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                  <text>.- Thursday, .July 3l, 2003

www.mydallysent•nel.com

.Sex tape rude aw~kening
for woman·'sleepingit o~'
DEAR ABBY: Two weeks
ago, I went to a party with
"Brady," my live-in boyfriend
of five years. To make a long
story short, I had too much to
drink. Brady took me home
and put me to bed so I could
"sleep it off." I remembered
nothing the next morninf.
A few days later, ran
across an unfamil!ar videotape and PQpped it into the
VCR. I coofcfn 't believe my
eyes! It was Brady and me
having sex the night I was so
"out of it." When I confronted
him, he said he had always
wanted to document our lovemaking. Then he apologized.
I rnade Brady promise to
destroy the tape.
I feel angry, hurt and violated! I can hardly look my
boyfriend in the eye right
now. Am I making too much
of this? - NOT INTO
PORNO IN WASHING·
.
TONSTATE
DEAR
NOT
INTO
PORNO: Not at all. What
Brady did was indeed a viola·
tion. I urge you to make
absolutely certain that the
tape has been destrored and
there are no other cop1es. And
ifl were you, I'd reconsider a
relationship with a man who
appears to regard you as a sex
"object" rather than a person.

Dear ·
Abby
ADVICE
P.S.: Drinking and blacking
out are signs of alcoholism.
Please get the help you need
to stop now.
DEAR ABBY: "Trying to
Keep the Peace in the PaCific
Northwest" wants a simple
wedding, but doesn't want to
alienate his or his fiancee's
large families.
I have seven sisters, a brother, several stepparents, a huge
extended family and a large
circle of friends. (And that is
just on MY side!) My fiance
and I could not afford a . big
wedding or a fancy reception,
so here's how we handled it:
We made a list of what was
really important to us. I love
lots of fresh flowers, so that
was put on the "splurge" list.
My fiance enjoys good champagne. Everything else we
either made or asked friends
to help with.
·

,
My mom made my dress; a and unnecessary. Books have
friend who was handy with a been written about how to
camera took the photos; we plan a wedding on a budget,
were married in the garden 'of and they are available in
my ex-roommate's large libraries and bookstores. A
home; my husband made his weddin~ does not have to be
own D.J. tapes by recording expens1ve to be beautiful,
.songs off the radio; aqd I memorable and a happy occaasked each of my female sion for all concerned. Your
friends to bring a plate of hors wedding is proof. .
d'oeuvres. Everyone knew
(Dear Abby is written by
our financial situation. No one Abigail Van Buren, also
was offended. On the con- known as Jeanne Phillips, and
trary. we were told repeatedly was founded by her mother.
how happy they were to con- Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
tribute.
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
One hundred and fifty peo-. or P.O. Box · 69440, Los
pie attended our wedding and Angeles, CA 90069.)
· was one o f ·
everyone agreed 1t
the best times they ever had. r-::--::-:--:----:::--.~--. •
The cost? $1,500.
Do You Feel the
Twenty-one years later, we
are still madly in love and
Need to.Read?
have not changed our prioriWhether your
ties. Ironically, we have
favorite
subject
friends who were still paying
is
math
or
mus1c,
off their wedding debt while
science or
ironing out their divorce setsocial studies,
tlements.
you'll find
"Trying" is a wise young
something
man whose priorities are in
order. N~heuld be pres- interesting in the
newspaper. In fact, the
sured into spending what he
paper is such a reliable
or she doesn 't have to begin
source for the information
with.- HAPPY IN HUNT·
you want, you can even use
INGTON BEACH, CALIF.
it as a·homework and
DEAR HAPPY: I agree.To
school research tool.
go into debt to fund a wedding is, in my opinion, foolish . ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___.

ACROSS .42 Take notlct
of
1 .Sound · 43 Band
6 l1n't able
Instrument
IO
45 Wllllt10 cavort
- of bsleball
12 Thin layer 47 Luau dish
.14 Happens 50 Filch
52 Sampled
next
15 Climate · 54. Draw out
58 VIne
effecter
supports
12 wds.l
59
Near
16 Oe1cend
60
Stuck-up
18 ~co.
person
19 Range part 61 Needle
21" Gem
· 23 Jillvd.
DOWN
24 Term
1 Tarzan·
of respect
companion
~= ~o':lstve
2 40-cup
coating
brewer
30 Uldmate
3 Trill VIPS
4 Accustom
deglee
5 Dolphins'
32 Naturalist
homes ·
John 34 actor
"Catch-22" 6 Storage
place
36 Rapa _
7 Raggedy
(Easter
doll
8 Play.wrlghl
Island)
-Simon
37 Kind of
9
Camping
humor
38 Is Idle
gear
40 Earth,
11 Sixth senaa
In combos 12 Running

White . to Yankees, 81

mile
favorite
13 Wand
44 Auction
17 Lisbon
call•
locale
46 Come up
19 Ellipses
47 School gp.
20 Opera
48 Oory'a need
compo•er 49 Book ID
22 Hasty
51 Valtrdlne
eacapa
IYlO·
23 --glance 53 Alao
25 Wayfarer'• 55 Huah-huah
refuge
org.
27 Frothy
56 Payche
28 Employs
compo31 Scurry
nllntt
33 Dell breed 57 Souvenir,
35 LL.D.
often
holder
39 Deluxe
41 Diner

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on a project that hasn't yet lived
up to your hopes could tcwle it
~(Mardi 21-Apri119)
- Do nothing b reascns of
expediency, from taking chances
when driving to experimenting
with shortcuts on tasks that require
· ·on. Mishaps could easily
today.
URUS (April ~May 20)
- Instead of taking it pecsonally,
he especially tolerant and cmsidenlte today of a pal who might
misinterpret the mtent of your
actiros oc words. A clash could
destroy a long-time friendship. ,
GEMINI (May li·JUDe 20)
-Be watchful of who is on your
flank in a career situatirotoday. If

5·0 CE '•TS • '.o l 53 '•o 230

1st DOWN

2ndOOWN

3rdOOWN

235·24S

JUDO'S TOTAL

Judging of Junior Fair queen, livestock prince, princess complete

• Browns finally sign
Crocker. See Page 81
• Reds beat Rockies.
See Page 81

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

hoellich@ mydailysentinel.com
POMEROY - The jud_ging
of candidates for the 2003
Meigs Cmmty Junior Fair
queen and livestock prince and
princesses has been completed
and the winners will · be
announced at opening cere. monies 5:30 p.m. Aug. 10 at
the grandstand.
Competing for queen are
Alyssa Holter, member of the
Meigs·County Better Livestock 4H Club, and Jessica Justice, member of the 4-H Backyard Critters.
Alyssa is the daullhter of Edwand
and Jan Holter. fessica's parents
are Brian and Jackie Justice.
The livestock prince,princess
candidates, their parents and
club membership are as follows:
Swine
princess;
Renee
Colburn, daughter of Rick and
April
Colburn,
Another.

fb\HT.'

Coon

Dairy ....------,

4-H~ub.

H o r s e
princess:
As .hl ey
Nicole Baker,
daughter of
R.
Joseph
Baker and
Angela
Baker,
Rutland, The
Outlaws;
Miranda Grueser, daughter of
Max and Barbara Grueser.
Shade; Ou.tlaws; and Miranda
Marie McKelvey, daughter of
Bruce and Teresa McKelvey,
Portland, God's Country Kidz.
Rabbit prince: Andrew
Bissell, son of Todd and Diana
Bisse ll, Long Bottom. God's
Country Kidz.
Dairy Goat- princess:. Denise
Hannum. daughter ol Dav1d
and Wendy Hannum, Long
Bottom, Farmed Forces.

'

'

'

J. MILES lAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysenlinel.com

POMEROY Meip
Local Superintendent B1ll
Buckley is concerned about
the district's performance on
the 2002-2003 state issued
· report card.
The preliminary test results
indicate that the district
passed only four out of 22
standards tentatively set by
the state.
According to the Ohio
Department of Education, the
number should not be misinterpreted to mean that the district's educational standards
have fallen from lasl year.
During the past three years,
the school district has steadily
risen from "academic emergency" in 2000 to a standard

Inside
4th DOWN

Answer
to
previou
Word
Scrim·

0

t55·185
by JUDD HAMBRICK
AVERAGE GAME

;~RJ'~r;~~~~

=

DtAECTlONS; Make a 2- to Hener word from thl!lltnars on each yardllne.
Add points to each word or letter using soomg directions Ill right S.WO.Jttter
words get a fiO.poinl bonus. AI words c.-. be toood In Weblltf's New WOnG
Colege ~ JUDO'S SOLUIION TOIIORROW

mag~; ·

0 200:1

1-11-Gll

unlleG f . ..,...,.... • • •

• You don't have to kiss
God through a veil. See
Page AS

Weather
Rain, HI: 80s, Low: lOa

9 RRV IS lfl'OiiG BEADY
'Ill R.ECEI~ 'IISITO!lS

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VIVI~N A~D

TO r,Q ON

VACATI OI-l
WIT~ ~OU .

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JoNica Sttnn
Soutllem Elementii!Y

Index

~

2 s.ctlons - 12 Paps

I

:tSIO.H .. :I

HOIC.IW.

lo.RTUR. · C"N "LS.O
YOci'VE

GOT

FR.A.NCIS
~NO

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TO WO'lK

WORK.

WITH t'IE

WITH LIS!

HERE .

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Calendars
tlassifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith• Values
. Movies
NASCAR .
Obituaries
Sports
C&gt; 2003 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

._

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B3
86
B6
A4
AS
A3
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A6
A2
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MIDDLEPORT - "The
Music Man". a production
of
the
Ri ver bend
Community Theater. will
be presented Aug. 30 and
31 in the old Middleport .
High School auditorium.
This year perfonnances
will be at 7 p.m . on both
·days with a 2 JF.m . matinee
on Sunday.
At a recent meeting of
the management team,
Julia Sayre, Julie Howard,
Kathy Johnson, Tom
Dooley, Karin Johnson .
Susan
Baker,
Brian
· Howard, the need for air
condilioning the audiiOrium was discussed. It was
noted that a portable indus-

POMEROY
-Meigs
County officeholders have
spent more than the county
has taken into its general fund
so far this year, bUt Treasurer
Howard Frank said Thursday ·
that's no reason for concern.
However. Frdnk said, county officeholders and department managers must continue·
to keep a tight reign on
spending if the county is to
avoid office closings and layotl's before the end of the
year.
Frank met wilh Meigs
County
Commisioners
Thursday to discuss the county's financial condition, and
particularly to discuss cuts in
sales tax collections and local
government revenue from the
state, and low growlh on new
construclion , and lhe effect

Please 1ee Musk. A1

Please see Budpt. A2

.

;

..

REED

CHARLENE HoEFLICH

hoeflich @mydailysentinel.com

VACAIION 1.\lfl'H
i11AT 'I APP-1,
ILL-MANt.lERED
rLEABAc; !!

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What Call Hospice Do for You? ·

oil$

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EVERC~R
TO INN~R f'E!Ac~

Please see Testln~o A2

BRIAN

! IAIAN1

I AM PRAWINGt

of "continuous improvement"
last year by meeting 12 out of
22 standards.
Meigs
Local
Superintendent Bill Buckley
questions the new standards
tentatively set by the state.
"When they change the
rules, they change the rules,"
he said. "Bottom line. I have
been in this business for 32
years and it's just politics as
usual."
Buckley said special education students had their proficiency testing results counted
separately from the general
student population in the past.
There are a number of special
education students in the district who need special attention and .may learn in different manners, but ,they attend

'The Music County budget
Mah'to be holding steady
J.
presented breed@mydailysentinel.com

;

E. . . . .,._,

.
.
.
.
The pnnce and pnncesses of livestock have been selected and
the winners will be announced at 5:30 p.m. Aug. 10 in opening ceremonies for the 140th Meigs County Fair. The cand~
dates are from the left, front. Renee Colburn, Ashley Baker,
Miranda McKelvey, Hoi!Y Davis, Kimberly Castor, Andrew
Bissell, and back, Audrionna Pullins, Georgana Koblentz,
Miranda Grueser, Denise Hannum, and Amanda King.
·

Meigs
Local
faces
· s··a··tety
·
·
.
_
.. '.
·academic emergency
in student testing

'·

loW lATEST lt\61\SURfo·
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Generation; r, ,......,.,......,.......,.-......,
Amanda
King, daughter of Tunothy
and Sheila
Whitlatch ,
Pomeroy,
Farmed
Forces;
Georg ana
Koblentz ,
d~ughter of L--H-o_lt_e_r_..J
Richard and
Cindy Koblentz, Pomeroy.
Wool princess: Kimberly
Castor, daughter of Don and
Lisa Sidwell, long · Bottom,
The Pioneers; Holly Davis,
dau~hter of David and Edna
Dav1s, Rutland, Busy Beavers.
Dairy .prince: Stephen Yost,
son of Charles and lla Yost,
Racine, Meigs County Better
Livestock Darry 4-H Club.
Dairy princess:
Audrionna
Renae Pullins. daughter ofTom and
Stacie Pullins, Long Bottom, Meigs

BY

388

,.,.,..,...
7

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..AVERAGE
.... GAME

-128
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-88
•

www.mydaily•entinel rom

Sports

Page A2
• Mae Bletner, 90
• Maxine Russell, 72
• Lewis Smith, 67
• Edward Laudermilt, 59

romance? The Astro-Groph .
Matchmaker wheel can help )00
understand what to do to make the ·
relationship wolt Mail $2.75 to
Matchmakr. P.O. Box /67,
Wicldi/fe, OH 4409UJ/67. Wsit
MVw.&amp;mice4u.com for advice.)

:tll03 Unllld , ...' " ,.,....••• Inc.

FRIDAY. AUGUST 1. 2003

Obituaries

you fail to prorect yourself, this
person could take you down so
suddenly you won'thave a chance
to respond.
CANCER (JUDe 21-July 22)
-If you fail to be attentive today
when infamatiro is heing passed
ro to you, you could miss out ro
some pertinent facts that would be
very imponant Don't assume you
know it all.
(Trying to paiCh up a broken

IVOIID SCRIMMAGE"c SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK .

A2

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

----J

axe to grind with a fiiend of yours.
He oc she could teU tales in the
lqles
. of turning you against your
pal.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) - Should you view
yourself as the undetdog today,
you could prerna!Urely awand success to an.xb:r befoce the caltest
gets a chance to get underway.
Rave faith in your abilities.
CAPRICORN (Dec. l2-J1111.
19) - Good plans ro which
yoo've been waking could easily
be thrown off- kilter today if you
share your ideas with Wllt:oue
whose ideas dro 't jibe with yours.
Keep your own counsel.
AQUARIUS (Jan. :ZO.Feb.
19) - Business or oonunercial
affairs could be exceptionally
tricky today. Be w ~ at all
times so that something that has
been running s111000tly foc you
isn't suddenly derailed by an
'4JPOIIdll
PISCES (Feb. ~Mardi 20)
- Olanging hocses in midstream
is usually a maja' mistake, and
today will be no exception.
Making unnecessary adjustments

spiritual

•

1~-.._ _ _ _ _A_s_tr_o-=g_ra--=p;..._h_ _ _ _
Br lilts :e BillE OIOL
It could prove profitable in the
year ahead to scwt ID which
rnaJkets are available b yrur erealiveness. The right anangement
could prove to be a huge success
LEO (July 2.1-Aug. 22) Carelessness when waking with
oc near some prized possessioos
could quickly cause a mishap. If
your mind isn't ro what you're
doing toda~,ou coold dust a deliCate item · t off the shelf.
VIRGO ,-\ug.l3:Sept.22)Be careful m to be insensitive to
the thougiGulness of a COII1JW1'
ioo today. N~ will be ll1Cill
impatant than showing appreciatim to tha;e with whom you share
a ca1111011 cause.
LIBRA (Sept. 1J.Oct. 23) k's unlike you to blab out sorrethin~ that should be kept crofidential, OOt should your lllJUih
wall alrad of your lr.lin talay,
you could inadvertently reveal
secrets to the WIIXIg person.
SCORPIO (Od. 24-Nov. 22)
- Oro't be so quick to believe
everything you IJ:ar today, ~
cially from son10011e who has an

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Hospice provides emotional,-medical ~:md spiritual support for people who
) are terminally ill. Their goal is to improve patient's quality of life by
makinglhem comfortable in their home, os well os focusing on
symptom and pain rnanag~ment of the terminal illness. Hospice helps
families cope wilh lhe care of their ill family member, and acts as on
advocate during lheir time of need. Please coli Holzer Hospice if you
would like more information about lhe services lhey provide.

a

In Galli" Coun_lyl 446·5074 • In Melt• Countya 992·7463
In .lack"• Couatya 384·21 94

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Dijje1'e11ce

www.holzer.org

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PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 1,2003 .

'

Community calendar
Clubs and
Organizations
Friday, Aug. 1
POMEROY
Meigs
County PERl 84 will meet at
noon at the' Senior Citizens
Center. Representatives of
Aetna and Medical ~.~:Jtual
will speak on insurance. Mary ·
Powell will talk on Morgan's
Raid .
Saturday, Aug; 2
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411 at
7:30 p.m. at the Temple.
Refreshments will be served.
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange #n8. Junior Grange
#878, polluck supper at 6:30
p.m., followed by meeting at 7:30
p.m. Hemlock Grange members
as guests. Craft, art and photography contes1s Will be judged.
.
Sunday, Aug. 3
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Eastern Star 186 will observe
go-to-church Sunday at the
Middleport
Presbyterian
Church. All members urged
to attend. Communion will be
served. Following the service,
members will go to Damon's
in Athens for lunch.

Public meetings
Friday, Aug. 1
RUTLAND
Rutland
Township Trustees, 5 p.m., at
fire station.
Saturday, Aug. 2
PORTLAND - Lebanon
Township Trustees 7 p.m at
the Township Building.
Monday, Aug. 4
SYRACUSE
Sutton
Township Trustees, 7:30 p.m. at
Syracuse municipal building.
LETART - Letart
Township trustees, 9 a.m . at
the office building.

7 p.m. at the Poplar Ridge
Free Will Baptist Church.
Singers will be Cross Creek
of Buffalo, W. Va. and New
Horizon of Barbersville, W.Va.
John Ellswick, pastor, invites
the public.

Other events
Friday, Aug. 1
RACINE -OH-Kan Coin
Club will present a coin and currency exhibition in the lobby at
the Home National Bank,
Racine. The display will include
ofd cumency, ofd coins, Meigs
County tokens, and ofd local
bank cunrency. Afree coin will be
given to children, 16 and under.
Those attendng may bring in an
ofd coin or bill for appraisal. The
lobby opens at 8 a.m.
Monday, Aug. 4
MIDDLEPORT - Vacation
Bible School will be held at
Victory Baptist Church , 525
North
Second
St..
Middleport, through Aug. 7,
6:30 to 8 p.m. Theme: "His
Eye is on the Sparrow." For
more information call 992-9052 or 992-6550.
MIDDLEPORT - Vacation
Bible school through Aug. 9,
6 to 8:30 p.m. at the Ash
Street Church, 398 Ash St.,
Middleport For more informatoin call 992-6443. Theme is
"Great Discoveries."

