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                  <text>Young Buckeyes make
mistakes in season
debut,Bt ·

Road gets rougher for ·
Thundering Herd, Bt

••
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
I0

(

I '\ I S • \

II I.

."i ."i .

SPORts .
• Ohio's running game
still a bit of a mystery.
See Page 81 .

I l I 0., I) \\ . S I .I' I I \I B I I{

'\II . I 0

-. :! () 11-l

BY BRIAN J. ~EED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CO.M

George Nesselroad, surrounded by family and friends, is handed a State American Legion Baseball Assocation certificate by
longtime local player, Jon Rothjeb. It was one of numerous presentatons made to Nesselroad at the Meigs,Athens football
game in recognition of his work with youth and community
organizations over more than 40 years. (Dave Harris/ photo)

Page AS
• George 'Bud' Davis

Nesselroad honored at game

LoTI'ERIES

WestVi
• 'a
. ll'glill

Margie Snider of Pomeroy helps her granddaughter Brandi O'Neil of Racine sort out yard· sale
items while they visit with one another. (Beth Sergent;photo)

tribute 'with his wife Lena,
their son, Mike, and two
grandchildren, before a
cheering crowd, the man best
known as ''Nessie" was presented plaques and certificates. and given a lifetime
pass to all Meigs sporting
events.
For more than 20 years
Nesselroad has been the
scoreboard operator at Meigs

Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
'•

Finding bargains and life lessons at yard sales
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Normally
walking into a stranger's yard
and rummaging through their
belongings might get you
arrested, or even shot, unless
that stranger is having a yard
sale.
Over Labor Day weekend,
WEATIIER
rt)any Meigs Countians
decided to throw yard sales in
the hope of not only getting
rid of stuff they no longer
wanted or used, but making a
little moneY. in the process.
. And while lots of people
came to · the yard sales in
search of bargains, that wasn't the only reason they were
out and about going from one
sale to another. In short, yard
sales are a social event.
Details on Pace A8
During Maxine ' Dugan's
yard sale on Mulberry Road
she had a visit from her
friend Mary Voss of Pomeroy
whom she hadn't seen in four
I
years. Voss was out hitting
2 SI!CilONS- 12 PAGFS
the sales and decided to say
Calendars
A3 hello to Dugan. The two
women attended the same
Classifieds
B3-4 one room schoolhouse and
were on the state of Ohio's
Comics
Bs championship bowling team
1974.
Dear Abby
A3 ' in Dugan's
yard sale gave the
two
women
chance to remEditorials
A4 inisce about a their
memories
and what theX called the
Obituaries
.As "good
ol' days ' in Pomeroy
years
ago.
Voss recalled the
Sports
Bt
many shops and restaurants
Weather
A6 that were once in. Pomeroy
and joked with her friend,
"Mary, you and m\! will fade
© a004 Ohio Valley Publishlnll Co.
..

Dally 3: 2-5-7,
Dally 4: B-3-6-8
cash 25: 4-6-12-17-19-22

INDEX

\ll.o 11 . '''11111" I • •, 1"

paving, installation of new sidewalks, The total project iiwolves $489,000
'The grant will see to the compledemolition of condemned houses. the in· funding , Trussell said.
tion of some much-needed improveThe paving project will encompass
purchase of new fire equipment and
restoration work at the train de'pot in ' most of the streets in Middleport not ments in the village that might not
Dave Diles Park.
, paved in a village-wide project com- have been possible any other way,"
The Community Distress grant pro- pleled in 2002 and 2003, and involves Mayor Sandy lannarelli said. "Thanks
gram is a relatively new program mostl y secondary streets in the vi llage. to the cooperation of the county comwhich allows communities to com- The Issue Two program funding was missioners. who allowed Middleport
bine several small projects into one previously approved for the work.
to apply for the grant. and the hard
application, Middleport's application
A community group has taken
included additional funding through re&gt;ponsihitity for the depot renovation, work of Jean Trussell , we' II be able to
the county's CDBG formula alloca- and the 'late grant award will allow for enjoy new sidewalks, a new depot
.tion, in the amount of $20,000. and interior work to co'mplete the project, community center and other amenities
funds previously approved for street including new walls and flooring, and that will make Middl~port a much
paving from the Issue Two program. kitchen and bathroom facilities.
nicer place to live."

OBITUARIES

Pick 3 day: 7-8-0
Pick 4 day: 4-Q-6-8
Pick 3 night: 1-9-3
Pick 4 night: 7-9-4-7
Buckeye 5: 1-5-8·14-29

\\\\.I ll

Middleport receives nearly $500K grant
MIDDLEPORT - The Village of
Middlepoq · will complet&lt;! nearly
$500,000 in improvements throughout the vill;.~ge with a grant award
approved last week.
Meigs
· County
Grants
Administrator Jean Trussell said
Thursday ,the village has received a ,.
$300,000 Community Distress grant
through
the
Community
Development Blqck Grant program,
enabling the completion of street

Ohio

\\

Sisters Phyllis Young of Shade, Linda Jewell of New Haven,
W.Va. and Lillie Hart of Racine make going to the Senior Center
· rummage sale a family affair. (Beth Sergent/ photo)
· out · like everything else in
"Whatever we don't sell is
town."
going to the Humane
Families also reunite at Society," said Debbie Coup
yard sales. Brandi {)'Neil of of Middleport. Coup, along
Racine transported her yard with her mother, Clarice
sale goodies to her grand- )arvis of Cheshire, were on
mother's home in Pomeroy the third and final day of their
because the traffic was better. family yard sale.
O'Neil's three day yard sale
"I am so tired," remarked
also gave sht; and her grand- Coup. 'This is harder than
mother, Margie Snider, a working." •
chance to visit. .
Mother and {laughter were
" Brandi works in Athens selling everything from a
so we don't see each other 'satellite dish to collectible
much," said Snider. "We've . doll s. Though Jarvis found
had a nice visit during the last the idea of ~etting rid of her
three days. We sit on the junk appeahng. she appreciporch and talk." ·
ated more the oppoituni ty to
When
asked
where get out and socialize with
O'Neil 's. unsold yard sale shoppers, and more imporitems will go, Snider laughed tantly with her family.
and answered, "In my build'
Please see Sales, AS
ing probably."
'

POMEROY - In recognition of many years of contributing to the youth athletic
programs as coach, scoreboard operator,' umpire, referee, mentor, fan and ·friend,
George Nesselroad was ~­
ored at Frid\}y night's MeigsAthens game on Bob Roberts
Field.
On the field in a pre-game

Please see Honored, AS

A piece of the James and Solove Research Institute of
Columbus came to Meigs County for the third time this year to
offer mammograms to the women of Meigs County.
Technicians Karen Schoss and·Jeanne Sommers administered
the tests and wanted to remind all women over 40 that an
annual mammogram is r~commended in the fight against
breast cancer. (Beth Sergentjphoto)

Mammography center to return
Solove Research Center in

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

~olumbus.

The James and Solove
Center's traveling mammography RV sets its parking brake
at the Meigs County Health
Please see Retum, AS ·

POMEROY - The women
of Meigs County have several options in receiving a
mammogram. including getting one from the James and

Fo

Farmers Bank·

&amp; Sov•ngs Cornpo ry

' • Pomeroy

• Mason 773.11400
• Tuppes Plains 985.3385
• Galipois 4461265
, www.Jbscc""
. ....
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· •

Member FDIC

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PageA2
•

COMMUNITY

:The Daily Sentinel

J'.

_
Chefs heat- up Point during
:annual chili cook~off
yea'r's cook-of.f_ This is our
fifth chili cook-off and our
second as membe_rs of the
POINT PLEASANT, W Va. International Chili Society, so
~ If the chili was anything !he word is gelling out"
like the weather on Saturday
In addition to chili, individ- it was hoL
uals prepared sal sa for .a cash
But that didn't prevent 13 prize of $50, They could al so
chili chefs from cook in' up decorate !heir tables - sometheir favorite recipes, hoping thing new thi s year-- for a
to win the grand prize of $400 cash prize of S25 .
and the opportunity. to com- Judy McClure of Indiana,
pete for $25,000 in Las Vegas. made the best salsa. ·
· The sun was indeed intense . McClure was a 26-year resSaturday, but cooks were pro- idem of Texas. She said that
tected. Tents were prov1ded her salsa ingredients include
for contestants this year,· garlic and cilantro, two items
.keeping those rays at a dis- she really likes.
·
lance.
Originally from Kentucky,
Bill Reebel, coordinator for McClure said that she really
the Cornstalk's Revenge Chili enjoyed the time she spent
Cook-off, purchased tents and h_ere and plans lo return· next
tables, in addition to other · year.
items, this year with a grant
The winner of the Best
provided by the West Virginia Decorated Table was Barb
Economic
Development Brumfield. Her table- was
Authority.
tilled "Hot In, Hot Out"
This year's winners for best
• Reebel. said that he was
;Pleased with this year's event chili are Terry Van Lehn, tirst
• "We had a good turnout, pla~e. $400; Ed Gamer, sec:five more chefs than last , ond place, $200; and Don Van
BY

CHRISTINE COZZA

CCOZZA@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

Lehn, third place, $100.
(Interestingly, Terry and Don
are married.)
Winner of People's Choice
was Archie Chestnut of
Charleston, whose chili was
called, "Joe Manchin for
Governor Chili."
Chestnut said that Manchin
·gave him his_chili recipe. He
revised it somewhat, usin£ his
own recipe : "Joe said that with both of
!he recipes, we should win
something," Chestnut said,
laughing. "A lot of people
told us how much they liked
it Some even said they'd vote
for Joe just because of the
chili."
The winner of the People's
Choice is determined by the
number of samples that are
purchased: The proceeds go
to a charity or non-profit
organization. The Mason
County
Senior
Adult
Nutrition Program will bene- ·
fit this year from more than
' $250.
.

Public meetings
J'uesday Sept. 7 .
RACINE
Racine
Village council will meet at 7
p.m. Tuesday at the Racine
municipaJ building.
RUTLAND
The
Rutland Township Tru stees
will meet in reguiar session at
5 p.m. at the Rutland Fire
Station.
ALFRED - The Orange
Township Trustees will meet
at 7:30 p.m. at the home of
the clerk, Osie Foil rod.
·
Wednesday, Sept. 8
POMEROY - · The Meigs
County Board of Health will
meet at 5 p.m. in the conference room · of the Meigs
County Health Department
-on
Memorial
Drive,
Pomeroy.
Thursday, Sept. 9
SYRACUSE - A meeting
of the Syracuse Board of
Public Affairs has been
rescheduled and will be held
at 7 p.m. at village .halL
Friday, Sept. 10
RACINE - The Racine
Water Board will meet at I0
a.m . at the municipal building.

lEACH

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
The Pleasant Valley
Hospital Health Foundation is
preparing for the-- future of .
health care in the tri-county
area by supporting education
today,
The found!,ltion, a non-profit corporation, established the
Scholars Endowment Fund in
1988 with donations , from
local businesses and individuals who pled~ed more than ·
$300,000 dunng that fundraising campaign.
Today, the-fund has grown 2004 Pleasant Valley Hospital Health Foundation scholars
in principal to more than seen above include, seated, from left, Tia Curry, Audette
$800,000. Interest from tbe Gooch, Ginger Denney and Denisha Shah , Standing from IE1ft
fund goes toward grant-in-aid on the back row are. Sheila Oehler, Alvin ' AI" Lawson, JD,
loans for students majoring in
a heaJth care-related field at a FACH E, Pleasant Valley Hospital chief executive officer, Amber
West Virginia or Ohio institu- See, Nikki Robinson, Tim Newperry, Charles Clarke, Meggan
Sidler, Daniel Rodgers. Lisa Stepp, Jill Sallaz and Robert
tion of higher learning,
In presenting this year's Wingett, chairman of the PVH Health Foundation board of direcawards, which ,totakd more tors. (Submitted)
than $31 ,000, Robert Wingett, Clarke, Gallia County, medi- Roush, Mason County,
chairman of the foundation 's cine (Ohio State University); (Hocking College); Jillian
board of directors, announced Tia Curry, Gallia County, Sallaz, Mason County, nursthat ''this year's presentation nursing (University of Rio ing (Marshall University);
brmgs the total amount of Grande); . Connie Davis; : Amber See, M,ason County, _
monies awarded since 1989to Mason County, radiology · nursing (University of Rio
$429,000 to 127 different stu- . practitioner (Weber State Grande); Denisha Shah,
dents in the tri-county area." University); Ginger Denney, Mason · County, mediCine
"The objective of the PVH Gallia County, radiology (Rio (West Virginia SchooL of
Medicine);
Health Foundation is to Grande); Audette Gooch, Osteopathic
Mason
encourage ·students to return _Galli a County, nursing Meggan Sidler,
to the community and utilize (Hocking College); Timothy County
(Marshall'
their skills in the local area," Newberry, Mason County, University); and Lisa Stepp.
he added. "The aim of this Nursing ..
(Marshall Mason county, · nursmg
board is to make our commu- University); Sheila Oehler; (Marshall University),
nities a· better place to live, Galli a County, medicine
For information contact
work and raise a family by (Ohio University); Kendra Georgianna Tillis , federal and
helping local students realize Riffle, Mason County, nurs- state programs, Pleasant
their dream of being health ing (Marshall University);
Valley Hospital, (304) 674Nikki Robinson, Meigs 7234, or write to Pleasant
care providers."
The 2004 scholars include County, pharmacy (Ohio Valley Hospital -Health ·
Ashley Cardwell, Gallia Northern University); Daniel Foundation. 2520 Valley
County, nursing (University Rod~ers, Mason County, Drive, Point Pleasant, W, Va.
of Rio Grande); Charles medicine (WVU); Ryan 25550.

Clubs and
organizations
Thesday, Sept. 7
POMEROY
Eagles
Auxiliary potluck 6:30 p.m.
Tuesday, Sept 7 _ Meat to be
provided. Meeting at 7:30p.m.
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge 363;
F&amp;AM, will meet at 7:30

Involved parents make better students. Children are
more likely to get better
grades and te st· scores, have
better attendance, complete
more homework, are more
apt to graduate, become more
involved in extra-curricular
activities, and have a better
attitude and behavior when
parents are actively involved
m their children's education.
Parents can help their children do well in school by
meeting periodically with
their children's teachers.
Open communication with
the schools is essential for
student success. Parents can
volunteer in their children's
classrooms, not only to get to
know the teachers better, bu.t
also to see how classes are
conducted and what school
life is like.
Parents can prepare their
children for homework and
studying by designating a
specific work area. A q"uiet
place with good lighting, a
dictionary, pens, pencils,
erasers and paper will be
needed. A desk or a table will ·
work. - If the kitchen or dining
room table is used, the area
should be off-limits to others
until homework Is cornpleted. When the children sit at
their study area, the routine

Land Transfers

POMEROY
-Meigs John F. Dudding, affidavit
Donnie w_ Barringer,
County Recorder Judy King
Flora M, Osborne, Bruce Pamela S, Barringer, Albert
reported the following trans- Hann, Melanie Hann, deed, Lawson, Susan K. Lawson,
fers in ·real estate:
Scipio.
·
Albert Lawson, Sr., to Albert
Howard Barber to Belinda
Phyllis Spencer to Don Lawson, Susan Lawson,
M. Barber, deed, Olive.
Spencer, deed. ,
deed, Lebanon.
Trustees
of
Rutland
Ruth
Ellen
Story
Jeffrey Russell , Pamela
Township
to
Rutland Revocable Trust to Ruth Russell, to John Harkins,
Volunteer Fire Dept, deed, Ellen Story, affidavit
deed, Olive.
Rutlapd.
Ruth
Ellen
Story
John Harkins to Jeffrey
Jeffrey D. _Howell to· Revocable Trust to Tuppers Russell, Pamela , Russell;
Leonard C. Lyons, deed, Plains-Chester
· Water deed, Olive.
Salisbury.
District, right of way,
Helen Swartz to TP-CWD,
Connie Kay Chapman to Bedford.
right of way, Bedford.
·
John F. Stephens, Ladona G. · John J_ Sinar to Thelma R.
Randall Moore to TPStephens, deed, Scipio.
Sinar, affidavit, Sutton.
CWO, right of way, Bedford.
Debra R. Cochran to
Robert C Sargent, Anne_ E. • Leslie Richard Courtney,
Buckeye Rural . Electric Sargent, to John F. ,Wh1te, Ruby Kathleen Courtney to
Cooperative, right of way, Pamela B. West, deed, . Mark E. Proffitt, Nola' R.
Rutland.
Rutland.
·
Billy J. Tro.ut to BREC, . Evalena L. Pi~ens to Proffitt, deed,_ Villageof
Pomeroy.
right of way, Columbia•
, Thomas C. Leon d, eed, . - Sammy -L _Darst, Sherry
James E. Welsh, Susan D. Scipio.
Darst, to Angela 'LeMaster,
Welsh, to B,REC, right of
Joann Ward to Beth Brown, Robert A, LeMaster, deed,
way, Scipio.
deed, Village of Racine.
Columbia.
: Bill C Harris to BREC,
Ruthanna L. Albright to
·-' ·
Terry E. • Albright, deed;
Thomas J- Daugherty to
right oJ way, Columbia.
Patrick L. Lawson to Bedford. _
Arlin Radekin, Patricia
BREC, right of way,
Howard
c. German, Radekin, deed, Columbia.
Columbia.
Howard Curtis German,
Martha M.
Dudding;
Kelly L Wright, Kelly L Janet G. German, Perry R. deceased, to John F.
Wright
Bartlett,
Larry Shilling, to Vicky D. Dudding, affidavit, Village of
Syracuse/Sutton. ·
Bartlett, to BREC, right of German, deed, Salem.
way,
Columbia.
Dorothy
Ann
Johnson,
Wanda Vining, Eldon L
•
RonaJd L. Denney, Ginger deceased, to Jerry M. Vining, to James D. Graham,
K. Denney, to Citifinancial, Johnson, affidavit
deed, Rutland.
(lan
Inc., sheriff's deed, Salem.
Joseph' S. Tillis, Faye M.
Broghammer Realty Co. to
_
,
__
The French Art Colony unve1led the1r new exh1b1t Sept. 1 that . Countrytyme ALC, Ltd., Tillis, to Baer Builders and Monika L Bennett, Rita M.
Robb, deed,
will run until Sept. 30. The exhibit is fromthe VSA Arts of Ohio Anthony Land Co., 'Ltd., to Developers, deed, Village of Chapman
Anthony R. Russell, Pamela Pomeroy.
Columbia.
· that celeb~ates Oh1o art1sts w1th d1sab1ht1es.
·S.
Russell,
deed,
Scipio.
Albert
Lawson,
Sr.,
Susan
Country!yme ALC, Ltd. , to '
Expressions Ohio," an out- artists, emerging artists,
CIT Group Consumer Lawson,
Pamela
S.- Roger L Cordial. Christina
reach opportunity for artists, young adult (age 19 - 25) and
Financing
to
Todd
B.
Barringer,
Donnie
W_
M. Cordial, deed, Letart,
began in 1997 in the youth artists (age 13 - 18).
Cullums,
Andrea
L.
Cullums,
Barringer,
Jo
Donnie
W.
Erica D. ·Drummond to
Kettering, a suburb of Cash awards are presented to .
deed, Beqford.
Barringer,
Pamela
S. Aaron M. Drummond, deed,
Dayton, through the partner- winners in each category.
M.
Dudding
to
Barringer,
deed,
Lebanon.
Sutton.
Martha
ship and collaborationof indiThe exhibit will be on disvictuals and organii:ations play at the French Art Colony
committed to providing and until Sept 31, FAC hours are
promoting accessible arts.
from lO a.m. - 3 p.m. Tuesday
The annual juried fine arts through Friday and from I - 4
exhibit is open to any Ohio p.m. Saturday. Contact the
artists with a disability. FAC at '(740) 446 ' 3834 for
Entries are accepted in four more information.
Each
year,
almost properly supervised.
moves when the child lands.
categories:
professional
200,000 children are treated
~elps prevent serious
A fall onto a hard surface This
. . .
'
at hospital emergency such as . dirt, grass, gravel, tnJunes.
rooms for injuries occurring or ~oncrete can cause seriParents and teachers
on playgrounds , Most ous inj1,1ry. For example, if a should inspect play areas
injuries are caused by falls child falls from . an ·eight- for equipment hazards, broValley Electric Corporation's 2002. He is
graduate of from slides, climbers, foot high slide and lands on ken . glass and debris. and
Kyger Creek Plant, Plant
swings, or other equipment. asphalt, it is like hitting a wasps and fire ant nests.
Manager Ralph E. Amburgey Marshall University and lives Falls can cause· serious brick wall_at 30 mph in a School, church, and public
announced.
injury or death.
'
car. Even grass is not safe park playgrounds are often
Foreman joined the plant in in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Playground injuries are for equipment more than dangerous.
usually causlld by one of three feet 'talL
Remember · children
four things .
There should be a large should always be super• The equipment is too area of deep sand, mulch or vised by a responsible adult
talL
woOd chips, or small jlea and encouraged to follow
• The surface underneath gravel both under and at sa!ety rules to prevent
the equipment is hard.
least six feet beyond all IllJUry,
• The equipment is broken equipment. When a child
(Provided by the Mason
·or not anchored properly.
falls onto this softer sur- County
Health
• The children are not face , . the sand or mulch Department_)

STAFF REPQRT .
GALLIPOLIS
The
:French Art Colony unveiled
:the traveling exhibition of
:VSA Ans of Ohio September

l.

.

'

The exhibit, titled "Key's
Accessible
Expressions
Ohio," celebrates Ohio artists
with disa.bilities by showcas'ing professional, emerging
and )lOUth artists in j uried and
· tourmg exhibitions. The
_theme for this year's traveling
exhibit, now in it's eighth
)(Car, is Visions of Awareness.
VSA Arts of Ohio, former! y
-known as Very SpeciaJ Arts of
'Ohio, is an arts service organization promoting the ereative
wer in ople with
disabihties in ~io. Since
1986, VSA Arts of Ohio has
provided unique opportunities
:for artists and audiences of
·diverse abilities to share their
creativity. by participating in
educational, outreach, accessibility and professional
;development programming.
: Through the arts, VSA Arts
-of Ohio helps people with and
:without · disabiliti~ and
·encoura~es · them to share
their umque perspective with
others.
··
· Accessible
- "Key's

und

foreman promoted at Kyger Creek Plant
' CHESHIRE -Craig D.
Foreman has ·been promoted
-from human resources assis:tant to senior human
:resources assistant at Ohio

•

•

..

·G})~e~ (tl ~

____________

Church services

Birthdays

Reunions

Becky
Baer
----•
will help them begin concentrating on the work at hand.
Parents_ shoul~ keep the
house qUJet \vhiie children
are studying. The television
and stereo should be turned
off. Make this a time for the
whole family to read or do
quiet work This will send
the message that all members
of the family want)o learn.
A regular time for studying
should be designated. Most
children need some play and
active time after. a long day at
school before trying to study.
Then twenty to thirty minutes
of . homework, . with play
breaks in between can result
in more productive work.
Parents can establish
guidelines concerning homework. .These may include:
"No television until homework is done," "Study some
every night, even if there is
no homework," "Show parents homework and school

papers every day." Parents
shot,dd review assignments
and projects with their chil(lren, not only as a means of
helping the student, but ' also
so parents can keep abreast of
what is being taught. They
should encourage their chi!· dren to talk about their activities and work at schooL
Parents should recommend
that their children write down
all assignments. This can
become their -"To-do" list.
Each homework activity can
be ch~cked off as it is completed. This · procedure can
help them develop time lines
when working on major pro- .
jects.
· A home where parents are
supportive provides a conducive atmosphere for learning. If parents monitor children's leisure time, they can
ensure a balance of structured
and unstructured time. This
will help prevent an overload
of extra activities beyond
their schoolwork,' while eliminating too much time on
their children's hands. No
free time can cause depression and lack of motivation
for tb,e student, but too little
structure or suppOrt can lead
to disorganization and a
deficit of educational stimulation.

