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                  <text>J&gt;age to • 1he Daily Sentinel

'

Monday, August 25.2003

www.mydailysentinel..c om

Bengals have a long way to Wallace hoping for healthy se~son
go before beating the best
CINCINNATI (AP)
Steve McNair found all the
Cincinnati Bengals'llaws.
A defense that showed substantial improvement in the
firs t two exhibition games was
no 1.1atch for one ofthe NFL's
top passers. McNair did what.- ver he wanted during the
Tennessee Titans' 23-15 victory Saturday night, giving the
Bengals ( 1-2) a better idea of
where they stand.
The NFL's worst team since
1991 has made progress. but
not nearly enough.
··we got into situations that
we could have handled bettcr." linebacker Kevin Hardy
&gt;aicl. "Toward halftime. we
got a little disorganized. We
JUSt made a ton of mistakes
throughout the game."
The retooled defense had
heen the bright spot in the
Bengals' t1rst two exhibitions.
First-year coach Marvin
Lewis strengthened the line
'hrough free agency ~nd
&lt;:mphastzed a_ more aggressrve
1pproach agamst the pass.
The Bengals were eager to
' ee. how they stacked up
•• gamst the Titans (3-0), who
have looked· good on offense
Ill everx game~ They got thetr
answer m the hrst half ,
McNrur completed 13 ol 17
passes for 167 yards and .a
touchdown. Four of hts
throws went for 20 or more
yards. He was 7-of-8 for 81
yards on a touchdown dnve
JUSt before halftime. He never
was sacked and hardly was
touched.

to blame. The offense and specia! teams also had vint;lge
Bungles moments.
Tight end Tony Stewart let
Jon Kitna's perfectly thrown
pass bounce off his hands at
the Titans' 5-yard line on the
game's first possession. The
ball deflected to cornerback
Andre Dyson for the first of
his two interceptions. He also
"We got beat man-to-man picked off Carson Palmer in
tonight, and we've got to play the third quarter.
.
better," Lewis said. "It's not
Neil Rackers missed a 49just the secondary. The guys yard field goal wide left, and
on the bacl\ end are just part of T.J . Houshmandzadeh . fumit. They're not the whole bled a punt inside Cincinnati's
thing."
20-yard line to set up a Titans
The Titans rolled up 195 field goaL
yards in the. first half against
The backups also failed to
the
Bengals'
first-team get into the end zone on two
defense, using their spread consecutive running plays
formations to stretch the sec- from Tennessee's l-yard line
ondary and open holes.
in the second half.
"We g11 ve up some big plays
''Tonight was a classic ·
in the passing game that we example of what we can't do
·
shou ld not have gtven
up. " - get out of our own way."
defensive
tackle
John said Kitna, who was 12-of-17
Thornton said. " It doesn't for 114 yards. "We can't do
count. but it still matters. By that any more."
·
·the beginning of the week. no
They've done it for the past
one is going to care about this. 12 years, marking them as the
but we have to make sure we NFL's worst team in that time.
have it right for the regular Lewis has them playing a little
seuson."
beuer. but they still can't seem
Lewis knows what will hap- to get over the bumbles and
pen if his team plays the same stumbles that always seem to
way in the season opener hold them back.
against Denver.
"It is disappointing, but at
"There were a lot of posi- the same time, you can'tlet it
tives for what we did, but it's . get you do:.vn," Hardy said.
not close to where we've got "This is still new stuff, and it's
to be 10 beat the Broncos, and still the preseason . We have
we realize that," Lewis said.
one game left, and you do
-The defense wasn't entirely yourself an injustice if you get
down·on yourself. "

HUNTINGTON , W.Va.
(AP) - Butchie Wallace
walked slowly to the Marshall
locker room from practice, his
left ankle wrapped in ice.
The scene has been repeated many times over the past
few seasons. The only differ'
ence has be4;n the ice's location.
Wallace enters his senior
year in great shape but with
lingering questions about
whether he can stay healthy
for a full season.
Two years ago Wallace ran
for 796 yards and nine touchdowns on a bad ankle imd
hamstring. ·
In 2002 he could barely
remain healthy for a week at a
time.
"Last year I had just pure
bad luck," Wallace said. "It
was like, OK, I sprained my
ankle. Then the next game I
got a concussion. OK, now
I've got to sit out. Then the
next game, I pulled a quad
muscle. Then the next game,
my back locks up.
"So it's like somebody put a

spell on me or something. I
was like, '.why me?' I bust my
taiJ in the weight room every
year, and I keep getting hurt.
''That's behind me now. I'm
not expecting to be hurt at all
this year."
·
At least, not enough to miss
any games.
Two weeks into training
camp. he already had a slight
concussion and a teammate
fell on his ankle during a play.
He was held out of one scrimmage as a precaution.
"It's the nature of the position," said Marshall running
backs coach Ernie Pumsley.
"You :re going to take some
hit~. You' re going to pick up
the blitz. Everyone's going to
try to get to you."
Wallace doesn't need anyone to get to him - his
injuries have already done
that, and he thinks about what
progress he might have made
without them.
Wallace had a pair of I00yard performances last season
but was limited to less than I0
carries in seven games.

First Quarter
. BU - Casey Valentine 80 kick return

Union

· (Jon Pippin kick) , 11:47 .

BU -

Ethan Strope 2 run (run failed) ,

5:50.
BU - John England 32 run (Jon Pippin

from Page 6

k ick), 4:43.

BU - Nick Watson 10 run (Jon Pippin

can get it done in practice."
The Vikings will be coming in off a 21-14 win over
Huntington Ross.
48

Southern

0

0

0 0

-

Second Quarter
BU -John England 23 run (Jon Pippin
k ick) , 8:49.
BU ___: Jon George 4 run (Jon Pippin
kick) , 5: t9.

BU -

SCOring summary

Total yards
Comp-aH-int

313
1·2·0

Futnbles-lost

2-1

Penalties-yards 4-45

·, I ) \

I ' I """' • \

I I

I -~ ;

'l '

• Sampras retires. See

PageB1

so

BU
Firs1 Downs
Rustles-yards
Passing yards

POMEROY Was . Ozzy
Osbourne lost in downtown
Pomeroy yesterday afternoon?
· There was a man dressed in
black stumbling around, talking
incoherently and waving at
motorists on Main Street in front
of Whitley's liquor store. The
slouch was familiar to anyone
who has seen Osbourne on MTV.
The long black hair, colored sunglasses and costume jewelry fit
the prot1le of the man who has
bitten the head off a bat and sang
to the Queen ·of England.
It · was not Ozzy . but Pat
Morgan, a native of Athens.
Morgan was doing a favor for the
owners of Whitley's Liquor Store
by waving at motorists and calling attention to the sign announcing the grand opening Monday at

so-

Passing: BU-Nick Watson 1·2·0 15
50-Phil Pierce 0-1·1 o.
Receiving: BU-John England 1·15.

44-298

34-44
0

~one .

15

WHILE
SUPPLIES
LAST

NO
RAIN
CHECKS

• Community calendar.
SeePageA3
• Time out for Tips. See
Page 'A3
• Liquor agency moves.
See Page A&amp;

WEATIIER
Iunny. HI: 80, Low: 601

c

United

TRIPlE

Bananas

]O/o, 1Ofo, Skim
Borden lO/o Milk

·COUPON

]9Cib

S18!L.

Good For

5COU
so~

UPTD

LoTIERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 4-1-o
Pick 4 day: 8-4-8-o

Pick 3 night: 9-9-2
Pick 4 night: 7-1-6-7
Buckeye 5: 2-12-21-23-32

Each

West Vll'ginia

Dally 3: 8-7-5
Dally 4: 5-9-2-6
c.ah 25: 1-5-7-11-13-21

Not Good On Advertised Items
Coupons tripled once daily.
See Store For Details

Chef Boyardee's
2 cheese Pizzas Kit

l/$4

please w/

add. purch.

Mt• Dew

ll SECilONS -

Products

Limit l

2/Sl 0

please w/

add. nu11r~

J

Showboat

Pork It Beans
Limit l

Business
Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
.Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Sports
Weather

pleasew/

.add. purch.

l

.: t I

~rII

I

;

its new location at 221 Mill Street
in Middleport.
"I'm doing this just so they
look at the sign and know
Whitley's moved." he said. "No
matter how old or how young
people are, if you wave at them
they will wave back."
Morgan, 38, is a stand-up
comedian and actor who lives in
Los Angele,s . He said he will be
home for a couple of weeks
before returning to California .
Morgan said another reason he
chos.e to dress as Ozzy is because
that was his Halloween costume
last year. As Ozzy he knew he
would be. recognized instantly.
"Of course everybody recognizes me," he said. "Anybody who
watches MTV knows who I am."
Morgan loved the attention.
"I'm having a blast," he said.
"This is so much fun. Thi s is how
acting should be."

.

-·

.

Employees
to share
insurance cost
J. RE~D
breed@ mydailysentinel .com

Bv BRIAN

Is that rock icon Ow; Osbourne stumbling around
downtown Pomeroy? No. It is Pat Morgan who
dressed as Osbourne to call attention to the
grand opening Monday of Whitley's Liquor Store
in Middleport (J. Miles Layton)

POMEROY - A solid
exercise regimen can be better than an apple a day for
. keeping the doctor away
from senior citizens at the
Meigs County Senior Center.
Joy Bentley, wcllness coordinator, said the exercise program at the Senior Center is
three years old and still growing. In the beginning, it was
just a few people using a couple of exercise machines.
There are now 146 people
registered and there is more
equipment which includes
three exerci se bikes. two
rowing machines. four tread, mills and two weight
machines. ln February, the
exercise room grew larger
making easier for people to
use the new treadmills and
new rowing machine.
Doris Buchanan, 63. exercises three times a week and
has lost 12.5 pounds.
"I exercise so l will feel
better," she said.
Three times a week.
Joy Bentley, wellness coordinator, watches Juanita Roush,
Buchanan
rows two miles on
77, walk on the treadmill in the exercise room at the Meigs
the
rowing
machine, three
County Senior Center. Roush suffsred a heart attack a couple of years ago and started out doing a simple light exer- miles on the bike and three
cise program on the treadmill. Since then , Roush has more miles on the treadmill
tripled the distance and the amount of time she spends on
Please see Exercise, AS
the treadmill each day. (J. Miles Layton)

J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysentinel .com
12 PAGFS

A6

A3
82-4

Bs
A3
A4
As
Bt-2,6
A2

© aooa Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

ROCKSPRINGS - For
every acre of wetland the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation removes to
build highways and byways,
it must recreate this same
wetland somewhere else.
ODOT is replacing 2.5
acres of wetland as part of
the 46-acre wetland project
in the Rocksprings area.
Kenny Buckley, project
supervisor, estimates the
project will cost in excess of
$1 million.
Wetlands are important
ecosystems that cleanse land
of chemicals and debris. If

3/Sl

.

r ....

MIDDLEPORT - The
employees of the Village of
Middleport will have a
choice of health insurance
plans. but for the first time,
will be required to pay for
family coverage.
,
Responding to a 28-percent
increase in premiums, village
council
voted
Monday
evening to offer employees
two options for insurance
through Anthem/Blue Cross
&amp; Blue Shield, with varying
increases in co-payments and

Please see Cost. AS

Howard Mullins, 80, is working out on the treadmill at the
Meigs County Senior.Center. He said he is doing it to keep in
shape, and to help with his arthritis .

Wetlands essential to ecosy$tem in Meigs County

INDEX

PEPSI

f I

BY J. MtLES LAYTON
jlayton@ mydaliysentinst.com

BY

Lindt l

\

A workout a day could keep the doctor away

INSIDE

Kahn's One Pound

Sliced Bologna

I I I ..... I ) \ 'i

I

J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysenlinel.com

Individual Statistics
Rushing : BU-John England 5·75, Ethan
Strope 9-71, Nick 'lja\son 4·39, Andrew
Curtis 1·37, Torry 011ve 9·34, Jon
GBorge 4-27, Andrew Fenci 6·12, Chad
Hedges 6·3.
Jake Nease 16·32, Weston Counts
6-27, Dustin.Keyes 6-26. Kyle McKeever
1-0, Phil Pierce 5-(·41).

4

~'

BY

.

44
O+ 1
4·2
2-10

11

-·

Ozzy Osbourne comes ~o Pomeroy

SPORTS

Jon George 9 .run (Jon Pippin

kick), 1:13.

Berne Union 48, Southern 0
Berne Union 27 21 0 0 0

k ick) , 1:31.

His recent ankle injury may
not be a sign of things to
come. Wallace bounced back
in another scrimmage two
days later to rush for 73 yards ,
and three touchdowns.
"I'm being cautious with
what I'm doing. I'm going
through practice doing what I
can do. Then again. I'm still
trying to be careful," he said.
"All the coaches want me to
be out there and I want to be
out there, but if I keep tweaking it without being 100 percent, I won't be ready for the
game."
. ·
Pumsley is seeing to it that
Wallace is on the field for the
season opener next Satunlay
at home against Division 1AA Hofstra.
And if good health follows.
his coaches are hoping for the
first 1,000-yard season from a
Marshall back since Doug
Chapman in 1998.
·
"He's worked harder than .
anyone I know,'' Purnsley
said. "Everything's real positive. He's running the ball real
well ."

Browns defense
gets testy, Bt

Reds fall
to Brewers, Bt

the land was compared to a
person's body, then wetlands
would be considered the kidneys. For every acre of wetland destroyed by ODOT. it
must · recreate an acre and
quarter more.
·
Buckley said the 2.5 acre
area where numerous dikes ,
trees and wildlife are being
recreated used to be the site
of an old dump. Trash, old
appliances, cat parts littered
the area. Abandoned mines
decorate some of the hills.
Buckley said a · sawmill
used to dump sawdust and
other things in the area
where the wetland is being
built. While he was touring
the site, he spotted a rusty

broken circu Jar saw blade.
Buckley said the project is
at least 40 percent complete
and will be ljn i s~d by June
next year. At least seven
workers remove debri s.
build dikes or plant trees and
shrubs each week. More
than 80.000 cubic yards of
dirt will be displaced during
this project.
Seven dikes made out of
limestone are being built to
cleanse water as it passes
through. Among other substances cotnmon to a wetland. limestone cleanses the
chemicals and other substances that may be mixed in

Please see wedands, AS

The Ohio Department of Trans portation will move more than
80,000 cubiC yards of dirt to create a wetland in the

Rocksprings area. (J. Miles Layton)

"Grateful Life Tour"

Drive
sponsored by the HMC laboratory Deportment

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

Weclne•clay, Augu•t 27

I

(

1 0 AM • 4 PM

HMC Eclucatlon &amp; Conference Center
FREE !·shirt given to all donors!
To register, please call ( 7 4o t 446· 51 71

Prices Go5d July 22 &amp; July 23 Only.

'

•

.,

"

MEDICAL . CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer .org

�OHIO

The Daily Sentinel
VVedneaday,Aug.27

flilnliieiii [ii;i82:J •

··· ··· ···· · ·· · -···!··········· - ,

• [. ~.~~-~-~-~-~-~ . ?.~.~.~-~. ..:

..,
. . •.
{

KY.

Inc.
l':i&gt;&lt;&lt;h
~ ~....,

Sum~

PI..CIOudy

Cloudy

•\
Showers

.. ,.. .

,..'&lt;

T-storms

. W
.VA.

Flurries .

Aaln

..
'
Ice

Snow

Sunny; very warrn today•
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Low s in the upper 60s
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Thursday. ;.Partly cloudy
with a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs
in the upper 80s. Chance of
rain 20 percent.
. Thursday night ... A slight
chance of showers and thunderstorms
in
the
evening ...Otherwise partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper 60s
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Friday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms during the night
Highs in the upper 80s.

Today... Mostly sunny and
very warm. Highs . near 90.
Southwest winds 5 to I0 mph.
Tonight ... Mostly
clear
early...Then becoming partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
70s. Southwest winds around
10 mph.
Wednesday... Partly clot.-iy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the
upper 80s. West winds 5 to 15
mph. Chance ofrain 30 percent.
Wednesday night...Partly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
Aug. 25, 2003

10,000

Dow Jones

Industrials

1--- a.ooo

9,317.64

::;,=··

-0.33

7 000
'

MAY

JUN

High
9,350.77

Low

AUG
Rocord high: 11,722.98

9.28.94

Jan. 14, 2000

JUL

Aug. 25. 2003

1,800

· JUL

1,764.31

'=·=··

-

-0.06

t----'"-

1,400

AUG

1,ZOO

hleh: 5,048.62

Morch10, 2000

Aug.25,2003

Standard a

Poor'a.soo

AUG .

110

Low

::;,:,.. +0.07

987.91

Local .Stocks
ACI-21 .34

Gannett- 7793

AD Shell- 44.88

AEP-28.40
Alao-31.52
AsHand lrl:. - 32.66
BST - 35.35
Bl.l - 17.66
Bob Evans - 26.66
BorgWamer - 69.49
City Holding- 32.60

Geneoal Etectn: - 29.85
GKNLY - 425
Har1!ry Davidson - 49.21

Rod&lt;v.ell-26.06

~-3.77

Charming SMps- 5.67

Col-26.81 .
OUPI:&gt;nt - 44.32
00-20.07

Fedeoal Mogul- .19

Kmart - 28.50
Kroger - 18.95
ltd. - 16.25
NSC - 18.28
Oak H~ Financial - 28.76
BankOM-39.28

CNB-23.22
Peoples - 28.22
. Pepsico - 43.71
Premier-9

Seals- 42.77
SBC - 22.88
AT&amp;T - 21.59

USB - 23.64
Werdoj's - 28.92
Wai-Mart - 59.10
Worthington- 14.96
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. cbsing quotes of

has creaied what it calls an because of tougher laws.
CLEVELAND (AP)
Joe Waldron, executive
Ohio ranks seventh in the "iron pipeline" of guns from
Citizens
director
of
country and No. l in the Ohio to other states.
for
the
Right to
Committee
"There seems to be no
Midwest in exporting guns
to other states that end up in enforcement strategy in Ohio Keep and Bear Arms, said
the hands ' of criminals, and in many states to investi- only a small percentage of
according to a report by llate and crack down on the felons acquire their weapons
tllegal market in guns," said at gun shows.
Americans for Gun Safety.
He said most illegal guns
Jim
Kessler, the group's poliOhio was the origin of
are obtained by qualified
I,697 guns recovered in cy and research director.
crimes committed in other
Kessler cited the so-called. buyers who give them to their
states, according to the "gun snow loophole," which friends or relatives who are
report, which is based on allows private gun sales to occur not permitted to buy guns .
Waldron blamed gun vio· data for 200 I from the without background checks.
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
He said guns bought at lence on America's culture. He
Firearms and Explosives.
gun shows for $150 in Ohio said making Ohio laws more
Americans for Gun Safety ·will sell for $600 on the restrictive is not the answer.
Federal prosecutors · irl
says a combination of weak streets in Detroit, where it's
gun laws and lax prosecution difficult to obtain a gun Ohio filed only 10 gun traf-

Former school treas·urer gets four years in prison
CANTON (AP) - A former North Canton school
treasurer who stole up to
$168,000 in district funds
was sentenced to four years
in prison.
·
Diane Flad, 56, pleaded
guilty in July to a felony
theft in office charge for
embezzling school district
funds between January 1998
and March 2003.
Flad gave no explanation
Monday when Stark County

COLUMBUS (AP)
Utility companies were
expected Tuesday to tell
state regulators why they
marked certain documents
confidential and to justify
prohibiting their release.
The documents are among
several required to be filed
with the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio. The
PUCO has received several
requests from news orgamzations for documents relatin~ to the blackout earlier
thts month.
·
'
The documents were tiled
before the Aug. 14 blackout
that darkened homes and
businesses tn eight states
and parts of Canada. The
blackout affected 50 million
people, shut down more
than 100 power plants and
knocked Cleveland's water
supply off line.
U.S. and Canadian inves
ti~ators are focusing on
fatlures of a power plant
and lines owned by
FirstEnergy Corp. in Ohio
including one transmission
line that sagged into a tree.
Acting on behalf of the
PUCO, the Ohio attorney
general's office informed five
utilities on Friday that they
needed to defend their con
tention that the documents
should not be made public.
The
utilities · are
FirstEnergy of Akron
American Electric Power
Co. of Columbus; Dayton
Power and Light; Cinergy
Corp. of Cincinnati; and
Penn sylvani a-based
Allegheny Power. ·
"At this point, it is no

r

News
Editor: Charlene Hoemch , Ext 12
;Aaflo&lt;t*': Brian Reed, Ext 14
·Aaflo&lt;t*': J. Miles Layton, Ext 13

Advertising
.OUIMde lllofel: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
Cl..aJCirc.: Judy Clarl&lt;, Ext 10

Circulation
Dtatrtct Mgr.: TBA, Ext 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich , Ext 12

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what money means to us and
how it should be spent or
saved. As most people know,
money 1s one of the most
~ommon ~a u ses of arguments
10 a marna~e.. Each family
has only a hmtted amount of ·
cash but usually an unlimited
number of wants and needs.
What can you do to prevent
money battles from becoming
an all-out war in your household? Here are some ideas.
Communicate regularly
about money. Choose a time
and place when!eople aren't
hungry or tire and where
·there will be few distractions.
Some families like to meet
just before pay day or when
bills are due. Include the
children when it is appropriate . Let everyone have their
turn voicing their desires
without interruption, condemnation or ridicule. If all
family members are involved
in the financial discussions,
they have a better understanding of the situation and
are more likely to. abide by
the decision.
Communicate in a positive
way. Avoid "You-messages"
that use words and tones that
verbally attack another in a

possible solutions .to the
money problems as they can.
After . brainstorming ideas,
weigh the pros and cons of
each alternative thoroughly
before deciding which option
Becky
would
be the best for everyBaer
one involved. You may discover a compromise would
be the most beneficial solution. Write down the alternacommanding,
threate ning, tive you choose. Think of all
preaching, criticizing, or sham- the conceivable problems and
ing manner. Rather, use ")- conditions that may need to
messages" that explain why
and how their spending behav- be addressed in order for that
ior affects others. For instance. option to be successful.
Provide each family meminstead of saying to your cospender, "Why don't you ever ber with a certain amount of
write down the amounts of money that they can spend
checks in the checkbook?," try, however they wish. This free"I get frustrated when checks dom will allow for routine peraren't recorded in the check- sonal expenditures; thus prebook because· I'm afraid one venting unnecessary squabwill bounce."
Sometimes people argue bles about trivial purchases.
If these recommendations
over money when other
are
implemented, couples
issues are actually at stake.
Encourage everyone to say and families can minimize
what is on hi s or her mind to di sagreements about cash.
see if you can discover the All parties should be willing
real problem . Keep accurate to put forth time and effort
financial records document- and be ready to communicate
ed. instead of guessing at effectively to help resolve
amounts and expenses. Don 'I
bring up old quarrels or resort family financial problems
(Becky Baer is the Meigs
to name-calling; people
quickly tune others out when County Extensimz Agent, Family
and Consumer Sciences/
these tactics are used.
Have everyone list as many Community Development)