Homecomings/
Reunions

Saturday, ' Aug 2
RACINE - Beegle family
reunon will be held at 'Ronald
and Leanna Beegle Farm,
28600 Hogg Hollow Road.
Dorcas,
near
Racine.
Registration at noon, potluck
dinner at 1 p.m. with drinks and
fable service provided. Chinese
auction, pie baking contest with
auction of the top winners,
memorial service, short program,
business meeting will be
Saturday, Aug. 2
held.
Games
for the kids, 7 to
POMEROY - A gospel concert will be held at 6:30 p.m. 11 p.m.; square dance with
Saturday in the Pomeroy Howard and Shirley Meadows
Ampihitheater under sponsor- providing the music. Hat to be
ship of the Trinity Congregational passed for the musicians.
.Sunday, Aug. 3
Church. The oonoert is a benefit
EAST
MEIGS - Parker
for God's Net. A free will offering
will be taken. Featured wil be reunion will be held at noon at
Eastern
Elementary
Materpeace, Amy Perrin, and the
Sounds of Praise.
School. Carry-in dinner; door
POMEROY- Gospel sing, prizas, activities lor kids.

~~00
TAE BO UVE
Aerobic Kl,:kboxlng

three sons: Edward Lee
Laudermilt. Jr., of Kentucky,
Lee Laudennilt of Florida, and
MASON, W.Va. - Mae
Michael Paul Laudennilt of
E. Bletner, 90, Mason,
Pomeroy; three daughters:
W.Va., died on Wednesday,
Evelyn Hoffman of Chester,
July 30, 2003 at Country
Teresa Gillian of Gemgia and
Living Personal Care Home
Missy Witt of Aorida; stepin Buffalo, W.Va.
daughters, . Loretta (Earl)
She was born on Sept. 27.
Goode of Racine, and Christy
1913 in Mason, Ohio,
(Donald) Martin of Point
daughter of the late Hennan
Pleasant, W.Va.; four sisters:
Caroline
R.
and
Alma Irene Nelson of Ironton,
Kochensparger Bletner.
Vivian 0 . Games of Pomeroy,
Services will be held at I
Donna J. Durst of Pataskala,
p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 2,
arid Sue F. Withrow of
2003 at . Fogel song-Tucker
Pataskala; eight brothers:
Funeral Home in Mason, with
Charles (Irene) Laudennilt of
Pastor Huling Greene officiColumbus, Walt (Sandy)
ating. ,Burial will follow at
Laudermilt of Pomeroy,
Kirkland Memorial Gardens
Orland
Laudermilt
of
in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Pomeroy. Frank Laudennilt of
Friends may call from II am.
Pomeroy, Vincent (Louise)
to I p.m., prior to the se!Vice on
Laudermilt of Middter.ort.
Saturday, at the funeml home.
Johnny (Sheny) Laudenrult of
Nevada, Thomas (Jennifer)
Laudermilt of Springfield, and
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.
Max
Laudennilt
of
Maxine Russell, 72, of
Springfield; 19 gnmdchildren,
POMEROY -Lewis E.
five great grandchildren and
Smith, 67, Pomeroy. passed Albuquerque, N.M.. formerly
of
Mtddlepon.
passed
several
nieces and nephews.
away at his residence on
away
on
Wednesday,
July
Besides
his parentS, he was
Thursday, July 31, 2003 .
30,
2003
at
the
La
Vida
Llena
He was born on Feb. 12,
· POMEROY -Edwark--5 in death by his sister,
1936, in Pomeroy, son of the Assisted Living Home.
Lee
Laudermill,
59
emice Goble, and a great
She
was
born
on
May
7.
Pomeroy,
passed
away
q
grandson.
Donnie Lee Stwgeon.
late Ed Jay and Freda
1931
in
Meadow
Bridge,
Thursday, July 31, 2003 lat
Services will be held at 7
Cheatham Smith. He was a
p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 2,
rural letter canrier for the W.Va., daughter of the late his residence.
He was born on Jan. 13, 2003 at . Fisher Funeral
U.S. Postal Service and . a Etsie Bryan and Grace
member of the Middleport Cozart McGraw. She was 1944 in Gallipolis, son of the Home in Pomeroy with Rev.
formerly employed as a reg- late Orland Andrew and Hershel White officiating.
Masonic Lodge #363 .
Surviving are his wife, istered nurse in the office of Albena
Mae
Smith
Friends may call from 5 to
Carolyn Parker Smith of Dr. J.J. Davis, and was a Laudermilt. He was a carpen- 7 p.m. Saturday at the funerPomeroy; a ,daughter, Sherri member of the First Baptist ter and a member of the at home.
Smith of Reynoldsburg ; a Church of Middleporl .
Hobson Christian Fellowship.
Friends may send condoSurviving are her daughter
Surviving are his wife, Judy lences and register online at
son, Michael Smith of
Athens; and a brother-in-law, and son-in-law. Kayle and Carr Laudennilt of Pomeroy; · www.fisherfuneralhomes.com
Dennis. Parker of Reedsville.
Private graveside services
will be held for the family at
Meigs Memory Gardens,
with military graveside services to be conducted by
Drew Webster Post #39 of
the American Legion.
Friends may call from 2 to
4 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 3,
2003 at Fisher Funeral
Home in Pomeroy. Masonic
services will be conducted
by Middleport Masonic
Lodge #363 at 3:30p.m.
Memorial contributions
may be made to Holzer
Hospice, Meigs County
Branch, 115 E. Memorial
Dr., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Friends may send condolences and register online at
www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

Lewis Smith

Maxine Russell

Con. - 8 :4~ -9 : I~ a.m... Sun . Muss - 9:30
a.m., Dailey Mass . 8:30a.m.

four grandchildren: Kellie
Mullen of Oklahoma, Terrie
Mullen of Hawaii, Counney
Mullen of New Mexico, and
Casey Mullen of New
Mexico; a brother, Ernest
McGraw of Meadow Bridge,
W.Va.; and two sisters,
Shirley McGraw of Meadow
Bridge and Marie Griffith of
Ranelle, W.Va.
Friends may call from 6 to
8 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 2,
2003 at Fisher Funeral
Home in Middleport.
On Sunday, Aug. 3, visitation will be held at Wallace
and Wallace Funeral Home
in Lewisburg, W.Va .. and on
Monday, Aug. 4, graveside
service s will be "held at
Wallace Memorial Cemetery
and Mausoleum.
Friends may send condolences and register online at
www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

Churd. of Jtsus C hrist Apostolic ·
VanZandt and Ward Rd., Paslor: James
Miller. Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.,
E\·~ning -

River Valley
Worshi p Cemer, 87) S. 3nl
A\·e., Middl epon, Kc\·in Konkle. Pastor.
Sunday, II a.m. W~:dnesdily. 7:00 p.m.;
Youth Fri . 7:30p.m.

Emmanuel Apostolic Tabem~de Inc.
Lo•1p Rd uff New Lima Rd. Rulland ..
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m . &amp; 7:30 p.m..

Thurs. 7:00-p.m.. Pastor Marty R. Huuon

Assembly of God
L1Mr1y Assembly or God
P.O . Rox 467, Dudding Lane, Mason,

W.Va .. Paswr: Neil Tennant. Sunday
Sen·ices- 10:00 a.m. and 7 pm.

Baptist
Hope Baptlsl C hu~h (Soulhtrn )
570 Grant St., Middleport,_Pas1or: RC\'.
David Bryan, Sllnday school - 9:~0 a.m..
Worship - II a.m. and 6 p.m.. Wednesduy
Scn·if e- 7 p.m.
Rudamd io'lrst Baptist Churth
Sunday School - 9 :30 a.m.. Wmship10:45 11.m .

Edward
Laudermilt

Testing
from PageA1
classes and can graduate in the same
manner as any other student. Their proficiency test scores are now counted
alongside those of the general student
population.
·
Questions about thtse standards will
be discussed by the legislature in special session in early August.
The district's preliminary rating of academic emergency concerns Buckley greatly. He is optimistic that the district can con-

Pomrroy Flnlf Bapllst
Pastor Jon Bro~;h-rt . East Main S1..
Sumiay School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship I O :~ Oa . m .
.

First Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike. Pastor: E. Lamar
O'Bryant, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .,
Worship - 8:15a.m.. 9 :4~ am &amp; 7:00p.m.,
Wedncsda)' Sc:nices- 7:00p.m.
Flnt Baptist Church
Pastor: Mlltk Morrow. 6th and Palmer St..
Middl eport. Sund11y School - 9: IS a. m ..
Worship - 10: 1.5. a .m., 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

•

Budget
from PageA1
those cuts continue to have on the
county's fiscal health .
According to Frank, the county budget commission certified$3,266,295 in
anticipated revenue for 2003, and so
far, county offices have spent
$2,017,539 to date. While this reflects
deficit spending for the first half of the

tinue improving educational standards.
index, a growth calculation and ~ gauge
Buckley said he sees a silver lining of adequate yearly progress for school
with this preliminary rating of "academ- buildings and districts.
ic emergency." Despite the state budget
"I stress that what we are providing by
cuts to the district made this year, there complying with the public records law is
could be potentially more state and fed- preliminary, raw data," said Susan Tave
eral grants available.
Zelman, Superintendent of Public
The recently enacted federal No Child Instruction. "Until it has been through a
Left Behind Act has forced state legisla- quality assurance process and has been
tors to change the standards again this
year. Ohio's proposed accountability verified. it ultimately could be misundersystem, which was approved by the stood, misinterpreted and gi~e an inaccuU.S. Department of Education in rate picture of a district or school's
January, uses multiple measures to progress. These data under Ohio· s new
determine designations- not just the accountability system are not comparable
22 perfonnance indicators used in the · to data used in previous years. Any compast. These measures include the 22 parisons from ·one year to the next are
state indicators. a new performance likely to be inaccurate and wrong."
year, Frank said yesterday many county expenditures are greater during the
first half, especially those expenses
mandated by the state.
Frank said interest earned from the
county's investment program helps keep
the cou.nty's operations afloat. Those
funds are now earning 4.3 percent interest, compared to less than one percent
interest paid on the county's active
accounts. The 178 inactive · accounts,
bearing funds not needed to meet current
expenses, will generate approximately
$160,000 this year.

"Without this investment program,
we couldn't open the courthouse doors
year after year," Frank said. "It helps
eliminate the need for additional voted
millage for county government."
Frank said the county can anticipate
only $7,600 in real estate tax revenue
from new construction growth this
year. Revenue from the county's onepercent sales tax is down over $50,000
from this time last year, an~ local government revenue from the state is down
by over $7,000.

a weeks

Bring plenty ot water and a mat
SS.OO per one hour class
More info: taebo20002000@yahoo.com

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Polley

Committee members acknowledged the
need for community support and finan- '
cia! assistance in order to make the plan
materialize.
from PageA1
It was noted that Karin Johnson will be
taking
photos for the show's program book
lrial air conditioning unit . has been
at
the
Aug.
5 rehearsal. Advertisements are
secured to be used during this year's
being
sold
for
the book. Patrons to be listed
performances . .
The site for future productions was dis• in the book will also be solicited.
The grour. will join the Riverbend
cussed because of the uncertainty as to
Arts
Counctl in a booth at the Meigs
the future of the old school building.
County
Fair. It was noted that two
Tentative plans call for it to be trans. ferred to Middleport Village by the dress-maker model s are neqded on
Meigs Local School Board and then which to display Harold Hill's and
Marian Paroo's costumes. There will be
leased to a community group.
a
drawing at the end of the fair for two
It was decided that plans should be
put into motion to secure a permanent free show tickets and the winner will
location for future productions. get choice of show dale and time.
The theater group will be holding an

Music
1

Ohio River Bear give-away again this
year. The custom-made band leader bear
has been donated by Susan Baker for the
fund-raiser.
A letter of support for Morgan's Raid
was sent to Governor Taft inviting him
to attend the September event.
Susan Eason volunteered to take orders
for Music Man t-shirts. Many cast members have already received their shirts.
Additional orders are being taken and
shins will be for sale at the fair and at perfonnances.
·
Looking to 2004, it was decided to consider either "Annie Get Your Gun" or
"The Sound of Music" as the fall production. The possibility of a spring play was
also discussed.

(UsPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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Dfolrlct Mgr.: TBA, Ext. 17

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E-mail:
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www.mydailysentinef.com

Sliver Rub BaptUt
Pastor: J ohn Swanson, Sunday School IOa.m., Wnnhip · lla.m., 7:00 p.m.
,Wedncllday Serolces- 7:00 p.m

Pastor : D~vid Wiseman.· Sunday School9:4.5 a .m .. E\·enina - 6:30 p. m,
Wedne!iday Services - 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem 8apd1l Chun:h
Great Bend, Roule 124. Rac ine. OH.
Putor : Da niel Mecea, Sunday School 9:30a.m., Sundily Woahip . IO:J.O a.m ..
Wednesday Bible Study - 6:00p.m.

Old Belhol F,... Will B1ptlsl Chur&lt;h
28601 St . Rl. 7, Middleport, Sund ay
Sc hoo l • 10 a.m ., Evening - 7:00 p.m.,
Thursday Services- 7:00
HJlltldt Bapdst Church
St. Rt. 143 juil off Rt. 7, Postor: Re11.
James R. Acree, Sr., Sunda y Unified
Serv ice. Wor!thip - 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.mt,
Wednesda y Servkei'i -7 p.m.
Vlclol')' Baptist Independent
~2~

N. 2nd St. Middleport, Pastor: lame~
E. Keesee, Worship - !Oa .m .. 1 p.m ..
Wednesdoy Services - 7 p.m.
Faith 811ptist Church
Roil mad S1 .. Mason. Sunday School - 10
11.111. . Wur~hip - II am .. t. p.m .
Wedne sday ScrYkes - '1 p.m.

Fore1t Run B11ptist
Pa~tnr

: Arius Hurt. Sunduy School - !0

n.m ., W1lrship - II a.m.

MI. Moriab Baptist
Fnurth &amp; Mnin St .. Middl eport, PaSior '
Rc\'. Gilbert Cruig. Jr.. Sunday School ·
9:.'0 a.m., Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Antiquity B•Pthit
Su nday Schon! - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10 :4~ a.m.. Sunday Evening-6:00p.m..
Pastor: Mark McComas
Kulland Free Will Bapti'it
Sulcrn St .. Pustor: Jamie Fort ner. Sunday
S~;hool - 10 u. m .. Evening - 7 p.m.,
W~o.-dncsday Services - 7 p.m.
Serond Baptist C hu~h
WV. S unday School 10 lim , Mnming worship II ann Evening. · 7 pm,
Wcdnc""ay 7 p.m.
Ruwn~wCNll.l,

Catholic

Pastor: Jane Beanie, Sund&amp;y School · 9
a.m., Won.hip - 10 a. m., ~ Serv i~es
- 7}0p.m.

Congregational .

Church of Christ

ninhy Cburda

Hemlock Grovr Christian Chun-h

St.'l·t'lflli &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy, Pastor: Re\',
Jack Noble, Worship 10:25 a.m. , Sunday

Minister: Lany Brown. Worship - 9:30
a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 un .. Bibk Study 7 p.m.

Central Cluster
Asbury (Syracu~) . Pastor: Bob Robinsun,
Sunday School . 9:4.5 a.m.. Worship - II
a. m.. Wednesday Service~ - 7:30p.m.

School 9:15 a.m.

Episcopal
Gra&lt;t Eplocopol Churdl

Pomeroy Chun:-h of Christ
212 W. Main S1., MiniSier: Amhony
Morris
Sunduy School - "):30 a.m. , Worsh.ip-10:30 a.m., 6 p.m., Wedne sday Servh.:es 7 p.m.

EIIOI'(II'ile
Pastor: Arland King, Sunday School · IU
a.m .• Wcnhip _· 9 11.10 .. Biblf: Study Wed .

.U6 E. Main St . Pomeroy, Re\'. James
Bemucki, Re v. Kalharin Foster. Sunday
Sch~ and Hnly Eucharist II :00 a.m.

Middleport ChurTh of Christ
5th umJ Main , Pastor: AI H11rtsun, Ynuth
Minister: Bill Frazier. Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Worship· 8: 15, 10:30 a.m., 7
p.m., W~dncsda y Services- 7 p.m.

lns1rumemal, Worship Set'\lice - 9 a.m.•
Communion - 10 n.m ., S undt~ y School 10:15 a.m., Youlh· .5:30 PJTI Sunday, Bible
Study Wednesda)' 7 pm
Churth of Chri!Jt
Min ist er: Tom Runyon, 39558 Bradbury
Road, Middleport. Sunday School - 9:.30

Su nday School - 9:30 a.m.; Worship 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.. Thursday Bible Study
and Yuuth · 7 p.m.

Wonhip - IO:lO a.m.
Rulland Churth of Chrl.ll
Sunday School . 9:30a.m., Worship and
Communion · 10:30 a.m., Bob J. Werry,
Minister

Hickory Hlllll Church or Chrlsl
E~angeliu Mike Moo\-e, Sunday School •
9 a.m., Worsh ip • · 10 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Reednllat Church of Christ
· Pastor: Philip Sturm. Sunday School: 9:30
a.m.. Wor~hip Service : 10:,}0 a.m .. Bible
Study, Wednesduy, 6:30p.m.
Dexter Chun:h or Christ
Pntor: Bill Eshelman, Sund11y schooi 9:3U
a.m., Norman Will, superinlende nt,
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m.

Church of Christ
Int ersection 7 and 124 W, Evangelist:
Dennis Sargen1. Sunday Bihk Study 1):30 a.m., Won;hip: 10:30 11.m. 1ma.l 6:.' 0
p.m.. Wednesday Bible Slully · 7 p.m

Christian Union
Har tford

C hu~h

Rotk Sprtnp
Pasloc Keith RIKier, Sunday Sr.:hool · ~ : l ~
a.m., Worship - 10 a. m., Youth
Fellowshi p, Sunday - 6 p.m.

Abundant Gr11ce R.t-. 1.
923 S. Third St .. Mi dolkpnrt. l'ast(lr Tc-n~S&lt;I
Dni s, Sunday· scn irc , 10 ~ m..
Wednesday sen·ii:e, 7 p.m.

Ru.tJ•nd

Salem Center

Faith Full Gospe l Chun.-h
Long Bouom, Pa~nr : Stc\'e R~d . Sunday
Schno l - Y:311 u m, Wnr,;hap - 9:JO a.m.
und 7 p.m., Wednesduy - 7 p.m., Friday·
fellowshlp 5trvke 7 p.m.

Pastor: William K. Marshall, Sunday
School- 10:1.5 a.m., WoMlip- 9 :15a.m.:
Bi blt Study: Monday 7:00 pm
Snowville
Sunday School - 10 a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.

The BtUevert' Fellow1hlp Mlni.. try
New Lime Rd ., Rutland, Pastor: Re''·
Margaret J . Robtnson . Services :
W~dnesday. 7:.'0 p.m.• Sunday. 2:30pm .

Laurel Clift' FrH Methodl11 Chun:h
Rev. Les Strandt and Myra L. Strande,
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m., Worahip 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.,Wednesday Service
- 7:00p.m.

C.rmei·SuUon

Mornlna Star
Pastor: Dewayne SIUtler, Sunday School II a.m., Worahi p- 10 a.m.

Sl. Rt. 160. 446-6247 or 446-7486.
Sun day School \0:20-11 a.m., Relief
Societ)'/Prieslh ood I I :05 -12:00 noon,
Sacrament Service 9- 10:15 a. m.,
Humemakin&amp; meeting, ht Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Syr~~euse

Euc Letart

Lutheran

Pastor: Brian Ha.rknen, Sunday School 10 a.m., Worsh ip- 9 a.m., Wednesday· 7
p.m.

St. John Lulhel'lln Churtla
Pine Grove, Worship · 9:00 a.m., Sunda y
School - 10:00 m.m . Pos10r: James P.
Bmdy

Pa1tor: Bri•n Hal'kneu, Sunday School ·
10 a.m.,, Wonhlp · ll a.m.. Wodnelday 7

Our Sa\'lour Luthenm Claun:h
Walnut a nd Henry Sts .. Raven5wood,
W.V11.., Pastor: David Ruuell , Sunday
School - 10!00 a.m., Wonhip- 11 Lm.
St. Paul Lutheran Chun:b
Comer Sycamo!ll &amp; Second St., Pomeroy,

Grah•m United MtthodMt
Worship - 9:30a.m. (1st &amp;. 2nd Sun) , .
7:30 p.m. (.lrd &amp; 4fh Sun).Wednesday
Scr"ice ·7:30p.m.

