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)
Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 16, 2oos

www.mydailysentinel.com

-

Steelers' Ward ends holdout, "Rice moves up·Denver's depth cha.~ ·
$1.66 million this season, but .
Wide receiver . Hines Ward wa 1)tS guaranteed money that
eilded his 15-day holdout and puts him in the upper echelon
reported to the Pittsburgh of NFL receivers.
Steelers on Monday, without
Ward, disliked being menthe new contract he wants or a tioneu almost uail y with
Terrell Owens, who wants
promise he'll get it
·Call it the persuasion of more money a year af!cr signcoach Bill Cowher, who ing a $4Y million contract with
talked at length with the lour- the Eagles.
" I hate see ing me put in thi s
time Pro Bowl receiver on
Sunday night and convinced si tuati on," . Wmd Silid. "It ' s
him of his importance to a totall y different. ... I don ' t
team that went 15- 1 last sea- even th ink I'd look right 'in
son.
another Lmifo rm .... It 's unfor''For me, I needed to liear tunate i1 came to a holdout.
that from my head coach. this because I wouldn't miss thi s
support - that 's all a player season for the wotld."
can ask for. If vour coach
Redskins
TI1r~c-timc Pro Bowl linedoesn't have co1ifidcnce in
you as a ballplayer. may he bilcker LaVar AITington put on
you' need to part ways," Warll his helmet and shoulder pads
said after showing up to watd1 for the fir.st time at this year's
the Eagles-Sterlers cxhibitHHI training Cilmll, joining Carlos
game. "It's been a long ti 111C Rogers and Brandon Noble as
since we had a convcrsatil&lt;n W;iShington we.lco med · back
like that. ... Thai \ whv I' m three key members of the1r
here, showing good 'failh. defense . .
" It's exciting to me. " wach
because I want to retire a
Steeler."
Joe Gibbs' said: "because
Ward became ·. the team\ we're getting back some high
first majm holdou t in 12 years quality players tliat ha ve been
on Jul y 3 1 - keeping l1is mi&lt;Sing for a while."
promise not to report to !rainArri~g ton wore ·a black
mg ca mp without a contrac't sleeve on his right knee.. eviextension that wou ld make dence· uf an injury that has
·him one of the NFL'' l&lt;' p·paid hampered him for nearly a
year and ca used him to pubwide receivers.
The Steelcrs also kepi their lid y criticize team officials.
promi se of not negotiating Ro~ers. th~ No.9 pick in the
with a player under co ntr&lt;~l'i April draft. worked at cornerwho is not in c:a111p.
back with the starting unit ,
Ward hopes hi.s arriv&lt;il will hac: kpeualling with ease and
lead to a new ueal. hut realitos showi ng no s ign of' his an~le
an injury or a JlDDr season injury. Defensive lineman
could signilicantly rcduc:e his . Noble was a litt le winded but
value not just to the Steekr&gt; otherw ise looked fin e 111 his
but as a free agent atkr this return after an unusual~y harsh
seusnn . .He h a~ one year developmem a serious
remaining on a co ntral'l \\'O rlh infection that developed in his

knee after minor surgery.
Broncos
Jerry Rice moved up the
Denver depth ~hart, runnmg
as the No. 3 receiver at pmctice, ahead
of Dariu s
Watts.
Rice was
'aIr e. ad y
considered
a near shooin to make
the roster
and continNotebook
ue
h.is
record-setling career into a 21st season.
The move Monday only contirms it
After practice: the veteran
rece iver continued with a
theme he set when he signed
with the Broncos: that he is
simply trying to prove himself
and make the team.
" I pretty much approa~h
every ' Season never. thinking
about what !accomplished the
year before," Rice said.
Vikings
An MRI on cornerback Fred
Smoot's sore right knee
revea led no further damage,
and the Vikings expect him
back on the tield soon.
'I f he 's able to participate in
practice thi s week, Smoot
cou ld play Friday night at the
New York Jets. He was hurt
during an intrasquad sc rinimage last week ,
Smoot. the Vikings' biggest
pri ze during a·n aciive offsea•
son in free agency. hasbanily
been able to practice since
training camp began. He first
missed tilne because of a neck
strain and is now sitting out
with the knee injury.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NFJ,

"We have two good quarterWide
receiver
Kelly
First-round
draft
pick
Campbell, however, will mi ss · Thomas Davis was moved backs. Why would you give
at least two weeks with a .from safety to linebacker one away unl ess you had a
strained right quadriceps that becau se of depth concerns fol - chance to get a better one?
has kept him out for most of lowing an injury to Brandon We ' re not nece ssarily into
ca mp. Wide 'rec eiver Troy Short .
developing playe rs for .other
Willmmson was on the field
Short injured his foot m people. We ' re developing
Monday. but he didn't partici- Saturday night 's pre season players for our future."
pate in practice.
game against Washington, and
Rosenhau~ visi ted the Titans
Offensive lineman Anthony the Panthers aren't sure how · to help co ncl ude a one-year
Herrera missed practice!&gt; for long he'll be out. Chris Draft, deal for safety Arturo
the second straight day and who has backed up Short at Freeman . With
CI1icago
was expected to remain in the sirongside linebacker, has had already losing Rex Grossman
hospit&lt;d another ni ght for, a handful of asthma attacks to a broken ankle, the timing
treatment of ce llulitis. an that have limitect ·him in train·- seemed right.
infection in his right leg that is in g t'amp.
·seuhawks
causi ng severe swell ing from
Rams
Rooki e linebacker LeRoy
the ankle Ill the knee.
·
Alex Barron practiced for Hill is expected to be out for
Starting ri~ht guard Chr is th e fi rst time after endin g a 10 days after spraining his
Liwienski suffered a mild sep- two-week holdout last week . ri ght knee in practice.
arution of hi s left shoulder
However, all of the firstHill wa.s injured during a 9during practice, and is day to round draft pick's snaps came on-7 drill during practice
day.
at left tackle, ·Orlando Pace 's Sunday morning when he was
Dolphins · ·
position , a clear indication caught in a pile. Coach Mike
First-round draft pick that for the immediate future. Holmgren initially class ifi ed
Ronnie Brown took th e field the Rams consider him a high- the injLrry as a "tweak," bu1
for his first training camp priced ba~kup.
Hill was seen the last two days
practice after signing a fiv,eCoa~h Mike Martz named wearing t1 large brace on the
· year, $34 million contn\ct that Barron the starting right tackle. knee .
included about $20 million shortly after the team took him ·
BelJrs
guaranteed.
.
with the 19th ovewll pick, but
Defens ive tackle Amonio
Brown, the second overall demoted him 111 a minicamp Garay was signed to ·a twopick in the April draft, tried to after Barron struggled movin g year contract. and wide
make th e trip froni his home in from left tackle -. his positi on rec eiver Derek Lee and de fen sub~rban Atlanta to South in college- to the right side. sive
lineman
Jo1\athan
Florida late Sunday after the
Titans
Jackson·wcre waived .
agreement was reached, But
Agent Drew Rosenhaus told
Chargers
his flight was delayed m the Ti.tans he'd like to pursue a
Outside linebacker Shawne
departing. then finally can- trade that would allow Billy Men·iman returned to practice
ce led because of bad weather. Yolek to be a starting quarter- and said he should be OK to
forcing him to sleep at the air- back 'in th e NFL sooner rather play 111 the home exhibition
port before leaving Atlanta on than later.
· game Sunday against the St.
Monday morning.
That's not a subj ect . the Loui s Rams.
Gu s Frerotte has moved Titans are interested in talking
Merriman, the 12th pick in
ahead of AJ. Feeley 111 th e about.
the NFL draft. missed u
Miami Dolphins' quarterback
"To me, that wouldn't make week' s worth of pract ices with .
competition and will start sense based on you have to hamwing and to~ mjuries. He
Saturday's exhibition game at have two good quan erbacks 1o didn ' t travel to Green Bay for
Pittsburgh. .
have a chance to win ." coach the exhibition opcn~r last
Panthers
Jeff Fisher said.
Thursday IJight .
•

Browns making Edwards earn job
BEREA (APJ -. Fur now.
hands
on peinga cheerleader."
Bravlon Edwards is iuinther
his hips or . Th e Brown s,
though ,
rookie. buried on Clewl anu 's
kn~lt as he aren' t paying him all that
w at c h e d . money to shake pompoms nr
depth c:hart at wide receiver
along with some unknown .
He didn ' t yel l through a megaphone .
un signed free age nts who
know what They drafted him to· be the
won't even make tile Brown s'
to do with kind of big-time , clutchroster.
Notebook himself.
catch playmaker .he was as
"It was an
All-American
at
Edwards doesn ' t expccl to
be a fourth- or fifth -st rin~cr boring," he said. summing up Michigan .
That 's, in the future . Hi s
for long. though. He 's expect- hb first NFL practice . "I'm
ing a quick promotion. How used to going all the time , and ,pre sent playing time is being
quick''
..
today they held me out. It was controlled by Br,owns coach
"The first time they. th row an observatio~ day. I've been Romeo Crennel, who won't.
me the ball." Edwards .laid.
waiting for so long to get out show any favoritism.
Whoa.
there and make so mething
"We said when he got here
Confidence ooL ing from happen. I thought today was that he 'would have to work
every pore. Edwards prac· the day: butl'mjust following hi s way up ," Crennel said. " I
ticed with the Browns for the the leader. I'm just waiting told my coaches that there
first time Monday. a few days until they put me in th ere. I'm aren't going to be any battleafter he ended hi s two-week just biding my time."
fi eld promotions out on the
contract holdout by signin g a
It was no different on field . He's going to have to
five-year, $40 million to n- Sa1urday night fo r Edwards, go through· the process.
traCt with the 6rowns.
who suited up but was kept When he shows us he knows
"It was nice to see him out ou t of the Brow11.s ' 17- 13 the system and he' s getting
there .': rookie . quanerbm:k ex hibition win over the New the job done, then he ' ll move
Charlie Frye said. "He' s big. York Giants. He looked good up ."
stron g. tall and fast. That 's a in warmups and on the side· · Edwards has no. issue with
lethal combination."
line·in his while :slo. 17 jersey, Crennel 's decision . He
Edwards. the No. 3 overall hut neve r got the chance to . understands that if he's
pick, fla shed ·some of , hi s ge t it dirt y.
going ge t a starting job, he
immense talent durin~ the
.ln s t ~ad.
Edwards spent has to prove he' s worthy of
·early portion o.f pract ice . most of the nigh! talking with one.
"I'm not questioning anyDuring one drill. he snagged a injure'd ru nnin~g back Reuben
P.liSS with one hand and tip- Droughns. who was out with thing ." he said. ·'Coach does
. things for a reaso'n : I'm just
toed down the sideline. draw - a hamstrin g injury,
ing oohs and applause from · "It was weird at fi rst but waiting and doin g what they
th en it was kind of fun ." ask me . That 's my job with
the crowd.
. But in the team drills. Edwards said. " I was just thi s organization : I' ve said
Edward s either stood with hi s laughin g and. cracking jokes. that since day one."

'

Coach Romeo Crennel
was hopeful to have both
players back in the next few
days.
Linebacker Kenard Lang
(stinger) and offensive
guard Joe Andruzzi (sore
knee) were also held out of
some team drills
the
Browns began preparing for
·saturday's exhibition game
at Detroit.
Pool got hurt on the opening kickoff whe!l he tried to

crash through New York's .
blocking wedge.
·
Crennel also said that cornerback
Daylon
McCutcheon, who ·. has
missed all of training camp
with migraine headaches
and
dizziness,.
has
improved.
"Daylon is m&lt;\king slow
and
steady
progress,"
Crennel said. "He looks better but he's not where he
needs to be yet."

as

'

'

200S'
. ·FALL SPORTS PREVIEW
• MEIGS.• EAS.,ERN • SOU.,HERN

about com·
petillon."
Warrick said
at
the
B·c ~gals·
practice
facility
in
Notebook Georgetown.
Kv. "I don't
have time to worrv abo'ut .
where I' Ill gonna ~ in all
this. They (the coaches) k1now
football players: The y make
the decisioq on how things
go. I just go out and make
plays."
Head coach Marvin Lewis
said Warrick 's performance
will dictate his playing time.
"He's ~ot an upw.ard battle
t6 make our footba ll team , so
he's getting an opportunity to
do that." Lewis said . "I don't
need to specu late on his
chances. He gets to go prove
that."
Warrick said mi,;mg nearly

;;o

•'

. Lewis said at the Bengals
·
camp.
Pollac'- was the I 7th ovefall pick in the draft. He has
been asked to move from
defensive tackle, where he
played at Georgia, to strongside linebacker with the
Beogals.
-

• Indians snap three-game
slide. See Page 81

'

',

'

'

:!

\\

'

Lll:'l: LSil .\ \ . \ l

&lt;;t 'S r

t-. :.!Oo,;

BY

TtM

MALONEY

TMALONEY@MYDAILYR!'GISTER.COM

Still, Grinstead has questions.
'That's all great news, and
I' in thrilled to death, but how
is it going to affect what is in
motion now?" he said.
The C8 Health Project is
now well under way, with several thou sand people giving
blood saniples, and the Point
Pleasant mobile unit set to ·
open next week. Dr. Edward
Emmett. who conducted the
University of Penn sy lvania
st11dy. said further testing for

cancer ri sk "cou ld be don e and
it should be done."
Neither Art Maher or Dr.
Paul Brooks from Brookmar
Inc., which is conducting the
C8 Health Project. was available for comment on Tuesday.
Meanwhile. the Mason
County PSD is continuing to
tests its well tields and is in current negotiations with DuPont
over expenses the di strict hus
incun'Cd because of C8.
Grinstead said the PSD

..

'

'$'
L
'
I.

.

BY BRIAN

Page A5 .
• John Michael Beaver, 52
• Tammy Beaver, 45
• ¥ildred Louise Gaul, 81
• Alfred 'Rusty' Roush, 56

INSIDE
I !'
I'
''
' •
'
'

.

'

'

.

• Anderson, Fryar named
Ieeder calf showmen.
See Page A2
• Prosecutors will meet
Wednesday to discuss
possible Taft charges.
See ,Page A2
• Demo derby
winners announced.
See Page A3
'
• aves
back in session
. Monday. See Page A3
• Meigs County big
tree contest underway.
See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
See Page .A5
• Junior Fair Rabbit
Showman awards.
See Page A5
• Facemyer, Milam show
. champion market lambs.
See Page A6
·
• Plane filled with tourists
crashes in Venezuela.
See Page A7

ROCKSPRINGS -There
is gro wi ng interest in market
goats in the Meigs . County
Jun ior· Fair, and the proof is
in the compet ition at Monday
evening's Junior Fair Market
Goat Show.
Scout Faceymyer will se ll
th e grand champion market
goat at Saturday's Junior
Fair Livestock Sale, and
Nicole Mo'odispaugh. who
was also named grand cham·
pion market go;.~t showman,

wi II sel l the ·reserve champi ·
on . Casey Hannum was
nam ed r~serve champion
showman _
Brian J. Reed/photos
Market goats joined the
Scout Facemyer; left, and Nicole Mood is paugh showed the
livestock line up at the fair
'last year. The judge at. this .grand and reserve champion market goats at Monday
evening's Meigs County Junior Fair M;lrket Goat Show. Also
year's show was Sarah Ev4ns
pictured are the show judge, Sarah Evans of Mt Sterling, Fair
of Mr . Sterling.
Queen
Whitney Thoene and Fair Ki~g Tyler Lee.
Judging results in showmanship. by c lass, were:
Junior. Da vid McGinni s. Cody Hannum, .second, and Abigail Houser. and Shandi
first place, and Lind sey Morgan Powell , A; Novice; Beaver. all As.
seco nd
pi ace; Nicole Moodispaugh. grand
Judging results of market
Houser.
Intermed iate.
Casey champion. Tyler Sarber. sec- goats. by class, were: Class I.
Hannum. reserve champion, ond.
Scout
Facemyer, Shaf!di Beaver, first , David

Hoeftlch/ plloto
Sara Mansfield of Pomeroy dis plays her picture of a cornfield
which took best of s how in the photography competition at the
Meigs Coun!Y Fair.
·
Cha~one

1

POMEROY - From 579
entries in the amateur photography competition at the
Meigs County Fair. a picture
of a cornfie ld taken by Sara
Mansfield was selected by
the judges as best of show.
This is Mansfield 's second
year to enter th e contest
which has qllcgorics ranging
from adults or character to
hi storical happenings. Her
top award came in the class
of Nature Upelose.
Taking the reserve champi on ribbon in the show which
had a record number of
entries thi s year was Renee
Carson of Long Bottom with
an abstract enlarge ment.
The winners in the various
categories .. .listed first and
second re., pectively. were as
follows:
Snapshot size in color
Landscape and seascape: ·
Peggy Crane of Middleport.
'

.

Please see Mansfield, AS

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HOEFUCH @MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM
Details on Page A2

Call Dave or Brenda at 992-2155
For More Information

\!Cbe·1!\ailp ~enttnel

·

16 PAGEs·

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B4-6

Carnics

B7

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather
( 2005

Ohi ~~

B Section

A2
Yullc.r l»ublishing Cn.

A's ; Class
Ill.
Scout
Facemyer. grand champion,
and Nicole Moodispaugh. A:
Underweight. Abigail Houser
and Lindsey Houser. As.

POM EROY Lula S.
Tohan of Pomeroy took the
grand champiOn a).vard in the
category of animal study in
oi l in 1he category for ex peri ·
enced painter, . ·
,
Toban who has taken best
of show for three consecuti ve
years. won wi th her oil pa.int ·
ing of a bird house with a nut
hatch surrounded by pine
needles . She also took blue
ribbon~ on two other entries .
· Reserve champion winner
was Julia ,A . • Proctor of
Middlepnrt with her entry in
th e picture from life category
for ~xperienced painters.
Eighty·eight paintings were
entered and will be on exhib-

Piease see ,P aintings. AS

Beth sergont/ plloto .
,
Taylor Russell (left) and Saralisha Powell took home the
award's for grand and reserve champion market pen rabbi ts,
respectively, at Tuesday's Juni or Fair Rabbit Show. Russell and
Powell were.joined by Tyler Lee. Fair King.

Rabbit show·results 'posted
' .
BY B .ETH SERGENT
· Dutch .
BSERGENT @MYDAI LYSENTINEL COM
bre~d .

junior doe. be5t of
·Devon Baum . best ·.
opposite . H~a,~n Westfall;
ROCKSPRI NGS - Taylor Haric4uin . be't of breed,
Ru"ell and Saralisha Pu\\·ci l Dcmn Bauon. be,t opposite,
showed the crand and reserve Lindse1 Huu se'r: Holland
champion ;narket pens nf Lop. [,e,, of breed. Sarali,ha
rabbits. respect i\ely. as Carl P,m ell. ' be st
ppposite.
Budnick of Baltimore. ~ld . ~blin n \l icnJemus : Hoto.
judged hre~d cia""'· the best (, f breed. Lindsey
market cla:-.s and -.hrm lll ~ln ­ Ht•u&gt;&lt;· r: Lillnhcad. t&gt;e,t of
ship skills al Tuc sda) ·s .
hrecd. Carolann Stewan. best
Junior Fai1' Rabhn Shm1 .
opJinsit.:.
Carolann Stewan:
Devon Baum and 1\kli&gt;Sa
Snowden \\C'fl' ~rand ahd \lmi Lop, best of breed.
re~en·~ rharnpi(m- ~howmL"n . -. .o\manda Roush: ~Iini R~x.
respecti vely. wh1lc Baum was best llf breed. Haley Pcrdas.
·opposite . · Melissa
awarded be&gt;t of .sho11· an d . best
Sno\1·den:
Ne1herland Dwarf,
Lindsey Houser wa&gt; awarded
hc't of breed. Jacoh Pillow.
best opposite .
Jw.hdni! rc . . ulh in the mar- hcst opposi1c. b cob Pillow :
ket eli•~ . .:-in order fn1m fir . . t ,:'\cw Zealand. best of breed.
were. Ru"cl. PoJwclL R;md\ S&lt;~ rali s l~a PowelL be,r oppo'·
Davis. Heal ~n West tali. site·. Rand1 Da\ is: Sati n. best
Logan Grate. Adam Lamhcn. ot'br&lt;'c'd. 1:indscy Houser. best
Cha~one Hoottlchf plloto ·
Breed ·dasse' \\We j ud~ed opposite . •Lindsey Houser;
This oil painting of a bird house with a nut hatch won the grand as follow s: Califoruian: hcst Sati n ·Cn&gt;.s, hrcd . best 'of •
champion award in paintings for Luta S. Toban of Pomeroy. of hreetl. Dc-:un Baum. l"st breed. \lchssa Snowden. best
1 opposite.
This is her third consecut1ve year to take best of show'
AJi,llll Lambert : 11pposite. Sara h Lawrence.

Pomeroy woman takes best of show in paintings

' . INDEX
'
2 SF.t·noNs -

McGinni s. second: Class II ,
Casey Hannum. first. Nicole
Moodispau gh. reserve champion , Morga n Powell. Cody
Hannum. Tyler Barber (2 ). all

. BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINE L.COM

'

.

Nicole Moodis paugh , right , and Casey Hannum , l~ft. were
named grand and re serve champion showmen at Monday
evening's Meigs County Junior Fair Market Goat Show. Pictured
witli the.. outstanding showmen are . t11e event j~ge, Sarah
Evans of Mt Sterltng, Fair Queen Whitney Thoene, and Fair
King Tyler Lee.

Sara Mansfield·takes top photography award

';

'

pos,ibility of being re numer~ ·
ated by DuPont.
·
"I don't expect the PSD to
·eat the cost on this voluntarily.."
Another issue is that th e
PSD has been promi sed a
charcoa l filtration system to
remove the C8 from water
from it'' well field in Letart ,
but also want s si milar systems
for well fields HI' Lakin and
Crab Creek. ' for which test
results have' been inconclusive. Grinstead said.

J. REED

WEATHER

DEADLINE- WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 2005 - 5:00 P.M.

wants DuPont to set up its owll
informatiOJJ hotlinc for water
c ustomers with quest ions
about C8. He said the three
women who work in the PSD
ofli ce have bee n d e lu ~ed with
calls and questions. and that
DuPont ought to he responsible for answering them :
''We've spent a lot ol ti me
on this," Grinstead · said. " It
may have resulted in overtime, and ,it ma y not h,;ve. but
we ·want to know about the

.BREED@MYDA ILYSENTINEL .COM

OBITUARIES

'

""'

Facemyer shows champion market goat; MoQdispaugh tops showmen

I ,.'

l

" " 1un\Cl.oih -.·nt uod.o

.

C8 report brings relief, more questions
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- Cm1ld it ali haw really been
much to do about nothing?
Acc01;ding to a st udy by the
University of Pennsylvania
School of Medic ine, C8 docs
not make a perso n sick.
"That wo(Jld be fa ntastic,"
said Randy Grinstead, ge neral
manager nf the Maso n County
Public Service Di stri ct.

•••

Lewis upset by Pollack's holdout
GEORGETOWN,
Ky.
(A P) - Cincinnati Bengals
coach Marvin Lewis blasted
linebacker David Pollack on
Monday, the 18th day of the
first-round draft pick's holdout.
" I think the club has give n
111 every way," a frustrated

&lt; I' :'1: I'S • \ ' u I. ;;:;, No.

SPORTS

I

an entire season was fru strat ing. He was hurt last year
against the New York Jets but
finished the ga me and played
the following week against
Miami. He was then used in
just a few plays against
Baltimore on Sept. 26 and
against Denver on Oct. 25.
"The good thing about it is
ju st . coming back and just
sho~ing that I · am healthy,"
he said. "Now I'm out here. I
don't have anything to say,
just go out and do what I do,'',
On Monday Warrick partieipated· in 7-on-7· drills, full
team workouts, and returned
punts.
He will sit out the Monday
evening practice, Lewis said,
but will play in the Bengals'
next preseason game agai nst
Washington on Friday. Lewis
would not say ohow·· many
snaps he expects Warrick to
play.

•.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Warrick ready to earn his way back
GEORGETOW N. Ky. iAPl
,...., , Bengals wideou t Peter
Warrick .made his second
appearance on the pract icc
field Monda\' after beinu
sidelined fm 1;;ost o f the ~oo4
season with a shi n fracture .
·warrick. recovering from
knee surgery in the offseason.
hopes to add to an already
potent corps of rece1vers,
mcluding Pro Bowler Chad
John son ,
·
T.J.
Houshmandzadeh and Kelley
Washington .
Cincinnati 's
depth at the receiver position
was already considered one of
its strengths.
·
"! love having that kind of
competition and that kmd ot
talent because obviously that
means we have a chance to be
pretty good in th~t area of our
football team.
rece1vers
coach Hue Jac!lson said .
Warrick had hi s best season
· in 2003, when he re cordeu
career highs in catches 179).
receiving yard s 1819 1. and .
scored seven times . On s p~ ­
cial teams. he added '2 7.1
yards in punt returns. incluJ ·
ing a 68-yard toLfch dlnl n
return.
, Warrick,. cleared to play ""
Saturday, said he felt like he
WaS ready' to go tWO II eek s
ago. He said he do~ s n·r fe el
pressure to prove him self.
'.'Aw man. I don 't 11\&gt;rry

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en ne

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 2005

Scenes from the 2005
Meigs County Fair~ AS
'

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Browns .banged up after opener
BEREA
(AP)
Cleveland Browns starting
center Jeff Faine missed
practice Monday with an
injured rib muscle and rookie safety Bradney Pool sat
out with a concussion suffered in Saturday night's
win over the New York
Giants,
Faine and Pool were the
most notable r.tayers riding
stationary btkes as the
Browns went through· an
·afternoon workout.

.Wood, Jones
named beefbreeding
showmen,A7

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Page A!!

LOCAL • STATE

The Dajly Sentinel

AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

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Bt;tth

Sergent;pt~otos

Jed Anderson was named grand champion . in the feeder calf showmanship division and
showed the grand. cham pion feede~ calf at Tuesday 's Junior Fair Ca lf Show. Anderson was
joined by Nathan Cook. Beef Prince . Tyler Lee, Fair K1ng, Ashley Putnam . Beef Princess,
Whitney Thoene. Fair Queen.

......

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COLUMBUS
Pmsecutors planned to meet
Wednesday
morning to
decide whether Gov. Bob
Taft should be charged for
failing to report numerous
golf outings on ethics forms,
as required by law.
City and county prosecuto rs received the records
Tuesday following an inves_tigation by the· Ohio Ethics
Commission. Taft planned to
release
the
documents
Wednesday.
· Prosecutors will meet "to
determine what if any
charges are appropriate," said
Franklin County Prosecutor
Ron O'Brien.
He said a decision would
likely be made Wednesday
because they ' re already
familiar with much of the
information contained in the
. inch-thick pile of docu ments, including the com. mission's report.
O'Brien said any charges
brought against Taft would
involve minor ethics viola tions. such as the failure to
report gifts worth more
than $75.
O'Brien ,
a
fellow
Republican , said he had
already received a message
from Taft's lawyer Tuesday,
criminal defense attorney
William Meeks, to falk
about the decision before
prosecutors.
"He has requested that we
meet with him as soon as we
mutually decide . what the
next step is," Brien said. ·
A, message was left with
Meeks seeking comment.
Lara Baker.. a Columbus
assistant prosecutor, confirmed Tuesday she had the
documents but wouldn't
comment further.
Taft acknowledged the
lapse June 21 but has repeat·
edly refused to make the doc-

o:

Tylor Fryar was named reserve champion in the feeder calf showmansh ip division and showed
the reserve champion feeder calf at Tuesday's Junior Fair Calf Show. Fryar was joined by
Nathan Cook. Beef Prince. Tyler Lee. Fair King, Ashley Putnam. Beef Pnncess, Whitney
Thoene. Fair Queen.
·
·

ANDERSON, . FRYAR NAMED
FEEDER CALF SHOWMEN
BY BETH SERGENT

Anderson and Fryar also
showed the grand champion
and reserve champion feeder
. ROCKSPRINGS - Jed calf steers, respectively. ·
Anderson and Tylor Fryar
Joining Anderson and
were named grand ·champi- Fryer in the competition for
:On and re se rve champion grand and reserve feeder
:showman , respectively. at calf steers were Lynda
Tue sday"s
Juni or
Fair Fryar, third place , Sasha
Wris.ton.
fourth
place.
Feeder Calf Show.
BSERG.ENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL. COM

Wednesday, August 17
Afternoon ( /-6 p.m. )
·Temperature s wil l 'tay near
:83 with today·, high of 85
occurring around -1 p.m. Skie'
will range from partly cloudy
to mostly cloudy with 5 MPH
winds from the northeast.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
· It will .be a cloud\ e1·cnin2 .
Temperature&gt;, ''ill drop fron1
83 earl v this el'enin£ to 72 .
Winds i,ill be 5 'viPH from
the northea\1 .
Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
It will remain cloudv.
Temperatu re&gt; " ill ho!Li ' ready
around 6\1. Winds will be 5.
\-iPH fro m the northea\1 turn in£ fro m the ea;t a' the·
01erni ght progre"e ' .

Thursday, August 18
Moming (7 a.m.-Noon}
It·, going to be a humid and
Lloudy morning.· There is a
;light chance of rain .
Temperature; wrll climb from ·
68 to 82 b! late thi s morni'ng ..
Winds will be 5 MPH from
the east.
Aftemoon (/ -6 p.m. )
It will remain humid and
c!Dudy. Li ght rain i, foreca, ted . The rain ;hou ld 'tart by 2
p.m. Accumulation; of 0.06
in&lt;.:he s
3re
predicted .
Temperature ' will 'lin ge r at
85 . Wind' will be S tn I 0
MPH 'from the ea't turning
from the , outh a' the afternoo n progre " e'.