.

DEAR ABBY: "Lonely in
Georgia," the woman who
divorced her cheating spouse
eight years ago. wrote that
she's miserably lonely. I
know how she feels.
I was widowed four years
ago, and when I was ready-to
date, it seemed impossible to
find "Miss Right" By a
stmke of good fortun e, I discovered an online dating service that matched me with
people with shared personali ty traits and interests.
My first date was with a
lady with whom I immediately felt comfortable. We have
been seeing each other.for si&gt;l
months, are engaged, and
intend to be married soon. I
hope "Lonely" find s !his
helpfuL - "EUREKA" IN
ARIZONA .
.
DEAR
"EUREKA":
Congratulations to you both.
Very few people are, lucky
enough to strike platinum on
the first try. I wish you every
happiness. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I was
divorced at 44, and decided ·
to finally do someihing I'd
always wanted to try : country- western dancing. I went
not knowing anyone. When a
gentleman asked me to
dance, he didn't mind that I
was a novice. He led me'
through the basics. He also
mentioned free lessons
..offered by the establishment,
and J decided to go. I soon
got to know the regulars
(even experienced dancers
took lessons). Eventually, I
met the man who would
become my husband. We
have been married three
years, and I have never been
happier,- HAPPILY PARTNEREDAGAIN
DEAR HAPPILY PART-

REEDSVILLE -Judith
West of Reedsville was
named to the President's List
at Mountain State Colle~e in
Parkersburg, W.Va., earnmg a
grade Point average of 35 or
better for the spring tenn

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earning a
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daughter of -Rick and Diana electronics at the ·University
Ash and lives in Syracuse with of Rio Grande.
her husband and son.
She is a 200 l graduate of
The Fraternal Order of
Meigs High School.
. Eagles Aerie# 217.1 presented a $1,000 ,.....-C\)rey Vaughan was award- scholarship
to Tiffany
ed one of
two $1,000
Wyatt - of
scholarN e w
ships from
Ha ve n•
t
h
e
W.Va. The
Fraternal
2 0 0 4
Order of
W a h am a
Eagles
High
Aerie
School
# 2 I 7 I ,
graduate
Wyatt
Pomeroy .
will attend
Wo r t h y
Marshall University, where
Preside n t Yalll:lum
she plans to study music eduH a r r y
· cation. She is the grandDavidson made the presenta- daughter of Margaret Wyan.
lion. Vaughan is the son of Wonhy FOE President Harry
Andrew and Julia Vaughan of Davidson - presented the
Rutland and will be studying scholarship.

in the Sentinel ...

_.'--------------~---_._ __._or.,.,.

or

-sunday Times-Sentinel
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r·- ·r -.-- ,,.,_,~~ ••-,..,oma-.11- • •

1-800-200-4005 or (740) 667-7388
Frid•y 9-6; S•tunl•y 9-4; Dosed Sund•y

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things in life that truly made
me happy, I began substitute
teaching and mentoring high
scliqol s tud e ~t s. It was then
that the man of my dreams
walked into my life. We marDear
ried .a year ago and are hav'
Abby .
ing the time of ol!r li ves.
Please tell "Lonely" nor -to
give up . Men are attracted to
women who are happy and
NERED: I have often said . self-fultilled. - MARRIED
that if you want to meet new AND STILL GETTING
people, get involved in a new OFFERS
DEAR MARJ(lED Right
activity. My longtime personal assistant, Olivia, also met you are! As 11•/ mother often
the man of her dream s, used to say. "Happiness is the
Richard, while square danc- best cosmetic." And so is a
ing - and I agree that it can positive outlook. Read on:
be · fertile territory for - DEAR ABBY: I was
divorced for 16 years before I
rGmance. · DEAR ABBY: I, too. met Mr. Right four years ago.
divorced a cheating spouse. All it took was li ving and
"Lonely" should consider enjoying what l had instead
talking to a therapist to help of -.yo,rrying about what I was
her regain her self-esteem. missing. Most men and
After I did it, I focused on women over the age of 40
attending ·events and fun c- recognize the signs of sometions where I could meet the one "on the hunt" lt is a huge
kind of man I was interested turnoff. - HAPPY IN FALin. I chose museum and LON,NEV
gallery exhibitions and the - DEAR HAPPY: I agree .
theater, and went with girl- And that is why I advise peofriends. I met a wonderful ple to involve themselves in
man at a group (or over-35 i!Ctivities where they can
singles. "Lonely" should get improve their community.
out and enjoy herself I'm There are many ways to do it
sure she'll find the person - work for their political
she 's looking for. - BEEN party, as a hospital volunteer,
THROUGH IT IN GEOR- Habitat for Humanitv. Even if
they don't fall in love, they
GIA
can
make some wonderful
DEAR BEEN THROUGH
IT:. No one ever. met. anyone friends and make a differby sitting at home and brood- ence.
Dea'r Abb v is written br
ing. The most important thing
Abigail
VaiJ· Buren. als'o
is to put yourselfout there.
DEAR ABBY: My engage- known as: Jeanne Phillips.
ment went sour, an abusive and was · fotlnded by her
relationship followed, and so mother, Pauline Phillips.
Dear Abbr at
did many disappointing Write
www.Dea~Abbr.com
PO.
dates. I decided t.o stop looking for a man and focus on Box 69440, LOs Angeles, CA
90069.

School news ·,

a

·eominglhu

p.m. at the temple,
Wood family reunion will be
MIDDLEPORT - The held at the King Farm, 39858
Middleport
€ommunity Smith Road, Pomeroy, with a
Association will meet at 8:30 .potluck lunch at 12:30 p.m.
a.m. at the Middleport office
of People's Bank. · .
Wednesday, Sept 8
CHESTER - The IOOth
anniversary of Pomeroy
Friday, Sept. 10
Chapter 186. Order of the
POMEROY
"The
Eastern Star, will be observed Passion of the Chrisdt" will be
at a 6 p.m. 'dinner meeting at shown at Common Ground's
the halL Attending will be coffee ·shop at 7 p.m. Doors
worthy grand matron Sandra ' will open at 6 p.m.
Edministon, worthy grand
Saturday, Sept. 11
-patron , Robert Palmer; past
SYRACUSE- A diamond
celebration,
grand matron·, Betty Dawn anniversary
Hardman. A special invita- 1929-2004, will be held a the
tiQn is issue to members of Syracuse Church of the
Racine Chapter 134 which Nazarene from noon to 6
assisted in in stituting the p.m. "To God Be the Glory"
Pomeroy Chapter in 1904. will be the theme. There will
Members of local and district be special singing throughout
chapters
are
invited. · the day -with '~Delivered' to
Pomeroy Chapter officers are l:&gt;e featured. Food, games and
to wear chapter dresses.
fellowship will be included.
· EAST MEIGS ·-The ' Those attending are asked to
Eastern Athletic Boosters take a lawnchair. Joy FM wilL
will meet -at 6:30 p.m. at have a remote broadcast from
Eastern High SchooL Parents I to 3 p.m. For more informaand coaches asked to attend. lion call 992-2514. The Rev.
Thursday, Sept. 9
Robert Stewart will be speCHESTER - Shade River cial speaker at the Sunday
Lodge 453 will hold its stated morning service.
meeting at 7:30 P-inPOMEROY- A contemRefres)lments will be served. porary 9/ll service will be
POMEROY - Alpha Iota held at St. Paul Lutheran
Masters will meel at the Church in Pomeroy at 7 p.m.
Mason river camp of Eleanor ,
' Thomas for a barbecue to be
served
at
6:30 p.m.
Directional s1gns will be
Sunday, Sept. 12
posted.
COOLVILLE - Thelma
Henderson will observe her
' 83rd birthday on SepL 12.
Cards may be sent to her at
Sunday, Sept. 12
47160 ·' Guthrie
Road,
POMEROY- The anqual Coolville, oho 45723.

TIME OUT F-OR TIPS

·:VSA Arts of Ohio exhibit
comes to the French Art Colony
NEWS«PMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Tuesday, September 7, 2004

Community Calendar

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

Cornstalk's Revenge Chili Cook-off was a big success,_ bringing 13 'chili chefs to Point Pleasant
on Saturday. This year's winners are, front, Archie Chestnut, People's Choice Award; second
row, from left, Barb Brumfield with 'her grandson Brian Zepp, winner of tile .Best Decorated
Table; Terry Van Lehn, first prize chil i; back row, Judy McClure , best salsa ; AI Burton, president
of Farmers Market; Bill Reebel, cook-off coordinator; Ed Garner, second place -chili; and -Don
Van Lehn, third place chili. (Christine Cozza/ photo)

BY THE BEND
Those looking for new love
must get out there ·and mix

Tuesday, September 7, 2004

Foundation awards
health care scholarships
BY AMY

PageA3

· The Daily Sentinel

••J

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

·The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
•

Charlene.Hoeflich .

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
·establishment of religion, Of prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech; or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Gover.nment for a redress of grievances.

' U.S. Constitution
....:. The First Amendment to the

READER'S

PageA4

VIEW

Bush
ItS that the bestjor Ohio?
Dear Editor:
Last year Scioto County experienced a tenible ice storm· in
mid-February. We had to abandon our home due to the loss of
electric fo r 15 days.
There we~ no National Guard units protecting our homes
from looters ·ince they were in the Middle East preparing for
the invasio of Iraq.
.
··
.
There were no National 'Guard units to free us,from being
trapped without heat for three days. Pick-ups full of tough
country boys were finally able to cut their way in to us.
,Specialty high-tension repair equipment was stolen from
overwhelmed repair workers as a direct result of a lack of pro'tection. If the ice storm had been tollowed with a below zero
temperature drop there would have been a great loss of lite.
The Bush Administration tells us that there is no need for
more regular military units. We can only assume that he
·intends
to continue using the Ohio National Guard in this
1
.manner. This is not in the best interest of Ohio's people. There
were no National Guard units to aid while our people suffered
'great hardship. How well would your family survive without
:electric or water for two weeks in February?
.
· Ask your local electric repair worker what Scioto County
!ooked like when they showed up to help us.

2004

At;fte moment, Bush's strategy beats Kerry's
.

From the beginning, the
Bush and Kerry campaigns
have been pursuing opposite
stmtegies. Right .now, it looks
like Bush picked the right one.
President Bush's strategists
Morton
conceived of the presidential
Kondarcke
mce as a choice between two
candidates. Sen. John Kerry's,
D-Mass., · people basically
thought of it as a ·referendum
on Bush.
polls showed Bush's approval
At the Democmtic conven- mtings low and Kerry opening
tion in Boston, the Kerry cam- , up a lead.
paign brimmed with confiBut Kerry got little or no
dence thilt the referendum lasting "bump" from his conbasically had been held, that vention and as Republicans
voters had decided against gathered in New Yo~k, the two
Bush and that all that Kerry candidates. were neck-and·
had to do was make himself neck in national polls ·- evi·
.seem an acceptable alterna- ,dence thttt voters had not
tive.
·
rejected Bl!sh after all. Also,
But either they didn't deliver Bush's job approval ratings
the goods in Boston -· that's were rising and he was beating
the Bush view -· or Kerry had Kerry handily on whom the
a bad August, or both. Either public trusted to run the war
way, it looks as though the on terror.
mce is what the Bush camDuring the convention in
paign planned: a choice in New Wrk. Republicans had
which voters are going to heed three tasks: put a previously
what they dislike about each missing gloss on Bush's
candidate as much as what record, show how Bush is
they like.
better than Kerry (and how
From the moment Kerry Kerry is worse than Bush)
won the . Democratic nomina- and, finally waich Bush
tion in March, the Bush cam- unveil his agenpa for the next
paign.. has unloaded on him four years.
and his record in its advertisDuring the GOP convening. Bush got a big assist in tion's first two days -- only one
August from Swift Boat of them nationally televised -Vetemns for Truth, which speakers went stronger on
challenged the central theine Bush's achievements than on
but
the
of Kerry's campaign -- his Kerry-bashing,
Vietnam service as a qualifica- Wednesday night duo of Sen.
tion to be commander in chief. Zell Miller, D-Ga., and Vice
In contrasi, Kerry, while bit- · President Cheney was expect. terly critical of Bush in ed ro even the balance.
On Monday, · Sen. John
speeches, has concentrated his
ad money on positive mes- McCain, R-Ariz., did Bush the
sages touting his war service favor of explaining his Iraq
and proposals on health care policy better than Bush has
ever done for himself.
'
and the economy.
The Kerry strategy seemed
Even if Iraqi dictator
to be working until just prior · Saddam Hussein did not a~tu­
to the Democratic National ally possess weapons of ma~s
Convention in late July, when destruction at the time of the

2003 war. M~&lt;:ain said. the . paign, says Kmy\ nig mi'intemational sanctions regime take was in spending too much
against him was · breaking time at his convention revi,itdown and .eventually would ing the one subject voters were
have allowed Hussein to reac- familiar with ·- Kerry's )"ar
quire WMD and pass . them record ·- and not ei 10u ~ h
along to terrorists.
explaining where he . wot~d
, McCain delivered only the take the country.
most abstruse criticism of
While denying that was uuc.
Kerry.'s foreign policy. "We Kerry strategist Tad Devine
can't make victory on the bat- . told me that, startin!; th i'
tlefield harder to achieve so month, Kerry ads will show
that our diplomacy is easier to the candidate talking· to the
conduct," he said, an apparent camera about health care and
reference to Kerry's oft-stated economrcs.
.
Devine said the Vietnam
priority of enlisting allies
before using force.
. emphasis 11 the Bosto,t conIn · a far more rousing vent ion
was . necessary
speech, former New York because Kl'rry forces anticiMay&lt;ir Rudy Giuliani both paled the Swift Boat attack.
lauded Bush's leadership "They threw their tmtghesr ·
against terrorism and ridiculed punch at us, ana we survi ved."
Kerry's tendency to change Devine said. "It's better they
positions on key issues.
did it in August than October."
His best line of the night he said, blaming Bush for the
played oll' vice presidential independently financed ads.
nominee Sen. John Edwards',
Devine claims the Kerry
D·N.C., theme that there are campaign is not changing its
"two Americas." "One is strategy, that voters in focus
where John Kerry can vote for groups show they abhor negasomething and another where tive adverti sing and that Kerry
he can vote against exactly the will "stay positive,:· at least on
same' thing."
the air.
Night two's hero, Califomia
Dowd, on the other hand,
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, · says the 50-50 race "makes it
gave a subtly effective reply to all the more important that we
the Kerry charge that America emphasize that this is a
is not "respected abroad" choice."
under Bush's leadership.
Dowd says Bush's 50 perWithout refening to Kerry cent approval rating · is
or Bush, he reminded the audi- unprecedented lor &lt;m incumence that all over the world. bent president at Labor Day -tens of millions of foreigners short of the mid-50s of presiwish that they could emigrate dents who've swept to electo the United States, as tion, but well above the 20s
Schwarzenegger did, ,;md "ful- . and 30s recorded by presidents
fill their dreams."
who've been defeated.
Like
Giuliani,
The bottom line is that Bush
Schwarzenegger !\sed humor · is going to concentrate lire 9n
rather than vitriol to jab Kerry's Sen;lle record, proposDemocmts, aecusing them of als and leadership ability. And
being "economic girlie men" if it's done fairly. there's nothfor being "pessimistic·" about ing wrong witll it.
.
the economy.
(Mm1o11 Krmdrack£' is exec- ·
Matthew Dowd, chief wive editor of' Roll .Call, rhe
strategist for the . Bush cam- newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

PUT'EM UP...
WHO ARc YOU
CALLING A

MODERATE?

Steve Sparks
Franklin Furnace

Hate?

Tuesday, September 7,

•

Admirefirst rouple
Dear Editor:
I have heard the word "hate" used in talking about President
-Bush. The dictionary gives the meaning of this word as abhorrence, anger, animo$ity, antipathy, aversion, detestation,
revenge, spite, etc. What did our president do to you personally to cause such feelings?
·
I think he and his wife are the kindest, most lovable couple .
.I have ever see in politics. I (eel if I needed anything, I could
go to them for help and I would be welcome in their home.
those who have faulted him for his smile (smirk?) should tJ:y
·smiling a little themselves. They would be much happier.
If we would get down on our knees and pray for President
Bush and his efforts to save us all from terrorists, we could all
smile.
' ·

• EdnsKnopp

RDcirre

The Daily Sentinel
.Reader Services

II!SPS 213-960) .
Ohio Ylllley Publlehlng Co. ,

Correction Polley
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Hlhat is ]~hn Kerry hiding?.
The thickening storm clouds
over · the fierce dispute
between the Swift Boat
Veterans for Truth and the
indignant Democratic presi- .
dential candidate · can be
pierced if John Kerry will
release all of his records of service in the.Yietnam War.
Deep in a long front-page
Washington Post article by
Michael Dobbs, "Swift Boat
Accounts Incomplete," there is
a smoking gun. In the Aug. 22
piece, Dobbs largely gives
credit to Keny's version of one
· of the controversies - whether
there was enemy fue on
March 13, 1969, the day Kerry
rescued James Rassmann from
the water. But the ·smoking
gun appe&lt;IIS later:
"Allhough Kerry campaign
officials insist they have published Kerry's full military
records on their Web site (with
the ellception of medical
records shown briefly to
reporters earlier this year),
they have not pennitted independent access to his original
Navy reconls."
On ttimulruous cable talk
shows, Kerry defenders
repeatedly maintain that all of
Kerry's Vretnam ~ are
on his Web site. But, writes
Dobbs;
"A Freedom of Infonnation
Act request by The Post for
Kerry's reconls produced six
pages of information: A
spokesman for .the Navy
Personnel Command, Mike
McClellan, said he was not
authorized to release the full
file, which conSists of at least

Nat
Hentoff

100 pages." ,
.
What is in these 100-plus
pages? Since the centerpiece
of Kerr}'s presidential earnpaign is not his 20-year Senate
career, but what . he did in
Vietnam,
including
his
medals, aren't voters entitled to
look at the entire record? If
not, why?
In the same article, Dobbs
points out that while both sides
in this volatile debate have a
lot of information on their
respective Web sites, both "the
Kerry and anti-Kerry camps
continue to deny or ignore
requests for other relevant
documents, including Kerry's
personal
reminiscences
(shared only with biogmpher
Brinkley)" and the boat log.
On the anti-Kerry side, says
Dobbs, thl; diary of Jack
Chenoweth on the events of
March 13, 1969, has also not
been released. The Swift Boat
Veternns for Truth should disclose it.
However, why can't we al1;0
see what Keny shared with
Doug(a.s Brinkley during the
preparation of Brinkley's
''lbur of Duty" about Keny's
Vietruimservice?Acconlingto

the Washington Post story,

"Brinkley, who is director of day (March 13, 1969) in
the Eisenhower Center for kerry's military career" lind•
American Studies at the· ing errors in both Brinkley's
University of New Orleans, "Tour of Duty" and John
did not reply to messages left O'Neill's
"Unfit
for
with his office, publisher and Command," the book that
cell phone" requesting the ignited the firestorm over
Kerry's Vietnam record.
information.
The Post story continues:
What' I find strange is that
"The Kerry campaign has Dobbs writes that ".Kerry himrefused to make available self was the only surviving
Kerry's journals and other skipper on the river then who
writings to The Washington declined a request for an interPost, saying the senator view."
remains bound by·an exclusivWhy did more than 250
ity agreement with Brinkley." Vietnam veterans testifying in
(In a subsequent Post story, · O'Neill's
"Unfit
for
Brinkley said those papers are Command" make themselves
in Kerry's "full ~ntrol." Why vulnemble' to a libel suit by
not release them?)
Kerry, which, if they lost:
I have written biographies, could do great damage to their
and have never experienced careers and inc,omes? After all,
an ex(!lusivity agreement such in such a suit, both sides would
··as the one Kerry's campaign have to testify under oath. Are
staff claints. When I wrote they aH liars for Bush?
. about
John
Cardinal
Would Kerry then really
O'Connor, the ·late cardinal · release · all of his original
was very candid during our Vietnam records to be scrutiinterviews, including his · nized i~ the lawsuit's deposirenunciation of a book he had tions? In a challenge to Kerry,
written, "A Chaplain Looks at O'Neill says "sue me!"
Vietnam," about ' his experiA post-Vietnam fog of war
ences there, in which he thor- does indeed hover . over the
oughly endorsed our involve- Kerry candidacy. And why has
ment in th~t war.
,
most of the mainstream ~edia .
In the btography, OCmmor 1)01 followed up on this smo'ksaid "That's a bad book, you ing gun about Kerry's failure
know. It was a very limited to release all of his Vietnam
view of what was going on. I documents?
,.
regret having published it." He . (Nat Hemojf is a natioiUll/)'
and I did not have an exclusiv- nmowned aurhority 011 tire
ity agreement. even though the ·First Ame11dme11i 'wid the Bill
~ knew ~at his selt~ of Rig/us and author of severcnbCISm ·was g_?mg to be .m a/ books, including . "The War
my book. _
on the Bill of Rights and the
The Washmgton Post care- Garherirtg Resistance" {Seve11
•
fuUy researched "til!: climactic Stories Press, 2003). 1 ·

Tuesday, September 7,

2004

www .mydailysentinel.com.

Obituaries
·•.