Land transfers
Posts transfers

Walker,
Mike

Amand;~

Dawu Dc:o.lt'r, d!!cd, Orange

Floc~:o1n , Hc s~ ic

M Flnccari, to Sandra

Floc~:ari. deed. Villngc of Middlcpon.
POMEROY - Meigs Qluncy Rt.-cordi!r Judy l ean Coll ins Mann. Ucl:ca~~d. Jc;m Culrrfaii
King rtpt"l!tl-'1.1 lhc following tr,msfer-.: in reul estate
Ebcrsbac h Mann. hJ Mann F1tmi ly Tm ~ l . lW·
Robcn B. W&lt;Jmcr. MiL·hdle L. Warner. to Puul ti fi catc uftmn~fcr. PomcroyfLctart/Suthm.
Phil lips. Diana Phill ip~. uflldavil .
Helen Glot.&gt;ckncr, tkc~~.•Om l;lcien GlocckllCr.
Thoams P. A~Ji ~. Jud i1 h N. A\·is. to Columbus dcceasetl, toAifn:d Glo.xkucr. ifiJavil. Bcdftnl.
Southern Power, c a.~c mc nl , Orange.
Alfred Gkcckucr, dcccmolln l~uth E GlnL"Cknu.
Ronald K. Ferguson to Columbus Southern cenifkate of tr.lffirer. Orange and 8~..-dford.
Power. casement, Orange.
Ruth E. G)Ol."("kncr lu Jay Jolm Cunw;1y, Linda
Robert J. Fortnc)', Nom1a J. Fnrtney. to Steven ConwaY. deed, Ornngc tmd Bedford.
E. Hea ter, l isa F. Heater. deed. Olive.
,
John Earl Werry. dc\.-ca~ ctl . to Margaret Jcun
Pau line Ludlle Hyse ll tu Pauline Luc ill e Werry, affida\'it.
Hysell, Homer Hysell, affidavit.
Clarence E. Fraley, Jacqueline F Fra]c y. to
Pauline Lucille Hysell , Homer Hys(ll. to Aaron Escue, Hayley E ~c uc. dee d. Bcford.
Roben Ramsburg, Christy Ramsburg, deed, Clare nce E. Fraley, Jacqueline F. Fraley, w
Bedford.
•
Aaron Escue, Hayley Escue, dee d, Bcfl1rd.
Rhonda G. McGrath. Rhonda G. Phillips. to Clarence E. Frale)', Jacq u ~ lin e F Fraley. to
Jeny H11ymun. deed. Lebanon.
Aaron Escue . Hayley E~ue. deed. Bcford.
01Qtny Brown, Cordelia Brown, to Henry A. Clarence E. Fraley, Jacqudine F. Fraley, to
Salse r, deed, Su tton .
Aaron Escue . Hayley E~cur , deed, Hcford. ·
John William Blaettnar. deceased, to Eleanor Clarence E. Fraley, Jacqueline F. Frnley. to
Blaeunar, aflldavit, Village of Pomeroy.
· Aaron Escue , Hayley E~cue, deed, BcfonJ.
Raymond C. Foutty to William N. Snowden, Clarence E. Fraley, Jacqueline F. Fral ey, to
Rebecca H. Snowden, deed, Rutland.
Auron Escue. Hayley Escue, deed, Bcford.
Henry J. Hom to Henry J. Hom, Christi Horn, Brian Johnson, Brenda Johnso n, to Larry
deed, Rutland.
·
B'utchcr, deed, Village of Pomeroy.
Alha D. Vrn; l, deceased. to Roscoe Mill.~. affi- lewis E. Kemredy. deccJ.~t:d. 'to Alice
davit. release of life esH1te.
Kennedy. cenilicate of transfer, Rutland.
Roscoe Mills, Sandra J. Mills. to Ke,•in Fields, Lewis E. Kennedy, deceased, to Alice R.
Betsy Fiel ds, deed, Suuon.
Kennerly, certilicate of tnmsfcr, Rutland.
Pamela J. Jenkins. James H. Jenkins. to Cry.~t al Federnl Na tional Mor tgage to Washtenaw
A. Cox, deed.
Mortgage Co., deed.
Edward N. Humphre)', Clara Humphrey, to Emma Jane Robinwn, deceased, to Howard C.
hnet Boyc(, deed, anidavit.
Robinson, allidavit.
Gary L. Nelson. Diana J. Nelson, to Gary L. Judith F Reiber. Terry L. Reiber.Judilh F. Eid1inger,
Epple, June E. Epple, deed .
to Judith F. Rt:iber, Terry L. Reiber,~. Orun!!\e.
Secretary of Housing and Urban Development John R. Hill , Hobbi J. Hill , to Home Nationnl
to George L. Wright. Nelle L. Wright, deed. Bank. sheriff's deed. Village of Rt~cine .
Rutland.
, Janet Rose Rummel, Jan\!1 Ruse Lcfll c. tu
Palm Harbor Homes, Inc., to Jeromy Adam •larry l ee Lerne. deed, Sutton .

Harry Lt:l' Ldllc Ill Janel Le llle, Jccd , Sutton.
Shcrm om lluski rk. 11'. to Mich&lt;1cl l:Juskirk ,
N11ncy S. Broderic k. deed. Vi ll&lt;~g c of
Middlcpunll.
Flort' nl'l' Baker, deCCi iSCd. hl John T. Baker.
nnidll\'1\.

Washtenaw Mortgage Co. to Jarn c .~ E
Winwovc. dcr:d. Orange
Linda Hcq; lc. Shirley Beegle Huston . ~itli
Beegle Fisher. Thct-...k'm: Meier Beegle, Linda
Crow Bccgk, tu Doug Hus\lm , Tiren:sa
l-lu ~t o n . &lt;tc.::d. V1 ll &lt;tgc ol Pon ~ roy.
Gayle L. C h a st cc r~ Gayle L. Ha5kins. Dwight
W. Ha ~ kin s . to Dwight W. H:tskins, Gay le L
H askin~. Jeo:d. Salisllury.
Rosie L. Nid&lt;1y to Brian Bai ley, U:Jri Bailey.
deed. Olive.
Federal National Mortg&lt;~ge . Washington
Mutual , Homes ide Lend ing. Inc., to
WtlShingtun MU!ual , deed, Village of Pomeroy.
Wa.\hington Mutualtu Vktur Young Ill , dee d,
Village of Pomeroy.
Douglas K. Campbell, Cheri L. ,Camphell. to
Jason Kearn s, Melissa Kearns, deed,
Col umbi a.
Am y Spent: cr to Terry Spencer, deed.
Columbia.
Nellie Haggy to W;~hcr J. Haggy, deed. Rutland.
Nell ie Haggy to Walter J. Haggy. deed. Rutland.
John F. Fultz, Marilyn K. Fultz, to James R.
Acree .. Jr.. Kristin C. Acree, deed, Village of
Middleport .

Joseph Masters. Barbara Ma s te r~. to Nazarene
Church of Ce nt ml Ohio, Di strict Advisory
Bo&lt;Ud, deed, Oli\'e.
Gerald Ra ymond Klecbcrgcr ta Brandon
Kleeberger, Jeremiah M. Knies, cenificate of
transfer. Oli ve.
Gau l Revncahlc Li ving Trust to Jacob M. Gaul,
Mildred L. Guul . deed, Orange.
Jn~cp h . Ma s te rs to Nu:tarene Church of Centrill
Ohio, Distri(t Advisory Board, (.](ed . Olive

·Community calendar
Wednesday, Aug. 27
TUPPERS PLAINS
Township meeting 7 p.m. at
the Tuppers Plains Fire
Department to discuss
prsparing and serving food
for Morgan Raiders reenactors, Sept. 5, 6 and 7.
Thursday, Aug. 28
SYRACUSE
Meigs
County Board of Mental
Retardation
and
Developmental Disabilities, 4
p.m. Carleton School in
Syracuse.
Saturday, Aug. 30
PORTLAND - Lebanon
Township Trustees, Saturday,
Aug. 30, a.m. at the township
building.

Clubs and
Organizations
Tuesday, Aug. 26
RACINE - RACO meeting
6:30p.m. at the Legion hall in
Racine. Guests will be fairgate workers. Potluck dinner
will be served. New members
welcome .

Thursday, Aug. 28
POMEROY -Caring and
Sharing meeting of the Meigs
County Council on Aging, 1
p.m Thursday at the Senior
Citizens Center. Melissa
Gandee of the Alzheimers
Association will be guest
speaker.
TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW 9053, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the hall in
Tuppers Plains.
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Garden Club, 6:30 p.m. at
the home of Chris Chapman.

DEAR ABBY: I read with
interest your suggestions to
"Young Lady Who Needs to
Knkow in Memphis," who
as ed what important questions should be asked before
marriage to ensure a happy
union. You listed such subjects as monogamy, emotional
and financial independence,
child-rearing and disciplii1e,
compatible career goals, sex,
religion and poll.tt.cs · •
I agree with those recommendations. but 1 think
someone should ask: Have
you had previous sexual
experience?
lf the answer is no, this is
importan·t information. If the
answer is yes, further discus·
d'
s1on regar mg safe sex, 1-!IV
testing, birth control , elc..
should ensue, which may
also prompt another important question: "Have YOU?"
-- M.D. IN HILLSBOROUGH, CALIF.
DEAR DOCTOR: If the
couple does not already
know that information. 1
agree, that is another importaut question. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: As a pastor
who regularly provides premarital counseling to couples
who are considering marriage, I would like to say that
the "questions" you ask each
other are not so important.
It's how you LISTEN to each
other and the ways in which
you communicate your opinions, philosophies and feel ings for each other that are
most important.
Most often it 's not the subject that causes disagreements in marriages. although
the issues are always blamed
as the cause for the disagreements. Rather, it is the lack of
ability to openly and honestly

Dear

Abby

communicate
about a variety
f
o subjects. and the inability
or unwillingness to really listen and hear each other that
causes marital discord.
May God continue to bless
your mini stry, Abby. -- REV.
ANN T FEW, NEW HOLLAND, PA.
DEAR ANN: Thank you
for your kind words.
Readers, listen up' There is
much wisdom in the reverend \ letter.
DEAR ABBY: Having
been through one divorce
and, fortunately, a much happier second marriage, l
would like to share some
thoughts on another topic
that should be addressed
before marriage.
h is: How does he or she
and his or her family spend
each and every holiday and
birthday? This is something
that will affect you for the
rest of your life.-- HAPPILY
REMARRIED IN OREGON
DEAR
REMARRIED:
That's another good one.
DEAR ABBY: You omitted
some important questions from
your list. May I add a few?
Have you or anyo ne in
your family suffered from
mental illness'' Borderline
personality
disorder''
Addictions? Trouble with the
1aw .,. And most ·unportant -do you get along with his or

her mother? ·- BEEN
THERE, DONE THAT IN
SAN DIEGO
DEAR B.1'., D.T IN S.D.
I agree . Asking about skeletons in. 1he closet would be.
wise. At that point. both parties should be prepared tn
"shake the fami ly tree."
DEAR ABBY: 1 have been
a family mediator for more
than 20 years. The one topic
l would rank near the top o(
h
.
t e list of questions that:·
should be di scussed is finan cial compatibility.
Di sagreemems over tinancia! matters rank as one of
. the most frequen t causes oi
divorce. If more couples had:
a mutual understandin ~ uf:
how lhey plan to earn. save
and spend money, it would
go a long way in reducing
the
divorce
rate .
SHIRLEY P SEYMOUR.
E,SQ. , POTOMAC. MD.
DEAR SHIRLEY: Right :
Mutual goals go a long way·
tow ard keeping a couple
together.
c

(Dear Ahhr is ol'rillen 1J 1Abigail Van Burm. al.w
k·nou·n as Jewme PI11.,,. cuu f
1ms founded by her 11111the1:
Pauline Phillips. Write Dew•
Ahbv at ov&gt;v&gt;&lt;:DewAbhv. CtJ/11
o r PO. Box 6'J440, Los
A11geles, CA 9()()69.
.
What teens need to k11o11·
about sex. drugs. AIDS. wut
getti11g along with peers illld·
paren ts is i11 "What Every .
Teen Shmlid Know" To '
orde1; send a hus in ess·si~e.
sel_(addressed mrelo11e. rlus
clteck or mrm e_1 rmlerji'r $5
(US .fimds rmlrJ w: Dear
A/Jhl', Teen Booklt' t, PO. Box
447, Mount Mo!'l'is, /L
61054-0447. (Postage is
inc/ruled.)

'I''·

Local folks
and Dottie Bond The infant
weighed 5
presented readings.
A marble game was played pounds, 15
and will continue at the next ounces.
GrandCOOLVILLE -Pe nny meeting. The meeting was
parents
are
closed
with
a
circle
of
hands
Brooks received the weekly
Roger and
best loser certificate and to encourage others.
Louise
fruit basket at the recent
Brown of
meeting of TOPS #20 13 of
Ashland, L - - - - _ _ J
Coolville, held at the Torch
Ky, formerSwain
Baptist Church.
ly of Pomeroy, and Lyle
With 18 attending, the
REEEDSVILLE - Jay Swain of Reedsville and the
group completed a 40-minute and Robin Brown Swain of late
Mary Swain of
workout tape before the meet- Reedsville announce the birth Reedsville. The family resides
ing. A program on brown bag of their tirst child, a daughter, on the Swain Farm.
hints was presented by Pat Easter Ruth, born on July l .

TOPS award
presented

Sn~den,

Birth
announced

Racine Service Center

'

Public meetings

Charter Communications

Tuesday, August 26, ;!003

Time Out for Tips

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13Weeks , ....... . ... '30.15
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tusPs 213·960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Subacrlptlon Rates

PUCO staff do not believe reviewing the documents
clear why the company
marked some of this infor- the documents contain trade and expect to report to the
PUCO on Tue~day on
mation as confidential when secrets, Duffy said.
FirstEnergy spokeswoman whether any can be released
submitting it." Steven
Nourse, the attorney gener- Ellen Raines said the compa- without raising security
al's top public utilities ny has a tradition of submit- issues or potential violations
lawyer, said in the form let- ting certain documents to the of Securities and Exchange
ter sent to the companies.
guidelines,
PUCO marked confidential Commission
The burden is on the com- in whole or part.
Raines said.
panies, PUCO legal director
AEP spokesman Pat
"It could be for security
Paul Duffy said Monday.
reasons, it could be for Hemlepp said the company
"We're not seeking their financial disclosure rea- is reviewing the documents
permission, we're asking sons," Raines said Monday. for anything it considers
them for their legal argument · For example, portions of trulyconfidential.
as to why it constitutes a the company's long-term
"If there is anything like
trade secret," Duffy said. "If forecast were marked confi- that, we might ask for conthey don' t meet · burden, dential for security reasons.
tinued
confidentiality,"
we' re not going to protect it."
FirstEnergy officials were Hemlepp said.

www.qualitywindowsystems.com

the previous day's li'Brlsae-

Published
every
·a«ernoon,
Our main coneem in all stories Is to be Monday through Friday, 111 Court
accurate. If you know ttf an error In a Slreel, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodocal
S1ory, call 1he newsroom a1 (740) 992· postage paid al Pomeroy.
·2156.
Member: The Associaled Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspaper
Association .
Our main number 11 "
Paolmeater: Send address correc·
(740) 992·2156.
lions 10 The Daily Senlinel, 111
o.partment txtenolona ere:
Court S1ree1, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 .

also used credit cards for
another $33,000 and doctored
$11.000 in purchase orders.
The district is withholding
her severance pay pending
final audit results and seeking to garnish her pension.
"I think there's three or four
sources that we'll be pursing
for restitution and we're confident full restitution will be
made," said Superintendent
Thomas Shoup.

Quality Window Systems, Inc.

The Daily Sentinel
Correction Polley

Flad, a 25-year veteran of
the school district, resigned
her $70,500-per-year post in
March when confronted
about questionable purchases on a district credit card.
She admitted buying herself three televisions, three
digital cameras, light fixtures ,
a leaf blower, gas and food.
A preliminary state audit
revealed she took $81 ,000 in
district checks and put them
into her personal account. She

HOME IMPROVEMENT

..

Reader Services

Pleas Judge
Common
Charles E. Brown Jr. asked if
she had any comment.
"S~e surrendered to temptation," said Bradley lams,
Flad's attorney.
lams asked for probation,
one of the .options Brown
could consider.
Brown said he would consider releasing Flad in a year
if she behaves in prison. He
also ordered her to pay a
$10,000 fine.

·Regulators ask utilities· to explain confidentiality request·

tions, provided by Smith
Par1ners at AcM!st Inc. of
Gallipolis

Aa:ky Boots -11 15

ficking cases between fiscal
years 2000 and 2002, and
three cases against corrupt
licensed gun dealers, according to the report.
Federal prosecutors in
Cleveland referred questions
about the report's conclusions to representatives of
the ATF, who could not be
reached for comment.
According to the report,
the top I0 crime .gun export
states in 200 I were:
Virginia,
Georgia,
California, Florida, Texas,
Mississippi, Ohio, Indiana,
North
Carolina
and
Alabama.

PageA3

BY THE BEND

· Tuesday, August 26, 2003

Report: Ohio guns end up in other states

Ohio weather

0

PageA2

The.Daily Sentinel

Other events

Wednesday, Sept. 3
POMEROY
Oh-Kan
Coin Club Exhibition, 9 a.m to
3 p.m.at the Peoples Bank.
Pomeroy, for the enjoyment of
customers and the public.
Free coin to chldren six and
under. County currency ang
tokens wil also be included in
the display.
Tuesday, Aug. 26
POMEROY - Childhood
immunization clinic at Meigs
County Health Department, 9
.to 1i a.m., and i to 3 p.m.,
112 E. Memorial Dr.,
Pomeroy. Bring child's shot •
records and medical card if
applicable . Child must be
Sunday, Aug. 31
POMEROY - Thirty-first accompanied by parent or
legal guardian.
homecoming of the Poplar
Ridge Free Will Baptist
Church , State Route 544,
Poplar Ridge Road. Services,
Sylvia Robenstine will
10 a.m. Sunday school; 11
a.m . preaching by Paul observe her 90th birthday,
Elswick; lunch, 12:30 · p.m. Sept. 2. She resides at rose
and 2 p.tn. afternoon service lane health Center, 5425 High
with Ray and Deloris Cundiff, Mill Ave., NW, Massillon, Oho
Mason, and Eternity of Point 44646 and cards may be sent
to her there. ·
Pleasant.

Homecomings/
Reunions

Birthdays

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The ·Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street .• Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller·lnterim Publisher
c;harlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

NATIONAL

PageA4

VIEW

Camage
Terrible attacks against airliners
The Atlallta Joumal-Comtitlltioll, o11missile attacks agai11st
airli11ers:
There are few things more terrible to contemplate than this:
A solitary terrorist aiming and tiring a missile at a fully loaded
airliner landing at a major airport. Carnage. destruction, lost
lives ... and the despairing thought that there is no end. no end
in sight to the fear. Thoughts of that very possibility entered
the minds of many Americans with the testimony of Hemant
Lakhani.
The airline industrv. however. iscautio.us about the $10 billion cost of anti-miss.ile systems. such as would be required by
the pending Commercial Airline Missile Oefense Act.
In a rece nt statement. the Air Transport Association, a trade
group, suggested careful study of the relatively untested technology for warding off missile attacks.
Prudent study is reasonable. but delay is not. Small planes
have been attacked and brought down by shoulder-fired mis.siles. and sooner or later similar technology will likely endanger big plunes too . It is u horror worth uvoiding, and the
administration and Congress need to make study of anti-missile systems a priority.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters 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 the column below
are the consensus of the Ohio Vallep Publishing
Co. s editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

.•

-·•

It takes Iraqis to rebuild Iraq
cials now say, for the first
Washington Reporter
time, that coalition forces are
fighting a two-front war in
Last week's horrific bomb- Iraq. Up until recently, we
ing of the U.N. compound in · have been fighting scattered,
by
Saddam isolated sniper attacks by
'Baghdad
Hussein's loyalists spotlight- small cadres of terrorists that
ed a treacherous new front in reportedly included Iraqis
America ·s occupation of and extremist forces from
Iraq.
Iran, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia
The bloody attack was, to and Syria. They are killing
date, the single most damag- American soldiers and· Iraqi
ing postwar assault on the civilians, and blowing up
U.S.-led efforts to help water and oil pipelines to
rebuild Iraq into a democrat- disrupt Iraq's infrastructure.
ic, pro-Western nation.
Now we are also facing a
It is also the most recent better-armed. better-trained
sign that. for all practical foe in Hussein's partially
purposes, war with. Saddam resurrected forces who
has begun again. The rem- blended into the civilian
nants of his military forces population at the war's end.
have apparently regrouped They bided their time, waitand are much better armed ing for their chance to begin
than initially believed (with a longer-tenn guerrilla war
weapons reportedly seized of attrition and terror on
from Saddam's hidden muni- occupation forces and on
tions sites).
their own people.
The llatbed truck that
Guerrilla warfare does not
drove- unimpeded by U.S. favor occupying forces.
forces - down an unguard- They are elusive, hiding in
ed side street next to the their communities or in
Canal Hotel, where U.N. remote geographic regions,
officials worked carried carefully choosing when to
more than I ,000 pounds of attack. They are apparently
large, Soviet-made bombs. content to kill just one or two
The force of the blast shat- soldiers at a time, but on a
tered windows two miles relentless, almost daily basis.
away.
They have no time frame in
U.S. intelligence agencies their war. While U.S. milisay the attack was one of a tary officials and national·
number of signs (since t-kll~ security advisers talk in
car bombing outside the terms of a years, guerrillas
Jordanian
embassy
in think in terms of generations
Baghdad) that Hussein's loy- seeking revenge.
alists are raising the stakes in
This bleak new reality in
Iraq.
Iraq has sent President
Indeed, U.S. military offi- Bush's national security offiBY DoNALD LAMIRO

cials back to the drawing
board to rethink U.S. strategy there .
Secretary of State Colin
Powell is seeking a broader
international role for the
United Nations, but on terms
agreeable to · the United
States.
U.N.
Security
Coun&lt;;,il members. however,
want more authority in Iraq
and some agreement on getting a large share of its business contracts.
The most immediate question that needs to be
answered is. how can Iimited
U.S. forces subdue and
defeat the terrorists' objectives? Here are a few ideas
worth considering.
- Establishing bombproof
perimeters around all major
buildings and utility structures is job No. ·I. No vehicle
should have been allowed
near the U.N. compound until
it was thoroughly searched
and cleared.
- Armed Iraqi guards
need to be posted along the
oil pipeline route and in key
water and power installations. with oil revenues used
to train and pay them, and
with built-in financial incentives to sign up.
There musi be a
stepped-up, better-financed
mission to develop a large,
well-armed Iraqi military.
We're not doing this fast
enough. President Bush
needs to put some high-level
official in charge of-seeking
foreign financial help and
training assistance from

'

friendly countries to helP:
Iraqis defend their country
from the enemies within. · !
- We have to put an Iraqi
face on the forces fighting
Hussein's loyalists and begin ,
a heavily promoted public ..
campaign for paid local mili-'
tias to seek out loyalist force~
and kill or arrest them.
,
-U.S. intelligence in Iraq: :
is still very weak. We need to ..
establish special intelligence,
networks in heavily populat- ,
ed areas of paid informants"
who can help Iraqi military teams locate and destro:l:
weapons caches.
-;::
- A stronger push is need•
ed in the process of creating
Iraq's new governmen~.:;
Governing councils hav~~J
been fonned, and soon work
,will begin on a new
Constitution and, eventually, •
elections. But Iraqis need to •
be more fully engaged in this,,.
A series of town hall meet- :
ings, where citizens can voice..
what kind of governmenL··
they want, would help to keep
the focus on what the IraqiS: ;
are fighting for.
'
No matter how much miJi: :
tary and economic assis-··
tance we may provide, the
battle for Iraq's freedom ani:!"
security will ultimately"
depend on the Iraqi people.' '
In the end , this is a war that '
they mu st win for them' '
selves.
· '· ·
(Was!ringtmr investigative '
reporter Donald Lambro is
!he arllhur of "Fat City:.~
How

Washington

Wastes.:

Your Taxes" I Reger1rv))

WOW!