Local Stocks
ACI -60.88
AEP-37.13
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Akzo - 41.19
· Ashland Inc. - 61.11
·AT&amp;T ·.- 19.78
:BLI-11.97
·Bob Evans - 24.93
BorgWarner _ , 59.85
Champion - 4.25
Charming Shops - 10.81
City Holding- 36.37
Col- 49.10
OG -18.67
DuPont - 40.82
Federal Mogul - .45
USB -29.99
Gannett - 72.96
General Electric - 33.88
GKNLY - 5.150
Harley Davidson- 50.86 ·
· JPM- 34. 58
Kroger - 19.41

Oak Hill Financial - 31.01
OVB -25.00
BBT -40.88
Peo ples - 27.21
Pepsico ~ 54.79
Premier- 13.20
Rockwell- 51.85'
Rocky Boots - 30.52
RD Shell - 63.39
SBC- 24.29
Sears - 137.16
Wa~Mart-

47.57

Wendy's - 49.29
Worthingto~ - 17.28
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. cl!!sing quotes or the previous day's transactions. provided by ~mith Partners at
Advest Inc . of Gallipolis.

Cleveland State associate biology professor electrocuted in lab

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
biology professQr at Cleveland
State University was electro·
cuted Tuesday morning while
working in a lao.
Ashley
fi fth place .
1\vo students who were in
The show, judged . by
the
lab . told police Tatun K.
Jamie Bond of Beaver, proceeded an evening of dairy Mal, 42, was plugging someand commercial steers and thing into an electrical outlet
feeders in the live stock when he· collapsed shortly
before II a.m . .
show arena.
University police are invesThe show featured novice ,
beginner. junior. intermediate tigating and have sealed off
and ,enior 4-H mernbers.
the lab, said Brian Johnston, a

Life.

Cleveland State spokesman.
The Occupational Safety and
Health Administration also
will investigate, because the
incident happened ·while Mal
was at work.
, "He was a highly respected
and very accomplished man,"
Johnston said.
Mal came to the university
in 1999 and was an associate
professor in the biology
department. He was born in
India and received his doctor-

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ate at the University of
Windsor in Ontario, Canada.
On hi s Web site, Mal said he
was working on a ·variety of
re search projects including
studying the effects of humans
on natural resource s in highly
populated urban areas.
Mal leaves behind a wife
and ~-year-old daughter. . Hi s
wife, Sanchita Mai-Sarkar, is
a lecturer at Cleveland State
in the computer and information sc iences department.

.

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NSC- 36.40

uments public until the ethics variety of alleged wrongdo- .
commission co mpleted its ing, including inve stment
investigation.
losses at the state insurance
. Tart said Tuesday he takes fund for injured workers topfull responsibility for what pin g $300 million .
happened. ·
Noe has said $ 13 million is
''rhi s i:. my report. I signed 'mi ssing from the state investit.'' Taft said. "We thought we ment, and Attorney General
had done a good job on the
reports - we obviously did Jim Petro .has acc'usetihim of
not from the standpoint of stealing at least $4 million.
Brian Hicks, Taft's former
there being significant errors
,
c
hief
of staff, was · convicted
and omissions:"
Taft , 63, halfway through last month of failing to report
hi s second,and last·four-year vacation stays at Noe's home
term , would not say whether in 2002 and 2003.
he thinks he'll· be charged or
Hicks .. now a Col umbus
shou ld resign. and wouldn't consLrltant and lobbyist, said
discuss what the records he paid between $300 and ·
will show.
$500 for use of a sma ll ·
'If charged. Taft could fac e apartment in Noe' s house,
a fine of $ 1,000 and six what he con sidered the
months in jail, though time
behind bars is considered gojng market rate .
But prosecutors sa id he
unlikely. He'd be the first
Ohio govern or charged with should have disclosed the
stay · because. what he paid
a crime.
A partial list of records he was below "fair market
released Aug. 5 showed he value" for rent in ·such a
accepted invitations to golf at house, which could run as
least 21 times from 1999 high its $2,000 a :week.
throu gh 2004.
Taft's failure to report the
The records did.n' t say who golf outings contratlicts his
paid . In interviews, some . own ex peri ence and state·
partners hl,lve said they ments as governor.
picked up the tab. while othThree former officials in
ers say Taft paid his owrl way. his administration resigned
Taft 's partners inc.luded
several
prominent after investi gations found
Republi cans . such as former they improperly accepted
CSX Corp. chairman John gifts from companies doing
Snow, now the U.S. Treasury busine ss with the state.
secretary. CSX paid for that . including go lf outings.
.On May II . Taft gave a
October 200 I outing.
Earlier that year, Taft speech at Xavier University
golfed with Tom Noe, a during which he reminded
prominent GOP contributor participants that state law
and former chairman of the prohibited public employees
Ohio Board of Regents and from accepting golf outings
member of the Ohio Turnpike from companies with busiCommission.
ness before them.
It was Noe's handling ol' a
Taft said Tuesday he has a
$50 million investment of
state money in rare coins '" high re sponsib ility '' to ·
that sparked the state' s ongo- maintain ethical standards
ing inve stment and ethics but wouldn't discuss any of
that hi story.
scandal.
"I will be held to the . same
Fifteen state and federal
investigative teams and ihree high standard; as everybody
grand juries are examining a else." he said.

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The Daily Sentinel
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Demo derby winners announced

Community Calendar
School events

Meigs cu nt y will be held tthe
Hopewel l
townsh ip
Comm
un
ity
Room.
I08 E.
Sunday, Aug. 21
POMEROY - Orientation Board St .. Glenford. · A ~;ov.·
for all incomin g sixth grade ered didsh dinner will be
students and new enrollee s i1i heoid at 12 :30 pi.m. Take
the seventh and eight grades, · table service. The Curtis fam2 p.m., Meigs Middle School. ily canie to Cheter in 1811
Parents and students will and includes much of the
Eastman, Robinson. Gaul and
meet in the gym.
Hood families of the county.
Monday, Aug. 22
For
more informati on call
RACINE
Southern
992-7874.
Elementary will hold an open
house for parents and stu. dents in first through eighth ·
grades from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m .
POMEROY
- Mei gs
Wednesday, Aug. 17
High School will hold a open
POMEROY - Americ crn
house for freshrmm and new Ret! . Cross BloodriJObil e, I
students ·from 6 to 7 p.m. to 6 p.[ll .. Mei gs Senior
Information llt 992-2 t58 .
Center. All blood types
needed.

Other events

Sunday, Aug. 21
POINT PLEASANT
Annual Shirley homecoming
will be at the former homeplace of Ephram and Hannah
Shirley off Shirley Road
north of Point Pleasant.
Covered di sh dinner at noon .
For more. information call
304-895-3812.
.GLENFORD - The 98th
anniual reunion of the Hoit
and Mary Curtis fa mily of

DEAR ABBY: I work for a
law enforcement . agency.
Several months ago, my 23year-old nephew (I'll call
him Dion) moved in with me
and my mother. Dion is not
an orphan . Both.. his parents
are It vmg.
Last month, I discovered
that Dion has been smoking
marijuana. and selling it, too.
When I confronted him, his
response waS: "Marijuana is
better than alco hol.'' I pointed
out to him that alcohol is
legal and marijuana isn't, and
I don't want it il) my house. I
cou ld lose my job over this,
but he and Mom just don't
seem to ·'get it. "
. After tryin g to help · my
nephew by searchi ng for jobs
and helping him with finan cial aid for school , I realized
that I was doing the majority
of the legwork while he was
lyin g in bed all day and
watching TV
I h~ve told Dion he must be
out by the middle of ne xt
month, but my mother isn' t
backing me up on thi s. (She's
an enabler, and I think I am,
pool. There wil be sw im- too.) I told Mom that either
ming, food, and music . Back he goes or I do. Is she ri ght'!
to school supplie s wil also Am I being unreasonable'? be giv en away. The event is AUNT AT THE END OF
free and open to thepubic. MY -ROPE IN PASADENA
For more information call
DEAR AUNT: You 're not
992-7196.
being unreaso nable ; you're
MIDDLEPORT -.
The being pragmat ic and ratioWhite Oak .Quartet of Point nal. Has it occurred to you
Pleasant will sing at 7 p.m. at that your nephew might not
the Middleport Church of the just be lying in bed all day
Nazarene. Puhli c invited. watching'TV. but ~!so stoned
Refres hments served:
out of his gourd ' Stick to
your guns. Your career could
depend on it.
If it is discovered that he
has been dealin g an illegal

Friday,Aug. 19
SYRACUSE - The. First
Church of God. Syracuse,
will have a sc hool su pply and
clothin g give-away from II
tun ·to noon ..
Saturday, Aug. 20
MIDDLEPORT - Oasis
Christian Fellowshiop will
have a back to sc hool pool
party from 6 to ~ at 1he
General Hartin ge r Park

Clubs and
organizations .

GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio
Valley Christian School, will
begin its 29th year of operation Monday.
Elementary
students,
kindergarten through sixth
grade should be· at the elementary
building.
1100
Fourth Avenue, by 8:30 a.m.
Early arrival will be available
at 7:15a.m. and at 8:20a.m.
all students should go to their
homerooms.
Homeroom
: stans at 8:24 a.m. and stu. dents are counted tardy at
:8:30a.m.
'
An orientation for kindergarten students will be held at
the elementary location at 7 ·
. p.m. Thursday.
. High school students,
:.grades 7 throu gh 12 should
·come to the hi gh school
bu11ding, 455 Third Ave .. by
8:20a.m. Earl y arrival will be
available ai 7: 15 a.m.
Homeroom starts at 8:24 a.m.
when the tardy bell rings. .
. Open House for the high
· school students will be held at
the high school building at 7
p.m. Friday. Ohio Valley
Christian School invites par'
ems, students, and all friends
: to come to Ihe open houses to
. get acquainted and oriented to
. :school for the new year. They
: will begin in the school auditorium and teachers will be
present in their rooms to talk
to parent s.
·
·
OVCS was started in 1977

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a-

Birth announced PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.

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The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2155
.www.mydailysentinel.com

"Healthcarein Your
OWn Backyard"

HEALTH SYSTEMS

500 Roc;,m, Sarah Ramsburg, RO, fR&gt;mthe Nutrition SerVices Department at Holzer
Medical Center will be the guest speaker. Caii(7«1)446-50BOto register or for
infpn'nation.
.

rrore

Akigl County feir
Aug.. t 15-20 at the Meigs County FairgR&gt;unds . lookforthe HolZer Medical
Cenhtr Wellnen Wagon as they provide lr11e screenings and health infometion
during the Fair. Schedules will be posted daily. FormD!'e information. please call
the HMC Cofl"''n..nily Heakhand Wellne$5 Department at(7«1) US 5679.

Submitted photo

Dr. Fred Williams, admimstrator of Ohio Valley Chris tian
School. congratulates Harord Taylor. the high school sciE'nce
and computer teacher for 27 years. Taylor recently completed
his master's of science degree in science education at the
Montana State University College of Graduate Studies. Part of
the benefits from the school is to pay half of the tuition for
graduate study leading to a master's degree .

',

as

a

non-denominational
Cbristi~n edlrcational ministry of First Baptist Church
with 39 ~tu dcnts in gratle' K0: In five years it grew 1o a
complete KS- 12 school with a
college prep emphasis . Over
the years the s&lt;.:hool ha ;
earned a reputation for its
Bible teaching. excellent academics. family atmosphere .
and Cl'arigclical spi'ritual

emphasi s. Fami lies
are
encouraged to call the school
and arrange for a visit.
OVCSoffcrs a non-denominational. Biblically integrated
education that currentl y serves
-18 di!Terenr area churches .
Enrollment is still open and
interested parents shoultl call
-146-0374 for high sc-hool
information and +!6-3960 f(lr
elementary information .

.

•Meigs County big tree contest underway

.

substance from your premises, you_could lose not only
your credibil ity, but · also
your li ve lihood . If he has
been smoking grass in your
house, it's likely the scent is
on yo ur clothing. Let ' s pray
you ge t thi s felon-in-trainjng out of there before a
member of the canine unit
start s W&lt;\gging hi s tail in
front of you.
. DEAR ABBY: I have bleen
dating "Matt" for about a
year. We have had a great
relationship, and I really
adore him. Not long ago, I
had so me severe financia l
setbacks, so we decided to
move in together to help me
with the expenses.
Although Matt is good to
me, he hasn't told me that he
loves me. I don 't know if th i~
is bothering me so much
becau se I'm used to prai se,
or if. after one year. this
phrase should have been spoken. We share things that
people who love each other
do, and I kind of feel cheat\ d
- like 'the relationship rs
somehow incomplete.
I talked to my girlfriends.
They agree that if we live
together and he essentially
takes care of me, he should
have told me by now. When

I ask him about ' us and how
he feeb. he ;ay.s. " I care a lot
about you," and "You mean
a lot to me.'' But when ·1
asked why he ha;n't said ·•J
love you ." he told me he
doesn·t feel that way yet - .
to give him time. He sa.id "I
love you " means a lol to
him, and he isn't just goi r!S
to throw it out there to ma~
me fee I good .
The .other night l wa; talk·ing to him and'tllurted out , 'T
love you ." He ; aiLl . "011'.
baby.'' and acted like I hadn't
said a word. It left me feclin_g
a terrible void . Am I bciug
, unfair to this relationship arid
myself? - LOVELESS ll'J
WYOMING
DEAR LOV ELESS : You
are feeling _a terrible vo id
because there is one. You a(e
not living- with Matt be&lt;.:au~e ·
h~ wants to take your rei
tion ship to the next leveL you
are liv ing with him bec·au'e
you hat! finan cial setback,
and he tonk you in . That \
charity, not love.
If you want to move thi s
relationship forward . yo u
may have to take a giant , tep
backward ;pecifically.
save some money and move
out. You wi ll never ge t him
to love you by pre"uri ng
him , but you. miglll if you
create a vo id that he tilrnks
only .you can fill.
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Plril/ips.
and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Pili/lip•··
Write
Dear Abby (Jt
www.DearAbby.com or P.f1.
Box 69440, Los Ange/e~·.
CA 90069.
•

Diabetes SUPJPrt Grpup On Ga!IIIICI!is)
Sul'll'.l.y, Augu.t 14 from 2:00 pm- 4:00 pm in 'the Holzer Medical Center French

.

POMEROY - The annual
Big Tree Corttest spons!lred
· by the Meigs Soil and Water
. Conservation District is
. underway with the nomina·
. tions being accepted through
Monday.
. Every year. a different
species of tree is selected for
· the contest. This year's con: t~st is open for the "':eep_ing
: Willow. whose screntJfJc
: name is Salix· babylonica. L
The nominated tree mu -t be
loca'ted in Meigs County. It

Dear
Abby

Thursday, Aug. 18
RACINE Pomeroy ,
Racine Lodge · 164 F&amp;AM
will meet at 7:30 .p.m. at the
ALBANY - Mi sty and Tim Althouse of
hall. Refreshments.
Albany annunce the birth of a son, Josiah
Monday, Aug. 22
CHESTER - Shae River Wayne, July 13 , at O'Blene ss Memorial
Lodge 453 will hold a special Hospital, Athens. The Althouses have two .
. meeting 7 p.m. for the pur- · dau ghters, Mikayia Rae -and Jacelyn Rae .
pose of conferring the Grandparents are Bonnie Althouse and Ron
entered apprentice degree on an~ Dian Hysell of Albany. and Steve and
two
candidates: Charl ene Chaney of Pomeroy.
Refreshments .
·. Thursday, Aug. 25. ·
CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453.will·-hold a special
meeting at 7 p.m. a\ the hall
for the purpose.of conferring
the Master Mason degree on
a candidate: Refreshments.

OVCS back.in session Monday

~~!: '! !"!": '%"!"!"'!!" '!.YY YYY '! YYYY YYYTYYYYYYTYYYYTY YYYY TTY T :fYYYYYY"% YYYY
Y YY '! "% YY YYY-YY Y YYY Y Y YY Y YYY '!''!''!''!"'!'"!'''!'t&lt;
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Church events·

Wednesday, August 17, 2oos

Aunt lays down the law with drug-dealing nephew

POM EROY
Rob
Harrri son as the feature
winner of the Monday
night 's demo derby at the
Meigs Cou'nty Fair with
Travis Hendricks coming in
second.
Winners. in the four heat s,
listed first through fifth, were
,.
as follows:
First . heat: Brent Whaley,
Mike
Conkel,
Travis
Hendricks, Robert Henry,
lind Brian Gauld
Second heat: Ri chard
Arnott, Rob Harrison, Brad
_Haggy, Brian Whaley and
Troy Brooks.
Third
heat:
Jeremy
Basham , Keith Harr, ·Jeff
Oiler, Brian Buffington and
Dave Harrts;Photo
Mike Bai)ey.
. There's always plenty of excitement at demo derby competi'Fourth
heat :
Adam tions .and the on'e at the Me1gs County Fai r was no exception.
Stapleton, Dale McDo nald The Pomeroy Fire Department was called in to put out a fire in
and Brian Huffman .
one of the cars .

Reunions

PageA3

BY THE BEND

Tht; Daily Sentinei

VVednesday,August17,2005

Prosecutors will meet Wednesday
to discuss possible Taft charges
Bv ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS •

·I

\

does not need to be located nil
property or the person making
the noniination. however permission from the property
owner lf\USI ·be obtained in
order to nominate a tree .
Tree' can he ' nominated
only one time and the fir&gt;t
entry received will be entered
in the contest.
Nomination fonm arc
available at the Meig&gt; Soil
and Watei Conserl'ation
District. 33101 Hiland Road.
Pomeroy. OH 45769. and arc

a!SI) al'ailable at the !\'leigs
SWCJ) fair booth . ·
A 550 sal'ings bond will be
presented a&gt; the Meigs ·
County Big Tree Award at the
Meig' SWCD annual b&lt;~n­
quct. District persomt6l and
forestry judges will measure
all trees. and the decision of
· the judge' will be final. .
· The winner of la;t year\
l'nntc; t was Jane and Rud
Baker who nominated the
Sycamore tree located rn
Chester Tl•wn,hip. ·

Autism Support Group
T.-sday,Augwt 16 at 6:30pm in lhe HMC.Education &amp;'Conference Center Room
C. For rmre information, call HOPE Intervention at (7 40) 446 8598.
'

Tuesday, August 16 fR&gt;m6:30 pm until8:30 pm in the Holzer Medea I Center
Education &amp; Conference Center Room A. Please call f140) 44G-5030 to regrste r or
for rrore infomBiion.
~tue §~A~Qrt~
Thursday,AUQU~St 18 at 6 :00 pmatthe Holzer Center for Canc.er Care located rn
frontolthe Hospilah:m Jackson Pike in Gallipolis. Speaker will be Pal Davis· RN.
who willdiscu~s Bone Cancer. A light supper will be provided by Celgene
Pllarrnaceutical$ . For rrore inforrr-etion, ple_a seca"(7«1)446-5679.

Holzer Hosniee Grief SuPPOrt GroUP !Jackson. Obto)

· ThUIWday,Augua•1Bat 7:00 pmattheJackson Corriort 1m Meeting Room Call
1-blz er 1-bs pi:e to 11-free at 1...900-5CJ0.4850 for rrore information .
'
Commurtily.J;offee
Friday,Auguat 19 trom 8:00am ~,mti19 : 00 am in tile HMC Educallon &amp; Conferenc e -~
Cenler. l-btzer Medical Cente r invites all to an infomela.Uorgo,ngoomrnunity
coffee prorroting conversatiOn between area leaders in bu sines s . corrmu nrly
setvice , edueatron, gr)vernmentaoo privale enterprise. Sponsored by the HM C
,
Chaplaincy Services pepartment. For rrore inforrrstion , please call (7 40) 446-'0'3.

Time, Temperature and Weather .
,.

A free servial provided by HolZer MediCal Center.
Temperatuf8 and weather forcasts af8 ava1/able 24 hours a day

(740)

446-2999 ~f [f 'fAI

�...

..

•

•

•

•

•

0:..

\

PageA4

NO

The Daily Sentinel

• Wednesday, Augtist 17, 2oos

VVedneSday,Augustt7,2005

Britain's great schism, the Blairs
Cherie Buuth. wif~ of
British Prim ~ Minister Tony
Blair, has certuinly made a
name for her.sel f - and not
one that ~ugge~t!'o goud
things for Britain or the war
. on terror.
Most recen tl y. Booth has
made heaJi ines by cautioning Britain's leadersh ip that

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

..

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Fr,eland
Publisher

.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Ed!tor

-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
· ToJay ts Wednesday, Aug. 17. the 229th day of 2005.
There are ·1~6 days left in the year.
•
Touay's Highlight in History :
On Au~ . 17. 1807, Robert Fulton's North River Steam
Boat b~g:m heading up New York's Hudson -River on its
su~cessfu i annular-trip to Albany.
·
On tillS Jatc:
in I863. l0eueral batteries and ships bombarJed Fort
Sumte r in Charleston harbor during the Civil War.
. · In I X96. a prospecting 'party discovered gold in Alaska, a
l'inding that touc hed off the Klondike gold rush.
In 1915, a mob in Cobb County, Ga., lynched Jew ish
"businessman Leo Frank, whose death sentence for the mur{Jer of 13-year-old Mary .Phagan had been commuted to life
ip1prisonment. (Frank, who had maintained his innocence,
was pardoned by the state of Georgia in 1986.)
. : In I 942. during World War ll, U.S. Eighth Air Force
-liombers attacked Rauen, Fram:e.
.
: In 1943, the Allied conquest of Sicily was completed as
:U.S. and British forces entered Messina.
"
· In I 969, 248 people were killed as Hurricane Camille
slammed into . the Gulf Coast.
In 1969. the Woodstock Music and Art Fair conCluded·
near Bethel. N.Y.
In 1978, the first successful transatlantic balloon !light
endeJ as Maxie Anderson, Ben Abruzzo and Larry Newman
landed their Double Eagle II outside Paris.
· In 1985. more than I ,400 meatpackers walked off· the job
~t the· Geo. A. Hormei and Co.'s main plant in Austin ,
Minn .. in a bitter strike that lasted just over a year.
In 1987, Rudolf Hess, the last mem ber of Adolf Hitler's
inner circ le, died at a Berlin hospital near Spandau Prison at
:age 93. having apparently commjned suicide.
: Ten ye;(rs ago: James B. McDougal, McDougal's ex-wife,
Susan H. McDougal, and Arkansas. Gov. Jim Guy Tucker
we re indicted by the Whitewater grand jury. (James
McDougal was convicted on 18 of 19 counts of fraud and
conspiracy: Tucker was found guilty on one count of fraud
and one count of conspiracy; Susan McDougal was convict. .
.
ed on four fraud-related charges.) ·
Five years ago: AI Gore accepted the Democratic nomination for president, pledging a "better. fairer, more prosperous. America': at the party's convention in Los Angeles.
Shortly before Gore spoke, his running mate. Joseph
Lieberman. was nominated by acclamation. Word leaked out
that Independent Counsel Robert Ray was assembling a new
grandjury to investigate President Clinton's conduct in the
Monica Lewinsky scandaL (Democrats charged Republicans
we re behind the release of information, but a federal judge
said he was inadvertently responsible for the disclosure.)
One year ago: British police charged eight terrori&gt;t suspects with conspiring to commit murder and use radioactive
materials, toxic gases, chemicals or explosives to cause
'·fear or injury.'' At' the Athens games, Romania won its sec'ond straight Olympic gold medal in women's ' gymnastics:
ttie United States took si lver whi'ie Russia won the bronze.
Thought for Today: "There are two ways of spreading
light : to be the candle. or the mirror that reflects it." Edith Wharton. American author ( 1862- 1937 ).

rimes when there . is a threat
to national sccuritv. must u~o:t
strii.'tl y in &lt;1\.'\.'un.ianrc with
the l;tw." She was also seemingly opposed. following the
London bombings. tu talk of
even mor'e tri-pa nisan. anti-

Eng land's attempt to deal
with the current brutality of
militant Islam .
One needs onl y to look to
Booth 's in vnlveme.nt in the
Shabina Begum case lo
terror leg i\ lation. sayi ng that unJerstand the . apparent
SU(h
i.l res pon se
wou]J schism in Bl air and Booth 's
·•rheapen o ur right to_ra il approaches . Miss Begum is
a Musl im teen who won a
ourse lve.s
a
~: i v ili 1c d
court victory earlier thi s
nation."·
Far from simpl y ex pre"- year with Cherie Booth' s
ing a general caution ahout . help. Cherie was the girl' s
respecting. perso nal ri ght s . . lawyer in a case that should
Booth - a human-ri ght s have give n· the fem ini st
lawyer wl10 lises her maiden Bootll whiplasb .
Beg um sued her state
nan !~~
profess io nally
made her comment s evl.!n &lt;.Is schopl for not allowing her
Tony Bla ir \vas talkin g to wear her full-length jilbab
about re fu sing ··ro give an - uttire that wou ld have left
inch to terrori sm" - a ~ he only l1c r face and ' hands
has cotisistently said ,...;ince ex poses!. She had already
Sept. II . and reiu l'orced ti)J - bee n attending the school -.
" low in 0 lite horrifi c Jul y 7 under a Jress code ·which
allnwcd for some but not all
:macks on London . ·
of
the j ilbab - for two
By voicing the less-than subtle publii.' warning to her yeurs. Cri ti cs. such ·as
hu shaml. Bomh 's slatcment s Briti sh writer Theodore
were acutely irresponsihl e. Dalrymple (author nf "Our
Perhaps the worst part of her Cu lture. What's Left of It"
wmmcnts is that she made (Ivan R. Dee . 2005) inti them in Malaysi a. no hast1on mates that "she was almost
cert ainly put up to this by
of human right s .
Some may try to exc·use · her o lder tJrothe r, .a support her remarks as impcttinclll. er of Hizb ut-Tahrir, a
thou gil') seemingly harml ess. Muslim party, that seeks to
But Booth. especia ll y as the establi sh a Muslim \Vorid
prime minister's heum&lt;tte . state. that beli eves democrahas become entangled in the cy is blasphemy. and that
fra yed wpe.11 ry 111a1 " deni es that the Western citi -

00 YOU OR 00 'rtlU
NOT B£1.1£\/E IN A
CO~STITUTIONAL

RIGHT 10 PRIVACY?

LETTERS TO THE.
EDITOR
. uuers io rhe ediror are welcome. They should be less rlwn
JOO &gt;rords. All leuers are subjecr ro edirin~: . musr be signed.
and include addre.u and relephone number No IIIISifined /crIers &gt;ri/1 be published. utrers should be it! good U/ Sie.
·a ddressing issues. 1101 per,wtraliries. Lellers of rhmrh [(I atxa ni:atiom and illllil'iduals will nor be accejJted fur rmblicatirm .

The Daily Sentinel
.

(Usl!s 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.'

Our main concern fn all stories is Ia be Published every afternoon. Monday
.accurate. If you know of an error in a through Fnday. 111 Court Street .
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992- Pomeroy. Ohio. Second-class postage
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Member: The Associated Press and the
Ohio Newspape,. AsSOCiatiOn .
Our main number Is
Potlmaater: Send address correctionS

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Department extensions are:

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Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769.

