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Page B(; • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, J uly.7,

www .mydailysentinel.com

•

2004

'

Major League Baseball
PlO

Sttil:

5~

l1

~4;-;;~-- w,

5·5 _
5-5
CE NTRAL

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P&lt;L

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45

37

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Cleveland

-=..__42
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Kanp.s Oty

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42

40
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22-19

26-1&lt;1

-

18·23
- 18·23
Hi-26
172J

23- 18
2 1-2C

....,

19 23

21 Ill

National League
EAST
Pt' rtaaerotua
NYMm

w

L

P&lt;t.

Oakland

Texas

46
45

35
35

Anaheim

43

39

"

49

568
568
524
.395

s..iiie

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16-25
17-25

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A·.zona

Te.&lt;as H Clf'Yeland ~
NY Yanl~es 10 Det·.c.: 3
Ml'lnesota 9 Kans.~s Ct.

s·

Tax~ (Drese 4·5) al CleV$1and (Ja .Davts 2·6). 7·05 p rn
Tampiil Bay (~12-3) at Ballimore (Bauer 1-0 or M111n8 C·O'. 7 05 p 111
Anaherm (Washburn 8-4) at ChiCago Whr1e S011 (SchoerewQis 5·61. e. 0 ~ p m
Karwas C~ (DRe)'EIS 2-3) at Mrnnesota {Lohse 2·6t. !I •O o'"

EYoogll

ri bl
.. aoo

M'I'Mg dh 3020
.I.Sr•no 2b 4 0 0 0
Txerrt. 1b 3 1 2 1
Menchrl 40 1 0
Blalod&lt; Jb 4 0 t 0

Melhws ct 4 0
BraJ&amp;sc
Ardoi1c
Alxndr 55

Tottr lt

o0

1 '000
1 000
3 0 0 0

CIIVtland
eb r· ll bl
Biirard 2b 4 0 1 2
Vizquelu 3010
LawtonH 400 a
3100
VMrtnzc
Blak&amp;3b
31tl 0
Merlooi 1b 3 I 2 0
Bf$.Sfd 1b ' 0 0 0 0
Hainer dh 3 1 2 2

~::

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Gerutrf
31 1 6 ·1 Tottrlf

2 0, 0 0

29 4_ 6 4

Texa1
000
900 100 - 1
p10 , 200 lOx 4
Clevell nd
E-Bialod&lt; {8). Ataxe.nl:!er (1). DP-Gieveland
1. LOB-Ta~as 7., Cle-.-eland 10. 2B--Terxerra
{17). MenGh (14 \, Merlon1 (9). THatner ~26)
HR- Tsr"11ra (161. SB-Vrzquet 18 \ CSMYCll.lng (31, Vizqual (2).
1P H RER BSSO
TeKa&amp;
BertJrodtl.l-1
31·3
1 3 3 7 2
Wasdf"'
31·3 4
1 1 1 1.
BShouse
2·3
1 0 0
1 o
· Broca1l
2-3 0 0 0 0 0
C!eve!1nd
Cll eeW.8·1
62-3 4
t t 2 5
MrHer
·
1·3 0 0 0
1 1
WiOOnall
•1 t 0 0 0
1
AiskeS.3
1 1 0 p 0 2
HBP~ C1lee (Barai&lt;Jsl. WF;--81erbrodl
Ump.res-Home. Dana DeMulh: F1rs1. ·Jrm
Joyce; Second, Kerw1n Danley: Th1rd, Marvm
Hudson.
T-2:49. A-16J96143,389J.

Red Sox 11 , Athle11cs 0
Oakland

Botton

ab rhbl
ab r h bi
Kotsay cf 4 0 0 0 Damoncl 6 2 50
Mclmr Jb 2..0 Q 0 81thorn.2b 5 2 2 2
RaCstr :JJ 2000 . OOrtizdh 6000
Hnberg 1b 2 0 0 0 MRmrzl1 3 0 0 2
1000
Karros lb 2 d 1 0 Kapler~
~rt
3 0 0 (] Grcprss 50 2 2
K1Bity r1
1000
Reesess 000 0
4032
Durazo dh 3 0 0 0' M~lar1b
McCty 1b 0 0 0 0
Crosby ss 2 0 0 0
DM il~c .3 0 1 0
NIKOnrf
5110
Byrnes ~
3010
Mrbelrc
5320
Scutaro 2tl 3 0 1 0 Mueler 3b 3 3 4 3
Yukrlis 3tl
1 0 r! 0 ~
44 11 H 11
Tatals 30. 0 4 0 Totals
Osldand
000 000
000 0
Bolton
030 440
OO:tt: - 11
E-Hatteberg {4). Scularo (4). OP--Boston 1.
LOB-Oakland 4, Boston 14, 2B~Scu l aro
(19). Millar 2 (181. HR ~Mu e l l er {6)
IP H RERBB SO
Oakland
l ito L.4-6
4 9 7 6 3 2
LeiY
2·3' 5 4 4 \ 0

I 1·] t
0
lJ 0
1
0 \JCMCI'ler&amp;r
MO&lt;&lt;
I 0 0 I 2
RRmcor
0 0 0 0 2
Bolton
Wokalle-d W. 5 5
7 3 0
0 '
€
JAndilrSOI'I
2 1 0 0 .0 I
WP- RR1ncor
Umprra~ -H ome. Dale SooN. Ftrs1 . 8((1 Kulp&lt;l
Seconn EM Mrller. Th1rd Bnan Gornan
T- 2 49 A--,35 302·135 095 1
.

BltJe Jays Mariners 6
=;;;;;=c:.::.!.::=i;;;;;;;;;=--.,-~

7,

Saat1l1

Db
!Suzuki r1 5
W1nr cl
3
BBoo~e 2::1 5
EMrtnz dh ,5
Olerudlb 3
Aunlra iiS J.
Hanse~pn .1
JoCbto ff 3
Spi'IZI03tl3
DWilsnc 3
Totl!lls
3!i

Toronto

r hol
1 2 I
2 2 1
o ~ 1
0 1 (l
0 C 1
0 0 0
0 0 0
1 0 Q
2 12
o t o
610 6

ab rh DI
Mncnno ~s 5 1 1 0
orudsr 2b 4 0 0 0
JM30n : 1 5 ' ? 2
CDigdo rn_ 3 \ t 0
Zaunc
.11 1 1
Hrnsklt 3b 4 0 3 0
Rrosrf
d 2? 0
JPnlos c1~
' 13
Barg N
-~ 01 1

J4 712 7

Tol als

Suttle
120
100
002 6
601
000
00• 7
Toronto
DP-Toronto 1 LOB-Seau e 9 Torontc 8
26-BBoone (12). DWtlson 1101 ~ rr1ocnrno
(9). COelgado {10). HJOs 2 {9) H H -w1~n 15).
SpteZIO t9), Johnson (7). JPhelps -.7 SA1Su2ukr 1211 5--0HIJds.")rt SF-O'e'ud
IP· H RERBBSO
Seattle
$ 10 7
7 2
I
Moyer l.6·5
12-32'0001
Villono

p,,

1 1-3

b

0

0

l

I

Toron to
MBatista W.B·S
6 6 ~
J ·6
2
2i0002
Chulk
Fraso·. S,9
1 3 2 2 0 0
HBP--tly Vrl:111e iCDelgadO)
Umpires- Home. Larry Poncrno F1 ~ 1. RoD
Dra ke ~ Second. Lance BarKsdale Tr.ro Bruce
Dreckman
T-2 44 A- 16.262 {50.598)

Braves 1, Expos 0
Atlanta

,6-4
6-4

~~

·1.3

"

"'·

L1

WI

w·
WJ

Homo

Awoy

24·19 .
24·16
22·20
22 · 19
15·25

21J.1 9
18-24
21-21

P10

s..

Homo
25·17
25 - IB
23 - \7
25·15
22-20
18-22

26·15
21-21 '
20.21
19-24
20.2 1
19-22

L2

5

6-5

W5
L2

'1'

7

6-4
)·7

W2
L2

4-11·

L3

; \

l\

,_,

S1&lt;•

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Away

w;

7-3
37

w•

5·5
3-7

W5

25, 17
25-16
25· 19
20·2 1
16·26

21 ·20
\9·21
20·20
13· 28
14·28

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GB

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55J

sn

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3:J7

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' G.

P10

"

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!j

Mo ntreal

ab r hbl
Furcal ss 4 0 1 0
Mrrero H 3020
JDrewrt ·so 1 1
CJone$3b 4 000

b r h bi

WIKrsn rf
: 0 3 tJ
ECh\'E!P c:t ) 0 1 0
Vodro2b , 3..'Q[l
CEvrttrl
2 :0~
AJor1escl 3 0' 1 0 Ayalap
0 l nn
JuFrco \tb 3 0 1 0
CCrdro p 0000
Smohzp oooo
Carro~ ph I 0 0 0
JEsldaC
4 0 1 0 T81Sia Jb 4 0 ~ 0
DeRase. ~b 3 1 0 0 O.Ctlera ss. 4 0 0
RuOrtizp 3 o o 0
NJhnsn 1b .1 Q 0 0
R1tsmap 0 0 0 o . Schndr c
1 o n 0
Lroche 1b 1 0 0 0
Ocr.vnsp
;&gt; 0 0 ')
Horg&lt;m P o o o o
Sledge 11
r 0 0 0
Total s 33 I 7 1 To1a1s
30 0 5 0

o

Atl•nta
Mormeal

000
000
100 1
000 000 0
000
~ -Fu 1C8tl1 2J. NJoMsOfl13! DP- AuanHl2 ,
MO'lt·e a 2 LOB Atranla 1'. Monl real 7
?R-F ,relit 11 Wtlk'!rson 2 I 1Bl SBOCabr&amp;ra f I 1 S-EnC~&lt;wez
IP H RE R B6SO
.AII1nta
:l-.00 3 3
Ru0rt z W9-6
Rertsl"1a
~
0 0 0 0
Smo~o: 5.15
1 0 0 0 . 2
Montreal
Dow~~ l,IJ-:1
S I ·3 7 1 0 3 4
. Horga11
13 Q 0 0 1 I
A~ala
113 J o 0
1
CCordUrr.t
:
0 0 1 I
f-&lt;BP--oy Oo-..ins -M&lt;6rero.1. WP.:..CCorder~ .
1.Jmp1re s---Home. Ted B:mEtt, F'1rs1. Rrc::~ Aeeo :
S9001'1d. Al!onno Marq.,ez, Thtrd. Ed Rapua'\0
T-.. 2 4.1 A-7.6971 19.000)

a

New York

Ph ita

ab r h Di
Ra~ os2 b
5 1 10
MatSUI SS 5
J 0
3010
rtau ac

ab r llbi
Planco 2b 3
'-Achels c! 4 0 0 0
BAbroorf 3000
Th()'l\e 1b 4 0 I 0
3 0 0 0
Bur-ell ~
'JJBell 3b 3 0 0 0
lbrltlal c
41 t 2 0
·ToPetz ss 3 0 t 0
Wo ~p
10 0 1
RHtndzp 00 00
'lolootan ph I 0 0 0
Gearyp
00 00
Gilwrlll::! ph 1 0 0 0
8 Pow~p
0 000
Jt ley p~
I 0 t 0
31 1 5 1
Totals

B ttloo~

0 0 0 0

StilntO'l p
loopQr p
r'roalgo rl

0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
5 12 2
F' IOO, Cl~
50 1 0
Spnccrl 0000
Wggntn 3h 4 0 ) 0
Ze~ e1b
30 1 0
Cmaron cl 2 0 1 0
Lelll'&lt;rp
AO OO
JPhllpsc 0000
Totals

3B 411

~

ooo

New Vorh
001
021
000 4
PhlladeJphltt
001
000
000 1
E- 8Ab1uu [21 DP- NG·I'iYOr~ 1, PhrladEJiph1a
1 L08 - N~w Yo1 k 11 Plrrl a d~lph1a 9 28-M.l!SU· (231 Wrgglll\On t 17l. ToPerez (61. 38-HtdlllgO !3) S B - ~ I oy d (31
IP H A £R BB SO
N!wYork
7 3
Le110r W 5·2
3 3
1·3 0 0 0
Bonaltc:l
1-3 0 0 '0 1 0
I .~
Siilnloll
~
5. 1 7;
11·3 2 0 0
0 '
~lla
ia
W L.3 4
42-3. 9 3 3 3 4
l111 rnandcl
1·3 0 0 0
1 1
l..¥"aary
2-2
1 1 2 3
BPowel'
2 0 0 0 0 0
r!8P-i;Jy lo,tsr i D&lt;~ 8e11)
Unrpwes-Horne Anay Fletcher; First, Kevin
Kelley. Second. Gory Cederstrom ; Th1rd. Ji'r'

' ' ' '

R~·nolds

T .. 3: 18. A.....J6 .230 {43.5111)

Marlins 6, Pirates 3
Pil tsburgh
eb r h bi
~enda ll c
5 1 I 0

7

1

1

8

.

~

ab rh bi
5 0 0 1
·5o 4 1
4 0 00

abr h bi
BRbrt5 dh 5 0 1 0
Hrsl Jr.2b 4 0 1 0
Tljada ss 4 0 1 0
Jvlopzc
4 0 2 0
APimo1b 4 0 0 0
8 1 ::J 0
Matoscl
MomaN
2 0 0'0
Nev.~n ph I 0 1 0
LLopez 3b 4 0 2 t
Re1nes rf
3 000
B!Qbre ph 0 Q. 0 0
Totals
34 1 8 1

JoCru..: rf 4 0 2 0
TMrtr '.t:1 b 4 0 0 0
L~gcss
dl20
McGrf!dh.31 20
Rollsdh
o o o 0
THaU c
.! 0 11
81um 2b
3 11 0
Totals

5

1·3
1

0
0

j

2

3

4

Eckstrn IS

0
0

0
0

0
0

F!ggin&amp; 3o 4 0 0 1
GAndlnc1 50 1 1

LViZCalno
Koi:IS.26
1 1 0 o D 0
umprrai----Mome, Brran O'Nora: Fir!!, Phil

--

Cuzzr: Seccrnd, ..larry Crawford. Th.-d, Dave

36 J 12 3

001
200 000 3
Tampa Bay
Ballimore
000
000 001 1
E-llopez (41 OP-Tampa Bay 1 Baltrmore
2 LOB- Tampa Bay 9 , Battrmare 9 28Ba!delll {1 2 ~. JoCruz (1d), Blum (14) llopez
t21 S- Biu(l1 .
IP H RERBBSO

Tampa Bay
0

Hndtck W,&amp;fi

0

1

2
0

'
6
' 2 1 1 1
Baltimo'*
Alope;; L,6-5'
6 2·3 6 3 3 2
2
Groom
t 1-3 3 0 0 0
1
Ba\.Eir
t100 0
1
HBP--t1).· DBae2 (Matos ].
Umprres-Home, Ed Mon1agua. Frrst. J&amp;ll)'
Meals. Second. Darryl Cou.\lns : Thrtd Paul
Schneber
T-2:43. A-22.192 (46,266).
088ez 5.17

Kansas City
ab r hbl
Alatord "
2 0 1 o
Berroa ss 4 0 0 0
Harwy 1b 4 0 0 0
Starrsrf
3000
RMataoc! 3
1 0
Grf1 nno2b 3
o
DBr.vn Oh 3 •0 1 0
BIJCk c
3 000
JBt1sta 3b 3 0 C 0
28 0 3 0
Totals

w.e.a

1 1·3
\

1

a o

o a o

0
1

'
0

Minnesot.l
9 3 ' 0 . 0 2 13
San1ana W,7·5
Balh-Grernke.
Umpires-Home, Jolt Ke'!oog: F'1 rsr Chns GucCIOne: Second. Charl16 Reirklrd: Thrro . Dan las.
sogna.
T-2:27. A-18.0~ {45,423).

Dodgers 4, D'backs 1

a.

(II,

Florld8
ab
P1er' e cl

f

hbi

4 1 l 0

'

1

0

o o o o

Tigers 9, Yankees I
New York
ob r h bi
4 o o a
Jel ers~
4 0 I O·
Shfll'lld rl 3 0 0 0
AAct-gz3b 4 1 1 0
JaGbi t11
4 0 t 0
Posaoec 4021
MOISUI H
3 0 0. 0
TG1arll1b 3000
Cairo2b
3 0 1 0
BWI!msct

Total•

tocool

Holtman 5.22

55
1 1 3" ·3
2·3 3 2 2 0 . 0
Pen~ho
0 1 o 'o o o
BumpW,2-3
1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1
Benrtez 8,28
1 0 , 0 0 0 1
CorBy pttdt~ to 4 batters rn the 71h, Perisho
pitched ro 1 be ner m the 7th
Umprres---Home. ChtiCI&lt; Menwc1her: Fi~l. C.8
Bu:knor_; Second, Matt Hollowell: Th1 rd. Err:
Cooper
T-2.57 A-12.330 (36.331)

Detroit
ab r II bl
ASnchz.ct 5 1 1 0
lntan1e 2tl 4 1 1 0
IAdrgzt
4 1 10
OFebce c 0000
OYungdh 5232
CGrllen ss 5 2 2 2
RoWhlell 4 1 3 3
Mooroe H 0 0 0 0
Hggnllrlr14122
CPena 1b 4 0 1 0
Mu!lwn3b 4 0 0 0
Total s
39 91.4 9

Otsuka

32 1 6 1

Detroit
000 025
011 ·9
NewYork
000
010
000 1
E-Muss1na 121 DP-Delro-1 1, N&lt;!w York 2.
L0B-Del roll 5. New.York 5 2B- In1anle 1111,
DYoung 3 1.11), Jeter (18), HA- RoWh1\e (12,
Hiyg;nson (51 \
IP H R ER BB SO
Detroit

1 0 0 0
1 0
Ump1 res~Home Terry Grell: Ftrs l , M1ka
DrMuro Second, Joe West: Thtrd , Paul EmmeL
T-2:18 A;-31 ,540 142,445)

Brewers 4, Cubs 2
Chic;: ego
eb r h bi
Grdzln 2b 4 0 0 0
Hams3b 30 t l
1Wal':r pl1 1 a 0 0
Merckrp
0000
Wuertzp 0 0 0 0
2000
SS06art
A'outt
4000
GPnson cf 4 0 1 0
Delee 1b 4 o·o 0
Barrette
4 1 1 0
REMtll ss 4 1 1 1
Prrorp
0000
Godw1n ph 1 0 0 0
lBICSi r p
0 0 0 0
Mac1es 3tJ 2 o 2 o
Total s
33 2 6 2

Milwaukee
ab rhbl
Pdsdl'lkC1 4 '\ \ 0
Gt11M! II ~s 4 I I 0
Jenkins H 3 0 0 0
Ovrbtty 1b 4 0 1 0
Grieverf
2 1 1 1
M~rdarr1
0 0 0 0
KGimr2b J 112'
Helms3b . ~ o o IT
GBnnttc
3000
VSantsp 2000
Adamsp 0000
8Ha'lph
1 000
LVzcoop 0000
Kobp
0000

Cardinals 5, Reds 3
Cincin nati
ab r h bl
Freel~
4011
l.arkrn ss 4 0 0 0
DJmnz2b 4 0 1 0
GrfJr. d
4 130
Ounn1b
3000
LaAuec
4120
JaCru2r1 3 I 1 1
G~ hitep 0 0 o 0
Hmmel 3b 2 0 0 0
JoA.Ildo p 1 0 0 1
..ICastro 3b 1 0 0 0
Tota ls

Sl. Louis

ab r hbl

30 3 8 3

aoao

Vlermss

4 1 1 0

sweep Reds, Bt

4 000

Wmacll 2b 3 0 0 0
Rntena ss 4 1 1 2
Pujols 1b 4 0 1' 0
Rolen3b
3 1 1 0
Edmndct 321 1 1
Cedenort 4 0 2 1
MA ndn W 2001
Tguct11 rt
1 0 Q. 0
3000
YM1i1 a c
Momsp
2000
RSndrs ph 1 1 1 0
K11nep
0000
Totals
30 5 7 5

Ci nclnM tl
030
000
000 3
Sl. l ouis
000
200
21x 5
OP-S1 . lou1s 3. LOB-Cinci,nah 3, St.Lou1s
6. 26-JaCruz 15), Pujols (26), Cedeno 2/2),
RSanders (15). HR-Renteria (5). Edmonds
!17). SB--DJi'nene 2 (9) . S-Womack SFJoAcevedo. MAnder!!On .
Toh!la
29 II 5 3
IP H R ·ER ea ·so
Cincinnati
Chicago
002
000 000 2
642235
' JoAc8\'9CIQ
Milwaukee
400
000
00• 4
GWMe L.G- 1
23330t
E-Harrrs ( 1), Barren {3), Helms (6), VSantos
StLouis
[t). LOB-Chieogo S. M i lweu k~e 5. 29---Har- Morris W.&gt;l-6
77'3323
ns (1 ), B8rret1 (15). REMartin e2 {13), P9c'Jsed- Kltne 5.2
210000
nik (17) .. Gneve (1Q). 3B..:...CPatterson {5) . WP-JoA.cevedo
HR- KGmter (9) S~ enkrns {2) 5-Pnor.
Uffipires-Ho me, B1ll W&amp;lke; .Fust, Johll
IP H R ~R BB SO
Hrrschbeck, Second, Wally Bel l, Th1rd, laz Oiaz.
Chicago
T-2:32.A-29,786(50.345).
Prior L,2·2
4 4 4 4 3 6
Lek:osror
2 1 0 0 0 0 Angels 6, White Sox 2
Me rcker
1 2·3' 0 0 0
1 2
0 0 0 0 0
Aneh illm
Chicago
1-3
We""

FAOduguez
Donnetl;'

2

7

I

'
0 0

0

1

0

0

0

2
0

1
1

C hi ~ o

FGarcia l.5·8
B 7 4 4 2
7
Cons
022210
Polfte
1 1 0' 0 0 2
Cons prtched to 4 batlers 1n the 9th
HBP- by Cons (AKenr.edy ). WP-lackey.
FRodugue2.
Umpi'SS-Home, Sam Hoibrool&lt;; First. Peu!
Nauert, SIICOOd, Randy Marsh; Third. Larry
Vaf\CM!r.
T-2'38 . A-26.209 {40 515).

SPORTS

Rockies 8, Gianls 6

• Matta says yes to OSU.
See Page 81

San Fran

Co lortdo

etl r h bl ,
Drham2b 52 1 0
4 1 1 0
Tuc:ket rl
FRd~z p 0000
Snow.1tl
50 3 3
Bondsll
2000
A~zq3b 4000
Hergas p o 0 0 0
c:Jtrsao c 4 0 1 I Chrslns p 0 o a 0
oooo
Slarllp
1000 Mohfrl.
PelloW ph , 0 0 0 Priynac
4 2 1 1
Dhmnnp _ 0,000 Grssom cf 5 1 1 0
PrW~¢11010
DCrvus 4 0 1 0
Hrlte.la p
0000 Rn somss oooo ·
MaS....yph 1 o o a Schmdlp 301 1
Chaconp 0000 Brow11 p 0000
Eyr&amp;p
0 0 0-0
Fellz3b
1000
37 6 9 !5
Total•
33 B 6 8 Totals
abr h bl
Miles2b
4100
Glayton ss 4 I 0 0
Ha"on 1b 2 21 t
Cas1rlla 3b 4 0 0 0
LWalkrrf
2 1 0 \
H~• day 11
J. 2 I 2
BurnMzcl 5 1 2 3

BY TOM WITHERS

Associated Press
CLEVELAND - Bob Wickman plan' to
throw every pitch as if it's his last.
His next one could be ...
Wickman, wlio hadn't pitt: hed in the majors in
nearly two years because of elbr&gt;w problems.
was activated .from the disabled list on Tuesday
by the Cleveland Indians and 10ssed a scoreless
inning in a 4, I win over Tex as.
The 35-year-old Wickman endured months of
grueling rehab to get.back, and he plan s to make
the most of what could be his linul three momhs
with the Indians, ·who acquired him in a trade
with Mil waukee just before the trading deadli ne
in 2000:
Wickman is signed for $6 million through
2004 with the club holding an option for 2005:
"I've got three months left of the contract and
I'm going to give it everything I've got." he said.
"! want to live up to that contrac t. I feel like I've
let the Indians down."
The Indians are hopi ng Wickman ha' arrived
in time to help their combustible bullpen. the
AL's worst, which has prevented the club from
making a run in the Central.
Wickman isn't making any promises of being
the savior.
" I don·t know if !·can stabilile it," Wicknian
said. "I just really need to take it to the next le,el
and see if I can get major leag ue hitters out.''
Wickman had n't pitched in a big league game
since Aug. 10, 2002. when- he could no longer
throw with a ligament that had been tom for
most of that season. Still. he gulled it out and
recorded 20 saves before havi ng surgery.
He expected to begin the yeur with Cleveland
but strained his ligament in spring training and
spent the past three months in rehab tor one la;,t
shot.
.·
If this is indeed the end for Wickman, he "'Y'
he's mentally and physically ·prepared for it.
He's no longer worried thai he could blow hi;,
elbow ligament at any moment.
"I'm done with.that," he said. "If she goe,, '~e
goes. Either it's healed or it 's not."
Wickman made it back to fhe Ind ian' a little
.earlier than expected.· He didn'l figure to be
ready until after the All-Star break. but he made
such good progress in minor league rehab
appearances that he and the Indians didn't want

'

s~rts@mydailytribune~com

.

rain s, we have a tlood thro ugh the .
buil di ng."
Roush. has removed some of the
dirt behind the buil di ng wilh a backhoe. but it keeps pili ng up.
"Something needs to be . do ne
before it pu shes me out in the street."
he said.
·
The ODNR· has plans to fix the
problem estimated to cost $134.000
which comes from federa l grants
administered by the stale.
Husted s:tid 4.000 cubi c yards of

dirl behi nd the shop will be re moved
and replaced with large rocks, simi ·
Jar to the ones placed by contractorsat the Lewis landslide site behind the
Meigs High School football stadium_
Furiher up the hill . Husted said the'
ground aro und the seepage area will
be te-soi lcd and topped off with vegetation .
The project will beg in in August
and should be lln ished by nex t June,
Htosted said .