Apple und Scc~\n d Sl~ .. Pastnr: Rc\·. DaYid
Ru ssell, Sunday School and -Worship - 10
a.m.
Evening Scrvice9· 6:30 p.m., Wedne~du y
Set'\lices - 6:30p.m.

Hnoper Roud. r\\hens, Pas1vr:
Lonnie Clmls. Sundny W1\ Nhip IU:IJO um.
Wcd!l!.'~day : i pm

Mls!ilon

Joppa
9:~0

Syr•tuse Churth of tht Nazarene
Pnstor Mikl! Adkin s, Sunday School - 9:.'0
a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Long Roltom
Sunda · Sr.:hool • 9 : ~0 11.111., Worship -

Pomtroy Churth of the Nn.rene
Pastor: Jan Lave nd er. s'unday School 9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m., Wcdnesdoy Services · 7 p.m.

a.m.

Worship - 9::\0 a.m., Sum.l11y School -

10:30 a.m .. First Sunday of Month - 7:00
r .m. SC I'\/ iCe

Pel.tecostal

Presbyterian
SyruUie First Uniltd Prabyte.rl•n
Pustor: Rubert C n•w. Wor~hiJl - II ll.lll.

p.m.

Mlddleporl Pl't'!lhyterlan
Ruhcr Crow.. Worship - 10 u.m

Seventh-Day Adventist

.

Church of the Nazarene. Pastor: Teresa
Waldeck, Sunday School - 9 :30 11 .m ..
Worship - 1 0:4~ a.m., 7 p.m., Wednesda)'
Services • 7 p.m.

Thursday

l.anan·llle Chrlsll11n Church
Full Gospe l. Pnstor: Rol1ert Mussrr.
Sunday S~:hoo l Y:JO am .. W11rsh1p 10:.\0
am - 7:UO pm. \\'edne~lluy Sl'T\'Il''-' 7:00
pm

l"r nteco!!ihd Aswmhly
S1. Rt. 1:!4, Rucin~: , Pu ~ tnr : \Villium
Hohnck. SundD)· Scl\1.)()1 · 10 a.m..
Evening - 7 p.m .. Wcdnc ~d ny Ser\'il·es · 7
p.m.

MI. Olive Communit y Church
Pastnr: Lllwrerwc Bush. Sunday Scht'lo l 9:30 u.m .. Evening - (dO p.m.. Wcdlt~.'d uy
Serv ice - 7 p.m.

RoodJvllle FolloMhlp

'
Church of'Gnd of Prophecy
O.J. While Rd. off St. Rt. 160. Pastor: P.J.
Chapman , Sunday Sl·hnol - 10 a.m.,
Wnn;hip · II a.m., Wednc .«&lt;ay Scrvi~cs 7 p.m.

9 3 6~

Nazarene

CbHitr
Pustor· Jane He1111ie , Worship - 9 a.m ..

10 : .~0

Hobson Christian Fello"·shlp Church
Pastor: Her!ll.:hel Whi te. Sundny S.:honl10 am, Sunday Chun:h ~~n· irc - 6:30pm
Wedne!lday 7 pm

Fallh Gosptl Church
Long Bouom. Sundlly Sl-hlllll - 'J:.'\11 :t.m ..
Worship · 10 :45 u.m .. 7:30 p.m..
Wednc.sduy 7:30 p.m.

Mkldleporl Church ollhe N•urent
Pastor: All~n Midcap, Sunday School 9:30 a.m.,Worship - 10 :30 a.m.. tdO p.m.,
Wednc11day Sen i ce~ - 7 p.m .. Pastor:
Allen Midcap

P11~ 1or : Boh Randolph, Worsh ip 11.111.
Sunday SchoOl - 10:30 11.m.

Salem Commu nity Church
Road, Wt""st Cvl umPita, W.Vn ..
Pas10r : Clyde Fendt. SunUay S~,:hnol 9:JO
am. Su11dny e\'Cning smke' !') pm.
Wednesday sen icc 7 pm

Li~:ving

P11.~tor :

Grand Street, Sunday S~:h ool - 9:15 o.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m .. Pastor Phillip Dell

Wor:ohip · II u.m.. 6 :.m p.m.

Morn~.

Mone Chapel Chun:h
Sunday !lchool - 10 a.m.. Worship - 11
a.m., Wednesduy St-rvirc - 7 p.m.

1\lelp Cooperative Parish

Syracuse t"lnt Churth of God

RU .\1-1 ..&gt;\nltqujty. Pu~tcw .b sr
Sen·il·es: SaturWt)' : ;tl() p.m.

7p.m.

Church of God

11 .111 . ,

t'ull Guspe l Chun:h or thr l .h·int.t

'Harrisocn·llle Prtsb,·terian Chu rch
Pustor: R~.ll\cn Crow, Wur:;hip - 9 :1 .m.

Sum.luy School - 9:30 a.m.. Worshi p 10j0 a .m.• 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Scrvi..:cs ·7:00p.m.

Sunday School - 10
Services - 7 p.m..

Ctnln
G:tlli]'lo.lh s. OH
Pasn••·: Bill Stutc11. SonJa} Sen ire' . 10
a.m. &amp;. 7 p.m. Wcdne ~d!l }' · i p.m. &amp;
'1'outh / 1•.111.

Dyenllle Community Churth
Sunday School . 9:30 11.m., Worship ·
10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.

Hockinaport Church

Norlheast Cl uster. Alfred, Pastor: Jane
Bemtt ie, Sundmy School - 9:30 a.m.,

\'lctor~·

Cooi.Uie Unlhd Molhud~l Parloh
Pa1tor: Helen Kline, Coolv ille Ch urch,
Mai n &amp; Fifth St., Sunday School • 10
a.m., Wonhip • 9 a.rn ,, Tuesday Sen·ices -

Torch Chun:h
Co. Rd . 63. Sunday S&lt;:hool - 9:30a.m ..
Worship· 10:30 a.m.

Rutl•nd Churt"h or (; od
Pastor: Ron Heath, Sunduy Worship · I0
tu n .. 6 p.m.. Wednesday Services · 7
p.m.

Nt:W l...ife

~77.1 CiL'l)r~c s Crt.'l:k R~o~o~ll .

7:~0

Mt. Olive United MethiMIIII
Off 124 beh ind Wilkesville, Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires, Sunday School • 9:30 a.~ .•
Worshifl - 10:3 0 m.m.. 7 p.m.. Thursduy
Sc r vi~·es- 7 p.m

ML Moriah Churth of God
Mile Hill Rd ., Raci ne, Pastor: Jam es
Sll.tterfield, Sunday School - 9:45 u.m.,
Evening- 6 p.m., Wcdncllduy Sen ·il·es - 7
p.m.

,\111

p.m.

or Chri slln

Chrisilllll Union
Hartl'ord, W.Va .. Pnstor: Da~· id Greer.

10 ~ lll

· 7 r.m.

( 'litlon Taht"rnudt l ' hun·h
W.V:1.. Sumluy Sdu•ul · 10 a .m..
\\'urship · 7 p.m .. Wclinl·~llt)' SL•rvkl' - i

Sebool - 9:30a.m., Wonhip- 10:30 1un.,

Town!hip Rd .• 468C. Sunday School - 9
a.m. Wonh ip • 10 a.m .. Wedne~ay
Servicea- 10 a.m.

United Methodist

Chunh

Cli h~oHl.

Huel Community Churth
Off Rt. 124, Pastor: Edsel Han . Sunduy

BotholChurcll

Sunday School - 9:4.5 a.m .. Worship · II
a.m. Pastor: James P. Brady

Wt:dne~lla~· S ~r \'kl·~

1411 Bridgeman St .. Syrucu ~ e. Sunday
School - 10 a.m. Evening - !'! p.m..
Wednesday Scrvil:e. 7 p.m.

Racine

ur~

LnHCIIO.:l' F llfl'lllllll, w,lr~ hl )l•

Faith Valle)'· 'II~rnacle Chuf&lt;'h
Bailey Run Road, Pnstor: Re\'. E111meu
Rawson, Su nday Eveni n11 7 p . m ., ~
Thur~D)' Service · 7 p.m.

The Chun:h of Jcsua

Chrlsl ot Latler-Day Saln•

Re,ioidnw

Middleport Comn1unlty Church
.575 Pearl St., Middlcpllr! . Pa~lor: Sam
Anderson, Sunday School 10 11 . 111 . ,
Evenina - 7:30 p.m.. Wednesday Ser\·ir.:e ·
?:JO p.m.

Carmel &amp;. Bashan Rds . Racine . Ohio,
Pastor: Dewaynt: Stutler, Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m., Worship • 10:45 11.m. , Bible
SIUdy Wed. 7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints .

p ln .

Harrlaan\ill t Community C hu~h
Pastor: Theron Durham, Sundt•~· - lJ:.m
a.m. and 7 p.m., Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Be1bany

Bradford Churth or Christ
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd ..
Minister: Doua Shamblin. Youth Min iJter:
Bill Ambe!ier, Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Won hlp - 8:00 a. m., 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m .. Wednelday Services ·7:00 p.m.

Pauy WaUe, 60J S~nmd .\\c. ~·l uson . 77 .l~0 1.7. Ser\'ice tin1e: Sunlla~ IIUO a.m..
Wednesday 7 pm

Panor: Oewayne Stutler, Sunday School 10 a.m .. Worship - 9 a.m., Wednesday
Sen-ices - 10 a.m.

a.m.

Wot:ShiP Center

Schon!. Pas1or: Rtlb Burht• r,

Pastor: Rod 8rowtr. Worship - 9:30 a. nl. ,
Sunday School- 10:35 a.m.

Sunda y School - 9:30 a.m .• Worsh ip IO:JO a.m., Thursday Sen' ice~- 7 p.m.

HyHII Run Hollneu Churtla
Br~~dbury

Slin•rs,·ille l'nmmunily Chun.'h
P:t, tnr W&lt;IY IIl" K. k~o~ el l. S ua.l&lt;t~ S e rv 1n: ~
- lO:Llll a.m. &amp; 7:ll0 p.m .. llwn.lhl} . 7:00

Pastuc Kan:- 11 Davi ,, Smula~
Wor~hip: tO am , Ewning Woc~ hir : 0 t•m,
Y~'llllh group 6 pm. WcdnesdU}': Power in
Prn)'f:r . and Bihk- Study - 7 pm
Ash Simi Chun:h
A&gt;h St.. Middlepon- Sunday Schot'l - 9:.1!l
lUll ., M11rnin g Wnrship · IIUU 11.111 . &amp; 1
pm, Wednesday Scn·in· - 7:00 p.lll .. You!h
Servil-e· 7:00 r.m.
A Rape L.lft &lt;..:en ter

Pomeroy

Wesley11a Bible HoUneu Chun:h
75 Pearl St., Middlepon. Pastor: Rev.
DaYid Gilhen, Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship • 1 0:4~ p.rp., Sunday Eve . 7:00
p.m .. Wednesday Service - '?:30 p.m.

C.11.lnr~· Hibll' l 'hun·h
PuultTt•y Pilt· , C1•. Rd ., Pa~ h•r : H:t: \·
Bllldi.WI'IIXL Sunday s. .- h~llll . •) : ~0 a. m .
Wnrsh1p Ill · 'U 11.111 .. L\U p.m..
Wl'l.lne....J;,y St'T\ i\·l" - 1·.\l \ p m

As~i s t 1111 1

Pearl Chapel
Sunda)' School · 9 a.m., Worship - 10 a.m .

112 mi le off Rt. 125. Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Maolf:y, Sunduy School · 9:30 a.m ..
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m ..
W&lt;XInesday Service -7:30 p.m.
'

Th.ppen Pl•ln Church or Christ

f11ith t'ellowship ( ' rul&gt;lldt' for Chri!it
Pa'ilnr: Rl'\ h ,mlla n IJtd. l'lh. Sl'l"\ll'l'
frida y. 7 p.m

Be~

Mlnerwvllle
Pastor: Bob Robinson. Sunday School - 9
a.m, Worship· 10 a.m.
~

Pine Gron Bible Hollne!ll Claun:h
Zion Chun:b or Christ
Pomeroy, Harrison\'ille Rd . (RI.14J ).
Paslor: R og~r Watson. Sunday School 9:.30 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m.. Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Portland First Church jlf thr NaZMn-nl'
Pastor: Wil\ilun Ju~ti s. Sumla)' Sl·huvl ·
10:00 a.m.. Momin!: Worship - 10:4.'i a.m..
Sunday Service · fdO p.m.

of Christ
Rd .. Pas!~• r : Jt:rr) Siugcr.
Sund11y s,·hoql - \UO u.m.. W1•rship ·
10:.\0 ' o.m .. Wtdnc ~Jay Scmces - 7:tXl
p.m.

Huth (Middleport)
Pas10~ Rod Brower. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m .. Wtnhip - I! :OOa.m.

Rose of Sharon Hollnrss Church
11ading Creek Rd .. Rutland. Pas1or: Re\'.
Dewey King, Sunduy school- 9:30 a.m ..
Sunday worship -7 p.m.. •Wednesday
prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Bearw•llow Rld~~:e Churdt uf Chrio;l
Pns t or: Bruc~ Teny. 'Sunda) Sdtool - 9:.~0
a.n1
Worship · 10:30 a.m .. 6 : ~0 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

Fain-itw Blbl~ Chun-h
Lttan, W.Va . R1. I. Pu~1ui' : Hrian Mu~·.
Sunduy SdtOtll . 9 .\1') a.m.. Wor.&gt;hi1• · 7:00
r .m., ow:&lt;"dnl· &lt;i&lt;L•~· Hihk S111Jy - 7·UO p.m.

Ch~!~ter

Calwary Pilcrim Chapd
Hunisorwille Road, Pastor: Charles
McKe111.ic, Sunduy School 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - II a.m.. 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
s~rv ice ~ 7:110 p.m

Kenn Chun:h of Christ
Worship · 9:30 a.m.. Sundnj- S..:hool ·
10:30 ;~. m .. Pas10r-Jeffrcy Wallace, 1st and
3rd SundU)'

Rutland Chun-h of tht N~rene
PaS!or: Re\·. l..ouis S. Stlluhs, Sunday
SdlOl•l - 9:30 11.111 .. Wu~hip . 10:.\0 a.m..
6:30p.m., Wednesda)' Sen·ices - i p.m.

Pmtland - R~teinc

Fortll: Run
Pastor: Bob Robinwn, Su ~y S«:hool - 10
a.m .. Worship - 9 a.m.

llanwiHe Holint~~~ Churth
31057 Stille Route 325. l&amp;ngsvll e, Pastor:
·a11ry Jackson. Sunday school - 9:JO a.m .•
Sundtty worship · I 0:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m ..
Wedn,.."Sday pruycr scrvke - 7 p.m.

RilkMur, Sunday S,·hool · ~:.'0 a.m..
Worship · 10:.10 11.111 .. Wctloe'ir.ha&gt;· Sc.'r,· il·~
· 7 p.m.

Communh~·

Flatwoocl5
Pastor: Keith Rader, Sunday School · 10
a.m., Worship - II a.m.

Commu•hy Chun-h
Puslnr: Steve Tomek. Main Street,
Rudand, Sunday Worshi~IO: OO a.m..
Sumluy Servke- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Re v. Herbert Grute, Sunda)' S~o-h llOI
- 9 : ~0 a.m .. Worship - 11 aun .. 6 p.111..
Wednesday Ser\'il·es. ?' p.m.

Other Churches

7:30

Holiness

hmero)' Wesutde Churth of Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd .. Sundt)'
School - II a.m.. Wor.ship - toa .m., 6 p.m.
Wednesduy Seri-' ice~ - 7 p.m.

MI. Union Bapdll

Sacred Hurl Catholir Church
ltd Mulllcrr}' Ave ., Pnmeroy. q92 -5K9R.
Pustnr: Rc\'. WaJter E. Hl'im., Sat. Con.
4 : -l~ -~ : 1~p.m.: Mass- ~JO p.m .. Sun.

Published
every
atternoon ,
Our main concern in all stories is to be Monday through Friday, 111 Court
accurate. If you know of an error in a Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992- postage paid at Pomeroy.
2156.
Member: The Associated Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspaper

Our main number Is

Radnr Fine Bllpdst
Pastor: Rick Rule, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m.. Worshi p - 10:40 a. m., 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday ~n· ices - 7:00 p.m.

1\oppen Plolm SL Poul

,.l•

Where; St Paul Lutheran Church
When: Mondays and Wednesdays 6:15pm
Startlnc: Auc. 4 for

7:30p.m.

Apo~loli r

GET FIT!

Join the ar..s only Billy Blanks Certified
Tile 8o Instructor and the many people
who have chanced their bodies!

Correction

.
Sean Mullen of Albuquerque;

'

Concerts,
Shows

tlfiVE
fUN!

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Obituaries
Mae Bletner

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

wwvl.mydatlysentlnel.com

Full Go~pc- ll..lghthousl.'
Hi land Rl&gt;lld. Pnmcrny. flu stnr: R11~'
Humer, Sunday S~o:h&lt;'ll'l . 10 ;1.111., Ewning
7:.' 0 p.m .• l'u esd&lt;l)' &amp;. Thursday - 7:.111
p.m.
~ .\04 ~

South Hethtl t 'ontmunlly Chun:h
Sii\'Cf Ridge- Pastm Lind n O ;lllh! W•l•l•!.
Sunday School · 9 11.m .. Wl•r ~ hip Scn· ic~.·
IO.n.m.

Carleton lnttrdt'oomlnatlonltl L' hurch
Kin~&amp; sb ury R(li\d, Pastor: R11l•l'rt V:nM·,
Sundn y Schon\ . IJ:JO lLi ll ., Worship
Scn' i ~c 10 :~ () a.m., E1·cning. S.ca'\I•'.C t1
p.m.

Sennth -Da~ Ad\nllst
Mul berry Ht s. Rd .. Pomcwy. Pustor. Rny
Lawinsky. SuH!nlu y Scrvkt.' ~ : Sn hPnlhSr.:hlX;I- J. p.m .. Wurs.hip · .1 p 111

United Brethren
!\11. Hermon l lnlll'd Bn.·thn.-n
in Chrlsl C hutt•h
Tr-;,u s Community .\h-1 II Widh;llll R~l .'
Pa,wr: P.-tcr Maa1imlijll', Suudu y !-kho&lt;.&gt;l &lt;J :.\0 a.m.. w ,, rsha p
1(1:.1() :un .. 7:()11
p.nl . Wnint:~•hl ~ s,·naa ~ · 7:00 r .m
Y~o' Ulh group mwti11g ..?ud &amp; -lth Su n do1 y~
l p.m

F.dcn l lnit«&lt; lln• thn.•r1in Christ
S!:tt\· Ro ut,· 1:!4 . Hl' l'd~\!llc. SunU:t~
Sdloul - II .a m .. Sunolu;' \\\,r., hap • !!l : t~t
a.m. &amp; 7:011 p.m. Wnlnc ~ da~ Sn' ar~~ 7:00 p m.. Wclln e .q i;L ~ 1'1 '1111\ Sl'f'\

i,.,. ·

7:00p.m

Huld Knub , on Cu. Rd . .I I. l'a"l"r fk'
R(l gcr Will(ord, Sunday Sfl'k~l\ · IJ:.lO ;u n.
Worship- 7 p.n1
I

Whitt's t.:haJWI Wesll',·•n
Coo! r ilk Ro nd. P.t ~lnr : R,., _ l,hdl ip

Chnter Churth of the Nazarent

Association .
Poslmaater: Send address correc··
lions to The Daily Sentinel, 111
Court Stree1, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

On Their 3rd Anniversary

Open

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August 3rd 2pm - 5pm

By carrier or motor route

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Bou~e

Wyngate Of Gallipolis Would Like To Thank The Following For Donating
To Their Silent Auction, All Proceeds Go To The Relay For Life
A Team Event To Fight Cancer!
Carmichael Equipment, Inc. - Riyer Front Honda
Ratliff Pool Center, Inc. - Floral Fashions
Head Quarters by Juanita - The Empty Nest
Stone Jar/JcPenney - Paul Davies, j4lwelers
T~Di Furniture Galleries- Fruth Pharmacy
Karat Patch Diamonds &amp; Gold - Basket Delights
'
Summer Image - Corbin &amp; Snyder Furniture
For Further Information Call
Trimat Construction
300 Briarwood Drive
A Licensed
Wyngate Of Gallipolis At
Gallipolis, OH 45631
(746) 441-9633
www.Chancellorhealth.com
Assisted Livi ng Community

"So I strive always to
keep my conscience clear
before God and man."