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'---

Man injured at fair

POMEROY- Randy Fryar of Alfred was reponed in good
NEWARK
Mildred
condition at Cabeli-Huntington Hospital late Tuespay afternoon
Loui se Gaul. known as
after a struggle with a feeder calf at the Meigs County Fair.
"Mid'' to her friends, 81 , forIt was reported by a fair official that Fryar was moving the
mer resident of Meigs
calfwhep it became spoofed by a fairgoer. The animal dragged
County, passed away at
and then knocke_d Fryar down as he struggled. to control it.
· Arlington Care Center in
After examination by emergency personnel on the grounds,
Newark on Tuesday, Aug. I 6,
MedFlight
was brought in to transport Fryar to the Huntington
2Q05 after a lengthy battle
Hospital for treatment.
.
'
·
.
·
.
with heart and lung di sease .
Mtd wa~ born on Sept. 15
1923 in FiatWO!)ds. daughter
of the late David Jenkin and
Edna (Windon ) Morga n.
MIDDEPORT - In announcing the engagement of Tara
She spent her childhood on
Leann Wyatt and Skip Dodson in Sunday's paper, the name uf
the dairy farm . spoke often
the prospective groom's father was unintentionally omitted by
of the Great Depressi-o n and
the family. He is Alan Dodson of Florida.
played wonderful songs of
faith on the piano at
Mildred Louise "Mid" Gaul
Flatwoods Uni ted Methodist
Church. ·
'POMEROY -Winners in the Grange .exnibit competition
She graduated from Chest.er Hi gh School in I 94 I . worked at the Meigs County Fair have been announced . Taking first
at the TNT Plant in Point Pl easant, W.Va. anJ was a volunplaces were the Meigs County Grange Youth and Star Grange,
teer 4-H leader. She married her high school sweetheart ,
· both of Bidwell. In second place was Hemlock Grove Grange,
Jacob Miller Gaul. on Nov. 25 1943 . She was a housewife and ttiird went to Racine Grange.
and former bm;iness women . She worked at Public Debt in
Parkersburg, W:Va .. owned and operated the Gaul Trailer
Sales and the Shake Haven Restaurant at Chester.
Her children cherished her presence at their chcerleading
POMEROY - Meigs High School will hold an open hou se
activities, baseball games, dance recitals. minstrels, plays.
4-H, Girl Scout and Eastern Booster events. She vol un- for freshmen and new students from 6 to 7 p.m·. Monday. For
teered COUill le·ss hours in Ohio and at her winter home in more information, call 992-2158.
Avon Park. Fla. where she wrote the ne igh borhood
newsletter for years. She had a lifelong love of animals
and enj oyed quilting, crocheti ng and writing poetry for
family and fri ends. She was a member of' Chester United
POMEROY. - in compliance with the Individuals with
Methodist Churc.h.
Disabilities Education Act, the Gallia-Jackson-Vinton Joint
In additioi1 to her parents and sti llborn brother David Vocational School District conducts on an annual basis, an
Jenkin Jr., she was preceded in death by a stillborn daughter, intensive campaign to identify handicapped children under the
Gloria Kay, and gra ndson, Michael Andrew Clay. She is sur- age of 22. For furthur information regarding available servived by her husband of 61 years, Jacob M. G&lt;lUi, anJ a half- vices. residents may contact Steve Saunders of the Buckeye
sister, Gladys MorgaD Rig gs; one son, Victor Eugene Hills Career Center, 245-5334.
(Darlene) Gaul of Heath , Ohio; two daughte rs, Patricia Ann
(Larry) Clay of Alpharetta, Ga. and Vicki Lynn (Andy) Kish
Mansfield and Peggy Crane.
of Centreville, Va.: six grandchildren, .Victor E. (Teri ) Gaul.
Children portraits: Stacie
Jr., Lisa Gaul. Steven and Patrick Clay, Kyl eigh and
Pullins and Sarah E.
Matthew Ki sh: two step-grandchildren. Jonathan Kish and
Lawrence
of Long Bottom.
from
Page
A1
Lauren Hem pstead; three great-grandchildre n. Justin and
Nature
closeups: ·sara
Bryant Gaul, J oshua Harper: two ·step-great- grandch ildren ,
Mansfield and Renee Carson. ·
Jesse and Chelsea Berger.
and Tara Rose of' Racine.
Sports and/or sporting
The following poem was written with love by granddaughAnimal or birds: Renee
ter, Lisa Gaul.
Carson and Tyler Johnson of events: Stacie Pullins and
Crane
of
Jeanette
" Grandma's Love"
Portland . .
Middleport.
It's applesauce with cinnamon candy
Adult portrait: Joni Jeffers
Flowers: Renee Carson and
And custard pie that tastes just dandy!
of Middleport, and Peggy
Debbie
Spencer.
Crocheted afghans and hand-stitched quilts
Crane.
Birds:
Valerie Allman and
Children portraits: Julie
Are pri_eeless heirlooms her love· has btiilt'
Spaun of Pomeroy and Jeanette Crane.
Homegrown love for you to take
Insects: Lisa M. Stethem
Debbie Spencer of Pomeroy.
Handmade crafts that she can make!
an·d
Jeanette Crane.
Nature close ups: Renee
A grandma's love comes in many a form
Abstracts: Renee Carson
Carson and Debbie Spencer.
It 's always there to keep you warm'
and
Lisa M. Stethem.
Sports . and\or sporting
Lisa M.
Miscellaneous:
A funeral 'service will he held at ·[] a.m. on Friday, Aug. 19, events: Stacie Pullins of
Steihem and Joyce E. Manuel
2005 at the Fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with graveside Long Bottom and Peggy of Racine.
Crane.
services following at Mound Cemetery on S~mner Road.Meigs County historical:
Flowers: Amity Wamsley
Friends may call from 4 to 8 p.m. Thursday at the Fi sher
Carson ,and Peggy
Renee
Funeral Home iq. Pomeroy. Memorial contributions may be of Pomeroy and Julie Spaun. Crane.
Birds: Lisa M. Stethem of
made to the Activities Department at Arlington Care Center at
Snapshots 4x6 or smaller
Pomeroy, and Peggy Crane.
98 S. 30th St. in Newark, Ohio, 43055.
Meigs County Fair: Phyllis
Insects : Lisa M. Stethem
Online condolences may be sent 'tO www.fishert'(Hieral- and
Valerie Allman of Spencer and Peggy Crane .
homes.com
Snapshots, black
Pomeroy.
and white
Abstracts: Holly Jenkins of
Abstracts: Juolie Spaun
Long Bottom and Phyllis
and
Wade Allman of
Spencer.
Miscellaneous: No first, Pomeroy.
Portraits: Julie Spaun and
Peggy Crane, second.
Meigs County . HistoriCal: Wade Allman.
Sara
Miscellaneous:
Debb ie Spencer and Peggy
Manfield and Julie Spaun.
Crane.
MASON. W.Va. - Alfred Lee "Rusty" Roush, 56. of
Enlargements, black
Eillargements in color
Mason, W. Va. , died Monday, Aug . 15, 2005 at St. Mary 's
and white
Landscape and seascape :
. Hosp ital in Huntington, W. Va.
.
,
. Sara Manstieid and Renee
Abstracts: Julie Spaun and
He is survi ved by his wife. Hilda Marie "Shhron'' Roush of Carson.
Valerie Allman.
Mason.
Portraits; Debbie Spencer
Animals a~d /or · bird s~
Friends may call from I I a.m. to noon Thursd&lt;!y at the Renee Carson and Pamela and Julie Spaun .
Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home in Mason. At 12 :~0 p.m. Buckiey of Pomeroy.
Miscellaneous : Julie Spaun
there will be gra veside services at Graham Cemetery. New
Sara and Sara Mansfield.
Adult
portraits :
Haven, W. Va. with the Rev. Li:;a McKee and Pastor Clyde
~mlioffic~i~ .
·
Computer graphics: Peggy
E-Mai I
condolences
ma y ·
be
se nt
to
·Crane
of Middleport .
foglesongtucker@myway.com
Adult paintingfrom Page A1
experienced
Landscape:
Diana ' L.
Johnson,
Long
Bottom.
it
all
week
in
the
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - John Michael Beaver, 52. of Coonhunters building.
Animal study: Diana L.
Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Sunday.
Johnson.
First and second winners in
· Visitation will be from 5-8 p.m. today at Wilcox~n Funeral
Floral study : Juli a A.
the categories listed respecHome in Point Pleasant. .
'•
Proctor of Middleport.
were as follows: .
Funeral services will be at II a.m. Thursday at the funeral tively Amateur
Picture from Life: Julia A.
Painting
home.
Picture from life: Ch ri s tin ~ Proctor
Burial wi ll fo llow in Leon Cemetery, in Leon . W.Va.
Pencil , pen and ink: Robert
Howard of Albany and Joyce
Swi sher, Middleport.
Manuel of Racine .
Landscape : Juilia
A.
Animal s t~d y : Shirley J.
Prqctor and Diana L.
Hamm. Racine.
Johnson.
study:
Shirley
J.
Floral
POINT PLEASANT. W:Va. - Tammy Beave r. 45 , of Point
Animal study in oil: Lula S.
Christina
Hamm
and
Pleasant, W.Va., died Sunday.
Toban and Diana L. Johnson.
Visitation will be from 5-8 p.m. today at Wilcoxen Funeral Howard.
Floral study in oil: Luia S.
Pencil. pen and ink or crayHome in Point Pleasant.
Funeral services will be at I I a.m. Thursday at the funeral on: Eric Montgomery of To ban .
Picture from Life : Julia A.
horne.
· ·
Lan gsville and Catherine
Proctror and Lula S. Toban.
Moon of Shade.
Burial will follow in Leon Cemetery. in Leon. W.Va.

Open house to be held

Services to handicapped

"How mw.:h iS t! nou gh'!
hedge. clean out the garage
Fifty dollar,·' A hundred·'"
or a thousand other little
Tht" Fen.!lhnns were Jcbat things. And it taught me a
in el' hO\\•... mUc .h to !!ivc their
Iife lesson - hi rc someone
13-v(·ar-old
dall'•hter
Cartier
to do those chores for you as
•
1,
1
e
lor her. veekly &lt;tllowancc.
soon
as you can afford it. It's
Jim.
A hundred do'll a rs~ I was
a lesson I'm afraid Cartier
Mullen
trying lo remember whm my
may never learn.
allowance was when I Wa'
" I thought .she· d seen
13 - wa' it a qu&lt;trter or 50
everything. What movie did
cents'1 It lllU&gt;t huve been 50
she go to''"
cents beCause mo\'ics were a
" Let me think, it was 'Hot.
· quarter and the hus. with h av~ to be the di sciplinarian Wet Nurses Meet the Army'
transfers. v./as a dime. EvL:n ir. thiS famil y. Why do I or
'Secret
Lives
of
. wit h inllation. S lc sl1nuld always have to be the bad Cheerleaders· or something.
'
"{_
get Cartier to the movies and .-:-ouv- ·'.
I'm so glad she 's finally
"Bes ides. her credit card going to see somethin g
back. $ I 5 top,.
"When was the last tnnc i,n· t suppo&gt;cd to be used for uplifting instead of rhat nor,
we raised the limit on her travd . It' s for shoes and mal Hollywood irash. So
clothes Jnd purses and iPods many of today's movies are
credit card''" B1)b :osked.
"Oh. i1·, been awhile ... and CD, - the. necessitic&gt;. just gunfights and car chassa id Bc1 crly. "Sometithe Th~ whole idea is to teach es. These sounded rea lly
thi s
spnng
I think . her that money doesn' t just motivational. though. I
Remc.mber. ·it .,_\.tt:-. on ly grnw un tree!'-, that it co mes couidn 't find any reviews for
5_1.200 a mo1nh and she from her par~nts, the same th em, though, they must
cc\uldn' t even pu1 plane lic-k - · \\ av our~ does."
ha ve ju~t come out.'"
l:inh ,noncd. " Hey. I'm
et\ on .it. Sht". ~vas ... o emba rSurely it couldn ' t be the
rassed wh~n 'h~ went tn bu v jthl• a, tuttglt on her as you same "Sec ret Lives of
plane tickeh to Cancun and arc . Wa, n't it just ye,terday Cheerleaders' we had seen
that I told her 'he w uldn 't '20 years ago at a bachelor
it w;,h dec lined.''
go
to the mo\'ie~ unle ~s she
" I d01i' 1 kno11·... Bon 'aid. ·
party for Win ston· Snuffin ..
"Maybe . 11 ~ .shnuld hal'c let lei the maid d ean her roo t'n That ·was so raunchy I don 't
her go. ~l;t)h·c we're betng liN . You &gt;illluld hal'c heard even thin~ it's been on cable
the yell in g and screami ng
tuo ..,tric..:l.
and
pouting b111 I held firm ." l e l ev i ~io n . veL
.. You can nt"\·cr he too
It was i·our in the afterTo get my 50-cent
strici." Be,t·rh '"id. "I t.. JJ alh)\\ancc. the re wa:'\ alwa\1~ noon . Cani~ r was not up yet.
her sh~ could;,,]) go 11 she .
" I; n·t that a little odd ''" I
"omc loa th '-l~l mc ~: horc io
lk\v L"oac l1 : not fir'! ...:!a .......
a.sked .' "ls ,he sick·&gt;"
done lirst . mow the lawn ,
So she Jecidcd not 1(, go'
"Oh.. no.'' Beverly assured
sc rape paint off the porch
I'm ' ure s h~ thinb I' m a r&lt;&gt;iiing. pull \Vecds. trim the m..:. "It's just that· she hact"
mmhtcr. I don't know whl' I
long night. She didn't get
c

~

home until I 1."
"You let a 13-year-&lt;lid girl
stay out ti II II at night?"
"Of course not. What kind
of parents do you think we
are '' It's dangerous for kid$
to be out late at night. She
didn't get home until I I this
morning."
. I'm trying to think. When
was my bedtim~ whe'n I was
J3? Four in the afternoon?
Eight at night?
"And it's not like she was
unsupervised," Beverly continued. "She was with t~at
nice Goth family." .
'' No, honey," said Bob,
"She was with the Vandals."
" Vandals, Goths, what'.s
the difference? She was safe.
This . is the age where you
have to be careful. You don't
want her to &lt;ilart hanging out ·
with the w.r'ong crowd.
It occurred to me that her
parents were the wrong
crowd. Here's a "Dr. Phil"
show .waiting to happen. I
left before Cartier got up.
I'm not sure I was ready to
see her stumble . downstairs
in an outlit from the kid '~
section of Victoria's Secret.
(Jim Mulfen is r/re author
&lt;~{ "It Take.1 a Village Idiot:
Complicating tire Simple
Life '' a//(/ "Babr :~ First.
"/(moo. " You ca11 i-eacir /rim
at jim_mllllm@ ll~y&gt;t ·a_r.cum)

Beth Sergent/ pttotos

Devon Baum took home the awards for gra nd champ•on rabbi t
showman and best of show with · his Califori;Jn at Tuesday :s
Junior Fair Rabbit Show. Baun-i is joined by Tyler Lee. l'a~r K•ng.

Mansfield

Alfred Lee ··Rusty" Roush

Making allowances

jUNIOR FAIR RABBIT
SHOWMAN AWARDS

Grange winners announced

Deaths

'

The Dail y Sentinel • Page As

Omitted

II

~)!

Local Briefs ·

Mildred Louise Gaul

lenship of Muslims is real problem is about much more
or meaningful. or confers than her political future any privileges or imposes former U.S. president Bill
any duties."
Clinton has recently pledged
Not exactly the kind of to campaign for her if she
&gt;ompany the prime min-is- ever wants to run for prime
ter 's wife should be keeping. minister (a.k.a. pull a
, After her legal vic tory. Hillary) . Instead, this ail
Begum said in a statement gets at the heart of British
that the school's pre-court identity roday. And the
dress code .was: "a conse- media focus on Booth adds
quence of an atmosphere to the mixed signals from
that has been created in the ·Blair government - a·
western soc ieties post-9/11 ,
govern ment which has
an, atmosphere in which
Islam has been made a target knighted as one of its key
moderate
for vi lification in the name supposedly
I
s
lami~
all
ies
a
man
who in
of the 'war on terror'."
I
989
said
"death
is
'
p
erhaps
Booth called the ruling "a
victory for all Muslims who too easy" for Salman
wish to preserve their identi- Rushdie, the author of "The
ty and values despite preju- Satani' Verses. " Ju st this
· year, the same ally said that
dice and higotry. "
As British colum nist "There is no such thing as
Melanie Phillips wrote at the an Islamic terrori st." Thattime, the court ruled in .favor like Booth's involvement in
of the full j ilbab "despite the the SGhoolgiri case - is an
fact that her headmistress insult to real moderate
warned that this would leave Muslims who condemn vioother Muslim gi rl s defence- lence and understand the
less agains t targeting and ·need to assimilate a little for
intimidation by fund amen- the health of a civilized socitalists. and despite the fact ety.
that this girl was backed by
If Britain is going to stand
just such an extremist up against terrori sm group."
which. hit at home so recentIf the school's pol icy was ly, it should know full well
in filet some kind of ''vilifilike never before that it has
Ciltion"-of-lslam policy, it
to
send a clear message to
would, of course, be outrageous and totally appropri- those who would use reliate for Booth to fight. But in gion to wage war or oppress.
Booth sure hasn' t sent that
a · country where unbridled
immigration is running into 'message. Tony should clue
an identity cri sis for a cul- her, and those Brits with
ture that has embraced mul- similar views , in .
(kathryn Jean Lopez is
ticulturalism over some
modicum of sensible assimi- rhe editor of Narional
lation. Booth'.; involvement Rel1iew Online (www.natimi · ·
in the high-profile case only alret,iew.com ). Sire can be
i:onwcred at klope~@nation­
adds to the problem.
Unfon unately. ihe Booth afre\l;e·w. com.)

JU!Xi~ ~RTS,

\ ,·,

Correction Polley

Lopez
'•

.. the govc r'nment. t'vcn in

: Congress shall make no latv respecting an
· establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise the.reof; ·or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to ·assemble, and to petitiotz
the Government for a redress of grievances.

Reader Services

Kathryn ·

www.mydailysentinel.com .

Obituaries

'

The Daily -Sentinel

•

Paintings ·

John Michael Beaver

Melissa Snowden took home the award for reserve champi 0 n
rabb it showman with her Satin Cross bred at Tuesday's Junior ·
Fair Rabbit Show. Snowden IS JOined by Heaven Westfail.
Rabbit Princess.

Columbus Zoo investiga'tes elephant death
COLUMBUS (APJ - A
yo ung male Asian elephant
was found dead in his slaii at
the Columhu s Zoo on
Tuesday, ofticiais said .
· Ganesh was 7 years old and
weighed in the neighborhood
of7.000 po!Jnds. not even hal f
grown , according to assistuiH
zoo direCtor Don Wins1el.
The tentative diagnosis follow ing a neanpsy was that
Ganesh died of a viral infection from ~ strain nf lierpes.
that is .ipecific to elephants.
Winstel said . Final rcsuliS
may not be known fnr a week.
"In some caseS. anima ls
die, and you can never real-

ly put your fiitger on 1d1) .
but the pathologists arc
already m&lt;tkin): r~ m&lt;t rkabk
progre ss and l'. ni nptimi&gt;t ic
th at th~y "i ll he a bit' tn put
the pi ece' to get her thi&gt;
time :· Win.stt'l said.
_
The elephant had hcen on
loan fro m tin~ Cinr innati ZtXl
and Botanic·a l Garckn. where
he was hom in 19lJ~ He "'"'
mo\·ed to. the Co lumbus
Zoo's Paclm.lcnn ex hihi1 in
.:!003 he~.·au "c he wa..; ton tt• m peramemal. and th.: e .xhi~ 1 t
has

1 1 1n r~ ~paL1.'

for

phants .111u bc·tter

n~~tl('

k'IL·

~quipml'nt

for restraining the.' Ill
nt?cdcd. \\t' in ~ tcl said.

\\ ilt..' !l

Tammy Beaver

"Professional Care for tire Hearing Impaired since 1984''
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PageA6

NATION

the Daily Sentinel--

·-

Wednesday, August 17,2005

FACEMYER, MILAM SHOW
CHAMPION MARKET LAMBS

· P.ageA7

NATION -• WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

VVednesday,Augnstt7,2005

Roman Catholic church's World Youth
- WOO~, )ONES NAMED
.BEEF
.

Day celebrations begin in Germany .,

.

BREEDING SHOWMEN

~

BY BRIAN J. REED
: 8REED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Class III. Kaylee Milam,
Sellers and Andrew Smeck,
A's; Intermediate, Dawn first, Action Facemyer, sec. Bi sse ll. grand champion, .ond, Dawn Bissell, Suzanne
- ~ ROCKSPRINGS .
Su'zanne Grueser, seco.nd, Grueser, Hannah Williams.
. J.ction Facemyer 's market Ryan Beegle, Olivia Davis, Clayton Moore, all A's; Class
:l~mb was judged gra"nd
Drake,
Action IV (13Q, J31), Lilly Ann
Tina
"):llampion
at
Monday Facemyer, Lilly Ann Jacks, Jacks. Michael Wright, Holly ·
j:)lening's Junior Fair Sheep Kay lee · Milam, Hannah Davis, Olivia Davi s. Tina
~ow, and Kaylee Milam's
Williams. and Mi'chael Drake; Class V ( 138-.140),
tilmb the reserve champion.
Action · Facemyer, grand
Wri ght, all A's; Novice,
Dawn Bissell was named ' Judging results of market champion. Alyssa Baker, sec·
:grand champion sheep · lambs, by weight class, were . ond, Ryan Beegle, A.
:showman , and Suzanne Class I (Y I-106 pounds),
Winners in the sheep
·Grueser was named reserve Alyssa Baker, Kyle Young, breeding
showmanship
Alex
Amos,
Holly
Davis,
classes were Dawn Bissell.
.champion showman . Sarah
Bvans.of ML Sterling was Kasie Sellers, Victoria grand champion,
Ryan
·
Lawson,
all
A's;
Class
II
Beegle, reserve champion ,
lhe event judge. ·
· Judgin g results in ·the ( II 0- 119), · Michael Wright, breeding sheep showman Amos,
Hannah sh ip. Dawn Bissell, grand
showmtt'nship ciJiilpelition , Ryan
by age class, were: Senior. Williams, Kaylee Milam , · and reserve champion; sufBrlan J. Reed/ photos
Tim Ball . first place: Dawn Bissell, Kyle Young. folk ewe, and Ryan Beegle, Dawri Bissell and Suzanne Grueser were named grand and reserve champion sheep showmen
· Junior, Alyssa Baker. first. Suzanne Gmeser, Tim Ball, grand and reserve champion at Monday evening's Junior Fair Sheep Show. Pictured with the the shOwmen is event judge,
crossbred ewe.
Sarah Evans , and Fair Queen and King Whitney Thoene and Tyler Lee.
!"folly Davis. second. Kas ie Andrew Smeck, all A's.

--

BY BETH SERGENT
·. BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM ,

:. ROCKSPRINGS
Jordan Wood and Craig
Jones were grand .champion
'and r~ se rve champiou show.man,
respe ctively,
at
.Tuesday's Junior Fair Beef
Breeding Show.
' The show, judged by
Jamie Bond of Beaver, proceeded an evening of dairy
and commercial steers and
feeders in. the lives toc k
.show arena.
· The show also featured
novice, · beg inner, junior,
irttennediate and senior 4-H
members .
Craig Jones showed the
grand' champion AngLrs ,
Jordan Wood showed the
grand champion Charolais.
Ashley Putnam showed the
:grand champion Chiania.
·Ashley Putnam showed the
grand champion and Dyla n
Milam showed the reserve
champion Maine,. Anjou ,
Dylan Milam showed both
the grand champion and
reserve
chan,p i"on
Shorthorn , Dylan Milam
showed the grand champion
and. Ashley Life showed the
reserve
cha mpi o n
Crossbred .

'

BY STEPHAN KOEHNlEIN
ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER •

·Beth Sergent/ photos

Dylan . Milam showed the grand champion Crossbred at
Tuesday's Junior Fair Beef Breed ing Show and was joined by
Tyler Lee. Fair King, Whitney Thoene. Fair Queen. Ashley
Putnam. Beef Pr1ncess, Nathan Cook , Beef Prince.

COLOGNE, Germany Thousands of cheering and
singing young people from
dozens of nations gathered in
Cologne Tuesday, inaugurating World Youth Day with a
jubilant Mass led by the
city 's archbishop.
German-born
Pope
Benedict XVI will join the
six-day .Roman Catho lic
y·outh festival on Thursday in
his first foreign trip. Hi s predecessor John Paul II , the
founder of the 20-year-old
event and ·a favorit e wi th
.
AP Photo
young people, was still very
much on people's minds.
Youth from around the world take part in the opening ceremo"The 20th Wo rld Youth ny of World Youth Day in Cologne , western Germany, Tuesday.
Day is the lirst one with two More than 400,000 people have registered for the World Youth
popes ," said Cologne 's Day in Cologne- the larges.t attend ance in the event's histoArchbishop,
.Joachim ry - as church leaders and young people on Tuesday kickep
Meisner.
off the festival which German-born Pope Bened ict XVI will join
German President Horst on his first foreign trip.
Koehler welcomed the pi I- ·
grims. drawing bursts of tude, and we are extremely . urged the young Cathol ics to
cheering with greetings in happy · about the arrival or proudly display their faith &lt;n
English, Italian. French and Pope Benedict," he said.
public, and many .apparenO~
Spanish.
More than 400,000 people took note. of the advice. . ·•
"I hope you return to your have registered for the World·
Young people filed int!&gt;
home countries with new Youth Day, and organizers Cologne's gothic cathedral to
energy ai1d coni"idc,nce," he say as many as a million may pray, then poured into tlle "
said in English, urging people · turn up by the time the resti - ci ty.'s streets , dancing aCd
to make friends and collect val ends on Sunday.
singing religious songs. Ttle
lots of phone numbers. " Do
"We want the World Ym!lh festivities continued into th~
not let go of the hands reach- Day to be a deep, sp iritual buildings housing them over
ing out to you over the next experien·ce not . on ly in the next few day s, inc luding !l
few days."
Europe but in the entire Turkish Islamic cu ltural cerr
.. ..
Then. returning to his world," Meisner said at a ter.
native German , he too found · news conference ahead of the
Benedict is scheduled . ~b
words for John Paul, who ofticial start of the fe stival.
join the festival on Thursday
died ip April.
The head of Germany' s and close the event with:a
"We are· thinking of John Bishops
Conference, huge open-air mass outsidf
Paul with respect and grati- Cardinal Karl Lehmann, Cologne on Sunday.
,;

·-

..
Plane filled with tourists crashes itj

Venezuela, killing all160 on board\
•

ing, say ing both engi nes haq ter was among the dead.
failed. But within 10 minutes.
Some passengers were
•
; ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER
the McDonnell Do&lt;.1glas MD- descendants of island workers
82 fell into a steep descent who helped build the Panama
MACHIQUES, Venezuela and broke apart on impact, Canal a century ago, sai.&lt;;l
-· A chartered jet ftlled with Venezuelan official s said. ·Al in a Guerrero, a spoke.!!;'
tourists .returning home tO the Residents reponed hearing an woman for Panama's Foreign
French Caribbean isl"and of explosion.
Ministry. She said the group
Martinique crashed Tuesday in
"The plane went out of chanered the flight as pan of
western Venezuela, killing all control and crashed," said a program to visit descen160 people on board. The plane , Col. Francisco Paz, president dants of the Caribbean immiplunged to the ground after the of the National Civil Aviation grants who came to Panama
pilot reported both engines had Institute. "There are no sur- .to construct the canal.
. failed, officials said.
vivors."
"Martinique is a small place
Wreckage was · strewn
The plane was carrying I 52 - I 52 people dead, you
across a remote pasture near tourists from Martinique, imagine," said Magalie
Machiques, 400 miles west including a. 21-month-old Grivallier. a spokeswoman for
of Caracas near the border child, returning home after a the Maninique government.
with Colombia just east of · week in Panama, officials said. "It means vinually everybody
the Sierra de Perija moun- All eig ht Colombian crew had a cousin on that plane." ·
tain range . From above, only members also were killed.
"France is mourning.~'
the tail 1of the West
At Martinique's airport , French Pre sident . Jacques
Caribbean Airways plane relatives sobbed as "a law- Chirac said in a televised
cou ld i)e seen intact, lying maker read out the names of statemenl.
amid charred tree s.
the victims. In the nearby
Venezuelan President Hugo
The tail of the West town of Ducos, where about Chavez said he spoke to
Caribbean Airways plane jutted 30 of the victims reportedly Chirac and Colombian
from the ground, the only part lived, about 150 distraught President Alvaro Uribe to
of the jet that appeared intact.
friends and relatives gathered express his &lt;.:ondolences.
The crash was the deadliest outside city hall. "
"We are very saddened by
in
Venezuelan
history,
"It 's as though the sky fell !his tragedy.'' Chavez said,
according to the Aviation
saying both engines appeared
Safety Network, a nonprofit on my . head today," said to
have simply "turned off.""
Claire
Renene,
40,
whose
sisgroup that keeps a database
of air disasters. It said the
death toll surpassed a 1969
('hiroprac&lt;or Of !he )-eat t'l'Jtl .
crash in Venezuela that killed
V.P11"1' ("hiropactic Soci«y .
155, including .?! victims on
M&lt;ml&lt;r ol Amerirnn Boord ol
the ground.
kn:t5ic PniCSS~tNis
Rescuers pulled dozens of
20 yl) c~pmenr.."t'
bodies from the site and
M&lt;mi&lt;r &lt;i Aff&lt;ri&lt;on Aod&lt;my
Auto Accidents Workers'
recovered one of the plane 's•
..r Medial A~""
black boxes, which could
Compensation
give clues to the cause of the
• Spur1 ~ lnjun.:s
crash, said Air Force Maj.
• fl.h.•O i~,..-n:
• \Inn ln..~ um~
• Acupum:tu~
' Same \ill~ ilppl.
Javier Perez, the search and
resc ue chief. He said the
cockpit voice recorder had
not been found.
As the plane developed
problems just after 3 a.m.. the
Colombian pilot radioed to a
304-273-5321 ~ .
nearby airport in · western
Venezuela requesting pennisRa'(enswood, WV
n St.
sion fo r an emerge nc y land- 316 Washin
•

•

.A:ction Facemyer showed the grand champion market lamb at Monday's Junior Fair Sheep
~how . Also pictured are Fair Queen and King Whitney Thoene and Tyler Lee, and Judge
~arah Evans.

Kaylee Milam , assisted by Morgan Burt, left. showed the reserve champion market lamb at
the Meigs County Junior Fair Sheep Show. Judge Sarah Evans and Fair Queen and King
Whitney Thoene and Tyler Lee are also pictured .

,Senate Judiciary panel's top Democrat calls RobertS' views 'radical'
Bv DAVID ESPO

and Records Administration.
Leahy asked that ponions of
those be made public, as
WASHINGTON - Sen. appropriate.
Patrick Leahy, who will lead
Additionally. a folder of
ihe Democratic questioning al' material relating to alfirmmive
John Roberts' wnfirmation action was misplac.ed by library
criticized . the officials atier being reviewed
·hearings,
Supreme Court nommee by administration officials.
Tuesday as an "eager. aggres- Weinstein wrote. He said he
sive advocate" for policies of believed the material had been
' the Republican far right wing. reconstructed "Without the migi' One day after the release of m~s 'and made public. Both
5.000 pages of Reagan-era Leahy and Kennedy asked for
records,
the
Vermont investigations.
Democrat said in a statement
Leahy spoke out on Robens
. tbat Roberts' views were as several officials said
"among the most radical People For tlie American
being ,offered by ;, cadre Way. a prominent civil rights
: intent on reversing decades of. · group. is likely to announce
:policies on civil rights, voting its opposition to his conllrma. rights, women's rights, pri va- tion by the end of next ~.eek.
:.cy and access to justice.;·
These officials sai d the
; Leahy stopped shon of announcement could mark
·announcing· his opposition to the beginning of a string of
:the appointment. in keeping such declarations from other
i with a ca ll from -Senate
including the
: Minority L..eader Harry Reid organizations.
Leadership tonference on
· for the rank and llle to wait
: for confirmation hearing s Civil Ri ghts and the Alliance
for Justice. · They spoke on
: before rria!&lt;ing decisions. But condition
of .anonymity, not; hjs statement was by far the
ing
that
formal ·decisions
:most critical" he has made
·since President Bush nomi - have not yet beeq made.
Other groups gave indica: nated Robens to the high
tions
of following .
:court, and among the most
• Joe S61 monese. president
scathmg by any Democrat
Steve Schmidt. a White o.f Human Ri ghts Campaign,
; House
spokesman. said says the organization leaders
:t:eahy's comments reflected a were '\till evaluating his.
Democratic strategy - predat- record and have not made a
ing Roberts' nomination - of formal decision . But obvitrying to depict Bush's nomi- ously every day ou r concerns
continue to grow about him
nee as ideologically extreme.
· "The ease with which Sen. and hi s candidacy...
Ralph N'eas, president of
distort s
Jt1dge
_Leahy
•Roberts" record i~ troubl ing Peopl e For The American
and may indicate that the · Way, declined to comment on
'Democrats are not ye t done hb own org1mi~:ation \ plans.
.trying to make that ·argumcnl. However. he said a "s ignill although it has already bee n cant' number of progre;sive
organizations will soon be
di scredited." Schmidt sa id .
. Leahy and Sen. Edward M. coming out agains t the
-Kenned y. D-(\lass.. both Robens nomination."
At the sa me time . Neas
·expressed concern about doc'uments that were not rclca.sed prodded Senate Democrats in·
on Monday. asking for inl'l's- public ;md private to outline
tigations into a few that were the ~take' involved in Robens'
appointment. Bush named
reported missing.
. Nearly 500 were kept pri1atc Robert' to succeed retiring
·in their entirety on gro&lt;.mtb of Jus tice Sandra Day O'Connor.
·national .wc urity ur pri vm:y. who was often a swi ng vote on
according to Allen Weinstein . • i"uc., such as affirt!lative
... head of the National Archives action and abonion. ,
. AP SPEC IAL CORRESPONDENT

.