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HO EFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

'

ALLaaders

INSIDE

B ATT I NG-I Aodrigu ~z. Detro ~ ..373: Mora,
Baltrmore. .347: VGuarrero. Anaheim. .347:
MRamrrl!z, Boston.. 340; MYoung , Texas, .332:
A Sanchez. Detro~ . .329: Hai'\ISY. KansaE CKy.
.324; CGuillen. Det ro I, .324.
RUNS- VGuerr ero, Anaheim, 69: l awton,
Cleveland. 62: MYoung. Texas, 61: Mora. Ba'fi·
more, 60 l Crewiord, Tempe Bay. 59: CGuil en.
Del r011 ; 59, Damon. Boston, 59.
RBI-OOrti.i. Boston 76: Teji!da. Bahimore , 71 :
VGuerre1o Anaheim. 71: MRam,rez, Boston,
65 : 81alcd:, Te•as, 63: VMamne2. Cleveland.
61 : JGu1llen , Anaheim, 58.

• Law You Can Use, A2.
• Belle visits Point
Pleasant, A2.
• Community calendar, A3
• Kerry appears much
more relaxed in Edwards'
presence, A5

NL Leaders
BATIING-Casey. Crnclnn&amp;tl, 352: Bonds.
'San Francrsco, 352, Hellon, Colorado, .351;
Rolen. St. Louis. .346 JW ~san. Pftlsburgh . .341:
Overbay. Milwaukee . .340: JEstrada, Atlanbl .

.

•

RUN5--Pu)ols. St . l ours. 71: BAbteu. Philedel·
phia, ~; B011ds, San Franc1sco, 64; JDrM,
A~nn1a 61 H&amp;~on. ColOrado. 61: ARamrrez.
Ghrcago. 60: Clayton,_Coklrado, 60
RB I--Rolen, St. Lours, 80 : Cest ~la. Colorado.
70: OverOay, M ~wau ke&amp;. 11 1: Burrell. Pr.iladel·
phia, 60: Bero:m o.n, Houston, 59: Thome,
PhrJade lphra. 59: Pu,ols. St. l ouis. 57: BADreu,
Pholadelph•a. 57

LorrERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 8·5·1
Pick 4 day: 8·3-3-8
Pick 3 night: 7-8·4
Pick 4 night: 2·9·9·1
Buckeye 5: 7·11-17·36·37
~: 8-11 ·27-31·35-38 (32)
Kicker: 3-0.5-8-4-2

West Vrrginia
Dally 3: 6-5·2
!.·
Dally 4: 2·6·1·1
.
Powerball : 18-25·30·34-41(10)
Power Play: 5
.!

WEATHER

MIDDLEPORT - Somewhere in a
cemetery in Meigs County. there is pro bably a Spa nish-American War veteran
withoui a monument.
A granite ·stone fo r Charles E. Rice, who
was a corporal in Co. 7, Seventh Ohio
Volunteer unit, has .for many yems stood in
the b a~k yard of a Middleport residence.
Rice who was hom on D~c. 21, 1876
and died on April 27. 195 1', served in the
War from Apnl 25 , 1898 to Nov. 6, 1898,
according to an inscri ption on the marker.
Tina Slater who resides in the Th ird
Avenue property deciLied she didn't w:mt a
grJve stone in her back yard and approached
the owner about having it removed. ,
N"'o}...Wanting it to be destroyed but rather
placed on the man '.s grave, she contac ted
the American Legion Post 602 in Racine
arid talked to longtime member Tom Wolfe.
Wolfe has takeri on the chore of find-·
ing out where~ Ri ce is buried and getting,
the marker to the .gravesite .
''Apparently someone pur c h ~se d lhe
monument and stored it in the back yard
since it's not set, and then just ·never got
aro und to ge tting it to the cemelery."
said Wolfe. "That's what I want to do,
. get it to the cemetery."
Anyone wi th information on where
Rice is buried or the name of a relalive
who might have that information is
asked to call Wolfe, 949-2044.
Meanwhile, the monument , will be This granite ll)ill1&lt;er for Charles E. Rice. a Spanish-Arneiican War veteran. stands in the back yard of a Middleport residenCe. Raci~
moved to the Racine Post for safekeeping. legionnaire Tom Wo~e has take'n on the chore of glitting the mao1&lt;er to the_gravesrre once he gets rr located. (Charle~ Hoeftich)
I'

Despite delays, retirement center Promoting reading
still slated for construction
BY J. MILES lAYTON
JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

i'
t
&lt;

INDEX
2 S ECTIONS -

Once Again, The Daily Sentinel Will Have A
· Special Meigs Co~nty Fair Preview Edition.
This Year's ~dition · Promises To Be One Of The
Biggest -And Best Evert Look For this Special
Edition In Your Friday, August 13th Paper.

been seep ing water wi)ich causes the
top soil to shift.
The problem begun last March.
perhaps even earlier, said Husted
who noted, thai the sl ip could cause
some structural damage to the wall s
and fl oors of the shop as the earth
shift s.
Manning Roush, owner of Gravely
Tractor Sale s, said the shop flood s
when it rui ns .
"So far the slip hasn't moved anything,'' he said,. "But every time it

.

,

'

Legionnaire seeks ·home for cemetery marker

to Lielay it any longer.

E-mail us your local sports news:

BY J. MILES lAYTON
JLAYTON @MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

John· Hu sted , a natural resources
admi nistrator
at
the
Ohio
Department of Natural Resources,
said there is an aba ndoned mine
about mi dway up the hill that has

ba~k

Wickman allowed one hit and struck out one ·
wh ile throwing 10 pitches in the eighth innioig
against the Rangers on Tuesday night. Before
the ~a me , Wickma n said he'd be as nervous as a
rookie if he got in'.
"Oh man. il's going to be great,'' he said . "1
jusI hope I don ' I ggt hurt ouoming ·from the
bullpen to the mound."
• ADIOS JOSE: Jose Jimenez -won't be able
to blow any more games for the Indians.
The oight· h&lt;tnder was designated for assignment on Tuesday, giving the club I0 days to
trade. release or o(nright him to the minor
leagues.
It\ unlikely Cleveland l~m s wi lll:tave to see·
him agai n.
Ji menez went 1-7 wilh a 8.42 ERA in 31
games for the lndians, ·who ·signed him to a oney~ar. S 1.025 million .free age nt contr.act last winrer.
•
The move to designate him came one Jay after
the 'club did the same witl1 left-hander Scott
Stewart, whom the Indians traded for during the
offseason wi1h Montreal.
"He (Ji menez) was never consistent with his
'/'ommand," manager Eric Wedge said.
• THANKS, GUVNOR: Travis Hafner didn'i get a pmdon fro m the governor. He got a
plea.
,
The Indian," first baseman/de,ignated hiller is
one of live playl!r.; on an online fan ballot to
name the American League's final roster spot for
nex1 week's Al l-Star game in Houston .
Hafner is getting some campaign help from
North Dakota Gov. John Hoeven, who issued a
'taten1ent Tue,day urging his state's residents to
vote for Hafner. wl10 is from Sykeston, N.D.
-"Travis is a nali ve 'on of North Dakota. and
he's batting with the best of them in the major
leagues,'' Hoeven 'aid .. "He's already a Nonh
Dakota All-Star. so let's make him an American
League AII-S1ar, too.''
H&lt;tfner ha' ;.ome tough competlloon on. the
ballot- 'I11e other AL players are 'New York 's
Hicleki Matsui, M in~esota's Lew Ford. and
Chicago's Paul Koncrko and Frank Thomas.
Hafner llrew up in Sykeston (PDf· 160) and
wa:. valedoctorian of his high schoo graduati ng
class, which had eight &gt;tudents.
He is· one of three North Dakota natives playing in the majors. The others are Arizona's Tun
Obon and Anaheim's Darin Erstad.

'

mg.

Colorl do
000
100 052 8
San FranciiCO 110 400
000 It
E-Ciily\On {7), OJohn10n {5), DCruz (3).
DP-Sen Francrsco 1. LOB-C ojorado 10,
San Francisco 10. 29--Snow 2 '(13). DCruz
( 16) . HR-Hellon (161. Burnrtl {17), Plerzyns·
kl 17),
IP HRERBBSO
COlorado
ee634
1
Slark
100000
Doh mann
Hank~al;l W.2-1
100000
100020
ChaconS.19
San Frsnci1co
Schmidt
7 1 1 I
5 12
Brower
1·3 D. 3 0 2
1
Eyre
1-3 0 0 0 0 0
HEI!'QeS
1-3 3 2 2 2 0
Ghrstns U-2
2-3 1 2 2 2 a
1·3 1 0 0 0 0
FRodnguez
HBP---by Chnsliansa'l (LWalker). WP-8fOW9f.
Umplres---ttome. Hunte! Wendelstedt; First
M1ke Winters Second. Tim Timmons : Th1rd,
Bruce Froemm111g.
T- 3:15. A-35.'160 (41.584}

.332.

Hillside comes dow~ behind Gravely Tractor Sales ·
POMEROY - Every tinie it ra in s,
the hill side behind Gravely Traclor
Sales at 204·Condor Streel -sli ps a little more toward the business bu ild-

Indians Notebook

Wickman not going to hold

I

·aooo

I

Fl orida
Wrll1s
JManzanrllo

4 1 1 '0
4 2 3, 0

E'rstad 10

a oa o

l1'lr!w 111
Urbedh
Calwf

Knerko1b 4 1 2 1
Gloatlrt
4000
Cr00e3b 3011
BD&lt;MSc
31 2 4 2
34 810 6 Totalt

· Loa Ange lfll
eb ..r h bl
ab ·r hbl
Padres s, Astros 3
H11s1on 2tl .4 o a o
IZluris ss
3 o
o
;;::=~=='-":..:;:;;;;:;;;--- Bruney p 0 0 0 0 JHrndz ~ 2 1 t4 1
Houl ton
S1n Diego
Olson ph
1 0 0 0
Gl'bwSk If 0 0 0 0
lb r htll
SFinleYd 3' 1 1 1
DRbrtsH · 0 0 0 0
ab r hbl
Bioollft
4000
BrrghsJtl 4000
LGnzlzH
3020 · LDuca c
4000
AtVrtiss 4 1 1 0
Loratta 2b 4 2 2 1 . Hlnbm tb 4 0 2 0
Be~re3b
3 1 1 1
f
CBekrncl4110
BGII&amp;srf
4 111 - Tracy3o
3000
SllGranrf 40 1 0
JW isn ss 4021
Ch011b
4110
~mnrf
3 0 0 0
Kieskolb 4 1 2 0
C1ntronss 4 01 0
Saanztb 31 10
TAlvrz~
4010
Cbrerarf
4033
Bgwell1b 3 0 2 1
LOl'IQ.
4 0 1 2
t..t:Ckn rf 4 0 1 0
G11gne p
0 0 0 0
CWilsn 1b 3 1 1 1 Lo-.vel13b 3 1 2 0
Ensbrg3b 4 0 0 0
Paytoncl 4 I 1 0
Hmdtc
4 0 0 0 Warlhcf
31 2 0
Styn&amp;~30 3 0 0 0
Wr ~hm~
3 0 0 0
Burke 2b 3000
Oj&amp;dac
301a
FOJjsump 2000
Corar 2b
4 021
N u nez~
00 0 0
Mckwk3b 1011
Asmus~
3111
Greenau3011
Aqurnop 0000
L1mep
20 1 1
JD8111srf
3 0 1 0 · LCstrllo2b 31 0 0
10 0 0
IV,!jlda2 p 2 0 0 0
RAimr2b 2 0 1 0 ·Dri!ortp.
0 0 0 0
Munrop
S1mon 1b 1 ,0 0 0 AGr1zlz 55 4 1 1 3
OPfmt&lt;oph 0 0 0 0
Nealp
0· 0 0 0
Vntura lb 1 0 0 0
STones o 0 0 0 0 TranQrc
4 1 2 0
Gallo ~
00.00
Nadvph
1000
Tota l•
34 181 Tota la
211494
000 0 Wdr.sp
3010
Vglsngp
BuRngtp
0 0 a 0
lnbmkp
0 0 0 0
T~a 'l1 n cf 4 0 t 0 JMnzdop 0 0 0 0
1
0
0
0
Otsuka
p
0
0
0
0
JVzcnoph
4rlzona
00
1
000
000
;_ 1
Cas1illo 20 3 0 0 0
Per1Sh0 o 0 0 0 0
Wtllsrsp oooa
Hltmanp 0000
Lo1 Anllllea
00 1 003
00• 4
Foggp
2aao
Bl&gt;mpp
00 0 0
TJ?Ill ll
3D 3 5 2 Totlls
33 5 9 5
DP-Arlzona 2. Los Allgeles \ . LOB-Arizona
MOOWsp 0 0 0 0 MrctcArph 1 0 0 0
9. Los An~ ele&amp; 9. 28- McCraeken
Werlh
Htll ph
1 1 1, '0
Benttezp 0 0 0 0 '
Hou t ton
000
210
000 3
(2) . HA-SFinley 1211. JHernand!i!Z (5, Belt/&amp;
0000
Coreyp
Sa n Dl1go
201
110
00• , 5
(22). CS-Izturr5 {5) 5--L.tmA. ·
ANunez 3b 1 0 0 0
E-Pa)'lon (2). DP-Sa n Diego 2. LOBIP H R ER BB SO
3~ 3 9 3 Tota lII
JJ 61 I 6
Total11
HoLISton 3, San Diego 4, 28-KI&amp;sko [13).
4 rl.zona
Long
(11)
.
HR-Ausmus
(3).
Lorena
{7),
Fossum L.2-7
52-39 4 4
4 4
Pitliaburgh
000
100' 200 3
BGrles (13)
Aquino
1 1
1·3 0 0 0
Florida
000
020
40:tt: 5
JP
H
RER
BBSO
200 ' 0 '22
OP-Prt1~burgh 1 LOB-Prtt5burgh 9, FlondB
Houston
l
aa
I'(Qelaa
8 26--JWrlson (22) Cabrere {19) . HR4 1 4 4 0 O!.t , Ltma W.7·3
7 7 1 I · 1 5
CWrlso" {\Ji, AGo,zalez (10) SB-JDav1s PMu11ro l , 1-2
Gallo
·
2·3 2 1 1 0 \1'\ Drer!ort '
1 0 0 0 2 1
121. TRedman (6),lowall (4). SF-JW1Ison.
Bullinger
1 1·3 0 0 0 0
Gagne S,22
1 1 0 0 0 1
IP H R ER BB SO
weasne~
0 0 0 0 3 WP-Bruney.
Pittsburgh
San Diego
Ump1res-Hcrne. Btl! Hohn: First, Gary Darlrng,
Fogg
5 B 2 2 2 2
0 0 0
IValdezW.7-5
6
4 3 2 2
1
1
MeadO'o'ls
Third. MBfl&lt; Carlson
1
'
3
3
3
o
Neal
1
1
0
0
0
1
T-2·31 A-25 ,139 {.56,00J] .
1-3 1
Corey l.\·2
10000t
2-3
1 1 1 0 o l r r e br•1k
'STorres
~l so-ty

o

DVnon ct\ 2 2 1 3
BMolnac 4020
AKndy2b 3 1 . 1 1

Kan sn City
000
000
000 0
Min nesota
0 10 003
OOx 4
E-Ste rrs (2). DP-Mtl'lneso\a 1 LOBKansas City 3. Mmnegota 5. 2B-GGuzme.n
{14). THvn1er (18). HA-THunter (11). SBRelalord (21 . CS-DBrown 12), THunter (4).
tP H RERBBSO
Kansa s City
Gfe1nke L t-6
3 5
5 2·3 5 4 4

''"'

501

ooa

00 0
0000

Rwandcf

MlnnesoUt
ab r hbl ''Tottrls
CGzmn s.~ 4 1 1 0OQD 310 002 6
Ana!Mlm
LForoH
4010
Chlc&amp;go
010 010 . 000 2
Mauerc
4000
Koskra3b 3 1 0 0
OP--Cilrcago 1. LOB-Anaheim 7. Chicago
THnterc1
3221
5. 2B - Erstad {14), AKeonedy .J9).. HR- .,
J.Jonosr1
2 o'o o
DaVanon (~ ). Konerko (211. 8-Ecllstetn. F!Q· R
Offrmn dh 3 0 1 2
Mnlkw 1b 3 0 1 0
IP H RERBB SO
ANBs2b· 3000
An&amp;he!m
Totals
29 4 6 3
2
1 5
Lacke&lt;1

o
oo

c."''

VGrerort
JGill&amp;n N

Wl'arra 2b 3
TPetez d
3

3 0 00

2

0
0

Twins 4, Royals 0

Devil Rays 3, Orioles 1
T1mp.a a.y
Baltimore
Ht~H3b

6 2-3

T-2.49 A--42,295 (41 ,900).

T-2:49. A-41 ,m (57.47a).

Crnfrl:lll
Badellrd

Vs.ntos W,8-3

Annstrong takes
yellow jersey at
Tour de France, Bt

a11ows~to

lb r h bl

1b r h OI

"""'.l' '

Mets 4 , Phillies 1
i

9

352201
HBP--tly Sturtz8 {IAodrJOiuezl
"Umpires I lome, larry Voo'lg". f"~ . Af'91!11 Har·
nandez; Second, Mik&amp; Elf'ltritl, "Tiurd. Mark Wfl9"

Monday's Results
Mrlwal.lkee 1, ChiCago Cubs 0
ST LOUIS 4, Crnc•nnatl 1
ColoraOO 7. San Francrsco 4
D ttsbufgh 3. Florida 1
-'\tlan ta 11 . Montraa 4
P'1tladelphia 6. NY Mets 5
los A11geles 6. Ar1 2ona 5. (10\
5iln DoegJ 2, Housrnn 1

~OtJIS 5 CorCUll\al' 3

6

Sb.JIUII

13·29

MI-

Adlmt

MI.JSINL.IJ-6

2Q-22

. 614
554

. 39

.....,_

8 6 1 1 0 4
100011

Urbina

,

._,

54

51

..

..IJotrnton W,&amp;-7

W&amp;dnesctay's Gemes
•
.
' -Atlanto 1Wr.gnt 5·51. vs f.~Otltre .JIIl Hefl'arde z 6-7 at San Ju2n. 70S p m
Pi!!sburgh ,01 Pf. raz 4-41al FICnda iP.avar'lo 9-31, 7·05 p m
N 'r Mats (Trac l1se1 e-61 at PhrlarJalph1a '. f.tlr'J I ~ 5-5 1. 7.05 p m.
c~1~3go Cubs \C.Z:lmor3no 9-3) 91Mr•wa..tkee ( O:Dav~ 6·1). 8:05 o.r1
Cn~lrne t iiSai'~M z ( .. • 1a: St lou s 1W Willlams 6·6). 8.10 p.m. ,
Hc·u'ston (Oswa ~ 7-6, a: San D•egq 1Peavy 5-21. 10·05 pm
Ccloraoo I K~t~ medy !\ 4.) at S a~ F1anc•SCO IAua\er 4-6). tO:OS p m
llr!lona 1Spafks 3·41 at los Angeles (lsn r 9-41. 10:1 0 p m

Games

ab r

P!O
•

L

Sill' Oego 5. HviJS\011 3
Los -'\ngo10s 4. Anzona 1
CJtora::q il San Fran~r'ICt

Oiltroil (Bo11derman 5·61 at N.Y. Yan~ees IHal.iey 1-11 I 05 Jrn
Seattle !Biacilley 1·0) at Toronto (TO\Yers' 2·3'. 7 0~ p m
Oakland (Repman 6-5) at Boston (P.Martmez 8-SI. 7;05 :l '1'1.

To111

2

40

Tuesday's Results
ll:lal'1&lt;! • ~Or'I~Jt'd
Flo I&lt;Jil 6 P l!SlMQ' 3
~Y \Ids 4 Ph radCIOhra 1
"-' ""&gt;ll- ~ &lt;'e 4. Cnocago Cuhs 2

Ba nlf11 0feA Tampa Sa•? ·G"''I
Ba"II'I'Ore.3 Taml a B&lt;lll&lt;' 1Gw.:•

Indiana 4, Rangers 1

GB

. ,,
" "" "'
"'
,.'' ...82
3'&gt;
w
GB
,.,
""
,, 37

rr

Aw11y

Mmesota 4 . Kan&amp;as C1ty 0

Wedne~y'•

537

•

CENTRAL

Str ~

Tampa Bay 3. Ba!t11001e 1
Maheim 5,-Ch.rcago Sox 2

"

38

2E

St L01.1rs
Ch·cagc
o~
Mdwauk•W
cr,,cl'l'' .

Monday 's Re$ul1s

Pel

506

GB

Toronlo 7, Ssanle 6
Boston 11. Oal(land 0
CIEM!Iand 4. Texa::.~l
Oettoif9, NY Yankees 1

L

4-6

P·!1~1'1

WEST

w

I .arkin error

l'

Calenda rs

12

P'\GES

A3

Classifieds
Comics
"' Dear Abby

Editorials
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A PART OF THIS YEAR'S
FAIR EDITION ..•
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A6

© 2004 Ohio Valley Puhlls h l'ng Co.

RUTLA ND
Whil e
there have been numero to s
del ays, an assisted Jj,,ii ng
fa cility in Rull and is slill
on trac k fo r co nstructi on,
Perr y
accordin g
to
Varn adoe, director of the
Meigs
Developmen t
Office .
·
The Deer Run Se ni or
Livin g Center, ' a $4 mil lion project of Lege nds
Realty, was scheduled to
be started earlier thi s year,
but a vari e ty of problems
has delayed the project.
First there was th e need
for constfuction of new
sewe r lines in Rutland.
Then there was the old
wa ter
sy stem
which
seemed inadeq uate to supply the need s of th e
50,000 square foot 60-unit
apart ment on . the 2- 1/2
acre site .
The o ld sewer lines
and
were
replaced .

· ex panded ea rlier thi s
spring.
Legends Realty
had to secure th e necessary ease me nt s to run a
new water line to the site
which caused f urther
delays.
'
The~ the Envi ronmental
Protectio n Age ncy go t
invo lved wi th the permit
process to ensure tha t all
environment al regul ati ons
are
co mpli ed . wi th .
Approval
has
bee n
received fro m, the EPA.
Most recentl y, Varn adoe
said there ar~ still core
dril ling bein g done o n the
site to make ab solu te ly
certain. the ground is suit able for co nstru ct i&lt;tn.
Despit e
the
de lays,
Yaroiadoe re mains opti mistic abo ut the project.
"We look fo rward to
having th is busine ss come
10 Mei gs Count y and I
remain optimi sti c about
getting
co nstruc tion
underway in the near
fu ture." he said.

Each apar tm e nt will
have ei ther a cl&gt;u rtyard or
ex terio r view . The buildin g will co nsist of one·
story modul ar units. Once
eve rything is in place, it
wo uld ta ke as little as two
months to build th e final
produ ct. whic h is the pro totype o'f 17 more whic h
wi ll be built in Indiana
and Oh io .
Eac h . aparlme nt· wi ll
have ~ liv in g roo m,
kitchen, bath and one bed. roo m wi th appro,priate
ap pl iances and fac ilities.
The apartment s will have
many ame ni ties inc luding
mi c rowave s·, refrigerawrs.
di shw4s he rs and ; cei ling
fans.
Legend s Realt y · has
three main partners wh ich
in clude Oscar Robi nson,
who played profe ss ional
basketball. Bobby Plump .
a baske tball legend in
J,ndiana. and Joe Wollla.
· the deve loper for Legends
Realty.

Strawberry Shortcake made a stop to promote summer reading Wednesday at the ·Pomeroy Public library. Amanda Bailey,
children 's ser¥ices coordinator for the libcary, said Sierra
Wolfe. wM is seated on ti\e 80's cartoon icon, was &lt;lne of
more than 150 children who saw Ms. Shortcake and maybe
carried nome a book or two. Bailey said the sum mer reading
program is really taking off and the next great adventure will
be at the London Pool In Syracuse on July 26. (J. Miles Laytor )
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.-

The Holzer Medical Center Diabetes Support Group will meet
Sunday, July 11 from 2:00pm · 4:00pm in !he HMC French 500 R90111 .