GeOrge 'Bud'
Davis
PORTLAND - George
Hoyt "Bud" Davis II, 65 of
Portland,
formally of
Ravenswood, W.Va. went to
be with his Lord on Saturday,
Sept. 4, 2004 following an
extended illness.
He was born in Harrison
County, W.Va., on Feb.
12,1939, the son of the late
George H, Sr. and Sarah
Riggs Davis. He was a
Baptist by faith and a member of the . Second Baptist
Church of Ravenswood. He
graduated from Salem High
School , class of 1957 and
attended Salem College
where he was an outstanding
athlete in all sports: • .
He served In the I092nd
National Guard . He was a
local · businessman, and

owned and operated Davis
Nursery in Portland. He
worked a1 Kaiser Aluminum
and retired from Century
Aluminum. He was a member
of . the
United
Steelworkers of Ameri'ca,
Local 5668. George enjoyed
participating in and watching
sports, as well as hunting and
fishing. He also liked to read
and pay Rook. · His greatest
accomplishments . · were
knowing the Lord and raising
his family.
He is survived by is best
friend and wife of 47 years,
Rebecca J. Davis; four sons,
Greg (Caperice) Davis of
Ravenswood. Rodney (Pat) ·
of Cutler; Chris (Rh'onda)
Davis of Ripley, and Kevin
Davis at home; two daughters, Beth ·(Matt) Moore of
Cottageville, and Jahe Davis
at home; II grandchildren,
and two great-grandchildren.
He has th~ee sisters, Judy

Sweeny of Pennsylvania.
Linda K. Davis of Michigan,
and
Lynn
Ranson of
Charleston.
Va.: an uncle,
Dale. Riggs of Buckhannon,
several nieces, nephews, and
cousins. He was preceded in
death by an infant ' son,
George H. Davis, Ill .
Funeral arrangements and
services will be handled by
Roush Funeral Home of
Ravenswood. Burial will take
place in the · Ravenswood
Cemetery. Military rites will
be
provided
by
the
Ravenswood VFW 6669.
Visitation was held from 5
to 8 ,. p.m. Monday at the
Second Baptist Church. The
funeral se~vices will be held
at I p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 7. at
the Second Baptist Church
with visitation starting at
noon. Friends may e-mail the
funeral home with condolences to the Davis family at
roush llis2002@yahoo.com

w:

Clinton undergoes successful heart surgery,
Qut was at grave risk of suffering heart attack
'•

NEW YORK (AP) - Bill . through a trying time.
Clinton had a succes sful
"Bill, Chelsea and ·I stayed
quadruple heart bypass oper- up pretty late last night talkation Monday to reheve. ing, playing game~ and just
severely clogged arteries that bcmg with each other," the
doctors said had put the for- senator said. "These past few
mer ):lresident in grave danger days have been quite an emoof a rllajor heart attack some- tional roller-coaster for us."
time soon.
·
She · added: "The presi Clinton is expected to dent's optimism . and faith
make a full recovery, but doc- will carry him through the
tors said he was fortunate to difficult weeks and months
have checked himself into the ahead - of that we have no
hospital- when he did. The doubt."
heart disease they repaired
In bypass surgery, doctors
was extensive, and blockage remove one or more blood
in several of Clinton's arter- ve&gt;sels from elsewhere in the
ies was "well uver 90 per- body - in Clinton's case ,
cent. " said Dr. Craig R. two art.eries from the chest
Smith, the surgeon who led and a vein from the leg ~
the operation.
.and attach them to arteries
'There was a substantial serving the heart, detouring
likelihood that he would have blood around blockages.
:had a substantial heart
During the operation,
attack," said Dr. Allan Clinton's heart was stopped
Schwartz, chief of cardiology and he was put on a heartat New York Presbyterian lung machine for 73 minutes.
Hospital/Columbia.
That process, used for mme
. Smith said Clintoh could than 75 percent of' bypass
leave the hospital in four or patients, carries a small ·risk
five days. Clinton was awake of stroke and neurological
but sedated about four hours complications.
after the operation ended,
As many as 30 percent of
Schwartz said.
patients suffer "measurable
The four-hour surgery but very subtle" problems in
came three days after Clinton mental funct.ioning after
arrived at the hospitlll com- bypass, but those problems
plaining of chest pain and are gone within a year, Smith
"
shortness. of breath. But doc- said.
tors said Clinton's problems
Asked whether there· were
were not as sudden as had any troubling moments durbeen portrayed. He had suf· ing the ,surgery, S.mith said:
fered shortness of breath and "There are always a few
tightness in his chest for.sev- minor anxious moments dureral months, blaming them ing heart surgery. There was
on off-and-on exercismg and nothing in thts case that was
acid reflux, his doctors said.
outside the realm of routine."
In addition, the former · Schwartz said it would be
p11esident had high blood possible for Clinton in the
pressure and may not have future to lead an "extraordibeen adequately treated for narily active lifestyle" high cholesterol. His doctors includin!l hitiing the camswd Monday he was put on a paign trarl.
"Hejs recovering normally
cholesterol-lowering drug a
few days ago. Clinton was at this point. Rtght now
prescribed cholesterol medi- everything looks straightforcine in 2001 as he was leav- ward," Smith said.
ing office.
Still, Dr. W. Randolph
In · a statement, Clinton's Chitwood, chief cardiovascuwife, Sen. Hillary . Rodham lar surgeon at East Carolina
Clinton, thanked the hospital University and a spokesman
staff for helping the family for the American College of

Honored
fromPageA1
games. He retired this year
due to ill health.
Coach Carl Wolfe, representing the Meigs basketball
team and Meigs Local School
District, presented him a
team-autographed
2003
game ball and a plaque with
an inscription ofappreciation '
from the school district.
On behalf of the Meigs
Sideliner's C:lub, Jirnmer
, Soulsby handed him a life. time pass to sporting events
and a Meigs Sideliner Club
shin.

His service as a longtime
American Legion coach was
recognize~ as former players
Jon Rothgeb and Perk Ault
present.ed him a certificate
from the State Amencan
Legion Baseball Association

and noted his coaching which 39, American Legion, repre~
had led a local team to the sen fed by George Harris, past
· state tournament in the post ,·commander; and the
'1970s.
Pomeroy Fire Department
A plaque, donated by the represented by fire chief Rick
Meigs Water Boys, Wil and Blaettnar.
Blake Crow and Marion
Coach Mike Chancey preSnider, bearing an inscription sented Nesselroad with an
in tribute to nis community . autographed picture of .the
service, was presented to 2004 Meigs Marauder footNesselroad by Meigs County ball team and a clock donated
Commissioners Jim Sheets by Mr. and Mrs. Homer
and Mick Davenp.ort .on Smilh, Jr. in the, pre-game,
behalf of the commission and tribute. After the game
several organizations.
Chancey gave · him the team
Those groups included
'ball and Meigs County's proTrinity Church of which he is
a member, represented by fessional football player
Rev. Jonathan Noble; lhe Mike Bartrum presented him
Meigs
County
Senior with an autographed collage
Citizens Center for many of action shots.
A.n inscription on one of
years of volunte~r service
the
plaques , handed to
represented by Bet\! Shavar,
executive director; .the Ohio Nesselroad seemed to say it
Power Co. where he worked all - " Your time and comfrom 1956 to 1991 represent- mitment to the youth of
ed by .a co-worker, Ivan Meigs County will never be
Wood:' Drew Webster Post · forgotten."

Sales·
.from Page A1
'

Cardiology, agreed with
Clinton' s doctors that the
president had been in a dan;gerous state leading up to the
operation. "Within the next
couple of weeks, something
was going to happen ," he
said.
Doctors delayed surgery
until
Monday
because
Clinton was on the bloodthinning medicat.ion Plavix,
and ·waiting a few days
decreased the chance of
excessive bleeding, they said .
Clinton was described as
upbeat in the days before the
surgery, resting \Vith his wife
and daughter. One New York
Post photo showed the former president reaching for a
Boggle game near his hospital-room window.
Clinton has blamed his
heart problems in. part on
genetics - there is' a history
of heart disease in his mother's family- but also said he
"may have done some damage m those years when I Wfl~
too careless about what I ate.'
He was lampooned during
~is presidency for his inability to resist fatty fast food , but
he was also an avid jogger
during his two terms in the
White House.
·
In recent months he has
appeared much slimmer. 'He
has said he·cut out junk food,
begun working out and adopted the low-carbqhydrate. lowfat South Beach d1et.
Clinton had planned ,t o
campa1gn for Sen . .John
Kerry, tbe Democratic nominee for president, but the
recovery from surgery will
take hi'm off the stump - at
least for now- with just two
months left until the election.
From his hospital room
before the surgery, Clinton had
a )ong telephone conversation
with Kerry on campaign strategy, said a Democratic official
familiar with the talk who
spoke on condition of
anonymity. Some polls have
shown Kerry trailing President
Bush since last week's
Republican convention.

.

"Everybody is so busy," said
Jarvis of her family, pleased that
they had an excuse to get together
.for, the yard sale.
When asked what sold the best.
Javis said, "Anything marked .25 or
.50 cents." When asked what the

strangest item anyone ever bought
at one of their family yard sales
was, Coup replied, "A used toilet
seat. It was the first thing that sold
that day."
:
Sisters Phyllis Young of'Shade,
Linda Jewell of New Haven, W.Va.,
and Lillie Hart of Racine were not
looking for a used toilet seat at the
Meigs Senior Cent.er Rummage
Sale. Instead, they were interested
in spending time together and find-

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

States restrict access to vital
records, but fraud grows
COLUMBUS (AP)
copies of ce'rtificates,About a Social Security numbers or
Four-thousand. five-hundred dozen of them do.o't use secu- other sensitive information.
and seventy- seven.
rity paper becau se it 's more The · legislation 's. sponsor
That's how many copies of expenstve than plain paper, showed Senate colleagues
birth 'certificates someone McCoy said. State law does- that she could go to a geneai'
om:e requested from a state · n't require security paper.
, ogy W7b ' sit.e and find her
office; said ·Mark Kassouf,
"That is fru stratmg becau se mother s matden name - a
chief fraud officer. for the it does open us up to fraud common identifier at banks.
Ohio D~partment of Health. issues," McCoy added.
In similar fashion, Texas
Employees were immediately
Judith Collins, director of removed its indexes from .the
suspicious but, by law, had to the Identity Theft University- state 's' Web site in 2003, citprovide the documents.
Business Partnership m ing fraud concerns.
"It wasn ' t for personal use; Michigan State University's
Still, the problem isn't
·I , can .guarantee that," School of Criminal Justice, going away. Ohio still is told
Kas~ouf said. "They were
said the tools for breeder doc- by the reg10nal New Orl~ns
lookmg at those to find ideal uments fraud are readily Passport Agency and the
candic;lates for identity theft." available to thieves. Collins Department of Homeland
Ohio and about 14 other and her staff track identity Security that its documents
oJ!en-rec~rds s!ates . face a theft online, train · law are part of a large fraud ptobd1lemma mvolvmg btrth and enforcement officers and Iem. Kassouf sa1d. He said he ·
death records. State officials assess theft ri sks for busi- expects to see a problem with
say they ' ve closed some nesses.
death certificates, which in
loopholes in the law that can
As part of their research, Ohio li st Social Security
leave residents vulnerable to her staff printed a 3 1/2 illch- numbers.
identity theft or the country thick binder full of thousands
'As fraud concerns lead the ·
vulnerable to terrorism. But of names and Social Security rematnmg
open-records
they and federal authorities numbers from the Internet .
states to restnct access,
also say the document fraud
"Identities are out there." adoptee organizations are
problem is growing ..
Collins said. "Data is gomg pushing for the opposite, said
Meanwhile, adoptee and · to be increasingly kept in Adam Penman, executive
genealogy groups are push- databases. The answer is to director of' the Evan B.
mg for more access to birth secure the borders of those ·, Donaldson AdoptionJnstitute ·
an~ death
indexes, the . businesses who have the in New York. a national nonrecords thieves use to request databases, to ensure the peo- profit dedicated to improving
documents in someone else's pie work in~ in their business adoption policy.
name .
are honest.
He said people. who could
In law enforcement circles.
Keeping vital statistics in prove they were adoptees ·
those documents are called · elect~onic databases is a pri· should have access to indexes
breeder documents, because ority for the National because they often can' t get
criminals use them to breed a Association for Public Health what they seek from just one
financial clone of an identity Statistics and Information birth or death record.
theft victim or proof of citi- Syste1i1s in Silver Spring,
Jack Brissee, chair of the
zenship.
Md., said its executive direc- vital records, access and
Government documents tor, Kenneth Beam. But, he preservation comm'ittee of
fraud was involved in 17,192 said. those databases should the National Genealogical
cases of identity theft report- be for government eyes only. · Society, said genealogists
ed in 2003, up . 4,246 cases
Beam said national data- need access as well.
from the previous year, bases would help· prevent
"We ' re hurting because of ·
according to the Federal breeder documents fr.aud. by concerns about ·identity theft, '
government which we don't engage in,"
Trade Commission. Overall. · allowing
· the fraud accounted fof R per- employees to check the valid-. he said. "The type · of inforcent of the almost 215 ,000 ity of other states' documents mation we need isn't con·cases of identity theft report- . against the electronic record. tributing to identity theft."
. ed by consumers in 2003.
The recently published
But open access to that
Tlie FTC said its numbers report by the commtssion that informal ton can lead to ideomay understate the problem investigated th'e Sept. II, tity theft and aid terrorists by
because consumers often 200 I, terromt attackSTecom- helping them secure U.S.
don't know how fraud mended such a federal sys· passports, said Stuart Patt,
against them was committed. tem for issuing birth certtfi- spokesman for the State
The documents dilemma is cates.
Departmeni 'so Bureau of
complicated by the fac.t that
At last count in 2002. Consular Affairs. All but one
Vital statistics records are Beam 's statistics association of the Sept. II hijackers had
kept in a decentralized sys· knew of 14 open-records . some form .of U.S. identilicatern at state and local levels. states, he ·said.
.lion, the Sept. ll commission
Last
summer
States try to close loopholes
Ohio report said. Some of those
by using security paper, seals increased copying fees for document s were obtained
and applications for access, certificates and required an through fraud.
but getting hundreds of application and that all state
''The biggest co.ncern is
records repstrars to comply offices use the same ·security that someone who is trying to
with those steps is another paper and seals.
conceal his true identtty and
matter, said Richard McCoy,
[n 2002 , California limited his true nationalit.y would
director of public health sta- access by requiring that the suddenly have what is essenstate regtstrar produce sepa- tially the best proof of
tistics for Vermont.
His state has almost 250 rate birth and death indexes American citizenship," Patt
town clerks who can issue for public view that didn't list said.

Return
from Page A1
Department four times a-year. Its next. visit is
scheduled for Dec. 2, by appointment only.
To schedUle that appointment, call
Courtney Sim at the Meigs County Health
Department at 992-6626 .
Though the cost is usually low and determined by a client 's income, there is a misconception that the service is only offered to the
poor or uninsured . The service is, offered to
any women of any income, even those that
have existing health insurance coverage.
During the RV' s most recent visit, 23
mammograms were given. An annual -mammogram is'recommended for all women over
40, while women under 40 with a family history should consult their doctor.
Donna Davidson ol' Middleport arrived at
the health department just as she has for the
past I0 years to receive her annual mammogram .
Davidson said her insurance paid for virtually everything.
"]like that you don'; have to wait," added
Davidson, who was pleased with the efficiency of the James and Solove technicians , and
health department staff supplement.ed by the
Retired Senior Volunteer Program based at
the senior center.
· .
· "The RSVP seniors keep everybody moving and on time ." said Sim, .the health departyment 's assistant administrator.
Outside the health depanment, the mammography RV took up a mammoth and
prominent parking space. Upon first glance.
the vehicle resembled a tastefully decorated
touring bus complete with a mural of the
S•)love Research Institute painted on its body.
Stepping inside the RV was like entering a
soothing, warmly decorated living room complete with air conditioning, a couch that
matched the draperies and, a silk !lower
arrangement.
Karen Schoss. RT for the Jmnes and
Solove ,Research Institute, said the decor was

ing a bargain in t.he process.
"We're havi.ng a ball," said
Jewell as she dug through piles of
clothing. All three sisters also had
their lunch at the Senior Center that
was raising money for their programs with the proceeds.
· Like the sisters who shared their
day tagether, every person interviewed for this 'story shat;e~ their
stories in -a pleasant and playful
manner amongst the social atmos-

intentional and meant to put clients in a calm
state of mind.
Often the normal, sterile environments of
other health care facilities only perpetuate the
stress people feel when taking medical tests.
From the "living room," clients were led
i,nto one of two comfortable dressing rooms'
for privacy. From the dressing rooms, clients
entered the actual mammography area wheretheir test was administered. The films were
then developed in a yet another room in the
RV and were later transported to Columbus
for a radiologist to read .
Schoss was accompanied by fellow RT.
Jeanne Sommers, who said thev drive the RV
three days a week to .various' countie&gt; and
evert corporations in Ohio.
When they are not on the road, they are rotated to the institute's diagnostic center insuring
that they arc up on the latest technology. ·
Educated technicians are only part of the
battle. Sommers believes communication
between the . patient and their technician is
also invaluable. .
"The patient and technician are a team." she said.
Schoss and Sommers enjoy giving a
patient their first mammogram. or what they
call .a "baselihe. ·· If that first mammogram
"baseline" experience is pleasant. it sets the
tone. and compels the client to return . ·•
Schoss compared· her role in the baseline
experience to that. of a· kindergarten teacher
exposing a young person to healthy habits
that will serve them well t.hroughout their
lives.
.
'
She and Sommers want to intervene and
impact their patient 's lives for years to come
with education, and a general sense of comfort left in a woman's memory bank in regard
to her overall mammogram experience,.
There are still appointments available for
the Dec . 2 mammogram clinic at the Meigs
County Health Department. The health
department can bill Medicaid. Medicare and
most insurance companies and is open to
women of anv income.
Women under 39 need a doctor's order for
the test. There is funding available for low
income clients.

phere the yard sales produced.
Karen Flanagan of Middleport
took · time from her yard sale to
show off her Boston Tenier. Coco. •
who loved to drink soda pop.
Another Middleport resident who
wi shed to remain nameless, share~
a beauty secret that one of her yard
sale. shoppers shared with her. The
shopper had claimed that using
Preparation H on her face once a
day kept the wrinkles away.

Another person recommended WD40 to spray on arthritic joints.
Funny moments, home remedies.
and reunions of friends and family
make the items in the yard sale
almost sec~ndary to the socializing
that take s place because of them.
Clarice Jarvis said that in a yard
sale normally the things you think
will never sell go first, while thci
ones you love never go, whicli
makes yard sales a lot like life.

�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 7,

2004

Under 35: Cornbag game popular
in backyards, bars and Olh campus

Tuesday, September 7

Wednesday, September
8
Moming (7 a.m.-Noon) ·
It will be a cloudy morning. Temperatures will
climb from 641o 76 by late
_this morning. Winds will be
5 MPH from the northeast.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
A humid ;Jnd cloudy afternoon . Temperatures will
.hover at 78. Winds will be 5
to 10 MPH from the east
turning from the northeast
.as the afternoon progresses .

Group of four states in play

..

Tuesday, September 7, 2004

CINCINNATI-'The projectiles are lighter
than horseshoes and safer than yard dans, but
the idea's the same. Players try to hit a target
several paces away.
·
The Ohio pllenomenon that is catching on
nationwide is called comhole, or corn toss,
because players try to throw cloth bags filled
with corn into a goal.
."It's easy to play, you don't have to dig a
pit, drive stakes or tear up your lawri," said
Mike Whitton, founder and president of the
American Curnhole 7\ssociation.
Beanbag games in various forms have been
around for decades. Local ·players say the corn
bag game originated in Cincinnati - specilically the ' city's west side, where Whitton grew up
- although many lay claim to it.
Portable goals have let the backyard game travel to tailg~te parties, bars and college campuses.
UQd a cottage industry has sprung up supplying
boards, bags, clothing and paraphernalia.
The American Cornhole Association claims
10 be the arbiter of the ~ame, sanctioning tournaments and "official' rules of play.. It grew
out of a scorilig dispute at a family picnic and
now has more than 3,500 members, Whitton
said. It's Web site sometimes gets 300,000 ~its
a month .
"Cincinnati is the core. but I ship hats ·and Tim DeForde, left, looks on as Dave Busser
(game) sets everywhere," Whitton said. "Many watches his last corn-filled bag sail towards
sets are goi ng to North Carolina and Rorida. but the Cornhole, or Baggo, board they are shootit's also spreading west, to NebrJlska and ing ·for while playing at Steve Baker's outdoor
Oklahoma, at a fairly rapid clip."
homemade court in Lakewood.
The simple premise of the game is to throw .
.
_
.
. .
..
a bag .filled wah corn into a six-inch hole in a . dtrecl!ons. Dozens of eBay_ I! slings otter c_uswuoden ramp 30 feet away. A bag in the hole tomtzed boards and bags wtth logos of pratesscores three point s a bag left on the platform stonal and college team s.
_
~cores one.
' ·
''A friend and I make them on the side,"
Although not a drinking game by definition, Moine said . "With Christmas coming up,
·
alcoholic beverages often are consumed. The we've gut about 20 orders."
Christian Moerlein Brewing Co. sponsors tourThe game is so popular around Cincinnati that
naments, an~ offers a virtual versiqn of the game nearly 400 temns competed for the $2,000 firston its Web site.
place prize in the Comhole Cla&gt;sic in February,
Christy's Bierstube, Rathskeller and and organizers are planning a Holiday Comhole
Biergarten, which caters to University of Classic forThanksgivingweeken'd.
.Cincinnati students, installed , a game court
"We were extremely surprised. I knew it
because regular customers asked for 'it, said was popular. but ·not this popular," said Matt
co-owner Christy Windholtz.
Dunne, general manager of U.S. Bank Arena. ·
It may be bringing in new business "because it "We have to limit it to 400 teams because we
ives
peopl_e something to do," she said.
only have room for 40 courts on the arena
g
Players span all ages, but teams that com- floor.'
pete in leagues at Tommy's on the River, a bar
Entry fee is $65 per team. Beer is eXtra. ·
and restaurant adjacent to a Cincinnati mariMoine claims to be responsible for introna, tend to be twentysomethings.'
.
ducing the game to Myrtle Beach, S.C .. while
"Many of them are people who work at on vacation. Students take the game with them
P&amp;G (the Procter &amp; Gamble Co.) or Sara Lee, to college.
·
people who have been transferred into
"My little brother just graduated from Ohig
Cincinnati and don't know many people so State, and he says students take the.ir OSU
they play sports to meet people," said Donna boards to their tailgates," said Moine, who is
Frey, a bartender at Tommy's, where beach from Columbus. "It's picking up there, at
volleyball is another popular pastime.
Miami' University - anywhere in Ohio. It
Cincinnati Sports Leagues, a private company, doesn't seem to be very popular outside' the
rates the com toss and volleyball leagues, Midwest."
Th e game h as ta ken root at the Umverstty
·
· of
· ong with flag football, softball and other ~rts.
K
k·
AbOut 15,000 under-35s participate, sai coentuc
y. ·
. founder Joff Moine.
·•y ou · can •t. go up an d down· th e street
· board s an d bags, " sat·d D e I
"It's safe, it's fun. and you don't get dirty," wtt· h out seemg
p
f
L
·
K
·d ent o f th e
Mol.ne sa1·d of the game. Playt~rs must be 21 . roctor o exmgton ,·1 y. , prest
h
because some teams are sponsoreci by alcohol local Sigma Phi Epst on c apter. ' 'I h ave
vendors.
\
some family in ·cincinnati, and they 've
· a coup 1eo f years. I t seems to
"We cater to young professional s J·ust out of been p1aytng
h
·
college," Moine said. "About every three or ave mtgrated down here th'roug h th e s1ufour weeks, we have a happy hol\r that about dents."
.
AI
h
h
h
·
· 1,
300-400 people a.ttend."
t oug t e game ts not very phystca
p
·ct
1
h
be
A ready-made board can cost about $150, roctor sat payers ave come more ac t'tve
b
f·
but several Web sites have do-it-yourself ecause o !!.,
1

%:

professor
iu California in economically d\!pressed
University of Pennsylvania communities, Madden said.
Those types of visits· help,
who lives in Ohio.
COLUMBUS- Michigan,
Both Bush and Kerry were but the campaigns' primary
Ohio, Pennsylvania and West in Ohio on Saturday and audiences are the small group
Virginia share more than bor- planned to return this week. of voters who have not made
·
· d ·BI b
ders and economies. Their Bush was in Parkersburg, up I hen
mm s,
urn erg
combined 63 electoral votes W.Va., on Sunday and said.
provide nearly one-fourth of pi an ned to return after an
"The strong partisans have
the 270 needed to elect the ·Ohio bus trip on Friday while dug in their heels. Those peopresident and the candidates Kerry was expected in West Pie are preny much senled,"
are lighting for every one. ·
Virginia mid Ohio on Blumberg said. "I think it's
Recent independent polling Monday.
time to strictly be going for
has found that Michigan, with
"The president has to go out the undect·deds. "
17 electoral votes, is leaning there and meet as many peatoward John Kerry while pie and shake as many hands
West Virginia, with five as he can," campaign
votes, is leaning toward spokesman Kevin Madden
President Bush. But ·the two said. "We' re really focused on
largest
states
making the case for voters."
Pennsylvania, with 21 votes,
In 2000, Bush won Ohio
and Ohio, with 20- are seen an~ Wesi Virginia while
Here are some of the most popular ''Thank You" ad sizes.
as up for grabs.
Democrat AI . Gore won
Pennsylvania and Ohio ar~ Michigan and Pennsylvania.
ranked second and. third in No candidate had a margin of
Please see Dave or Brenda at The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy,
electoral votes among the victory of more than 6 peror call 992·2155 for details. Ads must be paid for in advance.
swing states,behind Florida's centage points among those
27.
states.
.
Both states have proved
All four states have manu'popular with the campaigns. facturing -based economies"
2 Col. x 4"
2 Col. 5"
Bush
has
visited that have been slow to recovPennsylvania 34 times - er. Unemployment rates for
$65.60
$82.00
more than any other state - July, the latest state statistics
1 Col. 2" ...
sin.ce taking oflice. He has avai lable, ranged from 5.2
1 Col. X 3" ...
been in Ohio 11 times this percent in West Virginia to
$16.40
year alone and is scheduled to 6.8 percent in Michigan. The
$24.60
return on Friday. Kerry makes national rate for July was 5.5
his 14th trip to Ohio on percent. ·
Monday. He also has visited
"It's all about the economy.
Pennsylvania 14 times.
The four states have not done
Pennsylvania was selected well under this president and
to put Bush over the top in the they don't see themselves
vote for his nomination at the having a future," said James ·
Republican
National Ruvolo, a Democratic consulConvention. Kerry 's cam- tant and Kerry's Ohio campaign chose Ohio at the paign chairman. ·"lt 's both the
Democratic
National actual job losses and the fear.
Convention.
The unemployment rate does"With all the attention n 't matter as much as the fear
being paid to Ohio and of unemployment rate."
2
X
Pennsylvania, you'd .think litIn Ohio and Pennsylvania
erally they are native.·I won- on Saturday, Bush talked
der if other states are feeling' about creating "opportunity
slighted here," said Melanie zones" that would encourage
Blumberg, a political scientist private and public investment
JOHN McCARTHY

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

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Today'a game
.
. t'allll)'batl
l'Higa at MIDer ·
Alexander at eaa1ern
Neloonvtlle-YOfk at So\llhern ·

' Ctoo_a Country

Meigs at Gattla Academy tnv.• at Rio
Granda Untver41ty, 4 p,m.
Ooll
TVC Ohio.at Meigs

TVC Hocl&lt;ing at Trimble

: F~d!rf'o rootbott gamtt
• Metj)a pt Rtver. Velley
,
Eaalem at Wahe,tna, w.va,
South Clallla at Soiltharn

Bengals acquire
cornerback off
waivers,
cut WR
..
CINCINNATI
The
aengal s added a cornerback
on Monday, acquiring thirdyear pro Rashad Bauman off
wat vers
from ·· the
· Washington Redskin s. ·
Receiver Maurice Mann, a
fifth-round draft pick from .
Nevada this 'year, w·as
waived -to open a roster spot.
Bauman
was
the
Redskins ' third~ round pick
in 2002. He was used primarily as ..an extra cornerback in passing situations,
appearing in 28 games and
starting three over the last
two seasons.
The Ben'gals also signed ·
seven players to their prac- ·
tice squad: linebacker Allen
Augustin fr9m Florida State;
receiver J a mall Broussard
from San Jose State ; offensive lineman Pete Lougheed
from Purdue; defensive end
Elton Patterson from Central
Florida; defensive end Greg
Scott from Hampton; linebacker Larry Stevens from
Michigan, and receiver Cliff
Russell from Utah.
Everyone except Russell
played for the Bengals during· the preseason. Russell
playe(f in three games for
Washington last season and
was wai.ved by the·Redskins.