..

..

In a private meeting with
Senate Democratic aides,
Neas said angrily that the
public was being left with the
impression that Robens' contirmation proceedings were a
mere formali ty, according to
several participants.
For his part, Reid, D-Nev.,
seemed eager to rebut any
such suggestion. "Al l this
talk
about
whether
Democnits will support the
Roberts nomination is laughably premature. The hearings
have not even begun."
Kennedy also urged fellow
Democrats to avoid making a
decision on their vote until
at"ter the Senate Judi c.iary
Committee
confirmation
hearings, set to begin Sept. 6.
"I can tell you from having
gone through 20 Supreme
Court nominations - and
hundreds of other contested
nominations that the
process is frequently slow,

· and, not surprisingly, that the
most imponant information
- one w~ or the other - is
frequently not discovered or
understood until a late stage,''
' he wrote.
In material released Monday.
Robens emerged as an attorney serving in the .Reagan
White Ho4se who held view'
generally in line with those of ·
other con~ervatives . He was
sympathetic to prayer in public
schools. dismissive of "comparable worth," referred to the
"tragedy of abonion" and took
a swipe at the Supreme Court
for being too willing tO· hear
multiple appeals fr~m death
row inmates.
"Those papers that we have
paint a picture of John Roberts
as an eager and aggressive
advocate of policies that are
deeply tinged with the ideology of the far right wing of hi s ·
party, then and now." Leahy
said in his statement.

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
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Ashley Life showed the reserve champion Crossbred at Tuesday's Junior Fair Beef Breeding
Show and was joined by (from left) iyler Lee, Fair king, Whitney Thoene, Fair Queen, Ashley
Putnam, Beef Princess. Nathan Cook. Beef Prince.

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Geria!ricand Internal Medicine
U. Giri, H.D.

Jordan Wood (right) was named grand champion showman and Cra1g Jones (left ) was named
reserve champion showman at Tuesday's Junior Fair Beef Breeding Show. Also pictu red (from
left) Nathan Cook. Beef "Prince . Ashley Putnam, Beef Princess, Whitney Thoene , Fair Queen,
Tyler Lee , Fair King.
•
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..

Internal Medicine

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Audrius luki'enas, H.D.

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jack N.lamey, D.O.

Podiatry and Podiatric Surgery

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Call (740) 992-9158 for an appointment
with any of these physicians.

113 East llemorial Drive, Suite A
I'Dmeray, Ohio _45769

Coming Thursday in the 1Sentinel ...

·. ·~p~aCeJ) f€J ~ &amp;

jane E. Broecker, H.D. ·
. Adolescent and Pediatric Gynecology

CHRISTOPHER
TOOTHAKER

Ravenswood
.Chlropl'actic Center

Welcome to Our Team
are now scheduUng appointments.

BY

..

Thnng~

'

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f(J ;}/;)()"

•

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Your guide to weekend ·
entertaln•nt in the tri-state

=.

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tee tloa !It Tk !!eij.f dtJwr~ ra~ie-/ .~

•' •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
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Visit the PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL booth
•
••
during the II I&lt;,.._ &lt; c H \ \, I \ I'
••'
...
Booth hours are 4 p:m. to 8 p.m.
•
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,·
TIMOTHY P. METZGER. DO
•
•
•
•
••
of TBF \llllDLE.'OIU ( 1.1'\IC
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will be a(the booth on Thursday, August 18, 2005 .
•••
••
Booth hours for that day wii'l be 2 p.m . to 8 p.m.
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the
. Daily S~ntinel

1

Page AS

2005 MEIGS COUN1Y FAIR VVednesdar,August17,2005

PrEp Golf -

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
LeBron in court.over contract disput~, Page 82
MLB Standings, Page B3
More majors loom ror Lefty, Page B4
Dilrer happy to be In Cleveland, Page B8.

TVC Ohio

.

'

Marauders march 'past field.in TVC opener
Yenoy's
even par 34,
won the sixteam event
by
15
strokes over
runner-up
Wellston
with a team
~core of 148.

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYOAI LYTRI BU NE .Cci M

JACKSON ~ One day
after an impre.ss ive second
place efforl at the Ironton
Invitational, Meigs continue&lt;.] ils good start to the
2005 high school golf- season by wit1ning the first TriYalley Conference Ohio
Divi sion match Tue sday at
Franklin
Valley
Golf
Cou;·se·.
The Mu_raudcrs, led by
match
Medalist
Jake

Charlene Hoefllch/ photo

Robin Stephenson, agriculture ·educator of the Ohio State
University Extensi.on Service in Ad.ams County, judges the 394
entries in the fartn crops display at the fair. The names of winners will be announced tomorrow.

T

Jake Venoy

h

tive!y,
to
led by Todd
join Venoy
Kisor ·,; 3R.
in
leading
wa'
Kisor
MHS to the
lhe
only
triumph.
player
no1
Kirk Legar
from Meigs
tini·sh e u
lo . have a
with a 40 for
sub-40 &lt;.lay.
Meigs. whi le
Defending
Josh Venoy
Ohio chamand
Dan
pion Belpre
Stewart
Davidson
B 00 k man
plac ed third
rounded out,
on the day,
the team score by both firing firing a team Iota! of 173 .
43 . .
Host Vinton County was
Wellston finished the day fourth with 189.
with a team effort of 163,
Nelsonville- York placed

e

Maroon and
Gold
had
three players rounds in the
thirtie s, as · Cody Davidson
and Steven Stewart fired
rounds of 36 and 38, res pee-

liflh wilh a team tally of
210, while Alexander fin i&lt;hcd last with a 239.
.
Meig s received five points ·
in the race for the Ohio
Division crown with t.he vic~
tory. with four points going
to Well sto n for second.
Belpre picked up three,
Vinton County two and
Nelsonville-York received a
point for fifth.
The next TVC Ohio match
is Thurs&lt;.lay at Hidden Hills.
Alexander will be the host
sc hool and the event will
stan al4:30 p.m.

Major LEaguE BasEball ·
Tuesday's games
Meigs at Jackson, 10 a.m .

River Valley at .Oak Hill, 10 a.m.
South Gallia at Ports. Notre Oa~. tO a..m.
Eastern at Parkersburg Catholic. 6 p.m.
Southern vs. Alexander, site/time TBA
Gallia Academy at Valley, B p.m.

Beth S.rgont/ photo

These chi ldren take a spm on the mim-scrambler which is one of the many amusement rides on the mtdway at the Meigs County
Fair. Today until noo~ al l children 12 and under will be admitted into the fair for free.
·

Thursday, August 18
Bluefield vs. Point Pleasant (at Laidley
Field) , 3 p.m.

Giants
squash
Cincinnati

Friday, August 19
Trimblfl at Meigs, 10 a.m .

Williamstown at Eastern. 6 p.m.
G. Beckley Christian ·at Hannan. 6 p.m.
OVC Preview at Coal Grove, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Southeastern . 7 p.m.

Saturclay,-August 20
· Wirt County at Southern, 5 :30p.m

GaJia Acaden"o/ BlooWMe game. 7:2/J ~m.
Wahama at Midland Trail , 10 p.m.

--,

; ~

CIN CINN AT I (AP)
Deivi Cruz and Pedro Feliz
matched each other hi I for hit
~ and lhm spelled trouble
for lhe Cincinnati Red~.
Cruz and Feliz both set
c~reer highs with five hits,
~nd the San Francisco Giants
came from behind to ove.:power
Cinci nnat i
I 0-8
Tuesday night.
"I felt like I had a good
g&lt;~mc. " said Feliz, batting
.267 wilh 18 homers and 70
RB!s in 116 games. 'Td like
lo have more. llhink I shou ld
have beller numbers, but r m
happy with whm !"have."
Cruz and Feliz became the
first pair of Giants with five
hits in lhe same game since
Terry Whitfield and Darrell
Evans on July 17. 1978.
"! ,.,·n·l remember two

fNP Schldule
GALLIPOLIS _.:. A sctmduto Ot upcoming college
and high sc!lool varsity sporting events Involving
teams from Gallia. Meigs Md Mason countios.

I

Today's game
Golf
~~harna at Ripley (Green Hi lls) . 3 p_.m .

•

Thursday's games

Brian J. Reed/photo

This family had a great view of the Junior Fair Parade and opening ceremonies on Sunday evening, as members of youth
groups participating in this year's Me igs County Junior Fair
paraded before the grandstand at the Rocksprings Fairgrounds.

~

Beth Sergentjphoto

Steve Pickens and his WD45 4-cylinder tractor compete in the
Big Bend Farm Antique Club's Antique Tractor Pull. .Pickens
·went for 190.7-feet during this pull.

Golf
TVC Ohio at Htdden Hills. 4.30 p.m.
TVC Hocking at Arrowhead, 4:30 p.m
Wahama . Point Pleasant at Ravenswood
lnvitatio{lai(Green Hills), noon
River Valley at South Point, 10 a.m.
South Gallia at Notre Dame (Elks), 5,30 p.m.

Wahama wins
quad at Riverside
Bv BRAD

SHERMAN

BSHER MAN@MYOAI L'fl' RIB UNE. COM

Beth Sergentjphoto

.I

This market goat decided to have a pinwheel for dessert since
he cou ldn't make it to .the food v_
endors on the fair's midway.

l

'"'

I '

I

-~

·'

t'

'.
I

I

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Beth Sergentjphoto ·

Courtney Kennedy gets · up close and personal with her pig
Pinkie who is getting a bath in preparation for today·s· Junior
Fair Market Hog Show which began at 8 a.m.

Magfc of thr

(All

Harrd ·

Kiddie Tractor Pult-Sonall

4:00p.m.
H:OOp.m.
8:00p.m.
lt :OOp.m.

"38 Special" Grandstand-Reserved Selolin.g Avaitlobte
Hill Stage Entertainment· '
·
Gales Close · ·

THURSDAY. AUGUST 18.2005
Cha~ene

. Char1ene Hoefllch jphoto

Several hundred flower arrangements. flower specimens and
special exhibits by the Master Gardeners are on display in the
Thompsen-Roush building for . viewing by fatrgoers. Among
those taking time to enjoy the display_ yesterday was Shirley
Hamm who came to the fair wearing a hat to protect her head
from the sun and carrying a fan to cool herseJf.
'
.

MASSEY
" "

Hoeftlch/photo

Victor Wolfe described these antique popcorn seed sc.ales as
a ·piece of junk" when he bought them at an auction . But
being a fixer-upper man, he tackled the job and restored the
scales to like-new condition. Popcorn seed is poured into the
bin on the scales . a tid when the weight is right is released
through the funnel into a sack at the bottom. Wolfe said the
scales are a rarity and that he has never seen one in all of his
years of attending antique events. ·

SENIQ'H CITIZEN DAY
Spon1or of llu Day "Ride1wur Gas-"
Magic oflht "Cnplingtn '1 . Sponsored by lht Mtigs County Heallll Depar1me11l
St'nior citil,MS nu.;£ 14fllil1:00 p.m.

Gates Open
Jr. Fair Goat SI10M'
Bicycle Drawing-Hill Stage
Open Cla."iS •' lower Show judging
· Senior Fair Duildln2 .
l:l)()p.m.
Harness Racing-Race Track
4:00p.m.
Kiddie Tractor Puii-Smull Show Anma
fi:OOp.m.
Tmck &amp; Tractor Pull
8:00p.m.
Hill Stage Entertainment
II:OOp.m. Gates Close
7:00p.m.
9:00a.m •
I 2:00p.m.

GUSDN'

· • or r~tje ,..e.'N &amp; U'\.&lt;.!d Farm &amp; Industrial Equipment

Jim's Farm ~quipment, Inc.
.

MASON,
W.Va .
Medalist Darin Reece shot a
.
77 and Wahama easily beat
· ~ " three other teams during high .
school golt
action
Tuesday at
River s ide
Golf Club.
All, four
sco ring
W h i t e
Falcons sh01
rounds below
I 00 over the ·
18 .-hole
Reece
event,
en
route 10 a 343
team score - 43 shots better
than runner-up Point Pleasant.
Buffalo was third with 398
and a young South Gallia
squad shot 478.
Justin Rou sh carded an 86
for Wahama, while Justin
Arnold followed with an 88
and Admn Rou&gt;lra 92.
Will Garrison and Eric
Milhoan both shot a.94 to pace
Point Pleasant, while Justin
Duckwonh llnishcd with ·98
and J.T. Reynolds 100.
Garrell Burdelle was lhe low
man for Buffalo. which
· Wahama also bcal Monday.
'with an XI .
Brodv Green shut a solid 94
for the Rebels, followed by
I 13 from Kevin Johnson.
Jesse McComas and Jacob
Watson finished with a 131 ·
and 140 respectively.
Wahama and Poinl .Pleasant
are at the Ravenswood
Invitational on Thursday,
while South Gallia is at
Ponsmouth Notre Dame.

Contact Information
Fax- 1-740,446-JOOB

.

Parts • Salas • Service
'

'

e-mail- spo:ts@ mydallysentinel.com
SJw(!§. !ilill

2150 Eastern Avenue {SI. Rt. 7) • Gall,lpolls, Ohio

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(7 40) 4,46-2342, ext. 33
,
bshe rrflan @ mydailytribune.oom

(740) 448·9777. (740) 446-2484

Bryan Walters , Sports Writer

www.jlmslarm.cam

(740) 449·2342. e~~:l. 23
bwah ers@ mydaelytnbune com

Larry Crum. Sports Writer
(304 ) 675 -1333. ext 19
Ierum@ mydaelyreg1ster com

guys getting fiye hits ," Reds
interim
manager
Jerry
AP photo

' Fron'l"left, Cleveland Indians' Jose Hernandez, Victor Martinez and Travis Hafner celebrate after scoring on a tf1ree-run double by Ronnie Belliard off Texas Rangers pitcher Kenny Rodgers in the seventh inning Tuesday in -Cleveland.

Indians beat Rangers, snap three-game slide
CLEVELAND (AP)
Ronnie
Belliard
and
Jhonny Peralta didn ' t lislen and weren't talking,
Belliard hit a three -run
double to snap a seventhinning li e and Peralta
homered twice and drove
in three as the Cleveland
Indians broke a three-game
losing streak by handing
the Texas Rangers their
eighth straight los s, 8-2 on
Tue sday night.
·
One day after Cleveland
closer
Bob
Wickman
expressed dismay that

some of the Indian s' position players often duck the :
media afler games. neither
Belliard nor Peralta was
available for comment.
C.C. Sabathia (9-9), who
won his· third straight start
as C leveland rebounded
from a three -game sweep
at home by Tampa Bay.
was talking .
"This was huge,'' said .
Sabathia, who &lt;tllowed two
runs and eight hits oyer
seven innings . .
The left-hander was well
aware the Indians needed a

•.~ ........................

Eagles
•••
second at •••
••
Trimble -•·•
•
BY

Scon WoLFE

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

GLOUSTER
•Eastern placed second
and Southern fifth" in the
preseason
Trimble
Invitational tournament
Tuesday
evening at
Forest
Hills Golf
Course'.
'rrimble
claimed the victory and
establi shed itself as lhc
learn to beat in the Tri Vallcv
Conference
Hocking Division.
Trimble claimed the
match wi th a 304-315
edge
o,·er
Eastern.
Please see Second, 84

win to stay in the thick of
the AL wild-card race after
falling 4 1/2 g_ames back.
" The experience of Iits1
year, falling completely
oul of it, will help thi s
year," Sabathia said.
A year ago, Cleve lan d
got within one ·game of
first place on Aug . 15. I hen
lost nine straight.
Texas is 3-12 si nce a
four-g ame winning streak
July 27:30 .
Belliard lined a 3-2 pitch
to left -center off Kenny
Roger s ( 11-6). who was

••
•••
••

•

making his second stan

since serving · a 13-game
suspenston

for

shoving

rwo cameramen.

"That was one of the
best at-bats of the year."
manager Eric 'wedge said
of Belliard, who had been
1-for-15 off Rogers in his
career. "He bait led. until he
gol a pitch he could drive
and then didti't mis s it."
Travis Hafner opened the ·
seventh wilb a sharply hit
ball off 'econd baseman

Narron said .
· Cruz fe ll a triple shorr of
the cvclc and tied a career
hieh 'wilh five RB.I s, while
Feliz scored four runs and
was a home run shy of the
cvcle. ·Giants · outfielder
. Randy Winn did hit for the
cycle in Monday night 's victory.
San Francisco se t a season
high with 19 hits to overcome a pair of two-run
homers by former Giani Rich
Aurilia and a ninth-inning
solo shot by Ken tiriffey Jr.
" I guess we·re hining
now," Giant s manager Felipe
Alou saiu. ··some guys were
hacking. We had 10-for- 10
h&lt;~ckers. Hilling comes . and
goes. but we're together
now.

Please see Snap, 83

Please see Squash, 83

,.•••..•.........••........................••
•

••
••
•
•
All proceeds benefit the Mason County Special Q~vmpics
•••
•
•
Uawn 111U\l b('
••
. •Saturday, Septem~r 10, 2005
IS Wdl\ rl dUt' ,\ fi(M· ••
•••
.•Hannon &amp;Ordnance Fields

..•
•••

•

••• •

.•$150 entry per team ·

'•••
••

.•Packets available at PVH Wellness Center
•
:• .·For infonnation; 304-675-4635 (Pam Brvant)

•I . f I t I t

•

f

•

•

I I I I 1 '1 I I I . I . I I If t I I . I.~ t t t t

••

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!I
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· Page B2 • The Daily Sentihel

'

Wednesday, August

w\vw.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, August 17,

17, 2005

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailysentiitel.com

2005
'

Norno drilled in start with Clippers

Athens wins SEOAL Wahama
golf opener at Cliffside shoots down ·
Bv BRAD SHERMAN
BSH ERMANIZPMYDAILYTRI BU NE. COM

GALLIPOLIS Rick
Frame led a quartet of
Bulldogs · with
sub-40
scores, and Athens nipped
Marietta by three strokes at
the
Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League golf open~r
Tuesday at Cliffside .
Athens ' winning team
score of 151 far outdi s·
tanced the rest of the field,
with the ·exception of the.
Tigers. as the first· of six
_league matches was a twohorse race . Third place
Warren was a remote 18
shots off the winning pace.
. Fram~ fired a 36, while
teammates Shay Brooks and
A.J. Cadamagnani added 38
each. Taylor Cowie's 39
rounded out the winning
total.
Host Gallia Academy
( 170) was fourth, followed
by Logan ( 178) and threetime
defending
league
champion Jackson ('192),
.
Brad Sherman/photo
Gallra Academy's Travus Stout, above , chips o nto the gree n during the first hole of . which after years of domiTuesday's Sout heastern Ohio · .Athletic Le ag ue match at Cliffside. Stout and the . Biue nance has entered a rebuilding phase.
Devi ls finrs hed fourth .

COLUMBUS (AP)
· Hideo Nomo suffered a set·
.. back Tuesday in his fourth
start With Triple-A Columbus,
allowmg six runs on five hits
·and five walks in the
Clippers' 9-0 loss to the
Norfolk Tides.
Nomo, still hoping to earn a
call-up to the New York
·Yankees, struck out four of
the 24 batters he faced but had

Butfalo

Bradley
Wilson, the
last remaining men1'ber
of lronmen
I i n k s
dynasty, won
medalist
honors with a
!-under par 35, but .had little
help as the team' s next lowest score was a 46.
Only Wilson and F.rame
shot even .par or better on
the gloomy, humid morning.
Greg Russell carded a
one-over 37 for Ga llia
Academy, followed by A!ldy
Noe's 43 . Travus Stout and
Kyle Hunter · each shot
rounds of 45 to round out
the Blue Devils' scoring . .
Marietta had three golfers
shoot in the 30's, paced by
Dan Cawley 's. 37. Zach
Skidmore
and
Ryan
Spackler finished
with
scores of 38 and 39 respectively.
Athens will try to extend
its early SEOAL . lead on
Monday when the scene
shifts to its home course,
Athens Country Club.

Bv fRANll CAPIMART
SPORTS COORESPONOENT

. WINFIELD, W.Va. -The
White Falcon linksters added
a win to their 2005 recond on
Monday at Meadowlands
Golf Course near Winfield,
where they collared the
Buffalo Bison 177-190.
.
Buffalo's Garrett Burdette
scprched the already sunseared layout in a dandy 3over 39 score to win medalist
honors for the day, just three
strokes ahead of Waharnan
Darin Reece at 42, but the
Falcon balance carried the'
-., • ' .
da.y.
Finding the
eonditions challengmg,.¢oacli Bob
·Blessing's tr()9pS · adjus~
shots amj Jllilcec\ ail five
plaxers .in the 40's. Right
beil.ind Reece, Adam Roush
carded a steady 44, \ Garrett
Kayldr followed with a solid
45, 1ustin Arnold pos,t'W one
stroke more for 46, and
Dan!ly Roush came in.. with
48. The beSi .four made team
totall77,'
·
The victory improved
Wahama to 11-7 on the 2005
season.

an error anu failed to make it
out of the fifth inning. After
an intentional walk to load the
bases with two outs in the
fifth, Noma ( 1-3) walked in a
run. He then gave up a tworun double to Prentice
Redman and was pulled.
Neal Musser (5-10) struck
. out seven in six innings. for
Norfolk, allowing fqur hits
and two walks.

. StandiDKS

MLB NotEbook

American League
Eaal Divlalon
Brian Daubach went 2-for-4
w L Pel GB
with a three-run homer off Boa Ion
69 48 590
Noma to feud the Tides.
New York
',;
65 53 .551
Bt 57 .517 8 j,
Noma went 5-8 with a 7.24 Toronto
5860 492 11 'It
Blllti~e
ERA for the Tampa Bay Devil Tampa
Bay
47 73 .392 23 'h
Rays, who designated him for
Ctntrtl Olvltlon
w l Pel GB
assignment July 16 and
Chicago
74 42 .638
released him July 25 . The Cleveland
6455 .538 11 ~
Yankees signed him in an ' MIM&amp;60ta
61 57 .5 17 14
58 82 ,475 19
attempt to shore up their · Detroit
38 '79 .325 36 ),
Kansas Ci1y
injury-plagued starting rotaWelt Division
tion.
w l Pel GB

.

los Angeles
Oakland
T8llaS

Seanle

69
67
56
50

.49
51
62
67

.585
.568
.475
.427

2
13
18 ~

Tuesday'• Retultt
Boston 10, Oetroil 7, 10 innings
Cleveland 8, Texas 2

Tampa Bay 4, Yankees 3, 11 inntngs
Minnesota at Chicago White SOIC, late
Baltimore at Oakland, late
KB!l§BS City at Seattle, late

Toronto at LA. Angels , ta1e
Wednesday'• Game•
Boston

(D.Wells

9-5)

at

Detroit

{Bondarman 13·9) , 1:05 p.m.
Baltimore (Cabrera 8-11) at Oakland
(Haren 1().6), 3:35p.m.
K&amp;rJS&amp;s City {Carrasco 5-6) at Seattle
(Moyer 9-4), 4:35 p.m .
Texas (C.Young 9·7) at Cleve land
(Millwood 6-9), 7,:05 p.m.
.

parched

N.Y. Yankees {Le1ter 3·3) at Tampa Bay
{Hendrlckson7 -7), 7:1 5p.m.
Minnesota (J.Santana 11·6) at
Chicago White Sax (Buehrle 13·5),
8:05p.m.
Toronto {Towers 9·9) at L.A . Angels
{Washburn 6·6), 10:05 p.m.

National League
East Division
w l Pel
Atlanta
66 51 .571
Washington
63 55 .534
Philadelphia
63 56 .529
Florida
61 57 .517
New York
60 58 .508

GB

4 ~~
5
6 ~l
7 'h

Central Dlvltlon
w L PL1

James in Akron court ·over contract·dispute

•

AKROC\ i AP I -

A busi -

nl!.-,:-, man \v ho cl i.li m :-. LeBron

Jame s co'l him millions by
bar ki m.! o~J t of a dl'a l tu Uu a
bi og ra phi cal . uocurncntary
&gt;&lt;.juar~d o il aga i11st the basketball star at th e start or "
$15
million civ il · trial
Tue.,lhry.
"
Entertainmen t
produ.:c r
Joseph Ma"h is· suing Jame &gt;.
who went from Akmn \ St.
-Vincent -St. . Mary
High
School to become rookie of
the ·year for · the Cleveland
Ca•v alier ~.
Ma r~ h
claim:-.
larnes·bruke a contract .
In opening stat eme nts
Tuesday afternoon. lawyer
Mall Hi scock said Marsh and
his company coul!.l have
expected iLprofit of $5.75 mil lion from a James du&lt;:urncntary e ven after a 50-50 split
with Jame.s and hi.s family.

• But James ' attorney Fred
~ance countered in hi&gt; opening statement that Jam es
never authorized a documentmv about hirn . He called the
lawsuit "a case uf legal pusturing anu an unwarranted
attempt to take advantage of
LeBron James."
The ch&lt;illcnge fur the judge
uno lawyers in Summit
County Common Pleas Court
was to pick a jury in Akron.
James' hometown and the city
where he hecame a nationall y
kriown high ;chool basketba ll
player taken by Cleveland as
the first piL·k in the 2003 NBA
draft.
"ll's haru to live in these
parts and not have seen some- .
thing at least on television
ahout hi' protessional career,"
Nance commented to a jury
pool of about 40 people.

.
S o m .e
jurors said
they
know
James
and
have attended
Cava I i e r s'
games.
"This is the
kind of case
that can scare
a
lawyer,"
James
said Richard
Dobbin s ,
another lawyer for Marsh.
It took about 90 minutes to
select the four-man , four-,
wonu1n jurY, The trial is
expecteu to last three days. It
was unclear if James would
take the stanc\. ·
Janies. 20, .wore a black
business suit. wh ite dress shirt
and a blue, JC,dr1tly checkered
tie. He declined to comment
outside of the courtroom .

'

Marsh, co-owner of Magic
Arts &amp; Entertainment Inc., in
Aurora, Ohio, argues that he
loaned $100,000 .to James'
mother, Gloria James, and
Eddie Jackson Jr., James'
father-figure, in 2001.
Marsh claims that James
broke a verbal a~reement to
allow him and his entertainment company to produce a
documentar~ about James'
life:during his senior season at
the high school.
·
James~ defense has said
Marsh has turned do.wn
repayment of the loan with
interest.
Marsh, the tlrst witness, testified that he became interest·
ed in a James documentary
and possibly other ways of
promoting him when James
was a sophomore in hi gh
school. He said he was intra-

duced " to Gloria James and
Jackson throu\lh an intermedi·
ary, Joey Bensh, who got to
know Jackson by playing basketball with him at an Akron
YMCA.
Marsh testified that he had
several meetings with Jackson
and Gloria James, including at
least one in which they discussed making the documen·
tary. Marsh said Gloria James
requested that "Do the Right
Thing" director Spike Lee
become involved, with the
documentary.
Marsh testitled that he and
his staff spent weeks trying to
get Lee to agree to direct or
produce. He . said Lee sent a
letter which Marsh forwarded
to Gloria James that said Lee
did not have time in hi s
schedule for the project.
Marsh said th at in the enter-

tainment business it is com. mon to make deals based on
verbal agreements and then
get the conttact paperwork
done later,
He said he forwarded the
$100,000 spli t over several
·payments to Jack son and
Gloria .James in the belief that
it was a _loan to help them out
whil.e he was arranging the
documentary. Marsh testified
that after a final paymen t of
£2,500 was made he never
heard from them again.
During Marsh's testimony.
James calm ly sat with hi.s
attorneys and listened closely.
He didn't show much
response and occasionall y
took notes.
Marsh was to be crossexamined when the trial
resumed Wednesday.