Jill Strauch, R.Ph., HMC /npotienl Pharmacy, will be the speaker.

Call
DAVE or BRENDA

at

992-2155

FOR MORE INFORMATION

The

Sentinel

...

Diallefes Self-Management
Paogram
July 19, 20 and 21 from 9:00am· 12 Noon in the Hospital's Educa~on
&amp; Conference Center Room C. Please bring a list of home medications lo class.

·~se have preKription from your physician lo alle.'ld. ·
moie inform~ion on lhese FREE programs, or 1o regi,...;, call (740) 446·5080.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Diff~ rence

www .hQlzer.org

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, L.
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COMMUNI1Y
LAW YO·U CAN USE'
OSU offers,assistance to·
you should know about
displ~ced tobacco workers What
guardianships.and advance ca.re planning ·

PIKETON - A program
designed to assist Ohio tobacco farm families wtth diversification · and nfltW · enterprise.
development is being offered
by the Sniall Business
· Development Center (SBDC)
at The Ohio State University,
South Centers.
The Center will be conducting free, confidential, one-on one ' counseling for tobacco
quota owners. growers and
tenant.s who are applying for
_this year's Southern Ohio
Agricultural and Community
Development . Foundation
· (SOACD~) Diversification
Project grant.
The counseling is being
provided by SBDC business

Thursday, July 8,

counselors. free of charge, to·
assist produce"rs with the
development of their diversificatio•i proje_ct. cash flow.
projections. and written business plan .'
To allow sufficient time to
pr~pare the required information for rhe grant application.
tobacco growers interested in
meeting with a business counselor at a location in their
coun ty are enl'lluraged to
schedule an appointment as
soon m; possible' by contacting the SBDC at the OSU
South Centers at (740) 28937·27 or 800-860-7232 (Ohio
only). ·
·
The counseling is part of an
on-going.
comprehensive

resource. program. OSU
re sources include seminars.
workshops, ol'le-on-one counseling, local resource materials ;lVailable at OS U County .
Ex tension offices, and a web
site hllp://tobaccodi versification.osu.edu which serves as
an on- line resource cen.t;;.r.
The one-on-one assistanc~ is
offered in cooperation- with
the
Southern
Ohio
Agricultural · &amp; Community
Development .Foundation.
For more iltformation. or to
schedule an appointment,
contact Christie Welch at the
OSU ~o ut.h Centers at (740)
289-3727 or 1-800-860-7232.

Gillilan family holds .reunion
CHESHIRE .- The Elbert Linda, Gary. Jordan. and
and Della Gillilan family Isaiah Haynes, Lockborne .
re.union was held recently at
Kenda. A!un. Joe, Derek,
the Kyger Creek Power Plunt Raymond
and
Deidru
Park.
Armstrong, Jackson ; Gerald,
Following the dinner, there , Linda. Becca, ·and Jodi
were games and visiting. Donohue. Harrisonville ; Tony
Prizes were awarded to all the Suntora, Albany; Dylan and
73 people attending.
Kody Roush, .Kent.ucky:
Those attending were Bea Dennis,
Matthew
and·
and Rex Carlyle, Westerville; Jonathan
Donohue,
Brian, Tammy Preston and Harrisonville; Wendy. Kevin,
Rexie Carlyle, Ashville: Vicki Kevin Jr.. Andrew. and Alex
and Robert Shepherd, Grove Myers , Lancaster; Brenda
City; Mike Carlyle, Hillard; Neutzling,_Pomeroy.
Tim Carlyle, Point Pleasant,
Gene and Mary Lou
W.Va.; Dolores and Raymond Hawkin s, Mark, Regina, Josh
Donohue,
Harrisonville; · and
Tiffany
Simpson,

Middleport: Shirley and
Gerald Simpson, · Racine;
Glenn, Suellen and Jon
Simpson, Portsmouth; Diana,
Todd, Andrew, Brady, Haley
and Ty Bissell. Long Bottom;
Lori, Rachael and Abigail
Bearhs, Mary and Roy .
Gillilan, Margie Reeves,
Chester; Betty Spaun. Joy
Spaun, Zack, Chelsea, Dakota
and · Dalton Imboden , Joey
Forrester, Racine; Mildred
Williams, Jan, Cameryti and
Billy Harmon, Racine; and
Freda Holsinger, Pomeroy.

Hen_drix excels at weight loss
COOLVILLE Amy
Hendrix was not only the
weekly best loser but also the
monthly best loser and was
presented . the traveling trophy at this week's meeting of
TOPS OH #2013.
She also received a fruit
basket and a certificate noh

ing her half-way to weight
goal. It as noted that five
members will be going to
Pittsburgh, Pa. later this
month
to
attend
the
International State Tops
meeting. Members will walk
in the F9under's day parade
on Aug. 7 in Coolville and

will hold an open house on
Aug. 24 at the Torch Baptist
.church for anyone interested.
TOPS meets at 5:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Church with
meetings starting at 6:30 p·.m.
Pat ~nedden at 662-2633
may be contacted for more·
information. ·

Belle visits Point Pleasant

Q.: I am th~ legal guardian
for ,my brother. I have been
advised that I should do
"advance care planning "for
him. What. exactly, is
advance care planningry
A.: Advance care planning
is a type of estaje and life planning that focuses on planning
for when a person becomes ill,
disabled, incompetent or incapacitated. As your brother's
legal guardian, the court has
already entrusted you with his
care.

How~ver,

advance care

documents allow your brother
to state his own wfshes about
medical treatment and-to privately appoint you to act as \Jis
agent in financial or health
care . matters if and when he
cannot make his wishes
known. The most common
and simplest advance care
planning documents are
durable powers of attomey for
financial matters. durable
powers of attorney for health
cm·e and living_'Yilfs._.Tmsts
also can be used for advance
care planning.
Q.: What is the difference
between a guardianship a1id
a power of attorney?
A.: The probate court creates and oversees
a
guardianship and entrusts
the guardian with the care of
another (the "ward"). This
relationship includes financial obligation to the ward (a
"fiduciary" relationship) .
The drafting and exec ution
of a power of attorney is a
private matter with no court
involvement. A power of
attorney can allow the agent
named in the document (the
"attorney-i n-fact") to make
financial and/or health care
decisions for the "principal."
Q.: My father is unable to
care for himse lf. Will the
probate coul'l appoint me as
hi s guardian?
A.: It depends. A probate
court first must. find that
your father is incompetent.
You, as the proposed
guardian, must give the
court a medical doctor' s
expert evaluation that states
your father is incompetent.
Then, the court must find

2004

that your father need s a provides a way for the t;unily
guardian because there is no· of a terminally ill or pernt&lt;J~
less restrictive alternative. If nemly unconscious. patient to
there is such an alternative, consent to withhold life-susthe probate court wi ll deny '· raining treatment.
·
the guaruianship applica- I Q . I am the attorney-in-fact
tion. For example. the court under my' father's powers of
may find that your father'&gt; attorney. but my sister recentcare can be managed ly has been appointed my
through one or more powers father's guardian . Are the
of attorney (financial and/or · powers of attorney now
health care) rather than revoked or ineffective? A.:
through a guardianship.
No. The appointment of a
Finally, the probate coun guardian by the court does not
will determine whether you are automatically revoke a-validly
suitable to serve as guardian. executed power of attomey.
Family members genemlly '"" How~,·er. the Jaw allows a·
·the preferred guardians.
guardian to revoke all or any
Q.: My mother is incom- pa11 of the power and authoripetent and needs help to ty · of any all\)rney-in-fac;t.
make medical decisions. She Therefore. you have .continudoes not need help with ing authority to act. on your
financial matters as her father~s behalf until your sisassets are managed in a trust. ter, as his guardian, revokes
Can a probate court appoi nt the powers of attorney.
a guardian who woul&lt;j only
Q .: ln brief. what is the
make health care decisions relationship
between
guardianships, powers of
and manage her care?
A.: Yes. A probate coun attorney at1d advanced care
can appoint a "guardian of the
·planning? ·
'
·
person," which is different
A.: Generally. proper
from a . ".guardian of the advanced care planmng
· estate." The latter has author- removes the !·need for a
ity over the ward's assets and guardianship, if the guardianfinances while the former has ship is only needed to make
control o.ver the person · and financial and health care decihi s or her care. Although the sions. Usuall y, a guardianship
court usually appoints a is necessary only because.
guardian of both the person while the ward was compeand the estate, a person can tent. he or she did not make an
apply to be guatdian of just advance ·care plan and draft
one or the other. As guardian . _powers of attorney for a time
of . the person only, you will when help would be needed.
not have control over ·your
Ullt ' You ('1111 U&gt;e is "
mother's finances and will not weekly COII &gt;lllller legal il((or- ·
need to post a bond or repon matio11 column p.rm·ided to
on her assets to the court. · this /letvspapa as a pub'fic
Q.: If I Am appointed my · sef'vice,ofthe Ohio State Bar
mother's "guardian of the per- Associario11 a11d the Ohio
son," will I be able to m&lt;~ke State Bar Fmwdatirm. Tl1is
"end-of-life decisions 0 "
article wa.1· prepared bv
• A.: Yes. · A guardian may attomevs Brya11 B. .lolm..1·mi.
agree or refuse to authorize Tri.&gt;tall A. McCormick and
medical care in the watd's' Eric B. Gqmble of the '
best interest without a probate Columbus firm of Gamble
court order unless interested Hart slwm Jolii1son. LLC.
parties object or the probate Articles appearing in thi&gt;
court orders otherwise. cohm111 are' i11tmded tiJ proHowever, since the Family ••ide broad. gmeral.infomwConsent Statute was enacted, tio11 (lbout rile. /ml\ Before
the probate court is reluctant ' applying rliis in/(mnarion to
to appoint a guardian only for a specific legal problem.
making end-of-life d~c ision s. readers are urged to seek
The Family Consent Statute advice Ji'OIIl "" a/lome)~

Community Calendar .
Public meetings

I

7230. 12:30 p.m. at 'the Church of Christ on Route
northbound park on Route 143. Relatives of Edgar and
33
near Darwin . Kathleen Addie Reed Blake are invitThursday, July 8
Dougan
to be recognized for ·. ed. There will be a potluck
LANGSVILLE - Salem
Township Trustees budget outstanding service to the dinner, pictures . will be
hearing, 6 p.m. '.at the Salem community. Drawing for taken. and genealogy items
will be di splayed .
Firehouse on.State~ route 124. family door prize.
Monday, July 12
Sunday, July 11
Monda,y, July 12
·
TUPPERS
PLAINS
•
POMEROY
- The annual
. RUTLAND - The Meigs
Eastern
youth
football
playLovell
reunion
will' be held
County Republican Party
e_rs
&lt;md_
cheerleaders
fir
at
1
p.m
.
at
the
Zion church
will meet at 7:30p.m. at the .
stgnup 5 tPol 7 p.mb. at bthlel of Christ, Route 143.
. Rutland Civic Center.
Tuppers
aut~ . . ase a · Descendants of Daniel and
, RACINE
Racine
f!eld.
Take
copy
ot btrth cer- · Phoebe IJovett and William
Village wi ll hold a public
and Mary Lovett are invited
hem;mg on the 2005 budget · ttficate . Cost. $35.
at 7 p.m. at the Municipal
along with those having ~ur'
name s of Bush, Boyd,
Bluldmg. The budget will
·
Goldsberry
and Riffle. There
be open for review from 9
Friday, July 9
will be a potluck dinner, pica.Jn. to 3 p.m. Jul v 1-July 19.
LONG
BOTTOM
tures
·will be taken, and a
. POMEROY ~ Notice is
Hymn
sing
at
7
p.m.
at
the
table
of
genealogy materials
hereby given · that between
Faith
Full
Gospel
Church.
wi ll be displayed. A silent
6:30 p.m. and 7 p.m . a pubLong
Bottom.
Delivered
to
auction
will be held and
lic meeting on the budget
be
featured
singers.
·
those attending are asked to
and revenue sharing for the
Saturday, July 10
take something for the aucyear 2005 for the village of .
POINT
PLEASANT
A
tion.
Pomeroy will be held at the
"sing
for
missions"
concert
RACINE ·
Theis-s
clerk-treasurer's c;ffice in vi lwill be held at 6:30 p.m. at reunion will be held at 1:30
lage hall.
the 22nd Street Church· of p.m. with a potluck dinner at
TUPPERS PLAINS . ·Regular meeting of Tuppers God in Poim Pleasant. the Star Mill Park in Racine.
Plains Regional
Sewer Singing will be the ,,Cadle Those attending are asked to
District. 7 p.m. , at sewer di s- Family, Two for Je 1
take an item for a ' pig in a
sus.
Ray
and
Delores
poke" auction.
trict ,office. Topics will be Cund iff,
and Randy
2005 budget and second Parsons.
reading on sewer rate
Monday, July 12
increase amendment.
POMEROY -· . Pomeroy
RACINE -. There will be Church of · Christ, Vacation
Monday, July 12
a meeting at 7 p.m. at Racine Bible School 6 to ,8 p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Village Hall to discuss the Theme, "Trip through the The TB staff will be at the
2005 annual budget. The Holyland." Games, crafts,
Plains
Fire
public is invited to attend. Bible stories. All ages. Tuppers
Department
4:30
to
6
p.m.
Following that meeting, vil- Program on Friday evening.
for skin testing. The staff
lage council will hold a regMonday, July 19
will return July 14 from 4:30
ular meeting.
RUTLAND - Vacation to 5:30p.m. to read the tests.
Bible school will be held For more info rmation call
from 6:30 to 9 p.m. Jul y 19: 992-3722.
23 at the Rutland Freewill
Thursday, July 8
Baptist Church. Classes will • TUPPERS' PLAINS be held for children. nursery The VFW Post #9053 will
·Friday, July 9
to teens. For more informa- have a meeti ng at 7 p.m. at
MIDDLEPORT
tion call 742-2743.
the hall. There will be a meal ·
W,idows Fellowship at noon
at 6:30p.m.
at Gino'~ in Walmart Plaza.
Saturday, .July 10
.. POMEROY
The
Antiques Tractor · Pull will
Monday, July 12
host an antique tractor pull, I
Saturday, July 10
GALLIPOLIS
- Holzer
p.m. at the Rock Springs
RACINE - The Charles
fairgrounds. The Scipio fire W. and Fannie L. Wolfe Center fo r Comprehensive
Department will serve food.
Beaver reunion will be held Weight Loss support group,
Sunday, July 1l
at the Star Mill Park in 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. in Holzer
POMEROY - Hometown Racine.
Medical Center Education
Hero recognllton . picnic
POMEROY -. The annual and Conference Center
sponsored by the Modern Blake reunion will be held at Rooms AB. For more inforWoodmen of America Camp 12 :30 p.m. at the ' Zion mation call 446-5825. ·

Ch. urch servl'ces

Other events ·

Clubs and ·
organizations

Homecomings/
Reunions

Support Groups

Farm field day to highligh_
t local products
AMESVILLE -· Green· work and dlsplay· thei~ own
Edge Gardens, a certtfied products.
organic producer of salad
'This is a great opportunity
greens, microgreens and sea- , for chefs and produc·ers to
sonal vegetables, and Rural •meet and learn from each
Action will hos1 a Farm Field other," said Rural Action
Day on Aug. 16 in Amesville. Sustainable
Agriculture
The event is designed to G:oordinator Tom Redfern.
meet the needs of area chefs, "We would· like to highlight
restaurliJlt owners and pro- local produce and local busiduce buyers and growers. nesses, and this event will
Interested food buyers . can help connect commercial
view high quality produce as growers and consumers.".
it comes from the farm.
The activities begin at 9
Interested growers can net- a.m. at Green Edge Gardens,

16232 Henry Road in
Amesville. For more information. call GreenEdge Gardens
at (740) 448-4021 or Tom
Redfern at (740) 767-4938.
Rural Action is a local
membership-based, nonprofit
organization
promoting
social, economic and environmental justice by working for
sustai nable
commumt1es,
economies and environments
in Appalachian Ohio.

Celebrating specio/ .
· ·dilys with you! ·
The Daily Sentinel

'"

992-2155
.

'Sleeping ·Beauty' -comes to Ariel
.

BY IAN

McNEMAR

IMCNEMAR@MYOAJLYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLiPOLIS-Just over 2
weeks of rehearsals is all
that stands in the way of
showtime for cast memtJers
in the upcoming· production
of "Sleeping Beauty" at the
· Ariel Theatre. The adaptation of "Sleeping Beauty" is
· a musical fantasy based on
the faky tale by Charles

~-

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Perrault. With the remaining
rehearsal time, . eacli cast
member is putting the fmishing touches on his or· her
character. ." It's Sleeping
Beauty with a twist," laughs
Cheryl Enyart, director of
the play. The cast is made
up of II teenagers from the
area with I5 kids in the
chorus. Though the summer
season has caused the cast
and crew to have to work

around family vacation time
and wor~, the hard work put
in by the cast and crew has
left Che'ryl Enyart with good
expectations. The cast and
crew will rehearse every
.weeknight at · the Ariel with .·
dress rehearsals starting July
19 . The premeft'e will be 8
p.m. Friday, July 23 and . 2
p.m . . and 8 p.m. Saturday,
July 24 at the Ariel Theatre
in dow~town Gallipolis..

.

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A PART OF THIS YEAR'S
FAIR EDITION ...
CALL TODAY!

•

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Sunday·Times-~enfinel
Subscribe 'today • 992-2155

FOR MORE INFORMATION

at
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992·2155

The Daily Sentinel _

2004

woman a

Dear
Abby

neighbors and tell them that
due to . budget and space
restrictions, the number of
guests is limited. - ASHLEY S., FOUNTAIN VALLEY, CALIF.
.DEAR ASHLEY: Where
were · you wheq I needed
you'.'
DEAR ABBY: The bottom line is, it takes "chutzpah" to include uninvited
children. - SUE K . WEST
ORANGE. N.J.
DEAR SUE·: It al so takes
a lot of nerve or gall ( "chutLpah") to bring uninvited
guests to weddings. anniversaries and other invitationonly events. However. if my
mail is an indicator, chutt'
pah is one commodity that's
never in short suppl y.
DEAR ABBY: I am planning a small. intimatfl wedding this summer. Most of
our guests will be family and
very close friends.
My mother asked me to
invite a longtime friend and

sent

ihe-

,;t\'e-th~-d~lt~

canJ.

When Mothn sa\\· her th,·
·next day at work. the friend ·
'aid she v.uu!J be-hapr) to
attend - if she didn't hm·c a
"band gig... Mother kh
enibarrassed and ' li ght ed.
She would no\\ like to ' tan
working from hom,· 10 a' oiJ
this person and has asked me
not to send an in\'itation ..
What should I dl&gt;'' ~
SOON -TO-BE BRIDE II\
VIRGINIA
DEAR SOON -TO -BE-BRIDE : Since the co-worker
has indicated that if a joh
-co me s up she might b~
absent. take the hint ;tnd
don't &gt;enJ the in,·itation .
Better th&lt;it ' he was honest in
advance about the fact she
mi2ht be able to attend .
rather than heinQ a no-show.
P.S. Al!hough' your mother is disappoi nted. she
should not let her co-v.orJ..er's reaction spoil a warm'
workplace
relationshi-p'.
Avoidin~ the woman is not
the answer. Forgiving her
and moving on 1~ .

Dear Ahln· is

11·rit!P11

hr

Abigail Vwi Burm. af.,-{, .
knmnt as Jmnnr Phillip.1.
and "'as /illlndcd In """
morl1a Pauli11 e Pliillips.
Write
Dear
Ahh\·
ril
1\' 1\'1\'. DearAb/J\'. com or P 0.
Box 69440. Lris Angelel'. CA
90069.

•

Students learn how to be peer helpe-rs
POMEROY - A fourth
annual retreat of the Natural
Helpers, a peer-helping program geared to educate students on how to be peer
helpers at their respective
schools was held recently at
the Ohio Valley Christian
Assembly camp near Darwin.
The retreat got underway
on Friday morning and concluded on Saturday evening
with a dinner and pizza party.
Julie Mayer, certified chem. ical dependency counselor
and prevention sJ)ecialist for
Health Rec&lt;lvery Services,
lnc.' held a peer-helping retreat
at the Ohie Valley Christian

· Assembly. This is the fout1h
year for the retreat.
Health Recoverv staff assisting with the retreat "were Debbie
Stewart, Jennifer Meadows.
Phil Metcalf, Reggie Robinson,
Shari Blackwell &lt;mLi Rebecka
Aanders.
~
The ,program targe : the
Meigs Middle Sch
and
Meigs . High School students.
Students in the eighth grade at
Meigs Middle School compleie
a survey every year and are
anonymously chosen by their
peers as s91neone they would
turn to if they had a problem.
These students in turn
attend the retreat and follow

up with ongoing !raining t~i .
the high school umil they arc .
seniors if they chose. The program has proven to be a positive asset for the, pani cipams·
and will 'Contitiue into the
ntxt school year. said Mayer. ·:
Attending the n~treat tl1is year
Aja Blackwell, Chelsei1 Manley..
Derek Grimm. Jennifer Gmdy.
Daniel Young, Alisha Jenkin'
!Trimble student), umy Hess ..
Brittany Cundifl Katie 11tomas,
Joe Rosier, Niki Fulks. TtiTany
Mytko, Morgan Powell. Ben·
Coppick. and Cassidy Willforrl.
Questions concerning the
program may be directed t''
Mayor or Stewan at992-5277. -

If
Some banks
hom~ equity.

call it
''do-it-yourself" tlncrncl
We

With do~it-yourself financing from
Formers Btink, you can write yourself a
loan as easily as writi~g a check~ whenever you want wherever you watit,
wh.evl" o wa 'h.,_

~)ge

•

i1
Home Equity
res o ch .'ce of terms, so

.-ltlf'tion that's

Closing Co.sts
J.ust

$99*
FARM • HOME • BUSINESS
LIFE • BONDS • MOBILE HOMES • HOSPITALIZATION

DAVE or·BRENDA

July 8,

. co-worker. ·\('e

·Credit life awJ·dist~bility insiJrrant~e.
also ovolloble. ~d for a
closing costs

.•

DEAR ABBY: I have read
your column for yeats and
usually agcee wholeheartedly
w1th your advice. However. I
·was stunned to read your
reply to "On tbe Spot" in
New Jersey, who chose not to
invite her neighbor \ 8- and
6-year-old children to her
son's bar mitzvah.
Yes. it's true that children are
invited to bar mitzvahs. But in
tltis case, the neighbor's children are not family and are too
young to be playmates of the
bar mitzvah boy. The parents
are within their rights to exclude
these children from the guest
li s~ especially w.,hen the c.:bt of
additional guests is taken into
consideration. Funhennore: it
was rude of the invitees to
RSVP that their uninvited children would attend. - LINDA
tv( .• ROCKVILLE. MD. ~
DEAR LINDA: You 're
right - 1 goofed. My readers were quick to set me
straight. Read on:
DEAR ABBY.: I am 14
and recenlly had a bat mitzvah myself. I understand the
si tua,tion. T.his was a challenge for our family. too.
Abby, these affairs are
expensive. and it is not
always affordable to include
kids who are not close to the .
family. Also, young children
can' t sit through a three-hour
service. That mother should
discuss the situation with her

can set&lt;

Once Again, The Daily ·Sentinel Will Have A
Special Meigs County Fair Preview Edition.
This Year's Edition Promises To Be One Of The
Biggest And Best Ever! Look For this Special
Edition In· Your Friday, August 13th Paper.

Thu~sday,

Children at Bar Mitzvah
are not always w~lcome_=

Our H •
Loan fe

'

The Belle of Cincinnati stopped at the Riverfront Park Wednesday long enough for her passengers to stroll along Main Street in Point Pleasant. Keri Derenberger, director, Mason County
·Tourism and Welcome Center, and Charles Humphreys , director, Main Street Point Pleasant,
had the pleasure of cruising the O~Jio River aboard the Belle as they made their way from
Huntmgton. The two spent time promoting Mason County hoping that Point Pleasant will
become one of the riverboat's excursions. (Christine Cozza)

PageA3

BYTHEBE~D

'

The Daily Sentinel

Page A;!

The Daily Sentinel

I

196 East Second St. Poniero

OH • 992·3381

�•

,

,

PageA4

.O PINION

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 8,

2004

.