Acts 24: 16
Davls·Qulckel Agency Inc.
Full line at

Insurance
.

Products+
Financial

ENOES In&lt;.

S~rvices

Bill Quickel

White Funeral Home
·since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
'

740-667·3110

..

.11•bn ,1ulltfal _ ,
.............
t•

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

.IIHMI

ij!;eaforb
~eal &lt;lf~tate
216 E. Second Pomeroy
7 40.992·3325

f

4

36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
7.992-6606

Brogan-Warner

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

INSURANCE
SERVICES

PltARMACY

We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

992 -~130

Marketing Property
Since 1971 ·

Pomeroy

Crow's Family Restouront

!francis Florist

"Featuring Kentucky Fried
Chicken "

Meigs Cnum y\

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992·5432

'lt~•ua.e flttu~t-e
17 4 Layne Street
New Haven, wY 25265
I James H . Anderson 30'1·8!12·11200I11'nulv
Director

I

my conscience clear
God and man."

Beauty &amp; Nails Salon
293 South Second Ave.
Middleport, OH 45760

(740) 992-l5SO
(Owner) Janice Gri:mn•

I

Acts 24:1

Old~sl

Flori s1

East Ma in
Pomeroy, Oh
740-992-2644

740·992-6298

Let your light so shine bej(11't'
men. tlratthey may see your
&amp;
good works and glorify your
93 Mill St. Middleport, OH
Fatl1er in heaven. "
Matthew 5:/6
(740) 992-9513

&amp;4IU'Itu, t;4U

6noufftr'tJ
· .1'irt &amp; 6aftl!'

Shear Illusions "So I strive always to keep

•

Tht can you dtserve, c/o&gt;t to home

214 E. Main

L-__,;,---~------------------~

---------·~---- · ..--. ·----··· ~·~-·-· ---·--·-·----~-----------------,-----~·· • • •

ROCKSPRINGS
REHABILITATION CENTER

........
"'loll_.....,_....................
TOI.WIU

laMIII ....tl

11...........

--·-

Office Service &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

�il

I

The Daily Sentinel
111. C!lurt Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
·

www.mydallysenllnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher

..
.

Charlene Hoeflic,h
General manager and news editor

GUEST

VIEW .

Choice
.Sometimes itS OK to get shingles
B~

the Editors of Consumer Reports

II the roof over your head is covered by slate, tile or metal

shingles. chances are you won't have to think about replacing
it. These materials last for decades, even centuries, barring
major damage or persistentleaks.
· Wood and fiberglass shingles. however, need periodic
replacement. With a lifespan of up to 30 years, fiberglass is
the hardier of the two. It's also fire-resistant, comes in many
styles and colors. and is much less expensive than wood. Not
surprisingly, tiberglass shingles are the roofing material of
choice for most households.
·
Nowadays, that choice includes two types of fiberglass
shingles: the traditional three-tab and a newer, usually heavier, laminate. Also known as "architectural" or "dimensional"
shingles, laminates are fairly thick, which helps to create a
three-dimensional surface meant to look like wood or slate .
Both types are made of fibergl~ss sandwfched between asphalt
and ceramic granules ·hence their description as asphalt shingles - but three-tabs are made frorn a single layer rather than
the double layer of a laminate .
· Laminates offer what many people consider a richer and
more pleasing appearance than three-tab shingles. If looks run
a distant second to cost in your priorities, choose a three-tab
shingle. Yet, if you've room in your bud~et ·the cost difference is relatively small. especially constdering how seldom
you have to· buy roofing · think twice before sacrificing the
aesthetics of a laminate for the savings of a three-tab shingle.
· We tested both three-tab and laminated fiberglass shingles • ·
subjecting them to extremes of weather, punishing winds and
forces of impact - lnd found more tof eerformers among the
laminates than among the traditiona shingles. But the best
three-tab models rival the best laminates, and two traditional
types- Certain Teed 's XT 25 and Owens Corning's Supreme combine very good performance with a comparatively low
price of $30 per I00 square feet, eaming them distinctiOn as
CR Best Buys. Another top-performing three-tab, OAF's
Slateline is expensive at $60 per I00 square feet of coverage.
If you want the look that laminates offer; CenainTeed's
Grand Manor Shungle 'provides that, along with excellent performance . At $140 per 100 square feet of coverage, however,
it's the most expenstve product we tested. For $65 and $55 per
100 square feet, respectively, CenainTeed's Landmark 50 and
OAF's Timberline Ultra laminates are very good alternatives.
.You can expect a fiberglass-shingle roof to last 25 years or
more, but tornadoes, blizzards, hail and other calamities can
ruin any roof before its time. That's why it's important to
check a shingle's warranty. Fiberglass shingles typically have
a two-part warranty. The first pan provides full reimbursement for materials and installation costs for most hazards,
including wind damage. The second pan typically provides
prorated reimbursement for materials and ranges from 20
years to the life of the house. Many warranties are transferable
(with restrictions) if you sell the house.
Our advice: Go for the longest full-reimbursement period
you can get. In our test lin~up. several laminates - including
the top-rated CertainTeed Grand Manor Shangle and the OAF
Timberline Ultra - had I0-vear full warranties and a lifetime
guarantee on materials. Among our three-tab shingles. only
GAF's Slate line and Owens Coming's Supreme feature a 10year.full warranty. Materials warranties un three-tab shingles
are typically prorated. and range from 20 years to the lite of
the house.
You can help ensure a long life for your roof by installing it
correctly. If the roof is new or if you ' re having the old shingles removed, you' ll need underlayment (roof felt) to create a
moisture barrier for the wood sheathing and the rafters underneath . Metal flashing and new drip edges are often needed
around pipes, chimneys and the like.
And affix shingles with nails, not staples. Fiberglass shingles normally require four nails, but if you live in a windy
area. use s1x.
'
Visit the Consumer Reports Web site at www.consumerreports.org.

Moderately Confused
AFTER

ON~

WAVE,
THEY'RE ALL
TltE SAME.

.\

0 2003 by NEA, Inc.

'I

Page.A4

0 1n1on

.The Daily Sentinel

l.

•

Friday, August I, 2003

lt'hat did Hany Trnman know?
The battle over the significance'
of
American
Communism and what to · do
about it was probably the
biggest domestic controversy
of the 20th century. It began
shonly after the Republicans
took control of the House of
Representatives in 1946, with a
senes of investigations by the
House Committee on UnAmerican Activities. and
reached its first climax with the
conviction of Alger Hiss for
petjury (in denying that he had
been a Soviet spy) early in
1950. The battle was then taken
over by Wisconsin Sen. Joseph
McCarthy, and roiled qn for
nearly five more years, reaching its second and final climax
with the censure of McCanhy
by the Senate, in effect for having made what were regarded
as false and extT'dvagant accusations of Communism against
innocent people.
That remained a fair summary of the controversy for
40 years. until the late Sen.
Daniel Patrick Moynihan (DN.Y.) forced the publication
of the so-called Venona
Papers in 1995. These were
coded dispatches from Soviet
KGB officials in Washington
and New York to Moscow
Center in the first half of the
1940s, which had slowly been

--

•·t i_
•

..

~~

William
Rusher

decoded by U.S. Army cryptanalysts who staned working
on them in the mid-1940s.
These dispatches made it
clear that Soviet intelligence
agencies had indeed deeply
penetrated the American government before and during
World War II. planting agents
in almost every .important
office. right up to and including the White House.
What bas long mystified
some of us who participated
in the battle over domestic
Communism from the antiCommunist side. so to speak.
is why this immensely important information, which was
known to a few insiders by
the mid-40s, was never made
public as a definitive answer
to the furious controversy.
Now, in a fascinating article
in the June 30 issue of the
Weekly Standard. Robert
Novak reveals a previously

unsuspected footnote to history that may explain that baffling silence.
Some think that President
Truman WlL' never told what the
Yenona Papers revealed.
According to this account.
General of the Am1y Omar
Bradley. chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of StaJJ', took personal
responsibility in 1949 for insisting that Truman not be told.
There is. I1owever, another
and very different account of
the facts . Novak has tracked
down a retired Army cry ptanalyst named Oliver Kirby.
who asserts that his superior.
Brig. Gen . Carter Clarke. met
with Pre&gt;ident Truman in tile
Oval Office on June 5, 1945
just six weeks after
Truman took offi ce - and
told him (at the urgi ng of
Gen . George Marshall) of the
Venona decryption s then
under way. But Truman was
unimpre ssed. He didn't
understand the decodin g
process . and told Clarke the
whole tiling sounded "li ke a
fairy story." As late as 1948.
when Bradley (accordin g to
Kirby) informed Truman of
new Venona dis.:overks. tile
pres ident
told
Defense
Secretary James Forrestal
there were " too many
unknowns" in the dispatche s,

. • Values·

~.lth
r~

The Daily Sen~el

and that "even if part of !hi$ is
true, it would open up the
whole red panic again."
Even . in 1950, when
Bradley told Truman that
Alger Hiss and Harr~ Dexter
Whit e were identified in
Venona as Soviet spies,
Truman kept his eyes lirmly
shut : "That goddamn stuff. "'
Every time it bumps into us it
gets bigger and bigger. It's
likely to take us down ."
So the struggle over domestic Communism roared on,
while Harrx Truman, who (at
least according to thi s
account) knew the truth and
could have ended the battle
by telling it, kept the information deeply buried. A new
(and Republican) administration took over in 1953, but
how much it was told about
Venona is unknown .
Much of this account
depends on the veracity of
Oliver Kirby, whose versions
of the se various conversations
are impossible to check. But it
is a fact that Carter Clarke did
talk with Harry Truman in the
Oval Office on June 5, 1945,
just as Kirby asserts.
(William R11sher is a
Disting11ished Fellow of the
Claremont /nstitllte for the
Smdy of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)

You .don't have to kiss
God through·a veil

·Special Services
&amp; Events

Saturday, Aug. 2
BIDWELL, Ohio- Gospel
Sing, 7 p.m., Poplar Ridge
Freewill Baptist Church.
Singing by Cross Creek and
New Horizon. Pastor John
Elswick Invites everyone to
attend.
Sunday, Aug. 3 ·

Reducing medical errors
BY DONALD M.BERWICK

rak , .:ven if every death caused

The Washington Post

by error is known io be so.
which is far from the case.
It's like most public health
burdens. . About
43.000
Americans die every year in
automobile accidents. but most
of us never actually witness
such a death.
Of course. nonlethal injuries
to patients are far more frequent,
like
"fenderbenders."but for social and
technical reasons, they are also
hard to track locally. For one
thing, health care workers don't
talk very much about these
smaller events. even with each
other.
·
Indeed, most health care
workers, even though they
encounter flaws when they or
their family members are
patients, simply don't see the
flaws when they act as health
care providers. According to a
recent study, only 20 percent of.
doctors believe that preventable medical errors occur
"very often"or "somewhat
often,"even though 35 percent
of the very same doctors saw
errors in their own health care
or that of a family member.
· The invisibility of injuries to
patients makes them seem ttivtal or infrequem. Until we find
ways to make errors and injuries
routinely visible in local health
care settings, the national will
for safety will be hard to translate into local action.
Second, even when hospitals
find ways to notice the inJuries
to their patients, their theories
about the cause often . remain
scientifically
Neanderthal.
Health care leaders, like executives and boards of trustees,
cling to unsound. harmful but
deeply entrenched beliefs:
·They believe that bad people cause bad errors, even
though in reality, most serious

The Institute of Medicine,
our nation's most respected
adviser on medical science,
says that at least I00 patients
will die in hospitals in the
United States today because of
injuries from their care, not
from their diseases.
How many will die lommrow?
Tom Nolan, one of the leading
quality- improvement
scholars of our time, identifies
three essential preconditions
for improvement of anything:
will , ideas and execution.
When it comes to reducing
medical errors. America's will
and ideas are increasing steadily now, following the Institute
of Medicine's lead.
And yet, so far I see no evidence that health care in the
United States is becoming
safer. The ingredient we seem
to be missing most is the third
one on Nolan's list: execution.
Who will change the care? And
when? At least four major
roadblocks appear to lie
between will and ideas, on the
one hand, and ex.ecution , on
the other.
First. in local hospital settings. our health care workforce largely remains blind to
·!he enemy-patient injury.
People who work in hospitals
and clinics cannot easily see,
day by day, the errors and
injuries
that
large-scale
research studies have found. ·
A simple calculation shows
why: If I00 patients die from
injuries in U.S. hospitals each
day and there are 5,000 hospitals, that is very roughly one
death per hospttal every two
months. From the viewpoint of
individual doctors and nurses.
!his is an unobservably low

..

medical errors are committed
by competent. cming people
doing what other competent.
eating reoplc would dn.
-They believe that analyzing
etTors will allow them to tind a
single root cause. even though
in fact the very idea of a "root
Cllllsc""is mish:ading. Most system failures come from complex interactions between
latent failures (the little things
that go wrong all the time) and
specil'ic actions. Saying that

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money for technical changes,
such as new equipment, computerizution and the redesigning of johs. and money for cultural improvements, such as
new trai ning and suppot1 for
better teamwork among doctor' and nurses. Today's
stressell hospital executives
often fee l that they cannot
arti1rd 10 make these investments . A distam hope for longterm returns or vague calculations about how much patient

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20 years ago. has nourished
recentlY in the United St:lles.
Two years :I!!O. nine d1apters
served about -150 members.
Today. 2S groups from Old
Orchard Bt•ach. Maine. to
Pensan1la. Flu.. to Hawaii.
count about I.400 members.
The organitation tallies
thousands of surfas ebc where. too. in Jap.m . South
Africa. Venezuela and a host
of other surfing hot spots .
In all of these groups. the
mission is to minister 10
other surfers. gently preach
their message, and get them
to join a local chun:h .
·'For a lot of surters. the
whole concept of church Is
off-putting," said the Rev. Bill
White of the Surfer\ Chapel.
where services are held on
Saturday nights to avoid imerterence with morning waves.
Surfers me sometimes ' skeptical of org:mized religion. he
said, but can be swayed by a
community of faith solely
comprised of lellow wave riders. "Nobody thinks anything
of :m Am1enian church or a
Hisplmic church or a Sammm

.:hurch.'' While said. "I feel that
surters identify with sorting as
much as any ethnic gruup identities with theirethnicily."
In 2002. Christian Surfers
dutplers in the United States
recorded I,07 I conversions
- surfers who accepted
Christ for the first time as a
resul! of their efforts. Nearly
-100 fallen-away Christians
across the country returned to
their faith last year as a result
or the organization's efl'orts ,
Christian Surfers said.
·
Among them is Jake
Gomez. A ycur ago. Gomez
used drugs and considered
himself an atheist~ a surfin&amp; ·
bad boy. He got involved in a
surf club and when he wa~
invited by other members to
join their Bible study, he
decided to try it.
··1 wouldn't have met the
people who helped me
change my life without this,"
the 18-vear-old · said before
com peting in a Christian
Surfers amateur surf contest:
"We'n; out here to bring the
word of God to the people
without preaching."

•

Concessions available. For the speaker.
camping information, call 446·
4120. For information regarding
the sing, call (740) 379-2647.

preaching service with Rick
Barcus. preaching, 6 p.r;n.,
Addison Freewill Baptist
Church.
Friday, Aug. 22
GAWPOLIS, Ohio- 13th
Annual Gallia County Gospel
Sing, lrom 5 p.m. to midnight,
today and tomorrow, Gallia
County Fairgrounds. There will
be 20 to 30 gospel groups performing . .Free admission. Rain
or shine. Bring chairs.

I

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Revivals &amp;
Homecomings

Special service
DANVILLE - Special services will be held at the
Danville Church of Christ, 7
p.m. Saturday and 6 p.m.
Sunday with Denver Hill .as

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1 ,'and Richard Parsons. Aug. 2.

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July 29-Aug. 2
APPLE GROVE - Revival
at Mi'llstone Church, 7 p.m.
nightly.
Nightly
singing.
Speakers are for remainder of
schedule are Sampy Hart, Aug.

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Sunday, Aug. 3
GALLIPOLIS (Kanauga). Ohio
- Special singing by The
Grimmetts, preaching by the Rev.
Jackie Grimmett, 10 a.m .. Silver
Memorial Freewill Baptist Church.
Aug. 3-6
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio- Gallipolis
Church of God of Prophecy. 6 p.m.
Sunclay, 7 p.m. weeknights, Aug.
3-6. By His Gl]ice ministries.
Everyone welcome!

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The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
S\JNO~Y

H........

tH·21

Young's Carpenter Serulce

MONDAY
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Roofing &amp; Building Work

TIJESDAY
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740-992-6215

. ,1·11

EWING FUNERAL HOME
106 Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy, OH
740·992·2121
Fax 740-992-2122
Ben H. Ewing
Licensed Embalme r, Funeral Director

Licensed Pre-Need Insurance

WILLIAMS &amp; ASSOC.
INSURANCE
122 E. Main St.

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Ann

1Athens)

often seem to carry the day in
hospital s and clinics facing
l&lt;trge and immediate tinancial
lo"es .
Finally. improving safety is
hard. not easy. A hospital that
wants to make patients truly
safer has to involve almost all
depann.1ents. suppon systems
and patterns of activity. Dozens
of habitual systems have to .
.:h1ii1ge-rounds, record keeping. meetings. training programs. policy manuals and
review procedures. to name but
a tew.
I have no doubt that. technically, we could reduce injuries
to patients by 99 percent or
more. savmg tens ot thousands
of li ves ·every year. But the
changes required to get there
are so profound that most hospital s and clinics will no! find
their own way. In order to help,
we. should de,velop in our
nauon a tew bold design projects-"surgery
of
the
future,'"'the safe emergency
department,'"'cancer care without harm ."for ex.ample-and
support them as public demonstration projects to prove to
ourselves that dramatically
safer care is in fact possible.
(The writer is fJresidenr and
CEO of the lnstit11te for
Healthcare Improvement in
Bo.\·trm.)

THURSDAY
I Ptter
, ,1·14
FRti)AY

Gene•t•

-··

209 Third
Racine, OH

6' 1·13

Guardrail, Fence &amp;

Untangling the Web

sign erection _......,_,

Do you find yuun.tf caught In a web from which you feet

.

powerless 10 escape? Perhap• you have strayed from your
Heavenly Father. We can quickly and almost imptrctptivtly
become entangled by free will and human nature in a delicately
gleaming and gossamer net of docoption . .Tho wily web Is so
captivating that by the time we realiu we must free ourselve• . we
may feel helpless to do so.
Don't despair, for God has not strayed from yuu ... when xou
seek Him. Together, you have all the •~ret~gth. you need. Trost
the unconditional low of your Creator to help )'011 jKipt' that
•ituation which i• mangling your soul. You can begin anew. Talk
to th&lt; Lord earnestly and be patient, for He is your beat frlrnd.
Psalm 27:14 says It weU ... "Wait on the Lord, be of good murage,
and He shalt mengthon your heart: Walt, I say, on the lord!"
Wonihip this week. Your new beginning is .only a prayer away.