Reds pick up
Miley's option
for 2005 ·
CINCINNATI (AP) - ,
Reds manager DaYe Miley
will have his contract
option picked up by the
team, and he will keep his
coaching staff For another
year.
Miley
agreed
in
December to a one-year
to
manage
contract
Cincinnati through the
2004 season with a club
9Ption for 2005.
He had a 22-35 record
after his midseason promo;
tion to interim manager last
year when he replaced Bob
Boone, who was fired on
July 28, 2003 . The Reds fell
to 63 -73 after an ll-5 loss
to Houston on Monday.
They are in fourth place in
t.he NL Central.
"I'm very happy for the
coaching staff. It's been a
lot of hard work all the way
from spring training ,':
Miley sa'id Monday. "It
shows that they have some
trust in us."
Also invited to return
next · year were hitting
coach Chris Chambliss,
pitching coach Don Gullett,
bench coach Jerry Narron.
bullpen coach Tom Hume.
first base coach Randy
Whisler, third base coach .
Mark Berry and bullpen
catcher Mike Stefan~ki.
· Miley has been with the
Reds organization for 25
years. Before managing the
Reds, he spent seven years
managing .
Triple-A
Louisville
and
Indianapolis.

Bv Scon WoLFE
Sports correspondent

Southern
0 h 1 o
Conference
champ ion ship team
t
h ·a t
advanced to
the playoffs
and tintshed
9-2 a year
ago.
That ·

WILLOW WOOD
Stepping onto the gridiron for
a battle with a hungry giant is
no easy task.
Yet, the
Southern Tornadoes (0-2)
were able to show the
improvement that a week of
hard work can produce in
Marnhout
a I o n e
dropping a 36-18 loss' to the
stacked the
powerful Symmes Valley
deck
the
younger
Tornadoes
Vikings. The eighteen points
tha ~ have just ten upp~rclasswas its greatest single game
men.
,
output in two years. ·
Symmes'
Corey
Burcham
Symmes Valley (2-0)
returned 17 starters from its and Ju stin Holland ran for

two touchdowns. each
and amassed
most of the
e a r I y
·S y m m e s
Va I Ie y
g r o u n d
yardage as
th~ Vikings
used
its
Derek Teaford q u i c k n e s s

and experienced backfield to attack
Southern's vulnerabii'ity outside .
Southern 's inside defensive game and pass coverage

•

I

was credibl e and one of the
bright spots of the night. The
Southern defensive backfield
held Symmes ' quarterback
Craig Neal to just 1-10 passing for 34 yards. Last year. at
34-71 Neal had nearly a fifty
percent throwing accuracy.
Utilizing the long sweep
and outside speed. Symmes
whisked away to a 15-0 first
period lead, and 22 -0 at the
half.
Those touchdown
romps came on two runs of
over 50 yards. and runs of 44
yards and 34 yards.
Symmes scored quickly on
its first possession of the sec-

ond half, setting' the stage for
a 75 yard kick -off return by
. Butch Marnhout with II :02
showing on the clock. The
PAT kick failed.- After three
rounds the score stood 29-6.
By mid third quarter both
clubs substituted more freely
with many junior varsity
players
see ing
action.
Weston Count s punched into ·
the endzotie from one-yard
out on a dive pl~y . with 8:00
on·the clock to once again put
Southern on the board. The
PAT kick was short , the score

Please see Southern, 81

·College Football

Ohio's run~ing gaine still a bit of ·a mystery
po sition ." said Ohio head
coach
Brian
Knorr.
"Kalvin 's has the ability to
ATHENS _ The running . make people mi ss and he 's a
hard runner. At times , he
back situation at Ohio is showed the power he has for
becoming a game of who a smaller guy."
will start and who will get
But was McRae's start :a
the rriost carries.
game time decision?
Not according to McRae.
This past summer, the
probable starter in lhe new · "A couple of weeks ago,"
one-back offense. · Ray ·said McRae wh en asked
Huston, tore hi s ACL and when he found out he ' was
will likely_be out for the sea- starting.
son.
While McRae started,
· R
h 1· ·
h.
The depth chart going into
the summer drills had Brad Ju sttn ous ' P aymg ts
first game after suffering a
Young starting and Justin season-ending injury during
Roush backing him up.
1
·
hd
Then. a week before . last ast year s opener, .a a
career day.
Saturday's season opener
The former Meigs standagainst YMI , freshman out ran the ball 16 times for
Kal vin McRae came out of 130 yards to lead all rushers
no where anq un~eated on the night. Included in
Roush as the mair backup to Rou sh's total was a 49-yard
Young.
run in the second-quarter.
"J ·
h
d ·h
When Saturday came
ustm was ampere w;t
around, who was the starter?
a ham string problem a little
Kalvin McRae'J
bit in the presea son and
The fre shman out of hopefully he' s cla&gt;e to full
Decatur, Ga. was named the speed," sa id Knorr, who's
starting back minutes prior Bobcats travel to Pitt sburgh
to the kickoff of the
h'
Bobcats' 42 -14 win over the this Saturday. " In 1 15
offense, you better haye
Keydets at Peden Stadium.
more than one back. Kalvin
And he didn 't fail to and Justin did a good job."
i)11press.
Meanwhile, Young dido 't
McRae rushed for . I00 even step into the backfield
yards on 18 carries, includ- until early in the third quar·
ing a touchdown. He also
was on ·the receiving end of te~he running game paced a
an .18-yard touchdown pass more aggressive Bobcat s
from quarterback Ryan that tallied 459 yards of total
Hawk.
.
offense.
"Coach (offensive coordiNot bad for a first time
o~~i think Kalvin showed nator Phil) Earley has a lot
Please see Bobcats, 86
(Saturday) why he's in this
Bv BUTCH COOPE~
bcooper@ mydailytribune .com

Ohio University tailback Justin Roush (20) was a tough tackle all day for the Keydets of Virginia
Mi litary Institute . Roush .. a grpduate of Meigs High School. topped the century mark for thefirst time as a Bobcat with 130 yards on 16 carries in Ohio's 42-14 victory at Peden Stadium.
(ian McNemar/ Photo).

College Football

Young Buckeyes make
mistakes in.season debut

Road gets rougher
for Thund.ering Herd-·
Br BRAD SHERMAN
bsherman@ mydailyregister.com

~
l. t
'\

~
.•

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.--,.
on a 27 -yard field goal on the
Marshall could not contain
second play of the second
. Troy at home - bad news
· quarter.'
.
for a team that faces road
Moments later, Ross burst
games at Ohio State and.
COLUMBUS - Like any
through a hole at· his own 20
Georgia
the next two week s.
good teacher, . Ohio State
.and found no one near him,
Quarterback
Stan Hill was
coach JimTressel did his very
MARSHALL TM
bolting 68 yards.
sacked
eight
times,
and
the
best to point out the good
"We started slower than we ·
·
offense had its lowest outalong with the bad.
wanted- and I started just as
"The quarterbacks made
put In 15 years during a 17- Pruett. "We only ran 62
slow," Ross said. "But in the
some good plays," Tressel
15 season-opening loss · to plays ; so we just had a poor
second half we got into a
said after the No. 9-ranked
Troy Saturday, the Herd 's offensive effort."
niche and started doing what
Pruetts club amassed 177
Buckeyes' 27-6 win over ilar in the way they h3)1dle the we wanted to do."
second loss to the Trojans in
yards
for the game, and only
Cincinnati on Saturday. team," said tailback Lydell
two years.
Zwick completed passes
"We really realized some - 25 on the ground.
.
'They also made some bad Ross, who rushed for 141 for 14, 28 and 15 yards before
thing tonight, 1 guess we' re
Marshall had won 20 conerrors, especially from a yards and scored once for the linding a wide-open Ryan
not as good as we thought · secuttve hom~ openers .
turnover standpoint, which Buckeyes. "Obviously, there Hamby for a 17-yard score
we were," Hill admitted . before Saturday s loss. Now
we won't be able to survive in were mistakes. We have to late in the' 'Second quarter to
the future."
" We've· got a reall y good . the posstbt!Hy of beg m~tn~
learn from those mist\lkes and put the Buckeyes ahead 10-3.
The Buckeyes· lineup was get better."
foo tball team. but tight now the season 0-3 l oo m ~, w tC .1
Things could · have been ·
choked with young and
we're not going to beat any -. would be the .team~ wor~t .
Wide
receiver
Bam even worse for Zwick. one of
untested players, although Childress said the quarter- Ohio State'$ most highly toutbody on our schedule 1t we star_t stnce the 19~5 , easo .
quarterback was the most back tandem deserved a pass- ed quarterback recruits ev~r.
In fact_ theHerd has not lost
play like we did. today."
obviotiS position where green ·ing grade.
an
O'Brien
Award
three
str.Hght d.unng any
.
Hill.
He fumbled the ball another
players were taking over.
canidate, was held to !52 . stretch . ol a season stnce
"Both quarterbacks did time and it tJ!,unced directly
Justin Zwick started · and well, to keep their cool to teammate Bam Childress.
yards through the ai.r with a 1990 · . · .
. w II·
completed 14 of 26 passes for through the good and the bad On the touchdown drive, he
touchdown and intercepMarshall_ dtd play
e.
213 yards, but threw two tittles," he said.
tion.
As
a
resu
lt
of
the
agamst
nattonal
powers
~n
threw a pass over the middle
interceptions and fumbled
sacks,
he
finished
with
neghostile
en·vtrornents
last
seaAfter a scoreless first quar- that went through the hands
four times. He was relieved ter in which Ohio State of two Cincinnati defenders
SOn, mcludtng a 27-20 Wtn
alive 43 rushing yards.
by fellow sophomore · Troy rushed for minus-! yard, the before Childress grabbed it
. "We're going to have to at No. 6 I&lt;;an~as State . It
Smith, who hit on. 2 of3 pass- Bearcats took a 3-0 lead after for 28 yards.
(ind a way to protect our was the team s ftrst-ever
es for 29 yards and, like Zwick was stripped of the
passer if we're going 10 do vtctory over a top 25 team
''You can't dwell on misZwick, threw a touchdown ball by Jainar Enzor. Kevin
anything at . all ,'' added tn the regular season.
pass.
.
Lovell eventually connected
Mar'shall coach Bobby
Ple•se see Herd. 86
Ple•se see OSU, 86
'The quarterbacks are sim'
BY RusTY MILLER
Associated Press

~~ '

.~

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Bl

The Daily Sentinel

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Weather forecast

.

Davis cuts first draft pick, Page B2
Browns' Suggs misses practice, Page B2
QB Couch released by Green Bay, Page 82
Davenport beats Venus at US Open, Page B6

TERRY KINNEY

NewsChannel.

east turning from the northeast as the afternoon proMorning (7 a.m.-Noor1 )
Cloudy
morning . gresses.
p.m.Eve11i11g
(7
Temperatures will ri se fro m
64 to ·76 by late thi s mon\- Midnight)
It sho uld be a cloudy
ing. Winds will be 5 MPH
from the eas t turning from evening. Temperatures ·will
the so utheast as the morn- linger at 74. Wind s will be 5
MPH from th e northeast
ing progresses.
turning from the east as the
Aftemoon (1-6 p.m.)
Expect a humid and evening progresses.
Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
afternoon~
cloudy
It should remain cloudy.
Temperatures will hold
steady around 78 with Temperatures will drop
today's high of 79 occurring from 72 to today 's low of 64
around 5:00pm. Winds will by 6:00am . Winds will be 5
be 5 MPH from the south- MPH from the northeast.

INSIDE

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•

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Tuesday, September 7, 2004

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www.mydailysentinel.com

www.mydallysentlnel.com

'The Daily Sentinel • Page 82

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\Davis cuts first draft pick
BY
•
•

TOM WITHERS

Associated Press
'

, CLEVELA:-.ID - Ttght
;end Darnell Sanders was
:released Sunday by the
.Cleveland Browns. the first
draft pick cut by Butch Davis
·since he became coach 111
:2001.
: Sanders, selected in the
:fourth round (No. 122 over- excepl!On was linebacker
:all) of the 2002 draft out of Jeremiah Pharm '. who wa'
.Ohio State, had 18 receptions drafted 111 .200 I but released
'for 118 yards and one touch- be.~au se ot drug charges.
down in two seasons
• '· This Is probc~bl y t.he mt?sl
: Among the other notable dtfltcult lime ot the year tor
:players let go as Davis ,Ill head coache s and certain:trimmed his roster to 53 were ly tor me. when you are
·defensive end Mark Word. forced to release players that
whose contract was termindt· have worked extrem~~y hard
ed
and w1de recetver the past ltve months. Davts
Frisman Jackson.
said in a stalemenl "Thts has
· The biggest surpnse may been. our mo't compet it ive
.
'be that the Browns kept four tn~!mng camp.
:runni ng backs, including disThe 1111p10vement m the
·gruntled James Jackson, a healttl of our footb?U team
thtrd- stnnger who recently from last year. our oft-season
asked to be traded
aC4UISit ions. 111 lree agency
But the best offer the and lhe draft, and the growth
Browns got for him was a and evolution of last years
late-round pick, and w1th Lee young Riayers mad!" for.~mne
:suggs currentl y nursmg a very dtlttcult dec1 stons ..
:neck "stinger'', Jackson g1ve$
The olher players waived
them some depth and msur- were: deten stve . lme'!lan
ance for the ume bemg.
Felipe Clayb10oks. !meBefore Sanders ' release, backe1 'S henod Coates,
Davis had kept 27 of28 play- ottenstve · _lmeman Lewts
ers he had picked since Dawson, w1de receiver C.J.
·replacing Chris Palme'r after Jones, oflenSive . lineman
:the 2000 season The lone Chuck Klabo. runmng back

spokesman. who hovered near
the s(cond-yeai' back's locker
during the brief inlerview session
Coach Butch Davis steered
clear of talking about Suggs,
who rushed for a team-high
118 yards on 15 cames and
scored three touchdowns durin~ the exhibition season.
'He's day to' day," Davis
said.
•
Based on h1s ~lay dunng
tmining camp and m t!Jn;e preseason games, Suggs appeared
to win the competitiOn With
W1lham Green to be the
Browns' No. l back.
Davis, who kept four running backs on' his 53-man roste?, has said he'll use some
two-back sets thts season.
Meanwhile, third-stringer
James Jackson, who last week

BY TOM WITHERS

Associated Press

BEREA - Browns running
back Lee Suggs d1d not practice Monpay. mising doubts
about hts availability for the
sea,on opener against the
Balumore Ravens.
Suggs. who sat out
Saturday's preseason finale
against the Chicago Bears wtth
a neck "stinger", had little to
say in the locker room follow,mg pmcllce.
" ft feels good," Suggs whispered.
Asked if he would play in
Sunday's opener, Suggs said,
''It's not up to me."
Suggs only nodded to a few
more questions before being
whisked away by a team

said he wanted out of
Cleveland, has changed his
tone .
"I'm happ~," Jackson saJd.
"I'm stmignt. '
•
Jackson said he and Davis
spoke Monday to clear up any
misunderstandings.
''I'm domg what's best for
my teammates," said Jackson,
who led the Browns m rushing
as a rookie in 200 l. ''Those
guys have been behind me."
Jackson said he expect~ to
spend the rest of the season
w1th the Browns, who entertamed some trade offers for the
28-year-old, but weren't willing to give him up for a lateround p1ck.
Jackson was asked if his still
bemg here had anything to do
w1th Suggs' inJury.
"I don't thmk so," he satd.

QB Couch cut by Packers
But the quarterback neyer
progressed, and the Packers
cut him Sunday as teams got
down to the 53-man roster
limit for the regular season.
"He just o/asn't productive
enough," Packers coach-general manager Mike Sherman
said. "We took a shot 111 hoping he could be the guy. I
don 't thmk it 's the first t1me
in the league that you were
wrong on somebody. It certainly won't be my last time

BY BARRY WILNER

Associated Press

Tim Couch's stay in Green
Bay was short and unproductive. ,
The t!p overall draft
chmce in the 1999 draft by
Ckveland, Couch was
released by the Browns in
June He joined the Packers
and was projected as Brett
Favre's backup.

BY

JOEL

ing that stretch
The Astros closed Within a
game of NL wtld-card leaders Ch1cago and San
Francisco. Houston. a season-high II games over .500
at 74-63, hasn't been within
stnkmg range of the Cubs
and Gmnts in more than three
months.
"They are not missmg anything at the plate," Reds manager Dave Miley said "If you
make a mistake, they h1t it
and they hit 1t hard."
Backe (3-2) virtually. shut
down the Reds after giving
up three hils and a run-scoring si ngle to D' Angelo
Jimenez in the first. He gave
up only four smgles from
there, finishing with a careerhigh eight strikeouts and a
walk.
But it was Backe's performance at the plate that was
the biggest surprise.
Backe went 2·for-2 with a
walk, including the two-run
shot m the fourth that gave
Houston a S- 1 lead.
" It was my b1 g dream to be
a hrtter m the major leagues,"
said B,acke, who was drafted
by Tampa Bay in 1998 as a
second baseman " I never
thought I'd be a pitcher My
hittmg skill s are sttll there. I

ANDERSON

Associated Press

---------HOUSTON - The crowd
WIIS on its feet, beckoning the
latest slugging surprise in the
Houston Astros' vaunted
:offense to re-emerge from the
dugout.
Already seated and oblivl,ous to the cheers, Brandon
·Backe didn't stir from hts
daze until his teammates
nudged him back outside.
: "I was JUSt excited thinking
about the home run ,'' smd the
26-year-old pitcher, who was
making only his fourth career
start. "I Wlls going to go
down and sit in my little hole,
but they told me to get out
'there."
Backe hit his first career
homer, a two-run shot, and
'allowed one run in seven
innings to keep the Astros in
the thick of the NL wild-card
chase with an 11-5 win over
the Cincinnati Reds on
-Monday- their season-high
' lOth straight victory
Jeff
Bagwell,
Lance
·Berkman and Jeff Kent also
homered for Houston, on its
longest win streak in five
years. The Astros have won
18 of 21 since Aug. !5, the
best record in the majors dur-

pracuce all the time behind
'
closed doors."
The crowd of 40,581 gave
Backe a standmg ovation· as
rounded the bases and didn't
stop the cheers until he came
out from the dugout to doff
his cap. It was the first homer
by an Astros pitcher since
Ron Yillone did tt agamst the
Reds on Aug 15, 2003
"I asked (manager Phil)
Garner. 'Did we just wm the
World Senes or what?'"
Berkman satd. "I didn't know
what was going on."
Said catcher Brad Ausmus :
"I JUst wanted to make sure
he didn' t get too full of htm·
self after that home run . I've
played for over I l years and
I've never had a curtain call."
Houston 's
powerful
offense did the rest.
The Astros, who've averaged nearly I0 runs a game
during Its win streak,
roughed up Reds starter
Aaron Harang for the second
ttme in six days.
Harang (8-8) allowed
seven runs on nine h1ts,
including four homers, in
four mnings for his fifth loss
in six decisions. Harang also
gave up four hdmers 111 an 80 loss to Houston last week.
"I was hstenmg to their TV

announcers and they said
somebody ~~ gmng to have t~
throw an absolute gem of a
game to stop them and get
them out of their rhythm,"
Harang said. "I agree And I
don't see that happening."
Bagwell connected in the
first to extend his season-best
httting streak to II games,
tying the game at 1-1.
Berkman and Kent led off the
fourth with back-to-back
homers before Backe's twoout, two-run shot.
Bagwell added an RBI
double in the fifth and Mike
Lamb followed with a runscoring single. Houston
added four more runs in the
sixth after Bagwell was hit
by a pitch with the bases
loaded, Kent walked and
Lamb hit a two-run single.
Cincmna!l's Adam Dunn
scored in the eighth on a
fieldtng error by Lamb. Juan
Castro's three-run homer in
the ninth cut the Reds' def1c1t
to 11-5. It was his fourth
homer of the season and tt
drove in Darren Bragg and
Ryan Freel, both of whom
walked.
The Astros have won six
straight against the Reds,
outsconng them 54-16 during that stretch.