'

Spotlight on 9linton: .Sex) ·lies and vanity ·

The Daily Sentinel
11'1 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
. (740) 992~2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

Now and then, something
happens that causes our
www.mydailysentlnel.com
·
.esteemed Washington press
corps to exhibit its collective
posterior to a wondering
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
nation.
Such an event was the publiJim Freeland
cation of Bill Clinton's bioPublisher
. graphical memoir. "My Life"
(Alfred A. Knopt).
Charlene Hoeflich
· Following the extended
General Manager-News Editor
funeral .rites for former
President ~onald Reagan.
Clinton's
humongous
Bildungsroman left pundits
Congress shall make no law respecting an
scrambling madly to master a
new collective script.
. .establishment of.religion, or prohibiting the
"B ildungsroman" is· profesfree exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
sor-speak for '' 10 pounds of
: of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
ego in a 5-pound sack."
Nobody writes an autobiogr~- ·
:people peai:eably to assemble, and to petition
phy
without a big ego. Not
the Government for a redress of grievances.
even Sr. Augu,stine.
But what was Clinton's real
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
motive~ Speaking on "NBC
Nightly News." Andrea
(Mrs.
Alan
Mitchell
Greenspan) thought she knew.
"All Clinton may want to do,"
•
she opined, "is . outsell his
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
wife's book. which sold almost
Today is Thursday, July 8, the I90th day of 2004. There are
176 (lays left in the year.
•
·
·
3 million copies· worldwide."
Today's Highlight iR History :
·
·
Time's Margaret Carlson
On July 8, 1776. Col. John Nixon gave the !irst public readechoed_her on CNN's "Capital
ing iJf the Declaration of lmi~pendence, in Philadelphia.
Gang."
On this date:
Where do they lind them?
In 166J. King Charles II of England granted a charter to
Write a 972-page book to
Rhode Island:
show
up your wife? In my
In· 1853. an expedition led by Commodore Matthew Perry
experience,
when people ponarrived in Yedo Bay, Japan, on a mission to seek diplomatic
tificate about the motives of
and trade relations with the Japanese. ·
people they scarcely know, it's
.' In 1889, The Wall Street Journal was first published.
their own .. motives they disIn 1891. Warren G. Harding married Florence K. DeWolfe
in Marion , Ohio.
.
·
play.
In 1907, Florenz Ziegfeld staged his first •'•Follies," on the
Apart from horses apd high
roof of the Ne~ York Thealer .
.
school guidance counselors,
In 1919, Presttlent Wtlson received a ·tumultuous welcome
it'd be .hard to find an equivain New York City after his return from the Versailles Peace
lent group it,~ consumed with
Conference in France.
·status
anxiety as the
In 1947, demolition work began in New York City to make
Washington punditocracy. •
way for the new permanent headquarters of the United Nations.
Every' news article and TV
In 1950, Gen. pouglas MacArthur was named commander·
feature
I saw regarding
in-chief of United Nations forces in Korea.
Clinton's book featured the
In 1975, President Ford announced he would seek the
quote
from
Michiko
Republican nomination for the presidency in 1976.
.·
Kakutani's front page New
In 1993, a jury in Boise, Idaho, acquitted white separatisi
Randy Weaver and a co-defendant of slaying a federal marshal in a shootout at a remote mountain cabin.
Ten years ago: Kim II Sung, North Korea's communist leader
since '1948, d1ed at age 82. OJ. Simpson was ordered to stand
trial on charges of murdering his e~-wife, Nicole, and her friend,
Ronald Goldman. Leaders of the Group of Seven nation ~
· opened their 20th annual economic summit, in Naples, Italy. The
space shuttle Columbia blasted off on a two-week niission.
Five years ago: An Air Force cargo jet took off from Seattle
on a dangerous mission to Antarctica to drop medicine for Dr.
Jem Ntelsen, a phystctan at the Amundsen-Scott South Pole
Research Center who had discovered a lump in her breast:
(The. mission was successful ; Nielsen was evacuated the following October.) Astronaut Charles "Pete" Conrad Jr., the
lhird man to walk on the moon, died after a motorcycle accident near Ojai, Calif.; he was 69.
One year ago: In Senegal at the start of a live-nation tour of
Africa, President Bush called American slavery one of history's
greatest crimes as he stood at the very spot where hundreds of
thousands of Africans had been bought and sold like cargo. A factory worker ppened fire at a Lockheed Martin plain in Meridian,
Miss., leaving five dead before committing suicide. 1\venty-nineyear-old !raman twins joined at the head died foUowing surgery in
Singapore to separate them. A triple-deck ferry capsized in
Bangladesh; more than 500 people drowned. A Sudanese Boeing
737 crashed on the northeastern Red Sea coast, killing 116 people.·

TODAY IN HIS.TORY

Gene .
Lyons

'
York TIITies review, "sloppy,
se lf~indulgent and often eyecrossingly dull ." Positive
reviews. by "Lonesome Dove"
author Larry McMurtry and.
·Ben Franklin biographer
Walter Isaacson got little play.
Interestingly, the Times'
review neglected to mention
that Clinton spent many pages
deconstmcting that paper's
dreadfully bad Whitewater
reporting. Reading the coverage, he wrote, "felt like an outof-body ·
experience."
Regarding the Times', The
Washington Post's and everybody else's failure to disclose·
the contents of the Pillsbury
Report (the eight-volume
study by a Republican law
lirm tbat exonerated the
Clintohs of Whitewater
wrongdoin~ in December
1995 -- years before independent counsel Ketmeth Starr),
Clinton quoted the late New
York Daily News columnist
Lars-Erik Nelson. Nelson
spent years in· Moscow covering the Soviet Union. •
"The secret verdict is in," he
wrote. "There.was nothing for
the Clintons to hide.... (l)n a
bizarre reversal of those
Stalin-j!ra trials in which i11no,
cent people were convicted in
secret, the President and the
First Lady have been publicly
· charged and secretly found
innocent.
Yet Kakutani charges
Clinton with "lies" about "real
1
'

estate." Challenged by Salon's from whom repPTters took die·
Eric Boehlert to stipulate any, tation, blandly ass ured a PBS
he says she ,never called back. interviewer that "very few
Times editor Bill Keller ali- individuals who are caught up
bied that · the independeiu in the process of criminal juscounsel's Whitewater report lice ... walk out saying how
mentioned "inaccumte state- much I love the prosecutor."
· ments.. "
Cute, but Clinton's beef is
But if inaccurate statements more pointed. He produces o
are lies. the Times printed even list of persons, such a&amp;
more lies. about Whitewater Kathleen ·. Willey. whom he
than "weapons of mass says St:vr rewarded for lying,
destmction." Indeed, had edi- and a list of others like Susan
tors heeded problems with its McDougal who he says got
"investigative" reporting dur- indicted for refusing .to lie. '
ing Clinton's first terril when
Self-serving~ Maybe. But a
some o( us started calling . Little Rock jury acquitted
attention to them; they might McDougaL and a Virginia jury
have spared themselves a lot failed 10 cmivict Julie Hiatt
of trouble. Judith Miller's bad ·Steele on Willey's say-so.
reporting about lmq and Jeff
Unfortunately. · Clinton's
Gerth's about Arkansas had . book overlooks one of Starr's
cei1ain basic similarities:. Both . most stunning tmnsgressions:
reporters went to ~laces they convicting Arkansas Gov. Jini
knew lillie about, put them- Guy tucker on the basis of a
selves il1to the hands of con repealed statute.
men ,. h axes to grind and
Yes, you read correctly.
supp1 cd dissenting voices' Starr destroyed the career of
evcmually proved correct.
Tucker (a Clinton rival, inci,
. As newspapennan George (jentally, to whom the former
Seldes observed, however, president says he apologized
"the most sacred cow of .the for not having pardoned him)
press is the press itself." by using an expired tax law. It
Hence, The Washington Post, took tucker five years of costtoo. editorialized that Clinton's ly appeals 'to prove it, and it
memoir "veers from the non- .opens to further appeal a secfiction ca1egory" · regarding ond conviction of Tucker ·that
Whitewater. adding: "The tan- Starr obtained through the tesgled real estate investments ... timony of convicted ·embezmerited invesligati&lt;in, and the zler David Hale.
inquiry produced numerous
But the courtiers or the
convictions.''
Washington press have no
But in fact the Clintons time for such trivialities.
made exactly one real estate Speculating
ab01H· the
investment involving roughly Clintons' marriage makes bet$200,000, repaid the loans in ter entertainment
full and lost about $50,000.
(Arkansas
Democrat~
None of the convictions Starr Gazette columnist Gene Lyons
obtained.involved transactions is a national magazine aivard
to which they were a party. · winner and co-author of "The
Most had no, relationship to Hunting of the Presideni" (Sf.
their investment whatsoever.
·Ma11iil's Press, 2000). You can
Starr himself. · apparently e-mail Lyons at gimelyons2
one of the unreliable sources @cs.com.)
•

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

Breaking the smoking chain in Ohio·
Routinely,
people
I
encounter ask me what I do for
a living. That is typical "small
talk" con·versation for us
adults, right?
However, I sometimes face
strong opposition from those
same people when I tell them
what I do. You see, in my job ·
as youth coordinator at Holzer
Medical Center's Tobacco ·
Prevention Center, I travel
around Gallia, Meigs, and
Jackson counties educating
youth about the hannful, and .
often deadly, effects of tobacco use.
The people 'who offer resistance are adamant they don 't
want anyone taking their
"freedom" away. Their animosity usually boils down to
their belief that it is an adult's
personal choice whether or not
to use tobacco. And, I can
agree with that point. These
people most always are tobacco users-themselves-- use~s
with strong .addictions.
However, the one thil'!g all
of them will usually agree to is
the fact that, although they
may feel it is an adult's decision whether or not to use,
they do not want children to
start using tobacco. It is with
this in mind that I write.
This is my personal opinion.
But,_please, all you: adults listen ·up.
Your kids are worried about
you. The children I talk with
are extremely concerned about ,

. The Daily Sentinel
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Correction Polley
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Reporter: Brian Reed, Elt 14
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•

Todd 0.

Tucker

the adults in their lives who
smoke or use spit tobacco.
Daily, I am a&amp;ked about ways
they can get their loved ones to
quit. I explain to the kids l)lat
we didn't know how addictive
and harmful tobacco was 20
years ago when we ftrst used
tobacco products. I explain
that most adults began using
and became addicted long
before it was ever made cl~
to us what tobacco can do to
your health, yout financial situation or your social life. We
didn't know.
The kids and I talk about
how they love you; and, their
concern for you jJ; clear. They
also make it clear they know
how hannful tobacco, use is,
and many · times I've even
been ask¢ what they cai'l do
·to "end tobacco use worldwide." (Remember, they're
kids; they're idealistic).
But, one of the most recurring comments I hear is that
you don't always listen 19
them when they try to ta.lk
wiih you about your .tobacco
use.

So, true to my job helping
l believe this generation is
kids. I. mn here to. help their smarter than ours. I talk with
voice be heard. However, your the kids about how they can
kids have another worry as change the cultural acceptance
well.
of tobacco use here in Ohio,
Your kids
worried about that they can be the generation .
themselves. Unlike we were at to "break . the chain" with
their age, they. know how . regard to tobacco use.
I believe in their ability to
harmful smoke can be to their
bodies. They worry about ch311ge the future. I believe in'
themselves and their brothers their power. They are "standand sisters. They tell me about . ing ·up and speaking out ·
relatives who smoke around against tobacco." They know
them in con!ined spaces such that 52 people die each ·day in
as in the house or car. · Ohio from tobacco use; I,200.
Remember, when you. are a in the United States every day
kid, you can't just get up and .. . our friends, m\r relatives,
walk away. They don't have people we know. And they
, ·that freedom, that choice, that don't lind that acceptable.
"right."
The good news is that statisThis next thing I am going tics show tobacco use by our
to say may make some of you youth is dropping. They are
angry with me. What would doing their part to stop this
you do if I put a lit cigarette in horrjfic kiUer. But, they still
your . kid's mouth? You 'd need out help. We need to
probably beat me to a pulp and keep our addictions from
have me airested for child harming our children. We
abuse anq endangerment, need to protect them. Will we
right?
hear their plea? These are our
. Ho~ever, if you are smoking kids. We are the adults, right?
Todd Tuclu!r, MPA, is the
m the car or m a house where a
child resides, you may as weU Youth Coordinator with
put a lit cigarette in your child's Holzer Medical Center·~ ·
mouth. "If both a child's par- Tobacco Prevemion Cemer irl
ents smoke, it is the equivalent · ·Gallipolis,, Ohio. Free assis•
of the child actively smoking ·tance is available to any resi:
between 60 and 150 cigarettes dent of Gallia. Jackson, or
per year." (Lancet, June 6, Meigs County who wants help ·
1987, page 1325). Please;be· · to quit their use of tobacco by
mindful that your child's liqdy contacting tire . Tobacco
is still developing. It's not that Prevemion Center. Please call
big an imposition to not smoke (740) 446-5940 for more
in the house or car.
infonnntion.

·are

: Thursday, July 8, 2004

Th e Daily Sentinel • Page As

www. myrlailysentinei.com

'

Local Briefs

Keny appears much more relaxed in Edwards' _presence
Bv LIZ SIDOTI
ASSOCIATED PRESS

waiting to board the campaign plane now emblazoned
with both of their surnames .
CI;IAPEL
,
Pa.
·
Kerry rumpled the blond oair
FOX
· CHESTERH ILL - Development of a produce auciion in
Aloof,
dour
a-ncr
wooden
are
of
Edwards' 4-ycar-old son
Chesterhill for Southern Ohio growers will be discus~ed at a
the
oft-repeated
adjectives
to
Jack
- then chased him and
meeting to be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the theater over the
describe John Kerry. The his 6-year-old sister Emma
Cheslerhi ll Library.
.·
presence of running mate Claire in a kind of spiderFarmers intere sted in selling at a produce auction are urged John · Edwards altered that like walk .
·
· IO attend. The. planned auction will provide an outlet for localimage Wednesday.
At a plaza along,Lake Erie
ly-produced frui ts, vegetables, greenhouse products and other
From the lawn of his in Cleveland, both ' familie s
-goods. The more committed producers 10 become involved, wife's'sprawling estate to raJ- bounded onto the stage under
the more successful the auction .will be, said Jean Conkle who lies in Ohio, Kerry's sty le a banner declaring, "A New
ca n be contacted for more information at 740-554-7338.
more closely resembled his Team for ,a New America."
younger Senate colleague As a light rain started to fall.
and chosen vice presidential Kerry threw an arm around
ca'ndidate
energeti c, his wife, Teresa ·Heinz Kerry.
upbeat and relaxed.
and pointed into the crowd.
: CARPENTER - Homecoming will be celebrated at the
As the two strolled across Edwards hugged his wife
Mt. Union Baptist Church on July 25 . Services will begin with the lawn for the !irSt time as • and kissed her on the cheek.
Sunday sc~ool at 9:30 a.m. followed by a carry-in dinner at running mates, the one-time , . Teresa Heinz Kerry · weinoon . Afternoon service will be at I :30 p.m. The Gabriel rivals grinned, laughed and corned supporters from "a
Quartet and Eternity. along with local singers will be having a patted backs, each man hold- neighbor from Pittsburgh."
program of music. The Rev. Mark Morrow, pastor of First ing hi s wife's harid. Seven of As the crowd playfully
Bapti st Church, Middleport, will be the speaker. David the eight children-o1Jetwecn booed, she joked:-"Don 't get
Wiseman is the pastor.
the two families followed sore. Don't get sore."
close ·behind, holding hands
Then. she praised Edwards'
and beaming.
wife, Elizabeth Edwards, and
Kerry pumped his fist in the two embraced.
Democratic Presidential candidate Sen. John Kerry, O.Mass.,
the air. Edwards waved. And.
Elizabeth
Edwards and his newly selected running niate Sen. John Edwards , 0.
R~CINE - There will be a meeting ·at 7 p.m. Monday at
the nation's !irst glimpse of remarked that her family NC. smile at th~ close of a rally in Dayton Wednesday (AP)
Racine Village Hall to discuss the 2005 annual budget. The the Democratic ticket proved already feel s a connection
publi c is invited to attend and review the budget.· Following to be the lasting impression 'with the Kerrys, and noted tion for being a policy wonk . person who had a better
for the day - a coming-out the scene playing out behind
He told the crowd that the weekend than John Edwards·
this meeting, village council will hold a regular meeting.
party that amounted to a her. ".Jt's obvious to me we learn was announcing a new and
John
Kerry
was
family affair.
·
are forming a bond that with campaign maoage r. "Jack Spiderman." Kerry said,
Kerry and Edwards offered your help will help. us lead . Edwards is taking over referring to the movie sequel
'
repeated glowing critiques of ihe country," she said .
everything." the pre ~ dential now in theaters. Then, he
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Fire Department· will each other as they traveled to
Andre Heinz,; Kerrv's 34- candidate quipped, refe~ring responded to a comment
have a tlsh fry Saturday. Serving will begin at the fire station events in battleground states. year old stepson, held Jack. · to ~ward s' son. "He does a from the audience. saying
at II a.m.
· Putting a hand on Edwards' while Vanessa Kerry, Kerry's wild cannonball. "
mischie vously, · "Michael
shoulder, Kerry called hi s 27-year-old daughter bent
Kerry also boasted that ·the Moore? I don't know." It was
vice . presidential choice a over 10 talk quietly with Democratic team has a "bel- a reference 10 Fahrenheit
man with "passion, convic- Emma Claire. Calc Edwards. ter vision. beller ideas" tllan 9/11. a movie by Moore that
·
21 , Alexandra Kerry, 30, and its Republican counterpart - assails President Bush.
POMEROY - The Meigs County Health Department and lion and · strength."h' A fcon- Ch
· Hemz,
· 31 . .,orinned.
and J·oked. "We've go1 better
The11. ·,1 was Edwards' turn
stant
gnn
on
1s
ace.
ns
the Tuberculosis O(fice closed at noon Wednesday because of Edwards praised Kerry for · For his part. the presiden- hair." It's somethin.,o the two to speak. As ·he stepped to
a break-down in the air conditioning system. The of!ices will having "strength and courage tial ca ndidate tinged h·is often arc teased about, partie- the podium amid ch(!ers, the
ularly on- late-night comedy lw·&gt; hugged t1'ghtly - 011e
. . ,.
remain closed until the system is repaired, according to Larry an d determmatton.
comments with jokes, some'
Marshall. administrator. He suggested clients call in before .
As the two families milled what uncharacteristic for a shows.
embrace of many more to ·
And. he said: ·"The only co1.ne lhroughout the day.
conling to the office for service.
around the airport tarmac mail who has had the reputa-

·Produce auction being planned

Homecoming planned

Budget meeting

Fish fry set

Office closed by heat

U.S. Embassy
identifies
Americans
killed in Panama
plane crash

Family owned Ohio business looks to make electric cars
"'

.

TALLMADGE, . Oh.io
Since 1965, the Myers have
run S.D. Myers Inc., a company that repaired large electric
transformers.
Today, Dan·a Myers is
PANAMA CITY, Panama . taking a futuristic turn
(AP) - Four Americans were away from the business his
among the seven people killed father founded .. Myers has
when a US-registered air formed Myers MoJors,
ambulance crashed into an air- which will make electric
po11 hangar during takeoff out- and gasoline-engine , vehiside Panama's capital last
week, the U.S. Embassy said cles like the motorcyclelike one used in the 2002
late Wednesday.
Spokeswoman Judy De Leon movie "A.ustin Powers in
identi!ied the victims as Barry Goldmember."
GE Energy, a subsidiary of
Scott White of Inwood, W.Va. ;
General
Electric, bought a
Haywood' Ralph Daisey, of
Luray, Va.; Steven Francis . significant portion of S.D.
Heberle, of Cross Junction, Va.; Myers Inc. last month, allowand Morris Grier Morrow, the ing Myers to focus on the new
; ·
plane's pilot. Morrow was trom venture.
If all goes right, Myers
Ruckersville, Va., but his familv lived~ Kemersville, N.C.
Motors soon will begin
- The embassy had refused to assembling single-passenger,
release the victims' identities three-wheel ele'ctric vehicles
for several days, citing rules called the Sparrow.
requiring thai family members
Myers bought the rights to
be nmitied first. De Leon said !he Sparrow and a sister vehigove rnment rules prevented the cle, including inventory, after
release of birth dates for the vic- Corbin' Motors, the original
tims, so their ages were unclear. manufacturer in Hollister,
_T~e plane, which was ferry- Calif., filed for bankruptcy
ing n patient from Ecuador to last year.
.
Washington, D.C.. crashed at
"In
"bout
four
months,
we
Tocumen international Airport
outside Panama City on Friday. want to be in production
Witnesses repo11ed hearing &lt;m here." said Ray Blake, pro-.
explosion and then saw a ball duction manager for Myers
Motors. "We're building our
of tlre and smoke.
, Also killed in the crash were own product. How cool is
that?"
\WO Italians, 40-year-old Paola
Initially; only 78 more
Di Gregorio and 17-year-old
Sparrows
are planned for proAlessia Mairati. A Panamanian
inan on the ground also died as duction _ all that is left from
inventory in California.
a result of the crash.

Once the Sparrow is finished, a larger. roadster-type
vehicle called the Vision is
scheduled to begin rolli.ng out
the ,door, Blake said.
The Vision, · based on a
Corbin Motors concept called
the Merlin , will be powered
by a Harley-Davidson gasoline engiDe. but an electric
version is being planned, too,
Blake said.
As for the Sparrow. it will
go more than 70 mph on the
highway, powered by a 20horsepower electric motor
and 13 sealed lead-acid batteries.
Myers ·Motors expects the
Sparrow to retail for less than
$18.000.
If there is W'?ng demand for
Sparrows, ·. .yers Motors
probably will produce an
updated version using the
Vision chassis, Blake said.
The company may end up
employing between 50 and
100 people and hopes to make
as many as 5,000 vehicles a
year, Blake said.
· That still makes it very
much a niche player. HarleyDavidson, for
instance,
expects to make 317,000
motorcycles this year. Newcar sales in the United ·States
top 16 million a year.
The Sparrow can go 25
miles before it needs to be
recharged, and it doesn't pollute.
.
Myers said building an
electric vehicle thpt is environmentally friendly is a way

•.

· L..._ _.._.__ _ _ _ _ _...:::
Rob. Dobson, from left , Rick Clester, Ray Blake and , Dana Myers, chairman and CEO of Myers
Motors show Ciff models of the ir recnargeable electric car. "Spa,rrow " designed for one person
and powered by batteries, in . Tallmadge, Ohio. They will b~gin production in three or fou r
monthS. (AP Photo/ Akron Beacon Journal. Paul Tople)
to fulfill the family's religio us Freund said .
Myers said he lhinks he has a
Ed Thorpe of Alameda, sound bu .&lt; iness plan based on
beliefs.
"It's a fun car," said Run Calif... has been using a how people actually use t~eir
Freund, chairman of ihe Sparrow as his daily ~o m ­ vehicles.
The vehicles will be targetCalifornia-based
Electric muter vehicle for a year and a
half. He bought his Sparrow ed toward baby boomers with
Auto Association·.
He estimates that between after
a lease on an' ' eiedric- di sposable im.:ome who have
.
I ,000 and 2,000 pure electriC powered Honda ran ouL
a spot for a th ird ve hicle ,
"I
like
it
a
lot,"
he
sa
id
or
his
vehicles .are used regularly in
Blake said.
the United States. He said he Sparrow. "I'm logging over · They also might be markethopes Myers Motors can I ,000 miles a month . I do ed tci retirement communities
where .golf cans are popular
increase that number by pro- about four rec ha rges a day."
Although Corbin MoiOrs . but can 't be driv~;n on public
ducing more Sparrows.
"It 's a head turn er. " c(ndd not make a go of it. streeb.

,,

~outhern

States Cooperative
acquires Cooperative Milling

Fort Randolph host to·Fort.Lee Scouts
8Y AMANDA JONES
S~ECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

pPINT PLEASANT - The
RICHMOND,
Va.
duced at Co"op Milling, espe- of 250 Agway and Southern Fort Randolph Committee is
dealers
in hosting the latest i'n a series of
Southern States Cooperative, cially since it incorporates States
l.nc.. one of ·the nation's many of our own proprietary Pennsylvania, New Jersey, events that showcase the
largest agricultural coopera- processes," says James H. Maryland, Delaware, as · well recoostructed Fort Randolpb.
The Fort Lee Scouts, of
lives in the country, has Moore, vice-president of as those dealers in areas of
C
h a r l e s ton ,
acquired the Agway portion Southern States' feed division. Virginia and West Virginia.
oj' Cooperative Milling. · . .
"It has lorig been our goal to
Additionally,
. Southern www.fortleescouls.com, ' wi ll
. · The move makes Southern · produce the best quality feeds States plans to expand the dis- represent various colonial-era
States the sole owner of at all our mills and provide tribution area of Cooperative .~ activities Saturday, July I0,
Cooperative Milling, .which top-notch customer service to 'Milling products to include ~004, at the Fort Randolph site
produces high-end eCf,lline and all our dealers. In that regard, southern New York and at Krodel Park,in Point Pleasant.
The Fort Lee Scouts were
other specialty livestOck feeds .Cooperative Milling will be · Connecticut.
formed
January 2000, by a
for di stribution throughout no different."
Feed industry leaders have
the mid-Atlantic.
"That having been said, already added their support of common interest in the history and heritage of the w lonial
Located in Gettysburg, however, we understand this the recent acquisition.
American
frontier.
"We 're glad to see S.outhern
Penn., Co-op Milling was is. a time of transition and
Their
clothing,
foodsruffs, peroriginally a joint venture change for our dealers and States take the · helm, as
between Southern States and th.eir customers," Moore con- Cooperative Milling is inte- ~al items and UL'Coutennents
Agway Feed and Nutrition . tinues.
gral to the .future of the feed are from the ·period of 1750 to
As a resu lt of Agway 's recent
"We encourage them to industry in this country," adds 1800 and all craftsmen make due
bankruptcy proceedings, the contact us with any questions Dave Ott, general manager of with their item~ from the period.
Agway portion of the busi- or concerns they may have." CRF, the world's. largest pri- much like early settlers did.
Cooking. black powde c
ness became available.
·
Coo'perative Milling; well vately owned ani mal-nutrijemonstrations,
woodwork . " It
make s sense for known for the production ot tion research organization.''
mg and tomahawk throwing
Southern States to have sole high-quality · equine feeds·,
Celebrating its 81 st anniver- will be demonstrated for the
ownership and control of the inost notably the Triple sary this year, Southern States public from 10 a.m . to 4 p.m.
manufacturing processes of Crown and Legends lines, now has more than 300,000
Tours of the Fof( ; w~ich
tht! bagged ·and bulk lines pro- . will continue to serve its base • farmer members .
'

.

includes blockhouses. soldierS.:,
quarters. a blacksmith, a woodwright, trading pos(, tavern itnd
colonial life center will also be
conducted thro,ughout the day.
The Fort Randolph Conuninee,
chaired by Craig Ht;:sson. is the
curator organization of the Fon.
They are responsible for development and community enrichment
program;; at the Fort.