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5: 16

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Before yu u pay your next ho me or

WEDNESDAY

one factor is a "'root r au se"is injuries are· costing today don'l

usually an illusioti created by
hindsight bias. It is Monday
morning quanerbacking. ·
-They believe th:H adding
complexity improves reliabilit y.
That's not olien true. How
many of us actually know how
to use those fancy butlnns and
controls on our YC'Rs. beyond
".On"and "Oft''' Adding steps.
even to make a system safer.
often creates new and severe
ri sks.
-And they believe that
because human errors. are
inevitable . injuries to patients
are also inevitable. Mature
safety systems don 't only try to
reduce the chances of .human
error; they also accept the htct
that errors will occur and then
lind w.a:rs to intercept them and
.reduce their potential consequences. That's why cars have
airbags.
Health care leaders and
boards that cling to these unscier-tific theories create counterproductive responses lu problems, such as nai ve investigations, .reprisals and secrecy.
They reinforce . fhe lear. the
shame and the sense of insult
that make people shut their
eyes and mouths even tighter.
They slow progress toward
safer care. . ·
Third. improving safety
costs money in the shot1 term-

Surfer Alon Maor prays before a surfing in Honolulu July 14.
2003. Around the world. a subculture perhaps better known
for sculpted bod 1es and. s lacker mindsets is finding spirituality in sport. Surfe rs are turning to God . converting nonbelievers, organizing Bible studies and mission trips and using the
ocean as the pulpit from which to preach their faith. (AP)

•

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
Sunday school at 10 a.m ..
preaching service at 6 p.m.
with Rick Barcus, Addison
Freewill Baptist Church.
Wednesday, Aug. 6
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
Prayer meeting, 7 p.m.,
Addison Freewill Baptist
Church.
Sunday, Aug. 10
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
Sunday school, 10 a.m.,

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Friday, August 1, 2003

For some surfers, riding the wav~s
off Hawaii is·a spiritual experience

HONOLULU (AP) - As
the white-tipped wave melts
into the ocean. the surfer's
People sure get nervous
ship with God, He works to
rush of adrenaline gives way
when being confronted and
lead people to rededicate their
other
feelings . Some who
having to decide . about makcommitment. He wants us to
ride the walls of water are
ing a specific commitment to
commit to be faithful and to
making
an unexpected di sGod. This thought became
practice the principles of Hi s
covery
at
that moment : They
exemplified in my mind
Word.
are linding God.
Ron
recently from an incident at
Yet,
all
too
often,
when
conAround the world. a subculchurch .
Branch
fronted
with
the
importance
ture
perhaps better known for
In June, I performed the
commitof
making
specific
sculpted bodies and slacker
marriage of a lovely couple in
ment,
people
get
extremely
mindsets is tinding spirituality.
our church. Their story of getnervous
with
God
about
it.
Some sutfers say a !lawless
ting together and counship
Concerning spiritual comtide puts them in touch with a
brings a smile to the faces of shuffled over to the bulletin
board in the hallway.
mitment, nervousness stimuhigher power. Others arc takthose who know them.
But,
just
as
I
reached
for
the
Nonetheless, the day of
lates such hesitation so as to
ing those fcc lings and using
their long-expected wedding doorknob, he turned quickly provide timely excuse, which
the oce&lt;m as a pulpit from
arrived. All the pictures were and said, "Wa.it a minute, is not worth the wasted time.
which to preach their faith .
taken prior to the ceremony. Preacher. Just one more .thing
And. dude. they think it 's
why
should
anyone
put
But
The church was well decorat- I am not clear about. Am I off making a commitment
awesome.
supposed to lift her veil tight
ed. The bridesmaids were before
"Surfing is the most spirithey surely know. will bring
I kiss her?"
beautifully adorned . The
tual
thing that yuu nm do;·
stunned momentarily, them great benefit and happigroomsmen were groomed butI was
said
Rabbi Nachum Shifren.
then his question doubled ness? No one has to kiss God
inost excellently. The bride me over with laughter. The through a veil.
who lectures on the surf-soul
was brilliantly radiant.
connection
. "You' re out in
thought of him trying to plant
YearS ago, a man struggling
The groom - very ner- a kiss on the bride through her
with a specific commitment · the water. you're by yourvous.
self, you're out there in
veil was the funniest wedding to God, told me if we had just
As the time neared for the question I have ever been .
God's creation. It's like
actual ceremony, he and I asked. At thai moment, he sung one more verse during
being in the womb."
stood in the hallway waiting was on the verge of making a the invitation he would have
Such messages of spirituto make our entrance into the serious, life-long commit- come forward and made the
ality in the surf ha ve given
sanctuary.
ment, and he was understand- commitment with which God
the search for the perfect
confronted him .
Back and fonh he paced, ably very nervous .
wave new meaning.
The next time he was at
first wringing his hands a lit·
But why should he have been
Each week. dozens of Bible
tie, then jamming them into so nervous about a commit· church. I ex.tended the invita·
study groups made up entirehis pants pockets.
ment he knew would bring him tion through 16 verses of
ly of surfers assemble arL1und
"Just how many weddings great benefit and happiness?
"Just As I Am" until he decidthe country. They are orgahave you performed over the
This rather lays the basis for ed to make his commitment to
nizing mission trips in the
years, Preacher?" he asked the broader concern as to why the Lord. From that time on,
Caribbean and Kosher surf
me, like it was going to make anyone should be nervo\JS about he would often express the
camps in Costa Rica. They've
a difference at that point.
rnakin~ a commitment to God.
joy commitment brought to
even seen the introduction of
"Oh, I think this is only the
Has tt occurred to you that the his life, and added how he
their own Bible, including a
second one I've ever done," I Lord works constantly in our
wishes
he.had
done
it
sooner.
full-color
cover with shots of
replied teasingly.
lives in such ways to lead us to
Back
to
the
nervous
bridebig waves and profiles of
One of those nervous, zig- make a commitment to Him?
groomthe
vei
I
was
already
surfers
inside, a surf gear line
zaggeddy, Charlie BrownWith those who have never
pulled
back.
Good
thing
for
called
Faith
Riding Co .. and
type smiles appeared on his received Christ as personal
the Surfer's Chapel in
face as my sarca~m registered Lord and Savior, He works to him!
Ron Branch is pastor of rile
Huntington Beach, Calif.
lead people to make a salvawith him.
Faith
Baptist
Church
in
"Surling has alway s been
The wedding singer was on tion commitment. With those
kind of a more spiritual" activthe last verse of the song as he who are not in right fellow- Mason.
ity, said Army Chief Warrant
Officer Glen Spence, a surfer
in Hawaii. "It's only naturdl
for the two to meet up."
Christian Surfers. an international organization that
started in Australia more than

Church calendar

Page AS

- - - - - · - ---

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�'age A6 The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

www.mydailysentinel.com

'Scoreboard, Page 82

eoone c1ea1 ~ Reda troubled, Page B3

PageBl
Friday, August 1, 2003

~ If

you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, C/o The Gaston Gazette, PO. Box

What: Brickyard 400
Where : Indianapolis Motor
Speedway, Speedway, Ind.
(2.5 miles), 160 laps/ 400
miles
When : Green flag drops at
around 2:30p.m. Sunday
Last year's winner: Bill Elliott
Quallfyln&amp; record: Tony Stewart, Pontiac. 182.960 mph,
Aug. 3, 2002
Race record: Bobby Labonte,
Pontiac. 155.912 mph, Aug.
5, 2000
.
Most recent race: Ryan Newm.an's Pennsylvania 500 vic·
tory represented a break out
of sorts in a season marked
by parity. It was h1s fourth
victory in a season in which
only three drivers have won
more than once. Afterward,

what Newman called 1t was
'the gutsy call." Newman
pitted his Dodge with 46
laps to go. Had all those
laps been run under greenflag conditions, he probably
wouldn't have made it to the
finish. What he and cre w
chief Matt Borland were depending on was caution
flags . When the field is
slowed , race cars do not
use as much fuel. They
played the percentages and
won , as Newman started on
the po le and led 88 of the
200 laps. He still had to
fight off challenges near the
end, first fro m Dale Earnhard t Jr. and then from Kurt
Busch.

What: Kroger 200
Wheno: Indianapolis Raceway
Par k, Clermont, Ind. (.686
mile), 200 laps/137.2 miles
Wilen: 8 p.m. Saturday
I.Ht year's winner: Greg Bif·
fie
Track quallfyln&amp; record:
David Green, Chevrolet.
113.461 mph, Aug. 4, 1994
lface record: Jimmy Hensley,
Oldsmobile, 96.923 mph,
June 22, 1985
Moat recent race: Scott
Wimmer won hi s first race

of the season Saturday at
Pikes Peak. Jason Keller fin·
ished second and in th ird
wa s Scott Riggs, who now
has a two-point lead over
David Green In t he sta ndings.

Gastonia , NC

28053

Terms not disclosed
on deal with Crocker

What: Power Stroke Diesel
200
Whent: Indiana polis Raceway
Park , Clermont, Ind. (.686
mile). 200 laps/137.2 miles
Wh8n: 9 p.m. Friday
Last year's winner: Terry Cook
Track quallfyln&amp; record: Joe
Rullman , Dodge, 111.843
mph, Aug. 2, 2000.
Race record: Greg Biffle,
Ford, B8. 704 mph, Aug. 5,
1999
Most recent race: Brend8n
Gaughan, in a Dodge, won
his fourth race of the season Saturday at Mi chigan.
With the victory, Gaughan
took over the points leads
by way of his four victories.
He and Travis Kvapll have totaled 2,000 points apiece.

iN THE SPOTLIGHT

TONY STEWART,

1893,

Browns finally ink Crocker
Associated Press

Days Until
High School
Football
Season!!!

WINSTON CuP SERIES

E
R

Jeremy
Mayfield .

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

"I will never ask anybody to lie for me or cover up anything
I do," Stewart said. "If I did something stupid, say I
'.
did it, but you don't have to write that I did something·stupid for the next eight months. It happens one time, and it's
hat a tough season for reigning Winston Cup
over with until I do the next stupid one. Once you write
champion Thny Stewart. For every time fate
about
it one time, be done with it.
smiled on the 33-year-old Columbus, Ind., native in
"That's
the one thing that disappointed me about what
2002, it has frowned in 2003.
you say or what you do. Nobody will ever leave it alone.
Stewart's won only once this season, but he's been fast
I've already answered questions this year about battling
almost everywhere. Mechanical breakdowns have been
the
adversity last year: What are we going to do this year?
prevalent for Stewart, and the latest example was SunI'll probably do two or three stupid
day's Pennsylvania 500, when Stewart's engine failed
things this year just like I've done
while he was running second.
all the years I've been in Win"We've picked up the pieces and gone on as a team quite
·ston Cup racing. I am a hua few times," said Stewart's crew chief, Greg Zipadelli.
man being just like
"We'll head to Indy. It's all we can do."
•
everybody else. We all
No track is more important to tbe mercurial
,
...
,
.
make mistakes. The
Stewart than Indianapolis Motor Speedway, wber'e
•
problem is a lot of
he won the pole and set the track record a year
the media won't let
ago. That's not what most remember, however.
it go and move on,
Indy was also the scene of the eruption - he
and that's the thing
shoved a photographer after a disappointing finthat keeps people
ish in the race - that put his championship seafrom being able to
son, and perhaps even his career, in jeopardy.
speak their minds
Stewart has been much better behaved since,
and be open
having gone through anger-management counselabout their
ing. He will always be emotional, but he's made an
thoughts."
honest effort to keep his temper in check.
"I was a Bu~ch Series driver, and I thought I had
Contact Monte Dutton
all of the answers before I got here and thought I
at hmd4858
was prepared," Stewart said. "Boy, did I find out that
@peoplepc.com.
I was wrong. .
"Five years later, I'm still learning and still trying to
adjust to it."
One recurring difficulty has been Stewart's controversial relationship with
the media.

W

• ~15 .

I. Todd Bodine

~tRucK
Brendan Gaul!han' 2.000

T!'lW!s IWapll
~.QQQ
Ted Musgrave
· 31
Dennis Setz~L..__.....:.li
Rick Crawt-rd
· 110

-m

JonWood
BobbV Hamilton

- 132
Jasonletner
-148
· Terry Cook
• 246
I. Galt EdWards
• 313
- Keller holds third place on
omber of top-five finishes (7}.
- Gaughan holds first place
•number of wins (4}.

s

Robby
Gordon

Ravens' Suggs
suits up to
warm reception

Jeremy Mayfield has won twice at
Pocono Raceway, but his latest race
there ended early.
Referring to Robby Gordon, whom
he tangled with in Sunday's Pennsyl·
vania 500, Mayfield said , "We were
going to be all right. The guys kept
working on it, and then 1 passed an
idiot and he ran over me . ... I never
wh ine or anything like that ... but he
did it and it was uncalled for."
NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton &amp;lves hla take: "Robby Gordon Is a proven winner and a consld·
erable talent. but he certainly has his
detractors."

Indiana's Stewart tries to right ship at the Brickyard

• 337 ·
• 4Q3

u

. WESTMINSTER, Md. (AP)
- Terrell Suggs received far
more attention than he desired
Thursday during his first training camp practice with the
Baltimore Ravens.
The IOth overall draft pick
was the focus of good-natured
verbal abuse from his veteran
teammates, who repeatedly
reminded the rookie defensive
end that they had to endure
three days of practice while he
was emb~iled in a contract
dispute.
\
"They were talking about my
fresh legs,'' Suggs said with a
big grin. "Everybody's ~ot
their eye on me. I know they re ·
going to get me, especially
because I came in late. I've just
got to keep my eyes open."

YOUR TURN
.;-;;.':"''' O::l_p .;.·~:!;)1:: ·;&gt;:!

·.:~·-:?·~

No orderly fashion

I

am writing In reference to the dif, ferent ways Fox and- NBC show the
places along the top of the screen
during races. Fo&gt; scrolls them
· through so you have a better chance
to read all the places, while NBC just
flashes three a time. The other bad
part of this type of showing places
is, when there any weather alerts or
oth er ads , they are put in the topright corner, and you can never read
who is in that spot. Is there any way
NBC would change their way of showing th is information to the scrolling
... Fo&gt; has?
Jo A. Shannon
5-.et,Ky.

Red Sox obtain
Suppan for top
pitching prospect
: BOSTON (AP) - The
Boston Red Sox obtained righthander Jeff Suppan from the
t&gt;ittsburgh Pirates on Thursday,
adding a solid starter to a
rebuilt pitching staff just before
the trade deadline.
The Red Sox _gave up minor
league second baseman Freddy
Sanchez, one of their top
prospects, who is hining .341
for Pawtucket of the
International League. ·
Suppan (10-7) joined il staff
that added four other NL pitchers in the last two months relievers Byung-Hyun Kim,
Todd Jones, Scott Sauerbeck
and Scott Williamson.
As part of the five-player
deal, right-banders Brandon
Lyon and -Anastacio Martinez
return to Boston, and left-bander Mike Gonzalez goes back
to Pittsburgh.

'The worst ever'

I

t's a relief to have .sound on my TV
again. I had to keep it muted most
of the time because of the Ignorance ... of Darrell "Boogity' Waltrip
and Larry McReynolds . Those two,
who th ink they know it all. are the
worst commentators I have ever
heard or seen .
• I have met a lot of the older (almost as ol d as 1 am) great NASCAR
drivers and commentators such as
Benny Parsons and Buddy Baker, and
It goes without saying there is no
comparison when they call a race
compared to waltrip and McReynolds.
Su rely. Fo&gt; can do better than
that. Every person I have talked to
feels as I do. Maybe if NASCAR will
straighten its act up and be fair and
consistent, we can enjoy the rest of
the season with the race commentators-we have now.
Tommy DoiY
Tupelo, Mlu.

I

'

A's down
Indians, 3-1

John Clark/

NASCAR This Week

Valley

. ·OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Rookie Rich Harden struck out
nine in seven scoreless innings,
leading the Oakland Athleucs
to a 3-1 victory over the
Cleveland
Indians
on
Thursday.
·In a spectacular home debut,
t{arden (2-0) allowed three hits
and four walks, striking out
eight of nine hitters at one
point.
.Miguel Tejada had a two-run
single and Eric Chavez homered for the A's.
• :startin!l with a four-pitch
first innmg, Harden overwhelmed Cleveland from the
second to the fifth innings,
striking out every batter in the
lineup except Coco Crisp.
.1\vo Indians reached base in
the seventh during Cleveland's
only attempt at a rally, but
Harden escaped the jam.
Chad Bradford lost the
shutout on Milton Bradley's
RBI double in the eighth. but
Keith Foulke pitched the save.

&amp; _Sup·ply
Co.
555 Park St • Middleport

992-6611
(Across from Rutland Bottfe Gsa)
''-'

106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

)

, . .. .

~
~

e

'

n

•

"'

. . . .,

.

r.
'

Main Street, • Rutland, Ohio

740-742-2289 or 1-800-837-8217
··

Call for hours or to make an appointment

,,

'

••

..

'

I

were all 18 hours long. You don't
make that up in one day or two days."
Still unsigned were running back
. Lee Suggs. cornerback Michael
Lehan and defensive tackle Antonio
Garay.
Lehan was believed to be close to
signing on Thursday.
Team president Carmen Policy said
Suggs. the former Virginia Tech star,
who is rehabilitating from arthroscopic shoulder surgery, could be
ready by the season opener. It had
been thought that Suggs would be out
much longer.

Another
win in 10
for Reds

LANCASTER - Michael
Warren, who played for Meigs
American Legion Post 128
this season, was 2-for-3 with a
!louble in Eighth District allstar's
11-2 win over
Pickerington Wednesday.
Also representing Meiss.
Dustin Gibbs was 2-fo"-3 wtth
a. pair of singles, and Dave
McClure was l·for-4.

•·

s

Johnny Sauter
$1!8ne Hm!el •

with linebacker Chaun Thompson, a
second-round choicj: who reported to
training camp Thursday.
All the signed draft picks will participate in Friday's practices ag:ainst
the Buffalo Bills.
Coach Butch Davis said that unless
there was a rash of injuries, Crocker
and Thompson wouldn' t play in
Saturday's scrimmage agamst the
Bills at Cleveland Browns Stadium.
"He has missed a significant
amount of time," Davis said of
Thompson. "It's not just that he has
missed I0 days, but those I0 days

Eighth District
squad defeat
district champs

v

In the past two races,
defending Winston Cup
champion Tony Stewart
has finished 37th and
22nd. But Stewart,
a native of Columbus,
Ind., retums to
Indianapolis Motor
Speedway this
weekend for what
he hopes becomes
a victory In the
Brickyard 400.