'Hewitt, Satin advance in comebacks
MASON (AP I - Ll ey ton
Hewitt shook off the la stin g
effects of a se vere stomach
·virus. gradually regaining hi s
touch Tuesday as he won a
first -round match in th e S2.45
million Cin.:innati Ma; ters.
Ru ssi a \ Marat Safi n had a
much tou gher lime with hi s
still achin g knee.
. . The third-seeded Hewitt
,beat Igor Andree v 6-1. 6-4 on
a mu ggy arternoon th at test ed
his stamin a. A week earl ier-.
Ihe Australian had to quit a
first-round match in Montreal
he cause o f the stumacll [li 1.ment - the first time he 's
:ever givc1' up.
"I didn't eat for about four
or five days." Hewitt said .
··so it hit me pretty bad. I felt
a little bit awkward th e last
few days ju ~ t training. gettin g
back into .th e routine of th ings
~gain . I'm definitely a li1t better than a week ago."
·
Satin al so g&lt;&gt;l back &lt;&gt;nlo the
"court afte r a much lun ge,r
absence Tuesday. The fourthseeded Safin liaun ' t played
'since Wimbledon becau se of
·an injured left knee that was
better in his return , hut still

piiinful.
·•t took a risk to come back
and play and prepare for the
U.S Open:· Safin said . " I
decided to try to play, so see if
it gc h better or if it geh

day's opening matches by 2
1/2 hours, rorcing organizers
to scramb le the schedu le.
Players who had practiced in
\15-ucgre'e heat over the weekend were faced with much
different
conditions '
wor:-,e.
He opened hi s mat ch gloomy. thi ck air and temperatures in the 70s.
a g a i n ~! Jan Hernych with a
Two seeded players lost
uoublc fault. and doubled
marches
l
heir
opening
faulted twice while losing th e·
Tuesday
after
the
long
rain
openin g game. lie eventuall y
got ro lling and pulled out a 7- delay - No . 10 Mariano
. Puerta of Argentina and No.
6 ( :1 ), 6-4 win .
13 Thoma s Johansson of
Satin didn 't wea r a brace or Sweden.
wriip on th e troubl eso me
" It 's no fun waiting around
knee. He moved heuer ii S th e
ro see wl1cn you're going to
. mat ch went alt,m g. gettin g play. if the rain's going to
into a !low when Hcrn vc h stilp." 'aid Robb y Ginepri.
was ~erv ing fo r the fi rst~ set who beat Pucrta 7-6 t 2), 6- 1.
wi th a 5-4 lead. Safin broke ''I'm prett y thrilled that the
him to even it. won th ~ J ay' s now fini shed."
tiebreaker. th en broke him
The wins by Hew.itt and
ag&gt;tin to start the 'cconu se t.
Sa fin lelt three of the top four
" It 's kinu .of di fficult:· Sa fin players in the second round.
said . " It (the knee inj ury) is No. I Roger Federer won hi s·
st il l in my head . When yo u openin g 1natch Monday - 1:\i s
kel ·" 'me pain ni so me mo ve- first match since he . won
ment s. yo u try to a\'uld those. Wimbl edon - and secondAfter th e fiN coupl e of seeded R'afael Nadal was
ca me s. I tri ed to fort!.ef about scheduled
to play late
~ flllJ f(u.:us nn the ga me.~"
Tuesdify.
Steady ra in ckl ayed th e
Hewitt ex pects to be back to

full strength in time for the
U.S. Open, where he won in
200 I and lost to Federer in the
title match last year.
" I ~ I ways· feel pretty com- (
fortab le when I get to
Flushing Meadow s," Hewitt
said. "I really like the atmosphere and the court surface
there. I think the whole tournament really sui ts my game
and my attitude as well."
Andre Agassi had to pull
out of the Cincinnati tournament. because his chronic
back problem fl;rred up, but
hopes to be ready for the U.S.
Open. Federer, Hewitt and
Sa fin also are heading into the
Open with less time on the
coun than they'd like - not
that Hewitt thinks it will matter to the favorite.
"Federer is 'in a class of his
own." Hewitt said. "I don ' t
think . limited · matches are
going to affect him too much
whatsoever. He's played
enough big matches, and his
record in tlnals against Top 10
AP photo
players over the last two years
really speaks for itself. I don 't Rafael Nadal, of Spain, returns a volley to Tomas Berdych, of
think its really going to cause . the Czech Reputilic. during their first-round match at the
him a lot of havoc."
Cinc rnnati.Masters tournament Tuesday in Mason.

It's taken a long time, bt~:t Huston is now. top kicker for Buckeyes
'

r

COLUMBUS (AP) - Like
a lot of kid s. Jos h Huston
came to Ohio State with high
~ o pes and a plan. One of the
top kicking recru its around,
lie wa ~ going to be the
Buckeyes' star kicker.
: Six years, a lot of setbacks
:..nd innume rable detours later,
:be 's right on track.
·: ' When I had those inj uries,
t wus like, '.Oh , no .. Not
again !' But now I look at it
arid it'~ all worked ou t well,''
·said Huston, in the middle of
:pre&gt;ea,o n workout' with the
·Bu ckeye,. "Of .:ou rse. I
would li ke to have played for
four year&gt;. but two's going to
have to be enough fo r me."
Hu ;ton i&gt; 23 1.'2 yea r, l'lid
and 'a id he fee ls twice that
age a&gt; he look&gt; at the frc, h-·

'

men run throug h their pace&gt;
in ant ici pation,of anot her sea~
son.
In some ways. however. he
&gt;hares their anxiety a&gt; they
get ready for the Sept. 3 opener.
"There 's more excite ment,"
he said, a; keu to compare thi ,
seaso n wit h the, fiv e seasons
he's already worn an Oh io
State uni form . "I' m re ~ dv fnr
th at Mi ami (Ohio) game.' ! go
to bed at night j ust ready to
ge t going. (Presea't1n 1 .:amp\
going to ta ke forever."
H u~ tun, an All -Ohio kicker
at Findlay High S.:hool
1whe re he wa; a teammate of.
Pin,burgh Steelers star Ben
Roet hii)bcmer). came to Ohio
State in 20rJO. After ;r rechhirt
}car. he shared the job wiih

tru e fre sh- thought going out there ,''
man Mike Huston said.
Nuge nt at
The contest between the
the start of two officially ended the next
2 0 0 I . . August. Huston had a hip
N u g e n t injury, and Nu11ent was on his
was con- way to becommg a folk hero
sidered the in Oh io. All Nugent did was
long-rang e kicker, Hu ston the become" a first-team Allmo.rc depcnuahle kkker from American, convening 25-ofm&gt;rdc 40 ya rd&gt;.
28 field goals, setting Ohio
But Hu ston c(llmected on State kicking records for
ju st
3-of- 10
field -goal points (120), field goals and
attem pt&gt;. Nugent wasn ' t · consecutive field goals made
much bett er, luning 7-of-14 as (24).
the Buc keyes stumbled to a 7Over the nex! two years,
5 record- and one of the rea- Huston stepped on the field
,,on,, (, "' their errati c kickers. just twice while "Nooge" - ·
"When I got out there my as the· fans now shou1ed in
freshman year, I wa&gt; saying, unison each game - contin·
'Oh. cmr~ If I don't make ued to add to his legendary
thi' . it' s not Ill) job any more.· career.
I had the wro ng ment&lt;r l· Hu sion , awarded a sixth
I

year of eligibility by the
NCAA because of his nagging
hip injury, is not ·bitter or
angry because he had to wait
so long to tlnall~ become the
Buckeye~ · top ktcker.
"You know what? I learned
u lot," he said. "Mike was a
very good guy and very concerned about his style and
what he does to get prepared
for a game. So I picked his
brain. I got to learn from the
best. Hopefully it show.s this
year." ·
· '
Coach Jim Tressel says he
is concerned about the kicking game because the long
snapper, holder and kicker all
graduated . But he has faith in
hi s elder state sman doin g the
,ki cking.
·'Well , those are big shoes
~

' GB

75 44 .630
Houston
64 55 .538
Chicago
56 62 .483
Milwaukee
58 G2 .483
Cincinnati
54 65 .454
51 68 .429
Pjt1sburgh
West Division
w l Pel
San Diego
59 59 .500
Arizona
56 64 .467
54 64 .456
Los Angeles
San Francisco 52 66 .441
45 75 .375
Colorado
St. louis

to till ," Tressel said. "(Josh) is
anxious to show that he's up
to the challenge . Obviously, 1
cap 't answer what the results
will be. But he 's got as much
leg as Mike Nugent and is as
accurate as Mike Nugent. Will
he have the consistency?
Thut 's what Josh hus got to try
to prove ."
Huston is out to enjoy his
long-awaited moment in the
'
spotlight.
"Now it's just have fun, do
what you know how to do and
get it through" the uprights,
Huston said. "That's what
Mike got to do for his four .
years. He got past the first
year and then he was a beast.
Ho pefully I' II have a good
yea r and we ge t ' em all
through."

11
17 I.
17 ~
21

24
GB

4
5
7
15

Tuesday's Results
San Die;go 4, Florida 2
Washington at Phillles, pfjd., rain

N.Y. Mets 6. Pittsburgti 2
San Francisco 10, Cincinnati

~-Cincinnati. Reds first baseman Adam Dunn jumps to .catch a throw from Reds s hor tstop
Felipe
Lopez. as San Francisco Giahts' Omar Vizquel sl ides safe ly into first base rn the third innrng in
. Cincinnati Tuesday.
.

,s_quash

gave up seven ruilS. six · tl1e first pinch-hit homer of
earned, and a career-high 12 his career' leading off the
hits in live innings. ·
eighth. Feliz opened the ninth
The Giants took a 1-0 lead with liis second double and
from PageBl
in the second on singles by scored on. Cruz's single . .
Feliz ·and Todd Linden. and
"I wanted to (hit for the
Feliz, playing left field in Cruz·~ doubl e. They rnade it
.:ycle).
but you don't want to
place of the injured Barry
2-0 in the third when Lance try too hard,'' Feliz said. "I
Bonds and Moises Alou , led
off the seventh with · his Niekro reached first on a was lucky to get the double ."
fielder's choice and scored
Griffey led off the ninth
fourth hit, a triple to center'
on Feliz 's doublr; into the against Walker with his 28th
field, off Jason Standridge
left-fie ld ..:orner, which was homer this seasun and the
(2·1) and scored on Edgardo
bobbled by Wily Mo Pena fur 529th of his career. He has
Alfonzo's bloop single down
an error.
I ,526 RB!s, snapping a tie
· the right-tleld line to ·give
Am·ilia· . touched
of'f with Jeff Bagwell and Sam
: San Francisco an 8-7 lead.
Cincinnati 's five-run third
: "He's supposed to be the inning with a two-run homer, Crawford for 40th on the
: third or fourth guy, but he's his 12th of the season. After career list. Walker is the
· been the No. I guy most of Griftey flied out. th e Red ~ 336thpitcher to allow at least
the year; · Alou ~aid. "We loaded the bases to set up one homer to Grif'fey.
Notes: Reds INF Ryan
.need to keep him in the line- Jason LaRue's three-run dotrFreel
was placed on the 15·
: up Lintil (Moises Alou ) gets ble.
day
disabled
li st and is scheq: back or Barry is back The Giants cui the lead ' to
uled to undergo arthroscopic
·according to his Web site."
5-4 in the fDL1rth with backsurgery
Thursday to repai r
: Jeff Fassero (3-6) earned to-hack singles by Cruz and
lage in his right
torn
carti
·the win with 2 1-3 innings of Mi.ke Matheny, Scl\midt' s
one-hit relief. Tyler Walker sacrifice and Winn 's one-out knee. The Reds purcl1ased
tile contract of INF Aaron
got three outs for his 22nd double to left.
·
from
Triple-A
save .
Auri lia got those runs back Holbert
in'
Louisville.
Holbert
arrived
: Giants · starter
Jason in the bOttom half with his
time
to
pinch-bit
for
Milton
: ~chmidt , who won hi s p~evi­ second two-run homer in two
in the fifth and strike out . :..
. ous two s t ~ns , was roughed innings.
Reds I B Sean Casey left after
:up for eight hits and a seasonCr~z responded with a
i nnin~ with a strained left
one
. high seven runs in 3 2-3 three-run shut in lhc fifth to
innings, matching his short- tie the score at 7 anu · ~c t shnulder. ~He was scheduled
re-evaluated
be
est outing of the season .' He. · Schmidt off the hook . Cruz to
Wednesday
.
...
Cruz's
horner
. also walked four, three of came .in 1-for-1 1 in the first
. which scored . His previous seven
games of
San was the major lcaguc ~ lcading
:season high for runs allowed Francisco ' ~ season-long I) - 35th al lmyed by Milton ...
Niekro went 0-for-5, extend· was six, which he'd reached game road trip.
·
Ray
Durham
greeted , i'ng hi s streak of consecutive
: six times.
Reds starter Eric Milton reliever Kent Mercker with hitless at-bats to 13.
·One-out . doubles
by
Michael Young and Teixeira ·
put Texas ahe'i1d 1-0 . in the
first.
· from Page Bl
Peralta's 17th homer· madeit 2- 1 in the · tlottom halL
Alfonso Soriano ;s glove when the Indians thought
that was · ruled an error. they scored more.
Victor Martinez followed
After the two-run homer.
with a slow tapper toward Hafner ·walkcd and Mart i ll~ z
third that Rogers came off followed with a dri ve that
the mound and grabbed. appeared headed over l11e
Without any chance of get- wall ·in center.
Gary
ting the runner, he threw to . Matthews leaped 'and the ball
first anyway. Mark Teixeira disappeared lrum view. then
scrambled at least 10 f€et · suddenly appeared in hi s
off the bag to keep the ball glove. Matthews threw back
from goin g past for an to the infield to doubl e up
·error, holdin g Hafn er at Hafner.
second.
·"He would have to be a
Jose Hernandez put down a cont ortioni st to make that
sacrifice bunt that Roge rs catch." said Wedge. who
fielded , but dropped for argued with second base
another error. loadiug the umpire Ma rv in Hudson.
bases .
Tele vision re plays cle arl y
"I don 't think the game gut showed Matthews trapped
away from Kenny," Texas the ball after it caromed otT
manager Buck Showalter the top of the fenc e. Martina
said. " He pitched , well should have had an RBI dou enough to win. We just did ble.
some things an"d didn't help
Young credited Matthews
· with an Oscar-worth y ac ting
ourselves."
Belliard' s double made it performance..
"I had ;1 good view of it.'' ·
5-2. Grady Si'zemure 's sacri ·
the
Rangers short slop · sard .
fice ny in the inning gave
"He made a great sell."
·
Cleveland ·a four-run lead.

Snap

Ro~ers then shut down the
lndiatls u~til the seventh . He
retired 17 of 18, including 12
straight after Jason Dubois·
leadoff single in the third.
Rod Barajas hit the first
pitch from . Sabathia in the
fifth for hi s 12th homer and a
2-2 tie.
Rogers. winl ess in [hree
starts since July 16, gave· up
three earned runs and six hits
over seven innin gs.
Peralta hit his I Xth homer
off Fran cisco Cordero in the
eighth and Hernandez added
an RBI -sin gle in the inning.
Noles: .Indian s 3B Aaron
Boone wa &gt; a late scratch
hecause of a sure neck ... .
Soriano has hit .344 ( ~1 - for61 ) during a 15-game hitting
streak .... Sabathia is 6-2 in
hi s career a2ainst Texas ....
Rogers fell to 11- 14 all ' time
against Cleveland .... Texas
last lost eigh \ straight in
June 2003 .... Peralta 's 18
homers are the most by an
Indians shortstop , since
Woodie Held hit 18 in 1962.
It was hi s fir' t multihomer
game .... Bel liard is batting
.379 (22-for-58 ) with 57
RB!s in his career with the
b'" " loaded .

a

L.A . Dodgers 6, Atlanta 4
ChicaQO Cubs 4: Houston 1
St. J,.ouis 8, Arizona 2
Milwaukee 6, Colorado 4
· Wednesday's Gemet
San Diego (W.Williams 6·8) at
Florida (Willis 15·8), 7:05p.m.
L.A. Dodgers {Od.Perez 7·6) at

Atlal")ta (T.Hudson B-7). 7:05p.m.
Chicago Cubs (C.Zambrano 9·5) at
Houston (Os"'(alt 14·9), 7:05p.m.
Washington
(Loaiza
7-8)
at
Philadelphia (Lieber 11·10), 7:05p.m.
Pittsburgh (Fogg 6-7) at N .Y. Mats
(Giavine -8-10) , 7:10p.m.
San Francisco (lowry 8·11) at

Cincinnati (L.Hudson 4-5) , 7:1 0 p,m.
Arizona (Webb 10·6) at St. Louis
(Mulder 13·61. 8:10pm .
MllwaLikee (Capuano 12-8) at
Colorado (Jam.Wright 6·13), 9:05p.m.

Day off a welcome
break fOr ln(lians
CLEVELAND (APJ them spiraling out of con.Teams in the" heat of a mean- temion.
iogful race - . like · the
ALL IS WELL: Wedge
Cleveland · Indians in their diplomaticall y downplayt:d
quest for an AL wild-card comment s by closer Bvb
· berth - seldom want a day Wickman · made Sunda v in
off.
which the veteran reliever
After losing three straight at expressed a coni:ern that not
home to TamtJa Bay, however, every Indian s player shared in
a one-day respite Monday left the accountability fur the 1-0
many
Indians
feeling loss.
refreshed for the start of a
T d hope that if Bob had .a
three-game series against the problem with a certain pl ayer
Texas 'Rangers on Tuesday or a group or players. that it
nigh!.
·
would be handku facc-to"1'his one inight have come face," said Wedge . "It starts
along at just the right time," with me. I have to be acc o un t~
said designated hitter Travis able. too. ·I thmk fur the mo&gt;l
Hafner. "When you ' re ' hot, part. we all have been ...
·
you want to just keep playing
Wedge defended po siti&lt;in
and not lose that edge.
players who are nut always
"But I think this was a good available for commen t after
mental break right in front of a games - win.or lose.
long stretch of important
"Hitters. and some pitchers.
games."
too. are in the weight room
, Catcher Victor Martinez during their work."' Wed~e
sa id he didn't feel any differ'· sard.
, .
ence, but he could see the benNOT QUITE READY:
efits of the ballclub taking a Right-hander Matt Miller. on
collecti ve breath.
the disabled lrst since Jul y Ib
''I don't feel any difterent ," with tendiniti s in his forearm
said Martinez - who under· and elbow. threw hi s second
slandably doesn't want things bullpen sess ion in three days
to change. He has the best and said he thinks he coulu be
average in baseball si nce the back before September.
"I threw about 30 pitches .
All-Star break, hitting . 419
(44-for-1 05) with 21 RBls in spun some (breaking ball s).
29 games.
and it felt OK." said Mi ller.
Manager Eric Wedge also "I ' ll probably throw in th e pen
thought it was a good time fur aga in Thursday and we'll go
a mental break and not go into . from there."
a tailspin similar to. the nine·
Miller, 1·0 with a I .82 ERA
game losing streak at exactly in 23 appearances .this sew.un.
the same poin.l in the season .said he is surprised it has
that took the 2004 team out of taken this lung to recover.
contention.
· "I fe lt it when I threw m1
"We' ve got 40-some (44) sinker, not the fastball or slidgames left,'' said Wedge. ''We, er," he saiu. "!thought I shut "it
had a day and now we've gut down .in time. but it lingcred\r
to get back after it.
little. I guess tl1c best thing is
" I think 1ve will step it up. to not rush it now anu he fully
The majority of people are available when l uu get back...
short-sighted, have short-term
PAIN IN THE NECK :
memories, but I see it as we Third baseman Aaron Boone
have a great opportunity was in the starting lineup
before batting _practice. bHt
ahead of us.
"I bel ieve in these players was removed bcf(,re the garrie
and I'm excited about the next with a strained neck and
month and a half.''
repla..:ed by Jose Hernamk t..
Cleveland was within a
"It's just a little something
game of first place Aug. 15 . .that Aaron has had for a cou2004. A horne loss to pie of days," Weuge sa iii.
Minnesota and then three "He's day-to-day. not ready to
straig ht setbacks in Texas sent start.''

THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 2005
• MEIGS • EASTERN • SOUTHERN
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Be sure To 8
Partot • eA
S . This Year's
.Pec1a/ Fa// Spo
Preview Edition
.

r:s
.

·

ADVERTISING DEADLINE- WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 2005- 5:00 P.M.

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~ore

Wednesday, August 17,

www.myd~tilysentinel.com

majors loom on Lefty's horizon U.S. hoops team wins

. SPRINGFIELD, N.J. (AP) - Phil
Mickelson was in no hurry to leave
Baltusrol, not tliat he had a choice.
Two hours after he won the PGA
Championship with a birdie on the fifth
!iay and final hole. he found himself
-squeezed in every direction by nearly
J 00 fa ns who gathered around for auto·
jlraphs, creating a large circle of humantty that slowly moved toward the parking
.lot.
.
. It h ~s been that way for years. Winning
doesn t change the way fans feel about
_their beloved Lefty.
, But among his peers, the. perception of
Mickelson as a maJor force changed signiticantly.
Hi s one-shot victory in the PGA
Ghampionship allowed him to break ·
away from an underachtev ing class of
p1aycrs who finall y won thei r first major
.ant.! never captured anot her. AnJ he
loi"ned an !!lite group ot: players who have
~o n maj(lrs in consecutive years.
: "He's not a one-major guy, he's a 10major guy." Thomas BJorn satd. "He's
gomg to go on now and contend for
majors as he's always dune. but it's
goi ng to be easier and easier for him to
AP photo
:w in them now. And he deserves great- Phil Mic kelson celebrates his chip onto 18 .dunng the final round of the ltghtntng
1less.''
delayed 87th PGA Champtonshtp at the Baltusrol Golf-Club in Springfield, N.J. Monday.
: Mickelson sti ll only has two maJors some as Lee J c~nzen. John Daly and Mark
O' Meara-,md predt cll ng greatness is a only players to have won majors in con- sons, with the last st x commg after he
1urn~d 35.
dangerous bu'!ness m golf. Who would secuttve years si nce 1990
There's slltl IIITIC.
have though t Davts Love Ill would still
Walter K1ge n went six strai gh t vca rs
The Wunamakct Trophy at hi s side _
on ly have one m;(jor championship after winmng at least one maJor (1\mt in a row
his PGA victory tn 1997"
_
at the PGA ChamptOnsh tp). whi le Jack M(mday .tltcrnoon, Mickelson Wtbn ' t ·
Even so. Mickelson ' et himself apart Nicklaus and Woods each went fom ready . to cnnstder the fit ltire For years
from other rivals to T1ger Woods, who straight years with a Grand Slam if"l' t~hy. when the sc,"un ended withou t a major,
rema ins in a class by himself.
Perhaps tt ts no surprise that they ,ue the ltc dicaclcd having to wai t sc,cn months
lot hi ' next c:hance
Vipy Stngh, Ern te Ets and Rettef top three on the c.treer majors ch,u1
'" The next m.iJOr isn't for another
Goose n all hoa vc multiple majors since
Mickelson got off to a slow stan . ·
,even
months." Mit:kelson sat d. th is ttme
It took him a dozen yeats on the PGA
Woods arn ved in I 997. although none
W
ith
a
gnn " IJUS! wan! to reli sh thts, and
has been able to sustai n any kind of chal - Tour and 22 victones to c,tpture his firs t
lenge in the tournaments that matter the major last year at the Masters,. and it enjuy the I act tlldl tor the next seve n
must.
.
appeared it mi~ht take him a whtle mnnth,. I'm the most recent maJor winSingh has been on top of his game before he got h1s next one Mtckel son ncr
Sllll. Le tt y can start entertammg
si nce winnmg the 2002 Tour failed to contend tn any ol them th ts year.
Champtonshtp a1 East Lake, winning 17 but he was dete rmined the PGA thoughts of a career Grand Slam. the ultimate measure o f g rea tn e~s.
tunes over the last three years. But when Championshtp would be chftcJc nt.
lo ts (U.S. Open, British Open ) and
Woods we nt into a tailspin, the 42-yearAnd he was right.
old Fijian managed to win just one
Mickelson went back to th at controlled Singh !Masters. PGA) already are
major, last year at Whistling Straits in a cut off the tee to take the right half of halfway thete, eac h capable at the majors
playoff.
Baltusrol out of play. He looked confi- thev ha'c not won Ditto lor Mickelson,
Els. rarely backs up a big year in the dent over putt s thdl wete 4 fee t ot 40 feet. especiall y ,ince Baltusrol was set up like
m;cjors wtt h another one.
and made enough of them th.tt when the a U.S. Open. and hts two runner-up tlnAfter winnmg the 2002 British Open at hole ~ot sma ller on tl1e weekend. he sttll ishes at majors have come in " U.S.
Open.
·
Muirtletd, he never contended in any of coula afford to miss a few.
It
would
seem
!he Bri tis h Open would
But he has some catching up io do'
the '03 maJors. And while he had a good
. "shut at all of them last year. he again was
''At 35, I' ve got a number of years left presen t the stlllc't test. but how to
never a factor tht s year until his season - ~ood years left - where my game explain Mtckclson ltn tshmg one shot out
ended wi th knee &gt;ttrgery
ca n continue to improve." Mickelson ol a playoll at Royal Trnun last year? Jf
. Gqose n. whose game is slowly getting said . "I look at some great players I rom he's pl.tymg well. he can Will anywltcre.
"n1ere arc dtl"tctent .:hallenges to wi nthe respect it deserves, lost his chance to the past that d1dn 't stan winntng btg
win consecuti ve U.S Open titles - only tournaments until thctr nud-.&gt;Os. I want nmg each m.iJOr. and I' m pleased to have
Curti s Strange has done that m the last 50 to try to get better arid better as my career accompltshed t wu of those challenges,"
years - when he shot 81 in the last goes. on."
. Mickel son said. ·' But there are two more
round at Pinehurst.
Ben Hogan won eight of hi s lllne thai W\lllld show the Cllmpletc player."
W'it h· mart•r \ ictories Ill (Oil'\C£ UI1ve
That's what made Mickelson's vtctory . majors after turning 35 Sam Snead won
ut Baltusrol so bi g.
six of his seven maj ors at 35 or older. year,, i,t co[tld happen sooner than some
He jams Woods and Nick Faldo as the NicklatJs won hi s 18 majors over 25 sea- people think

1~11l•lh.' Not I~ · '-· .-. 111 N._, "' "' I"'IH' I "'·

Yuur Rllo'ht tu Knu'"'• lh.•ll'\' t!'l''-'d

ADVERTISEMENT TO
BID
WATER
IMPROVEMENTS CONTRACT
1-2005 VILLAGE OF
RACINE
The Village of Racine
will rec&amp;:;lve sealed
Bids for a Water
Improvements
Project, 'which con-

sists of the construction of a new 250 gpm
Iron removal and zeolite softening treatplant,

a

new

391 ,000 gallon

fin -

posed Improvements.
until 5:00 P.M., local
time. Saptamber ~ .
2005, at Village Hall,
405
Main
Street ,
Racine, Ohio 45n1 :
Bids will be publicly
op~ned
and read
aloud begln"tng at
7:00 P.M. local tlrrie,
September 6, 2005.
Bids are to be
addressed to Village
of Racine, 405 Main
Street, Racine, Ohio
45n1 , and shall be
marked "'Sealed Bid-

ished water storage

Water

lank, and a new radio
based telemetry and
control system, along
with
miscellaneous
water
system
upgrades necessary
to facilitate the pro-

Contract t-2005.
Bidding Documents
may be obtained from
the Issuing Offi ce
which
Is
Strand
Associates, Inc., 109
North Broad Street,

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Improvements

In order to better serve
our customers, we
currently have opening's in
the following departments:
* Oil .&amp; Lube Technician
* Automobileffruck
Technician
*Automotive Sales
All'applicants should
apply in J&gt;erson.
Monday thru Friday

9:00AM - 5:00PM
195 Upper River. Road
Gallipolis, OH

Third

F!oor,
Ohio
43130. A non-refundable deposit ol the
following
amounts
will be required (shipping and handling
fees
Included).
Overnight mailing of
Bidding Documents
will not be provided.
Division
A-Water
Transmission/
Distribution
$100
Division
BWaterStorege
Facilities $100
Division D· Well Field
Improvements 5100
Dlyialon E - Telematry
$100
Bidding Documents
may be examined at
the oHices of the
VIllage of Racine and
McGraw
Hfll
Construction- Dodge
offices in Columbus,
Ohio,
and
lnSt.
Albans , West Virginia.
No
bid
will
be
received
unless
accompanied by a
cashier's , certified or
bank check or a bid
bond equal to at least
10 percent of t he
maximum
bid,
payable to the owner
Lancaster,

H:l l! hl I•• '\'u1n l&gt;uo o.

ed , bidder will execute and fil e the
agreement and 100%
performance and payment bonds withm 10
days after the nottce
of award .
Bidders who submit a
bid must be Plan
Holder of record at
the I ssuing Office .
Bids from bidders
who are not on the
Plan Holders List may
be returned as not
being responsive .
Plan Holders are
requested to provide
an e mail address If
they wish tp receive

addenda and othe r
information electronically. Plan holders are

Help Wanted

the President 's
Executive Order No.

1I 246.

Equal

Employment
Opportuntty
as

.IZM IR. Turkey (AP) Eric Hi&lt;:ks scoreJ 24 points
and Shelden Williams added
16 Tuesday to lead the U.S.
men's basketball team over
117-6 1 at
the
China
Univer&lt;i ty Games.
West Virginia University's
Mike Gansey added 10 points
for Team USA , whtch teJ
Chtna 62-30 at the half. It

was the team's fourth straight
win.
.
The American men can
clinch a spot in the quarterfinals by beating the Czech
Republic on Wednesday.
Meanwhile,
Gansey's
teammate, Joe Herber. scored
seven points in Germany's
69-53 win Tuesday over the
Czech Republic.

MORGA NTOWN, W.Va.
(A P) ~ · Duques ne assistant
coac h John Mahoney was
named dtrector of men's basketball operations at West
V~rginta on Tuesday.
Mahoney's duties will
tnclude
administrative
responsibtltttes and video

policy of encou r aging
the participatio n of

small busihess in
rural areas (SBRAs).
"The VIllage ot Racine '

Fla., ave raged 2.3 points
2. 1 rebounds in 10.7
minut es o f pl ay in g time as
a freshman las t sea son.
11 was not clear what
school he will attend .
" We wi sh him well, " said
men 's coach Ron Jirsa.
~ nd

Second
from Page Bl
Logan "A" wa ~ third with a
32 I. while Logan "B" was
328, and
fourth
with
Soltthern fi ft h at 36 I .
Waterford (37 1) was nex t,
lollowed by Miller (37:1), and
Federal Hockmg (457 ).
· Southern was led by Bryan
Han·is who shut a 7 I. Only a
freshman. Harris also, made
the All-Tournament team.
Brad Cro uch. returning seaso n - l ~m g Hockin g Division
Medali st shot" a 77. Alex

a
Hawley
101 ,
and
John Bentz a
112.
F
o
r
Eastern
Michael
Owen shot a
74 to lead
the Eag les,
followed by
Harris
J a c 0 b
Warn er. 79 ;
Evan Dunn. ·so; Ry an Nave.
82; and K'yle Edwards. 92 .
Southern and Eastern 's
next matc h is Thursday at
Waterford at noon for the
TVC opener.

sports@mydailysentinel.com

~a llty,

and to accept
any Bid which it
deems
advantageous All Bids s h all
remain s UbJeCt to

subcontrac tor or sup-

plier II they want this

and

reque sted t o

desig·

nate whether they are
a prime contractor,

information

p osted

on the proJect Plan
Holders List.
.
CONTRACTOR shall
pay wages to each
laborer and mech~nic
at a rate nol less than
the minimum wages
specified in the cur·
rent wage determination in accord ance
with lhe provisions of

Bidders shall comply
Help Wanted

responsible
Bidder and no contracts shall be a'Narded or signed before
release of funds date.
The
Strand
As·s oc1ates Project
Manager is Barbara
A- Anderson, P.E., and
can be contacted at
109 North
Broad
Street , Third Floor,
Lanca ster,
Ohio
43130, 1740) 687-4779
regarding the project.
Published by th e
authority
of
the
Village of Racine . J .