Fort Randolph was commissioned in 1776, but was
considered too remote and too
difficult to supply to.be of use
to the military on the frontier.
Indians set tire to the Fort
shortly after it was decommissioned and abandoned in 1779.
The current re.-'unstruction
of Fort Randolph is a project
of the City
. of Pbint Pleasant.-

.

�I

I

Page A~

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel"

Thursday, July 8,

· A DAY ON WALL STREET

10.240.29
Pet. cl'}ange

!rom previous: +0.20

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Armstrong takes yellow jersey, Page 82
!"angers ~ge Indians, Page 82

/

10,750

July 7, 2004

Ib.rv'Jcnes

2004

~~~IPt-----...t=~~--- 10,250

Thursday, July 8, 2p04 .

~--:-:::::::----:-:=--~;:-;------;;-;;--

APR

MAY

High
10,266.6 1

JUN

LOW
10,199 .29

9,250

JUL

Record high: 11,722.98
Jan . 14, 2000

Matta File

July 7, 2004

Na$daq
mtp:site
1,966.08
Pet. change

+0.14·

trom prevloua:

A look at new Ohio State
basketball coach
Thad Matta

1,800
- - : = : - - - - : - ; = - - - ; ; - ; : o - ; - - - - ; ; c ; ; - - 1 .600
APR
MAY
JUN
JUL
High
Low
Record high: 5 ,048 .62"
1, 976.92
1,960. 78
March 10. 2600

NAME: Thad Matta (MAHtuh).
AGE: 36 (Born July 11,
1967) .

July 7, 2004

St:an::iarti &amp;

Fl::x:lr

I

S

Ill.

500

.

Record high: 1,527.46

Pet. change
from prevlou•: +0. 1 9

· March 24, 2000
AP

Local Stocks
..

weather forecast .
.

'\..-,

Thursday, July 8

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will ris.e to 78
with today's low of 64 occurring around 6:00am. Skies
will rqnge from partly cloudy
to cloudy with 5 MPH winds
from the .west. .

evening. There is a slim
chance that it could rain.
· Temperatures wifl drop from
82 early this evening to 73 by
1O:OOpm then climb back up
to 75 late evening. Winds will·
be 10 MPH from the west. .

Afternoon (1 p.m.-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will stay near
81 with today's high of 83
occurring around 5:00pm.
Skies will be partly cloudy to
mostly cloudy with 5 to 10
MPH winds from the west.

Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
: It's going to be a cloudy

Overnight (I a.m.-6 a.m.)

lt should remain cloudy. ·

There Is a slight .chance we
could see some rain.
Temperatures will hold steady
around 69. Winds will be 5
MPH from the west.
Fridl!y, July 9
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)

Wendy's - 34.76
Wal-Mart - 52.32
Worthington - 20.27
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's transactions, provided by Sm1th
Partners at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

Premier 10.06
Rocky Boots - _ 22.52
lm Shell - 52.13
Rockwell - 36.74
Sears -· 35.71
SBC - 23.84
AT&amp;T - 14.5.7
USB - 27.86

.

'

.,.

·froUd;to'~e apart of your life.

'

•

1 Subscnbe

ta,lay • 992,2155

Cable Rate Hikes
Got You Down?

Cheshire Baptist Church installs Little as new pastor
CHESHIRE - The Rev.
·James Lusher installed
Steve Little June 13 as new
pastor of Cheshire Baptist
Church.
Members of the congregation opened the service by
singing · "To' God lle the
glory," and Pastor Harold
Tracewell welcomed the
guests with an opening
prayer.
Deacon Gerald King and
Trustee Brian Roush read
from the scripture and the
choir sang "It's a grand and
.glorious feeling ."
Dr. James Acree, friend of
the new pastor, gave person- ~
al remarks. Donna Waugh
sang "My Tribute."
After Pastor Little gave
his acceptance speech, he
sang "I'm just a sinm:r
saved by grace" with · his
wife, Rita.
A reception was held fol·.
lowing the service, for special guests, friends, family
and church family.

NS

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$291J

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••••••n.••

Pictured are Pastor Steve Little and his wife, Rita Little. ·

...... ~~::~ ~---:~i.::'. ·:?-::~'--~~~-.:~=-~~~-.
- ·-· --- ···-~-·- · - --~-""T_.,._._

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..

1990.

COACHING EXPERIENCE:
Head coach, Xavier, 2001-04.
Record of 78·23 and has
taken leam to three straight
NCAA tournament appearances, including advancing to
the Elite Eight in 2004. Head
coach, Butler, 2000·01.
Record of 24-8 and firsl-round
NCAA tournament win over
No. 23 Wake Forest.
. COACHING
HON.ORS:
2001 Midwestern Collegiate
Conlerence coach of the year,
2002 Atlantic 10 coach of the
year.

Bruce among
.Ohio State HOF
inductees·
COLUMBUS (AP)
Former head football coach
Earle Bru~e is among 12 peo•
pie who will be inducted into
the Ohio State athletics hall of
tiune.
The class,
announced
Wednesday, will be officially
inducted the night before the
Marshall-Ohio State football
game Sept. 11 and will be
introduced at halftime.
1l1e 2004 class also includes:
Maria Giusti-Lugo (synchro. nized swimming); Jocelyn Jay
(swimming); Averrill Roberts
(basketball); Vanessa Wouters
.(:volleyball); Vlade Janakievski
(football); Steve Myers (football); Kevin Randleman
(wrestling); Arnie Risen. (basketball); Paul Sarringhaus
(football ); Ty Tucker (tennis};
and Blaine Wilson (gymnastics).
·
Bruce took over for his men. tor, Woody Hayes, and coached
the Buckeyes from 1979-87,
pi Iing·up a record ofSl-26-1 in
his nine seasons. In his tirst
year, the Buckeyes went 11 -1
and lost a national championship by a point in the Rose
Bowl. He guided the Buckeyes
to three Big Ten titles (1979,
1981, 1984) and led them to
eight bowl games. He was
inducted into the college foot..ball hall of fame ~ year ago. ·

, Pennington
coaches at kids'
football camp

~

FAMILY: Wife Barbara,
·daughters Ali and Emily.
EDUCATION: Bachefor's
degree from Butler University,

Days Until
High School
Football
Season!!!

1,118.33

ACI- 36.30
AEP- 31.28
.~·
Akzo- 36.59
I
Ashland me . - 53.50
BBT- · 36.56 ·
BLI- 13.94
Bob Evans - 27.07
BorgWarner - 42.01
City Holding - 30.84
Champion - 4. lO
Charmin~ Shops 8.77
Col - ... 3.05
It should be a humid momDuPont ' -' •43.09
ing.
Temperatures
will
DG -:_ 19.14
increase from 68 to 77 by late.___federal Mogul - .27
this morning. Skies-will range . Gannett - 81:10
from partly cloudy to mostly
General Electric - 32.02
1 d . . h 5 MPH w· d
GKNLy - 4.55
m s
Harley Davidson - 61.26
c ou Y wit
from the West.
_
Kmart - 78.51
Afternoon (1 p.m.-6 p.m.)
Kroger 17.2 1
It should rem'ain humid.
Ltd - 19.56
Temperatures will linger at
NSC - . 25.54
Oak Hill Financial
82. Skies will be mostly
.
sunny ~ith 5 MPH winds 32.47
OVBC - 33.00
from the west turning from
·
Peoples - . 25.20
the southwest as the afternoon
Pepsico _ 53.36
progresses.

'

BIRTHPLACE: Hoopeston,

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
- New York Jets quarterback
Chad Pennington has returned
to teach at the summer camp
where he began honing his
football skills 14 years ago.
Pennington, 28, and his
father now run the annual .
summer camp at Webb
School, his high school alma
mater.
The fonmer Marshall star
offered tips on thrOwing perfect spirals a11d encouraged a
·. group of about 75 children on
the football field this week.
"I look forward to the day 1
actually get a chance to coach
youn~er people," Pennington
said. 'It's in my blood.
"So right now, this allows
me,o stay involved with the
game on the coaching side. I
enjoy giving back to the kids
and the community."
·
Pennington, a first-round
draft pick in 2000, is preparin~
for liis third season a~ the Jets
starter. He missed the first part
of last season after breaking his
left wrisl in a preseason game.

Thad Matta's year-by·year
coaching record

Thad M&lt;ltta's year-by-year
coaching record .

. Year .

:I

- By T.he Associated Press
.
.

Xavier hea.d coach Thad Matta reacts during an NCAA regional game against Texas , in Atlanta , March 26. 'A week after
declaring he had no interest in the. vacant Ohio State job, Matta accepted the position. (AP file)

Matta says yes to OSU
Xavier basketball guru accepts Ohio St~te head coctChing job
'

· Bv RusTY MILLER
Associated Press

COLUMBUS - A w,._ek after
declaring he had no interest in the
vacant Ohio State basketball coac hing job, Xavier's Thad Matta accepted the position on Wedne sday.
His change of heart happened after
a conversation late Tuesday ni g ht
with Ohio State athletic director
Andy Geiger.

"As of las1
night, I was not
going to go to
Ohio State. · 1
spoke with Mr.
Geiger late lasl
night
and
our
through
conversation
decided to go up there today. And
6:30 lonight ,is basically when 1
accepted the job," Matta told
Cincinnati television station WCPO

on Wednesuay night.
Ohio State sports informalion
dire ctor Steve Snapp said the school
would hold a news conference F[iday ·
to formally inrrnduce Matta. '.
"We have extended an otTer. he\
accepted it and we're excited about
it," Snapp .said.
Xavier athletic director Dawn .
Rogers confirmed Matta 's hiring in
.an e-mail to The Associated Press

Thad Matta

·Please 'see Matta, Bl
.

'

_Matta.. a good ·hire) but not the best choice for Bucks
)

Almost a m(Jnth to the day after
Ohio State fired Jim. O'Brien as head
men 's basketball ·coach, his replacement was named.
In one of the more hush , hush job
searches conducted in recent years
by a major college program,
Xavier 's Thad M&lt;ttta was ·n~med to .
supersede O'Brien.
• F.riday, Malia . will officially be
THE BUTCHMEISTER
named the Buckeyes ' new head
coach.
Among 'the candidates being con- ered.
We all know ·who the dream
sidered, Matta was perhaps .the best
choice
would have been , if he had
of the bunch.
But, only of those being consid- eve,n been contemplated.

Butch

Cooper

But. no.
Bob Knight wasn't even · interviewed fo r. the job :
No invitation to .Columbus .
Not even a call to see ·if.he 'd even
be interested. ·
t
Ohio State athletic dir-fctor Andy
Geiger sai d he wanted to go in a different direction.
More like a cheaper direction.
But. hey,
Knight was likely the highest
priced of tho;;e memioned by the
media during the past month 's
search.
·
But, alas, there will be no Bobby

Knight in Columbus. That's _great
news for Texas Tech. who stgned
Knight to an extension after Geiger
informed Knight that the Bu ckeyes
were not interested.
I
Now enters Thad Matta.
The positives that Matta brings to
the Schott is hi s yout h'. Turing 37
thi s· weekend. Matta can be a cornerstone to the Ohio State basketball
program for at least the next 20 or 30
years.
That's good if Mana proves to be
successful.
•

Please see Bukh, Bl

Larkin error allows.
Cards to sweep Reds
.

. .

.

ST. LOUIS - Barry Larkin's set·ond error of the season was a very big
one.
The All-Star shonstop's wide throw
led lo the go-ahead run. and Reggie
Sanders· seventh-inning single -sent
the Sl. Loui' Cardinals past the
Cinci nnati Reds 4-2 Wednesday night.
.. You don't wunt .to have to play like
we can't make errors out there ...
Larkin s&lt;tid ... It\ really tough when
you make errors and it ends up costing
you a ballgame...

St. Louis cardinals' Edgar Renteria is tagged out at third by Cincinnati Reds
third baseman Brandon Larson during the third inning Wednesday iO St. Loui~.
Watching the acti{Yt before making the call is third base umpire Bill Welke._.(AP)

.

.

.

'

BY R.B. fALLSTROM
Associated Press ·

Blue Jackets
sign Hartigan,
..
Trattnig
COLUMBUS (AP)- The
Columbus Blue Jackets resigned center Mark Hartigan
and signed forward Maltias
Trattnig on Wednesday.
Trattnig became the second
Austrian to sign . with the
Blue Jackets in as many days.
Defenseman Andre Lakos
joined the team on Tuesday.
Hartigan, signed as a free
agent a year ago. had a goal
and th ree assists in nine
games with the Blue Jackets
last season. In 69 games with
Syracuse of the American
Hockey League, he had :!3
g-Oals and 23 assists.

School W-L Pet.

2000-01 Butler 24-8 .750
2001-02 Xavier 26·6 .812
2002·03 Xavier 26'6 .812
2003-04 ~ 2.6.:.1LZQ.3
Totals
102·31 .767

:

Jim Edmonds homered for the sec- .
ond straight game tu help the
Cardinal,s complete their seve nth
sweep. and third in the lasl (our serie,.
The NL Central leaders are a season- ·
be't 20 games above .500 und 6-0 on
the homestand with three games to go.
oulscoring their oppon-ents 34-10.
.
Manager Tony La Russa has been
talking about being' 2(} games above
.500 for some time. Now that the team
is there. he wants more.. .
"That's kind of a ll)agic number... he

said. "It means somethi ng. it doesn 't
mean a lot. though . You get some
magic numbers in September. then
you can start getting really excited'.
The Cardinals swept the Reds in a
three-game series at home for the. firs1
time since May 15-17. 1987 . They ' re
5-1 &lt;~g ainst Cincinnati. whiclj, gol a
homer from Brandon Larson .. ~
The Cardinitls have won eignt in a
row at home overall. and 13 of 15.
Ken Griffey Jr. was 0-for-3 with . J
walk and is 8-for-44 with one RBI in
12 games si nce hitting his SOOth .
homer on June 20 in St. Louis.
ReJs right tielder Ryan free! left Ihe
game in the sixth after he injured his
left l~g slamming into an unpadded
section of the wall while chasing a
foul ball. Freel was 6-for-11 with an
RBI and a run scored in the series.
X-rays were neg'dtive, and Freel was
,et 10 lly with the team to Milwaukee;
then catch a flight to Cincinnali to see
the team doctor.
,
"He's fearless, he doesn't care who
he crashed int.,," Cincinnati manager
Dave Miley .said. "It doesn't matter if
.'

'

Please see Reds, B:l

..

•

l

�Thursday, July 8, 2004
.Page B2 •

'The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysenti_n el.com

Armstrong takes yellow
jersey at Tour de France
BY JOHN LEICESTER
Assocoated Press
ARRAS, France - , It's the
Jersey Lance Armstrong covets
and works so hard for gansh
yellow and a,warded daoly to
the leader of the Tour de
France
Armstrong slipped onto the
Jersey Wednesday tor the first
ume at thts Tour after he ,md
hos team wo n ,, ram-soaked
ume tnal Then the live-tune
champoon s,ud he's ready to
surrender the chenshed shu1 at least tempoo .u oly
l"he reason ° Because detendmg the lead at thos early stage
of the three-week race v,ould
be too gruelong Fur Armstrong,
there 's JUst one place where
weanng yellow really counts•
at the timsh on the ChampsEiysees on Pans on July 25

That wohlld be An11Strong '
stxth crown. a record 111 the
I0 I year-old race The Tex,m
took a"btg step toward that go,tl
111 Wednesday's team event.
openong up tmportant but not
msurmoumable ume gaps over
key nval s
From here on, Armstrong
woll try to prevent them from
recovenng the lost ground. and
even look to extend ht s advanldge when the Tour cltmbs mto
the Pyrenees at the end ot week
two, followed by the AIps
But Amtstrong's te'am can't
keep tabs on all 183 nders stoll
m the r.tce As long as key challenge rs don "t zoom .ahead,
Armstrong mdocated he won't
exhaust hts teammates by makmg them chase down break
.tways by second-uer nders at
thos stage - even if theor
ettorts eam them the yellow
Jetsey tor a day or two

"Th" os .1 hard race to
de tend," the 32-year-old
Armstrong smd "We ' re not
gomg to sacnlice the team to
defend tlie yellow Jersey on the
north of France The ttme to
work .md detend begms m the

Pyrenees "

.

Last year, Armstrong's team
surrendered the Jersey to a
French nder, Rtchard Vtrenque,
for a day Annstrong took the
lead 111 tl1e next Alpme stage
and then wore yellow all the
way to Pans- 13 racmg days
m all
Wtth Wednesday's wm,
Armstrong has earned 60 Jerseys m hts Tour career, mcludmg five as champion But, "I
don't really thmk about those
thmgs," he satd.
"The only real yellow Jerseys
that matter are the ones that the
guy wears on the ChampsElysees,.
'

Rangers edge Indians, 9-8
CLEVELAND (AP) - G,ll)' Matthews Jr
and Mark Tetxetra each htt two-run homers on
the seventh onnmg as the Texas Rangers rallied
agamst Cleveland's faulty bullpen for a 9-8 won
over the lndtans on Wednesday mght
Tetxetra connected off Jeroome Robertson ( 1I), and two batters later, Matthews hit hts off
Rtck Whtte as Texas tmproved to 5-5 on a 14game mad tnp
Altonso Sonano and Br,td Fullmer htt solo
shots tor the Rangers. who lead the maJors wtth
126 home runs
Sonano's 16th homer, a two-out shot m the
etghth mmng. set a smgle-season club record for

' a Texas second baseman Juho Franco hll 15

111

1991
·
Rehever Ron Mahay (2-0) struck out tour m 2
1-3 onnmgs as the Rangers moved b&lt;tck mto lirst
place tn the AL West, one game ahead of
Oakland
FrankJm Francisco got two outs 111 the seventh
and worked the etghth Franctsco Cordero
pttched the mnth for hts 26th save m 28 chances,
gtvmg up an RBI smgle to Vtctor Martmez and
a run-sconng grounder to Jody Gerut
Matt Lawton homered and Travts Hafner had
two RBis for the Indians, whose combusttble
bullpen !lamed up agam

-"

Sayr~

continues to lead Senior men

STAFF REPORT
sports@mydaolytrobune com
MASON, W Va - New
Haven Hetght's Ralph Sayre,
who has amassed 142 pomts
on the season to date, contm
ues to lead the Rtverstde
Senoor Men's Golf League
He leads · second-place
Clark Greene of Hurncane by
9 5 p01 nts, and ts II pomts m
front of Chet Thomas tn third
A total of 55 players battled
the 95 degree heat and formed
13 four-man teams and one
three-man squad Fourteen
pomts were avatlable tor the
wtnners who shot a I0-under
p;)r 60 for the day
'The wonmng team consisted
of Ketth Woods (Bradbury),
Miller
(Pomt
George
Pleasant
W Va ).
Chet
Thomas (Patrtot) and Boll
Wmebrenner (Syracuse)
There was a three-way tte
for second . place between
teams that shot 61 The quartet
of Dale
Hamson
(Pomeroy). Doug Caruthers

(Galltpolt s) , Harvey Blam
( Pomt Ple.1sant, W Va) and
Clark Greene (Hurncane,
W Va) tted wtth the foursome
ot Curtis Roush (Mtlton,
W Va),
Luther
Tucker
(Mason, W Va), Ed Wtlson
(Pomt Pleasant. W Va) and
Herman Knapp (Broad Kun,
WVa)
Also earmng a share of second was the team of Mock
Wmebrenncr (Ractne), Jtm
Capehart (Pmnt Pleasant .
W Va ),
Jtm
Prot Itt
(Mason, W Va) and R.tlph
Sayre (New Haven, W Va)
The closest to the pm contest was won by Wes Peterson
ot Athens on hole numbe1
sevetl-- woth Syracuse's Btll
Wmebrenner on number 14
The mnth .hole m one of the
season was made by Harvey
Blam on number mne The
hole was playmg 165 yards
and Blatn htt a live wood to
record the thtrd ace of hts
career It also marked the first
back-to-back aces on Semor
League htstory Blam's play-

lllg partners were Dale
Harnson, Doug Caruthers and
Clark Greene.
The league welcomed two
new players thos week Cuo tts
Roush ol Mtlto, W Va and
Allen Elberfeld of Pomeroy
A total of I06 dtfferent players have now taken part on the
league thts season.
There are sttll 12 v,eeks
remaonmg 111 the regular sea
so n before the btg seasonendong party and awards donner on September 28
Sen1or League Stand1ngs
1 Ralph Sayre 142 2 Clark Greene 132 5
3 Chet Thomas 131 4 Keith Woods 126
5 Howard Parker 11 7 6 Paul Lanham
115 5 7 Earl Johnson 110 B J1m
Cunningham 109 5 9 Tom Nunnery 108 5
9 Dewey sm th 108 5 11 Elmer Click
1 06 5 12 Don W1lson 1 02 13 B11l Pethtel
101 14 Harvey Bla1n 1005 15 Mck
Winebrenner 98 16 M1ke Bragg 97 5 17
Ken Whiled 96 18 Floyd Chapman 95 19
Chuck Yeager 93 20 B1ll Yoho 92 5 21
Jack Fo11 89 5 22 Ron Phalln 89 23 B1ll
Winebrenner 88 24 Claude Proffitt 87 25
Pat Williamson 87 25 Jack Maloney 87
27 Don Kay 86 28 Russ Wood 85 5 28
Harley R1ce 85 5 28 Dale Harnson 85 5
31 Mac McCarty 84 32 Curt1s Grubbs 82
33 Don Fields 81 34 Dana Winebrenner
81 35 Lew C?1lland 80 36 Cra1g Barnes
7B 5 37 J1m Capehart 77 5

Thursday, July 8 ,

2004

Ohto State lored o· Booen ,titer seven
ye.trs on June 8. stx weeb .t!tei he ,tdmotted
to Geoger th.tt he h.td p.llll ,l reuuot $6 000
111 I \19\1 NCAA .md Ohoo State onvestogafrom P,F~ge 81
tors ,Iiso are looko ng 11110 .tllegauons by a
,
shortly alter she receoved a ca ll trom hom Columbus woman th.tl she gave thous,mds
of dollars to forme} Buckeyes p!.tyet Bohan
early Wednesday evenmg
' I alway' had the uneasy teehng that Savovtc and paod hos bolb .ond dod hos
Thad moght be the next Ohto State coach." homework for two years
In thtee yea rs as the Musketeers· he.td
Rogers satd at a news conference that Matta
coac
h, Matta's teams had a tecord ot 78-2:1
dtd not attend ""Uitomately he dtd wh.tt he He was
24- 8 on h1s only s~ason as head
needed to do to be where he wanted to be as
coach at hts alma m.tter Bu tlet
a coach ··
Matta served as an assosta ni dt Indiana
Getger satd tl wasn "t easy for l\1atta to State, Butlet . Mt.tmo ol Ohto and Western
le,tve Xavter
" I !diked wtth hom m person and on the Carohna
Matta was thought to be one of the
phone several t11nes I don't know (that) he
favontes
for the Buckeyes JOb - whtcn
w.ts always tnlerested III the JOb He has
very strong feehngs about Xavter and 11 pays around $1 2 mol loon a year - from the
was dt!locujt for htm ," Geoger told The begtnmng Ohto State .tsked Rogets too permtsstOn to talk to M.ttta two weeb ,tgo
ColutT1bus Dtspatch.
Asked then whether he was mtct csted 111
M.otta, who wtll turn 37 on Sunday, mterthe
JOb, he denoed ot
vtewed wtth Getger, members of the search
"'I'
m not a candtd,tte It ' s th.tt p'l,un and
committee and Ohto State prestdent Karen
that Si mpl e, .. Matta to ld The Conc onnatt
Holbrook on Wednesday mormng
He w.ts offered the JOb soon after the EnqUirer on June 29 •
He has tg not ed other Job openon gs , say tn g
search commtttee met for 45 mtnutes at
he
could not lath\&gt;111 le,tvong Xdvter
Ohto Stadtum on Wednesday &lt;lfternoon.
" I'm not a 1&lt;:ry public person. so
'"I'm a Mtdwe st guy, I grew up 111 the Btg
nobody
's ever gotng to know how h,oppy I
Ten and thtnk havmg the opportunity to get
am
at
Xavter."
M,ltla sdtd l&lt;tst week · Our
what I conceive IS the best JOb tn the Bog
Ten, I !eel very lortunate at that," Matta players h,1ve three (At lantoc )0 ch.ompo onshfp) nngs tn three ye,trs We 've been to