Sadler wins race, eyes Nextel Cup next
BY MIKE HARRIS

Assocrated Press

FONTANA, Calif.
Elltoll Sadler has all but
secured a spot m NASCAR's
·new championship playoff.
Now, he's thinking about win'nihg it all.
·
"I think we can," Sadler
said Sunday night after racing
to a victory at California
Speedway. "We have four or
five cars in the shop just like
this. I can't wait to get them
on the track. We've mtght be
the sleeper."
Tile 29-year-old racer from
Emporia, Va., looked more
like a favorite in the Pop
Secret 500, wmmng for the
second, ttme this season and
third time in his career. He
.easily held off rookie Kasey
:Kahne and Mark Martin at the
·end of the 250-lap race with the help of a couple of
. late caution flags that slowed
the two challengers.
But Kahne, who · finished
:second for the fifth time this
season, .and Martin climbed
into the top 10 in the points
with only next Saturday
night's mce at Richmond, Va.,
remainirlg before NASCAR
pares the championship battle
to the top I 0 drivers for the
last 10 races of the season.
. Kahne is now ninth and
Martin IOth, nine points

"

NOTEBOOK

·

behind Jamte .McMurray finished fourth m the race and
moved into lith, 25 points
behind Martin
'
All Sadler has to do 1s start
the race at Richmond to
secure
hi s
place
in
NASCAR's new Chase for
the Nextel Cup.
"The cautions were definitely helping m~. but my car
was unbeltevable the last l 0
laps." sa1d Sadler, whose last
wm came early in the season
at Texas. "After we got the
checkered (flag), I told (team
owner) Raben Yates 'This is a
dream come true. This is the
reason I came to Robert Yates
~acing."'
.
Kahne said he was surprised
that Sadler came on so strong
at the end
"Elliott beat u~ both there at
the end," he said. "It was a lit·
tle surprising. I think both our
Dodge and Mark Manin were
a little better than .the 38
(Sadler) for most of the mce.
But he held h1s own and he
had the car to beat there at the
I

end "
Kahne nght behind. On the
Marlin did appear to have restart on lap 230, Sadler
the strongest car through drove high on the banking and
much of the race. But he raced to the lead. He stayed
couldn't seem to gel his car up there the rest of the way, holdto top speed for I 0 to 20 laps ing off Kahne and Martm on
after each of the II caution one last restart with l 0 laps to
flags in the race that began in go after a crash involving
99-degree heat of the late Earnhardt and Ken Schrader.
afternoon and ended in the The winner led a total of .59
cooler tem£fratures after dark laps.
under Cahforma Speedway's
Sadler said that crew chief
new lights.
Todd Parrott decided on a tire
"I hate it that all those cau- pressure change on his last pit
tions came out there at the stop, which didn't sit well
end," said Martin, a four-time with the driver at first. •
series runner-up. "That was
"I didn't agree with it. I told
our shot, but I'm thrilled to him, 'I don't think we should
death to run third here today do that,' and he did it. That's
and be a contender. If the cau- the reason he's the winningest
tions fell differently, we'd · active· crew chief in the
have had somethmg for garage. He got the car perfect
them."
.
for those last 12 laps and I
Both Bobby Labonte, who drove my heart out."
finished 21st. and Kevin
Jeff Gordon, who won the
Harvick. who was 29th, fell race here earlier this year; ran
out of the top I0, but still have over debris and damaged hi~
a shot at e;etting into the car early in the rae~. He
Chase at Richmond, along wound up 37th after his
with Dale Earnhardt Jr. and engine blew. Jimmie Johnson,
Jeremy Mayfield. Harvick fell his .teammate, finished I 4th
to 15th, 56 points out of IOth. but took over the series points
Martin, who led a race-high lead from Gordon, by 50
65 laps, took the lead from points.
Kahne on lap 217, but a spin
The points won't matter
by Earnhardt brought out a much after the Richmond
caution flag on the next trip race, though, with NASCAR
around the 2-mile oval and sei?arating the top 10 by fivebrought the leaders to pit road. potnt increments and starting
Rookie Brian Vicker&amp; took the final I0 races with .the
only two tires and grabbed the contenders only 45 points
lead, with Martin, Sadler and apart.

'.

BY TIM KORTE

Associated Press

29-12.
After a Symmes score,
freshman Ryan Chapman ran
a one-yard quarterback sneak
to pay-dirt. Southern tried
for the two-point extra but
failed at the 3:35 mark, the
score now 26-18.
Freshman
Butch
Marnhout led Southern rushing with an 8-24 night plus
over 100 multipurpose yards,
including the 75 yard TO
return . Sophomore Jesse
McKnight'was nellt with a 615 night.
All of Southern's passing
at 6- I I was handled by Derek
Teaford for a total of 55
yards. Ryan Chapman also
quarterbacked th~ Tornadoes
in th~ · latter portions of the

·•

t

..

ca~:;~::v (740)
'

Sentinel

&lt;?40)

446-2342

Or Fax To

446-3008

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

l\egt!iter

992-2156 (304) 675-1333-

Or Fax To (740) 992-2157

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

Otfftee llt~t&lt;F~

Oead'!f;,~

Word Ads

~ow you

Display Ads

Dally In-Column : 1:00 p . rrt.
Monday-Friday for In•ertlon

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

In Next Day•• Paper
s=•ru; n d••vay In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
,f" 101
For Sundaye Paper

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Sunday Dl•play: 1:00
Thursday for Sundays

.ttl.-)

Jm

* All ads must be prepaid'

•

1-0 with a one-out shot to
center 111 the second, and
Casey Blake followed With
another to make it 2-0. It
was the fifth time this season the Indlll'ns have hll
back-to-back homers.
The next batter, Ben
Broussard, hit a high pop
foul into the Cleveland
dugout. It bounced erratically on the steps and
smacked Sabathia in the
face as trainers rushed over
to help.
It certainly didn't affect
Sabathia's pitching. The
hard-throwing lefty kept his
count down - throwing 54
pitches
through
' five
innings, 117 total. He didn 't
throw ball three to any Iutter until the seventh.
Vizquel mllde It 4-0 in the
third, driving a 2-l pitch
from Meche just over the
fence in the nght corner.
Jody Gerut was on base
after a leadoff single to
right.
The only time the
mariners had a runner reach
third was on Suzuki's
sinlge. Willie Bloomquist
hit a broken-bat, two-out
double and took thlfd on
Suzuki's hit, but Randy
Winn hit into a forceout.

game.
'In the recelVlng department, Jake Nease led the
team wl!h a 5-43 night and
next was Chris Tucker at 112. No individual Symmes
Valley statistics were reported.
Southern hosts South
Gallia this coming Friday in
Racine .

Score by quarters:
Southern 15 7 7 7- 36
S. Valley 0 0' 6 12 -18

I

KIT

&amp; CARLYLE

It

lwrlQhi@IC.net
(1,.~

2nd house next to Me1gs Country!Aock band lookrng '
and Galha hne, old books lor rock QUitartSt, who also
NRA certif ied c,oncealed piS·
hkes to play Top 40 Country
tol classes, now formmg for
Call (740)379·9173 allor
Oh &amp; WV, please call
3pm
(740)992-9444,
1311

740·416- " - - - - - - - ·
-,
Absolute Top Dollar US
GIVEAWAY
Sliver and Gold Col~s
__
Proolsels Gold Rmgs, US
Currency,·M TS Coin Shop
3 female cats, spaded &amp; 151
Second
Avenue
shot 1 calico, 1 while 1 long G I • 1 74D-446 2842
haired (740)446·4479
I \11'111\\11 \I
'I I~\ I ( I ...,
3 female dogs (Border
~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Collle/Choc Lab m1x, 2/0iack
and 1 yellow, perfect for 4HELP WANTED
1
Hers, (740)992-3603

r

First Downs
Yards Rushing
Yards Passing
Total Yards
Passing
INT's thrown
Fumbles /lost
Penalties
Punts/Average

s

9

64

55

119
6-11
I
I- I
4-45
5-35

Esktmo Sprtz. med1um s1ze
An E)(cellent way to earn
dog, rnstde or outside very
money The New Avon
playful
lovable, · well
Call Manlvn 304·882· 2645
behaved, (740)742-2103
AVON• All Areas' To Buy or
Free Klnens (304)895·3215 Sell
Shirley Spears , 304
575_ 1429

'lou

CG~-tiN

38R, 28A, 5 129 acres . . .- - - - - - - .
Green Townshrp close to
school Pric ed to sell More
www.orvb.com
mfo (740)446·7377
Home Ll•tlngs.

1 ~!U:=D A 41ANr
CA'"l"Nt~ f't:t:'ZA ~

4br, 4bath
Hud Home
$8 900 Won't las II more
Homes ava tlabfel for ltshngs
BOO 366-9783 ex 1797

--------Due to our recent Agency
expans1on, Med1 Home
Health Agency, Inc •s seek·
lng both a full-ltme AN Case
Manager and a full-ltme AN
Patient Care Coordinator
position m the Galhpolis,
Ohro and surrounding area
Duties Include establtsh rng
and maintaining open ltnes
Of COmmuniCaltOn With area
physiclqns end health care

5 bedroom
11/2 bath
house for sale Pomeroy, 3/4
acre, 3/4 remodeled. 0%
down possible, payment
approx $425 00 month, no
land contract {740)206·
7080
By Owner US 35 •n Mason
County 5 Rooms &amp; Bath (2
Bed~ooms),
~arge
SunRoom 12x32
all new
Carpet, Full Basement 112
acre lot $41 900 (304)675·
2933

r

~AND

FOUNll

CLERICAL

AN

POSITION

Local Office "Previous offtce
requ ired
Found bag of clothes on Writ experrence
Rd near VInton (740)388· Working knowledge ol com pulers M1crosoft Word , typ·
9653
tng frtl1ng and ab1ltty to com·
pose letters pood commumcatiOn sk1lls a must Only
qualified persons need
apply Send resume along
wrth references to P 0 Bol(
311. Pomerov. Ohrc 45769

S.\SSY SCISSORS
Stvhst wanted, Salary/
COmmiSSIOn 740-441·1 aso
or 740·256·6336

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ............................................ 030
Antiques ....................................................... 530
Apartments lor Rent ......................... .......... 440
Auto Parle &amp; Accet~soriae .......................... 760
Auto Repair .................................................. 770
Autos lor Sate .......................... .................... 710
Boals &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Building Suppllea ........................................ 650
Business and Buildings ..., ......................... 340
Bualneaa Opportunlty ................................. 210
Bualneas Training ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanks .................:........................ 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Electricai/RefrigeraUon ............................... 840
Equipment tor Renl ..................................... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment. ......................................... 610
Farms for Renl...... ....................................... 430
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
For LeaH ........,:;;.,.... .................................. 490
For Sala ...........S!!:'....................................... 585
For Sate or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Yagetables ............................. ,....... 580
Furnlahed Rqgma ........: .................... ........... 450
General Haullng ............ ............ ........ .......... .850
Giveaway.... .................................................. 040
Happy Ada ............ ............................. ........... 050
Hay A Graln ..................................................640
Help Wanled .................................................110
Homelmprovemtnta .... ............................... BtO
Homes lor Sale ............................................ 310
HouHhold Gooda ....................................... StO
HOUHI for Rent ..........................................41 0
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
lnaurance ..................................................... 130

Lllwn &amp; G•rden Equlpn1ent ........................ 880
L.Jveetock......................................................830
Loot and Found ........................................... 060

Lola &amp; A-ge ............................................ 350
Mlacell-ua.............................................. 170
Mlacell-ua MarchendiH ....................... II40
Mobile HOIIMI Raptiir ................................. ,.HO
Mobile Homearor Rent ............................... 420
Mobile HOIIIM for Bale ................................ 320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles A 4 Whlllera.........: ................ 740

Mu•ICII lnatrumwwta. ................................... 570
Peraonlle ................................................. -... 001
Petalor Bele ................................................ 580
Plumbing
HHIIng .................................... 820
Prot.ulolllll Bervlcea ................................. 230
Radio, TV A Cl Rapalr............................... 180
Real Eetate Wantad ..................................... 580

a

8choolalnalructlon ..................................... 150
8ead, Plant a Forllll- .............................. 850

II

308
34
342
1-10
0
3-3
2-20
2-25

'

Ooocta ........................................... 620

auv·. tor a.1e .............................................. 120
tor Bele ............................................ 715
Upllollltii'Y ................................................... 870

Tl'ucu

V.na For

S.le ............................................... 730
W•nted 1o 8uy .........................:................... 080
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplleo ..................820
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Rent ............................................470
Yard Biola- O.lllpolla....................................072
Yard Bete-Pomeroy/Middle .........................07:4

Yard Slle-Pt. PleaHnt ................................ 071

Electronics Techn ician w1th
strong electronics, mechan·
ICS and computer netwot'kmg skrlls to work m research
facllrty located m Ashton ,
WV Person will assrs1 eng•·
neers
rn
expenmental
research of hrgh energy systams Salary commensurate
with e)(penence Please fax
resume to (304)576·3376
Forty Hours a weak·
Guaranteedll
$7-$8/hour, Proless1onal
work enwonment,
vacations every SIX
months. Full benefrls package after ntnety days•
II you're ready to start your
career Call today
1·877·463·6247 ext 2455

Auction and Flea Market.............................oao

tlf)ortlng

be licensed In b01h Ohio and
West V1rgrn1a We offer a
competrtive salary. benefrts

=...:..:;::.:.;__ _...:.___

Spaoe for Aent .............................................480

sv

Home Health serv•ces Must

package and 401 K E 0 E
Please send resume to 352
Second Avenue, Galhpolts,
OH 45631 Attn' 81lan King,

Bltuatlone Wantad ....................................... 120

Team Statistics

can have borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
&lt;:, ~
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

POUCtES· Ohio Valley Publlahlng renrvea1ha right to edit, reject, or c.ncelany •d at '"Y Ume. Errors mutt be reported on the firM day of
I
"»lbun.-Stntlnei·Reglater will be reaponelble tar no~ than the coat of the ap.ce occupi.ct by the .,-or and only the flratlnMrtlon. We ahall not be 1
~~ny loee or npen .. that reauh:a from the publication or oml•alon or an advartiHment Cor..-ctton wm be m_..ln the fire• available .clition • 9~:~"~:',.~~::=1
•• alwaya confldenlttl • Currant r'llte card appll... • All rul aatata advertiumenta art •ubj.CI to tht Federll Fair Houalng Acl ot 1981. • Thla
.cceptl only help
mHIIng EOe at.ndarde Wa will not knowingly accept any advartlelng In vlol•tkm ot lha taw.

-.

Subscrib,e today.
992-2155

from PageB1

m:ribune

To Place ·

Covnty. OH

,'

~------· lac1lrtres In the delrvery of

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS..

Southern

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

11'10

---~-

SEATTLE
C.C.
Sabathia threw a five-hitter
for his second career
shutout and Omar Vizquel
hit a two-run homer to lead
the Cleveland Ind1ans over
the Seattle Mariners 5-0
Monday night.
Travis Hafner, Casey
Blake and Matt Lawton
each added solo shots ·as the
lndtans snapped a fivegame losing streak and
handed the Mariners their
sixth straight los s.
Seattle's lchiro Suzuki
went 2-for-4, getting singles m the thtrd and ninth
innings to push h1s season
hits total to 226 - 31 short
of George Stsler's 1920
maJor league record of 257
hits. Suzuki has 25 games
remainmg.
Sabathm (ll-9) looked
strong all night, showing no
VISible side effects after
being hit in the face by a
foul ball while he sat in the
dugout in the second
mmng .
He struck out etght batters, and walked one. It was
Sabathia's fifth complete
game.
Seattle starter G1l Meche
(4-6) pitched seven innmgs,
collecting eight strikeouts
but giving up all three
homers. He allowed four
runs on four hits w1th no
walks.
Haf!Jet put Cleveland up

Co~Ub

and it wasn't my first time.
"It's unfortunate. I'm disappointed it didn' t work out.
I really thought with the
tapes I studied last year, I
really thou~ht it would work
out. It didn t."
Couch,
who got a
$625,000 roster bonus from
Green ' Bay when he signed,
completed just ll of 34 passes for 96 yards with no
touchdowns or interceptions
in three preseason games.

Astros extend winning
Indians blank
streak to 10,·beat Reds 11-5 Mariners, 5-0
, :

t!Cribune ;. Sentinel - l\egi~ter
CLASSIFIED

Browns' Suggs mi·sses practice

Nick Maddox . fullback
Corey Mcintyre. light' end
Ch.1d Mustard-, defensive
hnem,m John Nix, offensive
lineman Scot Osborne, offen-•
si1·e lineman Craig Osika.
linebacker Uyi Osunde , kickq Derek SchereJs. defensrve
lineman Cedric Scott. defensive back Ricky Sharpe, linebackcc Mason Unck and
de fen" ve backs Tim Wamley
dlld Roosevelt W1lliams.
The club also reached a
contract settlement With
oltens1ve
tackle
Scot
Oshorne aAd placed center
Jason Anderson on injuredA
reserve
The release of Jackson and
Jones means Richard Alston
made the final rost~r Alston,
an u ndrafted free agent from
East Carolina, caught touchdown passes in the final two
preseason games and has
been return111g kickoffs.
Word made two starts and
played 111 all 16 games for the
Bwwns last season. He had
four s,1cks and was one of the
lew defensive l111eman the
te&lt;~m could count on to pressure the quarterback'
However, Word became
expendable when the club
stgned tree agent Ebenezer
Ekuban 111 the offseason and
by the emergence of Corey
Jackson, who played 111 NFL
Europe.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Foster Parents needed· 1f
you have an extra bedroom
&amp; wish to help a child .you
can become a therapeutrc
foster parent for youths age
b1rlh thru 18 You wtll rece1ve
retmbursement of $33 to
$48 a day plus patd repent.
we are lookmg for homes
located m Athens Mergs,
Gallia &amp; Vmton Countres.

I

Trainrng begins September,
for more Information call
OASIS Therapeuhc Foster
Care Network toll fre~ ~325 1558
•
Help wanted' Darst Adult
Group Home, (740)9925023 Call for more mforma·
tion

an

Housekeeping/
Laundry
position, iull or part time
Arboro al Galllpclla
Attn. Linda Dennie
FP' 7~6·9086
K-2 CONSTRUCTION lo
seeking a tales person with
6 vears exPerience Send
resume to 86 Kelly Drive,
Galllpolla, OH 45631
°
Make 50% aelling Avon .
Umlted
time
ONLV
(7-40)446-3358 Flra151o call
receives 1 gift.

, MANAGER-IN-TFIAINING

HEALTH CARE SI!IIVICES
currently
haa
a
Ia undry/ho uaekeeplng
eupervlsor-in·trainlng posl·
non open Rotating schedule
wiU'I on-call duties required
Must posst"ss atrono auper·
v!110ry akl!la, be hardworking
and dependable BeneftiS
package available EOE
Send sppllcatJonlresume to
The Arbors at Gallipolis
170 Pmecrest On\le
Attn Linda Dennis

Fax· 7-40~·9088
Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's
naa~od . Apply a1 135-4
Jacklon Pike. Gallipolis

&lt;

I

B8 acres hunt1ng land on
Route 35 Henderson wv
$45,000 Day 740·645·1306
eventng 740-256-6574

Lrsl your home by ca lling
t7~0j.U8-3620

WANTED
ndivtdual looktng to bu
and or possrbly leas
XCIUSIVe hunting rtghtS I
roperty rn Me1gs County,
hro Prefer acreage 5
cres and larger II •nterest
d . please call (304)372
004

y1ew photos/mfo online
EW LISTING Secluded
Bedroom, 3 Bath W!th
eautrful River View
Located Close to town
ode 825 or call
(740)441 -0323
Bedroom 2 Bath Atver
rew/ Access, Prrvate
oat Dock 1n Galltpolts 1
ere lot Code 90303 or
all(740)446·0531
Bedroom Bnck Home, 2
ath 3 Car Bnck
nattached Garage 2
tory outburldtng Code
2104 or call (740)446·
566

Lots for sale rn Mercerville, 4
acres good bUtldtng srte
$17,500 (740)256·1825
Mobtle home lot lor rent at
Johnson s Mobr le Home
Park (740)446·2003
Prrme lot 5 wooded acres
on Buckeye Htlls Greal
homesite
$27 500 Call
74D-645·2950 or 740·388·
9649

Hl"li'
@2004 by NEA, Inc.

www.comlcs .com

I

All raal eatate advartlalng

"'"'~"_ _ _ _ _ _.,

111

0

HELP,.. ,~ .. ~....
'"""""'

•

l'llj501!l:"_"::'____...,

ScHooLs
INsmucnON

• •

Now Hlrrng - eJCperlence wall
staff for all shrt1s, please
apply m person Arverstde
Golfcourse, At1 , BoJC 35,
Mason

1• Fto

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
CattToday1740·446·4367,
1-800·214·0452
..wwgalllpollscareercollegecom
A.ccredrted

Memler

TECHNOLOGIST CT
POSITION
Seekmg ARAT regrstered
technologtst tor lull hme
poslllon Prlmar'ly lor CT
wtlh oppor1unlly to work m
MA l or Ultrasound , as well
Expen ence preferred, but
employer Will provide train·
1ng toward certrftcatron
Great opportun•ty working
with new equrpment rn a
hosprtBI·based radiology
department. Fnendly team·
o'rlented atmosphere that
suppo'rts
Independence
contrnued education, and

The

Alhens·Mergs
E~ucatlonal service Center
has a pos1tion opening for a
Certrf1ed
Occupational
Therapy Assistant (COTA)
This 20 hour position would
involve working with stu·
dents In Athena Countv
Public Schoola during 1ha
nine month achool year
under the aupervlalon of a
registered
occupational
theraplat The applicant
mutt have ml1 aU of the
requlrementa to acquire and
maintain a valid Ohio COTA
lk:enoe to prac1lce from the
Ohio OTIF'TIAT Board and
have applied for and
received
an
Aatoclate

I

UJIJ,~
B
·-

OPPoRn.JNrry

ABSOLUTE GOLOMINEI
60 vending machinell
excellent locations
all for $10,995
800-234-6982

Accr edltrng

I--------

r·7D

RADIOLOGY

~

I I \ \ \ ( I \I

- - - - - - - - Counoit lor lr&amp;pendent Coll&amp;gea
Part ttrpe bartender and/or ::
'"i;i
'~
"';:."""::':.:':.:
";::'""----,
gnll cook Must be able to
'M.IIH" .......... . . . .,....,.,........
work evenrngs &amp; weekends
ll'UM...~
Send reSume to PO Box
300, Gallipolis, OH 45G31
H1gh
School
Juntors,
Seniors and Pnor ServiCe

professronal development
Interested
candrdates ,
please rnqutre at {740)592·
9483 and send resume to
Radtology Assooates of
Athens
HHA needed part-time·. for
PO Bo)( 2608
1ntervrew call between 8am
Athens, OH 45701
and
4·3opm
M-Fn
Fax (740)592·9396
t740)9A9·2761
Hiring
P!T
stdes
for
N~,trstng
Community
Services I Health Care of
Southeast Ohro If Interested
ploaso call (304)n3·5086
or (740)6682·1222

Lars&amp;
ACREAGE

In thla newapapar 11
1ubject to.the Federal
Fair Hou•lng Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to
advertise ..any
pr.eference, limitation or
dlllcrlmlnatlon lialld on
rae•, color, religion, ux
ramlllelllletua or national
origin, or any lntantlon to
m~~ke eny 11uch
preference, llmltltlon or
dlecrlmlnadon "
Thl• new•papcw will not
knowingly accept
advertlaement• for IJIBI
eatllte which I• In
violation of the law Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwelling• advertiud In

Absolu te Goldmmel 60
ve ndmg mac h rna sJexce II enI
locations a II for $ 10.995
(800)2346982

you can fill vacant posurons
)!)
Of
rn the West Vrrgmta Army
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
Natrona! Guard II you are lNG CO recommends lha
b
h
f 17 35
h
thla newapaper are
etweon t e ages o
ou do bUSiness wit peo
available on an equ•l
or have prior m1htary serv·
le you know. and NOT 1
opportunity bane. •
iCe, you won't want to pass
end money through th
1hrs up For' 0 pportuntlres m
a11 untrl you have tnvest r
• Home For Sale
""... 675
aled the ofler•n
11
your are~. ca
.,JV"9.
•
::::::::::::::::~
Hand burltlog home 6 years
5837
---~---old Pnvate with 10 acres
WfiNTID 74 PEOPLE
MONEY
Stunnrng vtewt 3 Br 1 1/2
L~--IU·Lo·AN--,..1 bath Open loft 1
$CA~~ ~~V:~~iOSS
Financing available with
Cashl Cashl 3 K-350K any
NO DOWN PAYMENT!! I
For the Weight you Lose
(740)388 •0 164
purpose Good/Bad credit
rn 30 Days
1·800·306-1337
Call Tracy 740·44~·1962
,;ii;P~"""'=---., Homes from $10 0001.
(800)201-0832
PROI'I'SSIONAL
Forclosure, VA Hud for lrst
www tamousnutrrt10n com
SERVI~
rng 1·600·749-8 106 ex 1709

r

i

I

--

·

-:-c:-::-::.,..,...,==-:-:-=~
WORK FRO" HOME
Horne Basfld Bus1ness
Earn $20Q-$500 PIT
Earn 52 ,000 and up FfT
Paid Vacations, Bonuses
'
74o-441 •1984
888·540-8097

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wrnl
1-888-582·3345

r10

www workatcasa com

r.:llr'--::::-----,
11M
WANim

"---oi'l1iio.Doilil;,._.l

HOMii!S

co..
FOR ~..E

·

0% Down Payment even
wrth less than perfect credit
Easy qualifying Own don 1

rent
Local
company
23 Years elq:ierlence taking Mortgage Locators . 74
care of elderly In your home, 992•1324
contact Sharon (740}992· l'll:ll!IIIVIfllll'i'IIIEII!'iiiiiil

o.