BEREA - The Cleveland Browns
agreed Thursday to a five-year deal
with rookie defensive back Chris
Crocker, who has a chance to move
into a starting position on the team's
weak secondary.
The agreement means the Browns
have four of their seven draft choices

signed, including their top three
pic~s . after poing a wee~ without
havmg any o them at trammg camp.
Terms of the deal with Crocker
were not disclosed.
The Browns selected Crocker in
the third round with the 84th. overall
pick. Crocker played both cornerback
and safety as a three-year starter at
Marshall.
The Browns need help in the secondary after releasing Corey Fuller in
the offseason.
Crocker signed about 18 hours
after the Browns reached agreement

Bv JoE KAY
Associated Press
~INCINNATI - One of the few things unaffected by the Cincinnati Reds' trading frenzy is
their knack for last-inning wins.
Jason LaRue led off the IOth inning with a homer
Thursday night as the Reds got beyond their latest
wrenching trade with another dnunatic win, 5-4
over the Colorado Rockies.
The Reds have gone 2- 1 while dealing four players to save money and get prospects. Third baseman Aaron Boone was sent to the Yankees shortly
before Thursday's game, along with reliever Gabe
White.
After giving Boone and White an emotional
goodbye, what's left of the Reds held a meeting to
try to get beyond the tears.
"We talk,ed about that in the meetin~:· said Jose
Acevedo, who gave up four runs in seven innings.
"We're not going to put our heads down."
Instead, they were hopping in unison after LaRue
provided their 12th game-ending hit, a homer to left
on a 1-2 pitch from Brian Fuentes (2- 1). The Reds
lead the majors with 25 wins in their last at-bats.
LaRue also hit a tying ninth-inning homer on
Wednesday, setting up a 3-2 victory in 10 innings.
The two happy endings made them forget about
their misery for a few minutes.
"Anytime you get a last-inning victory, that's one
of the best Adrenalin rushes you can get," said
LaRue, who hit his career-high 13th homer.
Fuentes made the mi stake of throwing LaRue his
third changeup in the at-bat, and leaving it up .
-"It was a bad pitch," Fuentes said. "I liked the
selection. I just put it in a bad spot."
John Riedling ( 1-3) pitched two hitless innings to
get the win on a strange night overall.
The Reds held a long-planned Halloween In July
promotion, selling $4 bleacher seats to fans dressed
m costumes. The stands were full of fright masks
and nasty banners.
Fans in Oakland and Yankees shirts- two teams
that have acquired Red6 players - put bags over
their heads and held a banner that read, "THE
RED$ ... WORTHLESS." Another sign pleaded,
"Quit Selling Our Team."
The Reds got ahead by batting around for four
runs in the second off Chin-hui Tsao, who couldn't
provide an encore to his impressive debut. He beat
Milwaukee 7-3 last Friday, when he became the
first Taiwanese pitcher to pia~ in the majors.
The right-hander gave up etght hits and four runs
in
only 4 1-3 innings Thursday, walking one and
Cincinnati Reds center fielder Wily Mo Pena misses a triple by Colorado Rockies' Juan Uribe during
the second Inning Thursday In Cincinnati. Uribe drove in two runs with the hit. The Reds still won the hitting three batters. Russell Branyan's three-run
homer highlighted the four-run rally.
game, 5-4. (AP)

Boone, White traded to Yankees
Bv JOE .KAY
Associated Press

CINCINNATI - Three days after
his father was fired, Aaron Boone was
shipped off to the New York Yankees,
who hope the All-Star third baseman
can make a difference in a tight race.
The Yankees got Boone and lefthanded reliever Gabe White in a pair
of trades Thursday with the payrollslashing Cincinnati Reds, who transformed the market by changing direction.
New York gave up left-bander
Brandon Claussen - their top pitching prospect - another minor leaguer
and $1 million for Boone, whose
fatber, Bob,
fired as the Reds
manager on Mon(jay.
The Yankees then opened a spot for
Boone by trading third baseman
Robin Ventura to Los Angles for two
minor leaguers. Finally, a few minutes
from the non-waiver trade dealine,
they got the injured White for a play.
er to be agreed upon.
. Cincinnati Reds third baseman Aaron Boone grabs a seconcl-inning line clrive by Tampa Bay Devil Rays Toby Hall June
11 In St. Petersburg, Aa. The Cincinnati Reels have traded Boone to the New York Yankees for left-hander Branden
Please ... Boone, B:S
Claussen, left-hander Charlie Manning and cash. (AP)

was

- -· ..... ·--..

•

.•

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard
Baseball

AROU'NDT E
DIAMOND
. .

International League

....,., Dttllion
W l
Pet.
·-(RadSol) 63 48 .588
·Buffalo ~Indians)
60 51 .541
'Scranton (Philties.

59 53

GB
3

'•

.527 4 '12

EAGLE, Colo. (AP) - A
bid by Kobe Bryant to skip his
first court appearance next
week on a sexual assault
charge was rejected Thursday
by a judge.
The decision came the same
day ,attorneys for several media
organizations asked the judge
to unseal court records, saying
the Los Angeles Lak.ers • star
waived his right lo privacy
when he declared his innocence at a news conference.
Judge Fred Gannett said he
wouldn' t rule on the records
issue before Bryant's coun
appearance Wednesday.
After the hearing, Gannett
said it was important for
Bryant to be in coun

57 ss .soe e:..
- ( T w i n s) 53 59 .413 10';
·Syracuse ~B.JaysJ · 51 !59 .464 11\,
'
SouthDttllion
w l Pet. GB
Durham ~OM Ray$) 57 5,1 .528
Chard!e (While Sol) 55 57 .491 4

:Norlolk ~Mo1s)
52 80 .464 7
;RiChmond (Braves) 51 82 451 8'1,
Louisville (RedS}

64 49

Toledo CTige111)

GB

.566

·a' '

55 58 .495

59 478 10
61 44.5 13',

ColumOOs ~) 54
lndiarll!&gt;olis {Bo-.) 49

Friday, August 1, 2003

Bryant loses bid ·to skip
court appearance; media
tries to get records unsealed

.Ottawa ~000.1

-Divlllon
W l
Pet.

Frida~August1,2003

.www.mydallysentlnel.com

•

Tllllrodlly'o CllmH
Indianapolis 2, Durtlam 0
Charlone a, Noffolk 5
Pawlud&lt;e1 4, Ottawa 2
Columbus 7, Rictmoud 2
Rochestar 6, ScrantonWilkes-Barre 2
Syracuse 3, Butfaio 1
Toledo 5, l.oui&amp;ville 2

Frtdoy'oa....

Durham at Indianapolis
Norfolk at Charlotte
Pawtucket at BuffalO
Richmond at Columbus

Wednesday. "It's vital fot him.
It's vital for us. It's where the
process begins," the judge told
KMGH·TV in Denver.
ln their filing, defense attorneys had said Bryant's absence
would reduce "the impact on
the counhouse and the need
for security.'' The defense suggested j!ryant intends to seek a
preliminary hearing to determine whether he should s1and

trial.
Bryant, a 24-year·old bus-

band and father of one, has

said he had sex with a 19·yearold employee at a mountain
resort June 30 but denies
assaulting her. He is free on
$25,000 bond.
Much of the information

Dealing The Reds

Boone deal ·leaves
Reds crestfallen
.

abom the allegation has been
sealed, including the arrest
affidavit and court records that
could provide clues to the evidence.
· Chris Beall, a lawyer repre·
senting organizations including NBC. The Denver Post
and the los An~eles limes,
said the presumpt1on of public
access to court records is "a
hallmark of our judicial sys·
tem."
"Every day that goes by
when the public doesn't have
an opportunity to understand
the evidence is a day lost
under the Constitution," he
said in a courtroom fUed with
reporters during a hearing CO)I'ried on cable TV.

BY JoE KAY
·Associated Press

Rochester at Ottawa

ScrantonWilk&amp;s-Barre at Syracuse

Toledo at Louisville

_....,.• a. ....

Judge refuses NCAA request
to stay decision blocking rule
limiting tournaments

Durtlam at Indianapolis
Louisville at Charlotte

Norfolk at Richmond
Pawlucl&lt;sl al Buffalo

RochBSter at Ottawa
· ScrantonWllkes-Barre at

S~racuse

Frontier League
Eall Dlvltlon
w l Pet
Chillicothe
37 20 649
Evansville
38 22 .633
Washinglon
35 24 .593
Richmond
35 26 .574
Kalamazoo
24 36 .400
Florence
13 47 .217
Welt Oivlalon
w l Pet
Gateway
34 25 .576
32 27 .542
Kenosha
Rocklord
32 27 .542

GB
•.•

3
4
14\

COLUMBUS(AP)-Afederal judge has denied a request
by the NCAA to delay a decision overturning an NCAA rule
that prohibits Division I basketball teams from playing in more
than two exempt tournaments
in a four-year period.
U.S. Distric.t Judge Edmund
Sargus Jr. said Wednesday that
a delay was unnecessary
because the ruling would not
cause the NCAA irreparable
hann and the NCAA would not
have a strong likelihood of suc-

25~

GB
2
2
4h

· 30 30 .500
24 37 .393 11
23 36 .390 11

Cook County
Mid-Missouri
River City

Thul'ldey'l Gimes
Chillicothe 5, Cook County 2
Mid-Missouri 4, Kalamazoo 3
Florence 6, Kenosha 5
Gateway 7, Richmond 3
Evansville 9, ROCkford 1
Washington 5, River City 4

Friday'• Gamel
Cook County at Chillicothe
K·alamazoo at Mid-Missouri
Kenosha at Florence

cessifita~ed.

Richmond at Gateway
Rockford at Evansville

PreHUon

Washington at River City
Saturdll)'.. Q.mn
Cook County at Evansville
Kalamazoo at Gateway
Kenosha at Chill~the
Richmond at River City
Rockford at Florence
Washington at Mid-.Missouri

AMERICAN CONFE~ENCE
Eaal
W l T Pet PF PA
Buffalo
0 0 0
000 0 0
Miami
0 0 0 .000 0 0
New England 0 0 0 .000 0 0
N.Y. Jets
0 0 0 .000 0 0
Soulh
W l T Pel PF PA
Houston
0 0 0 .000 0 0
Indianapolis
0 0 0 .000 0 0

Mldweet League
Second H1H
Ea1tem Dlvl1lon
W l
SOuln Bend ~Obacks)26
x-FortWayne (Paclres)20
Battle Creek (Yanks) 19
W. Michigan {Tigers) 19
Oavton (Reds)
18
Lansing (Cubs)
15

14

Pet.

GB

.650
.488
.475
.463
.450
.366

8
11 'it

Wtltlm Dtv)llan
W l
Pel.

GB

Beloit (Brewers)
Clinton (Rangers)
: Peoria (Cardinals)

21
21
22
22
26

Baltimor~;~

?'!,

Cincinnati
Cleveland
Fttnsburgh

QuadCIIy ~Tw;ns) 16 25

.390

6i.

Burlington (Aoyals) 18 23 .439 8 ~
'Wisconsin (Mariners) 17 23 .425 9

IO'o

x-won first half
Thuraday'a a.mn
Banle Creek 6, Dayton 5
Beloit 6, Peoria 2
Burlington 7, Clinton 6
_ Kane County 8, Quad City 2
· So!Jth Bend 9, Lansing 0
Fort Wayne 5, West Michigan 1
Wisconsin 5, Cedar Rapids 1
Frldlly'l Games
· ·Battle Creek at Dayton
Beloit at Peoria
81Jr!ington at Clinton
Kane County at Quad City
Lansing at South Bend
West Michigan at Fort Wayne
Wisconsin at Cedar Rapids
Saturday's Games
Clinton at Cedar Rapids
Dayton at Beloit
Fort Wayne at Kane County
Lansing at West Michigan
Peoria at Burlington
Quad City at Wisconsin
South Bend at Battle Creek

Pet PFPA
.000 0 0

0

0

0 0 0

-·

0 0 0

Denver
Kansas City

PF PA

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

o o .000 0 0
OaklaiiO
o o o .000 o o
San Diego
0 0 0
000 0 0
NAOONAL CONFERENCE
D

Eaal

W l
0 0
0 0

Dallas
N.Y. Giants
Philadelphia
Washington

Pet
000
000
000
.000

PF
0
0
0
0

PA
0
0
0
0

T Pet'
0 ' .000
0 .000
0 .000
0 .000

PF
0
0
0
0

PA
0
0
0
0

T
0
0

0 0 0
0 0 0
Soulh
0 0

0 0

0 0
0 0
North
Wl T
000
000
000
000
Woll

W l
Arizona
0 0
San Francisco 0 0
Seattle
0 0
St. LOIJiS
0 0

T
0

0
0

0

Pel PFPA
00000
.00000
.00000
.00000
Pet PF PA
.000
.000
.000
000

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

Salurday'a Game
N.Y. Jets vs. Tampa Bay at Tokyo, 5 a.m.
Monday, Aug. 4
Green Bay vs. Kansas City at Canton,
Ohio. a p.m.

Thuradoy, Aug. 7

11

x-won tlrat half

Tllurodoy'o a.-

Aihovlllo 2. Llklwood 1
llko COunly e. Augulta 2
Hogerllown 9, Capital Clly 2
Rome 10. Chorlollon, WV 4
GIOtnoboro 12, CMr1111on, SC 3
OoimiiVI 4, Hickory 3
Konnopollo 7, SoviMIN 8, oomp. of
IUIP, Qaml

Kannapotla 4, Slvannetl 2

lexington 7, South Qootglt 3
'~doy'o· Gomet
Alhl'lllll II DtlmiiVI
Auguola 11 H1g11110wn
Copltal Clly o1lolol COun!y
Ch1r-n. WV o1 Sou1h Goot;lo
GrtlfliOoro 11 SIIYII!noh
Hickory II LlkoWOOd
K1nnopo111 II Chor1111on, SC
L.Ping10n ot ~ome
Aihl'lilllll Oolmorvo
Auguolll 11 H~o10Wn
Copl1oJ Clly ot 1o1 Coun!y
Chotlllton, WV II Sou1h Gootglo
. GrtlflobQIO II s-noh
Hickory II u.Konnopolll o1 Chor1H10n, 8C
LO&gt;dngton olllomo

lotu-o-

Football
National Footbtlll L.ugua

•

WL T
0 o o

0

Chicago
DetrOit
Green Bay
Minnesota

.Lakewooo ~Phlll les ) 21 19 .525 n.
. Gtfl0f161Joro ~ Marlins) 20 19 .513 8
· Hagerstown (Giants) 19 20 ..t87 9
. ~WV(B.¥) 18 22 .450 10\1
Delmarva (Orioles) 18 22 .o450 101!.
Kannapolis ~WSox) 15 24 .385 13
SoutMm Dlvl1lon
W l Pet GB
x-Hickory ~P1taleo) 25 15 .625
. Asheville ~ Rockies) 22 18 .550 . 3
Chnol:&gt;n, SC~)21 19 .525 4
Rome (Staves)
21 19 .525 4
' Capllal Cily (Mall) 19 19 .500 5
. Savannah (Expol!l) 18 22 .o450 7
. 8. Geolgia (Codgell) 18 22 .450 7
Augulla ~Rod Sox) 10 28 .283 14

,,I

0 0 0

Pet
.000
.000
.000
.000

W l

Second Hatt
Northern Division
W l Pet GB
x-Lake Co. (Indians) 28 11 .718
· Lexington (Astros) 23 17 .575 5'1.

l

Wl T

Atlanta
Carolina
New Orleans
Tampa Bay

South Atlantic League

. I ;

.000 0 0
.000 0 0

North

7 ,

x·Kane COunty (As) 22 18 .550 4
.488

0 0 0
0 0 0

6 '1~

26 14 .650
25 16 .610 1't,
23 18 .561 3 ~

CodarRap;ds(Angels)20 21

Jacksonville
Tennessee

N.Y. Giants at New England, 8 p.m.

Basketball

Wednesday'• Glime
Los Angeles 2, Columbus 1
Slturday'e Game
AII·Stars vs. Chivas de Guadalajara at
Carson, Calif., 3:30p.m.

Fridoy, Aug. 8
San Jose at Kansas City,·8 p.m.
, Solu....,,Aug.l

MetroStare at Chicago, 4 p.m.
New England at D.C. United, 7:30 p.m.
Dallas at Colorado, 9 p.m.
Columbus at Los Angeles, 10 p.m.

'~doy'o

Gornto

Phoenix at Cleveland, 7 p.m.
Washington at Conn.ctlcut, 7 p.m.
Detroit 11 New York, 7:30 p.m.
Houtton 1t Sin Antomo, 8:30p.m.

8olunloy'o GoIndiana It Dttrolt, 1:30 p.m.
S.alllo 11 MlnnoiOII, 8 p.m.

S.n Amon~ al Houolon, 8:30p.m.
Chorl011o 11Loo Anglloa, 10:30 p.m.

·Soccer
MaJor Luau• Soccer
lootorn'blvlolon
W L T P1o ClF GA
844282820
ChicolfO
M«ro81a111
854282723
NewEnglond 887 ' 22 3033
D.C. Unllod 881212422
8 7 8 20 21 22
Cotumbuo
Wwtam Dtvlllon
W l T ' P1o GFGA
Son Jooo
· 8 3 8 30 28 20
KonNO City 748273225
COiotado
883212028
LoiAngoiH 4 8 7 18 18 IG
3 10 4 13 18 38
Oolloa
NOTE; Throe polnll lot vlclory, ono polnl

for tte.

two such events in a four·year
period, spots in tournaments
must be filled by teams that
attract less fan interest.
Other exempt events include
the Great Alaska Shootout,
Maui
Invitational
and
Preseason NIT.
The "two in four rule" forced
II of 28 exempt tournaments to
be canceled last season because
there wasn'l an appropriate mix
of teams.
Each Division I school is limited to 28 regular-season games.
A team can al?pear in more
games by playmg in exempt
tournaments.
Each tournament counts as
one game against the NCAA
limit, even though a tealfl could
play in several tournament
games. The suit was flied in
December 200 I.

BASEBALL

BOSTON RED SOX-Qblainsd RHP

Jeff Suppan, AHP Brandon Lyon and
AHP Anastacio Martinez from Pittsburgh
for 2B Freddy Sanctlez and LHP Mike
Gonzalez.

NEW YORK YANKEES-Ttadad 3B

Robin Ventura to Los Angeles for OF
Bubba Crosby ancl RHP Scott Proctor.
Acquired LHP Gabe White · from
Cincinnati tor a player to be named.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS-Deslgnaled
OF David McCarty for aSsignment.

TAMP BAY DEVIL RAYS-Ttadod RHP

AHP Corey Thurman from Syracuse of
the International Leagu,. Optioned RHP
John Wasdin to Syracuse.
National League
CINCINNATI AEDS-Traded 38 Aaron
Boone to the New York Yankees tor LHP
Brendan Claussen , LHP Chartle
Manning and cash. PlaGed RHP Ryan
Dempster on the 15-day disabled list.
Called up OF Ryan Freel from Louisville
of the International League.

AGRICULTURE

CLEVELAND CAVALIEAS- Prqmoted
Jim Paxson to president and general '
manager of basketball operations.
UTAH JAZZ-Signed G Carlos Arroyo
to a one-year contract.

Malr to \a three-yur contract. Agreed to
terma w1th F Steve Begin on a one-year
contract. Announced F Tim Connolly, LW
Taylor' Pyatt and 0 Dmitri Kalin In hav1
accepted ttltlr Ont•Ytlr qualifying
offers.

CALGARY FLAMEB-Signod

0

Joooo

W1llln .

LOS ANGELES. KINGS-Signed C

Jozef Stumpel, LW Kip Br1nnan and C
Jarred Smithaon to ont·ytar contra·ctt.
MINNESOTA WILO-Ro·olgnod D

Andrei Zyualn to muitiyllr contract.

Jim's Farm Equipment

AMERICAN
7:20&amp;9:20

AL LAGES ALL TI MES 54.00

CHRIST ACADEMY
NOW ACCEI'TING APPUCATIONS Pre-K-12

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from high school, do you want
~) them to be well-educated,
Christ-honoring graduates?

~

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by senCilng them to CHRIST ACADEMY
A Christian School alternative.

•Blending traditional and modern methods of education.
Providing excellence in Christian education since 1976
Pre-K-12, College Prep and General Studies
Individualized Instruction • Educational Field Trips
Varied Music Program • Extracurricular Activities
Non-Doctrinal - Nondiscriminatory

the

Aul!ust 4-9. 2003
6:00- 8:30P.m.