93 Columbus Rd • Athens, OH

Dated

at

Racm~. Ohio

August 12. 2005 .
(8) 12, t 7,24 3tc.

Get
on ·
SAVINGS

SALES PERSON NEEDED
• Must Have Valid Dnver's License
• Be Neat In Appearance
• Training Program
• 5 Day Work Week
• Hospttahzation
• Paid Vacat1on
• Bonus Program

APPLY IN PERSON
ASK FOR JERRY

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon
below and drop off or
mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.
'

~alltpolls

Dati!'. tltrtbune

-l}otn~ ~leas.ant

)Ltegister
The Daily Sentinel
~unba:p m:tmes -6enttnel

----- - -------- -- -------------Subscriber's Name
Address
City/State/Zip

.

Phone ___,~----~~--------------~---

1

Shop the

Classifieds!

1 Esk1mo Sp1tz female,
.__..,;G;;;",;;\tiii.Liitlii~iiiniii.~iis-pl
mm1ature Doberman mala 2 '
We1maranertCol tle
m1K Garage &amp; moving sate 2
{740)379-23 16 leave mas- fam1ly sale K1ng s1ze bedsage
room set. Hammond ,Spmot
organ, lots of m1sc &amp;
5 White &amp; 2 Black K11tens to Christmas 1tems 8/19-8/20.
g1veaway
Bwks
old Fnday &amp; Saturday, 9am-5pm
(304)675·3777
45 Porlerbrook Lane

Patio Sate Thu r!l 18th·Sat
20th Tools clothes . m1sc.
1032 Kemper Hollow Ad

Found·
Gray/Wh1te .Kitten
around Ba111ett Ad off
Jencho, very lovable ca ll
(304)675-3150 to 1c.1ent1fy

Wanted It ems lo resale to
help pay b1lls Clothes
glassware. tools. housetlold,
etc (7 40)446-6984

t

Los t-Black male Labrador
Wo\N1"ED
Retnev~r S1x years old, red
mBm·
collar Lost around Add1son
1'1ke, Bulav1ll e Ad area. Absoh1le Top Dollar. US
Reward for return. (740)367- S1lver and Gold COinS
Proofsets, Gold R1ngs . Pre7581
, 935
US
Currency
Rewa rd for sale rel urn.
Sofitmre Diamonds- M T.S
Neutered
male,
Co1n Shop 151 Second
orange/white stripped tabb'y
Avenue. GallipOliS, 740·446ca t lo st l rom 5th ave

2642

Mail o• d•op off this coupon along
with a copy of you• photo 10 to
Ohio ·Valtey Pubttshing P .O . Box 469, Galtlpotts, OH 45631

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

•

4x4' s For Sate ...............•................. ........... 725
Announcement ........................................... 030
Antiques ....................................................... 530
Apartments lor Rent .............................. :.•.. 440
Auction and Flea Market ............................. 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair ..................................................770
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 710
Boals &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Suppties ........................................550
Business and Buildings ....... .... .................. 340
Business Opportunlty .................................210
Business Tralning ...... ................................. 140
Campara &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... OtO
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
ElectrlcaVRelrigeratlon ............................... 840
Equipment lor Rent... .................................. 480
Excavating ..........i .. ··· ................................... 830
Farm Equlpment .......................................... 610
Farms lor Rent .............................................430
Farms lor Sale ..............-............................... 330
For Lease .................................:...... ............. 490
For Sale .......... .".. ................. :•......•.... .•........... 585
For Sale or Trade .........................................590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450
General Haullng...........................................850
Glveaway ......................................................040 ,
Happy Ads .................................................... 050
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................640
Help Wanted ................................................. ItO
Homelmprovaments ................................... 810
Homes lor Sate ............................................ 310
Household Goods ........................... :........... 510
Houses for Rent... ............................:. ........ 410
In Memoriam ................................................ 020
Insurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 660
Llvestock ...................................................... 630
Lost and Found ........................................... O&amp;O
Lots &amp; Acreege ............................................ 350
Miscellaneous....................... ............)..........170
Miscellaneous Merchandise ....................... 540
Mobile Home Rapalr .................................... B60
Mobile Homes for Rent. .............................. 420
Mobile Homes lor Sale................................ 320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ...•...................... 740
Musical Instruments ................................... 570
Personats ........................................... .:........ 005
Pats lor Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng ............ ........................ 820
Professional Servlces .................................230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ...............................160
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
Schools Instruction ..................................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Situations Wanted ....................................... t20
Space for Rent ............................................. 460
Sporting Goods ...........................................520
SUV'slor Sate ...... :.......................................720
Trucks for Sale ............................................ 715
Upholstery ................................................... 870
Vans For Sale ........... :................................... 7JO
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Suppllas .................. 620
Wanted To Do ...•....:..................................... 180
Wanted to Rent. ........................................... 470
Yard Sale- Galllpolls ........•........... ................072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant ................................ 076

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Bu•ln••• Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dl:~~~~~~~!~~•'
Thursday

• All ads must be prepaid'

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclasslfledads
· r::~ ~~
lr1'o
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large
190

Ottt.t¥Et.DI'RLY

'f',ov' Lc!/tll~ JZ.E:AI- ~ 1FE:

1'1 fi. vfi. F!- I? fZ. E: A I'S f"cfZ...

Wanted 2or3 acres m
Mason County to bUild home
on or Home l or $40 ,000

C-oMM~F!-LIAI.-S!

(304i675-7790

I \11'1 0\ \ II '\I
'&gt; 11 ~ \HI"'

110

1.

HF.t .P WANTED

LEARN
TO

DRIVE
' NO EKF'H11ENCE r;ECESS ... AY
'~ ULL- T itJE CLASSES

' COL TA ... INING
'• FINANCING AVAII,A,[U [

" JOe PLACEMENT
' ENHOLUNG NOW

ALLtANCE
TRACTOI1 TRAILER
TAAlN INfi CENTE AS
WYTHEVILLE VA

310

C• tu:

buy
All cas h
Me1gs or
Gal l1a · N~ double-wide or
modular 740--4 16-3130

&lt;l:l 2005 by NEA, Inc.

www.comica.com

1110

HFl.PWANnD

11"0

..

ho

HELP WAN"IID

~...---"

l
.

T he
Athe ns-Me1gs
Educational Serv•ce Cen te r
has an openmg tor a
Homeless , llason/Case
Manager Pos1t10n reqUire ments_ h1gh sctlool diploma
or equ1valent (educahon
deQree 1n numan serv1ce
ltelc.1 or ec.1ucational a1de permtt preferred) : good commumcatlon &amp; computer sktlls
exper~ence worki ng with
SOCial serv1ce agencies
and/or homele ss families' 1n
Me1gs Co ., reliable transportatiOn w1th proof ofotnsur·
ance, and knowledge of
Mmgs Co addresseslloca·
li ons
Tnls is a grant-fu nded position Letter of mterest, resume and references
mu st be' rece ived by 12 00
noon August 22 SubrTut to
John
D
Costanzo
Supenn tendent ,
Athens·
Me1gs Educational Serv1ce
Center, PO Box 684. 320·
t /2 E Main St , Porneroy.
OH
45769
Equal
Oppo r t u n i t y
Employer/Provtder

II\\\( 1\1

10

ABSOLUTE GOLOMINEI
60 vend1ng mach1nes/
excellent loca11ons
all for $10,995
800 -234 -6982

oNOTICEe
HIO VA LLEY PUBLISH

All real eslale advertismg
In this newspaper Is
subject to lhe Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes It illegallo
advertise 'any
preference, hm•tatlon or
discrimination based on
race, co lor, rehg•on , .!lex
fam ilial !!latus or national
or1gln, or any Intention tG
make any such
pr"ference, l1mitat1on or
dlscr~m1n a1•on

ou do busmess wtth peo
le you kn ow and NOT t
end money through lh
a1l until you have 1nvest1
ated the otter"'\

This new spaper Will not
knowingly ac cept
advertisements for roal
estate which I S 1n
Yiolat•on ollhe taw. Our'
readers are hereby
informed that all
dwellings advertised m
t his newspaper are
available on an eq ual
opportunity bases

MoNt"\"
I~ IAN

m

orrow Smart cOntac
he Oh10 DI VISIOn 0
lnst 1tut1 on'
Fmanc1al
f11ce of Consume
ffa1rs BEFORE you ref1
ance yOU! home o
bta1n a loan BEWAR
f requests tor any larg
dvance payme nts o
ees or 1nsu1ance Ca l
he Off1ce of Consume
flairs toll tree at 1-866
78-0003 to learn If th
orlgage
broker
ender
1s
prope r!
tcensed (Thts IS a publ1
ervice announce men
rom !he Oh iO Valle
ubllsh1n Company)

Ashton , WV laclllly
(Mason County)

F6r a limited t1me make 500k LPN/STNA
lnnovaltve People Building
E:-:lr&amp;o!dmary Thmgs
selling Avon Call (740)446OUTSIDE SALES
Scen1c H1 ll s Nursmg Center,
3358
REPR ESE NTATIVE
JOB VACANCIES
a Tandem Health Care
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Healthcare Service Group ts Fac1hty, 1s seeking a select
Assemble cratts,
Th e
Gallipolis
Dally
the nat1ons premier prov1der lew to JOin our outslandmg
wood 1tems
BUJLDINGS &amp; GROUNDS
1nbune
IS
accephng
for housekeeping/laundry team as
To $480/wk
MAINTENANCE WORKER
resumes tor a full t1me
serv1ces to nursmg homes
Matenals prov1ded
outside sales represe nta•
Free mlormatiOn pkg 24Hr We are currently looking for
tive to JOin our seles team
JA ELECTRONICS
housekeepmg and l aundr~
601-428-4649
and to manage an estabFull Time
ENGINEER (Entry leVel)
managers. Must be responlished account list while
12 Hour Shlftl, 6P-6A
An E)r:Cellent way to earn Si ble (:lnd Willing to work hard
callmg on new accounts
10 a hands on enw onment
money Tho New M on
SA MECHANICAL ENGINEER
Ttle succeSsful }:a ndlc.1ate
STNAs
Please fax resume to 6t4Call Manlyn 304-882·2645
M S Mach Eng desned
Will be a diSCIPlined, s!JII·
Full and PartTlma
734 -9754 •
S+yrs profo&amp;SiOJ\BI eKpere+Ce
mot1ved team player that
All Shifts
ApplicatiOns bemg taken lor
understands the imporfor
f ull
t1me
o111ce Immediate Opemng
tance
ol
c.1evelopmg
Call HA , ask for Belle
manag!'!r/recep!IOn lst
for, wheelchair truck dnvers to Proper llcerfse/certlficatlon
strong. mutually benef1·
B66 -23 1-2 4 76
local cleanmg/restorahon transport patients to/from reqUired We offer an excelc1a1 busmess relationwww
UTAONmc com
co mpany Send resume to ph~SIC ian office Valid dr1ver lent work envrronment. shift
Ships With our accounts
requrred
Call d1fferentral,
compet1t1ve
Spec1al
Care,
1743 l1cense
Wantec.1 · Medical Off1ce
Centenary Road. GaU1pohs (740)446-7930 or stop by ' wages great benefitS, perfet
The ideal candidate w1ll
Assistant w1th expene nce lor
1770
Jackson
P1ke
attendance
1ncenhves
and
OH 4563 1
have sale experience For
phys1c1an off1ce A untque
much morel
conl1den1tal
mterv1ew,
POSitiOn. reqwmg knowlAre you tued of runmng ? Jr. Electronics Engineer, Please apply to :
please
send
resume
and
etlge of computers and c.1ata
WV
(Mason
•
Tned ot stand1ng on your Ashton
cover le11er to Galhpo!is · entry- also lCD an c.1 CPT
A S
Attn : Dianna Thompson
feet all day?
LPN/AN s County)Mm•mum
Daily Tnbune Attn J1m
cod1ng Reliable transportaHR
needec.1 m Pome roy OhiO degree m Elec Eng and
Freeland, 825 Thtrd Ave..
tiOn needed No weekends
Scenic Hills Nursing
area FTIPT hours ' 'Vent PLC prvgrammtng expenGallipoliS, Ohio 45631
holidays
reqUired
or
Famll1anty wilh
Center
Trach rind G-tube e Kpe n- ence
Benefi
ts
ava1
lable
· Sa lary
RSVmw
RSLOQIK
5000
311
Buckrtdge
Road
£mce Great compaf1y. great
ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT s nego!lable w1tt1 expenence
Bidwell, OH 45814
benefitS Call Pnmary Care AuloCAD. LabV1ew and dala
needec.1 Apply at • 1354 A fleK1ble employer Ma11
Ph. 7401446-7150
Nurs1ng Serv1ces 800-S t B- acqu1S1hon systems preJackson P1ke, Gatltpolls
resume to CLA Box 566, CIQ
Fax: 740144&amp;-2438
2273 10 Oh1o or (6t4)764· ferred Support proJect engi Gathpohs Tnbune, PO Box
neers w1th nands-on des1gn.
Email: acfinln.shn 0
0960 and ask lor Jean
Portamedic. ttle natrons
469, Gallipolis. OH 45631
p10gramm1ng and dratt1ng
landemheaHhcare.com
leading paramedical health
. AVON I All AreasI To ,Buy or US C1!1zensh1p and cnm1na1
mformat10n sei'Vlce compa·
exam1na llon
Sell
Shirley Spears 304- background
SFIOFIEOE
Smoot..~
ny · is seekmg Med Tachs.,
reqUirec.1 ,Compet1hve pay HR Otandl!l:mheatthcara.com EMTs and LPNs to do 1nsur67 5· 1429
!NSJ"RucnON
and lnnge·benef1ts
VIS it
ance exams In the Galhpolts
Dental Hygien1st Full/ Part www UT RON1nc com/emplo Managemenl
Tramee &amp; Meigs County area Must Concealed P1s1ol Class
Time reply to TSC 16 200 ymen1 or lax resume w1th Opporturi1t1es available at
have t year blood draw Sepl amber 3, 9.00 e m VFW
Mam Sl Pl. Pleasa nt, WV cover-lerter
to- (866)23t · Enterpr~se Rent-A-Car 1n the
expenence .
Conlractor Mason WV. Ph .(740}84325550
Galf1pofls area . Th1s oppor- PostttOn. Emat! Resume to
2567
5555, Cel~ (740)416-3329
tumty g1ves you the chance phis120ctnr0portamadiC net
Dnve
LICENSED SOCIAL
to ru n your own bus1ness
Gallipolis Career College
WORKER
and share m the prolits you
POSTAL JOBS
(Careers Close To Home}
'"lEW PAY INCREASE Overbrook Aehab1htai10n help create. Aaplc.1 promo· $15.94· $22 .56/l'lr now hlr- Call Today1 740-446-4367,
Ce nter 1s now acceptmg 11ons based on performance mg For appbcaUon &amp; free
1_800 _214 _0452
We are look1ng lor OTR 1esumes lor the pOSIIIOn ol 1n a dynam1c team en\llron- government JOb inlo, call
_ 0111111101 ~SC~~reorcoilege com
Class A COL dnvers With D1rector ol Soc•al Serv1ces men!
HrghiV marketable Amencan Assoc ot Labor. Accradtled Memoar ,.,ccr&amp;d 11111 g
The qualified ca'nd1date sk1IIS artd lra1n1ng In buslone year expenence
24 / hrs GotJnctl lor l~nt Colleges
1_9 13 _599• 8226 ,
must be a LSW possess1ng ness, management , sates emp. serv
~
"""
.;;;;"'
;.;.
""'
;..;';..;';.
".
'e;.._ __,
•Start at 40 cpm- all mllas strong verbal and wnnen and serviCe
At least two - - - - - - - - - ~170
coll'lmun1ca110n
sk1lls years ol college expenence Res idential
Tr(latment
•Fre1gh tllner Condos
MlliiOOIL.-\NEOI.JS
Med1c81Ct , Med1care · and IS reqUired in addition to two Facll1ty for boV&amp; now h1nng •
•
• 95% No Touch Fretght
MDS knowledge Long term years of sales and serv!ce ·D1rec:t Care Workers Pav
•No Forcec.1 NYC
•Hosptlaliza!lon and 40tK care expenence prelerretl You must be at least 2 t based on ekpenence, paid DIRECT TV 3 room With
Out not reQUire&lt;L Qualified years ol age w1th clean dnv · msuran ce . (740)379-9083 Ttvo FREE 145 charmet s
Ava1lable
only $39 00 per month Ask
candlc.1e tes
may
send mg record Apply online at 9am·3pm,Mon·Fn
•Homet1me on Weekends
how to get FREE HBO.
1esumes to. Charla, 61-own- www enterprise com/career
TASC ol Southeast OhiO, MAX. and home entertainMcGwe ,
AN
LNHA, s EOEIMFDV
Call 800-652-2362
Inc
499 Jackson P1ke, ment system. Call 800-523Ac.1~irustrator
333 Pag e
Street. Middleport Ohto Needed Caregiver to stay Gal11pol1s, Oh10 45631 , 740- 7556 tor deta11s
Drtvers Needed:
WIIh etderty soupte dunng 74Q-44t-647t or FaK 74(}COL Onvers w1tlmg to dnve 45760. EOE
tl"re dav 1n tht:llf home 446-7894.
Pos1t1on
lor local ready-miK-concrete
' Openmg TASC
of
l oca l Church seekmg a j740)645-5665
company E)Cpenence is
Southeast OhiO has a FT
preferred but not necessary p1ano player Sunday mornClean1ng
&amp;
740 -992- Now h1ring- All sh1fts Clencal Spec1ahsl poa1ti0n DHK
D river must be willing to do Ing &amp; evening
Powerwash1ng, Can 1 Keep
Assoc1
ates
degree
or
equNMcDonalds
of
RIO
Grande.
'2755
or
740-992·6849
pre-ma1ntenance on truck s
alent m the area of office Up Your "To Do" list too Btg ?
Apply 1n person
&amp; equipment. yard wor k &amp;
1
Look
no
further!
management
pre ferred plus let Us HE LP You We II
other m1scellaneous chores.
Clean-R·Up
&amp;
Gef·A·Done
We have the JOb tor you
a m1n1mum ol ooe year of
Expenence operat1ng eQUIPc.1o
All
Su0St1tule RNILPN wanted expenence. Duties mclude We
Up to $8/hOur plus
ment &amp; eKIIa sk1lls such as
Re Sl d e nt 1a I I B li S I ness
fm
the
Meigs
County
Board
weekly
bonuses
compiling
reports
entenng
,
welc.11nQ a plus ,
of Mental Aetardat1on and data, answering "te!ephones, In side / Outside
Pa1d tra1mng . holidays
CHit (304)937-3410
Developmental 0 1sab1hties ut1IIZ1ng I,)Hice equipment. OallyM'ee~ ly J M onthty 740·
anc.1 vacatiOns
Hours 9 DO A M .-3 OOP M ~!Cations Will be received 985-3639 or 740-4 16 1823
Both Full and Part 11me
Dnve rs:
Must have current AN by Donna Allison. Support
sh1tts
ava1lable
MARnN TRANSPORT DAI·
LICense in the State of OhiO Sl:atl Coordinator. vta ematl Georges Portable Sawmill
Stable work and
VEAS NEEDED TODAY
Prefer experience 1n public dall1son Otrognat.l"$1 or mall don~ haul your Logs to the
protesStonaJ enVI(onment
Reg10nal ru11sl One yr
health nurs1ng andlor wort· to TSO, ~ Box 88. M1U JUSt call 30Hi75-1957
Call today to set up an
tanker, or 2 y1 TT exp req
1nterv1ew1
1ng Wlth c.tuldren and adults Gallipolis, OH 4563t unt il
TOP PAY PLUS BONUSES.
Care
Pa1nhng
1-877-463-6247 SKI 2455 w1th developmental dlsabllt- August . 24th. TSO IS an Lawn
866-~93-7435
Repa u
tJes Send resume tr; Friday. Equal Opportunity employer Cleanmg. Roof
www mfociston com
~o
wer
Wash
1ng.
Fenc~
31st
To.
McBnCie.
August
Durable Med~eal Equ1pment
that offers excellent, com·
Company 1s lookmg tor a Part·tlme help wanted m 1310 Carleton Stre-et-PO pe!itr.oe salary and beneht Work Ahy Odd JOb Call
(740}446-7439 ,
person W1th e:-:penence 1n hOuse e,leamng JObs Preter Box 307, Syracuse, Ohio packaoes based on creoenmanagmg accotJnts receiv- matum poss1bly ret1red per· 45779
hals and years expenenCe
W1ll do Babvsmmg 1n my
ables &amp; electromc billmg son(sl SubJe&lt;:t to a police
home.
day-sh1fl
only
Wanted
lady'
to
live
1n
Wlth
Pa
rt-t1me
Delivery
person
check
report
Serious
program Send 1esume to
Sen~ and flora! deSigner Apply In elderly lady All expense Located al Gal lipoliS Ferry,
CLA Box 548 cfo Galhp()hs inQulfeS ONLY
Pa1d
plus salary. Ph . Crab Cree~· A rea (304)675Tnbune
PO Box 469 reslJmcs 10 PO Bolt 194 person floral Fas~10ns , 244
4007
.
1740)379·2538
1rd
Ave
No
phone
calls
Th
Henderson
WV
25106
GallipoliS, OH 45631

IIUSINtXS
0t1'01&lt;11JNITY

TRON
HE!.P WANIID

HoMt~'

tuK S·l l.t.

Have pre-school age child
would hke to babysit pr£l school aged ch1ld (740)4 46·
23 12.

1-800-334-1203

•

LPNs

For sate or rent
3 bedroom
2 full baths
fenced yard City schoo~s
Poss1ble land contract
SeriOUS Call Only!! I
Alte1 7p m
(740)446·3005

•

!'110Ft"'';10~ AI.
SER\1CFS

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We W1nl
t-888·582·3345

10

Gathpohs Ferry wv on flll 2
seven f!ll[es !rom Potflt
Pl easant Two Story 4ll r on
4 6-acre Farm With two Car
Garage Outt&gt;u1 ldmg •wo
Barns llJII Basement Heat
Pump new Wmdows : 8
S1d1ng ready to move mto
(304)675-6675 or !304)615
26~].1

Hmn:'
Hlll s,u.f.

140t
Ceda1
St
Meadowbroo k
Add
3
Bedroom. l 1/ 2 Balh .Corner
lot. new Rool. move-m condillon. new Ca rpet and

I';)

House tor sale 3 bdrm I I 2
bath Crown C1ty are&lt;!
(740!256 8149
New
Haven
3
larQe
Bedrooms. large L1VIn !,l
Room . one Bath Kilchen
S3-l 000 (904)862-2688

Floonng
Fe nce d

Storage Bu1 ld1ng Older
BAI 1·balh
2
m Back Yard
Farmhouse w H) acres m
(304)675·7708 oc 1304)593· country
3 m•les
lrom
41 35
Hartford
$49 500
Homestead
Realty
3 bedroom 2 bath Ranch \304}882 -2 405 \ 30411375
style house newly remod·
eled. 81dwell area $67 000
Call
(7 40)441-1 528
or
(740)709 5952 after 4pm.

I

'

'

Dally In-Column: 1 : 00 p.m.
Monday-Friday ror Insertion
Jn Next Day'• Paper
Sunday In - Column: :1:00 p . m .
Friday For Sundays Pape~r

Reai· Estate War'lted-Local
person looking for a home to

r

Found on Kerr Ad Beaut1fut
yellow female cat, fru3ndly
Call (740)446-8030.

DISPlay Ads

m lluY

Beautiful snow whit e kittens

Garage sale Fr1day 8119 and
Saturday 8/20, go ou t 141 .
Free k1ttens 1 female- black turn lett attar rM1o stallon
&amp; brawn mix 1 mate- bl aCk Lots ol g1rls and womens
L1tler box 1ra1ned (740)44 t - clothes large cha1 r an d
0254.
ottoman, baby bed, cradle,
car seat, comforter, toys and
, Full Slooc.1 . Chihuahua· tor
much mare Sam -? •
older couple 740 992 - 1526
tn s1de
a1 r
conditiOned
Losro~ND
Rummage sa le AlJg 19&amp;20
FoUNt)
9am-4pm 576 Debbie- Dnve
Chapel Fe llowship Hall
Found on Cremeens Ad , oft Friday 50% ott on clott!mg,
LinCOln P1ke, MIX-bleed Saturday $3 bag sale Also
brown/wt11te
c.1 og.
very Hotdog-Bake sale Proceeds
benef1ts youth
fnendly (740)256"6442

wo"r d Ads

WAN"IH)

YARDSAt.E

CLASSIFIED INDEX

SCOit Hill , Mayor

SOUTHEAST IMPORTS
SUPERSTORE

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

(740)366-6166

on your home delivered
subscription!

to waive any techni-

Monday thr-u Friday ·

YARD SAU.·

992-2157

Oea.cf/jir~

t?fftee !lr;ar:-&lt;f'

(740) 446 ·1542

Senior Discount*

reserves the right to
re Ject any or all 81ds ,

Or Fax To

operations. He replaces Bill
Lilly, · who became head
coach at Divi sion II West
Virginia Wesleyan.
Mahoney, 44, also was an
assistant coach at Robert
Morris and head coach at
Mount Aloysius College in
Cresson, Pa.

If so, you qualify for a

The procurement is
subject to the EPA

In One Week With Us
REACH · OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
\!tribune
Sentinel
l\egister
Your Ad,
can To~ay... (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 · (304) 675-1333

Herd player to transfer
HUNT ING TON , W.Va
(AP) - A Ma rs hall bas ketball player is transferr ing
to another sc hoo l, th e uni ve rsit y
announced
Tuesday.
Casey Wohlleb. a for ward from Boca Rato n,

Mtlp CountJ, OH .

..

Mahoney n~ined WVU
director of. men's
basketball operations

Are you 66
or older?

amended.

acceptance for 60
days after the t1me
set ~or rece1vlng Bids.
Contract awa rd shall
be made based on the
lowest
res ponsive

a'S a guarantee that ' the Davis-Bacon Act
after a bid is accept·

with

\!Cribune .. Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED

at University Games

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

ment

www.myc;tallysentlnel.coni

2005

3 BR Ranch 1 1i2 balh
overs 1zed garage hardwoodlltle lloors throughout
gas heat. lan dscaped qu1et
cul-de-sac. Mu st Seal 62
Don
Street.
GallipoliS
$ 145 000. (740)441 -5S40

5540
Well Mamtamed !-l ome ~ 2
miles
Nor:h
of
Pl!H'I
Pleasa nt on Landscaped t 2
acre 3 bedroom s Fa n••l ~
Room Dcn,Qfflr:e FHepl.lCI'
w1th gas logs H a-rdwooo
FIOQ.rS
Large
Uld ~ v
Storage Large Stare l®k
and Br1ck Pat o EKIIa IQt s
available
Shown t&gt;y
Appomtmen4 1304)675-1 5!16

www.orvb .com
;_..,;

I
• •

:

Home Listings
liSt your nome by calllnQ

(740)446 -3620

&lt;

3BR Ranch 2 car garage
pool. ctty schools $90.000
3460 SA 2 t B Gall1pohs
OH (740)256-19€2
4 bedroom 2 bath Roush
Fe~rat l lane S35 000 f11m
304 675 t~11 or 593-2096
AHen fiOn!
Local company otter1ng -No
DOWN PAVME •r programs to r you to ou-v iOU'
home inStead o( reot1ng
• 100Do l1nanc•ng
• Less tha n perfect &lt;:r001!
accepleod
• Payment co1Jid be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators
(740)367-0000

.