9661

ll

poe

-------lble on 1hla 3 bedroom,
Compaulonata lady want•
ath, mOdern home on ~ .
to provide peraonal care, ' crea, newly refinrehed I
light cleaning and TLC tor
001 , central air, hiB
the elderly In their homel, in
ump, ba&amp;ement, convlent
the Gallla area EX&lt;:tiltnt 'I located 1.5 mllet o
reference• (7&lt;40)448·384"
ute &amp;0 &amp; only 5 mlnut
rom
Tupper~
Plelna
DRYWAll.
ppro•lmololy 1150.
lno1all, Flnloh Pllnllng.
onlhly paymonl. Cal
Carpententry Bathrooma,
hrls
or
Robbie
a
Aetldtntial , Commercial,
740 667·3041

~:;~~~~~;o~f ~~~c~~~~o

NOTHII~~u:;~MALL

F»ecflatrle experienCe Ia pre·
!erred, but not mandatory.
You must provide your own
transportatiOn for tnla poll·
tion (mileage rtlmbut'lement
is available) Salary will be
based on ,education and
expenence lnter•ted can·

Flat Prices
Steve-(740)388-8731

28edroom Home In Pt
Pleuant Flxer·upper owner
financing with •mall down
payment
(J04t)675·7773
Wanting to do houu clean· after 4.00
lng, have personal referencea If needed, would also 3 Bedroom 2 Bathroom•.
contlder althng w/slck -or Lg Family Am , 7 acres on
H•ll 1f2 mlle past Paule
elderly. (7&lt;40)992-~22
dldates should aubmlt a let· wm
an with etderlv. Exxon Prices In 76's
tar of inlentllt, resume, and day/night. waakdaylweek· (304)675-5501 or (304)67olto
John ends, can give reterencea, 1619
references
Costanzo, Superintendent, many veers experience,
3 blelroom, 2 baths, fire·
Athens·Melga Educational (740)S49·2543
place. On 4.3 acres. In the
Ser\lice
CenttfJ
507
Countrv
Scenic
view
RIChland Avenue, Suite
$75 ,000 Call (740)709·
*108 , Alhena. Oh 45701
1166.
Application
deadline
September 28, 2004 or until
position Ia filled
The
3 t&gt;eoroomo- 1 balh Ready
AMESC Ia an equal opportuto move In Nice level lot
Call (7-40)992-2272
nity employer/provider

·'

House 3 Bedroom 1 1/2
Bath Heat Pump, new
Carpet, Wrndows &amp; Roof,
A•ver V•ew 12 Smrth St No
Money Down to qualifying
Buyer $425/monlh why Rent
(304)675·2749
Ran ch style home 1 1/2
mtles from Ato Grande on
Cherry Ardge Ad Call
(740)245-5102.
:_...:._______
Re frnrshed 3BA 1 bath,
central air/heat , new carpet,
Bd1ornlng garage apanment,
2BA.
central
air/heat
(740)446·4336 leave mea·
.s.a;.:g::.•----.,.---,
,.

Get AJump
on
SAVtNGS

Bedroom. 2 1/2 Bath
lose to Holzer Hospttal
n Spnng Valley Code
t3 or call (740)446·

624

~,t.10_ _..~.~iiR!NII:SIII,.;I.r-,.JI·

Bedroom 1 1/2 Bath,
Full Basement
rddlepor t OH Code
11 or call {7 40)992·
43

0% Down Payment even
w•th less than pertect credrt
Easy qualifying Own don 1
rent
Local
company
Mortgage Locators 740992·7321

Bedroom, 3 Bath, Pool,
10 acres Brdwell, OH
ode 42104- or call
740)388-9839

1 bedroom lurn•shed house
In town Excellent location
No pets (749)446·1 162

r

MOBD.E HOMlll

bedroom house
1n
GallipOliS
$350/monlh
depostt reqUired (740)441, i84

FOR SALE

3 bedroom. wate r provrded
no pets $450 month $400
~ 985 ~ 4..:70 Wrndsor wtlh depoSI1 (740)245·5064
14x26 addition New carpet,

drst'lwasher, rnterror/eX1error
paint tob, storage bUIIdrng
$14,995 Sertaus rnq01res
call (304)593·3768 leave
message
-------19a6 Clayton 14x65 2 bed·
room Pnced to sell Call
(740)446-0368

3br rn Syracuse , Ohto No
Pets $500 00 a month Hud
Approved (304)675 5332

Hom8· 4 bdrm. 2 5 bath 2·
car gar Si ,000/mo plus sec
dep Bulavtlle Pike 8smt
Apt· 2 bdr m
bath
$600/mo plus $600 sec
.dep Bulav111e P1ke Both
1991 14x72 3br, 2 lull bath avarlable
1mmet:h1Aiy
Heat Pump w/AC Deck Includes all uhhttes except
Cathedral ce11mgs Pnce tras.h
References and
$1 1,500(304)882-3S82
employmenl•nfo necessary
Call (740 )446 _3644 for more
2000 Redman mobile home Info
3 br/2 ba central arr excel· ------~~
lent condi11on $23.000 740· Homes for rent 1 140 &amp;
367-7292 740·388-8662
1140- 1/2 Se~ond Ave ,
Gall•polls Great nerghbor·
For sate or rent· 2 bedroom hood For more rntormatlon
mobr le homes startmg at (740 )388- 9851
$270 per month. Call 740· :_.:.:..:,_ _:._ _ __
992·2167
Nrce 2BR home t mile from
- - - - - - - - Gallipolis, $450 per month
Make 2 payments, mo\le rn 4 $400 depos1t References
years on note (304)736· requ 1red (740)446·3413
3409 •

I

j

MOIIIl..EFORn~

I

New OakWOOd mega store
AU&lt;~ I
•
testurlng
Homes
by
g
,
Oakwood. Fleetwood &amp;
Giles One stop shoppmg 2 bedroom In Vrnton, $300
only at OakwOOd Homes of ' month plus deposit No pets
Barbouravllle wv (304)736· 740·446·6i89 or ?40-44 6·
3&lt;09.
_sa_6_5_ _ _ _ __
Next to new 2000 Aedman 2 bldroom, like new, central
16X80 , 3 badroom/2 ba1h air (740)446·2003
vinyl sidtngltingle root fully
loaded $21,900 00 Can
help with delivery Ask for
Nlk&lt;I (7-40)385-9948

2 BA, CJA, newly remodeled
$375
month
Includes
water/trash
P/U
$250
depoolt (7-40)387-7092

Aedueedi
1991
16x80
mobile home 3 BA. 2 BA, 1
yr old heat pump Must be
mo11od $12,&amp;10 (740)«6-

3BR, 2BA, 70xt4 , located
miles from Ga!Upolls Stale
Route 218 $500 month
(7~0)256 · 1417
(740)256 -

s

r

_29_23------------~~-8~~----~~
SAVE·SAVE-SAVE
St()d( modele ,at old prices,
2005 models arrtvlng Now,
Cole's
Mobile
Homes,
15286 U S. 50 East Athens,
Ohio 45701 , t740)592-1972,
-where You Get Your
Money's Worth• ,

LoTs&amp;:

iL,--oiA·&lt;liEA~;;;GE~_.j
Shop

Clossifieds!

1 acre of land with septic.
electric and water on
Shepherd lane. V mton
(740)388--831 B
112 acre lot on Tycoon LaKe.
County water, no septic, bor·

APAli1Moo's
FOR

Jb:Nr

-1 &amp; 2 bedroom apt 1tar1mg
at $290/month, deposit
required No- pete WO
hOOkup (7~0)441·1184
1 and 2 bedroom apartmenta rumlshed sr'ld unrur·
nlthed, aecuntv deposrt
requrred, no pets 740...9922218
-------1BR partially furnished , all
new, tuitabMI tor 1 person or
a couple , no pets. 7 '!?,lnutea
from town and Rio Granda
$575/monlh
all utilities
Included
740·245·19&amp;t

d..-. Elgie Road . Asking
$8,!00.00 (740)247-1100
7~~-

..

�Page 84 • The Paily Sentinel

"'

Tuesday, September 7r 2004

Tuesday, September 7, 2004
,
ALLEY OOP

SPACE

foR RENT

.www.mydailysentinel.com

l;.J U!A~

MILO IN
"-"K1£NT
IT.tJ..Y...

2BR apt. anached garage,
patio, IJEif'Y qulel neighbor·
hood . $450 per month, no
pets, reference + deposit
required. (740)446-2801

Empire comfort system , comp. and hc$se. Uke new.
vented visual flame room $75 . (140)446-2506.
heater wllogs, LP gas
1 \lnl" l 1'1'11 1 ..,
60,000 BTU call (304)675.\11\I"IIH!,
25 year old male, seeking an 1687
efficiency apt. close to Wal· P..i!toll'!!!''lll!!!!!!!~~l'!!!"• ;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
ISCOUn bJ e .
Mart, reasonable
rate .
Grand Opf3nlng Sale
~ .

0

~

663 3rd. A.ve. 2 BR untur·
nished. S3001month plus
deposit. (740)245·9595.

111111111111111

Apartment Available Now

~~-----Q--~

River Bend Place, New
Haven, WV now accepting
· applications tor HUD-subsi·

dized, 1 bedroOm apart·
ments. Utilities included Call
(304)882-3121 Apartment
available for qualified sen·

I

r10

....

..,

304-675-4689 or 304-675-5931
.

i•=-------....,

r

------- r~.,__ANI_,_QUI_~_ r·
__

~.,r

FuiiNlsHED.:Rooi.=:::IS_..,JI

Guesthouse tor rent- bed·
bath.
wlshowe r,
· room ,
microwave, refrigerator, air
conditioned, all utilities furnished, $90wkl$350 month ,
(740)992-4543

r ~~ lr

L---F-OR_S_ALE
_ __. 93 Dodge Stealtn, 92 Dodge

1998 Weber Horse Trailer

38' wlshowtime conversion.
3 horse trailer wlfull living
quarters. e:.:cellent condi·
Hon. $25,995.00 call Harold
(740)385· 7671

6:30

'

~

l'v

ru

Driveways • Tennis .Courts
• Parking Lots t Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets
t

-------Red/white 1985 S-10 Blazer,
2wd, good condition, no Lw-iilMiiPIIiiiiOiiiVEMENTSiilii-iirii-'
rust, after market wheels,' ....,
low rider, (740)992-4555
BASEMENT
4x4
WATERPROOFING
FOR SALE · Unconditional lifetime guar·
·--rirriliiirriiitiiiiiiro-'· antee. Local references furnished. Established 1975. .
)
1997 Ford F-150 4K4 Lariat, Call
Hrs. (
_
24
740 446
114K, black, leathe r interior,
/d I
$9 200 080 0870, Rogers Basement
c
P ayar,
'
• Waterproofing. ·
(740)992-2932

Oealer: West
Vulnerable : North-South
South

1

For
sale
1998 Jeep
Wrangler 4x4,·29,000 miles,
AJC, cruise, automatic'.
$10,000. Call (740)388·
9125.

VANS

FORSW!
98 Chevy van, raised root,
wheel chair lift, 48,000.
miles $15.000.00 (740)742·
8612

A ''MAGN~T

$Ct400L"? ·-·
WON'T 'TtiAT

in Ohio and WV

M~SS UP

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

Tt4~

(.OMPUn~s-1
.
.

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

"1-7

BARNEY.
OH, BOY, URIAH
WE GITTO ADD
ANOTHER

1t

DO

!•

•'

ONE~!!~?J:~~N

(304) 273-5321

-'

r

Jinnette's
J£ouse Ckaning Service

r

8oA.TS &amp;

Marolt'S

THE BORN LOSER
....
,-I'/&lt;\ GLI¢ SC.f\OOL ..,------, ,.,..Tf\EY ~.lA() &amp;.ffi RU!-INING '&amp;o::
\OSC!l.OO\...sN..£'COWo\ERC.I~

1-\,.,_S STt-,~TE:t&gt; ..

Gallia &amp; Athen~rCo.

F~:'&gt;O (..()t-.1(,,

11 w~
pg,i'JI~I'\E..CRJI.-7.Y 1

1-740-843-5382

Mowers. Chain Saws.

Roi ~Air Air Compressors

33795 Hiland Rd.

740-992-5232

spouse• ar.-.: aaslgna
and the unknown
guardians of minor
and/or Incompetent
hairs of Irene Weill,
all of whose realdances are unknown
and cannot be rea·
sonable diligence be
ascertained, will take
notice that on the
17th day , of J~ne,
2004, Aegis Mortgage
Corporation
d/b/a
UCLending flied lla
Complaint In the
Common Pleaa .Court
of Melga . County,
Ohio In Caae No.
04CV074, on
the
docket of the Court,
and the objKt and
demand for · rallel of
which pleading 11 to
lorec:IOH the lien of •fnlhU
3M*
plalntlff'o mortgage
recorded upon the
following ' deecrlbld
real esteto to wit:
· Property Addraae:
IS. I
185 Mulberry Avenue,
Pomeroy, OH4578t
( 0/l .... tllll llll ll
and being more par"-1/ Sldl~ll
Ucularty daocrtbld In
Replsu•n~ Wlllllow.r
plelntlff'o mortgage
Roo• Addlllou
recorded In Mortgage
Book 104, page 713,
IHcb
of
thlo
County
Blown lltJulation
Recorder'l Office.
Pole Bulldi"l'
All of the above
Gonrlf&lt;t
named clefandanta
are
racjulred
to J..,_ K.- II, O..O.r
an•- wHhln - t y 740-992-1772
elght (281 clays attar
740-742-1332
laet
publication,
740-41'-1570
which lhell be publlllhed once a - k
lor alx conHCUtlve
Barnhart
· or !hey m19M
be denied • hMrtng
Builders
In thla caM.
30 y0ars experlcoco
AI u.ddlx
. •f'!lew HOlDa
Lern•r, Sampson &amp; • 1 _ Homa

F003

12

tHs,

executors,

adm.lnlstrelors,

:: Sf•.IIFF;:

BISSEll

Hill's Self _
Storage
BUILDERS InC.
29670 Basban Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217 '

'}10'
OJ 10'x30' .

*HME
UIIITEJIIIICE
•SUMUII
111111

PEANUTS

• J{eplacement
·windows • Roofing

Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

740-992-7599

PSST. FRANKLIN! 1 NEED .
TO 60RROW A PENCIL
AND SOME PAPER ...

'(OU 1-lAD ALL SlJMMER
TO !!UV THOSE TI-IIN65 ...
WH'f' ARE VOU JUST TI-IINKIN6
ASOUT TIIEM NOW?

TIRED m: PLA'f'ING
CENTER FIELD 0111 OU~
TEAM,I-lUH. ~RANKLIN?

Dean HID
New&amp; Used ·

BETTY

475 South Church St.
Ripley. WV 25271

1-800-822-0417
·w.v-s #I

I KEPT

Chery, Pontiac, Buick, Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

11-IINKit.JG

. AeoJf

SAYIWG''NO"

941-1415

Rothf\111

AH~IIor Plalntlff

....,.

• Post Fnmo

P.O: Bo• ~

oComplttt·Aemod&lt;Urig

Cincinnati, Oh 45201~
5480
(513) 241-3100
attyemaiiOiarlaw.co

•Replaa:merit WindoM-s
•Rodrs
,
C0111111&lt;n:ial and
R&lt;Sidentlal

m 7, 14, 21, 28, (10) 5,
(t)

Free Estimates
740-667-6080

..

Garr

40

of"Mr.Mom"
41 Character, lstics
. 44 Struck

Astro.Graph
qoo.. 'lllrthdliY:

you to lulfill a long·Standing ambition ,
Interestingly. you'll get help by riding th e
coattails of those you take With you In
achieving your quest
VIRGO (Aug. 23~Sept. 22) --:- AhhOugh
you're interested in furthering your own
ambitious interests . to your credit you'll
ta ke some time out to boost someone
else's who is faltering. No wonder y~ur ·
popularity is soaring.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- When dealing
with othe rs today use gentle, protective
meas ures to influence th~ir behavior
1nstead ol forceful directives. Kind words
strengthen your ability to do so, harsh
words sever it.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -The same
condition s thai had worked against you
yesterday could now turn about and function lo your benefit. Vou should now be
able to move forward and change losses '
1nto ga1ns
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23·Dec 21) Harmony w1111o110w in your footsteps today
because you'll instinctively know how to
put all persons you encounter at ease.
Benefits and good memories will be your
reward.

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL

*••n•

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Pomeroy, Ohio

NOTICE
OF THE
DLING.
FINAL ACnON. PUR· JAVMAIIINC
P~blic Notice
SUANT TO OHIO
SR 124
REVISED CODE SEC•
REEDSVILLE OH .Public Sale
Notice Ia hereby
TION
3745.07,
A
ISSUE
DATE
given
that
on
FINAL ACnON ISSU- 0810912004
September
·
25,
2004
ING, DENYING, MODI- APPLICAnON NO(S)
at 10:00 am a public
FYING, REVOKING, 0653000057 F004
sa~ will be hold for
OR RENEWING A
AGGREGATE PRO·
the purpose of satlsPERMIT,
LICENSE,
CESSING.
tylng e landlord's lien
OR
VARIANCE ,&amp;n
on the contents of
WHICti IS NOT PRE·
setf·sar,vlce storage
CEDED BY A PROrooma.
The goods to
POSED ACnON, MAY
Public Notice
be eold ara described
BE APPEALED TO
generally as houaeTHE EIIAC BY FILING
Pul!llc Sole
hold. The room• ,will
AN APPEAL WITHIN Nollce Ia hereby
be opened for view·
30
DAYS
OF given
lhlll
on
lng
Immediately prior
ISSUANCE OF THE September 25, 2004
FINAL ACTION. ERAC at 10:00 1111 a public to eollcllellon of bids.
Oescrlpllon ol propAPPEALS MUST BE sale will be held for
erty
u
follows:
FILED WITH: ENVI- the purpoae of aatl• .
VHSI1pe1, rumlture,
RONMENTAL lying a lllldlord's lien
bago
of
REVIEW APPEALS on the contents ol eaverel
clothea,
¥&lt;OOden
COMMISSION,
309 aolf-aervlce etorage
SOUTH
FOURTH
rooma. The goode to tebleo, other misc.
STliEET, ROOM 222,
be oold ara deocrlbld hOUHhOid lllml.
BayHii
COLUMBUS, OHIO generally se houllNar111: Deena Voyl•
43215. A COPY OF hold. The rooma will
Addraee: 1110 Wikle
THE APPEAL MUST be opeMCI !oF
Drive,
Waverly, Ohio
BE SERVED ON THE lng lmmtdlllely prior
DIRECTOR WITHIN 3 to eollcltllllon of bldl. 4setO
DAYS AFTER FILING
Deocrlptlon of prop- Tenne of the sale will
be cuh or certified
THE APPEAL WITH tl'ly as foiiOWII:
THE ERAC.
Jewalry Bo•, eeveral fund.
FINAL ISSUANCE Of' eulte
and
dreu. Hlll'a Sill Storage
AIR
PERMIT TO ahlt11, tool bo•, com- (B) 31, (I) 7,14
OPERATE
put•r component.,
JAYIIAR INC
wooden ahoeehlne
Public Notice
kit,
ehoe
molde,
SR 124 REEDSVILLE
OH
IBSUEDATE camping gear,..OIII09J2004
baga of cl~. uni- COURT .OF COMMON
PLEAS MEIGS COUN·
APPUCAnON NO(S) form overalls, mloc.
TV,
OHIO
_ , perta, cuff llnlla,
Olltl3000087 FOOl
Aeglo
Mortgage
ROADWAYS
~ND
many mlec. toole,
Corporation
d/b/a
ehoea, llrat aide. ldt,
PARKING.
UCI.endlng
cookw.,., VHBIIopee,
JAYMAR INC
PlalnUII
SR 124 '
pitcher, power etrtpa,
VI
.
REEDSVILLE flahlrtg gear. ·
!Nne
Willi,
II al
ISSUE
DATE Bayl41
Delerldantl
OIII09J2004
~-: Denial Fink
31004 C... No.: 04CV074
APPLICATION Addreoe:
Judge: Fred
NO{SI
0153000057 Nicholl Road
Nolle• In Suit for
Middleport,
OhiO
F002
Foreclosure
of
STORAGE PILES.
45780
Mortgige
.
Tenne of the Nle will
JAYMAR INC
.,.... w.tll, who•
811124
be Cllh. or -Hillel
IIIII
known l!ddrau Is
REEDSVILLE OH
fund.
185
Mulberry
DATE Hille' Sill Storage
c Pomltoy, OHA-.nue,
ISSUE
487811,
OIII09J2004
(8131' (9) 7, 14
and
1118
unknown
APPLICATION
· llllra,davl_,...,.
,NO(S)
01!53000057

w. c,_

l:t·s•tFF'. :.•
Athens

~:sNIFF~..'-

-1t-~~
High&amp; Dry

+7

Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2004
By Bernice Bade Osol
Channel s could open up for you in the
year ahead that would make it possible for

Generating Systems and

:iililoliiiiii:O._.J

mw-

•

BIG NATE

Chain Sharpened
&amp; Parts
New Ge;Jeral Standby

I

Pass

a match

42 Bled,.
as a color
43 Mole,
sornetlmee
45 Sighs
46 Dark gray
47 Erie I oelgl\bot
50 Spooky
52 Kitten's

comments
53 Lhasa56 Husband
ot Fatima
1
5e Gulfol.
59 Part ol mph
60 Cookbook

amt.