Lo~;~g Hairs

ASH STREET CHURCH

Saturday August 2nd
9-1

Admits students of any
race, color, creed,

naJional or ethnic origin.

~
\!~
'.:=1

Ctm1•eniently wJd
altradively /o.caled in
Christ Episcopal Church.

cu"rusTr"A.cXnEMY
P.O. Box 224, 804 Main Street, Point Pleasant, WV 25550

304·675·1559

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

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complaint In the com·
mon Pleeo Court ot
Malga Counly, Ohio In
ea.. No. OO.CV·155,
on the dockol of lha
Manhattan Bank, as Court, and the ob)ecl
ll'uatee of IMC Home and demand lor 11111e1
Eqully Loan ll'uat of which pludlng Ia
1997·5 under Jhe to lorectooe the lien
pooling and servicing of plaintiff's mort·
agreement dated aa goga recorded upon
ol seplamber 1, 1997 the
following
elo Fairbanks Capital described real estate
to wll:
Corporallon
Property Address:
Plaintiff
42838 St. Rt. 124,
VI
William K. Cogar, etal l'qmaroy, OH 45769
and being more par·
Oelendants
Case No.: 03-CV-(165
tlcularty described In
Judge: Fred W. Crow
ptalntllf'a mortgage
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR recardocl In Mortgage
FORECLOSURE OF · Book 50, page 111, of
lhlo
Counly
MORTGAGE
Mary E. Cogar and Racorder'a Office.
All of lhe above
John Doe, unknown
opouaa of Bonnie S. nomad delendanto
required to
Freeman, at time of are
convepnce on June . lnOwtlr Within twenty•
&amp;, 1880, WhOH tall elghl (28) daya altar
publication,
known oddrell lor 1111
Mary E. Cogar Ia P.O. which ahell be pub·
lox 303, Racine, OH llohed once 1 - k
4&amp;771 and for John far alx oonaeoutlve
Doe,
unknown wMIIII, or they mlghl
apou•• of lonnie a. Ill denied 1 hlarlng
Fr,eman, at time of In lhll OIN.
Lamar, 81111paon a
conveyance on June
&amp;, 1880 Addr111 RothfUII
Unknown, and the Attorne¥• for Plalnlltl
unknown
helra, P.O. box &amp;410
diVIIIII, leglflll, Clnolnnatt, OH 41201·
executora, admtnla· &amp;410
tratore, llpoUHII and ~13) 241·3100
aaalgna and the ~J 25, (1), 1, •• 11, 22,
unknown guardian•
of minor and/or
lnoompetenl helra Of
Mery E. Cogar and
Public Nolle•
John Doe, unknown
apoUH Of lonnie a. VIllage of Pomeroy
·
FrHmen, al time of Melga Ca~nly
Notte•·
COnYe¥anCI On JURI Legal
&amp;, 1880, 111 of who11 lnvltelton 10 bid.
realdencea
ro BHied bldl will be
unknown and c111no1 received lor furnish·
be r111onable dill· lng all labor, melerl·
gene• be eocer· olo and equipment
talnod, will taka necooaary I~ com·
notice that on the plete a project known
23rd day Of 'May, 2003, u VIllage 01 Pomeroy
JPMorgon
Chill , Wetarll'eetmant Plenl
Bank IIIII Tho ChaH 11 lhe Village of
(lho
Manhattan Bank, 11 Pomeroy
ll'uotee 01 lMC Homo "OWnor"), lho VIllage
Eqully Loan ll'uol ·OffiCI, 320 E. Main
1887·5 under tho Street, P.O. Sox tee,
pooling and oervlclng, Pomeroy, Ohio 45788
agreement doted 11 until 10:30 A.M. lOCII
of september 1, 1997 Jlma on TUeaday,
elo Fairbanks Copltal september 2nd 200,3,
Corporation tiled Ill and al said lime and
PLEAS MEIGS COUN·
TV, OHIO
JP Morgan Chaaa
Bonk IIIII The Chaoe

BUSINESS TRAINING

www.qualitywindowsystems.com

Your Klahtlo KIKiw, lkllnrrd K

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Publlt NotUI•-;~':•·,~~=~~=

•

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MAKE YOUR BUSINESS A HIT!!
Take your blJSiness into the homes
of over 40,000 consumers in
Gallla, Mason, Meigs Counties
EVEBYDAY with a llstlng of
your web address in our

WEBSITE
DIRECTORY
for only a $1 a day.

·

PITTSBURGH- PENGUINS-Signod

"W Kolly Buohborgor and c Mlko

Eootwood. Agrood to lormo wllh F Rleo

Flta : F Tcby Ptttratn and D Rob

Soudort.
ST. LOUIS BLUEI-R•olgnod GCOdy
Rudkowoky and FMore Brown.
WASHINGTON CAPITAL$-~o·olgnod
LW AIIX Henry IO I ono-yoar OOnlrtcl.
COLLIGI
NIAGARA-EXIandtd tno eonlriCI ol
Joo Mlhol~n . mon'o blllol1boll oooch,
1nrough lht 2008·10 aauon.
SWAATHMORE-Namod
Ronoo
Clerke eoftball coach .
WASHINOTON &amp; LEE-N1mod Adam
Hutctllnaon men't bllkltbl.ll co1ch.

BC &amp;

of their rebuilding in recent
years.

MEDICAL

BASKETBALL

National Baeketball .\IIOCIItlon

New York Jed Boston by 2
112 games ·and was intent on
bolstering its batting order to
keep pace with the Red Sox .
"It's flattering and hum·
Boone
said.
bling,"
"Hopefully, I can be one of
those pieces that kind of does
the trick."
The Reds' about·face firing their general manager
and manager on Monday,
then offering players for the
best deal - significantly
changed the last days before
the trading deadline .
'1nhey've had a change of
direction," Yankees general
manager Brian Cashman said.
"All of baseball reacted to
that. When the Reds' situation
changed. it created a whole
new market."
·
New York and the Boston
Red Sox have been locked in
an anns race as they fight for
the AL East IItle, and both
benefited from the Reds' sudden change of heart.
While
the
first-place
Yankees have recently added
relievers Armando Benitez,
Jesse Orosco and White, the
Red Sox have traded for
pitchers Scott W
. illiamson.
Byung-Hyun Kim, Scott
Sauerbeck and Jeff Suppan.
The
Reds
offered
Williamson to the Yankees
for Claussen and $2.5 million, Cashman ·said. He
wound up going to Boston on
Tuesday
for
pitching
prospects and cash.
Outfielder Jose Guillen was
shipped to Oakland a day

ffilcomes Back

398 Ash Street • Middleport,

MONTREAL EXPOS-Racalled AHP

T.J. Tucker from Ecimonton of the PCL.
Optioned AHP Julio Manon to
Edmonton .

from PageB1

For more inlormation call 740-992-6443

AI Levine to Kansas City for cash.

TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Roeallod

Before he left for his new
team. Boone said it appeared
the Reds had decided to tear up
their plans and start over.
"Sometimes in the short·
term. thin~s don't look great,"
Boone srud. "That's always
hard .for people to understand,
and certain] y hard for us as
players
to
understand.
Hopefully some of these
moves precede other moves
that enable the Reds to get
back on the right track."

GREAT DISCOVERIES

BALTIMORE ORIOLE$-Ttadsd AHP
Sidney Penson to San Francisco . lor
AHP Kurt Ainswor1h, LHP Damian Moss
and LHP Ryan Hannaman.

Team."

Vacation
Bible School

~

Amlrlc•n Le•gue

ing. Assistant general manager
Brad Kullman said the Reds
are still willing to talk after
Thursday's deadline for nonwaiver trades.
"It's not our intention to go
out and make more deals, but
we will utilize the waiver rules
and put ,Players through it and
see who s interested." Kullman
said.
Fans reacted angrily to the
payroll purge in t).Je fJJ'St season
at a publicly finance ballpark,
flooding talk shows with complaints. Fans at Thursday's
game held up a banner that
read, "We Want Boone Back
-NY Doesn't Deserve A Real
Player."
1\vo fans put bags over their
heads and unfurled a banner
that read, "The RED$ ...
Worthless." Others held up a
sign saying, ''Quit Selling Our

Boone

later, and the Yankeees got
Boone for Claussen, lefthanded pitcher Charlie
Manning and cash.
The trades sit:nified that the
Reds are starting over mid·
way through their first season
at Great American Ball Park.
Boone was one of their most
popular players and a key part

· '

WEB SITE DIRECTORY

Transactions

. Women's National
Baeketball Association
.FOOTBALL
EASTERN CONFERENCE
N1tlonat Foolblll Leque
w l Pel GB
Detroit
16 6 .727
CLEVELAND BROWNS-Ag10ed IO
Indiana
13 10 .565 3..
terms with DB Ctlrls Crocker on '&amp; five Charlotte
13 II .542 4
year contract.
Connecticut
13 II .542 4
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS-Agreed lo
Cleveland
II 13
.458 6
terms with TE Dallas Clark.
New York
9 12 .429 B:t
NEW ORLEANS SAINT$-Agtoed lo
Washington
5
19
.208 12
terms
with OT Johnathan Sullivan on a
WESTERN CONFERENCE
w l Pel GB seven-year contract
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES-Signed DE
Los Angeles
18 1 .720
Houatpn
14 6 .836 2';,
Jerome McDougle to a alx-year contract
Seattle
14 10 .583 J',J
.
HOCKEY
Mlnneaota
13 II .1542 4';,
NIIIOMII Hockey lelgue
Sacramento
13 12 .520 5
BOSTON BRUIN$-Agltad 1o tetmt
San Antonio
6 18 .333 9'1.
with G Andraw Aaycroft, D Zdenek
f)hoenlx
4
18 .182 12'1. Kutlak and 0 Ed Campbell on on11·ye•r
contracta.
Tllurodoy'o OomH
. BUFFALO SABRES-Signed F Adam
Stante 89, Charlotte 54
Sacramento 83, Lot Angeles 75

Sargus ruled Monday that the
NCAA's restrictions violated
federal antitrust laws and gr.tnt·
ed a group of tournament promoters and organizers a pennanent injunction.
The promoters were pleased
with Sargus' decision.

"The NCAA merely wants to
delay the injunction and make it
impossible for college teams to
create a schedule that pennits
the teams to play in the preseason
tournaments,"
said
Cincinnati attorney Stanley
Chesley, who represented the
promoters.
The suit was brought by
Cincinnati-based Worldwide
Basketball, Sports Tours Inc.,
Dorna Sports Promotions and
the Gazelle Group.
Those groups have organized
or promoted such preseason
tournaments as the Las Vegas
Classic, the San Juan Shootout,
the Coaches vs. Cancer event
and the National Association of
Basketball Coaches Classic.
They said that if high-profile '
teams such as Duke, Kansas
and Arizona can play in only

his reassurances a short
ume later.
Players were stunned when
closer Scott Williamson was
dealt to Boston on Thesday for
prospects and cash, the first
mdication (hat ownership had
decided to cut its losses.
· Outfielder Jose Guillen went
to Oakland a day later, costing
the Reds their lop hitter. The
Boone trade cut the deepest the franchise had made him a
cornerstone of its rebuilding
for a new ballpark.
"Obviously people need to
do what they need to do, but as
a person and a player, I know
you just don't go out and find
guys like Aaron Boone," said
fJJ'St baseman Sean Casey, wiping a tear from his eye. "Those
are guys you build around."
Instead, the Reds are getting
rid of them to try to save
money and ac9uire the one
miss;ng ingredient in their
blueprint: pitching.
The four players traded will
make more than $9 million this
season. The Reds won't say
how much money they got
through the trades.
The Reds opened the season
with a $57 million payroll that
ranked 17th in the majors and
fourth in the NL Central, ahead
of only Pittsburgh and
Milwaukee.
They may not be done deal~ave

CINCINNATI - Shortly
after the Cincinnati Reds fired
their manat:er and general
manager, chtef operating officer John Allen assured players
that he wasn't writing off the
season.
Four rapid-fire trades told
them something else.
"Obviously the actions that
have been taken since that
statement aren't consistent
with that," shortstop Barry
Larkin said Thursday, after
third baseman Aaron Boone
was traded to the Yankees.
"My reaction is, it's a salary
dump.
"It doesn't make a difference
if I'm upset or whatever. It's
not about our feelings. It's
about money. obviously."
Tears and frustration flowed
in the clubhous~ after the Reds
traded their only AII·Star to
New York for · pitching
prospects and money. Lefthanded reliever Gabe White
also went to New York in a
separate deal.
The clubhouse was nervous
after general manager Jim
Bowden and manager Bob
Boone were fired on Monday,
signifying that ownership was
taking a different path. Allen

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

www.mydallysentlnel.com

•

place publicly opened
and read aloud. lids
may be matted or
dellvarad In advance
to the public opening
at the above address.
A prepaid meatlng
will be held Tueaday,
Augual19, 2003 at the
VIllage Office &amp;110:30
A.M.
The work covered by
the
Conlract
Documents consists
of construction of a

new 650,000 OPD Iron
and
manganeae

removal and

soften~

lng water treatment
ple.nt. Work will atao
Include waler well
modlllcatlono and
etactrlcal work.
Bid
documonla
Include lhe lid
.Requlremanl
and
Contract Documenta
( that Include 111 bid
lhHII, pllnl, IPIC

end any addenda)
can be obtained from
M&gt;! Compentaa, Inc.
(the Englnur), 83&amp;
llrookeedga Blyd.,
Walltrvllla, OH 43081
with non relundebte
payment ot S171.DD
per Itt. ChtCkl
ohould ba made
payable to M•E
Companlea, Inc. lid
Documenta will eloo
be an file In the plan
room of lhe F.W.
Dodge Corporation
and lU. Companlaa,
lna.,399 Lincoln Park
Drive, New Llxtn:ron,
Ohio 43784 an the
VIllage Office.
Each - bidder Ia
required to furnlah
with Ita aubmlaalon
of tho fully completed
Bid Documanto, • lid
Secretary In accor·
dance with Socllan
183.54 of tho Ohio
Revlaocl Coda. lid
oecurlty lumlahocl In
Bond form (Bid
Guerantee

and

Contract

and

-mane• Bond ••
provided In section
183.71.1 ol the Ohio
Reviled Code), mull
be IIIUed by I Sul'lly
Company
or.
Corporallon llcannd
In lhl Slala of Ohio to
1,

Public Notice
Jho Ohio Revteed
Code can be obtained
from any of the
offices
ol
the
Dapartmanl
of
Admlnletratlve
services.
Addlllonally, conlrec-

Public Notice
Han lkl Judy Ellol;
th.e apouoeo, II any,
widowers, If any,
holro, devious, and
noll 01 kin 01 Joyce
Joy and Judy Hart
aka Judy Eliot;
wId ow I w Idow a r,

provide oald Surely.
Those blddara lhat
elect to oubmlt bid
guarenty In the form
of a certlllod check,
caahlara check or let·
Jer of credit pureuant
to Chaplor 1305 of
lhe Ohio Revlud tor compllanca with helra, deviSHa, and
Code and In accor· tho equal employ· noll of kin 01 Jooeph
opportunity W. Pulllna, deceased,
dance with Section manl
153.54 (C) ollha Ohio requirement• 01 Ohio and E. Fe¥e Pullins
Revised Code. Any Admlnlotrallve Code, aka Edyth F. Pulllna,
auch 1-r of credit Chapter t 23, the de celled, ell of
shall be revocable Govamor'l Executive whoH namoo and/or
are
only altha 10% altha Order of 1972, end addreaaea
Bid •nd ·the IUCCOIS• Govomor'l Executive unknown lo Plaintiff;
lui Bidder will be Order 84·9 1h1ll be 1111 known address
al47155 Booth Road,
required to oubmlt 1 required.
bond In the form pro- Blddere muat comply Coolville, Ohio; you
vided In 1&amp;3.67 Oltha with lhe prevailing era hereby nollfled
Ohio RoviHdCode In wage 11111 on Public that you hove bean
In named Oelendanlo In
conjuncllon with tho linprovomenta
execution of the Malgo Counly •• a logal action enlllled
delarmtnod by the American Oanerat
Contract.
Each proposal unll Ohio Oepartment of Financial Servlceo,
muol conlaln tho full Commerce, Olvlelon Inc.
Jooaph W.
namo of the party or of Labar and Worker Pulllno, deculld, at
partloo aubmlttlng Safely . Wage and al, Detendenll. Thll
the
lidding Hour.
octlon h11 b11n
Documanto end all The EnglnNr'a Hll· llllgiM!f CMe num·
poraana tntereled mila lor thlo project ber 03-CV-ol&amp; 111d to
pending In the Court
therein. Each bidder lal1,480,000.
VIllage
ol of Common Pleea,
mutt submit avl· Tht
Melga Counly In
dence of Ita Nperl- Pomeroy
ancll on projaota of rlghl to watva any Pomeroy, Ohio 41878.
Tho ob)act of the
olmllar alza and com- lnlormalltiH or lrrag·
plexity. The O.wnar ulerlll11. The VIllage Complaint 11 to fore·
lntende lhll thla prot- ,....rv•• the right to oloae on 1 trecl of
act Ill completed no rajeol any or. 111 bldl raal eatall located In
County,
tater. Ihan tha lima or to lncreeH or Mtlgt
peJ:Iod II HI forth In decrHM or omit any Orange Townahlp,
Artlcla 4 of the 111m or lime• and/or being 1.1004 acraa +I·
ltendord Form of IWird the· bid to till , eddr11a: 47181
Agr11mant letwaan IOWIII, r11ponetve Booth
Road,
Ownor
and and reepontlbla bid- Coolville, Ohio and
taka po-alon of 1
Contractor on the der.
IIIII Of I lllpullled ly order ol the 1817 Neehua mobllo
Village . of Pomeroy homta ·11111nat tny
Price.
Each bidder mual loellld at 320 1 . Main right, title, or claim of
Pomeroy, lite Delendent..
lnaure
that 111 811'111,
You 1re raqulrtd to
emptov- and appli- Ohio, 451e8, County
cant• for employment of Melgt, IIIII Unci eniWIIr lite Complaint
within 21 dip alter
are not dlecrlmlnatoct day of July.
·• the 1111 pubtlcotlon 01
agalnot beceuaa of 7128103
thla Notice which will
race, color, religion, 811103
be publlehed once
IIX, national oilgln,
each wHk lor alx
handicap, anceatry or
conaacuttve weeka.
age.
Public Notice
The laet publication
All contrectora and
oubcontrecloro IN THE COURT OF. will be made on
Involved with the COMMON PLEAI, Auguot 1, ·2003 end
COUNTY, the 21 daya for
pro1oct oholl to the MEIQI
an•wor will com·
txlant practicable, OHIO
uao Ohio producto, AMERICAN QENER· menoe on that dote.
In caoe of your loll·
materlala, eervlcta AL FINANCIAL BER·
urt to anawtlr or othand tabor In the VICES, INC.
erwlll reapond aa
lmplamtntetton of PLAINTIFF
required by lht1 Ohio
lhalr
prolact. vs.
ol
Civil
Domeatlc SIMI Uae JOSEPH W. PULLINS, Rulea
Procedure, judgment
Requlrainanta
11
by ctafiUII will be
opeclfted In Nctton ~tiNDANTI
en-, ogalnal you
143,011 of the Ohio C.. No. 03-CV.oii
Reviled Code apply NOTICE OF PUILI· lor lite relief demand·
odin lht1 Complaint.
lo thlo project. Coplaa . CATION
Delad:Ju~•
27,
of Section 153,011 o! TO: Joyce Joy; Judy

v•.

,.......,lhtl

..