told WCPO
Matta, who took Xavte.r to the national the round ot 12, round of 12 ,tnd Elote Eoght
quartertmals 10 March , was one of three (tn the NCAA tounwncnt) I'm sotttn g here
coaches ontervtewed on campus thts week and I probably h,tve one ot the longest conThe others were Rtce's Wilhs Wilson and tracts tn the country I lo ve thdl '
Matta's contract at X.tvter o.lll through the
Vanderbtlt's Kevtn Stalhngs. lntenm head
coach Rtck Boyages was to be tntervtewed 2012-13 season
The top candodate to repl,tee Matta Is
on Wednesday but apparently dtd not meet
assoctate
head co.tch Se.w Mollet . .t tormeo
wtth ·the search committee
•
The search commtttee - never formally guard at PtttsbUi gh Mtllet h.ts been ,m
tdentt!ted by Getger - was compose~ pn- asststant undeo M.ttta the l,!sl tho ee \e,us dt
manly of former Oh10 State players such as Xavter and betore that was an ,tsststant too
Btll Hoskct, Rtck Smtth and Clark Kellogg five years ,tt Nooth Caoolon.t Stdte
Rogers s,ud she woLiid move qutck ly to
and current team captatn Terence Dials .
find
Xavter 's next co.tch
Matta was htrcd 29 days after Jtm
''!am conhdent we wtll sec ure a natoondl
O' Bnen's forong , football coach Jim Tressel
caltber
coach who supports the mosston o t
1
was htred 3 /, years ago after a 16-day
our
umverstty.
she s,ud
search

from Page 81
If he tsn' t, then he may not l.tst I0, or even
ltve years. .
And everyone woll be wondenng , what tf
Mutta, though, has been an accomplished
6ead coach, gomg 102-J.I dunng hts career,
the past thoee years at Xavoeo and one at
Butler Only stx other coaches have won
more than 100 games dunng their ftrs t four
seasons
That's also 20 or more' wms a season, ht s
worst, 26- 11 thts past year
Oh, yeah, Xavter made tt to the NCAA
Tournamant's Eltte Etght back 111 March
Not to shabby
Wtll Matta be able conttnue that success 111
the Btg Ten?
Even though the Atlantic 10, whtch Xavtcr
has been a member, ts a conference that has
been tmprovmg over the years tn basketball ,
ot 's not the Btg Ten
Desptle the talk among-basketball fans that

the Bog Ten os oveorated, ot '' stoll a very !otmtdable league !rom top to bottom
Kntght could h,tve brought expe11ence
coadmg agaonst the Bog Ten sc hools on .t
mghtly basos Then agaon. Geogeo dodn ' t even
bother talktng to Kmghl ooghl 0
Matta will have to be a quock siL!dy The
lessons, though, shouldn 't be too doftocu lt to
learn
HIS b1ggest challenge woll he tryong to
overcome a scand.tl that he , noo the pl.oyers
he wtll mhent and recrutt. h.td anythmg to
do wtth
He JUst has to hope that the NCAA doesn' t
lay down any restnctoons to hos team
The good ne\\s os that Ohoo State dtd take
act10n agamst o· Bnen, so th,tt's so methmg
that the NCAA woll look kondly on But , how
much wtll that delton sotten the blov. tildt .-surly to come
Stay tuned
Yes, Matta was a better chmce than the
other two mam ca ndodate s V.tndeobolt 's
Kevm Stalltngs and Rtce ' s Wtllt s Wtlson .
who wet e tntervoewed earlter thts week
Now we'li see tf bemg the beller chmce ts
the ri ght chotec

DF

CASH?

Suspended Ohio State footb~11'
player enrolls at Youngstown State EASE THE
~

YOUNGSTOWN (AP) Former Oh10 State ttght end
Louis lnzarry, who was suspended ondeftmtely after
betng charged wtth robbery,
has enrolled at Youngstown
State, but apparently . has no
tmmedtate plans to play football
The school"s sports mtormation dtrector, Trevor Parks,
said Tuesday he had no
knowledge of any contact
between
Inzarry
and
Penguins coaches.
The
cnmmal
charges

Reds
from Page81
tt!s one of hrs teammates or
tHe wom~n he htt m the
stands whtle gomg for the
ball."
In the seventh, Edgar
Rentena went to second on
Larkin 's wtde throw to first
tliat Jletlected off Juan
Castro's glove, the second
error tn 58 games at the postuon for the 12-tin\e All-Star
With one out, Sanders
bounced a smgle up the mtddle of.f John Rtedltng (4-2) to
g1ve tl\e Cardtnals a 3-2 lead
"It just happened to tail on
nie," LarKin satd ~·1 don' t
think I dtd an_ything dtfferent,
I don't thmk I rushed tt, I JUSt
1made a bad throw

agatnst Inzarry, 19, and teammate Ira Gutlford, 18, a runmng back, stem from a May I
oncodent on the Oh10 State
campus m whtch another student claomed he was JUmped
by two men who stole hts
wallet
lr)zarry and Gutlford both
pleaded mnocent to robbery
charges m Franklin County
Common Pleas Court tn
Columbus and a trtal date has
been set for Sept 2
The players, both sophomores, were barred from
"As soon as tt happened I
looked up and he 's on second
Joke "Oh lord, here
base It's
,.
wego
.
Larktn also rolled tn a relay
throw to the plate on
Rentena's RBI double 111 the
first
Tony Womack added an
RBI double m the eighth off
Todd Jones, hts thtrd htt of
the game. to make tt 4-2
Woody Wtlhams and the
St Louts bullpen combmed
to ret1re 13 of the la't 14
Cmcmnalt httters Ray Kmg
(2-0) got the last two outs tn
the seventh and the first out ,
m
the
etghth
Jason
Isrmghausen worked a perfect mnth for hts ~!Oth save tn
24 chances
Womack led off the bottom
of the first wtth an .onfield' hu
and scored on Rentena·s doublt to gtve the Cardmals the

attendong classes or bemg on
campus.
On June 7, Inzarry was
arrested on campus and
charged wtth trespassmg. He
has a heanng set for Thursday
in Frankhn County Mumctpal
Court
l11zarry os a native of
Youngstown who graduated
from Youngstown Ursuline
lrontcally, Oh10 State coach
Jtm Tressel coached at
Youngstown State for 15 seasons before taktng over at
Ohto State m 2001
lead Larson ended a 1-for-17
slump wtth hts thtrd homer tn
the fourth, tying the score at
I.
Edmonds had been 1-for, S
agaonst Jesus Sanchez before
httung hts 18th homer, and
second III two days, to put the
Cardonals ahead 2-1 on the
fourth
,
Wtlloams walked a seasonhtgh s1x tn 6 I -3 mmngs,
labonng through I 24 pttches
and leavmg wtth the game
tted He allowed two runs on
four htts wtth three stnkeouts, and ts 3-0 wtth a 1.89
ERA on his last five starts
" It was JUSt sloppy,"
Williams satd " But when I
needed to. I made 'pttches "
Sanchez also pttched effectt vely 10 hts second start of
the season, gtviflg up two
runs and seven htts tn SIX
mnmgs
~

\!tribune - Sentinel - !\"'-· ter
CLASSIFIED
We Cove

Matta

Butch

UEEZE!

• 3 Sturely Cardboard GarageNard
Sale Stgns- 24" x 12"
• 3 Wooden Stakes
• 2 t 6 Pncong Labels
• Inventory Sheet
• 4 Mtno-sogns to be posted on bulleton
boards at laundromats, markets, etc
• 1 Seven-step onstructton sheet. plus
"Secrets of How to Increase Profots at
a Garage Sale"
• 3 Mountong Matenals
• 6 Multo-colored Balloons
• 1 Marker for Sogns

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n
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Yard sale at Middleton
Estates Thursday &amp; Fnday
July 8th &amp; 9th 8 4pm

GAUJJ'Ot.L~

Yard Sale July 9 &amp; 10 1770
Centenary Ad
between
2 fam11y yard sale July 10 &amp;
TJ s
Daycare
&amp;
the
GIVEAWAY
July 1~ from 9-? 8642 SA 7
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Name brand
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clothing women s 10 14
Beaut•ful kmens free to good 814 Fourth Ave Fnday g1rls 12 14 boys house·
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Furn Me household 1tems hold Amencana 1\ems eltlctnc treadmill computer
clothmg toys etc 9-?
G•veaway to good home
Cute lovable playful puppy
Call (740)446 2904

8 19 multi lam1ly sale 719
7/ 10 9? 6644 At 588
Rodney Furn iture clothes
new t1res baby Items odds
Two cats both temala One
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pure gray oneS amese Call
(740)446 7558 after Spm
Fn/Sa t 7/9 &amp; 71 10 g.?
Microwave
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women s clothes children s
clothes toys m1sc 6 m1les
Lost Blonde female Chow below town on~ St At 7 S
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fOJJND

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Announcement
.... .... ..030
Antiques...... ..... . . ...... ....... ...
... 530
Apartments lor Re~t ..... ............. . 440
Auction and Fl.leaJAarket .
... . . ...080
Auto Parts &amp; Tccessorles ..... .... .760
Auto Repair ..........................................770
Autos lor Sale ...... . ....... . ....................... 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale..
750'
Building Supplies .
.550
Business and Buildings .......................... 340
Business Opportunity.. . ....
....210
Business Training. .. ...
..140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes.. .. .. .. ...... .. .. 790
Camping Equipment .. ....... ... . .. .... ... 780
Cards of Thanks ...
..... .. ... . 010
Electrtcat/Refrlgerallon
84D
Equipment lor Rert ......... .. . .. ............ .480
Excavating ............ .................................. 830
Farm Equipment
.... . ... 610
Farms for Rent..
.. . . .. . . .....430
Farms lor Sale ........................................ 330
For Lease........ ...... ... . . ...... . .....
490
For Sale or Trade
...590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ................................ 580
Furnished Rooms. ......... ...... .. ...........450
General Hauling.
.... 850
Giveaway.
......040
Happy Ads .......
. .......050
Hay &amp; Grain. .....
. ..640
Help Wanted.....
.. . 110
Home Improvements....... ...... .. ..............810
Homes for Sale........ ............... ....
..310
Household Goods . . ... . ....
.510
Houfeslor Rent.... ... , ....... .... ..... 410
In Memoriam....... ............ .................. ... 020
Insurance... ............................... . .... .130
Livestock. . ...... .. .....•. ...... . ... . :. ..630
Lost and Found..................................... .. .. 060
Lots &amp; Acreage...... . ......... ... ......... ... 350
Mtscellamtous... . ....... ....... .... .... 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise.. . .............540
Mobile Home Repair.............. . ......... .......860
Mobile Homes for Rent. . . ..... .... . .. .420
Mobile Homes for Sale
.. ...... 320
Money to Loan ............................................220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers.... .... .. ...... 740
Musical lnstrumenll. .... . .... . . ... ... 570
Personals... . ....... . .... .,........................... 005
Pets for Sale:................... . .. . . . ..... .. 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating.....
... 820
ProfeulonaJ Services... . ..... ............... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Ripalr .......... •............ 160
Rill Eatale Wanted...... .. .... . .............. 360
Schools Instruction ............... .. ............... 150
Saad &amp; Fartlll-..........................................650
Sltuatlona Wanted. ...... . ..:... . .. ........... 120
Space lor Rant.. ...... ...... ............ 460
Sporting GOOds ........................................ 520
Truckl for Sate ...... . ..... ......: .... . ... 720
Uphotattrt . ..... .. ..... . ..... . . .......... 870
Vane &amp; 4-WDa..... .. ................................ 730
Wanted to Buy................ ....... . .... ... 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies ........... 620
Wanted To Do .... ................ ,... ......... .... 180
wanted to Rent.. . ...... . ......
.. .470
Yard Sale- Gallipolis..... .... . ..............072
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middle ................ ....... 074
Yard Sale-Pl. Pleasant... . ....... .... . . 076

Dally In-Column: 1.00 p.rn .

All Display. 12 Noon 2

Monday- Friday for Insertion

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In Next Dily's Paper
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1'10

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Tribune-Sentinel Register will be re•pone lble for no more than..,the coal of the apace occupied by the error and c nl~ the hrel tn&amp;er1ton
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r10

HELP WANJED I L,I50--INsl·Sc·~-~lliCiiO',s·ON-,.J ~:10::::F~:~:,~:~~:-~:r=~

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Multi lam1ly ~ard sale 36216
Rocksprings Ad July 8 10
Multi fam1ly sale· Ba1ley Ad
(off Te~as Ad) s1gns from 5

Pomts

baby rtems plus
s1zes Thurs &amp; Fn 9·5
Several 1am1ly sale &amp; 4 H
balo;e sate Fnday Saturday
July 9 10 d ishes toys
daybed
Longaberger
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mce clothes
(esp k1ds preteen) wooden
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ho use lett on S m th Run off
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6

YARJ&gt; S&lt;t E·

' J&gt;r. I'LF.AsANT
Fn &amp; Sat July 9th&amp; 10th Tag
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Brand Name ctothmg Old
Tools Stone Ja r.s Ant1que
Furmture and much more
Hugh Fam1ly Yard Sale lOIS
of baby Items household
1tems &amp; plenty of m1sc
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114 HowarD St
Haven Heights New Haven
Sal July 1Oth 9 ?

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RENI

All real estate advertising
m this newspaper Is
subJect to the Federal
Fa~r Housing Act of 1968
which makes it Illegal to
advert1a11 any
prafl!lrence llmlta tl(m or
discnm1natlon baaed on
race color, rellg1on, sea
familial status or national
origin or any Intention to
make any sucli 'I
prefl!lrl!lnctt llmlta tion\ or
dlacnmlnatlon

,,

This newspaper witt not
knowingly aCJCept
advertisements for U1al
estate which la in
v1olatldn of the law Our
readers are hereby
mformed that all
dwellings advertised m
this newspaper are
avallablu on an equal
opportunity bases.

MOIIII.Ic HOMF"S
I'ORSAt E

1 Bedroom
2-Bedroom
hOuses $275 +ut htles $350
tut llt1es 2 Bedroom tra ler
$200 +UIIhlies
Depos1ts
requ red (740)446 4854

2 bedroom house for rent 1n
Eu reka $450 monthl y $400
depos1t No pets (740)44 1
0583 (7401256 6408

2 bedroom house n Mason
$3~0

month 5350 depoSII
no pet s ava1lable Aug 1st
(3041773 5604

Itt- It t II t
wv r.:riO
HOMES

°

c

"'

"'' •

...,..

Carla Dnve Gallipolis OH
Denver Fannm
..........45631
(across from golt
Ma1ntenance
course) (no phone calls
Supenntendent
please) Must apply m per
4277 Lyma n DriVe
son
Hilliard OH 43028
Fax 6 145274114
ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT S
Ema I mfoxOarctlceK
needed
Appl~ at 1354
oress com
E 0 E /Drug free workplace Jackson Ptke GallipoliS

of Yehlcle

l~alnlenence

and repair.. elc:p with dieSel
power vehicle preferred
Chtekens, small unusual Must also have own tools
breeds
Sllk1es
etc tam1har.ty With repair manu
als and a m1n1mum or 1 year
(740)388 9824
perform1ng S1m1lar duties
I \1 1'1 I J\ \ II \ I
Must be abfe to lift 75Jbs
" I.IC\111 ....
Exc.lttnt comr»nlltlon &amp;
btneflt• with medlul,
110 ltn.J»
d,ntel, 401k. vact~Uon 1:
L._ _ _ _ _ _ __.. pt~naton PteaH come In
1

ll''l!r--------,
WAN11D

'
and appty anytime MonAn Excellent wey to earn Frl llam·Spm
TOe the .m-1 ol your
money The New Aovn
RuiT)pkt W11tt
Catl Monl"/n 304· 882 2645
28 AW Long Road
AVON ' All Araast To Buy or Wolloton, OH 45892
Sell
Sh1rley Spears 304 Fax·7~5472
No phone ca~s plaue!EOE
675·1429

PSYCHOLOGIST

S72K-$80K
e are a well respected
th 1cat nahOnal praCtiC
ah;yg w1th genatriCS W
er a good s1artmg salary
nef1ts whiCh Include li&amp;blt
ty and health msuranc
d a 401K W.e are m ne
a t1censed psychologtst
u can work as tew or a
any hours as you want
ur job 1s to see people
r jOb IS 10 bill COiled 8
'Ve you the support serv
e that you need We are
s1ness that never losse
lght of the fact that ttl
n1al health of our c:hent
our f1rst ooncern CBtl
sychOtog~eal TranS itiOn&amp;
77 734·20~1
or ~ fa
esume 877 734 2030

38r m New Haven 1Ba
w/garage &amp; dry basement
$15 000 worth o f Updates
$63 000 (304)882· 2817
4 Acres With 14x80 Newer
Mobil e Home Surrounded
by 1 0 000 acres for huntIng
Call (740)256 6476
Comoletelv
Behmshed
~ Great
J::I..Qm..e..
1ocat1on tn
GalhpoWs OhiO 3 bedrooms
2 lull baths Pnce to Sell
Now Phone 1740\446 9539

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFOAOAB LE'
Townho"use
apanmen1s
anCllor small houses FOR
RENT Call (740 1 ~411 111
fo r applicatiOn &amp; 1ntorma tlon
Gr aoous twmg 1 and 2 bed
room apar tmenls at Vtllage
Man or
and
A verstde
Aparlments m M ctdleport
From S295-S444 1 Call 7 40
992 5064 Equa H o!J~ m g
Opportun1t1es
Mode rn 1 bedroom
PhOne {740)446 0390

apt

NQ

Pleasant Valley Apanment
Are now tak ng Appllcattons
than pertec t cred1t accepted 1 for 26R 3BR &amp; 4BR
are
taken
Own don t rent Local com Applicm ons
pany Mortgage Loca tors Monday thru Frtday ho111
900 AM 4 PM OlfiC€ IS
(7 40)992 7321
Located al 1151 E\ergreen
House lor rent 1n Chiton 3
1
Dr•ve Po1nt Pleasan t WV
bedroom S425 per month
Phone No IS (304 )6 75 5806
pl us depos 1 (740)9~2 0175
EHO
Fmancmg ava1lable w1th

DID'i!·L!'.A'I.MO.NI' less

·'----&lt;-----

Smal l one bedroom house 1n
Tw1n R vets Towrat s accept
Mason $250 a month $250
1ng apphcat1 ons tor wattmg
.
2 Bed roo m Trai ler call depoSit no pets (304)773- liSt for HL.O SlJbSiZed I br
56"0"'4-~-~-.-..., apar 1ment ca ll 675 6679
(304)675 5217 good condl· ..:
EHO
''o_n_ _ _ _ _ _ _
E Ho~..:s
..
f'OR
Upsla I t; lurn1shed apt 3
3Br 12)(65 w/Add1t10n CIA
rooms &amp; ba th Clean no
$3 500 OBO must be m oved
(304)675 7783
"2 bedroom Tra1ler $285 pets References &amp; depos t
month $200 depos1t Trash reqUired (740)4 46 1519
For sale or rent 2 bed room &amp; water pa1d
mobile homes star t1 ng at
$270 per month Call 740
992 2167 ~

J420 Moun

RENT

look1ng
lor
3
Fam ly
Bed room Rental Proper y n
Bend Area preferaoly m lhe
coun ry Call \30:11 67 5 1904
or (304\273 6262
Ae locatmg
o Gall pols
Famtlv wants to lease n ce
home w !h at leas I 3 bed
rooms w1 th garage needed
1mmPdta1e 1y Ca ll Jacklf'
740 707 7999
740 589
5258

~~--------'

--------

'I

N1ce ono BR unfurnished"
3
bedroom
house
1n apartment Range &amp; relr g
M1ddleport 5425 a month provtded Wa1er &amp; garbage
plus depostt no 1ns de pets patd Deposit reqwred Call
(740)9923. 1 ~4_ _ _ . (740)446 434 5 a1te1 6pm•
:___:___...:.c:._

r

Ooesel Mechanic II
PM Shift

'

10

• Thts """""..

At'\Knu NOs
Hlll Ro ~ ~

IYIR

-

IJ20

llt :NHI.S

Local owner seekmg Cargo ~a;led=Ih:•:o:lle:•:,n=
n =~
van dr1ver Must meet I!!
D1esel Mechan~ c
Panther II reqwremenls
PR,Qio'}$(ONAL
SERVICES
One of OhiO s leadmg motor pass drug test and phys1cal
earners has an 1mmed1ate 60 40 spill For more 1nfo call
opemng m OlH e~~:tremely (740)446 6688
TURNEO DOWN ON
act1ve grow•ng shop for a ~a ~
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
Service Mecllamc The sue Now accepting resumes for
No Fee Unless We WinI
SAVE SAVE-SAVE
cessfut applicant must pas lull t1me I part t1me bar
1 888 582 3345
Stock models at old pnces
2005 models arr1111ng Now
sass a high level of mechan tenders waitress &amp; cooks
~ I
Mob le
Homes
1ca i apl 1tude and be able 10 for Po1nt Pleasant area PO -;;;;;;;;::;:;;:;:::;:::;:::;:;;;;;; Coles
15266 US 50 East Atllens
work with drivers Three and Bo)( 450 Pt Pleasant
Oh10 45701 (740)59 ? 1972
2555
a half day work week paid
FOR SALE
Whe re You Get
You r
vacal1on personal days
Mone} s Wor1h
healtll msurance paid hall NOW HIRING A leadmg
days ove rt 1me pay 401K provder to 1ndiv1duals w1tll 2 bedroom home for sale
""DO
1 •1 d
Trarler lor sale Located at
pl an and uniforms are Mn.o
IS oQ,Ing or lrect needs repair $25 000 289
T
Ad
11
(740)2S6
Leon WV (must be movedl
among the ma11y benef1ts of care 5I a 10 GaII1P 0 I15 N0 ,e)( as
a
$6 35 6702
1994 Commodore 14x60
"
work1ng at ~relic Express e)(penence necessary
2 bed mom 1 baih ulihly
Inc Th1s pos1t1on s open per hour Paid tralntng If you - - - - - - - oeam to 3BR on 5 l 29 acres Green room 1ncludes stove relrtg
ld I c 1 0 n
now and you can beg1n work wou 1" 8 0 l 1 our
~ownsh'p close oo school era tor washef e)(tra cab
h
I
d
.Is
ach
d
111
1
1mmed1ately Fax ema1l s or
eP
lVI u
.'.
m person applicants are wet· their fulles t potential you Asking priCe $89 000 More nets all underpmmng front
may pul your applicatiOn 1n 1nfo t740)446 7377
&amp; back porohes w/awnmg
come
.I 1"'ddleo~ Eslales 62.. - - - - - - - - all blocK &amp; SidewalK steps

Wed Thurs Fn
Mens &amp;
Womens Clothes VIdeos
Watch Furn1ture &amp; NicKNacks 44 Burdette Addition
Rumpke IS the leader In the
94
waste lnduatry
Pos1t1on eaalall nnlor &amp;
WANilll
experienced mechanics
roBuY
with repair• &amp; mainteAbsolute Top Dollar U S nance auch 111 lubrication,
S1lver and Go ld Cams electrical and brake work
Proofsets Gold R1ngs US Reqwres mtchanlcal aptl·
Currency M T S Com Shop tudt with b~·lc knowledge
151
Second
All(lnue
Gallipolis 740-446-2842

G)

r

yards

Will Pressure Wash houses
GENERAL MAINTENANCE mob le homes metal build·
V1llage ot R10 Grande The ngs
and gut ters Call
pos1t10n requ1re s general (740)446 0 151 ask for Ron
74
ARlJ
maintenance and vehicle or leave message
. r~~~'l'l'l!~~-• mechanical sk1lls 'Good
II \ \ \( I \I
rec.or
attendance a must Please
(Fnday Saturday) July 9th &amp;
p ck up an application at the
10
1Oth 9 3 Household Items
Med1 Home Health
Mtmlc1pal Building at 174 E
candles candle supplies
Age ncy Inc see~1 ng a
OPI'OKilJNrrv
College St No phone calls
crocks &amp; 1ars body lot1on
iull t1me AN Cllmcal
Appl1callon deadline July
supplies beddmg alot of
0 rector for the GallipOliS
Are U SS motivated ? 100X
14
other' m1sc Items Hyse ll
OhiO
more powerful than MLM IF
Run Road 112 m11e on lett
locatiOn
Hair Stylists
Serious 800 .305 7949
FIESTA welcomes you to - - - - - - - July 8th 9th 1Oth Romeroy
POSitiOn Requires OH
Bankers Life and
check out what we have to
Laurel Cliff Rd off At 7 lust
and WV AN licensure
Casualty Company
ol1er
$300 hmng bonus
house on lett
m1ntmum two years ot