This deal occ~,~rre.d juring the decisive
match between Italy and the Umted
States at the 1958 Bermuda Bowl in
Como. ltal~.
As I described yesterday, at the first
table , the U.S. West conceded 700 points
in five clubs doubled
In lhe ·Other room. Guglielmo Siniscalco
(West for Italy) opened with an atypical
weak two-bid in diamonds. Alter B.J .
Becker (North) passed. Pietro Forquet
(East) asked for more inlormalion with
two no -trump . The il, Johnny Crawford
(South) weirdly overcalled three hearts.
(Presumably North-South hadn't discussed that a three-d iamond cue-bid
would show both majors. Note that four
spades is unbeatable: but perhaps East
would have gone to five diamonds, which
can be made,) When North raised to four
hearts. East doubled.
East won trick one with the diamond ace
and shi"!\ed to the club ki ng. Crawford
won in the dummy, cashed the heart jack
to learn the bad news, then .continued
with the spade king to swallow West's
queen. After taking his spade ace, East
by LuIs
leid the club 10, South trumping. Now.
( Colobo"v Clol&gt;" Cl)'ptogramt ilrlt craaled from quotaOOns t7y laroo~slltiOIM , past and prnent
Ead11ett&amp;r in the ciphef staods for aro~
though, deClarer had to finish one ddwn.
Today's clue: Et~quals B
·
When he eventually ruffed a spade with
dummy's heart six, East overruffed and
"BG'D
XNG
GMZ
MOXA
GMOG
plaYed the diamond queen to tap South.
•
This gave Italy another 200 points and
DBCXD
GMZ
T0\'0
GMOG
MNTAD
seven international match points (old
scale) en route to victory by 211-174.
GMZ
AZDGBXP
NH
OWZYBKO.
Crawford did well to lead the spade king,
bul he had misplayed a trick earlier. If he
BG'D
GMZ
MOXA
GMOG
KODGD
had led the heart six to his ace and driven put East's spade ace, declarer could .
have trumped the club ,0, cashed two
GMZ
EOTTNG ."
M.D .
GYSWOX
spades, and crossruHed home.

Warranty Repair •
Lawn Tmctor &amp; Push

1.997 AM 125. Runs good.
$1,000 tlrm. (740)645-0873.

28
31
33
34
38
39

Guard oH.
65 Big carnival 10 Mead's
city
Island
66 Tombstone· 14 Fasttlme
deputy
19 "Silent"
·
President
DOWN
21 Fair-hiring
letters
1 Sitcom allen 22 Oul
2 Pat*l'a aunt ,
·of control
3 Columbus
23 Rome's
sch.
llddler
4 Adage
24 Foot part
5 Singer
25 Ideal place
- Ballard
29 Neat
6 Zll!lfeld
parson
30 Can. region
nickname
32 Elev.
7 Moat
unwieldy .
35 Backing
36 Bearded
8 Quiet lime
9 Chandelier
Rower
pendant
37 Tube pasta

campos

No Job to Big or Small
• Serving: Mei gs, Mason,

Open 8:30-6:00 M-F; ·
Sal. 8:30-l:OO 99l-I 033

2NT
Dbi

moorages

CELEBRITY CIPHER

820 East Main S1.
Pomeroy
beside Larry 's Fruit Stand

1997 CR 80. E(luipped tor
racing. Very last. $1.200
firm. (740)645.0873

East

Pass

The second
imaginative effort

!'enr '• Drgfaa

19B6 Hond a V45 e~~:ce llenr
condition, 13,000. miles. 2
new helmets, $2,;;00.00
tirm . (740)992·8154

North

Opening lead :

1

/

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

West

Pass

740-843-5264

:~~~~~~~~

2. ••
Pti.SIS

·HOME

I

IJE

25
26
27

gun

64 Coasl

pronoun
Green fruH
Hard water?
Wrestling
hold
Feminine
principle
Hula strings
Tataml
Rest room
sign
Skin soo1lrer
Killer whale
Fish eggs
Cracketjack
Eye ahadow
Family MDI

22

+ 6K .

· Box 189 • Middleport

1990 Regal Commodor8l
2004 Dodge VS, auto: quad boat. Stove , refrigerator,
cab, bed cover. 5,000 miles, bathroom, sleeps 5 comfort·
red/gtay. 740·256·1417 or ably. Call (740)446·4676.
740·256·6228.
" I In It I ...,
"

"' K 10

•

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

t

·
11
18
20

. J l0!:1652
.AKQ8 2

Rocky Hupp Insurance
..and Financiai . Servictl!s~ ,'

Vc:.ur .R.laht. t.o Kno_.. Dellve.-...,d Rlaht: .,., Vuur Door.

HAN·

on deck

57 Enthralled
61 Stash the
luggage
62 Loop trains
63 Seine

16 Common

+

"'QJ 9875
South

Call: ·

P u b l i c NoUc.eN In Ne-spnpers.

MATERIAL

Compilation ..,:.,...;;,.;
7-Up rlv•l
Gr!lduatee
Roeponaa

ray

12 Each and
every
13 Mountains
orrlver
15 -pas

East
• A 7 3
• 97543
A Q 8

+9 76542

For a Free Quote or Appointment

Daytona (needs transmisroR SALE
•
Air conditionerfheater hotel sion) (740)441~0797 after ..__ _
size wall unit, 5200 ; OeU•e 6pm.
12 foot Fiberglass fishing
meat slicer, $200; 4 x8 irBil"er,
boat, trailer, electric and 6
·$,-50; tools hand/electric. All Cars 1rom $500 Pollee HP Trolling motors, more.
ltomsOBO (740 )387 _0868 , Impounds For listings call (740)446-9791
1·801J.749·8104 EXT 3901

,

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

11.

A 4 3 2

·-

171-24&amp;7 ·

I

•
•

West
• Q

Simps·o n

09·07.(14

K 8 4
J 10 6
J 10 3

•

•we can insure your valuables!.

Bayliner
1964
WICuddy
Cabin
(304)675-8056
after 6pm
_......:.__ _,...-_ _

r10

•

Henderson, WV

IF YOU RENT

·Seff-Storage
PUBLIC NOTICE
RENEWAL OF A PEATHE FOLLOWING MIT, LICENSE, .011
.tPPLICATIONS VARIANCE. )NIIITTEN
AND/OR
VERIFIED COMMENTS
AND
COMPLAINTS WERE
REQUESTS FOR A
R_ECEIVED, AND THE
PUBLIC
MEETING
FOLLOWING DRAFT, REGARDING A PROPROPOSED,
OR
POSED ACTION MAY
ACTIONS
FINAL '
BE
SUBMITTED
WERE ISSUED, BY WITHIN 30 DAYS OF
THE OHIO ENVIRON· NOTICE OF THE PliOPOSED ACnON. AN
MENTAL PROTEC·
TION
AGENCY
ADJUDICATION
(OEPA) LAST WEEK. HEARING MAY BE
"ACTIONS" INCLUDE HELD ON A PROPOSED ACTION IF A
THE
ADOPTION,
MODIFICATION, OR HEARING REQUEST
REPEAL OF ORDERS 011 OBJECTION IS
(OTHER THAN EMER· RECEIVED BY THE
GENCY
ORDERS);
OEPA WITHIN 30
THE
ISSUANCE, DAYS OF ISSUANCE
DENIAL, MODIFICA· OF THE PROPOSED
TION OR REVOCA· ACTION. WRITTEN
TION OF LICENSES, COMMENTS,
PERMITS, LEASES, REQUESTS
FOil
VARIANCES,
OR PUBLIC MEETINGS,
CERTIFICATES; AND AND ADJUDICAnDN
' THE APPROVAL OR H E A R I N G
DISAPPROVAL
OF REQUESTS MUST BE
PLANS AND SPECIFI- SENT TO: HEARING
CATION!. "DRAFT CLERK, OHIO ENVI·
ACTIONS" ARE WRIT· RONMENTAL PRO·
TEN STATEMENTS TECTION AGENCY,
OF THE DIRECTOR
P.O. · BOX
1048,
OF ENVIRONMENTAL ·COLUMBUS,
OHIO
PROTECTION'S 432111048
(TILE·
(DIRECTOR'S) PHONE:
614-844.INTI!NT
WITH
2121).
"FINAL
REIPECT TO THE ACTIONS:"
ARE
ISSUANCE, DENIAL, ACTIONS OF THE
ETC. OF A. PERMIT, DIRECTOR
WHICH
LICENSE,
ORDER, ARE
EFFECTIVE
ETC. INTERESTED UPON ISSUANCE OR
P!RIONS MAY SUB- · A STATED EFFEC·
MIT WllmEN COM- TIVE DATE. PURMINTS OR IIEQUEST SUANT TO OHIO
A PUBLIC MEmNQ REVISED CODE SEC·
REGARDING DRAFT TION
3745.04,
A
ACTIONS.
COM· FINAL ACTION MAY
MINTS OR PUBLIC BE APPEALED TO
MHTING REQUEsTS THE ENVIRONMENREVIEW
.MUST BE SUBMIT· · TAL
!TID WITHIN 311 DAYS APPEALS COMMISOF NOTICE OF THE SION (ERAC) (FOil·
DRAFT
ACTION.
MERLY KNOWN AS
•PROPOBED THE ENVIRONMENArenoN8" ARE WRIT· TAL
BOARD
OF
TEN
STATEMENTS REVIEW) BY A PEAOF THE OIAECTOII'S SON WHO WAS A
INTINT
WITH PARTY TO A PRORIIPECT TO THE CEEDING BEFORE
. JSBUAHCE, DENIAL,
THE DIRECTOR BY
MODIFICATION, FILING AN APPEAL
REVOCAnON,
OR
wmtiN 30 DAYS OF

MYERS PAVING

'Liceno&lt;ed
2001 F-150 Super Crew
Lariat 4x4. 53,000 miles.
excellent condition, loaded.
$21,000. (740i388.0151 . or
(740)339.0564.

North

What would you lose, if there was a fire

&amp;S•LEOlORS
M
BoA'!!R

J!IKUS~r

or

Last Thursday
every month
. All pack $5.00.
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Gel
SFREE

Syracuse
Church ot the Nazarene
Diamond Anniversary
Celebration
Satur~ay, Sept 11 , 2004
12-6
Into: 992-2514
· Everyone Welcorpe!
Bring a chair &amp; plan to spend
lhe day! Special speaker- .
Rev. Robert StewartSunday AM Service

I ...,..,...-..,.-----,
~~15
Ii

aoo-

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

Point Pleasant Middle School gym
October 2, 2004 10 am- 6 pm
for more info call

lw-------,1

Dinin!J room set. solid oak,
do~ble pedes tal, claw feet, 6 Klafsun Saturn Tanning Bed '
Applications being taken for cha•rs,
h.ghted
hutch 24 bulb 30 min. Timer Cal! Boer
Male
Goats
very clean 1 bedroom 1n (740)441..()797.
(304)675·4&amp;,58 Evening or Championship bloodlines,
country setting yet close to
(304)675·1380 Day~
all ages. all full blooded. regtown . Washer, dryer, stove, Good UsEid App lia nces,
.
!sterad with ABGA. Adults
fridge Included. Water and Recon9itioned
and NEW AND USED STEEL proven. (740)245·0485.
Wa~"h ers, Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar - - - - - - - - ga rbage Included. Total elec- G uaran Ie ed ·
.. For
Concrete,
Ahgle , f.Jygmy goat. 6 mos . old.
D
R
trlc with AC . Tenant pay alecrye_rs,
anges,
anu
Channel,
Flat
Bar,
Steel Wetherecl . Would make a
R
t
e ngera Iors. Some sI arI aI
tric. $300 deposit, $375 per
For
Drains, ~ood pot. $60. (740i645month. No · pets. No smok· . $~5. Skaggs App11a0ces, 76 Grating
ing. 740· 44 6-2205 or 740- .V1ne St. , (740)446·7398
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L 0873.
.
Scrap ~etals Open Monday,
416-9585 as·k for Virginia .
Mollohan Carpet, 202 ClarK Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Chapel Road. Porter, Ohio. Fr'da aa 4 30p Cl
d
BEAUTIFUL
APART- (740)446·7444 1·877-830- T~ rsyd. a m- :S 1 ~ ose&amp; ~10
Allltli
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
u
y,
a
uruay
~---iiiiiiiiiiiiliii--'
PRICES AT JACKSON 9162. Free Estimates, Easy Sunday. (740)446-7300
t'OR SALE
.
financing , 90 days same as
ESTATES, 52 Westwood cash. Visa! Master Card. TV's trom $10!, oVo.
Drive !rom $344 to $442.
Players,
v,·doo-Games, $5001 Police · Impounds!
Ori\le· a- little save slot.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
Computers, Ect! now avail- CarsfTrucltsi SUV's
from
74Q-446-2568.
Equal ' Refrigerator. good condition able tor intO can
366• $500 Honda's, Chavys,
$75; Cigler fuel all stove and 9850 ex MSSS
Jeeps &amp; morel for· listings
Housing Opportunity.
275 gallon tank with aprox. ::..:..:..;:::..::=:::....____ aoo-366-9B13 eK V717
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· so gallons of fuel $200, will Wedding gown, beaded -~-----­
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
sell
separately.
Call front, lang sleeves &amp; long 1993 Toyota Camry LX 4
Townhouse
apartments. (740)441·9064 after 7pm.
trail. Size 6·8 . Been sealed door, auto, 4 cyl, PW, POL,
and/or small houses FOR
.
.
.. .
and preserved. (740)446- sunroof, high miles, greet
RENT, Call {7.40)441-1111 T.~. s S40 each; couch $75 4028.
running car, many new parts
for application &amp; information. each; table &amp; 4 chairs $75: ·
_$1.495. (740)441·1971 M·F
Li~e new Maytag stack
Buru:&gt;ING
days,
(740)44 1·0816
1 evenings and weekends.
,
. FOR LEA~E
·• wash8fll(tryer set $500; Like
SI.IPPLmi
Beautiful unfurn1shed two new Frigidaire stack wash· L~---!iiiiriiliitil-~
bedroom apartment. Living er/dryer $425: wooden hutch Block, brick, sewer pipes, 1998
Toyota
Avalon.
room overlooks city park $60; hanging Planters $5 windows, lintels. etc. Claude Leather, air, power seats &amp;
and Ohio River. Spacious each; full bed $125; Queen Winters·, Rio Grande, OH moon roof. 8o,OOO miles.
kitchen·dinette, 1 1/2 bath. bad $550.
Call74o-24 5-5121.
Call (740)446-4676.
References and security
.Skaggs Appliance
deposit required . $600 per
76 Vine Street
PE.is
2000 Neon $3,895; 199B
month. No pets. Call 740·
(740)446-7398
FOR SALE
Sunfire GT $3,795; 1999
446·4425 or 74Q-446-2325.
Alero $3,795. Others in
ThOmpsons Appliance &amp;
lock 3 months 3 000 milo
.
, ,
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed· Repair-675-7388 . For sale, AKC Registered Basset s
Hound puppies, Tri-colo~ec:t warranties.
room apartments at Village re-conditioned automatic
· Cook Motors
Parents
on
premises.
Manor
and
Riverside washers &amp; dryers, refrigera- (
328 Jackson Pike
740 }256 _6887 .
Apartments in Middleport. tors. gas and alectric
(740)446-0103
From $295-$444. Call 740· ranges, air conditioners, and AKC
Registered Labs.
992·5064. Equal Housing wringer washers. Will do E~~:cellent bloOOiines &amp; certi- 2002 Dodge Neon SXT.
Opportunities.
repairs on major brands In flcatlons. 1 blond female, 2 29,000 miles Automatic,
~hop or at your home.
black males, 3 blond males. $9,500 (304)882-~507
New 1 bedroom apt. Phone
Used Furniture Store 130 Roady Sept. 11 . Call
(740)446·3736
89 'Geo Metro, 4dr, new
Bulaville Pike, dressers, (740)44Hl013.
tires, 3cyt. body good.
Nice two bedroom apart· couches, manresses. reclin- Chocolate Lab pups AKC.
(304)675·5151
ments Large rooms Fully ers, grave monuments, Born 7115 , 04 . Dewclaws
eq uiped kitchen Central muc•11 more (740)"6 4782
•
•
removed, wormed &amp; first 89 Taurus S,H,O., 5 sp.,
heat Ing J coo I in g Gallipolis, Ohio Hrs. 11-3 shots. (74 0)44 1-0643 after needs little work, body in
Washer/dryer
hookup (M ·F) .
5
(304)882·2523
;,;,;;,;.;..._ _ _ __, lip=m~.-~...,.~--, great shape, needs fuel
f)umR. cooling lan assembly,
runs g'aod , 'new clutch,
..1 ___ VEGEIABLES
FRurls &amp;
$800,740-742.0607.
One bedroom apartment..
· no pets, in PomeroY.
Buy or sell. RiverJne Potatoes,
5011
$10.00. 92 Corsica V·6, new tires.
•(740)992-5858
Anti(lues, 1124 East Main Kenebec and Red Pontiac. brakes, paint (burgundy)
Olle bedroom garage apart- 9n SA 12 4 E. Pomeroy. 740- Monday· Saturday 8·:00AM· runs great, looks great.,
mont, kitchen furnished, · 992-2526 · Russ Moore, 5:00PM. 65002 State Route $2,700; (740)742-0509
$400, (740)992-3823
_ow_n_a_r._ _ _ _ _ _ 124 Reedsville.
- - - - - - - - - 95 Z-28, 360, auto, Hops,
Twin Rivers Tower Is accept- RIVERSIDE
AUCTION Sweet corn, for sale $1 .75 leather, ~ark· green, tan in1eing applications lor waiting BAAN At. 7 South, 5 miles doien. Bring your own con· riorl great shape, $7,000.
list for Hud-subsized, 1- br, below the Dam . EVERY 1ainer (picking new patch ' (740)742-4011 leave masapartment, call 675-6679 SATURDAY.
@
6pm. this weekend).
(740)949- sage
EHO
(740)256-6989.
1316.
-------99 Dodge Durango SLT, tow
mileage, exce llent condition,

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171

FALL CRAFT SHOW

~., ~600~92~2~-7~1~~5-----~

ior/dlsabted person. EHO

I auark'e
home
place

Model 782: New Holland
Forage Harvester wHh 36~ 2
10
H()lb'EHOLD
rpw corn head. MOdel 770W
Hay head. New Holland crop
JET ·
carrier 8 silage wagon &amp;
Big
screen
TV,
46 ~
AERATION
'MOTORS
Gehl
silage wagon . All are in
Magnavox . Aprox 10 years
Repaired,
New
&amp;
Rebuilt
In
gOOd
condition &amp; field ready:
old. Excellent · condition.
woOdgrain finish
$600. Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1· ~7~4~0~:;24;;;5;:,;·504;:;;:;:~7.;o.._ __,
800·537·9528
m
(740i446·8423.

r

48
49
51
5 Col. Snltra' 53

Phillip
Alder

8 HI-li recorda 54 Cottontail
11 Se•·playing 55 Use a

~

op quality, warranties
ltton, WV. Flea Marke
ectlon
C.
Fl'idays,
aturdays and Sundays.

45 Grill residue

ACROSS

rent. Includes water, sewa.Qe camper lots, $125.00/mo. 1 ner, copier. (all -in -one ) Sapt6. (740)388·8738.
and trash. Must have suHi· - orfiCe build1ng. $300.00Jmo' (740)446·8241 .
For sale; 2 HP BuHalo air
clent income to quality. 6141876·1661
(140)378-6111

NEA 'Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE-

'J:\LL€'1' 00P

2 bedroom· apartment for Camper lots lor rent. River Computet with CO burner, Firewood tor sale. $30 pickrent In Syracuse. $200.00 Park: permanent hook-up. 3 scanner, printers, computer up or $50 ·dellvered, In most
depOsit.
$330.00/month small mobile home or and video table, fax, scan: areas. · Delivery
st&amp;rts

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5.

CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan ' t9) ~ This
can be a great productive day for you, pro-'
vided your heart is really in your work. It
pro\les what Confucius said: "Choose a
job you love and you 'll never have to work
a day of your life:
·
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) Sometimes it is quite unwise to allow vo4r
heart to ruJe your head. but today could be
an exception. lei compassion and concern lake precedence over practica'!ity and
see for yourself.
PISCE~ (Feb. 2Q-March 20)- Much per·
sonal satisfaction and JOY can be derived

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'It tnere's an~ning in lile you cons~er wot1hwhile '
go for itl• - Isabel Sanford