'

••

MY OWN
6EORGE W. gusH
ACTION FIGU~E •..
COMfLET£ WITH A
16-WORD VOCABULARY!

•', '

,, ,

...
,,
"

...

li t :

"

'.

Our disapearing right to privacy
Amid lawsuits aimed at
stopping Attorney General
John Ashcroft and the Bush
administration from bypassing the Constitution (a document Ashcroft seems to have
learned little about at the
University of Chicago Law
School) there is now the first
direct legal challenge to a
section of the USA PATRIOT
Act. Filed by the American
Civil Liberties Union, the
plaintiffs are Muslim and
Arab-American advocacy
and community groups. The ·
defendants are Ashcroft and
FBI Director Robert Mueller.
The lawsuit focuses on
Section 215 of the PATRIOT
Act, a section thai has
already infuriated librarians
around the country.
Section 215 empowers the
FBI to seize records and
other "tangible things" from
citizens and permanent residents, including the titles of
books borrowed from the
public libraries or bought in
bookstores - along with
names of their readers.
In June, Ashcroft, testifying before the House
Judiciary Committee, said
that the omnivorous Section
215 can also be used to seize
computer files, education
records and even genetic
information. Medical records
can also be seized.
The FBI does not have to
inform targets that their
records are being seized. In
addition, the FBI - despite
the Fourth Amendment of the
Bill of Rights - is ·not
requ'ired to show "probable
cause" that any of these peo-

2003

'

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, August 26, 2003-·

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today\ Highlight in History: On Aug. 26, I920, the I9th
amendment to the U.S. Constitution, guaranteeing American
women the right to vote, was declareU in effect.
On this date: In 55 B.C., Roman forces under Julius Caesar
invaded Britain.
In 1883, the island volcano Krakatoa · began erupting with
increasingly large explosions.
In 1939, the first televised major league baseball games were
shown on experimental station W2XBS - a double-header
. between the Cincinnati Reds and the Brooklyn Dodgers at
Ebbets Field. The Reds won the first game. 5-2. the Dodgers the
second, 6-1.
In 1957, the Soviet Union announced it had successfully tested an intercontinental balli stic missile.
In I961. the officiallntemational Hockey Hall of Fame opened .
in Toronto:
In 1964. President Johnson was nominated for a tenn of office
in his own right at the Democratic national convention in Atlantic
City, N.J.
In I972. the Summer Olympics opened irt,. Munich, West
Germany.
In I974, Charles Lindbergh - the first man to fly solo, nonstop across the Atlantic - died at his home in Hawaii at age 72.
In 1978, 25 years ago, Cardinal Albino Luciani of Venice was
elected the 264th Pope of the Roman Catholic Church following
the death of Paul VI. The new pontiff took the name Pope John
Paul I.
,
In 1985, 13-year-old AIDS patient Ryan White began "attending" classes at Western Middle School in Kokomo, Ind., via a
telephone hook-up at his home - school officials had barred
Ryan fwm attending classes in person.
Ten years ago: Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman and 14 co-defendants entered innocent pleas in federal court in New York, a day
after their indictment on charges of conspiring to wage terrorism
against the United States. Landlady Dorothea Puente was convicted in Monterey, Calif., of murdering three of her boardinghouse tenants; she was later sentenced to life without parole.
Five years ago: Attorney General Janet Reno reopened the
investigation of the assassination of civil rights leader Martin
Luther King Jr. , focusing on two allegations of a conspiracy
beyond James Earl Ray. A Justice Department investigation later
rejected allegations that conspirators had aided or framed Ray in
. King's assassination. Hurricane "Bonnie" drifted ashore in North
Carolina and began creeping up the coast, packing heavy rains
and high winds.
One year ago: Vice President Dick Cheney, speaking at a
Veterans of Foreign Wars convention in Tennessee, warned the
United States could face devastating consequences from any
delay in acting to remove Saddam Hussein as president of lrlKj.
The United Nations development and environmental sumrrut
opene&lt;.l in Johannesburg with a call from South African President
Thabo Mbeki t(J end the apartheid that divided the rich and the
poor.
Today's Bi11hdays: Former Washington Post.Executive Editor
Benjamin C. Bradlee is 82.Rock musician Dan Vickery
(Counting Crowes) is 37. Rock musician Adrian Young (No
Doubt) is 34. Actor Macaulay Culkin is 23.
Thought for Today: ''Heroes in history seem to us poetic
because they are there. But if we should tell the simple truth of
some of our neighbors. it would sound like poetry." - George
William Curtis. American author-editor (I 824- 1292).

Tuesday, August 26,

Nat
Hentoff

pie are suspected criminals or
foreign agents.
To request an order from
the
secret
Foreign
Intelligence
Surveillance
Court - where only the government is allowed to appear
- all the FBI must claim is
that records and other "tangible things" are wanted to
investigate foreign intelli gence, clandestine intelligence or international. terrorism. The secret court has little authority to reject these
requests, and has turned
down hardly any.
As the ACLU points out,
all the FBI has to do before
the secret court is "specify
that the records are 'sought
for' an authorized investigation. The surveillance target
may be completely innocent." Again, this is not the
Fourth Amendment's "probable cause" standard.
215
(which
Section
President Bush has not
objected to) is chillingly reminiscent of , the "general
search warrants" that British
customs agents used to
obtain records and other personal property of the
colonists at will. At least the
British searches were not
secret. In · 1761 , in a Boston

courtroom,
American
Revolutionary
politician
James Otis warned the king
of England that this kind of
arbitrary search-and-seizure
power would not long be
endured
by
freeborn
Americans who knew their
rights as Englishmen.
Indeed. colonists loudly
protested this invasion of
their privacy, and formed
committees of correspon"
dents to share information
throughout the I3 colonies
about the British government 's abuses. Thomas
Jefferson was a principal
organizer of such a committee in Virginia.
But now our own government - when the FBI goes
to a library or bookstore to
find out what books are being
read by whom - instructs
the librarian or bookstore
owner that. under Section
215. "no person shall di sclose to. any other person
(other than those persons
necessary to produce the tangible things under tJVs section) that the Federal Bureau
of Investigation has sought or
obtained tangible things
under this section."
This unprecedented order
also applies to contacting the
press . The librarian or bookstore owner cannot tell the
local newspaper or radio or
television station thai the FBI
has come to search their
record s. In I 8th century
Amerrca, Samuel Adams and
other patriots freely wrote in
the Boston Gazette and other
new spapers and pamphlets
about the general search war-

rants and as the ·
Decliuation of Independence
was to assert - others of a
"long train of Abuses and ;
Usurpations" by "the King of •
Great Britain."
But in 21st century- .
America, while those of us ,
not subject to the gag order ·
are indeed protesting Section ·
215 , Department of Justice ~
spokesman Mark Corallo .
tried to put a spin on it by..
telling the Bangor (Maine) ,
Daily New s on April 9 that, ;
under the section, the FBI;
must show "there is probable
cause that the person you are ·
seeking the information for is
a terrorist or a foreign spy."
It ain 't so. Probable cause
is not required.
The ACLU and the other
plaintiffs are requesting that ,
Section 215 be declared
uncon stitutional 'under the
First, Fourth an&lt;.l Fifth •
· amendments (the latter •
requires "due process of Jaw'''
for Laking . property from ;
American citizens). Corallo ·
also incorrectly told Florida
Today last Sept. 23, thai ·.
"U.S . citize.ns cannot be ·
investigated under this act."
He was referring to Section ·
2 I 5, which he said "is limitea '
only to foreign iritelligence.'1'
"Foreign intelligence" ....:!
like, what library books we'
read?
..
Even if there is no evidence '
against we citizens, who are :
indeed subject to Section t
2 I 5.
(Nat Hell/off is a nationally' .
renowned authority on thB .
First Amendment and tire Bi/(
of Rights. )

,

•

Local Briefs
Soccer
registration
. RUTLAND - The Meigs
County Soccer Association
will hold its last sign-up for
the 2003 season between 6
p.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday at the
Rutland Civic Center. A copy
of a birth certificate must
accompany the registration
fonn.

Sharon!!!!!!
Special Meeting
SHADE - Special meeting of the Shade River
Lodge #453 at 1 p.m.
Thesday. There will be work
on the master mason degree.

Office closed
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Thberculosis Clinic will
be closed on Sept, I for the
Labor Day weekeitd. The office

will re-open at 8 am. on Sept. 2.

asked to boil all water used
for cooking and drinking for
three minutes before consuming it. The advisory is in
RACINE - The Tuppers effect until further notice .
Plains-Chester .
Water
District has issued a boil
advisory in Sutton and Letart
MIDDLEPORT - Kathy
Townships for customers on
Jenny Watt, Yellowbush, Mullins
of
American
Power
was
a speakElectric
Canter and Mile Hill Rd.
The advisory was issued er at the unveiling ceremony
due to a break in the main for a historical marker in
line on Mile Hill Rd. Dave Dil~s Park. AEP paid
Affected customers are the cost of the marker.

Advisory issued

Speaker named

Pilots want administration to
speed weapons training for pilots
WASHINGTON (AP) Capt. Phillip Beall thinks
l 0,000 of his fellow airline
pilots should have been
given guns by now and
trained to use them while in
the cockpit.
-Instead. he said, fewer
than 200 have weapons
because the agency in charge
of arming pilots is dragging
its feet.
·
.'They've turned 11 mto a
bureaucratic nightmare," said
Beall, a member of the Airline
Pilots' Security Alliance, a
jP'3SS-roots organization that
mcludes pilots from all the
major U.S. airlines. Beall flies
out of Dallas.
Pilots are stepping up their
campaign to pressure the
Bush administration into arming and training more of them.
The pilots planned news
conferences Tuesday at airports in Miami, Washington,
Atlanta, Los Angeles and
Cincinnati to urge the

Transportation
Security
Administration to speed up
the program.
Brian Turmail,
TSA
spokesman, rejects the claim
that the agency isn't moving
fast enough. He said the
TSA quickly created a training program and application
process for pilots, and now
that those elements are
established, the pace of
training will pick up.
Full classes are booked
through
the end
of
September, he said. The
number of pilots in each
class is kept secret for security reasons.
Pilots lobbied Congress
hard last year, arguing that
guns would allow them to
supplement air marshals,
who cover only a small percentage of the 35,000 daily
flights in the United States.
The TSA, seeking to address
a budget shortfall of nearly
$1 billion, froze air marshal

The first 44 pilots 'to complete the program were designated "flight deck officers" on
Apri I 19 and began flying
wnh weapons. The second
class fini shed in July, and now
classes are conducted weekly.
An upcoming move to a
training center in Artesia,
N.M., from Glynco, Ga. ,
will allow the agency to train
more pilots, Turmail said .
Pilots, though, don 't like the
new location because it 's
difficult to get to.
Fonner Rep. Bob Barr. RGa., will speak in support of
the pilots at Atlanta Hartsfield
International Airport.
"The government is
throwing roadblocks in the
way of fulfilling what was a
very clear con~;~ressional
mandate," Barr smd. "If the
White House would simply
make a clear statement that
this must be done, it dramatically improves the chances
of it happening."

hiring in May.
The agency had opposed
arming pilots, · believing
tighter airport security, bulletproof cockpit doors and more
vigilant passengers made it
unnecessary. Critics also said
adding guns to airplanes was
inherently dangerous.
But after it became obvious that Congress would
supp011 the program, TSA
chief James Loy reluctantly
went along.
Pilots who volunteer for the
program take a week of classes, weapons instruction and
hand-to-hand combat drills at
a federal law enforcement
training center. Background
checks and psychological
testing also are conducted.
Capt. Bob Lambert, president of the pilots ' security
group, said at the current rate
of 50 pilots a week it will
take I 5 years to arm the estimated 40,000 pilots who
want to carry guns.

Companies told state regulators of possible blackouts
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
- Two Ohio companies at
the center of the investiga:
tion into the nation's worst
blackout warned state regulators five months ago that
their power systems could
overload if the grid linking
U.S. and Canadian utilities
had problems.
FirstEnergy Corp. and
American Electric Power said
in long-tenn forecasts that
they didn't expect any of their
own transmission lines or substations to fail this summer.
But both companies said
that widespread .outages
were po~sible if the spaghet·
ti-like system that links east·ern states and Canada experienced unexpected changes
in electricity flows, power
transfers between regions,
unexpected demands and
extreme weather.
"Together, these factors ...
may lead to overload conditions," FirstEnergy said.
Those are just the sorts of
power grid disturbances that
swept across eight states and
the province of Ontario,
Canada, on Aug. 14. spreading the outage to 50 million
people.
,Akron-based FirstEnergy
is at the center of a U.S.Canada inquiry of what
caused the outage. The most
' prominent theory is that a
FirstEnergy power plant in
Eastlake, Ohio, and some of
its electricity transmission

Exercise
from PageA1
She also does I00 repetitions
on one of the weight machines.
"A few months ago, I could
not roll over in bed, but now
I can do all these things," she
said. "There is a good variety
here so that you can get a
good workout."
Juanita Roush , 77, had a
heart attack a couple of years
ago. Her doctor prescribed a
moderate exercise program
involving walking on the .
treadmi 11. She started small
and worked her way up to
ihree miles a day more than
70 minutes on the treadmill .
"I've got a lot of zap yet,"
Roush said. "I have seen the
results. I have lower blood
pressure and more energy. I
feel a lot healthier now that I
exercise."
Howard Mullins, 80, has
just started using the exercise
room. He is optimistic about
the benefits of exercise. He is
walking on the treadmill and

lines failed, including one
that sagged into a tree.
The resulting surge of
power in Ohio spread, rocketing across transmission
lines in Indiana, Michigan,
Ontario, and New York and
setting off automatic power
shutdowns.
The two Ohio power companies say the Public
Utilities Commission of
Ohio has heard the same grid
overload warnings . from
them for years and there is
nothing that state regulators
could have done with that
information to prevent the
blackout.
"It's just a statement of
reality. It's a recognition of
the fact that we are all inter- ·
connected and that there are
strengths and weaknesses to
that," Ralph DiNicola, a
FirstEnergy spokesman, said
Monday.
"The good is that being
interconnected enhances
reliability. The not-so-good
is that what happens on adjacent systems could impact
our system," DiNicola
added.
Shana Gerber, a PUCO
spokeswoman, said state
regulators don't have the
authority to help the utilities
solve such reliability pwblems.
"All we can do is encourage these companies to participate in a regional transmission organization in

which they can solve these
issues internally," she said.
In Indiana, James P.
Torgerson. chief executive of
the Midwest Transmission
System Operator, told state regulators Monday that the grid
manager has increased monitoring of FirstEnergy, adding
data collection points to watch
voltage flows on its lines.
Torgerson also said the
Midwest operator needs to
improve
communication
among utilities, which now
rely on old-fashioned · telephone warnings to relay
problems. On the day of the
blackout, there was little or
no warning for most U.S .
utilities and Canada.
"It's not very 'efficient
when you have to start calling everybody," Torgerson
told the Indiana Utility
Regulatory Commission.
Control room operators
called First Energy .when
they detected problems, but
didn't spot other conditions
that would lead to a widespread outage, the Midwest
group said.
FirstEnergy and AEP say
investigat~rs must . look at
what was occurring on the
entire grid inside and outside
Ohio in the hours before the
blackout because abnormal
activity elsewhere could
have impacted their power
systems' operations.
The PUCO asked power
companies in an Oct. 15,2002,

1

using the exercise bike.
"I am doing this to help my
arthritis," he said.
Bentley works closely with
each person to ensure a
healthy workout regimen.
She keeps detailed records
and can tell how far or how
fast a person has come. For
instance, when Roush started
exercising in ZOO I after her
heart attack, she was only
doing between 15 to 20 minutes of treadmill work a day.
Since then, she has . tripled
her workout load to 70 to 75
minutes a day.
Bentley motivates people
by recognizing their achievements. Anyone that does a
million meters on a treadmill
gets aT-shirt and their picture
on the bulletin board in the
exercise center. So far, ·
Raymond Oliver and Maxine
Little and her husband Bill
are in this club.
Anyone 40 and up can use .
the exercise room for a nominal fee. Before anyone can
start exercising, there are
three simple requirements. A
physician must give approval

letter to say in their annual
long-term forecasts which
transmission !lines or substations were most likely to be
overloaded and under what
conditions. FirstEnergy and
AEP filed their repons in Apri).
FirstEnergy
identified
none of its transmission system as failure prone. Parts of
its report were sealed with
some documents marked
confidential. The utilities
commission has asked it and
other utilities to explain why
the documents should not be
released.
AEP's report said a transformer at its S&lt;1uth Canton
facility in n.ortheast Ohio
was the most likely to over. load if other utilities on the
grid had outages or heavy
demand.
The
Columbus-based
company said it would
install a higher-capacity
transformer before this summer to prevent problems.
AEP
spokesman
Pat
Hemlepp saidthat work was
done, increasing the transformer's capacity by 5 percent. ·
About 30 minutes before
the blackout, a line coqwned by FirstEnergy and
AEP tripped as too much
electricity coursed over it.
The line is connected to the
South Canton facility. where
FirstEnergy's grid interconnects with AEP's neighboring grid.

and a liability release form
must signed. Also. there is an
equipment orientation session.
Bentley said funding for
wellness program and the
equipment has come from
federal grants, the Sisters of
St. Joseph's in Parkersburg
and Holzer Hospital in
Gallipolis, and the Council
on Aging.

Cost
from Page A1
deductibles. while maintaining an 80 percent coverage
on major medical expenses.
The village's insurance
administrator, Carol Cantrell,
said last night offering the
second option wi II save the
village $5.470 per month a significant savings in light
of the village's tightening
financial condition.
In the past, the village has
paid the cost of family plans
as well as single plans. Under
the new policy. a single plan
will be free to the employee,
while a family plan 's cost
will be determined by insurance industry formulas and
borne by the employee.
Mark Curry of the
Wiseman Agency said the 28
percent cost increase experienced by the village is "on
the high side," when compared to other government
entitites, and cited health
conditions of employees in
the Middleport group.
"Because of these existing
health conditions, it is unlikely that a cheaper plan would
be available from another
provider," Curry said.
Cantrell said six employees
have indicated they will drop
dependent coverage. Some
have medical coverage avail-

TUES BARGAIN NIGHT
$3.75 ADMISSION

BOX OFFICE OPENS
6:30 PM MON • FRI.
&amp; 12:30 PM SAT -SUN

FREDDY VS

7:00

MI M If

Other business:
Mayor Sandy Iannarelli
reminded council that all residents in the village are
required to pay refuse fees,
regardless of whether they
use another refuse service or
business dumpster collection
service.
Those residents who fail to
pay the refuse fee will experience disconnection of water
service.
Council also:
• Authorized Mayor Sandy
Jannarelli to apply for funding through the State Capital
Improvement Program for
street paving next year, at a
cost of $226,799;
• Approved funds transfers
from the refuse department
and ftrc department to the
street department salaries
line item;
• Approved payment of
bills in the amount of
$4,108.97.
Present were Council
members Linda Haley,
. Stephen Houchins, Bob
Pooler, Robert Robinson and
Kathy Scott. and Clerk Kathy
Hysell.

Wetlands

NOTICE
Due to circumstances beyond our control
the Riverbend Community Theatre ·
is postponing its production of the

"Music Man."

7:00&amp; 9:30

SEABISCUIT (PG13)

able through another family
member, while others have
already qualified or will
qualify for a medical card
through the Department of
Job and Family Services.

in the area where the wetlands are being built. The
salamanders are donnant all
from Page A1
but one month each year.
Thousands of salamanders
water that collects there before emerge from the soil and
traveling to lower ground.
mate to ensure the existence
Slag heaps and other mine
byproducts lying nearby can of a new generation.
poison the water in the area.
Buckley, who has worked
Red metallic looking water, almost 32 years for ODOT,
which shines in the sun, is still said the work that his crew is
visible in places. Buckley said doing is important to Meigs
nine mine entrances will be County and Ohio because it
sealed up before the project is preserves the environment.
completed.
, . .
...,
Buckley said environmen- _ 111ts IS ~. euort to ~reserve
talists who have visited the the wetrutds, he satd. We are
site have di-scovered a rare cleaning this area up and rnakbreed of salamander that lives ing it better than before."

FRI 8122103 • THURS 8128103

1 0 "' "
MOVIES
740 · 753· 3400

Is that rock icon Ozzy Osbourne stumbling around downtown
Pomeroy? No. It is Pat Morgan who dressed as Osbourne to
call attention to the grand opening Monday of Whitley's Liquor
Store in Middleport. (J. Miles Layton)

• Anyone who bought a ticket can have their monc:y refunded if they '
so desin:, or their ticket will be honored when the "Music Man" is
perfonned at a later date.
• Ticket money is being n:funded at the Ohio River Bear Compmy in
Middleport. Pleose bring your ticket with you when you ~ueot a

Ill . HU\

refund.

• If you received a courtesy ticket through Ute WYVK llldlo contest,
your ticket will be honored when the "Music Man" is performed at
a later date.
·
S.W.A.T. (PG13)
7:00 &amp; 9:20

MY

DAUGHTER
(PG13) 7:00 &amp; 9:20

MEDALLION (PG131
7:00 &amp; 9:00
MATINEES 1:00 &amp; 3:00

-·~ ·· .· · . -~ -·---·~--

··-·

We lfiH be performiDg the
"Music Man" at a date

to be announced soon.