guaranteed hourly wages
home health nurstng
·Expanding F 1e ld Force·
plus tips up ~o 45% serviCe
July 9\h 9AM 6PM 43261
expenence m a manage
•Tra nlng• Leads"
commiSSIOn reta11 and tan
State Route 124 Racme
ment rola knowledge of
Potential $25·1 60K Yr •
n ng commiSSIOns 401 (k)
Children adull and JUnror
Federal and Stat e home
Call (304)343 0400
pa1d 1Jacat1on health v1sion
clothrng and m 1sc
health regulation JeAHO
dental and hie 1ns tree
Equal Opportunity Company
expenence prelerred
advanced education 1mme
Just moved yard salel
M/F/H
•
dtato clientele and so much
Fr1day Su nday 8 00 ? On
morel
Now
h1
r10g
for
lull
and
1.-.
"'
NUll&lt;.;~
~
Hrgh Street
Middleport
Submit resume to 68 150
part t1me licensed Stylists ~H ID VALLEY PUBLISH
Waterbed TV and weddmg
Bayberry Dnve
at our salon 1n Mason Call lNG CO recommends tha
St ClairSvi lle OH 43950
Large 4 tam11y yard sale Fn
Cindy @ 1·888·825·6363 x ou do busmess wth peo
te you know and NOT I
Attn Katnna Dunaway
&amp; Sat at Cec1t Maynard res3010 for more mto and to
end money through th€
RN
rdence {F 1\h ST Rae ne
schedule an 1nterv1ew
~all unbl you have mve~;;
D1rector of Nursm
Oh ra1n or shme

Y SALE·
PoMEROY/MIDDLE

How you can have borders and graphics
~
added IC? your classified ads
(. ~
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Disolav Ads

• Start Your Adii With A Keyword • Include Complete
Oesc:rlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addren When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Lost 6month Boston Terrier July 10 i6 fam1 ly GAHS
Lost n Peach Fork area July H1gh School Par ktng lot
5lh Childs pet (740)992 GAHS Cheerleaders 8am ?
6049 m (740)591 2805
Pearl &amp; L1ll an July 8 9 to 6
Lost Corn Hollow noad 1 mrles south of Gall polls on
Beech Grove area Paint Rt 7 01shes &amp; glassware &amp;
horse(mostly white ) one I ron sK1IIets
blue eye /one brown eye
(304)882·3436
Yard Sale 7 6 9 Kn ck
knacks Nasccirs 1164 ec1
70
46 Burnett Ad Kanauga

r

lJearlff/rthf'\

Small 2 bedroom mob le
home
tn
Middlep ort
$200 00
&gt;e nI
S200 00 1010
Hnusnu 11 n
deposit 1 year leas e No
pets No calls -alter 9 uo PM
(740)992 5039
Gooc Used Appl ances
Recond
1 oned
and
APAR'I' I~ NTS
G Ja an teed
Wa she rs
IUR
~· 1 •
Drye rs
Ranges
and
Refr tgerators Some start al
1 and 2 bed room a pan
$95 S~a ggs Appliances 76
men ts furnished and unlur
VmP. Sl 1740)446 7398
ntshed
secur ly depos1 t
•eqUired no pets 740 992 .. 11 h
C
1 202 Cia"
&lt;vtO o an arpe
r ...
22 18
Chapel Road Porter Oht o
(7 40)446 i444 1 877 830
bedroom
• apt 9162 ~ree ESIIm&lt;Hes Easy
Washe /d e h k p $290
r ry r oo u
1nanctng 90 days same as
d
d N0
u~ n 1
epost1 requ~re
cash V1sa/ Ma stel Card
heatpump AIC
EKcellent pets 740 441 liSA
Dllve a little save alai
cond11t0n
S I 3 800 ::..:_.:.__ _ _.:.__ _
(740)698 2613
1 bedroom stove and refr~g Thompsons Appftance &amp;
~,;.;.;,;,;...;.B_U_S_IN_IS_iS_....., erator fur lllshed utilllieS Repa tr 675 7388 For sale
1ncluded S400 month plus re -c ond honed
automahc
\ND BI_;ILIMNGS
d
1 (740)245 5859
eposl
washers 8 dryers tefngeca
bedroom
co mplete tors
gas and electnc
Ret a1l or oH1ce space for
kitchen
central
air range~ a r condtliOners and
lease 1n Downtown Gallipolis
tl
Refe rences &amp; depoSil No wrtngel washer s
do
for more mfo 1 740 379
:P.::•IS:::..:(;..
74~0.::144:...:.6.:::01~3::9.:__ repa1rs or maJor brands m
·9~51~1--~---~---,
l!l
s~,
ho;;p;,.o;,.',;.
•I;,;Y,;.
O,;.
u'_h.;o_
m,;.
e__
1111'S &amp;
1 Br Cottage $350 month all e
AC'REAGE
UtilitieS Included S150 secu
--nty depos I \304 )675 3654
-

Goot, •

Rt

'w-lili-iiiiiiiiiiiiii-

w

r

pso

L

22 acres on Hoback Road 1 br upstatrs apt $275 .,.
Home on Rwer 2 bedroom
sell
R 1ven n~
Buy or
ott Old State Route t 24 In ulll &amp; depps11 ref reiJUired
2 bath kitchen d1nn1ng
Ant iques 1124 East Ma m
East Aacme 1·949 770 740-379 9511
laundry
L shape hv1ng
on SR 124 E Pomeroy 7 40
4768 cell1 949433 151 8
room
stone
fireplace
2
bedroom
apt
tn 992 2526
Russ Moore
28X32 geraQe on 78 acre Lots Nos 9 &amp; 10 Heathtvs Ce nlel')ary appliances tur ,
owiin~e~
(~------,
(740)992 2060
Addition m e 1dwe U Two mshed utlftlles paid eacept E
~tJsa..::U ""EEL~
large level lots Price to Sell electnc clean S325 month
~1EIKH\'illiSEMe1gs Co 3 bedroom home
Now F'hone C740~44C-9539 ._.Ca l (7401256 1135'
on 1 1/2 acres 1n country al l
new drywall new roof &amp; std Two homes1tes for sate Both 2 beCHMm JUSt past Holzer SID QOI TV s from $10 DO
ing &amp; l'uce lawn &amp; garden one acre m/1 3 1/ 2 miles $425 month Ce.n {740)44 1 PoliCe Se1zed P ropertyl for
1184
$36.000 (740)985-4121
more Info call (800)749
from Holzer Hosp1tBI
620 Eve rgreen Ad $19 500 BEAUTIFUL
APART 8107 e.:1 ~509
Lower Mason 2BA 2BA 2
AT
BUOOET
560 Evecgreen Ad $18 500 MENTS
Car Garage Fln1shed base
Computer desk hutch type
Call
{740)446 8840
or PRICES AT JACKSON
ment Heat pump call for
on rollers excelle nt cond1
( 7"'4;0;1:64
;;,.;5;_·4,.;5;,;1,;.
3 _ _ _..., ESTATE~, 52 Wesowood
appo1ntment (304)773-5338 ~
!ton Larg,e coctc:at1el cage
n ..... , •r.
DriVe from S344 to $442 and p~takeet cage on stand
JUAL eSTATE
Wal k to shop &amp; mov 1es Call
f740) 949 232B No answer
740 446 2568
•
leave message
Hous tng Opportunity
Home wlttl 5 acres or less
Elect ric Rheem 50 gallon
Tomato ptckers
All cash Must not be listed BeaurLful unfurn1s'hed one wate 1 heater Vseo 1 yr
Roush Farms (7 .. 0 )247
With a real estate company bedroom apt over loolung Askmg S12 5
(i 4014 46
2 165
CI1Y
Pa rK
references
J'm (740)992·7321
2701
reqwed ~ pets secvr1ty
depoSit $400 per montn For Sale 4 plots at Oh10
Wanted Full Time evemng
Call
(740)446 2325
or Va lley Memor al Gardens
Line Cook Appty In person
$350 each (740)441 9i71
(7 40)446-4425
Holiday Inn GallipoliS

..

i~~--..OWoiiiiAiffiDIIii--_.l.I

~ual

JSHOP CLASSIFIEDSJ

.

'

(

.,

�Page .84 • The Daily Sentinel

.Thursday, July 8, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com .

~hursday, July 8, 2004

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEY OOP '-- '

·NEA

BRIDGE

Puzzle

Crossword

John
Pla.ce
1 Mare's dinner 55 Quarrying
5 Taos brick 56 Elhlcally
ACROSS

~3

Phillip
Alder
In Ltnli"iJ Memory

of

.

GRAFTERS WANTED
Low - Low Rates
at a
High Profile Location
740-992-7100

Mary ~ins)
~U;
- • 2, 1!25- •

:/tl4 8, 2itJ:3
'

rrever l(poui lim&lt;'.
far you can go
go no more:

July 10

~u ntVtT /(Jurw fiou,
faro carn!fe sfii~ in

6:30pm

'llnti[it
,9fuws no morej ·
1/ie infoma• gou
ftllvt with pcopft
sonretimes llt'ller
shows, untif!!""go.
· ~ruf sol 9'"ou '([
never /(Jurw.
'11ian/q for your lyetime af 6rining happiness tv so many.
'Jrom your 'JamifJ

After 1st $5.00 each

1

Crank It Up Tipboard

Lucky 'Ball $300. 00

Fri. - Sat. - Sun.
July9, 10 ., 11
French 500
Flea Market
Gallia County Fairgrounds
Dealei'S'Welcome

July 8, 2003

forever cfia"iJetf

~.,r_._·.~.~PI'I.IES.Jl)·IN·G·-·' r

10

Biock, brick, sewer pipes,
windows. lintels, etc. Claude
Winters. Rio Grande, OH
CaII 740 -245 . 5121.

r

~
Satfly missetf 6y
'Jamify &amp; rienis

r

FARM
EQuiPMENT

John Deere 4020 tractor
Diesel w/cab $6,600.00
Massie Furgerson 165 trac· good
Ior, gaseoI.lne engine,
0
1 0
4 50 0 0 0
·
n d949li 005
n·$ ·
740

I'(

Prn
. L··--FOR-iiSIIAiiiiii..E,__.J
·
-

3 brown full blooded Toy
Poodles, 6 weeks old. 2
. males. 1 female. $25q_-each.

(740)446·3576.
AKC

Oru: year ago totfay.

:ocltV Hupp Insurance
Fi.nancial SeiVicteS,; 1

everv nionth

,.,.cn•.u

SheHies

(Miniature

Collies), 10 weeks old, sable
&amp; white, beautifu l ' &amp; smart
like Lassiel $350. Albany

(740)698·6049

01 Grand Prix GT, bronze
mist, leather Interior, sunroof, Onstar, BOSE stereo
wlcd, headsup display, pol ished ! luminum wheels,
'43.000 miles, e)lcellent con$;~0 'dllion. (740)992·7573

Free Estimates

Affordable Prkes,

R.Acttt Sr.t Chvntr

740-992-1189

JONES'

1970 Ford F350, 10ft. Grain

'

510, V·8. 350
Transmission, looks good,
runs good. $1 ,800 (304)6751983

Ohio, reHrvee the
right ..to bid at this
Hie, .a nd to withdraw
the above collateral
prior to Hie. Further,
The Farrnere Bank
1111d
Savlngo
Compt~ny
ra .. rvH
lhe right to reject any
or all bldo oubmlned.
The
abo.,.
deocrlbed collateral
will be aOid " aa-la-

wMre-la", with

no

exprnnd or lmptfed
w•r11117, glv.n.
, For llrlhw lnfor(llatJon, or for an
lflpolntm•nt ·
to
lnopect
collateral,
prior to .... conIKI Cyndla, Gtftfan,
DiRector
or
RMdy ~· .. 1922138.
· (7) 7,8,11 3TC

Tree s ·e rvice

Let me do it for youl

Top • Removal • Trim
: Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

PUBLIC NOTICE
The
following
applications and/ or
verified complaints
were received, and
the following dran,
proposed, or final
aetlona were Issued,
by
• the
Ohio
Environmental
Protection
Agency
(OEPA) laat
weak.
"ACTIONS" Include
the adoption, modification, or repeal of
orders (other than
emergency orders);
the luuance, denial,
modltlcatlon or revocation of tfcenaeo,
permits, leases, variances, or certificates;
and the approval or
dlaapproval of plano
and opeciflcatlono.
" DRAFT ACTIONS"
are written stata- .
m.nta of lhe dl'*lor
of
Environmental
P ~ olactlon 'a

(Director's) Intent
with respect to th•
laauance, denial, etc.
of a permit, llcenM,
order, etc. l-Ied
peraono may submit
wrlllen comrnentt or
raquaat a public
mHtlng
regarding
Draft
Actlona.
Comments or public
mHtlng
iaqueata
muat be aubmllled
within 30 days of
notice of the Draft
Action. " PROPOSED

ACTIONS" ... wrttt.n

atalam~nta

of the
dii'Kior'a Intent wfth

..

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

z•

South

liNII'S PIINnNG

2003 5
15
Cab 4x4 z71 OH-Road Pkg.
34,000 miles, Duel Climate

~RA-NK

26164

. .,

rt--1..---

MaroRevcu~

F-"or Sale: 200? Honda 250
Reflex scooter. 5000 mi.
Excellent condition. $3,900.
Cali 740 38&amp;082

BoATS &amp; MaroRS

Looking for a
non profit
organization to
work one day of
admission gates
at' the 2004
Meigs County
Fair. Please Call
740-985-4159.

H'gh m, Dry
(

I))

Self·Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992·5232

7

I'M KINDA SICKISH IN
TH' MORNIN'S, AN' I AIN'T
EATIN' MUCH BUT I'M
GITliN' FAT ! !
WHATTA YA
THINK IT
IS, DOC

(304). 273-5321

Hill's Self
Storage

Snapper

SALES &amp; SERVICE

45771 .
740-949-2217

204 Condor Street -Pomeroy, Ohio

to

10'x30'

Hours

7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

Manning K. Ro ush
Owner
,0

..

BUT, MOST LIKELY, A
1"-..---..
BOY'R A GIRL ! !

.

~

J
•

~L...C::~="=-'-_J A
-v

.

...l PR&lt;:rt:.RTO 11-\ii'I.KOF II~ &amp;.1~...

~

• Or.lt. OF OUR Cf\E:c.K.:&gt; J.&gt;ST BOO~

llf&lt;D(J&lt;; ~liED I

•

i

n Mon-Frl 9-5 Sat. 9-12

FOR SALE
1985 Bass Master Bass
boat with 60 H.P: Johnson &amp;
Motor Guide Troller &amp; other.

1
J
; ...-..........
II

992-2975
Lawn and Garden l!quipme!l't is.our
business, not our sideline

HARD TO SAY,
EMMY LOU ...

?I

GRAVELY TRACTOR

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

f-1"ff&amp;• 6'1(1 0'
~

Gravely

Meigs County's L~rgest selection of
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
• shrubbery, fruit, orname11tal trees,
roses, rhollollenllrolls, anti azaleas.

=~;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

H

IMJ'RO=F.NfS

Perennials, Annuals, . .
Flats, Hanging Baskets,

BISSEll
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • Nc'-" Garages

BIG NATE

Morning Star Road - C.Rd 30 • Racine, OH
TFN

Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE

ESTIMATES

740·992-7599

R.B.

TRucKS

~--oiFOoiliiRiiSALEiiiiiii._.l

_Trucking
Gallipolis, OH WVO 10212
446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967

Advertise
in this
.,
Space .
fOr
$50 per
month ·

. Barnhart Builders

3o vears experience
New Homes
•Log Homes
•Post Frame
•Complete Remodeling
•Replacement Windows
•Roofs
commercial and

respect
to
the
person who was a
Issuance,
denial, party to • procHdlng
modification, 18voca- before the director by
tion, or renewal of a filing an appeal within
Residenlial
permit, license, or
30 daya of notice of
Free Estimates
variance.
Written the
Final Action.
740-667-6080
comments
and . Pursuant to Ohio
requeots .for a public
revlaed code section
Tuppers Plain ,
meeting regarding a
3745.07,
a
Final ~;;;;;;;;;;;;~ ~;;~;:;::=:=:
proposed action may
Action leaulng, deny- ,
1 SYRACUSE SMALL
be submitted within lng, modifying, rewk30 days of notice of lng, or renewing a
ENGINE DR'S
the Proposed Action. parmi! , license, or
kes
1356 College Rd .
An adjudlcallon hearvariance which Ia not
h.1
precedad
by
a
'-'7
Syracuse. OH 45779
Ing may be held on a
proposed action If a
Proposed
Action,
• Birthdays
740-992-0122
hearing request or may be appaaled to
• Wec!!llngs
Quality workforafair
·oblactlon Ia received
the ERAC by filing an
A
II
pri&lt;e
0
by the DEPA within 30 appeal within 30 daya
ny spec I
All work guara01red
• days ol Issuance ol
or l aauance · of lhe
occasion
Master Ccr1 ified
lhe proposed action.
final action . I!RAC .
Place your orde~
Mechanics Brigg s &amp;
WriHen comments, appeala muat be flied
Str.1t"ton, Kohler,
w llh ; Environmental
today
Murray. MID All
requeato for public
meetlngo, and adludlReview
.Appaala
(740) 985-3917
makes &amp; models SIO.OO
eatlon
hearing
Commlsalon, ' 309
Lora Bing
off any purlihase of
requa•t• must be South Fourth
.$20.00 with thi s ad.
aent
to:
Hearing StrHI, Room 222,
Clerk, Dhlo
. Columbua,
Ohio.
Envlronmenlaf
c=.tof '::
Protection Agency,
P.O.
Box · t 049,
aerved on the dirac~
Columbua, Ohio
tor wfthln 3'daya efler
111.- «-l
43216-1049 filing lhe appeal with
St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH
(Telephone: 614-844- lhe ERAC.
Final approval of
, 74Q-992-70 13 or 740-992-5553
212e).
plana and apaclflca- Retltocklqq
Model
· "FINAL ACTIONS"
are actlono of the -ttona ·
. .a nd Aller Market Atrt..
director which are
Ohio Paperboard
effective
upon
Corporation
·
See Brc:m or Brian Whaley
laaua.- or a alated
VartouaTwpa., Otl
M -Fri 8:30-5:00
aHectiva
data.
...... Oatl el3tii2004
Thla final action
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Purauant to Ohio
Revlaed .
Code not ~ by pro- Sun. Closed
S.ctlon 3745.04, a
final action may be
appaelllble
to and
ERAC.
poNd action
Ia ,..
appealed
to
the
Land appllpatlon of
En vir o n·m • n tal
waate paper P.ulp
Review Appeala
from
Ohio
Paperboard
CommiiiiC!JI (ERAC)
(lormarly known •• . Corporatlon.
lhe
Environmental
(7)8
JJoard Of Ravilw) by a

tJi

Creative
Ca
Lora

J
Wha ~y~s Auto .

!!~!~ •

·ts .

HAUtiNG:

• Limestone

'

93 Columbus Rd.

I HOWARDL .
WRITfSfl
*RIOFliG

6UESS ~LL
60 HONIE .. J

1

IT S HARD STANDING
AROUND ON TilE SIDEWALK
N VOUR 6ARE FEET..

1-800-822-0417

·dOME

. MIINnUIICE
dEIJILESS
GIITEI
I *Frn~•'*

949-1405

Sunset Home
Construetiott
Bryan Reelles
NewHomee,
Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofl,
Siding, Decka,
Kltchtma, Drywall

• &amp;More
FREE ESTIMATES!

8ECAU!iE YOU EAT
THEM,&lt;,&gt;OU

I CAN L-IVE:
WITH THAT

I PlOT'

·and Furniture
Restoretlon
RaflrQII, Flepltlr,
Raatore

J&lt;.lth Bailey

40 192-11156

YOUNG'S

CARPEtmR
SERVICE

l\'E'Al.LY! .

•Aoom'fJIIIID IIIII

1 n•

""''

·-~
.-..-.
·~· .............

--

~

• Pltia 8lcllng
· O.:ka
lnd Porch

Wo do K olloJIC!IIII

1\lppera Plaino
has openlnp on day
and midnight shift. .

740-667-6329

•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Stop &amp; Compare

•

25 Walt
, 48
28 Aloha toltllns"
29 Masculine 49
principle
51
31 "Primal
Fear" stsr 52
33 Little kid
35 Dome
54
37 Villain 's
laugh
40 Rocky ledge
41 Disney
theme p'rk
42 May
honorees
43 Touched
down
44 Senor's son
47 Dr. Zhlvago's.
lo....

Jole de
vlvre
PC key
Dana or
Damone
Sign a
contract
Lama's
chants

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebl~y

C!Phel ::r\'f)tograms are created from cu01at1
ons ~Y tamoos people, pas! alld present
Eacn teller10 the oJ11e• s1
anos lor ElllOtne!.

Tooay ·s c1Us: X equals p

Hp

" VSPHEFCHRD

EFZ ' A

RWFA

LOFSRHASC
MT

c X 0 -Z

L0

AT Z D

RFSMWA .

Hp

HA

FI 0

UTHEOP

VH Z0

I

PTVORWHZM

FCSVHZSV ."

IFZXFCC

PREVIOUS SOLUT ION - "Human lile begms on the olher side of despair.·
- Jean Paul Sartre
"I think Sartre is a bag of w1nd ·· - George Orwell

~:~~:~:~' S~~J.}}A -~ ttfSB tAM I
·7 lllhul lly CLAY I . POLLAN
O~ eorronQe h!llltrt of ·tt·e
..,.,.-.._

WDID

Friday, July 9, 2004
By Bemlce .Bede 09ol
There is a goOd chance that ,you w111 get
involved wilh two ditterent kinds of acllv•·
" ties at work in Ihe year ahead. Each Will
·serve a diflerenl purjXlSe, but will jo1ntly
·· ·te am. up to better the odds of achieving
one common cause.
CANCER {June 21-July 22) - The area in
which you are likely to ra·re the qes1.1oday
will be in s•tuatlons where there •s a lot ot
competition. This cou ld be espec1at1y· lrue
where your work or career is concerned.
LEO (July 23·Aug . 22) .._ Don't wasle addi·
tional time today rehashing the pros and
cons ol a mauer where you had already
arrived a! a decision. Re -opening !he
debate Wtlttoster negativ•ty Ta"ke a pos•tive
stance.
VIRGO {Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Jornt ven·
lures tlave e•cetlent chances for success
today. provided the one you team up w1th
Is someone who is more daring !han you.
This person's boldness will put to rest your
doubts.
UBRA tSept 23-0ct. 23) - Unless you
take the t•me to th1nk things through thoroughly today, chances are you w1111Ump to
an erroneous conclusion. It's 1mportant
thai you.don'tlel impulSiveness deleal you
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22 ) - II you
believe th&lt;it you know how to get things
dOne quicker and more effiCiently than
those w1th whOm you "re invol\l'ed today, be
w•ll•ng· to take charge and lead the way
TalK atone •s cheap.'
SA.G ITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 2 1) - A httle
break m your normal rout1ne of th1ngs
could do you a world of IJ(iOd today II you
" have the IU)(ury to do so. f1nd an act•v•ty
that IS bOth mentally anti physiCally Slimu·
lating
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) - Be
mindlul ol your d ~&gt;p.:.rt ment today. because
m your zeal to a n.eve you· could unintenllunatly treat others m a demandmg man·
ne1. You may be espec1311y harsh w•th lam ily members.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 2Q-Feb. 19) - The
thoughts and ideas of your compamons
w1t1 have · a greater rnttuence on your attitude and o utlOOk tOday ihan·usual In oroer
to~ happy. select chums Who are pos•l•lffl
and op!lmlshc ·
PISCES (Feb. 20- M.arch 20) - You are
enterpnSing enough tOday lo get whatever
rt IS that you go after. so set your Sights as
t...l htgh as you dare. espectatly where your
':(f
materLal or hnancral objectiVeS are con~ cerned.
j2 AR IES (March 21 -Apnt 19) - Assume the
rnll•ahve today •n s•tuat10ns !hal are per\1'
sonally •mportant to you Don"t wa•t on oth·
ers because chances are what 1S 1mpera~ t•ve to you Will be secondary ro them
t:)l TAURUS (Apr• 20-May 20) - When len to
your own deviCes you can be excePoonal·
ty productiVf! so 1
1 you hOpe to get .any thing 1mporta nt done today ptace a barner
around yourseH when worlong on essenilal
tasks
GEMINI (May 21·June 20)- Try to come
up w1th actrvrt~es today where you can
meet and mrngle WJth a grouo of fnends
beCause 1n oroer to feel tulf•lled you re
gomg to requ1U~ some type of SOClCII outle1

io:.;r sc romb led 1'"'ord1 be·

low lo

II

lorm tovr 'Wotd'

L E NT E S

I' I' I I I
0

t PJX I

I

I- I I' I I
' N S I C /•
eI ,-T./-"'I'----1/.~.,

Gomgovermymonthly biils

t

wa~ always a hass le. I think my

.
6....., -...

.

.

.

.

.

income is only someth ing tr.at
~-------~.., falls sHort of what I nee d to

I0

L A WE S E
~-~~.:e___:,1:..:.:..,,=-:;..,..:·:..,..'~

I
!

_..L...J.-.l.-.1.. ...._.!.. ...J.

...

cover

my ------- -.

Comp iere 1Me chuck le quoted
by f, ll;l'"l g •11 the missing wore! I
yov cevelo~ fr-;orn llep No. J beiow

t\ UNSCRAMBLE FOR
~ ;.NSWEP.

SCRAM-l

S ANSWUS

Carver- Acorn - Geese- Ups1de - PROCESS ·
Our new aerobics instructor hung th1s sign over t~e
door of the gym : "Deve loping your t ody is-ir.1porta nt. but
don't neglect your mind in the PROCESS ''

ARLO &amp;JANIS

SOUP TO NUTZ

_.J

v.c. YOUNG Ill
M-f215'

To 'Start today, look only at lhe North hand
in the diagram . You 'r partner opens two
diamonds, ·a weak two-b.id showing a
decent six-card suit , some 6.-10 high -card
points , and no four·card major. What
. would you resporid ?
Helen Rowland said, ··u is easier to keEip
half a dozen lovers guessing than to keep
one lover after he has slopped guessing ."
At the bridge table. it is P.~sier to keep two
opponents guessing if you haven't painted pictures o! your hands. That applies 10
this deal. With that North hand. you can·
no! be sure how well you will do. In lhese
· unci Bar sitUations. go lo[ the contract w1th
the greatest upside potential. So. just
shut your eyes and leap stra1ght to si)(
diamonds. Surely the contract has play,
and not giving the defenders extra graluitous information might reap dividends.
(Hear1s? What h·earls?.Thal suit rates not
to be so good as trumps.)
Against six diamonds. West led the
·'spade JaCk. Declarer won w1th dummy's
ace , played off !he board's three top
hearis, discarding hiS t\'l'o spade losers.
th en ran the diamond queen. Wes t
defended well, ducking the trick. (·11 Wes t
wins with his king, declarer uses
dummy's d 1 ~mond jack to ruf1 a h!)art,
establishing the heart eight as a wmner..
on which his club loser disappears .) Now
South had tO guess what to do If he had
been tempted by a second diamond
finesse. he would have gone down, los·
ing one diamond and one club. But West
ducked only alter a slight tremor. Reading
. the position Correctly, declarer ruffed a