Its a Stqal, 4 bed•oom ~
ath 2 csr garaoe New•

Haven NV COde 6505 ci.r

i

AI II3~\S82- 3368

1\IOBIU J-iH\1!~

FOR: S \IJ
"---ioii.iioiioiiiiooo-~
2001 Clay1on 1 4K5D 2t&lt;R; 1
bath e•Ct ll~r'll conr1 !IQ"
S16 000 (74012--t::0-9-l:li •
5 Homes

ur&gt;:~e

S10000

--.-

86 Holly Park 3br 2t'la wot t8•16 trent porrll w ~ .. ' ~ '
Wlt"t a lot of fUff'I1 Lrl; B"~Wl g
S1Q 500
i304 1576·33J O

lea ... e

me~sage

Bnck w/3 BA t 1 2 BA. LR. ~--~-rc
DR FA , GA 1 acre near 97 Fleetw&lt;'od l·h:-0 lot H
Suoresta (304)67~-5026
electriC Wilt nee \\ ;" r1elive') •1lCiudeS cen•ra 1F1 0, 1,
• Newly remodeled 3 or J S10 995 (:ali 17 ,.01381:&gt; ·
bedroom house central a1r
%21
lull bflsement hardw ood
floo rs detached ga1age New ,1 •h.70 3 bedroym ; 2
large covere&lt;:l patiO. tenceo b&amp;~h On tv ~ 198 63 ' e-r
back
yard
$69 500 montt' COlli Ela•ne (i' 4Q , 3 ~ 5
~434
(740)709 1382

1

�VVednesdaiAugust17,2005
~ednesday, August 17, 2005

1:\ I 'I 1'1'1 I I "

1\LLEY OQP

I I' I " I l H h
CLEAN SWE&amp;P SALE: lot
model clearance. All remain_!!lg 2005's must go to make
room fpr new homes under
construction. ·SAVE! SAVE!
SAVE! OAKWOOD HOMES,
~LLIPOUS Call (740)446·
3893 .
New 3 BA Home Only
$189/mo. lncluoes ale, delivand set up. (740)385-

al)'

!1367

STATE ROUTE 554, BIDWELL: New 4 bedroom. 2
· 'bil.th manUfactured home.
·F~tatures living room, family
{Opm with fireplace and
"BONus- room Corner lot.
AbOve ground pool with pool
house. Ready for move -rn
PRICED
UNDER
APPRAISAL!!
(740)4463:118. .
THEISS ROAD, VINTON '
Stand new 3 bedroom. 2
bath manutactured home.
Completely set and ready
lor move-in. Feature::'i llv1ng
room, lam ily room and
beauti ful' s~y · lit k1tchen
DRASTICALLY AEDUCEDII
Calt (740)446-3570.

r

Lm10;&amp;
ACIIL\(;E

4.46 acres

1 bedroom Apt. Point
Pleasant , 1 bedroom House
, Gallipolis, HUO (740)4462200or(740)709-0062
-----;;-----2 Bd APt available in
Middleport
No ,pets.
$300 .00.
Call:888·514·
0192. HUO approved .
- - - -- -- - - 2 bedroom, 1 bath, water
paid $350 month , $350
security
deposit.
Call
44
01_
_6_-_
34_8_1---:,----_(7_4_;
4 room apt. WfD hookup,

Used Furniture Store, 130
Bulevitle Pike, Gallipolis,
OH. 40% oH all king mattress sets. mobile home lot ..O% Fln•nclng for up. to 36
lor rent. 3 stall garage lor montt1s on John Deere
rent. (740)44ti·4782.
Compa~ and 500C Serle&amp;
Tractors with John ~ere
Washer, $100; Dryer $95; Credit approval. Check them
electric range, $125; gas out! Carmich• Equipment
range, $125 ; refrigerator, Inc. (740)446-2412.
95 ; Whirlpool wasner/dryer - - - : - - - - - , - set $250; very nice couch John Deere 10ft. No Til Drill
$125; rocker recliner $75; for
Rent.
Carmichael
tablefchalrs, $40; chest-of- Equipment. (7~0)446-2412.
drawers, S40 ; Kenmore
.
updght
freezer,
$195; John Otere Commercial
bath. Kanauga $450, Porte r,
k 1
p od
Kenmore chest freezer,
or 1 te
r ucla
$4 90.
(740)367-7746 c ompact
E
S
;
65:
Wringer
washer,
$200.
xcavatorsl
kid
$
(740)367 -70 15
Skaggs Appliances
teers/Traclor
Loader
76Vine Street, Gallipolis
BacllhOe In stock. Check out
Apar t ment 1.700 sq. It
$650 No pets. Available Oct
(740)448-7398
our rental rates . Great
1. (740)441-1124
=~...;.-;...__,
, __., financing
available .
'.4. .."".-vr..~
Carmichael Equipment Inc.
Apartment for rent. 1·bed·
(740)446·2412.
room. located 1205 Ohro St.
POLE BUILDINGS
Pt. Pleasan t, $325/month , Buy or
selL
Riverine
·Any Size
water sewa ge. rncluded Antiques , 1124 East Main ·Any Style
·custom Buil1 to tit your
(304)675-6668,
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740needs.
Apt. for Renl Beech Street 992-2526. Russ Moore.
·FREE Estimates
Middleport. One Bedroom. owner.
740-596-2909
lurnrshed, utilities pard. retLeisa's ' Antrques - bought- Your ProStar Trailer O't~aler.
erences . 740-992·01 65
sold at Alligator Jacks Flea Carmichael Equipment Inc.
BEAUTIFUL
APART- Market. Al7, Pomeroy, furni- (740)446-2412
MENTS
AT
BUDGET lure, primitives. bOttles . i.!r~-----....,
PRICES AT JACKSON (740)992-5088
'
L!VFSfocK
ESTATES, 52 Westwooct
Drrve from $344 lo $442.
Walk to shop..&amp; movies. Call __ 1\fEROIANDISE
. Two nice young standard
740·-446-2568
EqLJal
bred horses lor sale.
Housrng Oppor tuOI!y.
6 II. slidrng glass patio door, (740)645-6157
00
stilt in bOI(. Call {740)446·
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- 32 10 or (7 40)446·2948.
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments, For Sale· firewood mostly $500 Demonstration Bonusand/or small houses FOR oa~ . already cut and split Let us demo a John Deere
RENT Call (740)441-1111 $30 load, (740)949-306~
Trak or X Series All-Wheel
tor applrcation &amp; information . ·
•
Steer on your lawn and
Going Out ol Business sate. receive an extra $500 oft our
Fur.nished Apanmant ·2nd
85 Dump Truck Paver and already discounted prices.
Ave, Gallipoljs, Upstairs, All Roller $4 ,000, truck needs
Limited
tiine
ofler.
Utilitres Paid. 1 Bedroom .
worJo:
Misc. Power Tools Carmichael Equipment Inc.
No Pets. (7401446·9523 ~
priced separately. (304)882·
Furnished upstairs .~ rooms 2196 (304)377-8266

r

~

z

R~~\1. ESI·\TE

·--•\io\io'AioNitimio:]iil_ _. .
r

~Buy Home's· Lo:e a·l person
buys hOmes. Con lidentral .
Otlick cash J1m , 740-9 92&amp; batn. Clean . ret. &amp; dep.
6300. No calls after 9.
requrre d. No pets. (740)4461519.

10

HOt 'S~:.-&lt;

IURRlxr
bedroom house clast to
Rio Grande college and
grade school. S3001mo. dep
req . (7401446-2422.
1 Possibly 2 Bedroom
House in ,New Haven ,
$300/month , $275/deposrt
No Pets (304)882.3652
2 ')edroom. stovel refngerator lurnishecl . $300/mo
S !50/deposi t. No pe ts
(740)446-9061
2 houses, I IS 4 bedroom,
$900/month. 1 is 3 bedrooni
$550/month, plus deposil
(740)256-8152.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Gracious living. I and 2 bed· Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1100m apartments at Village 800-537·9528
Manor
and
Riverside
Apa nments rn Middleport .· - - - - - - - - From $295-$444. Call 740 _ Lift chair, used less than 3
992 -5064 . Equal Housing months Atso hospital bed
Opportunities.
w/trapeze bar. (740)4462037 '
Immac ulate
apartment.
Wal ~ing distance to UAG . Lockie Here .. For Sale or
Recently remodeled . 2BA Trade . 81 Taurus 16 Ft.
new private deck. $500/mo. Travel Tr. was $3,500.00
(614)595-7773 or 800-798· Now only $1 ,800.00. Sleeps
6 Sellcontained . AC .----1 4
4686
Ft. Fib.Gias . Boat 50 HP
N 3rd' Ave . Middlepo rt. . ·1 Mere _, Trolling f!lOior, 2 fish
bedroom furnished apt. No Iinder. 2 anchor. life jacket.
petS. Deposit. Prev rental comp lete
wrtll
trailer .
Ref. 740-992-0165
$2,500.(){} .. 1995 F 150 . 4
WD Ext cab topper excel·
One BR 1st Fir . NC , uti I pd
tent shape $4,500.00---Ciaw
$350 plus dep. Reference,
Foot bath tub $50.00---0id
no pets. Stove &amp; Aelrig . turn .
Bunk Beds sturdy. Ca /1:740Co in W/ D on prem1ses. 258
992 -2719
State '
'Rt..
Gallri;loli s
(740)446-3667.
NEW AND USED STEEL

2-3 bedroom a!
1940
Chatham . S450mo. plus
deposit &amp; utili\1es. Leave per- Pleasant Valley Apartment
sonal
inlormation
at Are now taki['IQ Applications
!'140)446-2 515.
tor 2BA , 3BR &amp; 4S.R.,
Applications are
taken
SBA house on Rt . 160 near
Mon'day thru Friday. lrom
north Gallia H.S. $450/mo
9:00 A.M.·4 P.M. Offrce is
plus deposrt
No pets
Located at 1151 Evergree_n
(f401446-8495.
Onve Porn! Pleasant. WV
3BA, 28~ . hardwood floors. Phone No. rs (304}675fir eplace, Salem Cenler, 5806 E.H.O

$700/mo. Available Sept. 1.
Tara
Townhouse
tall (7401418-1183.
Apartments , Very Spacious,
~ bedroom farm house with 2 Bedroorns . CIA, 1 1!2
hice barn and horse proper- Bath , Adult Pool &amp; Baby
ty. At. 35 just in Jackson Pool , Pat10. Start $385/Mo.
Plus
Countv, With opt1on to buy. No Pets. .J.._ease
Caill after 6pm . (740)645· Security Oeposrt Required ,
(740)367-7086
6157, (740)367-7195

Att ention!
Local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" programs lor you to buy · your
home instead of renting .
• 100% trnancrng
• Less than perfect cred1t
accepted
• Payment could be tne
same as rent
Locators
Mortgage
(740)367-0000
House for· Rent Pt. Pleasant
~400 (304)675-5540 "'
(.:304)675-4024. ask lor
NSncy. Homestead Realty
Broker

Twin Rivers Tower is acceptrng apC:llicat1ons lor waiting
list lor Hud-subsized. t'- br.
apartment, call 675-6679
EHO

i

SPACE

I

HJH RI::.'Vf

Dowmown Office Space· 5
room suite $650tmo; 1 roo m
oltice- $225/mo.; 2 room
surte $250/mo. Security
deposrt required . You pa1
ut!lit1es. All spaces Yery nice
Elevator. Call (740)446·3644
lor appointment

Steal Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete.
Angle.
Cl1antle~. Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Frrday. Bam-4:30pin. Closed
Tnursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. {740)446-7300

Anything Hauled

OUTSIDE
WOODBURNING
FURNACE

• Metal, .

• 1\ppllances,
• Cars,
• GaraJ:e Metal
Call

Contact...
DAN
BURKE

740-742-2595

r

PE;rs

~---mliiiRiiSiiAii;,_.!
U:

-AKC German $hepl'1erd
Pups. Solid Black , working
line. Vel. qhecked (304) 937 _
23 10

AKC Registered 8-weeks
old Schnauzer plJf)pies, has
For Lease. Otllce or retail
House ' for Rent· 10 Pomt spaces 1n very good condi- au shots . $350/eacn. Male
&amp; Female (304)895·3745
· Pleasant ~304)6 75-6224
tion . Dowhtown Gatl1 polis.
Sma·ll 2 · Bedroom hOuse m Approx . 1600 sq .' ft . each . 1 Chihuahua puppies for sate.
Clifton. VN $350.00 month. or 2 baths. Lease pnce Need sl'1ots and wormed
$300.00 Deposit. No Pets [lego!labte to encourage S150 each . Call (740)388new
business.
Call 0381 or etnail for ptctures to
304-nJ-9 t 92
(740)446-4425 or (740)446- dannyboy767@yahoo.com .
3936
' No papers.
I"" Mooru:. HOI\1~

nJR RlNr

r

4x4
FORSAU:

2002 Toyota Tundra SAS V6,
5-spd. BO,OOOml, matching
topper, bed liner/mat, lots of
e11tras, $19,000. (740)3889634 eve. ask tor JeH.

r

VANS
FoR SALF.

~~--..ititiiiitliiili;,_.l
1988 Chevrolet . Astro CL
van. one family owned, good
condition, Estate Sale Make
an offert Call (740)446-8097
evenrngs
---'------1989 Chevy van 38 ,293
miles. good tires. runs great.
$2,500, must see.
Freezer cnest, white , $200,
good condition , 8 teet , 36
high , 60 long. (740)3889640

GOOd Condition. New TiresJ
$5.995 OBO (304)576-2934

Honda 919 and ~02 "
Kawasaki . 1500 "Mean
Streak" Both under 2,000
miles an d in Qreat condition.
Call
(740)446 -4096
or
(740)645-Q535 alter 4pm.
~02"

1995 Pontiac Trans-Am,
5spd, 305 H.O., only 55:ooo
miles, viper blue, Hops,
excellent shape. (740)446 0350

2002 HD Softail Deuce .
many extras includrng wide
tire. chrome. Python Pipes
7,000 mites. (740)446-2915
2002 Honda ACE , loaded,

1994 Jeep wrangler, 58 ,000 extra. Adul1 owned, Maint.
miles 4.0L , 5 Speed; air, Shop Manuel, $4,950, or
garage kept , extra clean , part traQe (304)882-3454
$7 .~. (740)367·7623.

2000 Honda CRV LX 5
speed manual tr,ans. Exc. Pro Craft bass boat 70 hp.
$Evi600nrude(740t)r368olling motor,
1·
·
·8421 eve.

CI\MPENS &amp; '
MOTOR HOMES

I

1968 Ctlevy 327 automatic
camPer. ·GOOd ruflning con·
dition . Only 52.000 original
miles. S1 ,900. (740) 441 7967 or (740)245-9008 .
2001 ~ayco Designer Series
27RKS, 5th WheeL Lots of
accessories
$21 ,000
(304)675-2246
2003 Coachman 24FT, TT,
Bath, AC , Furnace, Sleeps
5. $9.000 (304)675-1444_

~

area. clean , 2 t&gt;ed·
foam. $375 montn irlCiudes
water &amp; sewer, Reference 8.
cliposit requ• red No pets
1304)576-4037
B~well

~ob•le

m·

IMPROVE\IFNfS

i

Home 4-Rent m
fam ily Prrde Mobile Home
Park, 3br, HUD approved
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark Bushel, ready 7-1 4 da~s
$~75fmo ntt1 . $375/Qeposr l
Chapel Road . Por ter. Ohro (304)576-3320 leave -mes·
i304)674-'ffi33
(740)4 46· 7444 1·877-830· sage
Tak•ng applrca tmns for 2 BR 9162 Free Estrmate s. Easy
FORSAU:
Wider m Cen ~ enary No pets. f1nanc1ng. 90 days sanlo'1 as
cash V1sai Ma ster Card
~50 monltt plus depos•t
tf40)446· 7275
• D1111e- a· l111le save alot
New laptop, new prin ter.
ThOmpsons Appliance &amp; new monrtor All lor S1.()00
:\mRT~fFNrs
Aeparr-675- 7388 For ~le ·caH
(740)t4 1-8299
or
H!K Rt:'T
re·condrtloned
aulomatrc (740)441 - 547~
wa~ters &amp; ?rye,rs re tngera·
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
tors
gas i:lnd eleCtfiC Shop Smrlh· Mark V'rrien!!&gt; 'lurnrsh~d and untur1anges arr condrliOr'lers and System . ne w New reta rt
nf'P;hed. secur•ty , deposrt
wnnger wa shers Wrll do $3,150 , asking $2.300
feQurred. no pets. 740·992·
Chippe r. -$350
1evarrs o, maJOr brands 'rn Troybllt
2218
shop or a1 yOur home
~740)24!1·9294

r.

198S Chevy 3 1/4 ton . 2
Wheel Drrve Truck 350
Engine $1 ,500 (304)675·
7536
1997 Dodge Dakota SLT V6 .
AutomatiC, 2 Wheel Drrve.
72,000 m1les (304)593·1614

r

•

' 53

•

K 10 9 6

•

•
•

10 8 3 2
10 2

1 5

South
• A K 64
• 7 4 2

t AJ 6

740·667·0700 1·888-HUPP234

... i\ Q 3

1.

Owner: Jeff Stethem

POWER WASHING
(Commercial and Resid enti41)
Mobile Hom es, Houses, Log Hom es. Decks, Driveways,
• Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreasing of
Equipment Boats, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
Dum I' Tr'ucks, painting or staining Of your deck
or log home, Aluminum brightening.
Special rates to Trucking and Dump Trucking Companies.

LAWN CARE DIVISION

Equipment
LLC.

(Commercial ;,nd Residenrial)
Mowing, Trimming, Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fertilization,
Spra~ing of fence lines, leaf Remova l, as well as sma ll
land sc&lt;1ping jobs sOcll as planting and mulching.

M'Y PAWTH ' STORI&lt;
BRUNG ME II

• Repairs
• Parts
• Service

to 101 VI

FER SHORE
THAT DOC
DELIVERED
ME !!

CABBAGE
..___ PATCH!!

Get AJump
on

SAVINGS

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC,
1·800-291-5600 740-992-4119
www.qualitywindowsystenis.com

DoZers
• Spc~.:ialty • C lu tdt.•s
Truck s

• Brak e~

c••• ., • ,..,...

.,.,,.,
,.
131111 • ...,.

liD

all ,,.,,.,

£awntraclllre

.. lawn and Garden

a.re ou r
Business ...
not our sideline "
Tr~ .::tors

w..- .1en·irl:' rml\1 make'
C'onJur Strccl
Pomeroy, OH

2~

740-992-297S

. *Weekly Trash St:r vir;c
4 y r~ of Rel iable Service
(Keep Your Monl') L01.·all

G&amp;R SANITATION
3356 1 Bailey Ru n Rd ..
PLln11?fOV, OH

YOUNG'S

CARP.ENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
R~tng

• New Garages
• Eleetflcal &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Guners
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
.• Pa1kt ·~ Porch Decks

We do it all except
furnace work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-E215 WV OJ6
Pomeroy, Ohio
25Vearslocal El 1ience

Cornerstone

Elaclrlcal

Phone
(740) 992-5232

I'"'·

....

I OxlS, IOx20,
IOxJO

P'I Dlt-IE-D 1\\ ~&gt;.. t-'IN(.~CLOU:) 1'\E:W""'
':ki\FOOt:&gt;
1\\IGJ-\TI E\JEIZ'I-

~•--- Tf-\lf-IG I) FLONI\\

MANLEY'S
SElF STORAGE

p-Tf-\1\\ :':&gt;WKDS
GOOD' IS II
1\rfORDI\\'&gt;LE?

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH
10x10x10x20

992-3 194.
or 992-6635

WC:.LL, h~fOI'CDf&gt;.BLE.
I fOR . \l\1\T 1:':&gt; I

I

W~APPE.K.s.

Whaley's Auto
Parts

Self-Storage•

• New Homes
• Garages

·-

PEANUTS·

Superior of All Creatures
. On Land.Sea and Sky

I

THINK

I'LL TAKE
OUT T~E

YOUR TITLE
15 A BIT

''MAYBE''

LONG ..

and Maybe Space.
you WOirried'

7-t7-17 - $2151on (Whlluupply Lit!)

• Elcellenl Balanced Fertilizer
S-URE A. · S205ton top dreu your field eob meat
with Ull. sail S5.7511001b. bag

Mushn}()m Compust ..hailahlr
.\ Ita! SIH..I\ lOMb
IIi spreadt'r hu~ie&lt;i aHiilahll' fnr usr
t" .••~· oy_ pasturt rernn Blur~ &amp; ~en; M'ailable to renl.
LK"l'n.wd agronomi~t on stafT nailable ror consulling.

SUNSHINE CLUB
I

AI0S~D

A PIJ.?500AL

AD BY A IVCN·S/V'OkfOO,

Shade River AG Service, Inc

(VJ£AHA11AY5 SII\X3LE. MAl£
Wi-JO Ul&lt;f.S UJALKS 010/H£
8£1'01 AND SITIII\lG B'-t A
WC!RN\ RRf.PLA(f

Ohio 45769

'

..,-JoV/

OHIO IJCENSE # 38244

740-167-0544
_740·367·0536

I.EWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION

GARFIELD
50, l SNEAK UP ON THI5

CA'T', 5E E- ..

AND' THEN I EIEAT THE
STUFFING OUT OF HIM!

Concrete Removal

0

All Ty pes Of '
Concrete Work

0

Free

FOR $52 PE_
R MONTH

work

Mlnsured'"

Call Gary Stanley
740-742-1293

• Leave a message

Hill's Self
Storage

BAUl\1 LU:\IBER

Rac1 ne. Ohio
45771

Sizes 5'x1Q'
to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00AM -'8:00PM
•J

I ICI\.

Scorpion Tractors
"Taking Tlte Sting Out Of
i
/lard \Vork!'"
Mid -Size .JWheel Dri,·e Tractor
with ~Ohp &amp; .JOhp Kubora Engines

740-949-2217

&lt;

GRIZZWELLS

Now A•ailahle At

29670 Bashan Road

Eactll'!tter '"rile o~r staoos 101 aoot~
Today's clue. M equals V

" P

S

XSMU

P A T YU V P C Z U
XSI

SA V

IEYSAWU

KRI U

UAWAZHUV

EXSE ,

KU

Z P HU E P K U . "

RAIUUA ,

VRYPAW

YSN

KN

CYSVCRYN

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Wha! can be e&gt;pla~ned is no( poetry.·- W.B
Yeats
"Poetry is to prose as dancing is tO walking ' - John .Warn

~::~~~;~' S©~~1A-~tZN~"
O
leiter! of the

AstroGraph

£dir•J ~~~ ClAY 11 . POLlAN-----~

Qeorfontil!
fo u,r scrcmbled wmdJ b~ ·
low to form fou r 1irrop le word'

OJbur '!lll'thcli\y:

Thursday,Aug.18,2005
By Bernice B•de Oeol
A highly unusual , but substantial
opportunity may coma your way in lhs
year ahead through a chain ol cir-

I

cumstan ces precipitated by ou tside
fac1o_rs . ~l lt:lOugh someone o the r than
yourself will engineer the event . you 'll
' be a bEmefactor.
LEo' (July 23-Aug. 22) An impor·
tan! decision you w rll make today can
have far-reaching benefi1s, proyi ded
you don't get cold teet and are alrald
to fo llow through on matters as you
see them now
VIRGO (Au,g. 23·Sepl. 22) You're
now under extremely favorable
aspects !OJ adding to your resources
or increa sing your earnings, so be
con stanlly alert for fresh opportunities
and be ready to move on them
LIBRA ~Sbp t 23-0ct . 23) ,Good
things can happen tor you today
through your socia l contac·IS. A friend
may introduce you to someone who
has an idea that you can adopt to help
further your collecrive ambitions .
SCOAP IQ
(Oct . 24- N ov 22 ) , EnvL sron ' the outcome of events as
you would like them to ·unfold today
and you 'll be ama;zed at how your
positive think rng will bring them into
being. Use your Imagination to your