We our sorry for the inconvenience,
but we are trying to look on
the positive side the show will go on!
If ]ON MH IIIIJ fMrlioiiS, ciiiJ (14fiJ 992-JHI

·---· ~-~ --·----~----------------------------

�The Daily Sent;inel

STATE • LOCAL
2003 Mei·gs County fair livestock sale

PageA6

Tuesday,August26,2003

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Scores and standings, Page 82
NFL roster tranaac:tlons, Page 82

Tuesday, August 26, 2003

MAC, ESPN
reach TV deal on
football, men's
basketball

Gene Brown, representing DanTax. are pictured with Craig
Jones and his reserve champion feeder steer purchased by
the firm at the Meigs County Junior Fair Livestock Sale. Fair
Queen Jessica Justice is also pictured. (Image Gallery)

Dettwiller Lumber of Pomeroy purchased the grand champion
market hog from Kyle Russell at the Meigs County Junior Fair
Livestock Sale. Pictured with Russell and the AI Dettwiller family are Fair Queen Jessica Justice and Swine Princess Amanda
King. (Image Gallery

Local folks
tise. Seidenabel placed third in
her division of instructors all
over the United States.
In addition to the competition. continuing education of
the Tae Bo ® philosophy and
MIDDLEPORT
Anne of more difficult TaeBo®
Seidenabel, Billy Blanks cer- moves and combinations of
ti tied Tae Bo® Instructor, has moves were taught at the
returned from a re-certifica- camp. For more information
TaeBo®
email:
tion competition camp at about
Billy's World Training Center taebo20002000@yahoo.com
in Sherman Oaks, Calif.
been
Seidenabel
has
•
instructing for one year. Her
certification enables her to
teach Tae Bo® aerobic kickbox.ing fitness classes in
POMEROY
Rocky
Meigs and Athens counties.
Hupp of Pomeroy has qualiThe competition was held to fied for the Monumental Life
compete against other instruc- Insurance
Co.'s ' 2003
Chairman's
Round Table
tors of the same level of ex.per-

LocaiTae Bo
instructor
recertified ·

Hupp qualifies
for conference

Conference in Nova Scotia,
Canada.
Conference qualification
requires consistent, highlevel sales and professionals m .---·---.,..,
;
throughout
conthe
test's 13m o n t h

qualifying
period.
This is
Hupp 's
third year
as a conference qualiHupp
fier. He has
also received the company's
Chairman's Roundtable Ring
and has been named a
Natinoal Honor Associate.

PVH

Liquor agency moves
MIDDLEPORT - The county 's liquor
agency has moved back to Middleport. Cliff
Whitley, owner of Whitley's Liquor Agency,
has moved the store from Pomeroy to the
former Tony's Carryout building on Mill
Street. ·
The store opened for business at its new
location. 221 Mill St., on Monday.
In addition to serving as both a wholesale
and retail outlet for liquor, the agency sells
carryout beer, cigarettes, ice and other products.
Whitley said he plans to expand his inventory line to include grocery staples as well,
including milk, bre&lt;~d. eggs. cheese. chips
and dip and other convenience items.
The store will be open from I0 a.m. until
9 p.m., Monday through Saturday, and will
be closed on Sunday.
Whitley's will also offer service through Cliff Whitley, owner of Whitley's Liquor
the shop's drive-up window. ·
The telephone number at the agency, 992- Agency, stocks the shelves at his new store
on Middleport's Mill Street. (Brian J. Reed)
0008, will remain the same.

Enrollment on the rise at Central State

BY AMY LEACH
Special to the Sentinel

'
With each
stroke of her
brush, Sheila McGuire, a
medical laboratory technologist at Pleasant Valley
Hospital , envisions the
patients and volunteers whose
day may be brightened by her
colorful handpainted mural.
The masterpiece is displayed
outside of the newly renovated laboratory and features a
variety of !lora and fauna.
McGuire, a dedicated
employee of 15 years, spent
approximately 24 hours on
the creation. Each night after
she ' clocked out, McGuire
unloaded her art supplies and
began painting.
The mural is not the only
donation McGuire has made
to Pleasant Valley Hospital. In
past years, she has made yellow ribbons to show support
for the Armed Forces and
donated numerous paintings
to the silent auction at the
Charity Ball.
McGuire and her husband
of 32 years. Lonnie, a Gallia · Shiela McGuire is pictured above with her hand-painted mural
County police officer, reside outside of the newly-renovated laboratory at Pleasant Valley ,
in Gallipolis, Ohio.
Hospital.

Police charge Florida jail prisoner with killings
HAMILTON (AP)
Authorities will begin efforts to
extradite a Aorida jail inmate
who told Ohio authorities last
week that he robbed and killed
a couple in their home.
Jason Sam Campbell was
charged Monday with two
counts each of aggravated
murder and aggravateS[ robbery in Hamilton Municipal
Court, police spokesman
Dave Crawford said.
•
Filing charges allows extradition efforts to begin for
Campbell, 22, who is jailed in
Jacksonville, Fla., on unrelat• ed charges of escape and
receiving a stolen vehicle.
Campbell is accused of

McDonald 's of Pomeroy, represented by Greg Mills, purchased
Nathan Cook's grand champion commercial feeder steer at the
Meigs County Junior Fair Livestock Sale. (Image Gallery)

killing and robbing Helen
Riley, 55, and her husband,
Donald Riley, 44, on Feb. 23
in their home in this city 25
miles north of Cincinnati. The
bodies were found two days
later. Authorities have not
said how they were killed.
Campbell gave a written
confession to city police and
Qutler County prosecutors
who interviewed him in
Florida last we~k. acting on a
citizen tip to police in
Campbell's hometown of
Middletown, Ohio.
~
T)Je killings occurred the
same day Campbell escaved
from
the
Community
Correctional Center near

Lebanon, a jail for three
counties where he was serving a sentence for auto theft,
Butler County Prosecutor
Robin Piper said.
Piper said he will seek the
death penalty.

WILBERFORCE (AP) A surge in enrollment at
Central State i~ a sign-that
the only public, historically
bia.ck university in Ohio has
emerged from years of
t'inancial problems, school
officials say.
"We've always known our
success was going to hinge
on enrollment," said Vicki
Pegg, chairwoman
of
Central State's board of
trustees. "Legislators now
need to do what they've
been promising to do in the
past: allow us to grow.
We've proven our worth."
Central State emerged
from state fiscal oversight in
April 2002, five years after
the state took over the
school's finances. The. university continued its recovery last October by opening
an $8 million dormitory. .
· School officials anticipate
that 725 new students - up
from 400 last fall - will
arrive on campus next week.
New applicants are being
deferred to the winter quarter with , a shortage of hous-

ing. Some new students
might have to live at neighboring schools or motels in
this town about I 5 miles
east of Dayton.
"Our admissions picture
has
just
completely
rebounded,'' said Anthony
Fairbanks, CSU's vice president
for
institutwnal
advancement. "We have
more students who want to
come here than we have
space for."
Enrollment is financially
important to public universities such as Central State not
only for tuition income, but
because state funding is
based on the number of a
school's students.
CSU's enrollment, which
exceeded 3,200 in the early
1990s, plunged to I,025 in
1998 as a result of the university's financial shortcomings. This fall's enrollment
is projected at I ,625 - up
from 1.440 at this time last
year.
University president John
Garland said building the
enrollment back to the early

for Purchasinl! mY

To all residents of Village of Middleport
ref. proposed Ordinance No. 0203:

GRAND
CHAMPION
MAR.K

There will be a public meeting to be held at
Village Hall on Wednesday, August 28, at 5:10
to hear your comments on proposed
Ordinance to restrict and or eliminate mo.bile
homes. in the Village ·of Middleport.
Please come and voice your opinion.

.

Thank You

Dan Tax

REMINDER

.

'90s levels, while adhering
to admissions standards to
only bring in strong students, will take new facilities "that are as attractive
and 1comparable to other ·
public universities."
Dormitory space currently
limits the pace by which
Central State can increase
enrollment.
In 1996, state officials
condemned virtually all of
the university's residence
halls - some have · been
renovated, others were
razed. Last year, CSU
opened . the
304-bed
Foundation Hall, and school
officials are planning more
new dormitories.
Until then. the university
is putting together an alternative student housing plan,
temporarily placing ex.tra
beds into some rooms and
student lounges and talking
to other colleges in the area
about borrowing dorm .
space, Fairbanks said.

' 1\!l.......o..

Paid for by Roger Manley
1047 S. Second Avenue

STEER
at the
Meil!s
CountY Fair.
-Josh Collios-

'

&lt;

&gt; I

'.
'

I·

'

•
•
•
•

Subscribe today l(992·2156

.'
•

Thursday, September 18, 2003
FREE GIFT TO
Noon to 6 p.m.
ALL DONORS!
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Sponsored by the Pleasant Valley Hospital Auxiliary

YOU CAN MAlE . ADIFFERENCE.

CINCINNATI (AP) -The
Cincinnati
Bengals
on
Monday released seven players and acquired wide receiver
Marquise Walker on waivers
from the Arizona Cardinals.
· Cincinnati's roster was
t;educed to 67 players, one
~hort of meeting the NFL
deadline to have 66 players by
4 p.m. Tuesday.
The Bengals are allowed
one more player than the
usual roster limit of 65.
Linebacker Dwarne Levels
doesn't count agamst the cap
because he · played in NFL
Europe earlier this year.
The Bengals waived offensive lineman Alex Sulfsted,
defensive lineman Ron Smith,
wide receivers Kwazeon
Leverette
and
Chesley
Borders, quarterback Tommy
Jones,
linebacker
Tito
Rodriguez and cornerback
Maurice Tucker.
Walker was Tampa Bay's
third-round draft pick in 2002
out of Michigan but didn't
play last season because of a
thumb injury.
Arizona traded running
back Thomas Jones for him in
June. Walker caught one pass
for 9 yards in the Cardinals'
fii'St two preseason games and
was waived last week before
Arizona's third preseason
game.

Yankees claim
Heredia from
Reds; Taylor to
have surgery
CINCINNATI (AP)- The
New York Yankees on
Monday claimed relief pitcher Felix Heredia off waivers
from the Cincinnati Reds,
who recalled outfielder
Stephen Smitherman from
Double-A Chattanooga to fill
his roster spot ~
The Reds also said outfielder Reggie Taylor will have
season-&lt;:nding
shoulder
surgery. Taylor injured his left
~boulder while diving for a
ball Sunday in a 6-3 loss at
Houston.
Reds team physician
Timothy Kremcheck will do
arthroscopic surgery Friday at
Beacon Orthopaedic Center
in Cincinnati to repair the tom
labrum, the cartilage that
helps form the shoulder joint.
Heredia, a left;hander, was
5-2 with a 3.00 ERA and one
save in a team-high 57
appearances for Cincinnati.
Smitherma~ hit .A I0 with
19 home runs, 73 RBis and II
stolen bases in I 05 games for
the Lookouts. He pinch hit in
one ganTe for the Reds this
season on July I at Pittsburgh.
'

Reds acquire
Phil Norton

\.

SAVE AliFE BY G·IVI GBLOOD!
•

Bengals make
roster moves

-.

The Daily Sentiner
,

CLEVELAND (AP)- The
Mid-American Conference
and ESPN reached an agreement Monday to televise at
least 100 football and men's
basketball games over the
next five years.
The agreement begins with
this football season and runs
through 2007-08. It includes
the conference championship
games in both sports, with the
men's basketball title game to
be played on the final weekend of the regular season.

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

CINCINNATI (AP)
Phil Norton was acquired by
the Cincinnati Reds from the
Chicago Cubs on Monday
night for John Koronka in a
swap of left-handed pitchers.
Norton , 27 , had reconstructive surgery on his left
elbow on Jan. II last year
and missed the 2002 season.
He was 0-0 with a ~ .4 1 ERA
in 3 1-3 innings over four
games with the Cubs this
season and 4-2 with one
save and a 3.78 ·ERA in 48
games with Triple-A Iowa.
1

Sarilpras: 'I'm done,
100 percent done'
BY HOWARD FENDRICH

Associated Press
NEW YORK _ Pete Sampras carried his 9-month-old son instead of a ·
racket bag as he took one last walk off
center court to one last standing ovation.
No more titles 10 win. ,
No more matches to play.
Sampras delivered a formal farewell
to tennis Monday night at an on-court
ceremony and earlier news conference
· at the U.S. Open, not quite one year
since he won the tournament in what
turned out to be his final match.
"The process is now over. I'm 100
percent retired," Sampras said, his
voice cracking. "I'm at peace with it.
It's time to call it a career."
Sampras, who's 32 and became a
father in November, leaves with 64
singles titles, including a record 14 at
Grand Slam tournaments: seven at
Wimbledon, five at the U.S. Open, and
two at the Australian Open·.
"1 will never sit here and say I'm the
~realest ever. I've done what I've done
tn the game. I've won a number of
majors - I think that's kind of the
answer to everything," Sampras, wearing a black suit and gray shirt, said at
the news conference on the first day of
the U.S. Open.
"I don't know if there's one best
player of all time. I feel my game will
match up to just about anybody. I
played perfect tennis at times, in my

ceremony between the two night
matches in Arthur Ashe Stadium. The
crowd treated him to three extended
standing ovations, while fellow major
champions John McEnroe, Boris
Becker and Jim Courier delivered
speeches.
"I tried to serve like· you. 1 couldn't
do that. I tried to hit a big forehand like
you. I couldn't do that," McEnroe said.
"I also tried to act like Pete. Needless
10 say, 1 failed at that."
Sampras, known for his mild-mannered demeanor off and. often, on th~
court, wiped away tears during the
tribute, which also included a threeminute highlight video with clips from
each of his major final victories and
taped words from Andre Agassi.
Sampras was given a plaque with a
photo of him in his trademark pose of
·
· ~
h d
h ·h
JUmpmg or an over ea smas · Wit a
red superhero's cape superimposed.
The plaque read: " In a career that
spanned three decades, Pete Sampras
rewrote the record books for the men's
game and redefined the word 'champion."'
He finished at No. 1 in the rankings
a record six years ( 1993-98) and held
the top spot a total of 286 weeks,
another record. Sampras tops · the
career earnings list with $43 million.
"Staying at No. 1 for six consecutive
years is an incredibly demanding
thing," said Courier, a rival of
Sampras' in the 1990s and now a TV
analyst. "He was able to stay healthy

mind."

Later, he was honored in a half-hour

Pete Sampras can't hold back his tears after he announced his retirement
from tennis Monday at the US Open tennis tournament in New York. (AP)

Browns' defense gets testy Rockers make playoffs
BY ToM WtTHERS
Associated Press

BEREA - The finger
pointing at Cleveland's suspeel defense this summer has
gotten contagious. The
Browns are now directing it
toward each other.,
After a defenst ve breakdown led to a touchdown by
Detroit in the first half of
Saturday night's 38-17 loss
to the Lions, Browns tackle
Gerard Warren and cornerback Anthony Henry hap to
be separated on Cleveland's
sideline;
Coach Butch Davis and
several Browns defensive
players tried to dismiss the
altercation on Monday a.s
typical NFL heat-of-the battle tension.
"It's not an issue at all,"
Davis said. "I think guys get
hot and guys get mad."
However, the heated confrontation between teammates underscores a frustrat ing exhibition season for
Cleveland's
revamped
defense, which has played .
poorly
in
losses
to
Tennessee, Green Bay and
Detroit.
"I'm concerned," safety
Earl Little said. "But I'm
definitely not worried."
The ·
Henry-Warren
exchange came moments Cleveland Browns defensive back Earl Little (20) breaks
after Lions quarterback Joey up a pass intended for Detroit Lions · wide receiver
Charles Rogers in the end zone during the third quarter In
PIMH ... Browns, 16
Detroit. (AP)

CLEVELAND (AP)- Chasity Melvin put the Cleveland
Rockers back m the playoffs.
Melvin scored a season-high 22 points and had I I rebounds
to lead Cleveland into the playoffs with a 75-66 victory over
the Charloue Sting on Monday night.
·
"Whether we won or lost, I wanted to feel that I gave what
I could to win and get us in position for the playoffs," Melvin'
said.
Cleveland ( 17 -17) will open the first round of the Eastern
Conference playoffs against the No. 1-seed Detroit Shock.
The second-seeded Sting ( 18-16) will play the Connecticut
Sun, which beat out the Rockers for third place by winning at
Indiana 72-62, eliminating the Fever.
"Right now, we're playmg our best basketball of the ·season," Rockers coach Dan .Hughes said. "Detroit is awful
good, but wliat we need to do is get down and dig."
Detroit swept the season series from the Rockers 4-0.
"The slate is wiped clean and now we're 0-0." Hughes said.
-Tammy· Sul!on-Brown scored 13 points to lead Charlotte
despite being in foul trouble the entire second half and playing only 18 minutes.
Sutton-Brown went to the bench with her fourth foul 55
seconds after halftime as Pemiy Taylor converted a three.
point play to put Cleveland ahead 38-30.
The Rockers outscored Charlotte 21-13 over the next mne
minutes to open a 59-43 advantage before Sutton-Brown
returned.
. The Sting rallied to make it 61-53, but' Sutton-Brown
picked up her fifth foul with 7:50 to play.
Taylor then hit a free throw and LaToya Thomas grabbed
an offensive rebound to put Cleveland ahead 64-53.
"They needed it and we really didn 't," Sting guard Dawn
Staley said. "We dido 't mean to come in and play flat, but
they had something extra to play for and they wanted it
more."

Taylor finished with 16 points &lt;tnd rookie Thomas scored
14 for Cleveland. Thomas was a force on the boards in the
second half as Cleveland kept the Sting without an offensive
rebound until 2:43 remained.
Cleveland outrebou nded the Sting 33-16 overall.
"We didn 't do a · ~oodjob on the boards at all ," Sting coach
Trudi Lacey said. • We gave them too many second and third
shots."
Melvin scored 16 points in the first half to help Cleveland
lead at the break 35-30.
Charlotte was playing its second game in two nights, having eliminated New York from playoff contention with a 61 1 59 overtime win Sunday.

Reds fall to Brewers
CINCINNATI (AP) Qeoff Jenkins hi! a two-run
homer and Bill Hall· homered and drove in three runs
as the Milwaukee Brewers
won seven straight games
for the first time si~ce joining the NL in 1998 with a
I0-6 win - over the
Cincinnati
Reds
on
Monday night .
.
Hall had a career-high
four hits and Wes Helms
and Mark Smith also homered to help Milwaukee post
its longest winnin$ st~eak
smce they won mne m a
row from July 25 to Aug . I,
1997, when they were in
the American League.
Matt
Kinney
(9-9)
allowed six hits and four
runs with seven strikeouts
and no walks in seven
innings, improving to 3-1
in . his last six starts. He

retired II consecutive batters before Ruben Mateo
led off the seventh with a
double to .!eft field .
.
Brooks
Kieschnick
pitched a perfect eighth but
gave up a two-run homer to
Dernell Stenson in the
ninth and was replaced by
Danny Kolb, who got the
final out with runners on
first and second for hi s
12th save.
Aaron 'Harang (3-1) ..lost
fjlr the first time in four
starts since being acquired
by the Reds from the
Oakland A's on July 30. He
gave up six. runs and eight
hits - at least one in four
of his five innings. He
struck out four and didn't
walk a batter.
Helms hit his 17th homer
Milwaukee Bre:wers Brady Clark scores on 'a hit by teammate Royce Clatyon as Cincinnat Reds
Jason LaRue catches themte throw in the eighth inning in Cincinnati. Monday. (AP)

,_

.:

�•

·S COREBOARD

The Daily Sentinef
Baseball
American League
EMIO!vlllon
WLPctGB

--

80

Toronto
Baltimore
Tampa Bay

64

-

49 .620
55 .580 5

76

.489 17

97
61
69
51 , 78

.489 19'1
.395 29

-Dtvlolan
WLPctGB
69 62 .527
67 62 .519 t
67 63 .515 1\

58

73 .443 "

32

97 .248 36

-Oivtllon

WLPctGB
76 55 .580
76 55 .580
63 68 .481 13
61 70 .48e 15

s.rndoy'I-

Ooldond 17, Toronto 2
Dotrclt t O, Anaheim 9

7, Tompa Bay 5
Mft,..,.. 8, Kanoas City 1
T - 5, Cl1lcago White Sox 0
~

_

ao.n6, 5ealttet
Monday's Ge,rnoa
8, Selttltl t
Olldond Toronto 6
N.
5. llaltinore 2

_,..

a.
'I'-

Toronto (Hendrickson 8-9) at Boston
(~ 9-5), 7:05p.m.
Dotrclt (Cornejo 5- t3) 11
(Traber
6-6), 7:05 p.m.
Cl1lcago Whlt8 Sox (Loaiza 16-ll) at N.Y.
(Clemons 12-7), 7:05 p.m.
Texas (Dickey 8-5) at Kansas City
9-10), &amp;:05 p.m.
Minnesota (Radke 9-1 0) at Anaheim
(Ladcey 8-12), 10:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Zambrano 9-7) at Sea111e
(Moyer 15-li), 10:05 p.m.
Baltimore (John50n tQ-5) ·at Oakland
(Harden 3-3), 10:05 p.(ll.

Clf'"l8nd

1a-.on

--,··-

at Bolton, 7:05p.m.
OetroH at C-.nd. 7:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at N.Y. Yankees. 7:05
Toronto

p.m.
Texas at Kansas City, 8:05p.m.
Minnesota at Anaheim, 10:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay at 5ealtle, 10:05 p.m.
Baltimore at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.

National LMgue
Eoot OMolon

W L

Ananra

64
70
70
68
57

Florida
Philadelphia
Montreal

Now'!br'&lt;

Pet GB
.646
.538 14
.538

46
80
60
64

••

.515 17
7'2 .442 26h

c.ntral OMolOn
w L Pet
68

Houaton
St Louis
Chicago
Plttsllurgh
Cincinnati
Mllwaukea

68
67

58
58
55

GB

62 .523
62 .523

62
70
72
75

.519

"'

,453 9
.446 '10
.423

13

-Division
W
78

San Francisco
Arizona
Los Angeles

69
67

ColoradO

64

San Diego

51

Florida (Redman I Q-7) at Pittsbu rgh
(D'Amico 8-12), 7:05p.m.
Philadelphia (Padilla 11·9) at Montreal
(Day 7-51. 7:05 p.m.
Milwaukee (O.DaVIs (}-{)) at C1flCtnnat1
( Serafini ~ ). 7: 10p.m.
N Y Mets (5eo HI al A11anta (Reynolds
1~ ). 7:35p.m.
Los Angeles (Od.Perez 1Q-9) at Houston
(Fernandez 1-3}, 8:05p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Prior 12·5) at St. Louis
(Stephenson 7· 12) , 8:10p.m
San Francisco (Schmidt 12-5) at Coloral10
(Oliver 11).41), 9:05 p.mc
San Diego (Ot.Pe rez 4-7) at Anzona
(Oessens 7·7}, 9:35p. m.
-MOdly'IGarnol
N.Y. Mats at Atlanta, 7:05p.m.
Florida at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Philadelphia at Montreal, 7:05p. m.
Milw~kee at Cincinnati, 7:10p.m.
Los Angeles atliouston, 8:05p.m.
Chicago Cubs al Sl. Loo!S, 8:10p.m.
San Francisco at Cok&gt;rado, 9:05p.m.
San Diego a1 Arizona, 9:35 p.m.