heart and played two ro unds of trumps,
claiming.

L!..l-""-''-"==•

;!:

Big Bend Antique

740-742-341

'"=============~

..

Athens

ANI(WA'(, I

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

tate·

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 pe month

IMPORTS

IT1S EM5ARRA551N6! CAN
'(OU IMAGINE? I'VE FORGOTTEN
HOW TO TIE M't' OWN 51-lOES!

• Sand.
• Dirt

• Ag Lime
740-985-:SS64

East

-.r 'lllrthday:

OP,en 7 daya a weeki

• Replacement

"'~

AstroGraph

ALL ON SALE NOW!!

BUILDERS me.

North

·EARNEST

BARNEY

~=====F~r=e=e=E~s~t~im::a:te:s====::.

Pa.ss

Which way
should you turn?

Dr•.Kelly_K. Jones

Vrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

West.

Opening l ead: 4 J

Washington Street

Ravenswood, WV

gargoyles

8 5 2
7
Al09874
... K 8 6

uuered
North-40 uM

Burglqr ~
Avarice, e.g.
Tenn. '
neighbOr.
Fleck ··
Popular
cookie
8 Minstrel •
9 Falling that
10 Ms. Thunitan
11 Rosary
devotion
12 Make lunch
17 Want-ad
• abbr.
20 Untounded
reports
21 Power loss
22 Bosses,
b·rietly
23 Calif.
neighbor
24 No future

30 Mystery
32 Smell
pleasure
· 34 Movie rental
35 Slot-machine
site
3il Geog. "'!!ion
37 Warm
·
welcome
38 Noncom
39 Fugitive
42 Fellow
45 Sweater
lettar
46 Answered
a judge
50- Newton-

•
•
.

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center
316

• 6 5
4t QI02
. South

3061
" - _ _ _ilv-er-ad_o__oo_E_x_t.

.,

Public Notice

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Q J

• K 3 2
... 9 4· 3

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

HDtm: MtJnJay- S..tlt....., 9.. ~
Early pttparatio" arrdlfttmlntrRioailabJe.

CalL. Dennis Boyd

MONTY

DOWN

15 Ship's
1
position
t 6 Goose
2
!ormation
3
~8 Lyric poem
4
19 License
5
'23 Tip of a pen
26 Juan's single . 6
27 Like
7

4t A J 7 5
East
.K Q743
• J. 5 4 2
¥ I0 9 3

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Free Estimates

neutral

14 Cafe
customers

West
• J 10 6

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

..wt.(op· G~ · .

&amp;

•

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675·2457

~~))!&gt; m1 ·iw- f.,m~ "' "t'poinhmmt

Service

WV

Specializing ln Poured Concrete
Foundations, Basements, Floors &amp; Walls:

1-866-410- 0555

Oi-OB·W

¥ A K Q8 6

871-2417

Jlonum~nt

For Fast Courteous

North
A A9

"StateWide
CIE l'oured Walls

Phone: l-740-992-9922

BLIC
NOTICES

and
Savings
Company, Pomeroy,

Buy$5.00
BoDanza Get

J 'i172H Sr. Ri:. t43 • Pomer~~ hlJ 45769
just ufT St. R~. 1 \ ' •

-5t-ra_tto_r_d_L-ou-n-ge_r_ca_
m_el- in Tractor parts &amp; ser..'ice, spe- c
color less !han a year old cializmg
in
MaSsey
pp, $450 will lake $250 Ferguson , Ford, and 1983 Ford Ranger $300
(304)~76-2929
Belarus. (740)696-0358
(304)674-4628

The Farmers Bank

Henderson,

5 FR E~;

I~;::::7:40~4~4:6:
· ·0:10=3=~

0

3

Bring this roupon

740-843-5264

· Decks - etc.

t

Bishon Fr1se puppies only
Royalty owned until 1930's
Non-allergic, non-shedding.
Call (740)441-9510.
J k

metal, plans how to build ii;i;;i
;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
book. Flider free delivery. 1
FARM
(937)559-8341.
,
EQuiPMENT
•

4S
1MEFM50UOWA64466

or .

AII p~ck $S.tHl

Box 189 • Middleport

control. co player, Power
) • ~
Windows, Power Locks, r
Power M1rrors, Auto 4 wheel
Ill\ '\'l't )I( I\ Ill)\
drive . Towing Package, Tilt
Wheel. Cruise Control
AIJIUl
Custom Dual Exhaust (Flow
FOR SALE
Master). Tool Box. Fog
Lamps, Oversized Tires
$500!. Honda's. Chevy's $25,500 (304)593-3946
Jeep's , etc Pollee Impounds
Cars from $500. For listings
J
1-800-749-8104 ext 3901

1995
Oldsmobile
98
Regency Elite, loaded, 75K
miles. excellent condi tion.
JET
Call (7~0)441 · 14 75 .
AERATION MOTORS
Registered ADBA Pit Bull - - ' - ' - - ' - - - - - puppies, $1 50 each. Call ·tssa Chrysler Clrrus·V-6,
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In (740)256-1316.
aulo. new brakes, good gas
Stock~ Call Ron Evans, 1· P.:F~~;;...~-.., mileage, NAOA $5,j()Q- Sell
800-537-9528.
FRuns &amp;
tor $4,000. (740)446-2701.
VIT.F.TARU:&lt;;
2002 Cavalier Auto, Air/CO.
NEW AND USED STEEL
pwr. sunroof, exc. cond .
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar Blackberries. $16 gallon or 27,200 miles $7,800 neg.
For
Concrete.. Angle, $4 quart or you pick $12 gal- (304)675-5445
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel ion Friendly Ridge (740)256· :.:..._...:.:___;__:_;__:_;__:_ __
Grating
For
Drams. _1_
14_5_1e_av_e_m_e_ss_a_:ge_._ _ 73 Nova 4 Door Good
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
HOMEGROWN SWEEt
COndition (304)675·6633
· SC!ap Metals Open Monday,
CORN
COOK MOTORS
Tu8sday, Wednesday · &amp;
·
Starting July 1st." Available at
oved to New L.ocatio
4
Friday, 6am- :30ptn. Closed CHARLES w. MCKEAN
cr.oss from Gallia Coun
Thursday,
Saturday &amp; FARM AND WILLIAM ANN
air Grounds!
Sunday. (740)446-7300
MOTEL, . Gallipolis, OH
(740)446-9442
001 Cavalter, $3,895;
1996
Salurn, $2,495; 199
I \R\1 ' I 1'1 '1 II ..,
·Pole Barn 301150~10 only
utlass Cirea, $1,995.
.'\, 11\I..,II H I'
$5,295, Includes painted
hers in stock.

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, ~uty 10,
2004, at 10:00 a.m., a
pubtfc sale wilt be
held at 211 W. Second
SirHt,
Pomeroy,
Ohio. The Farmert
Bank and Savings
Company Is selling
for cash In hand or
certlllad check the
lollowtng collateral:
11199 Pontiac Grand
Am
SE
1G2NE526E6XM7804
•31
1198 Mercury Sable

MYERS PAVING

· Early birds start

6:30
Last Thursday

bed, low miles. rT)any new
parts, new tires/whe~ ls.
$1200 (740)245-Q485.

'Miuy 'E 'Bent.::.

fr'ves tfown lim are

a Free Quote or Appointment
Col/:

Painting- Gutters -

D'oor Prize $950 .00

of

the heavenly choirs
a6ove. ')'aur sweet
refrain to pfay. Our

For

Rooting , Siding - ·

Starburst $1,700.00

In Ltnli"iJ !Mcmonr

fleeierfyou, to jviu

,

SEAL IT
CONSTRUCTION

$ 11 ,000.00

In Memory

sweetfy spak! your
rwme. :Jie must have

Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday ·
Doors Open 4:30

First Pack $ 15.00 ail packs

•

our frearts ·were
6rok!n iii two. (jotf

What would you lose if there was a lire?

74D-949-160674D-591-1053

American Legion Middleport

~.

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 21 71.

• we can insure your valuables! •

- Contractor
Residential &amp;
Commercial '.
Houses. porches,
. Garages, Pole .
Barns, Roofs ,
Renovations ·

BINGO

'llnti{you can

Oru: !f&lt;Ur ago ]&lt;lJfa_l(.

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Page B&amp; • The Daily Se!ltinel .

Thursday, July 8, 2004

www.mydallysentlnel.com

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GALLIPOLIS- The curtain is up.: .the stage is calling
YOU!
The Imagination
Factory returns to' the Ariel
Theatre for the second .year to
present a four day aqing
workshop filled with fun
ac!ivities that will stretch the
imagination. Participants willl·
lea r-n the . basics of acting and
performance as th e instructor

bring these stories to life, such
as; movement, music, puppetry,
acting, and more. The ~Vt'nt
ends with a Thursday eve.ning
·
public performance.
. Register early, as spa·ce is
lnmted. Regtstratton ts open ,
to all students entering third
through twelfth grades. Daily
programming wtll take place
creates many experiences to from 9 am - '3pm, and stugive the students a Jilemo~abl e dents are to bring their own
moment in the-spotlight.
lunches. Registration fee is
,T his year's participants will
explore "Acti ng Wild!" , a $60.00 per participant. Call
unique look at storyte llin g and 446-ARTS (2787) for more
animal legends. . The · actors information.
will create original stories and
July 19-22, 2004 at the Ariel
use various theatrical means to Tl;eatre
.

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ASHLAND, Ky. - Lorrie Morgan
will sing and play at the Paramoul)t
Arts Center at 8 p.m., Saturday, July
10.
.
. One of co untry music's most beautiful women, Lorrie has been performing at th e Grand Ole Opry
s.ince she was .13 years old! She has
had num.ero,us platinum-sellin g
albums and hits such as "What Part of
No," "Five Minutes,, and "I Didn't
Know My Own Strength"- all number one hits. Tickets for this show are
S35, S30, S25, $10.
The next event at the Paramount
will be "Something in the Water - A
Celebration of Kentucky's Musical

Legacy" which is setr to be staged ·
Saturday,July 17.
This musical event is a journey
through the early years of country
music, highlighting the beginning of
"old time" and "bluegrass" styles of
music which started in Kentucky.
Whether sitting on the front porch,
playing the traditional ballads of their
native cquntries or spreading their
sound far and wide over the biggest
radio ·Stations in the country, ·
Kentuckians helped shape and define
this genre of music through the first
half of the twentieth century. They
wrote and sang abou~ what they
knew; bringing a vibrancy and reality

to their songs. This show spotlights a
number of those influential musicians and writers and feature&amp; solne
of the most populi1r songs of that era.
In the style of "Down · Fro;;, the
Mountain" and "0 Brother Where
Art Thou," this live, stage production
with multi-media backdrops b.rinb"
to life the rich legacy that added a
new depth to country music.
Paramount Arts Center may be
contacted by phone at (606) 3243175 or fax (606) 324-1233.
Tickets may be purchased on the
Internet atwww.paramount&lt;trtscen·
ter.com.

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• Pressure on Matta.
SeePage 81

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Easlern High School. He ers will lind many historical
said ' scienL·e finion ha, aspe&gt;:ts intertwined into the
always intrigued him. "Now ·slory I in e.
When asked what were
I have put inlo pnnt my
biggest influences
dream of publishing what I the
dearly love." 1he alllhor com- guiding his way Koehler
replied "Vi ntage Sci-Fi
mented.
He is a scholar of his10ry mo vies such as The Day
having earned hoth bachelor 1he Earth Stood Still' or
and muster degrees in thai 'Forbidden Plane!' and. of'
discipline. He said lhal read- cout'se: 'Star Trek 0."'

can be contact via the
Xlibti' web
site.
Koe hl er
who

now

lives

· in

G r o v e
City. is a

1972 grad uate · of

Koehler

Mother surprised by gift of love from soldier in Iraq
Bv

J. MtLES LAYToN
JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

details of the 1111SSIOn that
.he and ' 14 olher men "volunteered" for, llut he !Old
POMEROY
her not to worry about him.
Thousands of miles away in. So much for a peaceful
a sandy desert in Iraq, U.S. night's sleep.
Army specialist · Justin
"Wilh all the increased
Gilmore,. 2 I, is serving his violence. I wish he didn' t
country as part of the West' have to go," he said. "My
Virginia National Guard fear was concern for his
3664 maintenance battalion. safety."·
Gilmore's unit, which
Earlier this year, Clinton
includes many men and Turner, Jr .. was the first
women . from . Southeas.t castt ahy
from
Meigs
Ohio, was called up late 'Jasi County 10 die in Iraq .
year and has been on the Gilmore said she think s
ground since February out- , about what happened to
.~ide Fallujah where some of Turner and wornes about
the most intense lighting is . her son's life.
taking place.
"It makes you realize that
He has kept in touch with the war is closer to home
loved ones including his lhan you think," she said.
mother, Debi , thmugh eBefore Gi lmore shipped
. mail and instant messaging. out for his mission, he did
Debi Gilmore s.a id she something ordinary that
checks the computer· at became an extraordinary
work or at home several gesture of love. While hard
times a day to see if her son . at work at Weaving Slitches
has sent any messages . in
Pomeroy, · Gi lm ore
Since there is an eight hour -received a long cardboard
time difference between box. Even though the'box's
Ohio and Iraq, she said she address didn'l reveal any
1alks to him during the early clues as to ils origin, she
. hours of I he morning. They sensed that it migh1 be from
talk about the usual stuff her son.
ranging .from the latest gosWhen Gi !more opened
'sip around Pomeroy to 1he box, it revealed a dozen
some of his experiences long stemmed roses. It was
abroad.
not her birthday, anniver,
• " It was late one night sary or anyihing like that.
' around 2 a.m. and I was just There was a small white
about to get to sleep when I card ·in the box . Her fingers
,heard a knocking (the sound trembling. eyes watering
the computer makes when she read the card · which
there is a new message) on said. "Just cause I am in
my computer," Gilmore Iraq doesn't mean I can't
said. "He came on and I said think of ways to surprise
. "
it 's very late, what do you you. L ove,..
ya. ' Just1n.
·
wantT'
As the tears flowed freely,
Gilmore to'!d his sleepy it took a few moments for
mother that he was going to Gilmore to comain herself.
take part in a large convoy
"I didn 't expect this," she
and would be unable to con- said. "He sure did surprise
lac! her for 30 days. She
said he could not reveal the
Ple••e tee Gift. A5

,· I
)(,..,

HUNTINGTON; WVa.
The summer is hot already and
the temperatme is going up in
the Big Sandy Superstore
Arena when the WB 30 and
Miller Lite welcomes the
return of the WWE for the

Boyz, Rob Van Daiil, Torrie
Wilson, Dawn Marie, Charlie
Haas and Rico, and many others are slated to visit the TriState. (Card subject to change
prior to show)
Tickets are on sale now at
first time in more than a year
the Arena Box Office, all
with Red, White, and Bruised.
Ticketmaster locations, and·
WWE stars arc back in the
at
squared circle for one big on-line
'night ' of professional wrestling www.ticketmaster.com.
Ringside seats are $41 with
like no· other.
Eddie
Guerrero,
John premium reserved tickets
"Bradshaw" Layfield, John priced at $31 . Reserved tickets
Cena, Booker T. The Dudley will be $21.

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Ardath Brinker, 91
• Mary Kail North, 53

Lo'ITERIES
Ohio

Lonnie M_,rgan

Pick 3 day: 0-6-1
Pick 4 day: 8·2-5-7
Pick 3 night: 4-2-4·
Pick 4 night: 8-7-5-9
Buckeye 5: 4-7-23-31-34

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XENIA, Ohio - Before the Wright Brothers .
fleW.
Befure Ohio Became a State
The Shawnee Natiqn stood in defiance of the
World,
HERE ... Qn this &amp;acred ground!
The 23rd Season of the outdoor drama "Blue
JacJ&lt;et" has begun and will run through Aug. 29,
2004.
Show&amp; are at 8pm Tuesday - Sunday. Closed
Mondays.
Reb~ the adventure as Shawnee Indians, !iontier settlers and fugitive slave&amp; forge the definition
of American li:eedom. . . here. on this &amp;acred
ground!
·
"L&gt;ck a1 till! rurtlr am.md )'OU. Do )'OU thi11k -it lw
a11ythit1g to say?"
.
~ Death Rider - Aa 1, ScetU! 1A
W.L Mundell's epic play "Blue Jacket" has been
entertaining audiences tiom around the globe
since 1982. Based on the legend of Shawnee War
Chief Blue Jacket; this action-packed show captures the spirit and humanity of Americas rich
ance&amp;rry.
, Share the struggle as Shawnee Chief Black Fish,
Blue Jacket and the escaped sJa..., turned ShaWnee
warrior Caesar defend their homeland fiom daring fiontiers~iW1 like Daniel Boone and Sunon
Kenton. against the backdrop .o f the American
Revolution.
·
"Blue jacket" has been called "more natural."
"more authentic" and "more steadily entertaining" (Collll11~ Dispatch) than any other play of
ils .kind The. show is also a Library of Congress
loc3lleglcy and has.been called the #I Outdoor

1· 1\llt\\ , .Jt ll \ (} , :J UUI

POMEROY Meigs bookmarks. There will also
County · native Rmidy S. be a drawing for u free copy
Koehler, Sr: who recently . ol' his new book.
published the firsl of a fourThose purchasing books
pari science fiction series ahead of time will be personally
titled ''Starshjp Captain. Part autogrdphed by the author. He
I : Rejection" will be at the said the book c;m be purcha-;ed
Meigs County Library in wwwx libris.corrt I bookstore,
. 'www .b ar nesnoble .c om .
Pomeroy Saturday.
OJ'
He will there from I I a.m. www.borders.com,
to I p.m. passing oul free www.umazon.cum. The author

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Middleport •Pomeroy, Ohio

Meigs County ·native publishes novel

·SPORTS

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West Vu-ginia

..:.J

Da!ly 3: Q-8-9
Dally 4: Q-0·5·2
ea-sh 25: 5-6-7-8-13-24

Dtmu in 'America (Hemi'J'heres Magazine).
'Performed at the Ca~r's Ford Park
Amphitheatre, on the very Shawnee homelarid
where these legends once walked, "Blue Jacket"
exudes the spiriruality.of the land and its original
caretakers. As it&gt; current caretaker, First Frontier,
Inc. strives to preserve the natur:!l beauty of this
sacred ground, honoring those who walked
before.
Featuring a haunting score by compo&amp;er
Michael Rasbury's mixtun: of Native American
flutes, rattltis, drums and nature sounds, "Blue
Jacket's" audiences e&gt;q&gt;erience the magic as our
full herd of horses, roaring cannons, tlaming
arrows and professional ca&amp;t nette the ultiinate
theatre under the stm!
Relive the adventure as Shawnee Indians !iontier ~ers &amp; fugiti"" slaves forge the definition of
American fu:edom! '
Set 3fi;Unst the b:ickdrop of the American
Revolution, and perfonned on the Shawnee
horlteland wh&lt;v legends Daniel Boone, Simon
Kenton and Chief Black Fish once walked, "Blue
jacket" has bee9 called "more natural,"
umore authentic" and ..more steadily entertain..:
ing" than any other play of its kind (Collll11bus
Dispatch).
.
Experience the magic as BLUE JACKET's full
herd of horses, roaring cannons, flaming artO"M
andprofessional cast cre&lt;~te the ultimate theatre
underthe stars LIVE.on the three-acre stage!
Tickets are now on &amp;ale! Tickets may be purdu.ed by calling toll fire Idln...-46S..BLUE

WEATHER

Detallo on

Pace AB

SECTIONSCalendars
• 2

Classifieds
Lancelot. played by actor loan Gruffudd, left, Guinevere, played by Keira Knightley and .
Arthur, played by Clive Owen, stand united in facing danger in a scene from Walt
Disney Pictures "King Arthur. • This versiol] of the Arthurian legend dispenses with
many"traditional trappings such as the love triangle among Arthur, Guinevere and ·
Lancelot, Merlin as a sorcerer and other supernatural elements.
The movie is playing at IJ:le Spring valley Cinema. Showtimes are 7 p.m. and 9:30 :
p.m., with matinees at 1 p.m. and 3:30 p .m.
(AP Photo/Jonathan Hession, Walt Disney Pictures)

Comics
Dear Abby

Editorials
· Faitb:Values

Movies
NASCAR
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

.

16 PAGES

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© 2004 ohio v.n.,-Publlohl'n&amp; c.;.

Fresh Summer

Fru_its an~ Bright:

-

Summer Flowers

AVAILABLE-NOW!

Two Convenient Locations:
.1/4 Miie North Pomeroy/Mason
.
Bridge
Mason, WV 25260
Phone (304) 773-5323

Arson suspected in
.Harrisonville house
fires
'

CommissionerS seek to curb. cost of health insurance
and coverage. If nothing is
done , health insurance preJLA\'TON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
mium s
will
increase
POMEROY
With • $102.22 .1 or by 13 .7 perhealth care costs rising, the cenl in lhe next fis.cul year.
" If rates keep going up
Meigs
County '
Commissioners are search- like thi s by five to 20 pering for a way to save cent or more, these small
money by bringing down counties will not be able to
health insurance pren.·iums afford health insurance
for county e'mployees.
' rive to 10 years down the
The commissioners chal- road," said · Jim Sheets,
County
lenged a group of insur- Meigs
ance hrokers Thursday lo Commissioner.
Unless rates decrease,
find an insurance provider
health
insurance costs will
that could bea1 the rates of
the
county's
current make up 24 percent ·of lhe
provider,
Anthem budget next year - an
Insurance , while providing increase of three percent of
the same level of benefiis the county general fund

Bv J.

INDEX •

Deb.i Gi.lmore is barely able to contain herse lf after getting a dozen roses sent from her son
Justin who iS serving in Iraq . The surprise gift came in an unmarked box Wednesday afternoon
while she was working at Weaving Stitches in Pomeroy. (J. Miles Layton)

MILES lAYTON

fronJothis year. Potentially.
Meigs Commissioner Mick
Da ~cnport said thi s co uld
mean another round of
budget culs in the 20042005 budge1 to make up
I he three percent Idifference.
Speaking on behalf of
hi s
employees.
Mike
Swisher. director of Meigs
County Departmenl of
Human Services , said if
lhe county changes insurance providers. he wams a
"seamless" and "slreamlineo • . Trmr. ttion,
so
employees needing pre;criplion drugs or medical
visils won) have to worry.

'

· BY J. MILES lAYTON
JLA\'TON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

1

--------HARRISONVILLE
Arson is suspected in two
house fire&gt; which occupied
four" area fire departments
for nearly four hours
Wednesday even'ing.
Firefighters from Pomeroy,
Rutland. Columbia Township.
and Scipio Township res!X'nded to tl)e tires which staned at
upproximalely I0 p.m. and
were extingui&lt;,ned around~
a.m. Thtu~day morning. John
Chapman. lire chief al the
Scipio Township Volumeer

Fire . Depal1!11ent, said at least
I 0 fire truck&amp; split up to fight
· the f~res on Cotterill Road and
Township Road
I 0040.
Chapman said both houses,
which o,yere unoccupied and
had their utilities disconricted, had fwniture and clothing
·among other· items stored
inside. No one was bun.
Chapm~n said witnesses
a1 one of the crime scenes
spotted some boys running
away. No suspects are in
custody and the state -fire
marshal's office has been

Ple•n ... Anon, A5

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