I~ISEEO

When we

1

oul

y

doesn'l grow on trees we are
usually already out- -a - - - -.

~~~s~E=L~r=~o~J~~~
I I' 16 I . ()

-

I

S.
Complete the cl'lud:le Quoted
'---'-·-.1.--.L--.1.-.J.L...J
bv ld l. r~g ;, the minmg "tNOrds ·
··
you develop lrorn sfep No 3 below

@ PilNT

NUMBERW- LETTERS IN

I

THESE SQUARES

N
g gd~Ns!~e~
tET mTo (
RAM

T

I

I' • '
IAI I -I I .I
l

l THINK l'l-l- &lt;30 FOR A
CHEESE SANPWICH

The re are strong indications that you
could be the recip ient of sofne revolu tiona ry news that you can us8 to vour
' benefit. It pertains to a new develop·
mont you'll be able to put t o 'eJCce llent
use.
~
GAPRICOAN (Dec . 22-Ja.n . 19 ) - Do
not be atra1d to set goals lor yo urself
1oday which are a ·bit grander than
you are used to makrng . Vou have the
wherewrthal to put them in m otion and
manago them rn str ide.
AQUAR IUS (Jan _20-Fob . 19) - It wrll
be yow pQS.Lii\le approach to manors
and srtuatrons that wrll enable yot.! to
create fresh opp0rtunrties for yourself
and others today. Cont1nue to dwell on
upbeat, progressive thought s.
.,
PISCES (Feb. 20 -March 20) - There
is a very good c hance that conditions
Wtll brtn9 .Bbout your receiv1ng assistance in an area about which you·re '
very sen si trve and secre rrve It will
come about through a very good
•lrL end
ARIE S (March 21- April 19) - A new
venture about Wh LCh you're ve ry
enthusrastiC Will gel a wek;; omed sh ot
in the arm today. Along With it. you
may also get a c hance to link up with
a supportive partner in the process .
TAURUS
(Apnl 20-M'ay 20) Conditions in general are extremely
favorable for you at this ume where
your work or career is concerned. If
you have 50meth ln g In the mill that
you would like to launch, do It today.

BAUM LUMBER

lil,l}\1\1~

$1'Z1WE\.L, 1 ~Ol't
"b.\1~ A ti'l&gt;.~"' 6«11:1

~UU~E ~

r~~N6

oU'i!..

~~-~l'l~~y

(May

21 -June

20)

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

B-t6-o!

Cwtew - Vymg - Dandy - Valued - ANY WAY

"If I can't grow old gracefully,- the middle aged woman
told her friend, 'I plan to do it ANY WAY I can
,
' .
ARLO &amp; JANIS
TH£.\l

01&lt;, IJOW T~€. HOI!tZOIJT~~ ... ·

ADJU~T TH£ V€.1?TICAI..

/

HOL.D:

/

Till' f~ l!it&amp;HfiJ€.~~­
leY fHIO. ClliJTRAI'Jf. ..

/

/

.

...,~.~""'"

(£i'-~"(

,,4

C)t(f

~p~ frJJo;

-

Involvements you have whh persona
whO aren 't afrafd to take a calculated
riSk When one ,Ia ~lied for should
work out r•ther well tor •II conc•rrutd
tod•Y· Be bold when neoe ..ary.
CANCER (Jun• 2 1·July 22) ._ Oo not
let the vlc:l ..ttudea or nr. dlct•t• the
t•rma tod•y. ·Take th• lnlil•ttve youree lf tn attu•ttona wher• vou De ll. , .
you car, change thlnga tor u,e b•n•r
tor you,..•tt and othere .

IN THIS SPACE

f.~limaH"'

Q

GEMINI

ADVERTISE

25 Years Experience
David Lewis

by Luis Campos
Celebnty Copher cryplog•ams are o ea!ed hom Quo1alloi'L$ by ll11'10U! people , past al'l(l pteWLI

SAtil'fTAAIU S (Nov. 2 3 -Dac: . 21) -

Airway &amp; Rotow~k pasture
renovators rentala"'allabMr,

35537 Sr Rr 7 N ¥

essences

CELEBRITY CIPHER

adv~;mtage.

.$11 ~ So~·btan

• Complete
Remodeling

" - - - --"---'""---'·Oio

Why Dogs Are the Most

Sun. Closed

ROBERT
BISSEll
COIISTRICnOII

'.

Sr .

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

shener 52 Sprint rival
25 Taipei locale 53 Sail out
26 Helha- 54 Sauii27'Tempo
Marie
28 Nose-bag
lidblts
29 Warm~up
34 Changed

Mountain

the heart eight, but since both rounded·
suit finesses are losing, any nonclub card
defeats six no-trump.
My computer opponent ct1ose fourth-

four spades, twO hearts, four diamonds
and two clubs . (Yes, I would also have
made the contract if either opponent had
begun with the club king and four spades:
that hand would have been squeezed.)
Against three no-trump. the club stad
isn't silly. but leading away from a k\ng
against six no-trump is ill-advised

Ffi:Ot1 NOW ON ,
I'l'1 GOIN(, TO
SVRN ALL
1'1Y CANDY

See Brent or Brian Whaley .

"Middleport's only

Stop &amp; Compare

• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
· ·Free Estimates

Shop the
Classifieds!

· 01-\,'([:i , QUI\E ...

.BIG NAT~

Rt.681 Darwin . OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Re.lorkitJ!J /.aiL· .\bdel Salmge
and After .\il r·kd furls

49 Ms. Merllt!
50 Animal

I

elusive. I Cashed all of my red-suit winners, the n tried the spades, getting home
when they split 3-3 . My 12 trrcks were

.

Athens

Pomeroy,-Ohio

• FOR All YOUR
lllCfRICAL NEEDS.
• MOBilE HOME
REPAIRS
• CARPENTRY

GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality

L.-------,..1

v

IMPORTS

.B795 Hiland Road

47 Troubles

46 Zero In on-

lrlbe
4 Robbery
5 Mist
6 Planers
course
38 Walrus
7 Meadow
hunter ..
murmurs
39 Variety
8 Eavesdrops
drasllcally
of letiUce
9 Hill builder 36 Teeler
40 Music gartnl 10 Tie-dyed
42 ' "Peter Pan"
garment
41 Mil. officer
girl

highest from his longest and strongest.
the club seven. Not expecting tllis to be
away from the king, I played low !rom the
board and took Easl's 10 with my queen .
After a he~rt lo th e jack and kmg, back
came the club t'wo. Now I was confident
that West had the clUb king , so I rose with
my ace . cashed the spade ace. and
played a spade to dummy's queen . hop·
ing the jac~ would !all. When he rema1ned

· Hupp"'

Janet Jeffers

140·992-1611

TRINIMINC &amp;

4X4

!

'
.S ee
.. "''

Rocky ''R~;; l

Sx iO, lllxlll,

Service

STANLEY TREE

fORSAJ.E

.,.,_

E•JCR' MONTH !!

Storage

lrt.o;un'C'I

69-0302.

~

High and Dry

Gene Arms/O"·n t'r~

Op&lt;ra(or 740-992-3174

. 1m

95 HOI'I(Sa Passport suv. 2
wheel drive, aU1 omatic,
120,000 mites. air coMItioned , cruise tHt', · power
wmdows &amp; kids. casseHe ,
clean instde &amp; out, l~s &amp;
great.
$2 ,500.

HE SENDS TH' BILL

11'1 DI\IL'I I

740-992-6971

FUR 5,\(..E

I

THE BORN LOSE-R

Optional Upprades Available;
Argon Gas &amp; Heal MiTTor

43 Slug cousin
45 lucy
Lawless
role

. ~----~r------------------,--, from that West hand against the slam is

INSTALLED

for Farm Equipm~m ­

..

WELL, I KNOW

MY MAW SEZ
SHE FOUND
ME IN TH'

$219 .

740-742-2455

51 Camel kin
55 Mean to
56 Bring lorth .
57 Dlolress
signal
58 Ride the ·
banister
It Sullivan
and Murrow
DOWN
13 Ogled
19 Adds up
.I 'While Sox
20 Spice rack
org.
Item
'
2 Above,
22 This &amp;e&lt;:&lt;ind
to Tennyson
(2 wds.)
3 Rocky
· 24 Pertume

In a 35-table tournament, 14 pa1rs bid to
si)( no-lrump. I think the "normal" le ad

BARNEY

Vinyl Double Hung

Let me do it for youl

~"

novel1sl

' 20.

,WINDOW SUPER SALE
., i'

Pass
All j.lflSS

+

lnlo
44 Give the
plnkaUp
46 Pioce
for laundry
48 "'Northanger

Assum ing you open one no-trump with
15·17 points, SoUth's two-no-trump rebid
shows 18 or 19 points, or perhaps a poor

Office: (740) 992·2804 Cell: (740) 517· 6883

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

E~st

1
6 NT

42 Duck'o fool
43 ~ob
application

II we exclude near beg1nners, two classes of player sometimes produce strange
actions: computer programs and juniors
Let's start with a program. -Look only at
the West hand.' Whal would you lead
against either three no-trump or six no, trump alter South opened one club?

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASI-l
!\NO LAWN CARE

For more information call :
740-992-3824 or 740-667-0338

North

Some strange plays
at the table

Free

K-4 Open House
Aug. 26th at 7:00PM

Neither

Opc,ning lead: '!?

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

Grades K-4 ihrough 12

W(•St
Pass
Pass

2 NT

Top · Removal - Trim
· Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

Ri ver Valley Christian Academy
Now enrolling students l'or the
2005-2006 school year.

Vulnerable :

South

and Replacement

,SUVs

1999 Ch~ Suburban 41C4
good condrflon, loaded new
tues
Askmg
Sit 000
(740)441-0658 or (74 0)709·
"931

'I B 5 :1
... K98i6

• ROOf • PAINT
HOME

-BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG
Baldwin
Spmet
plano. For sale: ~ 995 Corvette Unconditional lifetime guar·
Excellent con dition. Pnce Coupe. Call (740)446-4255. entee. Local references lur·
$800. · Call after 9pm.
nished Eslablished 1975.
15
TR~X-'KS
740)446·3992.
Call
24 Hrs_ (740) 4460870.
Rogers Basement
~
FORSAIL
Waterprooling.
Cannrng tomStoes for Sale.
Very nrce! S4 00 you piCk,
Warehouse $5 DO we p1cklby order) J1m
o ·arren Farm, Letart Falls,
OhiO
740·247·2113.
m Henderson WV Pre owned appl1canes starting at
F1eld ripen tomatoes Call
S75 &amp; up all under warranty.
(740 1379-91 ~0 .
we ;:l_o servrce work on all
Make and Models !30d)675- For Sale Old Timer logan
7999
G1ant Pole Beans $:40

Ot 45783

Tree Service

No Lawn To Small
Call 742-2595
Rlder-Push-Weedeating
Owner Operated ·

Gravely
L.--oiiiiiitiliiiliio-,..1 Tractor Sales
&amp; Service

r

Appliance

HARMON
LAWN CARE

Morris

.2b02
Harley
Davidson
Softeil Deuce. many extras
Great shape. , 5,000 miles,
$17,000 lirm
(740)441 9816

2002 Sebring. $5,695: 2000
Neon, $3,895; 2000 Impala,
$5,995. Saturns , Cavaliers.
Grand Ams and others in
stock. 3 months/3.000 miles
warrantY
Cook Molora
328 Jackson Pike
(740)446-Q103. '

Easl

A J i 2

FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

4 WH9J..ERS

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\'Vest

JONES'

40 MaroRCYCLESI

1980
Mercedes
Benz
Sedan, 4dr, 5cyl, Diesel sunroot. 150,000 miles, excel lent sllape $2.000!080
!304)675·4907

Cond. $9000.00
OBO.
74Q-446-9931
--------2000 Kia Sephia. 4 door.
automatic , 27mpg , 72,000
miles, good condition . $800
in brakes, filters, tire~ . bel1s
etc. tuneup. Make excellent
car tor college . Asking
$5,500. (740)441-9378.

Tuppers Plains, OH

Dealer South

Coleman Camping Trailer
12FT. 2 King Beds. $4.995
call lor Detail s (304)675·
1731

lnautilul river vrew m
Kanauga . Ideal lor 1·2 peaPte
No pets, please.
App11catrons being taken .
Call (740)44Hl181 .

740• 698• 6809

OB ·I HJ5

... J 5 4

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare .Sup. • Cancer • Accident

Des igned ro Heat Your Home
and Ynur Hm Warcr 1

2003 Honda 450 Foreman S
EJ~;tenddh Warranty S3.900
1995 Buick
LeSabre. 080 (304 ).675 . 4807
63,000 miles, Power Seat.
W indows, Locks, Mirrors.
llo,\TS &amp; MmuRS
Auto, Air
Garage Kept ,
FOR SAI..E
excellent shape. one Owner
$3000 Firm (304)675·2902
1989 Stralos Bass Boat. 16
1996 Pontiac Grand Prix, 4 Foot, 70 H:P. Johnson Motor
door, 51,500. (740)441-8976 with power tilt and trim . New
trolling motor. $3,700. Call
Block. br ick, sewer prpes. or (740)645-6734.
after 5:00 P.M. (304)675windows , lintels, etc. Claude 1997 Honda Civic 109,000 7382
Winters , Rio Grande, OH mi. After market accesCall740-245-5121
sori~s. 38+ mpg. Clean. 1994 650 Seadoo jet ski, 2
wttrailer: Some
blacklblack. Call (740)441- seater,
PAVIDSON METAL
$1~50 .
Call
extras.
9865.
ROOFING
- - , - - - - - - - - (740)256-9045 or (740)886"18 Colors
1999 Chevy Metro. 4 dr., 4 1343.
"
"30yr_warranty in writing
cyl. 76,000 miles. ·$3,000
:------"Professionatlnstallatlon
OBO, no reasonable offer 2000 Kawasaki ultra 150 jet
· Free Estimates
refused , • must sell . Call ski, low hours, with shore
740·596-2909
lo.itler trailer S49oO 304 (740)441.07 12.
675-6675

a=---~---...,

•o

12 "-~"
14 Drlzzitcl
15 Summer
cooler
16 Tackl
17 Coat
18 Adherent
19 Amalol
lngredtenl
21 Two-timer
23 AUend a
b!nquet
26 One of us
27 Put mon&amp;y
on.
28 Pub sign '
· 12 wds.)
30 Slugger
· Mel 31 Ancien!
Tokyo
32 In a ferment
33 DeHa
preceder
35 Can . region
37'1mpress
mightuy

• Q 10 8
'I' AQJ
t K Q 9&lt;

41800 SR #7

2000 Chevy Astro Van, Gcyl. '

r

North

and Financial Services

Service

the poleo

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Hupp Insurance

Hauling

1991 Ford Econoline work
vail . 52 ,000 . Call (740)2561854.
1965 Mu~tang Fastback
Ra!')goon Red exterior: black
interior, 6 cycle, 3 speed, air
Co nditioning , radio , good
driver. Rust · tree AZ car.
Pnce: $19,000.00.
Hilt's
Automotive Classic Car
Resto ratron &amp; Parts. tnc .
Basnan
Road,
29670
Racine, Ohio 4577t.,Pilone
Website:
740-949·2217 .
www.hillsresto.com

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- - - -- - -- · - - - - -

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�Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

•

Wednesday, August 17.

. www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

Renewed QB Dilfer happy to be in Cleveland

. BEREA (AP) Trent
a trade from Seattle, Dilfer, who knew he needed to be
Dilfer retrieved his orange
who lost his starting job . around the ga me to help him
' helmet that he had just nung
witti the Seahawks to Matt grieve.
to the ground and shook his
Ha sse lbeck, has been 'an
Dilfer spent most of las t
head . All at once, feelings of
exemp lary team mat e and season on the bench. long·
' ·shame, embarrassmen t and
leader in Cleveland. A ne;y ing 10 be a No. I quarterguilt 'wept over Cleveland\
team and ne.w ctty ,have back so mewhere . When the
quarterback.
re vnal tzed Dtlter. He s tn Browns re leased Jeff Garcia
·Dilfer was mad, too. At
ht ~- best ; hape 111 years and , and let Kelly Holcomb leave
him self. He knows beller.
has embrdced. the opportut~t- as a free agent. Cleve land
Dis gusted for mi,,ing
ty to start lor the reb utl t became that somew here .
wide
receiver
Antonio
Browns.
The Seahawks tra ded. h'tm to
.,
Bryant with a pass during
In &gt;ome --:ays, ll s back to th B10
. wn who sig ned him
the begtntung for Dtlfer.
e
$.
. .
Monday morning's practice.
·
·
to
a
lotl
r-year,
$8
mtlllOn
Th
N
6
II
h
e o. overa c 01ce tn
.
.
,
Dilfe r angti ly ripped off his
the ·1994 'draft by Tampa deijl. wtth the promtse , of a
helmet and slammed it to
Bay, he spe nt six seasons starttn g JOb.
the grass. It was a rare e mowith
the Buccaneers before
'~ It ' s one that I love.'' he
tional outburst by the 33· signing with Baltimore in said .. "The p~essure makes
year~old, who is ge ttin g a
2000.
me !ee l more altve. and I ·
fresh win in hi s first season
with the Browns.
Midway through lhut sea- embrace the hard tim es as
son, Dilfer took over for well as the good times. It 's
" I was s hocked at my sdf
starter Tony Bank s and just exci ting to go into that
today,". Dilfer said after
·helped
lead the Ravens to a huddle and have everybody
practice. "That hasn't hap Super Bowl title . Ho\\C ever, look' you in the eyes and
pened in years . I just got
he wasn't re-signed when' know they depend on you."
really upset wit h myself.
That hasn't happened a lot
the Ravens decided to go
There are bigger chal since losin g Trevin ,.
AP photo after Elvis Grbac.
·
lenge s ahead, .and Dilfer
He landed in Seattle as a will fa te moments where he.
In 2003, when he was with · Cleve land Browns quar~rback Trent Diller (8) looks for an .open receiver under pressure from
the
Seattle
Seahawb. New York Giants' Carlo Emmons (51) and Michael Strahan (92) in the first quarter of the exhi· backup in 200 I, but started fee ls like chucking his hel- .
four games as Hasse lbeck, met in disgust. It 's at those
Dilfer's 5-year-old ,on. bition game Saturday in leveland. Browns' L.J . Shelton (66) watches.
.
.
Trevin, died of a r a r~ infec who would become one of times when Dilfer will have
"I'm not real proud of it," his closest friends , strug·
tion . ·The tragic lo" of his moments affec t him . That's field. Admittedly, he 's hi s
only son - · he and his wi fe. why he was so surprised by own touglilest cri tic and hi s he said . "I probably had iny gled. Di I fer began the. 2002 to take a deep breath and
remember he's being coun t·
Cass. have three daughters hi s minor temper tantrum ,
poo r throw to Bryan t came \'{Orst practice of the year season as the Seahawks ·
ed on 10 lead by example .
- nearly drove Dilfer from
" I just don't let 'the ebb moments after he had fi red and got a little fru strated starte r, but was slow ed by
"One of the things I've
football.
injuries to his knee and
and flow s of life bother me an incompletion to Denni s and I went on a little vaca- lower
been
preaching is that nothleg.
·
Northcutt, who Watched th e tion mentally. I came back,
But it also changed him as
he
sa
id
.
"I
don't
get
much.''
ball sa il hi gh over his head .
a man , father and teammate.
Nothing, though, would ing will bother us," Dilfer
though, and apologi zed to
by
the
littl
e
disappointed
damage him like Trevin's said. "There will be some
Dilfer's frustration boiled
And while he still strugmy
teammates
for
losing
my
thin
gs."
gles with some eilllltional
death in April 2003. Dilfer fr ustratin g tim es and you
'over ltnd led to his helmet
cool,
that'
s
not
like
me.
"
But that doesn'.t mean spike, which took plac e in
came close to quitting, but just can't let them bother
grief from Trcvin's pa.&gt;sing.
No,
it
's
not.
by
Dilfer
doesn't
get
upset
was talked into coming back you. I don't want to be a
se ldom does Dilfer allow
front of hi s teammates and
li fe's
more
mundane hi s performance on the hundreds of Browns fans .
Since arriving in March in by hi s wife and Has selbeck, hypocrite.'·

Big P-lans for Rio
Granae'&amp; Welcome
Weekend,A2

Scenes &amp;om the :zoos

Melp County Fair, A6

~....

Middleport • Pomet·oy, Ohjo

.
,., f

I

• I ', -\ ul

, ,

SPORTS
• Rangers blank
Cleveland. See Page 81

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C8 project to move ahead as.scheduled
BY TIM MI\LONEY
TMALON EY@MYOAILYR EGI STER. COM

POINT PLEASANT. W.Va.
- The C8 Heal th Rroject will
proceed '" schedu led. despite
a study by the University of
Pennsylvania that says the
chemical docs not make people sick.
Art Maher of Brookmar Inc.
said Tuesday that th e
Pcnnsyl va ni a stud y is inconclusive.
'' In my opinion. that .st ud y
is extremely limited in. what it

determined and the number of
'participants," he said . "The
need to gci cin is obvious."
Opening of the Point
Pleasant·mobile unit, originally
set for next week, has been
postponed to Sept. 8, Maher
said. Fumiture was moved into
the trailer this week. and electric service was wnnec tcd. A
fi rm date on when the Pomeroy
unit will open has not been set.
Maher s.aid residents could
take .the results of the
Pennsylvania study as "quali"
fied good news. "
0

Dr. Edward Emmet( told a
gathering of 200 people in
Vincent Ohio ; Monday that
there was no higher incidence
of cancer in Littl e Hocking.
directly belnw DuPont\
Wa&gt;hitigton Works. than anywhere else in Ohio.
Robin Ollis. spokeswoman
for DuPont. said the company
has no in te ntion of Irvin g to
;titer the· February settle tnent
of a class action lawsui t in
which it agreed to pay for the
C8 Health Projcrt.
·'We inte
nd to meet nur
.
.. oblig-

at ions that we ag reed to as pan
of that settlement.'' Ollis s:iid .
William Hopkins, plant manager at the Washington Works.
said the Pennsylvan ia study
serves to c·onlinn what they'w
known at the plant for years.
that C~docs not nwke you sick .
He ·said there arc ctitplnyee,
who ha1·c been workinc with. it
for 30 years who never got sick.
"No mutter what level. there
arc no health cfkcts associatcd wi th it.'' he· sa id.
·Still. Hopk ins and Oil is said
they want to see the C~ Heal th .

Project comple•ed to prove the
pnim on ce a·nd for all.
"From our point of view.
there wmtld be nothing better
than to complete the health
project and ha ve it conclude
tl1c ·" 'me thi.ng that the
Llnive rsity of Pennsylva nia
swdy did.'' Hopkins said .
To date. the C8 Hea lth
Prnject has received more than
20.000 questionnaires online
at www.cR hea lthprojec t.org.
Maher said there were expens
who predicted they would get
no more than 4.000.

38 Special rocks the Meigs County Fair
I

Sams returns to practice after DUI Ward returns to Steelers' practice
OWINGS MILLS. Md.
"These are ~rown men, I · tence and cornerback Samari
(AP) - One day after B.J. can' t lock then1 up and put Rolle's pl ea bargain to
Sams was arrested on drunk- them away 24-7." Billick domestic violence charges,
en driving charges, the said. "He had free time. Until Billick replied: "The process
Baltimore Ravens· diminutive · we know exactl y what hap- . is what I'm tired of talking
return spec ialist was hack at pened - there are legal lia- about sometimes. At ·some
practice Tuesday .atthe team·s bilitics · here - but anytime point , everyone has to take
indoor training facility.
someone h;ts free time they responsibility
for
their
The' media-shy Sams. 24. had better act responsibly. actions.''
NOTES:. The Ra vens
was pulled over shortl y after. You can't do it any other
2 a.m . Monday on .,Interstate- wav."
.moved practice to their indoor
83 North by state police for Sums set a Ra ve ns single- training facility because of
driving hi s· 2000 Chevrolet season franchise record last' rainstorms in Westminster
Tahoe 89 mph in &lt;t 55 mph season with 1.826 conibined that soaked the practice fields
zone, according to a police return yards. including a fran - · at McDaniel College .... The
report. Sams was charged chise reco rd 1.25 1" ki cko ff rcturit of tight end Todd Heap
with driving under the intlu - return yards. The 5-foot - 10. might be delayed until next
ence, speeding and negligent IH5-pound former McNeese week when he's likely 10 be
drsiving.
.
d,
. . State. standout registered the activated from the physically
ams wasn 1 rna e ava t1- second-most punt return
ya rd s in franchi se history unable to perform list. Heap
able for comment.
"We' ll have to wait and see wi th 575, including two punt underwent offseason surgeries on his ankle and shoul :
what the actual circumstances returns for touchdowns.
Sams was released from the der and had been projected to
are. we've got to let the
process work itself out ," Golden Ring Barracks in begin practicing this week ....
Ravens coach Brian Billi ck Essex at 4 a.m. Monday. and Billick shed no light on the
said. "I kind of get tired of driven away · by his fetimle Ravens ongoing dialogue
having to say that all the time. compamon .
· with four-tim e Pro Bowl lineWe ' re not goi ng to prejudge.
Team officials sa id that backer Peter Boulware, who
He didn't violate any team Sams was apologetic about reportedly might work out for
rules because he was on hi s the arrest. and Billick said he the team this week. The team
own' ·
udtlressed the issue with the has been wnsistently vague
Players had the night off entire team.
about
Boulware
since
and veterans like Sams are · When asked if he ever gets acknowledging contacting hi s
allowed to spend the night at tired of discussing his play- agent shortly after rookie Dan
home. There is no curfew. but ers· legal problems. such as Cody 's major knee injury that
·Billick expects them to use running back Jamal Lewis' cou ld keep him out for the
sound judgment.
federa l drug consp iracy sen- entire season.

Blue Jackets sign 2001 draft pick
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
· Columbus Blue Jackets
signed center Andrew Murray
on Tuesday, four years after
taking him in the eighth round
of the 200 I entry draft.
·
Murray: 23 . appeared in 32

games for Bemidji State last 242nd overall pick in the
sea son, recording ~ 6 goals ·draft. He appeared in 128
and 22 assists. Murray was career games at Bemidji State
selected as Col lege Hockey over four seasons. totaling 46
America's player of the year. goals and 69 assists.
A native of Selkirk. . Murnty signed a standard
Manitoba. Murray was the entry-level contract.

PITTSBURGH (AP) On a night they ran back an ·
interception and two kicks
for
touchdown s.
the
Pittsburgh Steelers' best
return came a few hours
before . they beat the
Philadelphia Eagles.
Hines Ward ended a twoweek 'holdout that concluded
just as it began-· with Ward
wanting· more money and
the Steelers declining to give
it to him until he showed up
and began practicing .
.ward's absence was the
lotigest by a Steelers veteran
player since Pro Bowl running back Barry Foster
stayed out for nearly three
weeks in 1993 .before doing
exactly what Ward did, by
remrning without a new
deal. There is every indication· the Steelers want to
work out an extension with
Ward and quickly. just as
they did with Foster.
What was unique was one
of Ward's main reasons for
returning: He missed practice and training camp,
something few NFL players
would ever acknowledge.
With training camp coverage
·now available 24 hours a
day by flippin g on a TV,
Ward began to wish he was
in Latrobe, Pa.. for the twoa-day drills, the heat. ,the
endless meetings and d~y­
long routine.
"It's the worst thing ever.
si tting at home and watching
all your teammates," Ward
.said. "I want to be out there

battling . form er
49e rs
receiver
prepar ing Cedrick Wil son to start at
· for the sea- ,;plit end. where Pla xico
son. get-· Burress &gt;;tarted for five seating bet - · sons before signing with the
. ter."
Giants.
T h e
Ward should ge t enough ..
Notebook S tee I e r s camp time. with a combined
t o o k three
practices
on
Tuesday off following their Wednesday and Thursday, to
38-31 exhibition win over play Saturday night against
the Eagles on Monday night, the Dolphins. He said he has
except to go back to St. no hesitancy to play and
Vincent College at night to practice, although he ha s not
watch . gam~ film. Ward taken out an insurance polireturus to the practice field cy to protect him finan cially
on Wednesday morning - until he has a new contract.
coincidentally. for the final He had such a policy last
day of two,a-day workouts. year.
The team has only two full
For now, Ward is playing
days of camp this week under a contract that pays
because the Steelers play him $1.66 million thi s seaagain ·at home Saturday son, well below most connight against Miami.
tracts for a skill -pos ition ·
· With Ward back. the player with multiple trips to
Steelers no longer mu st the Pro Bow l. Hi s agent,
debate whether they have Eugene Parker, warned him
enou~ depth and talent at before
he returned to
wide receiver to win without Pittsburgh of the risks he is
the player ·whose production taking.
.
.
and toughness have personi- · '" This· could happen: You
fied their offense for years. go back, you get hurt, you
Ward has three of the four could lose everything,'"
b~ st receiv,ing seasons in Ward said . ·"Or you . could
team history.
·
play thi s year out. you do
"We . needed to get our guy well and they can put the
back.''
wide
receiver franchise player tag on you.
Antwaan Randle . El sa id. Or. .for whatever reason. if
"The younger guys need him you don 't put up a lot of
because he helps them a lot. stats, based on your produccritiques their play, and the .tion or someone else's, you
young guys have been miss- could lose out on making big
ing out on that. It 's good to money as free agent.'
'' But I told him I wanted to
have him back.''
With Ward back, Randle retire as a Steeler and I told
El is competing again with him to make thiu happen."

a·

.Chong
M.
Kim,
MD
I
Urologist
Reds purchase Holbert's contract

CINCINNATI (API -. The
Cincinnati Reds placed Ryan
Freel on the 15-day disahled
list Tuesday and said the second baseman will have
arthroscopic
surgery
Thursday to repair torn .carti lage in his right knee.
The
Reds
purchased
infielder Aaron Holbert 's
contract
from
Triple-A
Loui~ville. He was expected
to be in Cincinnati on

Tue ,sday
~ night.
'\_ (jf~:IJ~.
Freel left
"'-._./ Monday' s
loss to Satt
Franci\CO after ~ix inning s
because of a sore right
quadriceps n.tuscle. He was
hurt trying to make a leaping
catch of a line dri.ve. but it
didn't bother h.im until
Tuesday rpoming. An MRI
revealed the tear.

This is Freel's second trip
to the DL thi s season. He
missed 21 gumes in June and
July because of intlamination
in hi&gt; left second toe.
Freel is hitting .282 with 29
stolen bases in 77 games.
Holbert hit .304 with six
home runs and 23 RBis in 68
games for Louis\'ille . He
p,layed at least eight gaines at
each of the four infield posi·
tions.

'

. Urologic Oncology
· General Urology
· Laparoscopy
• Minimally Invasive Urology

'

'

Chartene Hoeftlch/ phofo

If the numb~r of canned fr uits and vegetables. sauces and rei·
ishes. and jams and Jel lies, on display at the fair is any indi·
cation, many Meigs Countians are well·stocked for winter. Here
Amber Evans and Kathy Strickland of Middleport admire the
well-filled shelve s .

INSIDE

Canning and baking blue
ribbon winners announced

• Scout leaders in
Tri-State Council to attend
fall kic~off. See Page A3 .
• Biggest losers get
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
recognition at TOPS.
HOEFLI CH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
See Page A3
• Ohio newspaper
POMEROY - The 461
Dave Harris/ photo
entrie.
' in the baking and canLegendary Donnie VanZant. on left and Danny Chauncey of southern rockers 38 Special per·
publishers sue owner
nin2
division of tl1e Mei!.!~
forms one of the ir many hits Wednesday ntght at the Me igs County Fair. The crowd at the grand·
of former partner.
Coun ty Fair on display in die
stand according to fair officials broke attendance records.
See Page AS .
air-conditioned Coonhun ters

Flower show depicts 'The Many Facet.;; of Summer'
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY ·- When it
comes to , flower show
arrangements and placing
bl4e ribbons. it's a·matter of a
JUdge selecti ng the best from
the rest on the basis or skil l in
arranging. interpretation of
the class , creativity in design,
• Rookie showman
color combination s. and the
Detwiller shows grand
4uality of flowers used . •
This year an acc redited
champion hog,
judge of the Ohio Association
See Page AS
of Garden Clubs se lected for
the top awards in the show
.:arrying out the theme "The
Many Facets of Summer" WEATHER ·
Melanie Stethem's tall line
design in "Cioudy Summer
Skies.. for be st of show.
Patricia Holter's arrangement
with fruiis and vegetables in
"Sunny Summer bays" for
rese rve best of show: and
Shelia Curtis' design in two
containers in ··Summer·,
Double Rainbows" for the
creativity award .
In the junior division. ,she
awarded best of , show to
Details on Page AS
Deeanna A. Sayre for her interpretation of "Going Fishing in
Summer:· and re&gt;erve best qf
show to Nata~ha Mohler for an
arrangement of roadside materials in "Luy Days of
2 S•:rnoNs - 12 PAGES
Summer."
Calendars
A3
Arrangements.
Ribbons of blue for first
Classifieds
' 82-4 place and red for second in
of the·categories of artisComics
Bs each
tic design. listed rospectively.
were awarded as follows: .
Dear Abby
A3 "Sum ijlCr Sunrise. God's
inspirational:
.Editorials
A4 Glory"Melanie Stcthem and !\lice
A2 Thompson. PDmeroy.
Places to go
"Summer
Poobide"-·
B Section under water: Shirley J.
Sports
Hamm of Racine , and
Stethem.
Weather
As Melanic
"Summer
Family
Reunion''- crcativc ma&gt;S:
· © 2005 Ohio \ 'alley• Publishing Co.

Kody Wolfe won
this round of the
cotton ball race
during
Wednesday's
Kiddie Games at
the fair. The
object of the
cotton bal l race
is to race competitors white
accumulating
the most cotton
ball s stuck to
the end of your
nose greased
with Vaseline.

I

I

Beth Sergentj photo

INDEX

Most fiSh dead as water leaves lake
CHARLESTON.
WVa.
(AP) - Most of the fi;h in
Woodrum Lake died as the
last of the lake's water
draineCI through a jammed
dam outlet gate. de spite
effort; by eight Divi,ion of
Natural Resources biologi' "
to save them.
The DNR crew 11 orkcd
Monday evening and Tuc,da)
morning netting the ' qu irmitig. gasping remn an" or the
Ja ckson . Count y impound ·
ment's fi,h . But mo&gt;t \\ aC

dead or dying by the time they
were captured.
" It was very disappointing:·
said Bret Preston. the DNR 's
t1,heries,chief.
'
Pre&gt;ton said onlv 50 to 75
la rgemouth bas~ · :-,urvi'ved .
\1,)q of ·the 'ah·aged fish
we re' bluegill and crappi e.
llcfore the lake wa'
drained. it had a reputation for
ha\ ing troph y-,i t c mu \ kel-

ing through the dam, we saw
a lot of dead muskie s in the
mud flats left by the receding
water:· he said. "Apparently
they were 'o stre"ed by the
receding water level that they
weren't able to .keep pace
\loith it .' '
Mo't of the ' al vaged ti ' h
will he u'ed for brood stock at
the DNR ·, Pa le stine and
Apple Grow hJt cherie,.
· lunge. hlll only one rnu o.. ki c Pre"ton ~aid . . om e mi ght
V.l i.l "- ' •n cd.
e1entuall y be re,tBded into
"Before the ll \ h began com- are a Y\ att: r-..

HOLZER
CLINIC
•

apple and grape. and Barhara
Mora. Pomeroy. blackberry.
P.idJc .,. relishes. sauces.
and iutce': Bill E. Grueser.
· Raci'nc. dill: · Sarah E.
Lawrence. Long Bottom:
1\ktxine Dvcr. ~weet: Linda
Rathburn. ·Pomerov. zucchibuilding have been judged ni: Brenda Johnson: Portland.
and the wi nners announced.
14-day pickles: Maxine
They are a' fol lows:
Rose. Racine. end of garden:
·
Canning
Phyllis Spencer. Pomeroy.
Preserves. jam. jellies and . sweet pepper. chili saU(;e:
spreads: Maxine
Dyer. Tcrea A. Wilson. Racine.
Bidwell. peach. black rasp- tomato catsup. tomato juice:
perry. gr:tpe. blackberry.· Darlene Hayes. Pomeroy.
apple huller: Pat Bi ssell : spaghe tti sauce. barbecue
Rutl and. stra\Vbcrry: SteveR. " tun;. grape juice. V-8 juice:
Barnett. Pomeroy. hlueherry:
Tracy D. Bea1·er. Pomeroy.
Please see Canning. AS

•'

'1

Char1ene Hoeftlchf photo

Me lan te Stethem wins best of show award in artis tic design for
her arrangement in "Cloudy Summer Skies" featuring mum and
barberry vine in a modern container in the fair' fir st fl ower .show.
Melanic Stcthem. Shelia
Curti,of Lt&gt;ng. Bottom.
"Summer's
Double.
Rainbow''- dc"i·gn in two
container,: Shelia Curti,.
Patri&lt;.:ia Holter.
"Cloudy Summer Skies"tall lin~ dc,ign : Melani~
Stethcm. Alic~ R. Thompson
of Pomeroy.
"Sunny ~ummcr Days"-.
including fruit and vegetahle&gt; :· Patri cia
Holter.

Melanie Stethem.
''Lonn

Summer
design :
Shclia Curtis. Patricia Holter.
"Summer Colur&gt;"- 'tradi tional ma" : Patricia. Holter.
Karen Werry. Racine .
"Lt7)' Day' ofSummer"road&gt;ide material : Natasha
Mohler of Pomeroy: Coltoit .
Adkinson. Middleport .

"' - favorite
t:vening~··

Please see Flowers. AS

I

I

Kiddie games provide fu.n at fair
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGE~ T@MYQA ,L\

SENTINEL COM

ROCKSPRII'&gt;iGS
--chugalu g.

~:hu g a l u~ :·

'aiJ

Kiddie Games emcee Dan
Smith as ahnut I~ kid' a~eJ

I 0 l\1 I ~ downed a · l·an.__ llf

Mountain De\\' in f CI..'ord t i m~
with A'hk·~ Putn an 1fini.,hint:
fip.t and \'. inn i.n ~ ~ 1o.
Foll ow ing
chu~alu!.!

Put ll.!nl

\\ l' rC

(\l ie

\\ lll lll' r'

Graf1am -i n till'

,j,

tn

lllllC -

)Car old &lt;.:&lt;lll')!Or). allU
MarcL" Ric.hard' tn tl1e file

The . K iJJic Games arc
' i'"'N' red h1 the Meigs
C nutJ I~ Senim Fair Board
and Pep,i.
The game, p,ro,·ide fun ·for
children who · wi,h to compete inC\ ent' such the cotton
hall r;tcc where Vaseline is
di pped on the end of the
chtl d\ nose followed' bv the
d1 iiJ burying their face into
c·ot l&lt;ln balls and ·racing their
C&lt;l m~titors wi thnut the cot. ton balls. fall ing off.
KoJy Wolfe' came in tlrst

· Please see Games, AS

omJ tmder di\ j,i nn .

..

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