Angeles, 43: BWagner, Houston, 36:
Biddle. · Montreal . 30; Worrell , San
Franc1sco. 27: MiWilliams. Philadelphia.
27: Looper. Flonda, 24.

L Pet
51 .605
62 .527
62 .519
69 .48 1
81 386

GB
10
11
16

28 ~~

Sundoy'oGomn
Houston 6. Cincinnati 3
Milwaukee 10, Pittsburgh 9
St. Louis 3, Philadelphia 0
Atianta 12, Colorado 6
Florida 7, San Francisco 4
Chicago Cubs 5, Arizona 3
Montreal 8, San Diego 4
N.Y. Me1s 2, Los Angeles 1

Mondoy'IGoiMI
Montrsal12, Philadelphia 1
Mitwaukee 1O, Cincinnati 6
Arizona 11 , San Diego 8

Tuaday'• G•rne•

AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTfNG-ISuzukl. Seanle, .333: Mueller.
Boston, .328; GAnderson, Anaheim, .324;
GarCiaparra. Boston. .322; Bradley,
Cleveland, .321 ; MRamirez, Boston . .319;
MOrdonez. Chicago, .318.
Texas,
101 ;
RUN5-AROdriguez.
Garciaparra, Boston, 99; CDelgado,
Toronto, 98; MRamirez, Boston. 98: Wells.
Toronto. 96; ISuzuki , Seanle, 94; ASoriano,
New York , 92.
RBI-CDelgado, .Toronto, 1 17; GAnderson,
Anaheim . 109; ·'Wells, Toronto, 10 1;
BBoone, Seattle, 98; ARodriguez, Texas,
95: JaGiambi, New York, 94: Lee, Chicago,
92,
HOME RUNS-AAodrlguez. Texas. 37:
JaGiambi, New Vorl~ , 35; Thomas, Chicago,
34; CDelgado, Toronto, 33: MRamirez,
Boston, 31; BBoone. SeaHie, 31 . Wells,
Toronto, 30: RPatmeiro, Texas. 30.
PITCHING (12 Oecisions)-Halladay,
Toronto, 17-5, .773, 3.55: THudson.
Oakland, 13.-4, .765, 2.40; Hawkins.
Minnesota. 9-3.. 750. 2.17; ~M an i nez .
Bostoo, 9-3, .750, 2.32; DWells. New York,
12-4, .750, 3.96: Loaiza, Chicago, 16-li,
.727. 2.61 : Moyer, Seattle, 15-6, .714, 3.75.
STRIKEOUTs-Mussina. New Yor1t 164:
Clemens, New York, 164; PMartlnez,
Boston, 162: Halladay. Toronto, 155:
Loaiza, Chicago. 149; WaK&amp;fiek:l, Boston ,
144: Colon, Chicago, t &lt;\3.
SAVES-Foulke , Oakland, 33: Julio,
Baltimore, 29: Guardado. Minnesota. 29;
MAivera, New York, 27; Percival, Anaheim,
27: MacDougal. Kansas City, 26: Urllina,
Texas. 26.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATIING-f&gt;ujols; St. Louis, .362; Helton,
Colorado. .358; Bonds, San Francisco,
.339; Re nteria, St. LouiS, .332: Sheffield,
Atlanta . .331; Vidro. Montreal. .322:
LCastillo, Florida, .320.
RUNs-Helton, Colorado, 116: Pujol s, St.
Louis, 109; Furcal, Atlanta, 106: Sheffield ,
Atlanta, 106; Bonds, San Francisco, 92;
AJones , Atlanta; , 88; MGiles, Atlan ta, 85;
LCastillo. Florkla. 85: Bagwell. Houston,

85.
ABI-PrWiiSOn, Colorado, 121: Pujol&amp;. St.
Louis, 108: Helton , Colorado. 106: Lowell,
Florida. 105; SheHi eld. Atl anta. 105:
Thome, Philadelphia, t OO: Sexson,
Milwau Kee, 96.
HOME RUNs-Bonds. San Francisco . 39:
Thome. Philadelphia. 36: Sexson .
Milwaukee , 35; Pujols, St. LOUIS. 34;
JvLopez, Atlanta, 34; She ffieki, Atl anta. 33;
Lowell, Florida, 32; Edmonds. St.Louis, 32.
PITCHING ( 12 Oecision s)- AuO rtiz .
Atlanta. 18·5. .783, 3.56 : Reitsma,
Cincinnati. 9·3, .750, 3. 88 : Willis, Florida.
11-4, .733, 3.35; Prior, Chicago, 12-5, .706,
2.54 : Schmidt. San Francisco. 12-5 . .706 .
2.37; Hampton. Atlanta, 12-5, .706, 4.10:
W'Nilliams, Sl. Louis. 14-6 . .700. 3.52.
SJRIKEOU T5-Wood, Chicago, 208:
. JVazquez. Montreal. 195: Prior. Chicago.
179; Schmidt, San Francisco, 164;
Schilling , Arizona, 160; Noma. Lo s
Angeles, 154; KBrown, Los Angeles. 151 .
SAVEs-Smottz, Atlanta. 44; Gagne. Los

New England 3 0 0 UlOO 70 31
Buffalo
2 t 0 .667 7'2 80
·N.Y Jets
2 2 0 .500 74 79
Miam1

1 2 0 .333 7268

Tennessee
Indianapolis
Jacksonville

3 0 0 1.000 70 45
2 1 0 .667 67 so
2 1 0 .667 49 47

Houston

0 3 0 .000 35 73

International League

W - L TPct

NoriiiOivlslon

W L Pet. GB

Pawtucket (Red Sox )
O!tawa (Orioles)
Scranton (Phitlies)
Buffalo (Indians)
Rochester (Twins )
Syracusa (Blue Jeys)

78 58 .574
73 · 63 .537
72 64 .529
68 68 .500
65 7 1. .478

5
6
10
13
60 74 .448 17

Cincinnati
Pittsbu'llh
CieYeland

Soulll Dlvllllon
W L P&lt;:l GB
Durham (Devil Rays; 70 63 .526 Chark:Jne (White Sox) 69 68
Norfolk {Mats)
65 71
Richmond (Braves) 60 76
We1t OMston
W L
L'llUisVille (Reds)
74 62
Columbus (Yankees) 73 64
Toledo (Ttgelli)
63 74
Indianapolis (8lewers)61 75

Pet. GB
.544 533 1'7

Monday's Games
Buffalo 3, Rochester 2
Durham 6, Charlone 4
Indianapolis 5, Lou isville 2
Ottawa 6, Syracuse 3
Paw1ucket 5. ScrantonWilkes-Barre 4, 11
innings
Col umbus 10, Toledo 6
TueSday's Gamel
Buffalo at Rochester
Chartotte at Durham
Louisville at Indianapolis
Ottawa at Syracuse
Pawtucket at SCrantonWilkes-Barre
Richmond at Norfolk
Toledo at Columbus
Wednesday's Games
Charlotte at Durham
Louisville at Columbus
Nof""fotk at Richmond
Ottawa at Pawtucket
Rochester at Syracuse
Toledo at Indianapolis

GB

fl
2"1

5'1
21
27
GB

4
6"7

g
9
19

Monday'e Gamea
Chillicothe 6, Evansville 0
Washington 4. Florence 0
Ke nosha 6. Cook Cou nty 1
Gateway 5, Mid-Missouri 3
Richmond 7, Kalamazoo 6
Rockford 3, River City 2, 11 innings
TUesday 's Game•
Cook County at Mid-Missouri
Florence at Evansville. 1St game
Florence at Evansville, 2nd game
Kalamazoo at Chillicothe, 1st game
Kalamazoo at Chillicothe, 2nd game
River City at Kenosha
Rockford at Gateway
Wash1ngton at Richmond
Wedne.day'a Games
Cook County at Mid-Missouri
Florence at Evansville
Kalamazoo at Chillicothe
River City at Kenosha
Rockford at Gateway
Washin gton at Richmond

PF M
3554
51 61
44 6 1
5486

w.tt

East

460 11 ·,
.449 13

East Ot\'islon
W
L Pet.
Chillicothe
51 30 .630
Washington
50
32 .610
49
33 .598
Evansville
47
37 .560
Rk:hrnond
Kalamazoo
31
52 .373
Florence
25
68 .301
West Division
W L Pet.
Gateway
&lt;Ill
34 .585
45
39 .536.
Rockford
42
41 _5()6
Kenosha
40
44 .476
Cook County
River City
40
44 .476
Mid-Missouri
30
54 .357

-

WLTPetPFM
Denver
2 1 0 .667 68 SO
Kansas Crty
2 2 () .500 12 82
Oakland
t 2 0 .333 23 41
San Diego
1 2 o .333 36 53
·NATIOIIAL CO&lt;NFEAENCE

.504 3
.478 6"1
.441 11'7

Frontier League

0
PF M

WLTPct
t 2 0 .333
1 2 0 .333
120 .333
0 30 .000

Baltimore

MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS

N .' l ' - 7, 11a11imore0

PageB2 :

PtlilaOOiptlia
Dallas
Washington
N.Y. Giants
Carolina
Tampa Bay
New Orteans
Atlanta
oOtroit
Green Bay
Ch~go

Minnesota

WLTPctPFM
2 1 0 .667 60 57
1 2 0 .333 48 :)4
1 2 0 .3333743
0 3 0 .0003061

-

WLTPet PFPA
3 0 0 1.00060 17
3 1 0 .750 76 65
1 2 0 .333 51 71
0 30 .0005270
Norttl
WLT · Pet PF PA
2 1 0 .667 74 53
2 2 0 .500 72 81
1 2 0 .333 47 60
12 0 .333 5 1 48

Well
WL T Pet PF
Arizona
3 0 0 1.000 56
San FraflCisco 3 0 0 1.000 55
Seattle
2 1 0 .667 69
St. Louis
1 2 0 _333 56

PA
27
28
59
51

Thursday'a Game
PiHsburgh 15. Dallas 14
Frtday'a Games
New England 24. Philadelphia 12
Miami 30, Atlanta 21
Minneso.ta 21 , Oakland 6
Arizona 27, Chicago 17
S.turday'a Games
BuffalO 28. St. Louis 24
Detroit 38. Cleveland 17
Tennessee 23, Cincinnati 15
N.Y. Jets 15, N.Y. Giants 14
Ca rolina 20. Green Bay 7
Washi ngton 24. Baltimore 3
Tampa Bay10 , JackSOnville 6
San·Oiego 19, Houston 17
San Francisco 27. New Orleans 12
Seanle 42 . Kansas City 31
Monday's Game
Indianapolis 28, Denver 23
Wedneaday' a Game
Chicago at New England, 8 p.m.
Thursday, Aug. 28
Detroit at Buffalo, 7 p.m.
N.Y. Jets at Philadelphia, 7 p.m
Oakland at Dallas, 8 p.m.
Tennessee at Green Bay. 8 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at Battimore, 8 p.m.
Miam1 at New Orleans, 8 l)'.m
Kansas City at St. Louis. 8 p.m.
Allanra at Cleveland, 8 p.m.
Houston at Tampa Bay. 8 p.m.
Washington at Jacksonville, 8 p.m
Arizona at Minnesota , 8 p.m.
Friday, Aug. 29
Ci nci nnati at Indianapolis, 8 p.m.
Pinsburgh at Carolina, 8 p.m
SeaHIS at Denver. 10 p.m.
San Francisco at San Diego, 10 p.m.
End Pr.saaeon Schedule

Women's National Basketball
Association

National Football League.
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Eell
WLTP&lt;:tPFM

Indiana

18 .47 1 9
18 .471 9
Washinglon
9
25 .265 16
WESTERN CONRAENCE .
WL Pct GB
24 10 .706
y-los Angelos
20 14 .588 4
•-Houston
19 15 559 5
18 16 .529 6
x-Minnesota
18 16 .529 6
Sel111e
12 22 .353 12
San An101lio
8
26 ·~ 16

Kbstrewa. F«&lt;leased· Dl Michael Boireau,
DB O&lt;iYel Celestin, OL Jason Jimenez. DB
Jermeine Jones and FB Bob Slowiii:OWSici.

x-dlnched playoff spot

Mdlael Wiley and DT John Nix.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
WLPctGB
y-Detroit
25 9 .735
x·Chartone
18 16 .529 7
x·Connecticut
18 16 .529 7
x-Cieveland
17 17 .500 8

Marquise Walker off waivers from the ·

Maurice Tucker.
CLEVELAND BROWN5-Signed TE Jeff

-

DALLAS

Sundoy'o o Char10He 61, New 'l'brk 59. OT

Mondoy'o Gomoo
c - .nd 75, Charlone 68
Detroit 68, Washington 60
~ 72, lndiall8 62
Los An,jeles 67, liouston 64
Seattle 70, Sactamanto 57
End Regulot Sol_,

Pts GF GA
39 38 25
31 30 27
27 27 26
24 27 30
23 32 37

6 9 6

5 8 8
Wntam Oivlelon
W L T PtsGF GA
It 3 7 40 31 21
San Jose
7 6 8 29 36 31
Kansas City
8 9 4 282630
6 7 8 26 2523
4 134
16 22 44

Colorado
Los Angem
Dallas

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

McGacrahan from Miami tor a conditional
2006 seventh-round draft chOice.

Eallom DlviiiOn

D.C. United
Col umbus
New England

'

GREEN BAY PACKERs-Acquired S Scott

LH9ue Soccor
11 4 6
8 6 7
7 8 6

RB .

unatie-to-perform list.

Soccer
MatroS!am

COWBOYs-Re leased

DETROIT LIO&lt;Ns-P- CB Chri$ Cash ·
on iniured reserve and RB Artose P1nner
on rhe non-mttlaU injury list. Released G
Zach Wilsoo, LB Ken Philpot, RB l uke
S1a!ey and WR TlliYis Anglin. Activated DE
Kalimba Edwards from the physk::aUy-

y-c:linched conterence

Chtcago

NOTE: Three points for victory, one point
for tie.
Satulday'l Gom..
Chicago at New England. 6 p.m.
Colorado at San Jose, 10 p.m
Callas at Los Angeles, tO p.m.
Sundr{IGamu
Kan sas City at Col umbus, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, Sept 6
Los Angeles at D.C. United. 7:30p.m.
MetroStars at Kansas City, 8 p.m.
Columbus at Chicago, 9 p.m.
Dallas at Colorado, 9 p.m.
Sunday, Sept. 7
New England at San Jose, 3:30 p.m.

Transactions
American LHgue
KANSAS CITY . ROYALs-Acquired LHP
Brian Anderson from Cleveland for 18-0F
Trey Dyson. RHP Kieran Mattison and
cash .
NEW YORK YAN KEE5-Ciaimed LHP
Felix Heredia off waive"rs from Cincinnati.
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAY5-0ptloned OF
Jason Tyner to Durham of the ll. AecaMed
RHP Doug Waechter from Durham.
TORONTO BLUE JAYs-~J vated RHP
Cory Udle from the 15-day disabled list.

NationaiLNgue
CINCINNATI
REDs-Reca lled
OF
Stephen Smitherm an hom Chattanooga of
the Southern League. Sign"&amp;d LHP Danny
Serafini to a minor 'league contract.

Nattonal Basketball Auoctatlon
WASHINGTON WIZARDS-Sign ed G
Chris Whitney.
Notional Footballlu9uo
BA LTIMORE RAVENs-Released C Mike
Mabry, OB Man Lytle, WR Hugh Smith and
WR Mitton Wynn. Placed OT Tony Pashos,
LB Bernardo Harris. TE Trent Smith and
WR Javln Hunter on Injured reserve.
BUFFALO BILLs-Released WR Jamas
Jet!, STony Ori~o~er, CB Ahmad Brooks, OG
Richard Seals and TE Ray Thomas. Placed
OT Gary Byrd on injured'reserve .
CAROLINA PANTHER S- Released CB
Emmanual McDaniel, AB Skip Hicks, C
Zach Butler, LB Lawrence Fh.Jgence. DB
B rad Franklin, OT Eric Manning, OL Ben
NoWland, WR Francis St. Paul and 00 Tim

HOUSTCN TEXANs-Released 09 Mike
Quinn , OL Tarlos Thomas, OL Mf;tt
Ande,_,n, TE Pallid&lt; Hughes, Dl Howard
Green, OL Charles Hill, LB A.ntonto Wilson ,
s Curry Burns , PK Todd Sievers and P
Craig Jarrett. Recerved thei r 2004 seventh·
round draf1 plclc back and rescinded the
acQUisit ion of FB Oeon Oyer from Miami
after he did not pass his physical.
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS--Released K
Danny Boyd, K James Tuthill, DT Reggie
McGrew. DT Clanton Ballard, lB Bobby
BrookS. CB Chris L. Brown, WA Kerry
Hood. OT Jay Humphrey, OT Oa\19 Kadela,
and OT Barry Hall. Placed DE Javor Mills
and LB Joe Tuipala on injured reserve.
KANSAS CITY CHIEF5-Released OB
Scott Coving1on. K Jose , Cortez. S Henry
Baker. CB Willie Ford, RB Henri Childs, C
Jonathan Ingram, TE Mike Pinkard and WR
Wilson Thomas.
·
MIAMI DOLPHINs-Aeleased WR Margin
Hooks and WR Chris Jackson.
MINNESOTA VIKING5-Released OT
LaWaylon Brown, OL Robbie Doane, OL
Michael Early, K Todd France, TE Ma!f
Huebner. CB Jerma ine Mays. CB Willie
Miles, P Nick Murphy. LB Jarrod Penright,
DE Andrew Tippins. and OB Juston Wood.
Placed AB Michael Bennett and WR Nick
Davis on the physically-unable-to-perform
lis!.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTs-Released RB
Curtis Keaton, CB Reggie Doster, G
Shawn Draper. CB Lyna ris Elpheage. WA
Ira Gooch, S Co rey Hall, WA Terrep Harris,
P Mark Mariscal. T Jared Peck, WA Terrill
Shaw, FB Demetrius Smith and RB Watt
Williams.
NEW YORK GIANTs-Released WR ·
Kevin Wa lter, S Charles Drake , QB Ryan ··
Van Oyke, RB Antonio Warren , WA Derek
Dorris , TE Mark tnkron, OT Oton Meredith ,
G Vincent Sandoval, DL John Frank, Ol
Cliff Washburn, DL Oa11id Thompson and
LB Eddie Strong.
NEW YO RK JETS-Signed OB Todd
Husak. Released LB Vince Alexander, AB
Sean Bennett. RB Ctlad erinker, RB !an
Smart, DE La nce Gibson, OT Isaac
Herring, WR Tavon Mason. WA Michael
Oliva, TE Dallas Neil and C Matt O'Neal.
Placed C Dennis O 'Sullivan on . the
reserve-physically- un~·to-perto rm lisl.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLE5-Signed P Lea
Johnson to a one year contract.
ST. LOUIS RAM s-signed TE Spence r
Nead. Released K Owen Pochman.
SEATILE SEAHAWK5-Released WR
Cedric Bonner. G Kon rad Dean. K Re my
Hamilton, DT John Hilliard, QB Jeff Kelly. T
·oustin Kroeker. CB Tony Scan. FB Ed
Stan sbury, Le Tim Terry, T Michael
Thompson. WA James Williams and ~
Rodney W illiams.
TENNE SSEE TITANS - Released WR
Jerome A iley, WR Anthony Dingle, LB
Fred Barr. LB Lee Jackson . C B Derrick
Tatum and OL Mario Branch.
WASHINGTON REDSKINS-Ael eased P
David Leaverton , OL Tre Johnson, OL
Rod Jones. FB Thud Bunone. DL Nic
Clemons, LB Shamar Finney, WR Scott
Cloman. WR Se an Dillard and WR
Richmond Flowers .

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

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.

Public Notice
Bherlll'a S..le of Rul

Eatate
Revised Code, Sec.
~

The Blatt of Ohio,

:::==
«MMit
Plaintiff

OHIO

INC.
,.

~

CHRISTINE MAiiTIN,

elll
Dlllndent

c..
""· -.cv-ooe
In puml8ftCI
of en
OJdtr of .... INuad
by "" olark of e-ta

ol Common PleH of

County In the lbcm
entltttcl llollon, I will
ollw IDr . . el Pllbllo
euotlon, at ""door of

oourt

HouR In
the 1bova nomad
County,
on
s.ptamber, the 11 dey

, the

of 'flluNdey, 2003, at
10:30 a.m., lltt followIng d•urlbed reel

-County· 11tueta
In and
the
..... of
a-of Ohio,
lo .wft:
81tullad In th*
VIllage of . Pomeroy,
I

County of Meigs and
State of Ohio;
Beginning at t1te top
of t1te I8CII of the CIHI
of rock el the northwest corner of the
property deeded by
John A. Pomeroy, to
the Mardens and the
Vestry
of
Grace
Episcopal Church In
Pomeroy, Ohio, Vol.
28,
Pg. 724 of
Records of Deeds,
Meigs County, Ohio;
thane~~ Weal along the
top of t1te facti ol the
ciHI of rocks a distance of 78 feet;
then~:~~ South parallel
with the well line of
the Grace Episcopal
Par•onage Lot 20
deg. 10 Inches eeat a
dlatane~~ of 162 feet,

more or leas, to a
ateke; thence North
69 deg. 50 Inches east
85- 112 feet; thence
North 20 deg. 10 Inches weat 91 feel ;
then~:~~ Eaal 12 • 112
feet to the line of
the Grace Episcopal
Church
Paraonege
Lot; thence North 20
deg. 1 0 1 - weal
along the weal line of
the Grace Eplaeopal
Church
Paraonage
Lot, 71 "'M!, more or
leN, to the place of
beginning.
r\Jao • right to uM
aa meaM of lngreaa
and 1111reaa to aeld
above
deacrltl•d
property • right-ofway to 1M used In
accordance with deed
of John 1!. 11nd Annie
Lyone, mecle to Den
Diehl the followIng deiCribed preml..

ee;

...Inning on Main
liNe! at • point 12
feet .-tarty from the
aoutheMt comer of
Lot 1113 In Pomeroy,

Ohio; thence

n~rther·

ly f31 feet to • point
on the WMiarty line of
the Grace Eplacopal
Pwaort. . lot, which
point I• 71 IHI
eoutherly from the
lac• of the cliff of
roclto ; thende ....tar-

ly 12-112 feet; thence make timely payment
southerly a distance of said proceeds, It Is
of 331 feet, mora or ordered said deposll
lees, to Main Street; of
1110
of the
thence easterly 12 • appraised value shall
112 feet to the pia~:~~ of be
withheld
by
beginning, said right· Plaintiff as and lor
of· way to be uaed costs associated with
only In conjunction · advertisement and
with the reel estate resale of aid real
llrot above men- estate of Interest
tioned.
·charges.
For further agr- SherHI, County, Ohio
ment, see dHd ot Anorney lor Plaintiff
John E. Lyons and Robert K. Hogan
Annie Lyons to Dan (0024966)
Diehl, March 25, 1920, Javltch, Block a
Deed Book 121 , Page Rathbone, LLP
20, Melga County 602 Main Street, Suite
Deed Records.
500
Ohio
R Is herein agreed Cincinnati,
that II Second Street 45202
In Pomeroy, Ohio, Is (513) 744-9600
hereafter extended to (8) 26, (9) 2, g
t1te property ol john
E. and Annie Lyons or
either or both that lies
Immediately south of
the property hereinbefore granted and
the northerly Una of
Second Stretil so
extended does ·not
abut on the ooutherly
line of the property
herein aold to the
llt'llnteea -'!all extend
to Second Street ao
artended.
DHd:
Reference
Volume 7272, Peg•
231, Malga County
Deed Recorda.
• Bald
Premia••
LOCitted at 328· Eeat
Main StrMt, Pomeroy,
Ohlo, 417U
• Bald
Pr•ml•••
eppraiHd
at
$30,000.00 and can•
not be sold lor 1than two-thlrda of
that amount.
TERM 10 I' I A L f :
Puroheeer of tfl•
property oth• then
Plaintiff or lien holder
ahall be required to
depoeIt t/1 0 of th•
appraised valua II the
Ume of the Hie In the
form of 1 caahler'a
check and the bel·
once of the proceeda
to be paid within t.n
(10) dayo of the sale
by 12:00 noon to the
Shariff. Should the
purcha•ar fall to

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Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

.
1

C-1 Beer Ca rry Out permit
tor sale. Chester Township,
Meigs County, send letters
of interest to : The Daily
Sentinel , PO Box 729-20.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Comprehensive
Piano
Instruction , Children or
Adults. Inquire 740-4462272. Charles A. Murray,
Gallipolis, Ohi o. (Next door t
oHMC)

.r

GIVF.AWAV

1 Yellow tiger stripe ki tten 6·
8 wee&gt;s old (740)367-7328
10" Salellile dish system,
complet e.
rece ive r.
descra mpter. etc. 740-3792ll18
4 Mate mixed puppies.
Beagle/Germ an Shepard
good w/klds. 992-35 16
Loving Calico cat. about 1
yr. old , to good home
(740)446-774 1

Yi\RDSALE

.