. achieVing -

~~~~:::;T

S© R4{11v\. -c{G 'E~S·

WOlD
GAMI ·

Edittd b'l' CLAY R. .,OUAN -~----

0

~eorrange leiters ol the ~~...... _..~-... ~_,......_
. lour scrombltd words be)ow to form four .$imp le words

I I I I' I I
RECROG

r. I I I' I .
-,-:G_:E;....::..L,.:.L...:.A~~

-

. _·
E VU NE 1:

While'in the grocery store I
heard one woman comment
I .I .I i 1. 1. ~,~ thai,
"Life sp.ans would be
r - - ' - - - - - - - . longer if green veg~tables
N 0 G8 0 L
smelled as goad as - - . - .1·

I

I I I I I I () Co~p l e~e
4

.

5

.

.

.

•

.

the ch uckle Quoted
by ioil1 nq in th• m1ning wcrCs

.

you deorelop from steQ No. 3 be low.

@rRINT

NUMBERED LETTERS IN
SQUARES

THE IE

@)

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETlERS
10 GET ANSWER

SCIAM-UTS

ANSWERS

9- l -

o'

Astray- Foamy- Nomad -Intone- MONOTONY
.. Variety may be the spice of lile," pondered the old gent,
"but the grocery bills gel paid by MONOTONY.'

ARLO~ JANIS
l:oii.O!.l5AYING.
1&amp; Ml E.LrMT &amp;POI1l 1•

G.O~f

today from some form of domestic. artistic

expressiOn. such as entertaining. cooking ,
gardenlnQ. decorating or simply_nurturing
and IOvmg _
ARIES (March 21 ,April19) - let the one
you !ewe know hOW much you really' care .
You don't need a reason to do something
spcc1al today whether it be a thoughtful
gesture. flowers or an evening ovt on the

town

GOOO woRK,

GARFIE\..17! BE

EVER

VIGil-ANT!

HEY!

HEW!

HEY!

0
0
0

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room. j

.....

'hkM•'

Aim 1 '1,. .

~ .

• Btctrk:al • PfumbinQ
• Roorlf1i • Guftetl
Vinyl S,iding l Plintirlg
• Patk'J W\d Poreh O.CU
Wo do H allucopt

--

v.c. YOUNG Ill
992-&amp;215

..
I OBERT
BISSEll

TAURUS (April ~ May 20) - Someone
with whonl yov have close emotional
bonds, such as a family' member or a very
close friend , may P'ay a key ~today 1n
helping you get somethtng you've strongly
desired.
GEMINI (May 21..June 20) - Charm, wrt
and tad have always been your greatest
assets. and lodsy you may Skillfully put

0

0

them to good' use to get others to pull
togethfl!r 1nto one big happy fam1ty lor the
good of everyone,

0
0

!I...__:::::~:~~~~;!_=~::::J
"

CANCER (June 2hJuty 22) · .Normally. In
I)Uiineu situatiOns 11 is every man lor hlm·
setf. but today you'D do your part TO display
charttable trana In order lo get your coun·
terparu to follow suit. Everytx:rdy win1.
LEO (J...Iy 23-Aug. 22) - 'lbu could get a
bfg oppor1unity
today
to put
btue .
Into pJ-v
when
youyour
seetrue
a friend
who 11 In need of aomeone to 1tand up tot
I"IJm or her. oOn·t let lhlt J**)n dOwn

quallt~t

SOUP TO NUTZ

CIISTIICTIU
• New Homes

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

•o12-1m
Stop &amp; Compare

•

.

\

�'
Tuesday, September 7,

The Daily Sentinel • Page B6

www .mydailysentinel. com

-

2004

US Open Tennis

Davenport gets past Venus; Henin-Hardenne loses
BY HOWARD FENDRICH

Asso=iated Press
NEW YORK - Venus Williams
was grunting loudl y. . Lindsay
Davenport was muttering to ·herself,
and about20.000 fans were jumping
out of their sears after each point.
A few hours before defen.ding
champion Justi ne Henin-Harclenne
meekly left the U.S. Open with a
loss to Nadia Petrova, Williams and
. .Davenport were locked in a match up
fit for a Grand Slam final. noi the
·fourth round. So, too, was the riveting last game .
Seven major titles and 49 weeks at
No. I between them, Davenporf and
Williams swapped powerful strokes
and anxious moments in a fi nal act
encompassing 24 points over 13
minutes Monday. Nine deuces. Five
break points for 2000-01 Open
champion Williams . Five match
points for · ·1998 Open champ
Davenport.
· In the end. Davenport was slightl y
steadier and stronger, pulling out
th at game and a 7-5, 6-4 victory to
reach the quarte rtl nals.
It was a fitting ly tight way to end
the pair's 25th meeting. never so
early in a J.Qurnament: they came in
12-all.
"A tough one to get through,'' said
Davenport, who faces 62 nd-ran ked
Shinobu Asagoe for a sem ifi nul

benh. "I wanted to win so badly, and has won 2.1 straight matches since her 1997 debut.
1 played such a great, calm match talking
about
retirement at .' How long ago that seems.
until that poinl. and then let a few Wimbledon.
Now Williams needs to recapture
errors creep i,n ." ·
Another big-name showdown is the drive that carried her to four
She and Amelie Mauresmo both looming in -the men's quarterfinals: Slam titles, none since 200 1. She
have a chance to replace Henin- Andre Agassi vs .. Roger Federer. had quick exits at the Australwn
Hardenne at No. I, because of the Aga,si advanced Monday with a 6- Qpen (third round), French Open
Bel.,ian's 6-3. 6-2 loss 10 No. 14 3. 6-2,6-2 viCtory over pal and occa- (quarterfinals) and Wimbledon (secPet;ova - the earli est defeat for the · sional practice partner Sargis ond round) this year. She missed the
Open' s top-seeded woman since · Sargsinn, who was on court for near- second half of last season, including
Billie Jean King we nt ou( in the third ly I 0 hours in his previous two out- the Open, with a torn abdominal '
ings. This one took 90 minutes.
muscle, and had to deal with the
round in \!J?J.
Henin-Hardenne was betrayed by
Federer's opponent" No. 16 Andrei shooting death of'half-sister Yetunde
her best shot. the backhand, whtch Pavel. pulled out wtth a bad back.
in September 2003. · '
she flubbed on the final point of the
"There's nothing more you ask for
"I'm rea ll y disappointed (about)
tirst set and the fi nal points in each . than to play a big event against the all this year's Grand Slams. But I've
game when she was broken twice in best player in this environment," learned that the position that I' m in
!he second set.
Agassi said. "It's time to bring the is not necessarily my fault,"
• Williams said: " I can't be hard on
Henin-Hardenne. wllo returned best tennis."
fro m n~arly three months off wi th a
Because Federer's match was can- myself."
vira l infection to win an Olympic celed. Martina Navralilova's mixed
She raised her play in that fantasgold medal , totaled 30 ·unforced doubles
quarterfinal
a~inst tic final game, with Davenport serv·
errors.
· Wimhledon
champion
ari a ing at 5-4. Williams also rai sed the
That still wasn't . as many as Sharapova was shifted to Arthur · volume , grunting louder and loud~;,r
Williams. who since playing her firs t Ashe Stadium. Navratilova. into the with each shot, a sharp contrast to
Slam in \997 never had gone an doubles quarterfinal s with Lisa Davenport 's soft exhales. Davenport
entire season without reaching at Raymond. paired with Leander Paes plared impeccably until then. never
least one maJor semifinal. She hurt to defeat Sharapova and Max Mirnyi facmg a break point and trailing on
herself with 42 miscues, mostly off 6-4, 6-4.
her serve just pnce: at love-15 in the
forehands and more than double
Mary Pierce; who beat Sharapova second set's fourth game .
Davenpon:s -count.
'in singles, lost to No. 9 Svetlana
Davenport broke Williams for a 6."'It was me. I made too many Kuznetsova
7-6
(5),
6-2. 5 lead in the first set, and 3-2 in the
errors:· Williams said. "The thing Kuznetsova plays Petrova next in an second .
that hurt me the most was my incon- all-Russmn quarterfinal.
In ihe fi nal game, they went back
sistency."
Asagoe upset No. 29 Elent and -forth, with Williams swalling
That's been a problem for a while, Daniilidou 7-6 (4), 4-6, 6-3 , making two winners to get her first break
leading to· her slide to No. 12 in the her the lowestcranked Open quarter- point. wasted with a forehand return
ranklngs. Davenport, meanwhile, finalist since Willi ams was 66th in · long. On the. first match point, a 12-

stroke exchange ended with
Williams'
forehand
winner.
Davenport ceded her second match
point by d&lt;;&gt;uble-faulting, then turned
and chatted to herself.
"I felt OK until I lost the second
match point," , Davenport said.
"Then you get a little like: 'Oh, no.
Don't do .this."'·
There was more, including a forehand sai led long on match point No .
3. and Williams:, brilliant passing
shot to erase No. 4. Eventuall y,
thou gh. Wtlltams floated a forehand
return long on No.5.
Throughout the match , Williams'
sister Serena sat passively in the
front ·row, biting her nails or resting
her chin or her hand . Otherwise, the
crowd was rowdy. ·
.
,;Definitely had the buzz of a bigger match than a round-of-16 match.
They were definitely into it there at
'the end," Davenport said.
"I certainly don ' t want to have a
letdown now.''
As successfu l as she's been,
Davenport often has been eclipsed
somew ha t by other stars. Ri ght
before the start of Monday's match,
chair umpire Sandra de Jenken
apparentl y forgot who was playing
and substituted the name of a tour
journey woman in announc in g:
."Ladies and ge ntlemen. Lindsay
Lee-Waters elected to.receive ."
No one there will forget the final
ga me, though.

.

SPORTS
•

• Marauder runners
compete at wet Gallipolis
Invitational.
&lt;SeePage 81

,

Absentee voter applications arriving daily
BY

TIM

MALONEY
NEWS@MY DAILYSENTI NEL.COM

POMEROY - If the number of
absentee-ballot application s requested so far from the Meigs County
Board of Elections is any indication,
this November's election may indeed
be drawing increased attention.
A total of 151 applications had been
received as of Tuesday morning, and
more are arriving each day, accordi ng
to Jane Frymyer, deputy director.
Voter turnout is traditionally high in
Meigs Co unt y, and very well could be
even higher during this heated elec·
tion year, _said longtime elections

clerk Barbara Smi th . .
" I thi nk we' ll do very well," SI)lith
said. ''More people vote here than the
. state pred icts . Our county turnout
doesn't seem like much. compared to
what we have regi stered . but compared to the state figures, our average
is really high."
· Even in the primary elect ion this
past s·pring, in which Meigs County
had 40.23-percent turnout, it was an
appreciably higher percentage-wise
compared with both the state and
neighboring counties.
In Ohio , only 32.84 percent of the
7.2 million regi stered voters actually
· voted. In Athens County. 12.020 of

'

"They don't warit to be party affiii;
38,384 registered voters voted (3 1.32
percent). In Gall'ia County. the num- ated," Smith said. ·'They want to be
bers were 7.06 1 of 2 1,552 (32.76 per- independent. "
.
cent).
Voters who want to vote absentee
In Meigs County, 5,775 of 14,305 may request to do so in one of three
registered voters cast their ballots, for ways: by calling the elections office
a perce ntage of 40.23. more than at 740-992-2697 and requesting one,
seve n perce ntage points higher than by submitting that request in writing
the state average.
to the elections office at 112
· In the 2000 general· election, more Mulberry ·, Ave., Pomeroy. Ohio;
than I 0.000 of 16,000 regi stered vot- 45769, or by appearing persona ll~
ers went to the polls in Meigs Cou nty, (after Oct. I) at the board of election ~
more than 60· percent.
and vot ing.
. ·
Smith said a lot of county voters
There are a nurnber of ways to
' tell her they want nothing to do with qualify for an absentee ballot. Yo~
the primary. They don't want to regis- ·
Please see Voter, A5
ter for either party, she said.

Race at California Speedway draws fans Singh ~ins TPC at
BY MIKE HARRIS

Associated Press
FONTANA. Calif.
Ca lifocni a Speedway offi . dais expected a near sellout
crowd of more than II 0,000
for the inaug ural Pop Secret
500 on Sunday ni ght. ·
· With a se llout, estimated
at 120,000, at last April's
Auto Club 500 and a strong
advance sale .for the first
2005 race on the 2- mile
oval, moved up to February
27, speedway president Bill
Miller said the track has
sold more than 270,000
tickets thi s year.
"We're thi s close to sell ·
ing a ll the seats today,''
Miller said . holding his .
thumb and forefinger about
a half-inch apart. " It would
be nice to put the standing
room sign out, but we feel
pretty good about it." '
The ticket sales offer pretty strong evidence that
NASCAR mad.e the right
call when it added the second California race in 2004.
hitting tradition squarely in
the face by moving the
Labor Day weekend event
out of Darlirigion, S.C., for
the first.time in 54 years.
- Darlington. which will
hold the Southern 500. in
November this year. has a
seatin g capacity barely
above 60,000 and hasn't

Herd
from Page 81
The Herd also fared well
in
a · 34-24 loss at
Tennessee, a game in which
Hill completed 16 of 25

osu

frOm Page 81
takes," Zwick said. ''The two
interceptions weren't bad
reads. They were just bad
balls. You can"t worry about
that and let them get into your

Boston,.ov~rtakes
·No.1 from Woods

man of a new NASCAR operating officer George
committee on diversit y, Pyne on diversity issues.
finally got to hi s first
Since the announcement
. Nex tel Cup race Su nday.
of his NASCAR invol ve. " It 's .high energy, man," me'nt in May, Johnson has
John son said. "I came here . kept a low profile, promptyears, factoring in the strength
because I cannot tell people · in g some cri tics to say the
BY JIMMY GOLDEN
of
tield. Singh had winnowed
Associated Press ·
all · about it without experi- appointment was strictly a
Woods' lead to 12.09- 11.91
encing it. Today gives me a · publ ic ity gimmick.
heading into the Deutsche
whole new perspective on ... I've got eight companie s
NORTON,
Mass.
Vijay
Bank,
needing only to finish
had a sel lout in years. the sport itself.
1o run and 1 don' t need the
Singh
has
been
playing
the
best
ahead
of
Woods to pass him.
·
Beyo nd the disparity in
" I had to ta lk to the peo- publici ty and nobody is cut·
golf in the world for .a lon~ . The new numbers were
crowds
between
·
pie first. You see, I had a ling me a check," Johnson
ttme . Now he has Tiger Woods expected to be released later
NASCAR 's olde st super- game plan . 1 wanted to talk said . " I never do anything
No. I ranking to prove it.
Mondav, but Singh will be the
speedway in Darlington and to eve rybody who called that my heart is not in. Our
' Singh finished his long climb first player other than Woods to
one of the new Taj Mahal's me, al l the minorities , first. .attitude is ;Let us show you
to the top of golf's ultimate hold the No. I ranking since
of the sport , located 50 I wa nted to talk to what we're goi ng to do,
leaderboard by beating Woods Au&amp;:, 8. 1999.
in a head-to-head matchup,
'' t nat's not too bad, is it" I've
mile s east of Los Angeles, NASCAR . 1 wanted to talk what we' re all about,' not
there is also the size of the to some of the drivers, and I tell you."
· shooting a 69 on Monday to had a good run." Woods said.
win the Deutsc he Bank "I'm not disappointed about \,he
markets.
making
the will continue to do that.
John son said he brought
Champi_onship by .three strokes ranking; I'm disappointed in
Ca
li
fo
rnia
even
t
more
·
·
. . .
, .
And I'm going to be attend- about 30 guests from mmorand clmm Woods spot as the not winning .... Wmning takes
com munitie s
in
attrdc.tt ve for TV and spon- ing more races, in the South ity
top-ranked player in the world. care of the ranking."
sors.
.
.
. and other places , to get a Souihern California to
lt was Singh s sixth victory of
:;ingh fllld Woods were tied at
Sunday's race.
The change ."; 111 barely real feel for the sport. "
the year, enough to convmce 13 under.after Singh bogeyed
Since hi s retirement,
NASCAR
pr.eviously
regt ster Wtlh dmers accu~r
the computers that crunch the the 13th hole, but WoOds
tomed · 10 · NASCAR s John son has built a suc- an nounced th e successful
numbers what many have bogeyed the next one and Singh
expanded travel , satd long- cessful 'b usiness empire , beginning of a minority
known for months.
birdied No. 15 to pull ahead by "
"Finally it's turned into my two strokes. The 41-year-olcl
lime . driVIng star ~en hel pin g to stimul ate eco- program that has five dri·
favor," said Singh, who birdied Fiji&lt;m added birdies on the fmal
S~hrader: Th e sw ttch l o .nomic grow th and develop· vers and six crewmen comthree of the last four holes to two holes at the par-71 , 7,415
Cul tforma wtll help the ct r· ment in urban areas around peting in its Dodge Weekly
win the $900,000 fii'St prize. TPC of Boston to finish 16
cu.~t grow: he satd ..
the country. That includes Series and Craftsman Truck
"''ve
worked preny hard for under. three ahead of Woods
. I thmk tf we dtd _every- the 70 Starbucks Coffee Series. They were selected
this. I finally achieved what I and defending champion Adam
thmg tn our sport ltke we locations and five movie afte r a competition combine
wanted to do staning at the Scott.
used to. our sport would be theaters he owns, all in held in January.
beginning of the year.
Scott staned the day seven
JUSdl as btgbas .tt used to b~ black or Hi spanic commuso it' s going to take two
"It was a good win, as well. strokes behind Si ngh before
an ~ot as _'g as ~~ t~ no\\1, mttes.
or three more weekends
Coming down the stretch got makin u the tum with four COil" ·
pretty tight there, but I got secuti:e birdies to get into con·
Schrader s~td. It 5 lt~e . Johnson's dutjes include ·· before we get one of his
focused and I pla,re(:l pretty tention. He birdied the 18th
everythtng, ttmes change.
helping NASCAR in creal- cars in the system . But ·I
hole to move into second place
' •••
·. ing a program to identify. can't say enough. I needed a • good coming down.
. Woods had been Np. I for at 13 under, and Woods' . f:B
B ·M:~~~l Hall 0 f ~AN. and develop black, Hispanic shot of confidence and now
more than five yeats - .a matched him; John Rollins and
~s _et a
a~er and women drivers and I've got so mething under264 consecutive weeks Daniel Chopra were another
Ma~; tc Johnson , recruned crew members. He also is neath of that me that sticks · -record
in the rankings that consider two strokes back at minus 10.
earlter thts year as co-chair- advising NASCAR chief to the racetrack .''
perfonnance over the past two
passes for 242 yards and
threw for three touchdowns
and no interceptions.
" Playing at a place like
Tennes&gt;ee is definitely
going to help you in the
long run. when playing a!
places like Ohio State . and
Georgia." Hill stated.

Bobcats.

·.

While the new one-back
offense received most of the
concentration in the preseason. the defense grabbed
some attention of their own
·
against VMI.
· The Bobcats· first score
was on ·a 41-yard interception return by comerba.ck
T.J. Wright early in the first
quaner.
Late in the third, the
defense·shined again as Matt'
Muncy forced a' fumble,
which was recovered by
Tyler Russ for the score.
And an interesting sidenote ... those two touchdowns jlfe two more than the .
Bobcats defense recorded
all of last year.

Leadership group considers
downtown solutions
Spirit of South Charleston will be at Pomeroy's. Sternwheel Riverfest offering afternoon and
evening cruises on the Beautifu l Ohio, Sept. 24 and 25.

Sternwheel·Riverlest slated· tor Sept. 23-25
HOEFL ICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Page AS
• Doris A. Patton Goodrich

WEATHER

2004 HOME IMPROVEMENT EDITION
will be here Thursday, September 23
Supplement to:
Point Pleasant Register
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
The Daily Sentinel

DeblllsonPaceA&amp;

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

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82-4

Comics

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Dear Abby .

Obituaries

A3
A4
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Sports

Bt

Weather

A6

Editorials

~ 2004 Ohio voiney l'liblishin&amp; eo.

MIDDLEPORT
-The
Middleport
Community
Association approved $1,000
in
donations
duting
Thursday's monthly meeting .
The group approved a $500
cash donation 10 the Meigs
County Council on Aging
toward the purehase of a new
van,
and
five
S100
"Middlepon Bucks" gift .cer·
tificates for Fariners Bank
and Savings Company's

Dave or .B renda

at &amp;992-2155
...

walking path by the Meigs
Cou nt y Health Department
wi th the tirst I 00 to sig n up
to get a free t-shin.
A bounce house for the
youn gste rs is being brought in
by the Meigs . Di strict Public
Library to funher enhance the
imponance of exercisi ng lor
good health . In addition to the
bounce house. a caricature
anist will be there and balloons will be given· away from
lito l p.m. From 10 to 2 p.m .
free lemonade and popcorn
will be served on the library
porch.
For those who are into
country crafts and downhome · cook ing,
Trinity
Church wi ll have its social
room open for browsing and
lunch on all three festival
days. Downtown stores will

J.

ty and teach confli ct management, while helping local
leaders make plans for · a
MIDDLEPORT - A hand- community project. In the
picked committee of volu n- case df Middleport's volunteers continues to discuss teer team, the goal is to
to.
revitalize devise a plan to jump stan the
ways
Middleport 's.
downtown, communit y's retail climate.
while learning important
Once the volunteers have
community leadership skills . completed their training. the
Representing elected offi- M iddlepon community will
cial s, business ow ners and be entitled to a $10,000 plan·
agency representatives. the ning grant through the
group is participating in a 21- Appalachian
Re gio nal
hour tra ining progam offered Commission . The village
by Buckeye Hills/Hocking hopes to use the grant award
· Regional for planning of a revitalizaValley
Development
· District : tion of the downtown shop; L.:eadershipPienty is .a pro- ping area. and to attract new
gram designed to strengthen retail businesses into the viilocal .leadership. promote
Please ~ Solutions, A5
cooperation in the communiBv BRIAN

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Sponsoring Elvis

Ple•se see Fest. A5

Community association approves donations

12 P AGES

Calendars

Classifieds

licensed by the U.S. Coast
Guard tQ carry I00 persons. It
has a top deck to accommo·
POMEROY
date 30 passengers, and a dinEverything from boat cruises ing cabin with seatin g for 36.
to strolling fun shows, from
On both days there will be
hot chili to a sexy leg contest afternoon cruises. 3 and 5 p.m.
has been included in the· pro- Friday's evening cruises will be
gram lineup for the annual 7 and 9 p.m. while oil Saturday,
Sternwheel Ri verfest to be lhe cruise will be from 8 to 10
siaged Sept. 23-25 in . p.m. for those who want to
Pomeroy's downtown .
dance the night away and enjoy
"We're exPt;cting a. dozen the 9 p.m. fireworks from the
or so stemwheelers to dock at middle of the river.
the le vee along with a hunEntertainment again this
dred or so pleasure boats to year wi ll tak~ listeners
come in," said Pomeroy through country and contemmayor John Musser, festival porary music entwined with
some rock and roll and jazz,
chairman.
Again this· year the "Spirit · enhanced with some comedy~
of South Charleston" will be and featuring the ever-popuhere to provide cruises on lar Elvis impersonator, .
Friday and Saturday. The Dwight Icenhower. .
A "Meigs in Motion" '"5K
·refurbished "Spirit" is an
authentic stemwheeler pow- fund walk has also been
ered by a paddlewheel , planned along the riverfront.
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH

0BITUARIFS

.

head."
two wruttng defenders. then
Zwick threw interceptions Ross rambled for 18 more
·on Ohio State's fii'St two pos- yards to set up the score.
sessions of the second half.
Smith led the Buckeyes to
After Lovell's second field all their scoring in the fourth
goal for the Bearcats, the : quaner, including a scoring
Buckeyes marched 57 yards strike to Sa,ntonio Holmes.
capped by Ross' 1-yard run for
"Cemfort is a big. thing, but ·
· a 17-6 lead. . Zwick hit being a clear-cut starter is what
Childress on an 18-yard pass we both want," Smith said of
play that lll!ain went between the quane~k banle.

enjoyable to play like that
and its more enjoyable to
watch.".
,
Three different· Bobcats
from Page 81
had more ·than 40 yards
of confidence in our offense receiving.
And . twice on one drive in
!!Rd how we w~re running
the ball today," said Hawk. the opening quarter. the
Bobcats went for it on fourth
· "Coach Knorr does. too."
down
... and were successHawk threw for 223 yards
with three touchdowns, ful.
It wasn · t all fun and games
including a 51-yard pass to
for
Hawk as Ohio receivers
Chris Jackso1,1.
"That's how Coach Earley dropped their fair share of
is," said Hawk. "We ruqthe passes.
plays he cal Is. But, if some- . "It wa~ a lot of fun:· Hawk
body's open deep as opposed said. ''Obviouoly we enjoyed
to open short, l guess the it. We were just a httle
way I like to play, I'm going inconsistent tonight.
"Bring more consistaht
to go deep. I think it's more
overall will help u~."
I

After the OSU and
Georgia games, the Herd
face s another formidab le
opponent in last ye~r's Mid
American
Conference
champion Miami .
Marshall 's game at Ohio .
State kicks off 3:30 p.m.
Saturday at Ohio Stadium.

Brent Smith, who leads the LeadershipPtenty group in
Middleport , discusses effective meeting strategies with a
group of volunteers.who are working on the development of a
downtown revitalization plan. (B nan J. Reed/ photo)
·

----~---- --...!!.

-

IOOth anniversary celebra- sary. in exchange for promolion.
tional .consideration.
Assocation Vice President
According to Dooley. the
Tom Dooley also encouraged bank has been supportive of
merchants anending yester- association events, and pro·
day's meeting tb consider viding the gift cenificates.
donating items to an upcom- which are redeemable at any
. ing auction the MCCoA plans association merchant. will In celebration of their 100th Anniversary. Farmer's Bank is ·
h
for the van fundraising drive. provide good publicity tot e sponsoring a performance by Elvis impersonator Dwight
'Icenhower for the Pomeroy Sternwhee\ Festival. The perforThe bank. meanwhile. has group.
·l nvited its business customers
Susan Baker announced mance will take place from 9:30 p.m. to 11 p.m. on Friday,
to consi&lt;ler providing the thAt Downing House Bed and Sept. 24 at the Pomeroy Amphitheater. · Pictured are JoAnn
bank with product~ or ser- Breakfast is planning a Crisp. Human ResourGes Administrator for Farmer's Bank,
vices with a " 100" theme as · pumpkin pie-baking contest Dwight Icenhower. and John Musser. Pomeroy Village Mayor
and festival chairman. (Beth Sergent(photo)
. prizes for its IOOth anniver- for late October.

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