Community
Yard
Sale,
Saturday August 30th at
45585 Eagle Ridge Road
(Rain or Shine) go north on
Acute 7 from Pomeroy
toward Chester. turn on
Eagle Ridge Road at
Memor y
Gardens,
go
appro)( 112 mile , sigr1s at
intersection, 8ar:n !Ill wh enever. Will have tools . clothes
, guns. antiques. glassware.
Col eman
equipment.
crocks, stone jars. lots of
good misc. furnitu re. Don't
miss it. Call 992· 1527

lor Discount~

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

I

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•alltpoli• Dailp Qtrtbune
lSoint ·~lea•ant 1\.egitttet.
The Daily Sentinel
6~nbap 1Jtm" -iPenttnel

Addressers wanted immedi·
atelyl No experience neces·
sary. Work at home. Ca ll
40 5-447 -6369

'

'

AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304675· 1429
Baby-Sitter, close to GreenSchool needed 2·mornlngs
before school and 1-even tng
after school. 740-446-8731

• Once you have •lgned up lor the San lor D~eoount , your r1newel notlc;,a will relltct your dltoounl.

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

Phone _ _ __ _ _ ~-----------~Mall or drop off this coupon along with a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box

489, Galllpolla, OH 45&amp;31

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HarWANI'ED

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Orl119rs
Earn up to 34 cpm to start.
Fuel Bonus.
Consisten t
miles. Asalgned 'equtpment,
new corwent!onals. Benefits
available. Call for details:
1·877·452·5627. EOE

Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dlspl•y: 1:00 p.m.
Thurad•y for Sundays

For Sundays Paper

Need 7 ladies to sell Avon ,
Call 740-446-3358
Now Accepting Applications
Exxon on 22nd Street. Point
Pleasant. Apply in Person .

Pika. Absolutely no phone
Fnie remove! of used applicalls!
ances, 740·44 1-1690
Overbrook Cente r is c urrently accepti ng applicati ons for
a Full time 7PM -7AM LPN .
Applications can be picked
up at 333 Page Stree t
Middleport Ohio or call
Cassy
Lee,
Staff
Development Coordinator at
740·992-6472
Overbrook Re habilitation
Center is looking for·a part time housekeeping/laundry
aid e, for all shltts, come In
and fill out an application at
Street.
333
Page
Middleport , Oh
Part time receptionist./. clerk
needed for de ntal office
send resume by mall only
703 22nd Sl. PoiAI Pl eaoant
wv 26650.

WANl'ED

To Do
O&amp;J Picky Painters
Free Estimates. Interi or an
exterior painting. Give your
home or ~ arag e a fresh
new took. We paint homes,
garages, mobile homes,
building$, barns and roofs.
Licenced and i nsu ~ed .
(Colt M·S, 8-6)
(304)895-3074
20 Vaara experience
and reterancaa.
Do you want to come home
to a clean home 1
1 can help yoU II I want to
clean homes in the Gallipolis
vlc:: lnl ty, I hav&amp; 20 years exp.
I can'glvo ref. call (740)256·
1482 If no answer please
leave message.
Mother of 2 will f!llbysit Cay
shift only. FeriCed in yard on
Sandhill. (304)895·3774
Trantmlltlons, all types ,
740.246· 667.1:Will pressure wash homes,
tra ilers, decks, metal build·
lngs and guHers. Celt (740)
448·0151 ask for Ron or
leave a me!lsage

Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pl.e asant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
£ -mail us at:
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Trlbune-SentineJ.Register will be r..pone lblelor no mori than the cost of the space occupied by the error •nd only the first insert ion. We shall not be
any loaa or expense that results from the publication or om11111on of an advertlaem1nt. Correcti on will be made in the first available ed ition. • Box number
ere alway• conlldln11at. • Current rate ctrd II!PPIIII. • All rnl 11t1te advtrtlsem1nl s are subjtd: to th• Federal F1ir Housing Act ol 1968. • This oewspa'P'" I .
accept• only help wanted ads meeting EOE standards. We will not know ingly ~ecept any advertising In violation of the taw.

""" MORIIJ:: HOMES

11JR SAU:

lwrtght(!!llc.net

1'M NGW H~Re:.
WH6N t&gt;D I GGT
M~ f'HoN~ Utu.?

Orumi"ner needed for estab·
RNILPN (HOME HEALTH)
llahed Pomeroy-ba.sed rock Part or Fu ll time, per visit or
band. Cowrs and originals, hourly.401k. cafeteria plan,
Led Zeppelin a must.
mileage, unifOrm
Practice twice per week .
all owances, ..CEU relm·
play out 8\lery other wee~­
bu rsement, Sam's club,
. end. glll&lt;entO chart er. ne! or
Health &amp; Life Ins. PTO
740.378-6102
which accumulates from
Need to earn · Money? Lets first work d.ay. Top pay In Trl·
talk the ~ Avof) . Call State. Sign on oonus. 80"0·
759·5383
Marilyn, 304·882·2645 to
EOE
tearn all the ways it can work

fOr you.

for Insertion
In Nert Day's Paper
iun1day In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

Monday- Friday

SCHOOL
Experienced lead carpe n·
FUNDRAISING
ters-must be familiar with aU
Area Director needed for
phases of residential remocf..
established co. for local
eling, valid drivers license.
area. Call on coaches.
tool s, transport ation . and
PTA's, &amp; Prin cipals, $46K.
refe rences . Local work. pay
813-763·2926
based
on
experience .
Applications avail able at
Christians
Construct ion. Therapists Needad
1403
Eastern
Ave .. AZ Dlveraltled Healthcare
is looking for full lime
Gallipolis. 446-45 14
Licensed •
Physical
Full tim e cook, apply in per· Therapists
and
son, Holiday Inn, Gallipolis
Assistants. OccupaUonal
Therapists and Assistants
Fu ll Time positions, mostly and Speech Language
days . Flexible schedu le's, Pathologi st lor rapidl y
app ly between 10am-11 am, expanding Home Healt h
Mon- Thur-Sat , McCiu res Agency in Pt. Pleasant, WV
Restaurant 820 Jackson . and surrounding areas.
Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 4563 1 WE Offer
• Excellent Wages
Help wanted caring for the ·comprehensive 1i1Surance
elderly, Darst Group Home, Package
now paying minimum wage. "Paid v acation. Holidays .
new shifts: 7am-3pm. 7am· Pe rsona l. and SicK days
5pm , 3pm· 11 pm . 11pm- "Job Security
7am. call 740-992·5023.
"Great working environment
Please contact Stacy at :
Jackson Pl ant-looki ng lor
1·800·577·431.0
industri al electr ici an minior fax your res ume to :
mum 5 yea rs industri al
1·937·695· t 37 5
experience , or equivalent
ed ucatio n, and 3 years Wanted full·time. desk clerk
experience , please 18ll: 1lpm-7am. apply In person.
Inc.
resume with sa lary history to Holiday Inn, Gallipolis. This
5 13·733-9164, or emai l· is the night Audit shill
jconrad@aluchem.com
Wanted someone to remod·
el, take plaster down &amp; put
Litt1e.Ceasars is hiring expe· plast er" back up (740)367rienced individuals tor man· 7328
W ill repai r large appliances
agement position. Above
Wanted- someone over 21 and air conditioners 740·
average Starti ng wages.
yrs of age to help with OJ &amp; 44 1·1 690
concu rrent with experience.
ka raOke business, must
Please stop by &amp; talk to
11'\\\(1\1
have vali d drivers license,
Michelle Ed ge lor more
wages
ne·
g
.,
call
(740)742·
deta ils or fax res ume to 740f' 10
Bus!MX'l
886-7 425. attn .
Scott 7709
OPPORnJNIT\'
Goodwin
Wilt babysit in my home.

t

I to
•

Display Ads
All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2

HELP WANTID

NOW HIRING· A leading
provider to individuals with
Bll'liNI'X'i
mental retard at1on and
TRAINING
developmental disabil ities is
looking ror direct care staff in
Gallipolis. No experience Gallipolis Career College
necessary. $6.35 pe r hour. (Careers Close To Home)
Paid training. If you would Call Today! 740-446·4367,
1-800-214-0452
like to joi n our team to help
WAr&gt;mD
WiM
gallipoliscareercoltega.com
individuals achi eve lh eir
roBuv
Res #90·05· 12748.
full est potential, call 740U..bsolute Top Dolla r: U.S 446·8145 or apply In person
Silver,
Gold
Coins, at Middleton Estates. 8204
Proolsets, Diamonds, Gold Carla Drive, Gallipolis, Of-! .
Equal
Opportu nity
Rings,
U.S. Currency.- An
25 Serious People Wanted
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Employer F/M/ON
Who want to LOSE weight
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
Now taking applications lor ~ Pay You Cash tor the
740·446·2642
desk clerk and housekeep- pounds you LOSE!
I \ll'l(n\11 '\I
ing · Apply In pe rson at Safe. Natural, No Drugs.
"I In II I ..,
Budget In n 260 Jackson 81J0.20 t -0632

on your home delivered subscription!

Word Ads
DZIIIY In- Column: 1:00 p . m .

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Come and enjoy a fun, loving , and educational environment. I am a MOther o1f
two and have over 5 years
professional experience with
children. Flexible hou rs.
Call or leave message .740256-6338

ll\egtster

Visit us at. 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 992·2157
£ -mail us at:
classified@ mydailysent!nel.com

s Sblrt Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Dfleriptlon e Jnclude A Prlce • Avokl Abbreviations
• Indude Phon·e Number And Address When Needed
e Ads Should Run 1 Days

116

FOUND Small Beagle dog.
Black/white/tan has a collar
at
Watterson
Grocer y.

·If so, you qualify for a

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
£ -mail us at:
classified@ mydailytribune.com

Offe~ ~~o~~

~older?
.
..
NOTICE
Sealed bids will be
,_lved by t1tt1 Ohio
of
Department
Natural Reoourceo.
Dlvlolon of Foreotry
up to tJnd Including
Tllured8y. September
11 , 2003 al 3:00 p.m.
lor an eotlmated
29,111 Board Feet
1/4"
International
Rule, 102 tons of
hardwood pulpwood
and an estimated
1,628 Ions of native
VIrginia/pitch pine on
19.5 acrea at the
Shade River State
Foreot
In
Oliva
Townohlp,
Melga
County, Ohio. For further Information and
timber
Inspection,
contact t1te District 4
Oftlce, 380 East State
Street, AtheM, OH
45701 .
Telephone:
(740) 58H913.
8/19,26103

-

Arizona Cardinals. Rel_
eased OL Alex ·
Suttsted, OT Roo Smith. WR Kwazeon .
L«Nefette, LB Tito Rodriguez, WR Chesley
Borders. QB Tommy Jones and CB

·~

W L T

Qt:ribune - Sentinel
CLASSIFIED

2003

S1uber.
C INCINNATI BENGAL&amp;-Clalmed WR .

16
16

New'&gt;bri&lt;

Major

Basketball

Football

Tuesday, August 26,

"--oiii-iiiiiliiiiiiO.r

I NOTICE I
OHIO VAL LEY PUBLI SH·
lNG CO. recommend s that
you do business with people
you know, and NOT to send
money th ro ugh the mail until
you have investigated the
o ffering.
ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI
60 Vending machines with
excellent locations all for
$10,995 BOQ-234·6982

Crowning In dept?
Starting a small bussin ess?
Need a fresh start?
We can· help on all types of
loans. no up·fronllees, las!
and easy approvals. call toll·
free 1·866-803-9765

I'RoFESSIONAL
SEI&lt;VIQ:&lt;;
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
No Fee U nless We Win I
1·888·582·3345
IU \1 I " I \ II

()

\.09 Mabetine Dr.: Ranch for
sa le. 1394 sq. ft . with fin ·
lshed fult basement, 5
ro.oms, 3 bedrooms, heat·
lngfcooling gas. sing le-ca r
garage, vinyl siding exterior
with deck (patio) attached.
Gallipolis
City
Sphool
D istrict Priced to sale by
owner. Call 740-4415-0551
for appointment.

AI•AK I'IiltN IS

11JR REN1·

New 14 wide only $899 1 br. apt. $400. a mon. util
down and only $167.98 per pd . near PVH 304·675-211 7
month. Call Nikki 740-385- leave message.
767 1
1 br apt. in downtown PI
New 2003 Doubtewide. 3 BA Plea sant . no pets 304·675·
&amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down 3788
and &amp;295/mo. 1-800-691·
1br All utilities mcluded.
6777
$32 5. month. (304)675-3654

!""0

AI'ARTMlNIS
FOK RF.NT

Twin Rivers Tower is accepting applications lor w1iting ·
list lor Hud-subsized. 1- br."
ap ar tment . ca ll 675-6679
EHO
\II l{l II\ '\lll'..:l

p10

•

www.comlcs.com

HOMES
RlRSALE
Ranch Style 3BR, 2baths ,
garage, Brick School Road ,
Gallipolis. view photo!inlor·
malion
on
line
at
www.orvb.com. code 8 1803
3br 5 acres. pond. Boo thitt or call 74Q-367-7039
Rd. 2-112 ba1h. $234,000.
lnlormation , photos online. Ranch Styl e 3BA. 2baths.
www.orvb. com code 811 03 garage, Brick School Road,
or call (740)446·71 43
Gallipolis, view photo/informat ion
on
line
al
4BR house and 69.9·acres
www .or11b.com, code 61803
Brick 3200 sq-ft., new home,
or call 740·367-7039
Clark Chapel Rd . $265k,
740·256· 1226
Remo deled 3 bedroom.
1/2 bat h in good neighborhood in Middleport. (740)
992-7743 or v1ew at
www.orvb.com# 81503

3 bedroom house, 4 112
acres, double garage, cen ·
tral air, will make your down
payment, (740)985·4288

MOBILE HoMI:&lt;;
All real estate advertl•lng
In this newspaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fair Houalng Act of 1968
whic h makes It llteget to
advertise "any
preference, limitation or
discrimination baaed on
ra ce, color, religion , • ••
familial status or national
ortgln, or any Intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or
dl11crlmlnatlon."
This nawapaper will not
knowingly ac cepl
advertisements for real
estate which Ia In
violation of th• taw. Our
readers are hereby
Informed that alt
dwelllng• adv ertleed In
this newspaper are
avall!lble on an equal

fUR SALE
1994 C layton Mobile Home
14JC70 . 2 BR. 2 BA. new
heat-pump,
2· decks
$1 5,500 740 -245-9469
2 BR· 84 Oakwood MiH1 t 4"
wid e $6500.00 on rented lot.
740·446-3617
2000 Clayton Mobi le Home .
14ll:70 , 3BR, 28 th . great
cond, all up-grades. large
back decK. $22.000. 740379- 2928
Cote·s Mobile Homes an
assembled team with over
120 years of housi ng e"perience .. Patriot Homes out·
standing 1/5 year wa rranty,
shingles &amp; insul atio n by

_
House for sale in Ohio
3 br. in Oakhi11on a nice lot
$65,000 owner lin. available
$5000.down &amp; $399 per.
mon.740-256·1 686 or 740·
339·0387
- - - - -- - - Meadowbrook Drive 3br.
2ba. Hardwood floors, large
family room . Priva te, fenced
back
yard.
and
garage.(304)675- 1303

Owen s Corning, vinyl siding
by Vipco, James Hardi e sid ing available, low "E" ther·
mopane wi ndows by ~inro
carriage carpels &amp; flooring
by Congoled. appliances by
General Electric, faucets by
Glacier Bay &amp; Moen, light
tlxtu fes, cabinet pulls &amp;
knobs direct from HOJ1le
Depot (easy to match just a
few good reasons why yOur
next new home should be
from: Cole's Mobile Homes,

New Home 3BR, 2 baths, 2
car g arage, Debbi e Drive,
O~lllpolls, ~o~lew photo/lnto rmatlon
on
line

15266 US o East, Athens,
Ohio,
1·740-592· 1972 .
"Where you get your
money's worth"

www.orvb.com, code 81903 .-c
, M b1 H
ole 8 0 1 6 ames
.
or ca ll 740--245·9268 after
2 br Housel
us so East, Athens. Ohto,
5
HUO home. O o ~ $6 ,500. pm
45701, 740·592-1972
Far listing call 1·800·7 19· Nice private country home,
300 1 Ext. F144
2600 square feet , 6 bed· Land Home PacKages aVail rooms, 2 baths, walk·ln able. In your area. (740)446·
2 Story older, well main· bilsement, propane gas 1ur- 3384
talned 4b(, 1-1/2 bath. nace wfcentral air, co mes
Pomeroy. Information , pho- with equipped kitchen. 2 Must sell nice 2 bed room
tos online www.orvb.co m plus acres. 2 4x24 barn , 14x70. VInyl siding and 2x6
code
80603
or
call price redu ced to $80,000. walls. Call Karen a 740·385·
(740)742· 1049
99 48 ..
(740)992-3650

HO\ISHJOU&gt;

l rl'K Hli

l.ms &amp;

2-B A. 2 bath, living·area,
and kitchen . AJC, and appli- Good Used Appliances.
and
5 acres for sate. G re~t toea - ances . $400. call 740·446- Reconditioned
Guaran teed.
Was hers.
tion oft Kerr . Rd .. 2 mites 4859
Drye rs.
Ranges.
and
from AT. 35 and Holzer
Retngerators. Some sta rt at
Hospital. 10 minutes fro m
2BA apt .. $375/mo ultilites $95. Skaggs Appliances. 76
downtown. (740)388 -8972
included,
$300/deposl t. V1ne St .. (740) 446-7398
740-992-2274
Country Land
Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark
Co untry Living
Apartment Available No·w . Chapel Road. Porter. Ohio.~
Country Fun
RiverBend
Pl ace.
New {7 40)446-7 444 1-877-830-·
Haven. WV now accepting 9 162 Free Estimates, Easy
RS(;reational Land &amp; Scenic
app lications for HUO·subsi- lin anc1ng, 90 days same as
Homesltes available
dized. 1 bedroom apart - cash . Visa/ Mas ter Card.
th roughout Southern Ohio.
ment. Utilities included Ca ll Drive- a.' little save alot
(304)88 2- 3121 Apa rtmem
GALU A COUNTY
ava1table lor quali1ied sen- Thomp sons Appliance &amp;
FEATU RES
Repair·675· 7368. For sale.
ior/disabled person. EHO
automa tic
re-co nditioned
Home &amp; Hunting
Apar tment lor rent 1n washe rs &amp; dryers. rel r~ gera·
La nd available in th ree Syracuse, $2 00 depos it, tors
gas and elec tnc
areas. 3 to 33 acres. Wllh on $3 15 per month, must have ranges. a1rco ndiM ners. and
1 1+acre tra ct
touching sutficient income to qualil y wr inger washers. Will do
Wayne National Forest
(740) 378·6 11 1
repa1rs on maJor brands m
shop or at your home.
APART·
Owner Financing Available. BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
AT
BUDGET Used Furn1!ure Store, 130
Call lor FREE mapst
PRICES AT JACKS\)N Bulaville Pike. Mallresses.
800·213·8365
couches
ESTATES, 52 Westwood dresser s.
www.countrytyme.com
Drive from $297 to $383. bunkbeds. bedro om SUites
Lot for sale in Racin e. Walk to shop &amp; movie s. Ca ll recli ners.
Grave
1740)992·5858
740-44 6-2568
Equal Monuments. 740·446·4782
Gallipolis. Oh Hrs 10·4pm,
Nice mobile home lots, quiet Housi ng Opportunity.
Stop By
cou ntry setting. $ 115 per
For Lea se: Beautilul. 1600
mont h
1ncludes
water.
Sq. Fl., re sto red, second
sewe r. tra sh. 740.332-21 6·7
floor apartment in Histo ric
District. Ideal lor profess ion Bu y or
sell
Ai venn e
al couple. all modern
Ant1qu es. 1124 East Mam
amenitie s. 2 bedrqoms:
spac1ous ltv1ng/dining : lots
on SR 124 E Pomeroy. 740·
10
Hot.NEs
o t stora ge. 11 12 baths: rear 992-2526
Russ Moore.
111RRIN I'
d eCk: HVAC S600/month
owner.
plus utilities. Securi ty and
Moving Sale 8/30-911 M1sc
2 Bed room hOuse. I u II base- . key deposit. No pets.
ment. !rae gas. central air. References required. 740- lu rn it ure. I ree zer.t readm1ll ,l o
ols, misc·i tems. 34580 Crew
brg
~a rd.
h~ nd rc app ed 446-4425 or 446·3936
accessible. 2 m11es out of
Ad , Pomeroy 9arn/4pm
Po rtlan d. $400.00 month For Lease: One bedroom.
ML&gt;;C.'Et.I.ANFn\ IS
740-843-5 128.
untutnished, newly redecoM ERCHAN I&gt;ISE
rated, second Hoor Apt. , at
233 Second Ave. 2-slor y come r of SecoruJ and Pine.
hOuse 2BA. 11 /2Balh, fur· AJC . $ 300 _00 per mon th. Coo l Downl!
Cent ral
ni she d kitchen. WID hoo ~· water 1ncluded Security and Cooling Systems New and
up, off stree t par~i ng, wal ~ . key deposit. Off street park· Used Insta lled (740)44 6·
anywh ere dow nt own, 12
monlhs min. $ 545 _ month. ing. References Required . 6308
No pets. 740-446-4425 Or
_
ref/ dep, no pets. 740-446Electra Ride 11 Sta1rway ele446 3936
- - - -- - - - vator. (great lor han di4926
capped/ elderly) call (7 40)
Clean 2 br. house in GraciOUS l1v1ng I and 2 bed·
44"6-2423 aher 7:00 pm
room
apArtments
at
Village
Pome roy, $400 m o. , plus
Manor
and
R1verside
deposit, ~740)69 8 -72 44
JET
Apartments m Middleport
AERATION MOTORS
From
$278-$348.
Call
740·
For Rent- Nice 4 BA home
Rep3ired. New &amp; Rebuilt ln
nea r Rio Grand e. $7 50.00 992-5064. Equal Housi ng
S1ock. Ca ll Ron Evans. 1per month. Deposit and Opportunities.
800-537·9528
References req uired . Call
Wi se man Rea l Estate at tf oneysuckle Hills Apts.
Loca led on Colon1al Dr Lawn mower traile r 5x8
740·446·3644
beh1nd H1ghway Patrol Post (heavy duty) , 50 mch tallHome !rom $ 199/month. on Jackson P1ke 1 &amp; 2 br gate. ramp in good cond .
fo rec los ure
homes 4% ren t starling $255. low &amp;
good tires. new spare neve1
down . 30 years at 8.5% apr. moderate mcome Equal
used (740)245·0460.
4 listings call 800-3 19-3323 Housmg Opport un1ty 740·
ext 1709
446·3344 TOO 1-800· 750· Lawn tractor &amp; wagon GT12
1740)367-7326
0750.
Small 3BR hou se, 47 112
Spruce Street. Gallipolis Modern 1 br. apt. /740)446- N EW AND USED STEEL
$400/d epasit, $4tlO/month 0390
Steel Beams. F'1pe Reba r
For
Concrete .
Angle.
740-446- 0332
'
, Now Taking Applications- Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
I""' MOBILE HOMI~
For
D1a1n s.
35 West
2 Bedroom Grating
IUR RENT
Townhouse
Apartments, Driveways &amp; Wal kways . L&amp;L
Includes Water Sewage. Scrap Metais Open Monday.
2 Bedroom mobile home in Trash, $350/Mo . 740-446· Tue sday. Wednes d ay &amp;
Friday, Bam -4:30pm Closed
Middleport.
$350
plus 0008.
d eposi t. No in s1de pets.
Thursday.
Sat urday
&amp;
Pleasant Valley ' Apartment Sunday (740)446-7300
(7 40 )992·3194
Are now takmg Applications
2 BA. per1ecl. air. porch. lor 28A. 36 R &amp; 48 R.,
are
ta ken
very nice. 740-446·2003 or Applicati ons
Monday thru Friday, from
740·446· 1409
9:0p A M .-~ PM . Office Is Block, brick, sewer p1pes.
3br mobile hOme with wid. Located at 115 1 Everg reen
windows. lintels, etc. Claude
Located In
Glenwood. Drive Pomt Pleasant, WV
Winte rs . R10 G1ande. OH
(304 )576·9991
'phone No is {304)675-5806. Call 740·245·5 121 .
Mobil Home tor rent 740· E.H.O
446· 1279
Tara
Townho use
Apartments. Very Spacious.
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA. 1 For Sale Blue Heeler Come
112 Bath. Newly Carpet ed. mixed puppies. 8 weeks
1 and 2 bed roo m ap ar t- Adult J)oo t &amp; Baby Pool. old, 4635 Hannan Trace Ad .
ments. turnlshed and unfur- Patio, Start $385/Mo. No Yoder Collar Shop
Pels, Lease Plus Security . ~-------nishe d, security dep osit
Deposit Required, Days . Minia ture Yorkle , male,
required. no Q819, 740·_992740-446-3481 ; Even.ngs. w/papers.
9 mo. old
22 18.
740-367·0502
(740)949·2253 after 6pm

ACRt:~GE

':::•P:P:•:rt:u:nl:ly:b:•:•:••:·::~

(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
for immediate possession all
within 15 min . of downto wn
G allipolis . Rates as low as
6°/o. (740)446-3218

1""1

f540

r

r

t

�'

Tuesda~August26,2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

August 26, 2003

.com .

BRIDGE

NEA CrosswQrd Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

H111 ·s Sell
Storage

4monthold
lllllle dot froM

.AWEL

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45n1

Edmundson
Rud (Dtlnvllle)

aru. Brown
with black tllll.
white chest and
blnck "mask"'
above eyes.
Mlsslncslnce
Auc.11.Pieue
C.ll741-7710

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

•... and that's
:.when Dave
)oiled his

A B

"'
¥ &lt;
IQ

~ Perimeter !

•

•

$2,100. (304)675-5253

INf~GTION

FRurrs&amp;

electric

red

in

(740)985·3840

VEGEl 'liDLI-S

i

VA&gt;~&amp;

Jack Russell Terrier pups· Yes were gonna have Fresh Hay Round Bai ls, $20. 740· 1995 Monte Carlo Red, high
. 4-WDs
$150
eac h·· also
Jack Freestone peaches !rom 379·2989
miles, exc. cond., 1 own er, ~-------.,J
Russell Beagle , m1xed. $25 Romney at the Farmers
11ery c lean $3900.304-lt95·
II (\ '\..,1'01&lt;1 \1 10\
3346 serious calls only atter "979 F-150 4N4, 35 1-M , 4
1st shots &amp; wormed . (740) Market Saturday Aug, 30.
sp., good condition, $2500
698~7055
Also sounds ol bluegrass
Spm. &amp; weekends.

AlJI'O!l

playing 10-Noon also

Solid
Wh ite
regis tered
German Shep. puppies. has
fi rst
shots
and
been

1996 Buick Regal $ 1900.
1990 Dodge Mini Van 3·tone
1985 Bu ick La Sabre runs 1998 Ford Conture $2600.
Blue and Wh ite custom
van.Welt
taken
care
wormed . 7wks old, ask lor ~;:;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; good . $300 . 1989 Fo rd 2000 Ford Focus $2900.
Ecoline 150 Vert. Custom 1994
Mercury
Coug ar ol.120,000 miles. asking
Tommy. (304)882-3486
r10
FARM

r

70

I \lnl"'l 1'1'111 '-~
,\11\I"'J(Hh.

I L,~--EQuu
-·'11·1ENT
·· ....

M USICAL

w/tv $1500. (304)675-9739 $1900.

Call or come see anytime.

1992
1998
1997
1998

...
_ .INsTR
. ciiiiiiii
U,iM
iiiii;
fl'iifS
iic......
•

1970 135 Massie-Ferguson- 1987 Ford Escort wagon for
AIIo
Tractor,
between-1 000-a nd- parts. S250,(740)992·6968
Selmer Bundy II
case. 1500 hours, like new, $6500
Saxophone, with
1989 Cadillac Seville, fully
$1200 new. sell lor 5400. call 740·446·9204
loaded, reduced to $2695.

740-446-0350

Demeo tobacco sprayer, 6
rows with folding boom.740FRuns&amp;
379·2290
VEGf;rADLf~
- -- - - - - Fa rm tractor Agri Power
Canning tomatoes- u-pick
9000. excellen t condi tion ,
$4 , we pick $6 bushel ; bell
$4,700, (740)742-0026
peppers by order.. $ 10 a
bushel. (740)247-4292
W AIVfED

r

•

m Bur

Calvalair $1000.
1994 Chevy ~u . s2eoo
Ford Escort $2000.
Mecury Mystic $1 600. 1995 GMC P.U. $2500.
1 (' 94
Chevy
Silve rad o
Firebird $4300.

Home Grown Red Pontiac
Potatoes $8.00. Per sack

(304)675-2745
Potatoes

for

sale

auto. good cond. (740)446 _
2 115
~

1991 Thunderbird, goad ·

89 Dodge Dakota auto trans
V-6 $1895. 97 Kia 4dr. 5
speed, air. $1995., 90 Ford
Tempo auto, air, $ 1250. 94
Ford escort 4dr, automatic.
$995. Riverview Motors
pomeroy (740)992-3490

1992 f-ionda -C ivic EX, low 99 Ford Mustang $6500.
mites, sun-roof, C/0 , dark- 98 Toyota Camry $4900.
blue, clea n, good cond , 98 Pontiac Firebird $4800.
auto, air $2500. 740-379- 95 Olds Cutlass 2dr. $2600.
95 Ford Probe $1 750.
2615
98 Ford Co:nture $2500.
1993 Bu ick LeSabre. runs 00 Ford Focus 5-s peed
we ll , needs so me work , $2800.
$500. 740.4468807
92 Cavalier $1200.
GOATS FOR SALE
96 Ford Conture $ 1600.
2 100% Boe r Buds. 5 1993 New Yorker, good work
87 Pontiac Grand Am $300.
months in age Full registra- car. 13,200 miles. $2,750
~
l ion. papers,
pare nts on OBO 740-441 -0643
farm, 740-245-0485 after .:.:.::...~~.:_::._:::__ 8 &amp; D Auto Sales HWY 160
5pm.
1995 Ford Asp ire, low miles, N 740-446·6665
runs good, loo ks good ,
Miniature Donkeys
740- 46mpg $ 1000. 740-388FOR SALE
r4-46_-_
, _s_8_ _ _ _ _., _B7_4_3_ _ _ _ _ __

(Kennebec. Red Pon tiac) ,
Man-Sat. . 65002
Sta te
Route 124 . Reedsville , Oh.

r

SHOP

50# $10

TRUCKS

Dean HiD
New&amp;: Used
475 South .C)lurch St.
Ripley, WV 25271

160N 740-446-6865

IMPORTS
Athens

1995 Ford E-.350 Van , 14ft.
high cube box, e~ecellent

Start Immediately'
Genuine Opportunity!
For F(ee Information ,

can Toll Free·
1-800-357-1170

or '"'"'"""' you knO.

N. 740·446-6865
96 Ply. Voyager $5500. firm
304-675-2 11 7 leave mes-

sage.

VIAGRA-LOWEST PRICE
ReliR&amp;. Guaranteed. S.'l60 per100mg.

r~ MOIURLY~

BR IN G IN TH.S A D
FOF1 mJ L Y $1 '31JIJ PE R HUN DRE D

I ){ I NST A-CA$H ){ I
GEt Cash Today
Bring your

Why pay more7 We have the answer!
Vio11x. Ce lebrex. Lipitor. more!

2001 GSXR 600 Low miles

Prescription Buvers Group

1-U7-7U3

$5600.00
4305

Pomaroy1 _0H

740-992-CA&amp;n f22741

Maplewood Lake
on St. Rt. 124
Between Racine
&amp; Syracuse.
Large spaces
$7.50
740-949-2734

740.256·9197

• 1111

mo~

17ft. Sting er Bass Boat. 175
hp. ready to go. $2500. obo.
Must Sacrifice. (304)674-

•lert

• Jmprova memory

• fee I htppler

0698

Win 1 Hoi.IM and 8utlne11
In Wasilla. AL11ka
Esaay ConteJI ~i iJ
www.'l\'asijlaoonteelcom

01 SASE: Waai lta Web Wortd
713 w. Parks Hwy. C·130

1990 Thompson

boat 17-ft

140 horsepower inboard
with fish-tinde r radio/cassette , ship/shore, bikini top
and winter cover. $6,000 ,

74()-387·0247

949-1415

Or

WE REPAIR
• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mowers
•Chain Saws
• Snow Blowers
• Weed Eaters
Tillers • Edgers
Go Karla • Mini

Grt~r

Morrty wt\lt lttlpllll JOUf
Commulll"1 Tiler\ piMI &gt;btl

1otali1'1Q closeout

jmercha1nd"' lor ln"f company
~lhngl

We do sales wo~
provrde contact IISIS Slots
AC!Ias!1 Fe* FREE 24lnlo ~ i t, Wr ite ZAK EN,

Ol""'&lt;t 1195
Adopllonlm

INCORPORATION 11115
Not do it '(OOIMit Kit!

Shorm"'w" Cangoa Patk, Ca

Consot~te

your

b~ls

with

First COfltir)emal

$2.500 00 10 $150,000 00
Bad credit ~meet

LO ANSOAC
Free consultation with live aoent

·

CALL 1·1100-30:1·1170
101' tree information

"j

"!L ,~
f~

r.

32119 Welshtown Rd.

TOOl Box tor mid·size pick-

9

High 81. Dry
a:r.--~---..., Self Stor!\ ne
rlO
~?~ I
~
"6

up, while 2yrs old like new
wi th
$50, or best --,

t ••
Jl\'II"MV T II:.uu•.,.• ~

C&amp;C

•

General
Home
Maintenance- Painting, vinyl
siding, carpentry, doors ,
windows, baths, mobile
1998 Yellowstone Ca mper
home
repair and more. For
22 ft ., $ new tires, ret, air,
heat, &gt;Jery good cond. lree estimate cal~het, 74D-

$4000. 740-386-6743

No application tee

' I H\ I~ I "

Toll-fntt 1~9

r10 ~~ ~ ~

www.iwlllbtdtlrtfrw.com

I""

:I-lOW /&gt;..OOUT /&gt;..~TIC.

{ c.N-1

:i~T, f'l\Y 1..0\J€. '?

992·6323.

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.

Call

24 Hrs. (740) 446·

0870 , Rogers
Waterproofing.

Basement

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232

L---------

THE 944
STORE
Salvage
Parts &amp; Cars

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

County Rd. #35
Racine , Ohio ·

Read your
newspaper and learn

Pass

(740) 517-9138

or
(740) 949·0020

5
6
7
8

36 Toy build·
lng block
37 Realize
9
39 Do a gram- 10
mar task
13
40 Corporate
abbr.
19

The re:&amp;sull or this deal, no. 87 of 120•
su'r pri si ng at one table. When you

l oo k at t he Nor th -Sout h ha nd s, y ou

would li ke to r eac h si x c lubs. Gi ve n
Wesl's open ing bid, both m ajor-suit fi ·
nesses m ust be w i nnin g. But t hat i s
m uch cn~ i e r sol d th an do ne.
In thi s nuction . Wolff (North\ m ade a
Micha els Cue-Bid. showi ng at least 5-5
in th e majors. His three-diamond r ebid
indicatetl a very st r ong ha nd. M or se

· --:. ....&lt;7')~
·
( !'
.· . , · · . .'

loved ones.

Jlii;,.

ope ne d with a wea k no-trump, ind ica t..., ing 12- lol points. Smit h &lt;Nor th) ~ u r­
pri sin gly ove r ca lle d two clubs, wh ic h
\(li:"'&lt;OU'RE. :.\ILL
pr omise d a m ajor tw o-s uit er.
'(OJ 7 Howeve r . Seamon (South /, expectin !!J
hi s p a r t n e r t o h ave a muc h weaker
hand . passed. Smith won 12 l l'i ck s, but
the Caync teR. m los t 10 imps
With a hand of such strength , North
should start with a penaltv double (or
overcall t wo no-t r ump. if ihe partn er sh ip per mits this w i th any very strong
two-suiter l. If the double is passed out,
th e pe n a lt y !' h o u ld b e acceptabl e.
H ere, Et~s t w il l r un to t w o s p ades.

r

1)0!

Box 189 Mlddle~rt

FRANCIS , I CAN

•

!i!EFUTE THAT

CLAIM BY
ASKING 'IOU ONE
Slt\PLE Q UEST ION :

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

PANCAKES ARE NO
600D WITHOUT SYRUP..

AstroGraph
'lbur&lt;Birthday:
Tuesday, Aug, 26, 2003

O ReorroMge

leners of rhe
words be·
low to form fou r si mple wo rd~.

four scrambled

I~-T,-T
B0 L 0 0 V
I· -1:--r~--r~--r~-1
~---------,

~=~-==·==-=~-=~-....!

I

~_:A;.,...V!.,-1'-"LT-T.!...r.,..-l
~~

' I 1
==
·I:::·
=~-~

~~~~',;1~;:'o~ 23-0ct 23)- someone

!

handle. while you do 1he powder-pull sruH.

PNWWROI

01111

change his or her mind and walk oil 1he

Bonanza Get
SFREE

3

~I,0 II)
_

_

ISI /,-.,:,'

PT
.

_

L...J.-..L....J.-..L.....J

I, I'N EI CIl

I P

l

Q)

"That'sjust g reai," myhusband
grumbled . "I bo ught a suil wilh lwo
pairs o f pants and I've discovered
/that th e jacket has a
in
"

I e

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)- Innately,
you tend !o be quite fe r ve nt in yo ur L_ J._ J._ J._.l]-.l-.

-----

.,

CARPENTER '
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages

• Elec1rlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gunera
• VInyl Siding &amp; Poln11ng

• Patio and Porch Decka

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

'I&lt;W\t-liNG'· ~E FOLl-OWING PR06RAM
CONTAINS GRAP\iiC.$C£NES liND MAY
NOT &amp;E SUITA&amp;!.&amp; fOR SOME VI~W~

NOm&amp;\.eM!
I ''16 SeEN TONS
OF GOllY MO'IIES

'I'Du su~

'&lt;OU'RE READY
fOil. il-11 s'l

MYERS

~~~~ ~"--...,..,

beliefs, so lake care today not to carne
oft too harshly In expressing your views.
Try to be a bi t subdued.

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

HOW ABOUT A PROP OF
WATER TO WA&amp;H IT
POWN?!

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

PR INT NUMBERED LETTE RS IN

3

I I I I

Results

THe LaS\ da-&lt; oF
SUMMer;!: V8C81ioN aND

DoGGoNe IT,

I MGonna

MaKe T&gt;-le MoST of IT

THE GRIZZWELLS

Stop &amp; Compare

8
.
8

SAG ITTA RIUS (Nov . 23-Dec . 211THESE SQUARES
Associates will resent it today ilthey feel
UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
they have to account to you for a !I ol their
GH ANSWER
.
•
.
,
actions and deeds. Be a live-and- let-live
person who allows others th e freedom to
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
be themselves .
,crosty- Quirk- Jetty- Simply- PROFIT
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -Keep
I igno red most of the advice I wa s getting conce rning
a tight rei n on ynur temper today or else
marnage
. My Mom told me that m~st people get advice
you could easi ly take oflense at some·
but few are smart enough to PROF IT by it.
thing you interpre1 as outrageous, which
in rea lity is an innocent remark intended · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - to entertain .
son lor your peers today. Although you
ADUARIUS (Jan . 20-Fob . 19) - II you
may think you k no w what they be lieve,
put too many restrictions or conditions on
they could be quite angry with yo u if
something someone etse is attempting to
you re oN bAse
deal with today ,' thls person will take a
GEMINI (May 21-June 20 ) - Showing a
hike and leave you to fend lot your self
preference among your loved ones tOday ,
You won 't come out the winner.
even it you don't meen to. can be one of
PI SCES (Feb . 20 -March 20 ) A
the most hur 1ful things you could do. If
1
cohort's judgment might be fa r better
someon e becomes na te. consrder the
than yours today, but you'll never know if
cause of that outrage .
you refuse to lis ten to any sugges tions.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Keep your
Keep an open mi nd and don't be so
cool should you lind yourself dealing with
obstinate about having you r way .
an extre mely diHicult individual today . No
AR IES (March 21-Apri l 19) matter how nasty this person becomes .
Unfortunately , tasks you had planned Ia
don't demean yourself by behaving in kind .
take care of could prove to be troubleLEO (July 23-Aug . 221- Somelhlng
some and not easlly achieved today due
extravagant
tha t you can 't alford (bu t
to a great deal ol difficulty to keep your
which your pa ls might be purchasing)
mind on your work .
should not be the cause of press ure to
TAURUS (Apri l 20-May 20)- Do not
keep up with them , This fad will pass with
take It upon yourself to be the spokespertime .

SOUP TO NUTZ

MANUYS
SELF STORAGE

740-992-1611

you deve)cp from step No. 3 below.

Fast

304-675-2457

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

- -.

Ciet

878-2487 or 448-2112

ROBERT
BISSELL
COISTIIIcnll

-: - -

Comp lele th e chuckle QIJOied
by filling In the missing word•

Classifieds

r .

Henderson, WV

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

"

WOlD

~=~-

ing alt the ugly tas ks for this person to

R N Z AS

PREVI OUS SOLUTION -"The uglier a man's legs are , the
belter he plays golf- i1's almost a law.· - H.G. Wells

points are concerned . Take ample ·time to
analyze all the detai ls and consider the

job if It becomes evidenllllat you're teav-

0

A V

0 K K A S

who is prepa red to help you today may

Buy $5.00

G P0 I

0 UN I

, " USODA 1GL

8

51-lE l-IAS PANCAKES
IN HER LUNCH

ODTOLV

BNIVSUZOGAZS

UOLRNIM

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) - Do not le i
your eage rness for drawing up a con tract
cloud your iudgment today where the fina

PEANUTS

every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon

AV

AMSNDNJL ."

their
alms andobjective.
blend them into you r own
for a common

Let me do 1\ fer you

Last Thursday of

992-6635

R NUS

Your pcsslbllitles for generati ng the cooperation of !hose In high places who can
help you reali ze your goa ls a r e quite
good in the year ahead . Yo u'll find ou t

Ta~e

6:30

[740) 992-3194

Todey's clue.· R equals M
" USOOAGL

That would probably cos t 1,400, bu1 no
doubt South would jump to fi ve club s.

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

(10'x10' 610'x201)

by Luis Campos
Celebrity CiPhe r crypt ogra ms are created !rom quotations by famous
people. past and presen t Each lener 1n the cipher stands for another.

W..\J

Let me show you how
atTordable and easy lt•ls to
get the coverage you need.

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds s1art

CELEBRITY CIPHER

"'' t"f. , P--'f.£1-1'1

/-- ~ .. ~ Don"11eave the debt or
,: E_:.:' J
. ' burial and nnal expenses
"''· ' ~~1·~-· ~
fo~ your ramily and

Cell Phone 674-331 1 Fax

a....;...;.;;..~=.;;;.._j

"AFFORDABLE LEGAL SERVICES"

t009AC, 22055

Advertise
in this
space for 525
per month.

JIM'S SMALL
ENGINE RE"AIR

t A~ I p;~~-~9~~2~~;

,..,till rou'rt ""-"• In l.-nil'll

P'"

"W .Vs # I Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, O lds

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

Bikes

(304)662-3652

t-.o.,. Enr 1n11 v.ry ProfltliOII 1\llldnftln;
P!Ogllm for fOil' Gtollp?

Pass

At the other table, Wilda., ky IWesll

THE BORN LOSEU

1-800-822-0417

YOUNG'S

All Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates

color canvas cover. $17,000.

•ROOFIII
dOME
MllmfWICE
•Free Elllmltes.

SMALL
ENGINE
REPAIR

200 1 1900 FR Maxum open
bow, v-a 1o, loss lhan 20 hrs
run 1ime, white &amp; cream

IIOWARV l.
WRITESfl

GmEI

rlloA~:S~aroRS ~~ --Fa_s_t_T_u_rn_a_ro_u_n_d_
• Hne more entrov

Pass

tri ck s.

(740) 843-5264

.SEAMLESS

L..--------

080 740-591 -

2002
Harl ey
Davidson
Softait, standard $ 13, 000

U 11

I
"loot checking otetement
I
I
"Last pay chock stub
·
"'Photo I.D . - Phone Bill with name and address I
I
116MatnSt.
I

1

havens

{South) had no t r oubl e winn in g 12

c_o_n_d_._74_0-4
_ 4_6_-9_4_16_ _

97 Ford Ranger 4x4 $4600.
96 Ford Explorer 4x4 $4200.
8 &amp; D Auto Sales HWY 160
ditticulty wiping alter bowel ~&amp;menta?
TM Sohltlon Comf0f1Stttnt
wa&amp;he5 and dries u&amp;er. See video at
www.b!*tl.ul or ca ll
x4

ON A NAIL.,
I THINK~~

!

B &amp; 0 Auto Sales HW Y

5-spood, $2600.

Pass

+

was

1997 Dodge Caravan $2500
1995 Dodge Caravan

. 95 Nissen Pathfinder 4x4,

3

Land en - Pratap Rajadhyaksha and
Dan Morse- Bobby Wolrf.
The lat t e r team le d throughout.
eventually winning by 22 inte rn ati ona l
match poin ts Hmpsl.

•

flea l"'arket

START DATING
TONIGHT!
1-Soo-ROMANCE
EXT 1847

HMMMM ...

$3400.

Pomeroy. (740)992-3490

Pass

Smith and .lirnm.v Cayne a~ains t Doug
Doub Ada m . Wilda vs ky , Ste v e

.. ,

••••

2000 Ford Explorer 4x4,
auto, air, $8.995., 95 Jeep
G rand Cherokee Laredo
4x4, · $6,995. 96 Dodge
1500, 4x4, auto, 360 motor. . - - -- -- - - . ,
$7,995. 93 Dodge Dakota
4x4, auto, V6, air. $4,295.,
5ept. 5th .. 6th
95 Dodge 1soo Club C ab,
4x4, auto, nice. $8,995.
Riverview
Motara,

)'OU

,. .'

Bucket truck

1996 Ford Explorer $4000
1993 Ford Explorer $2300
1998 Ford Windsta r Va n

1 999
Ford, raised root,
many
Conversion Van.
extras. TV. VCR, etc ., nice

3 "-

4

One l'cm i(inal pitled Bobby Levi n Stevie Weinstein, Mike Seamo n - Ron

i

11J
1

Eas t
Pass

Carl o ncxt'November.

,•

OBO 740·388-9096

Mailing Our Sales Brochures!
Free Supplies. Postage!

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

$3900

(740)245-0144

tt

North
2t

t eam lo com pet e in th e n ermuda B owl
w or ld ten m cham pions h i p in M onte

1996 Chevy S-1 0 Blazer

1997
Taho e
4dr
4N4
$1 0,000, 1997 S-i D Blazer
4.dr
4N4 , $3500, 198 1
Chevy 4N4 3/4 ton $1 700, 16
ft Checkmate Speedboat
115hp Mercu ry
$2500

W«' st

Las t .lunc, lhe Open T eam Trinl was
staged in Memphi s, Te nn ., to se lect a

I&gt;OyJN.

ale $4600

1996 Chevy Monte Ca rlo.
1989 F~ 150 auto low miles, $10,500.
740-446-6865,
leather interior, loaded, very
lots of extras , very good
B&amp;D Auto Sal es
clean, exc. co nd . $5 ,500
cond. $1500. 304·675·8832

CLASSIFIED$

Tree Service

1997 Ford Ranger 4x4 .!luto,

1990 cHevy BereHa. 3. 1 v. 6

Canning Tomatoes . You pick L----~--•
$4 .00/bushel
We
p1ck
$5.00/ bushel. Please call a Older Pi n ball machine in
not.
11ay ahead to order. O"Bria n
Farms Letart Falls 740· l;;!;;:o;:~=:;:..--.....,
247-2113

Country Produce Market
PotatM s,
Tomatoe s.
Melons. Corn. elc . in sea son
Troyers Woodcraft 9
miles wes t of Gallipolis
along StAt 141

A fiG~T. Af'/ eNI&gt;Of(P~IN n1ES
TO CALM t-IIM

8 &amp; D Auto Sales, HWY $4500.
1996 Ford F-250 314 T. 4x4
160N 740-446·6865
$5900

cl7_4.cO)c_7_
42,·_690'-7_ __ _

cond, no rust, excellent running cond , $2 ,500. 080
74G-446-4945

$3500.00 740.667·3493

South

2
3

fi y l, hillip Ald er

PICt=

JONES'

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

firm. (740)742·2259

FOR SALE

~VEf(Y TIM~ T~AT
ANTIIOI&gt;Y Tf(I~S TO

l-AB

740·992·7599

color,

materi al

·Weak no-trump
troubles big hand

Tt-IE,fS A Pf(OI/,eM ••·

(.ONTflOL

ESTIMATES

FREE

F-150 Ford truck extent cab,

&lt;

Openin g lea d: olo A

RESIDENTIAL
Full length running board for

down

27 -c asseroles
30 Dessrt
31 Weakness
32 Lo1s of
cash
34 Frat le11er
35 Monkey

5~

21 DeiiCIII
peroon
38 Cuhlvated
flower
"- Bop"
24 Cookbook 39 Lual
omt.
tenned
DOWN
25 Big laugh
41 Try 1 bl1t
(hyph.)
42 Carol .
luau enter- 26 - - lor
43 - - anull
ta inment
the money 44 John
Oil exporter 27 "The
Olckoon Go slow
Wanderer" 48 81'11..
Parthenon
singer
47 Vlnt•g•
site
28 Waohstand .
vehicle
Item
Swarm In
48 Gerfleld't
Faucet
29 Declines
houoematt ·
Complete
31 Making
51 Mongkut
Falaful day
known
portrayer
Wild plum
33 Fawn's
Many layers
m01her
Summer
35 Novollot
outings
- Grey
;::.::;;:;;.,,...::36 Gentle .,..._.....,,.....,.....,

23 Refusals
24 Wafers

Dealer : We't
Vulner able: Both

FRANK &amp; EARNES1

Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and

matic, bed li ner &amp; cover.

9 8

mast er

57 Permll
58 Lauper's

22 Draw
to a close

olo K Q J 10 9 7 6 5

New Home ~ • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
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�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Browns

Davis later became agitated when
a reporter pressed him on the issue.
"One guy made a· mistake in cov. erage." he snapped. "Ten guys
played good, one guy made a mistake and they scored a touchdown,
and we' ll coach like the dickens to
change it."
Little said the whole "thing was
overblown. But he, too, gave a terse
response when asked for details.
"That wasn't a big issue right
there," Little said. "A.Iittle miscommunication. It wasn't as big a deal as
some people think. You guys have
the right to want to know what's
going on, but it wasn't a problem at
all. We ' re a family."
Currently, a fractured one.
While Cleveland's offense - now
led by quarterback Kelly Holcomb
- could be one of the AFC's most
potent units this season, the defense
is a work in progress.
Through three games, the Browns
are giving up 28 points, 388 total
yards and 142 rushing yards per
game. Granted, some of those numbers are inflated because they came

from Page81
Harrington threw a 4-yard touchdown pass to Scotty Anderson in the
second quarter.
On the play, Harrington scrambled
to his right, and for a split-second
looked like he might run . Instead, he
zipped his pass to a wide-open
Ancerson, who was left uncovered
by strong safety Michael Jameson.
According to broadcast reports, an
upset Warren stomped back to the
bench, wondering aloud who in the
secondary had blown their coverage
on the play. Although Jameson later
took the blame, Henry didn 't appre~
ciate !he criticism and confronted
Warren . Injured safety Robert
Griffith had to step between them.
Davis tried to turn the argument
into a positive.
"All that does is show that it's not a
preseao;on game in their minds and
they're taking pride and they want to
play well and they're frustrated." he said.

off the first with a triple that
skipped under Podsednik's glove in
center field and rolled all the way to
the wal l. Ray Olmedo followed
from Page 81
with a double down the left-field
- a two-run shot- to break a t-all line.
The Brewers tied the game in
tie in the fourth inning.
third on doubles by Royce Clayton
Milwaukee broke the game open and Hall .
with a three-run fifth. Scott
pulled within 7-4 in
Podsednik singled with one out, theCincinnati
seventh
on
Castro's runstole second and scored on Hall' s scori ng single Juan
and pinch-hitter
second double . Jenkins, who had 10 Stephen Smitherman's first career
RBis during the Brewers' just com- homer - in his second big league
pleted 6-0 homestand, followed at-bat.
Smitherman, called up from
with his 25th homer to make it 6-1 . Double-A Chattanooga when the
Hall, who hit his first homer and Yankees claimed Felix Heredia off
had three RBis Sunday, added a waivers ear lier Monday, arrived
solo home run off Brian Reith with during the game.
one out in the seventh.
Milwaukee got those .three runs
The Reds needed just I wo batters bac k in the eighth. Clayton si ngled
to take a 1-0 lead. Ryan Freel \ed

Reds

in the second half against reserves.
But the starters haven't fared much
better in limited time on the tleld.
Steve McNair. Brett Favre and
Harrington went .a combined 31-of44 against Cleveland's first-team
defense, and both the Titans and
Packers scored on their opening drives.
It took the Lions a little longer.
They scored the second time they .
had the ball .
Oavis; who released four defensive starters and fired coordinator
Foge Fazio during the off-season,
says that despite the appare.nt statistical imbalance , his defense i.s
improving each week.
"I think there are growing pains,"
he said. "But you can sit down and
watch film with me any time and ·1
can show dramatically that just
about every phase of our defense has
gotten better every week.
"We're not where we want to be,
and we're not where we're going to
be in a couple weeks, but we're getting better."
with two outs to drive in Clark from
second, and Smith followed with a
pinch-hit, two-run homer to right
field. Notes: Podsednik exte nded
his career-high hitting streak to !0
~ames .... Freel's triple was his first
1n the major leagues .... Helms's
homer was the · first allowed by
Harang in his four starts with the
Reds . He went 22 1-3 innings
before allowi ng a homer. He had
allowed five in seven appearances,
including six starts, with Oakland.
... John Vander Wal was scratched
from Milwaukee's orig inal starting
lineup after. experiencing flu! ike
symptoms .... Smitherman became
the firs t Reds player to homer for
hi s first major league hit si nce
Guillermo Garcia again st San
Diego.on July 19. 1998 .

Tuesday, August 26, 2003

Sampras
from Page 81
and stay hungry and continue. to
win at a very co~t~petitive time.
He was playing against some
tremendous all-time champions
and still dominating."
Sampras touched on il number
of top1cs Monday, including his
vanishing style of play ("The
serve-and-volley game is pretty
much gone today. I do worry
about it."); his most disappointing
moment (lo~ ing in the second
round of Wimbledon last year);
his loss to Stefan Edberg in the
1992 U.S. Open fina l ("It made
me hate to lose. I just became
obsessed with being the best.");
and becoming detached from tennis ("I don ' t watch any. To shut it
out has been nice. It's been so
consuming to my life for so many
years.").
He forever will be associated
with Wimbledon. where hi s skills
translated perfectly to grass, and
where he went 56-I while winning seven titles in eight years.
Speaking about the All England
Club, three-time Wimbledon
champion Becker said: ;,Before
you were around. I used to own
the place .... Seven titles later. you
stole my keys."
Still, the National Tennis Center
made a perfect setting for
Sampras · goodbye: He won his
first and last major titles at the
U.S. Open. In 1990, Sampras beat
Agassi in the final to become. at
19. the · youngest champio n in
tournament history. Last year, he
beat .- guess who? - Agassi to
become, at 31 , the oldest Open
champion since 1970.
Last year's title was particularly
sweet, given that Sampras hadn't

won any tournament in more than
two years. The man he beat in the
third round, 1997 finalist Greg
Ru sedski, called Sainpras "a step
. apd a half slow" - but Sampras
j1,1st kept winning en route to what
on Monday he called the happiest
moment of his career.
"I'm not retiring because I'm
married or I have a son. I'm retiring because I have nothing to
prove to myself. I've always had
challenges ahead of me, either
stayi ng No. I or winning majors,"
Sampras said. "My biggest challenge was last year - the challenge of winning one more. Once
I did that, I felt. I really had
climbed a tall mountain."
After that victory, Sampras
hinted he might walk away but
never said so explicitly. Instead,
he practiced with coach Paul
Annacone until he was sure he
was ready to hang up the racket.
"As the year went on, he wanted to see how it felt. wondering:
'Do I need to go play?' Clearly,
Pete is someone who knows what
he needs to do to be prepared to
play. He didn 't just want to show
at.a tournament. He wanted to be
ready to win," Annacone said.
"This whole process has been
about deciding what you want to
do about playing. and now he'll
move on."
After Monday's ceremony,
Sampras took a lap around the
court with his son in his arms
while Pearl Jam 's song "Alive"
blared overhead and fans stood.
After a full circle. Sampras kept
walking, right through the door
that leads to the locker rooms.
'Ttl miss playing . I'll miss
competing. I'll miss going QUI in
finals at Wimbledon or here, in
front of 20.000 people. That rush,
that excitement," Sampras said.
"Just the joy of playing the
game that I will miss.'' .

WHILE
·SUPPLIES
LAST

NO
RAIN
CHECKS
Kahn's One Pound

.·

,; oti~IS•\ol. .·, : ;

"-" ·'-'· •"

• Dorsch awaits Bengals'
decision. See Page B1

Bananas

COUPON

OBITUARIES

l9Cib

Borden 201o Milk

SJI!L.

Go.od For

5 COUPONS UP TO
sae Each

INSIDE
• Family Medicine. See
Page A3
• Fair Girl Scouts results.
See Page AS

otoli!fk ,HI: to., Low: 80o

Chef Boyardee's

2 cheese
I

Pizzas Kit

l/S4

PEPSI

Mt. Dew

Produds

'

Limit :z
please w/
add. purttlh£'

14 pk. cube

l/$

1·0

Showboat

Pork It Bea
Limit 3
please w/
add. purch.

Detail• on P..• A2

Lo'I'I'ERIFS
Ohio

Pick 3 day: 1-1-8
Pick 4 day: 4-9-6-1
Pick 3 night: 6-7-6
Pick 4 night: 4-2-2-4
Buckeye 5: 11 ·19-2().-24·26

hillside slip and extra cost
by default of a masonry contractor on the construction.
The district, he said, wi ll
be filing a lawsuit to try to
recuperate certain funds
resulting from the default.
Negotiations did not result
in a settlement.
Questioned about moving
some playground equipment
from the abandoned schools,
the superintendent described
that as "not an option because
it does not meet code."

Pleue see Problems, A5

POMEROY - ·George and
Nellie Wright have been
named grand marshals of a
Sept: 6 parade in celebration
of the Morgan's Raid Civil
War reenactment, an official
event
of
the
Ohio
Bicentennial Commission. ·"
The Wrights were selected
for the honor by the Pomeroy
Merchants
Assocation
because of their numerous
contributions to the betterment and beautification of
Pomeroy.
George serves on Pomeroy
Village Council and has been
a supporter and worker on
town pride and development
projects for many
Never afraid to get hi s
hands dirty, George can be
seen in the summer planting
!lowers and pulling weeds,
and in the winter putting up '
holiday decorations with the
assistance of his wife.
Whatever it takes the couple
married for more than 50
years will do to promote
Pomeroy and its businesses.
Since Wright retired from
the John. Amos Plant in
Winfield, W. Va. about I 0
years ago, he has dedicated
himself to community service.
From the · Mejgs County
Chaml)er of Commerce !o the

years.

2 SECI'IONS- l6 PAGI!S

A3
B4-6
B7

A3
A4
As
As
B1-4,8
A2

J.

George and Nellie Wright

MILES lAYTON

------~-

"'""' ·

BY ANDREW CARTER

acarter@mydailytribune.com
GALLIPOLIS - Meigs
County received some good
news on the employment
scene in July as the jobless
rate for the county dropped
nearly I percent.
Meigs County's rate of
14.8 percent was down from
June 's figure of 15.7 percent,
but still more than a point
higher than May's figure of
13.5 percent.
County
also
Gallia
received some ~ood news in
July as its JObless rate
dropped nearly I percent.
The July tigure of 7.7 percent was 0.7 lower than
June's rate of 8.4 percent.
The rate for May was 6.9 percent, while April's rate was
7.I percent.
Gallia's July figure was
one of the lower rates in
Southeastern Ohio. Athens
County enjoyed the lowest
unemployment rate in the
region at 4.6 percent in July.
up slightly from its June
mark of 4.5 Pl!rcent.
lncludin~ Athens, 13 counties statew1de had unemployment rates below 5 percent m
July. That list includes the
following counties: Holmes,
3.2 percent ; Delawar~ . 3.5;
Geauga and Union, 4. I;
Logan. 4.3; Butler and
Madison, 4.5 ; Athens und
Wayne. 4.6; Warren , 4. 7;
Belmont and Franklin, 4.8;
and Portage, 4.9.
In June. II counties had
jobless rates below 5 percent.
Morgan County continued
to have the highest unemployment tigure in Ohio at
16.4 percent. That figure is

Extended
lane at bridge
to proceed
J.

REED

breed @mydailysentinel.com

'-

l .... . .

The Morgan's Raid stamp cancellation looks like this.
Envelopes and Ohio bicentennial postage stamps will be
available at Wilkesville. Chester and Pomeroy for those who
want the Morgan 's Raid cancellation . (J. Miles Layton)
fro m 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on the
Pomeroy parking lot Sept. 6.
On Sept. 5 from a gazebo
on the Chester Commons,

Opal Eiching,er, Chester
postmaster. will be doing
the Morgan's. Raid cance llations on slamps.

POMEROY - An extended traffic lane designed to
ease congestion at the
to
the
approach
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge will
be completed by this fall.
Don Till is, project manager
at the new Pomeroy/Mason
Bridge site. said Tuesday tlve
underground
petroleum
tanks, once used by a service
station at the site, have been
removed, and contaminated
soi I replaced. allowing a subcontractor to proceed with
construction and paving of
the new traftic lane .

Pleese see lrld... '"

Co·ecl Softllall Toumament
sponsored by the Inpatient Rehab Unit at Holzer Medical Center

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
Prices Good August 26 &amp;August 27 Only.

-

,,

Meigs
jobless
rate drops
nearly 1
percent

BY BRIAN

Saturday, Septe..-ber 20
9 AM • 0.0. Mcintyre Park

'

"ol

Pleese see Drop, AS

The rubber stamp will only
be
available for 30 days
jtayton@ mydailysentinel.com
before being retired by the
post office. Anne Chapman
POMEROY - Letters of the Pomeroy Merchants
bound for mail boxes every- Association smd the Ohio
where may have a little bit Bicentennial Commission
of Morgan's Raid stamped designed the face of the rubon them.
ber stamp which was then
The Chester, Pomeroy, submitted to the federal govWilkesville post offices have ernment for approval.
rubber cancellation stamps . For 45 cents at any of the
that pay homage to the Ci vii sites anyone can purchase a
War reenactment that will statehood stamp and an
take .place in Vinton and envelope and have the stamp
Meigs Counties, Sept. 3-7.
canceled by the special
'!It is something the post Morgan's rai&lt;l._ rubber stamp.
office does to promote local
Brown said there will be
history,"
said
Bonnie postal representatives preBrown, the officer in charge sent providing envelopes
at the Pomeroy post office.
and the Ohio bicentennial
Anyone can get the can- postage staml' during the
cellation stamp mark on Morgan 's Ra1d festivities
their postage, but it must be between 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
requested first so that JX?St Sept. 5 at the Pickens Farm
office clerks know to use in Meigs County ; and at the
the special rubber stamp.
visitor/information
tent
BY

© 0003 Ohio Vlllley PubU.hl011 Co.

3/$1

board on recommendation of
Paul McElroy, transportation
supervisor, decided to put
three new routes in operation
on a tempo~ary basis to see if
that alleviates the problem.
Al so discussed was the
lack of playground space
and equipment. Buckley
explained that right now
there is no money to purchase equipment. He smd it
had been expected that there
. would excess project money
to be used for playground
equipment, but that those
dollars wen t for repair of the

Morgans Raid invades post office

INDEX
Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

some children spend on the
bus. A Middleport parent
said her child arrived home
one day a 4:50p.m. Another
complained that her children
rode around on the bus for
an hour before getting to
school, while still another
expressed conce.rn about
mixing small children with
teenagers on· the same bus.
Being only four days into
the
school
year.
Superintendent
William
Buckley called for patience
until some of the problems
can be worked out. The

Pleese see Wrlpts, AS

Dilly 3: 9-9-5
Dilly 4: 3-5-1-8
Cash 25: 2-6-1 ().12-15-22

Umit :z
please w/
add. purch.

hoeflich@ mydailysentinel.com

hoellich@mydailysentinel.com

West Vll'ginia

Not Good 0~ Advertised Items
Coupons tripled once daily.
See Store For Details

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

u

·.·

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Page AS
• Margaret Lowe, 39
• Abbie Stratton, 79
• Char1es Black, 84

]O/o, 1Ofo, Skim

:.o·.:.o oo :1 .

Wrights named parade grand marshals

Broughton

1\N" A

\\111'\I.Sil\\ , \I(,ISI

POMEROY - Bus routing problems associated
with relocating about 950
students from six elementary schools last year into a
single school this fall were
ai red at Tuesday night's
meeting of the Meigs Local
Board of Education.
Meeting with the board
were several parents and a
grandparent to complain
about the length of time

·~MtJ,

•

Meigs Local Board hears bus routing problems

SPORTS

c

TRIPLE

downs Reds, Bt

•

WEATHER

Sliced ~ologna

Brew crew

Clarett won't dress
against Washington, Bt

Team Reouirements:
$100 Entry Fee per Team • Minimum of 5 Men and 5 Women • 2 Softballs

· Proceeds go to HMC's Rehab Cares Fund
To register g team. please call Amber Thomas ot (740) 446·5597
Have Tea~ Nome, Team Captain and Phone Number When You Call
Phone Registration Deadline · Friday, September 12

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www .holzer.org

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