Public Notice
2003
OonaldA Cox
Attorney lor PlalnliH
239 Eoot Main Slrael
Jackson, Ohio 45640
(6) 27, (7) 4, 11. 18, 25,

Eas1em Youth ro:;t.~l;;
at Middleport American Legion
Thursday, Aug. 7
6:30
Doors open a1 5:30
Relreshments available,

(8) 1

Publlc'Notlce
NOTICE OF NONDIS·
CRIMINATORY POLl·
CV AS TO STUOENTS
OF CHRIST ACADE·
MY, LTD
Chrlal Academy
school admits stu-

20

Syracuse Volunteer Fire
Department monthly auction
Saturday, August 2nd 6 pm
at Station House
All m3w merchandise

dante of any race,
color, national and

ethnic origin lo all lha
rlghla, privileges,
programs and acllvl·
tloa ganorelty accord·
oct or made ovallabta
to otudenlo at lha
school. It does not
dlacrlmlnate on the
beala of race, color,
national and olhnlc
origin In odmlnlotra·
lion of tla octucotlcnal
pollcleo, edml11lcno
pollclal, IChOIIrehlp
end loan progromo,
and athlotlo and other
ochool edmlnlotarod
progrema.
Dilled thla 21 day 01
June, 2003.
s. Ralnay
Admlnlatrallu
Aaalttant
Chrlot Academy, Ltd.
• Weal Vlrglnlo
Corporallon
811,18

presen1s
Live Band· Deuce
Fri. - Sat. Aug. 1·2
6:30 til ?

Party on 1he Patio wi1h favorite
foods &amp; drinks
675-7030

SPECIAL

AMERICAN
LEGION

- BINGO
Rutland Post 467
Pay $80.00 or more
per game. Several
special games for
extra money. All
pack you can play
lor $20.00. · Starting
time 6:30 p.m.
Starburst $900.00
2 or 3 $300
Luck Ball Games

EVERYONE
WELCOME

$20

I i

'

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIQS
COUNTY,
OHIO
In Ra: Change Of
namo Of Jennifer
Stewart
To Jannller ChiiiNn
C111 No. 32100
JUDGMENT ENTRY·
CHANOE OF NAME
OF ADULT
An application tor
change of nomo wao
hHrd by lhlo Court.
The Court linda that
proper noll~ of the
appllcollon and hoar·
lng dale woo given by
one publication In 1
newar.epar of general
clrcu otlon In lhlo
county at leaol thirty

dayo prior to lho hoar
lng on the epptlcollon
Tho Court lurtht
IInde that re11on1blo
and proper cauoo
axlolo lor ch1ngln1
lho name. Tho Cour
IIndo that tho apptl
cent'o complele nem•
11 blrlh wee Jannlle
Rll ChiiiHn, oppll
cant'a data of btrll
Wll 1112117&amp;, end lho
place ot birth woo
Clnclnnetl, Hemlltcn
Ohio. Therefore, It lo
ordered lho noma c
Jennifer Roo Stewar,
, be
ch.angod 11
Jennifer
Roo
Chaaloen.

Every bre.ath,
Every thought,
There is no place
where she is nol!
Happy 23rd
Birthday, ~enl
Missing you
more every dayl
Love,
Dad. Mom , JD.
Steven, Tom,
Boyd &amp; Babie~

In loving
memory of

(B) 1

Jack L. Clark
who
passed away
August l . 1987.
Sadly missed
and loved by
wife Grace.
children ]lm,
john 8.. Sheila &amp;.
Grandchildren
'•

�l!tribune Sentinel - 3L\e
CLASSIFIED

titer

1991 8riliant Watre "x80
3bf, 2ba, new air and fur·
.....,., $4.000 down and
lake OWtl' paytnaiiiS $239.81
month
(7.00)388-8070
fx llenl ahape , tnUit be

""""·

.otlr41&gt;ahausa
- o n l y $9,900.
1-800-719-3001

To
Place
r

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342 .
Fax us at: (740) 448-3008
E-mail us at:
classified 0 mydallytrlbune.com

Otftfee #o~.s'

an.ertlon
1100 P·"' ·

c•-••

w"•" Needed
• ....,_ Shoukl lllun 7 D•Y•

YARD SAIL-

'

h o : : : :. Old

$ay QOOd bye to hogh phone
bills• New local phone sePI·

ICe w1th FREE unlimrted
Datton wtde long D•stance
i-800-635·2908
or
Fn-afternoon.
all
day
Pw.FreedomMov1e com/rip
Saturday,
3468
St
Rt.
141,
aysyou Local Agents want-

name-brand-cloth ing, and
accessories.
furniture,
household goods, exercise
equipment

ed

r

GIVEAWAt

Fri-Sat 9am-5pm, 426 St. At.
Beag le lo9kmg puppy, to 2 79 Thurman, rn·ce clothes.
gooo home (740)949·3029
many name brands, household items
Free Gerbils call· 740-446Fri-Sat Aug . tst &amp; 2nd, 9am7199
4pm, Crown City. between
Gtve away female dog. 740- Giovanni's and Dairy Boy,
256·1092
kids-mens-womens ctothing ,
toys, baby bassinette, other

Large-Breed very act•ve J.-4 misc.
montl'1 old, male pup, give Garage &amp; Moving sale, 116
away

to good home 74D- Kmeon Onve, Sat Aug 2nd

682-65 19

9am -?

r

r~Ya•r•d•S•a•l~~
'
e~y~' erpM;¥~'
ei.i itui•inrtui i rei,iho-use_.l·
rl t;: IO~;HEu&gt;; ; ; ;W;,A.ImiD.--,
·
Carport Sale:Augusl

j'4

r
r

~:::::;::::::~

IF

~

YARD SALEGAUJPOLti

107 2nd. Ave. Aug . 1st &amp;
2r'ld, 9-5, small refrigerator·
old ltema-knlck-knacka-p lc·
HIT aa -vldeo -game1-co I·
lact:lbla-cardl, womenl-boye
clothea, much more

Sat. AuQ 2 9am-3pm, 94
Airline Ad., Porter. Mary-Kay
Cosmetics clearance, 50%
off, huge selection.
Sat. Aug. 2, maternity and
girls clothes 0·6, toys, and
misc. Items 103 Baatlan l 9·?
Tara Estates 213 Carman
Orlve 9·4 Sat. only nice chll·
drena/adulta
clothing.
tcruba, misc.

2018 Centenary Road, loll
of tvety1hlngt 9am-~pm , Frl Yard Salt
Aug 1·2,
and Sat.
. Apoato llc Go1pa1 Church,
1812 Eaa1arn Ave
9am 3-lomlly.yoro-oale, Aug . 1-2. 4pm
t4 mlltl out 14t, 425 gol·
Yord Sale Aug. 111 &amp; 2nd ,
len-water-tank, furniture,
114 milo Allot Rd .· VInton ,
blankett, glauware and
computer,
home-Interior,
Chrlltmat lttma.
pagent drt...a, ~txtru"

~ family yard sale Auguat 1 Yord Soli Aug . 2 + 3 Dillon

&amp; 2 , Clothing, colloctlbloo, 2
glrla blcyolea and much
more. Located 1 mile out
Georges Cretk , off SA 7 N
to 285 McCully Rd . at bot·
tom of hill on left

E;.cttnllon ralnlahlne, Iota of
tverythlng, follow e1gn1
Yard
Sale
310
Neighborhood Rd. Fri. Aug
1· Sat. Aug 2 , 9am -3pm

Saturday.. August 2, 9·3,
Spencers, 605 Main Street,
Racin e. AE , Aero te en
clothes, &lt;Jidep games, furni·
ture, houseflold Items. Rain
cancels.

I"'

I'm ·not against hoping and
..
z. wishing for special things in life. I
.
was taught at a very young age
that you must work for the things

1~---r,~;-Tr~NT'.;..M.;..·Tr.....;:ET,-=·-il-~ -;;;;,:;; -~~~h:"~~~~g q=d~
vou dovolop '"'"' llop No. 3 bolow.

NUMBERED

LETTERS IN SQU-'RES
..,. UNSCRAMBLE FORI
'1;1' ANSWER

Yesterday's JCIAM.LITS ANSWIIS
Fomge - Knack - Motif - Pucker- IMAGE
The mom was trying to impress upon her son how to
act on dates. "When you are out on a date.· the mother
told him. "your behavior is the mirror in which you will
display your IMAGE.·

••

Sat., Aug. 2nd, end_P,I mov·
lng 1a1o, 305 Tyree Blv.
(Teafords) Racine, lots of
baby Items.
Saturday, 8/2 : 9-4 Boys.
girls &amp; womens plus s•ze
607 E. 1st Street, New
Haven. Anna Sines

·I. Is. I. I. l.
.--------""1

\

Hug' 'f'ard sale, August 1st,
2nd, 3rd-210 Cook Road:
1st road N . of AA tracks on
At, 17, Cheshire Aa1n or
shine 8-?

eoe

1

P~IN r

G1f1 Shop, 3202 Syracuse,
Saturday &amp; Monday. Zenith
color 27" screen TV. antique
light w/plstons. wooden
chair,
flower
rocking
arrangements, baby cloths.
jeans &amp; toys.

Hugh yard sale-Friday &amp;
Saturday.
253 S. 5th
August 1 &amp; 2· 9·2·t388 Middleport. Avon-antiques,
College Road, Syracuse furniture, milk glass. kids
Books,toys,good womens clothes
clothes
Mtddleport, Aug . 1·2. 2nd
August 1 &amp; 2-SR 143, 3 house on right on Story,s
miles from ·sA 7 Boys 0-24 Run Ad , clothes, baby stuff,
months, girls 0-3T. mens dishes, more, rain or sh1n~
and womens clothes, toys,
Multi family yard sale, Eagle
baby bed, coffee tables ,
Ridge near Bashan , guns,
dishes, lots more. Rain or
tables &amp; chairs, refrigerator.
shine.
Aug 1-2
August 1-2: 8am-4pm·Roae
Hill-Foll ow signs Toddler Mutllple family, 16 Anne
clothes &amp; toys, car seat, vac · Street, Pomeroy. Starting
uum cleaner, wide variety or July 31 ttuu l}uguat 2nd .
Houaehold 1tem1, jeana,
mlac.
·
biby Items and clothes.
August 2nd &amp; Augu1t 3rd··
325e5 Dark Hollow Rood , Rain or ahlne garage aala ,
Augu11 111 and 2nd- 8·3Pomeroy 10·4
Ytllowbulh Road In Racine .
Big moving lilt at the end (Dtnnll Wolft'l residence
of Uni on &amp; 7. Auguot 111 &amp; 740·949-20t01. Small rolrlg·
2nd Clortnot, tlllor, trtodmlll, erator, · new microwave,
TV.
pool,
clolhto , welghl maohlnt,
warm
mtcrowavt, btanlel.
morning atcve, oratt IUP·
pll11, loto of Nlkt tu ohlno
Bill Croll rtoldonce, Aug .
end American hgla jon•
2nd, 8-4pm, clothing of all
and othlr mlac. lttml. Watch
kinds,
~lckono Slr111.
lor ~gna .
Aaclnt, Ohio
ReJoicing
Lila
Chuch,
Friday Auguot 1, 2003, tt40
Middleport Augult 2nd &amp;
College Ad , So;racuae ,
Monday,
Auguat
4th .
9am-3pm , clothing knick·
Antiques, TV, microwave,
knacks and mlac items.
good clothing : 26 cents .
Benefits
toad
pantry.
Donations welcome

E'""l~ ...;,4r-Nr-IT.;.;-1--.-1·1

@

YARD SALE·
Pr. PLEASANT

to 5X, teacher materials,
household Items and other
th'
1 t
mgs o 1n eresl
- : : - - ' - - - - - - - - 3 Family Yard sale. Aug 2
J famtly yard sale. Aug Flea markeVcraft sale, July 6 OOam-? . 2109 Mt. Vernon
1,2.3. 1102 Union Terrace. 31st &amp; Aug 1sl, 10:oo-5:00,
Pomeroy, something for Aug 1st bake steak dinner, 4-Famlly Fn Aug 1st 8-5
Aug
2,
8-12
everyone
$5 per d1nner, Mlddleporl Sat
Microwave.
clothes/mise
3 fa m ~y. Aug. 1-2, 9-?, Park Leg1on, take-out available
2625 L1ncoln Ave
P1
Act , north ot Darwm, clothes Friday, tst &amp; Saturday, 2nd Pleasant,
infant to adult. baby 1tems 8-5 3rd house on left on top
cr1b, roll-top desk, coffee &amp; of Chester Hill (SA 248) Estate sale by fam11y
end tables, lawn mower, Clothmg (girl s t8/3T, boys Everythin g must go 123
glider. rocker, etc
3T/10 &amp; womens), shoes, English Rd. P1 Pl. Aug . 2. 8·
3 famlly -August 1•2 , 9 am-? large living rugs, battery nde 2
Elmwood Terrace, 613 Elm on vehicles, toys , e_
tc_. - Garage Sale, Aug 1-7 3-1/2
Street, Racine.
Garage sale, Syracuse. end m1les Jerr';'s Run Rd
of 2nd St. , Fri. &amp; Sat. . 9-5, Clothing. lots of old glass.
536 High. Middleport, Aug . 1
ra1n or shine
dishes cheap . Lot more
&amp; 2, 9-3, canning jars &amp;
mise
Garage
sale36545 come.
Flatwoods Ad., Sat Aug.
Huge Yard
738 Pearl Sl. Fr1day 7-?,
Sale Hot
2nd,
tools, w1descreen TV,
Oog/Bake Sale. saturday
costume Jewelry, c lothmg .
lots of m1sc.
9am. 2400 Jefferson Po1nt
bedding. books, ChriStmas.
elc
Garage sale· formerly Jo's Pleasant. Beside Wendy's

1

'--'-:---'----''-...1.--'---'

r

':_~v~:. --I

I (E,IVIBIEI2
6

6:00, two go earls, both real
mce, sa Cors•ca $200, chop
saw dnlls, ladders, m1sc
tools. cloth1ng lays, knick·
knacks, off1ce desk , VHS
tapes, brand new VCR . go
Forrest Run to Morn 1ng Star
F1rst t1me yard sale, 2nd to Carmel stra 1ghl to Coun
house, Scout Camp Road, Street.
follow
signs.
Chester August 1st and (740) 949-2048
2nd. 9·4. Infants. children 's
clolhing. women·s cto1hmg
4th··8·5 Three m1tes out
SA143 , ftrst dflveway to the
left past Wolfe-Pen Road
Rain or shine Men. women .
chtldren, &amp; baby clothtng
Look tor signs'

n.JMuaJtHuwvLL

WDID
lAM I

MA 0 E F

1st· Yard sale· Aug. 1, 2, 900-

n,...

Garage Sale
3 Fam1ly 1340 F1erbaugh,
218 to Bullsk1n to Johnso n,
Found k1tten . black-w/gray watch lor Signs. Aug 1 &amp; 2
ha1r on back, 2nd Ave, area Household goods, antiQues,
Aug 1·3, rain or shme
on Sunday 740·446-4314
turnJture , large selct1on of Bradbury, across from RadiO
tools Fri/Sat Aug 1st·2nd stat1on , 3 fam11y, oak ·cellars
Found male med SIZe, rust 8am-2pm
set. other ant1ques, kids
colored dog w1th red collar,
clothes, baby 1tems, hOuseMoving
Salewasher/dryer
Poterbrook
SubdiVISion
hold 1tems, toys, etc
smce
Octoberused
740-446.0936
$600 00, oak table/chairs· August 1 ~ 2 Eich1nger resi$400 00, freezer $300.00 , dence, VanMeter Hill Road ,
Found: Small black k1nen piano $400.00. 740·446Racine (JUSI oH Bashen
~2nd Street &amp; Jaeleson Call 3460
Road
&amp;
Pleasant&lt;JJew
(304)875-2208 to c1a1m
Home
Interior,
Rain or Shine 8/1·8/3 9am· Road) ,
Lost 1 small browntwhite 4pm some tools, small Longaoorger, crafts. furni cotlie . 1 blue, ' brown eye. kitchen appliances, misc. &amp; ture, hardware, clothes ,
reward. (304)675·6222
Hutch St Patnot, no pre- treadmill Rain or Shine
sales
I.QST: Male Ausl. Shepherd
f b'ue &amp; 1 brown eye. no taU Relay For life Yard Sale,
Lost in TNT area. Call Johnsons Greenhousa
(004)675-7264
.$5.00-bag sale or ttems
priced individually. Fri·Sat
YARD SAIJl
9am·1

.,..c•

US

••t.t•

Saturday, August 2nd at
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Canter. 36759 Rocksprin"g s
Road , Pomeroy. 9:00am3.00pm
Saturday, August 2nd only.
Gordon Fisher residence
1402
Dusky
Street.
S~racuse 9-5
Water Street, Syracuse,
Friday &amp; Saturday, 8·5 , kids
clothes. toys , mise Items

•
AVON• All Areasl To Buy or
Sell . Shirley Spears. 304675-1 429
DENTAL ASSISTANT
Par1 Time. Point Pleasant .
Expenence Preferred. but
no1 necessary. Reply to :
Point Pleasant Register
JR 11 . 200 Ma1n Street, Pt.
Pl. WV 25550
Expenenced lead carpenters·must be familiar with all
phases of resfdenlial remodeling, valid drivers license .
tools. transpo rtation, an d
references. Local work, pay
based
on
e;.cpenence .
Applic ations avai lab le at
Chnstians
Construction .
1403
Eastern
Ave .
Gallipolis. 446-4514
Fast growmg bustness
full &amp; part-lime bookkeeper,
full &amp; part-t1me cash1ers,
Send resume to
The Dally Sentinel
PO Bo;.c 729·8
Pomeroy, Oh 45769

FRIENDLY ~EO~LE
Inside Sale Gallipolis Ferry
Community Center Fnday, Needed to hand our samSaturday Furniture, c hil· ples m local Grocery.
drens clothmg, toys , anct fle~Cible schedule. Sat or
Sun. Call Encore Serv1ces
more.
1-800-700·0747
Moving Sale- Aug. 1&amp;2, 1
mile past Fairground Rd Help wanted canng tor the
name-brand clothes, glrls-6- eklerly, Darst Group Home,
12 months. 10· 12. boys-3T, now paymg mlmmum wage,
8, 14·16, womens 12-18, new sh1fts 7am-3pm 7ammens, household, crafts, 5pm, 3pm-11pm, 11pmportable dishwasher. 89 7am, call 740·992·5023.
Jeep Cherokee

Live in CaregiVer needed for
elderly lady who requtres
NICE YARD SALE Saturday, assistance /da1iy actiVIties
Aug . 2. Bam·?
Call
(304)675·2178
o•
2218 Mt. Vernon Ave .
(304)675·5578
Sat Aug . 2 women -g ~rls ­
baby-clothtng,other ite ms
2016 Jefferson Blvd.. Pt.
f)leasant.

Main tenance Person need·
ed. parHime. Valley View
Apartme nts, 800 State
Route 325, Thurman , Ohio
Apply at off1ce or subm1t
Sat, 3 miles South on At. 2. resume. 740-245·9170
from Pt.-Pleasant ·Bndge,
toward Galllpolls·Ferry, fur· Medl Home Health Agency,
Inc seeking a PAN Speech
niture, clOthes, etc.
Therapia! for the Gallipolis,
Yard Sale 512 McNeill Ave Ohi o area. We offer a com ·
Household goods, baby pelltlve salary, benefits
ctothea, strollers, high chair, package, and 401 K. E.O.E
toya, Barbie jeep. Something Please send resume to 430
lor everyone.
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
Oh 45631 . Atln. Olano
Yard sala Everything Gosa Harlesa, Clinical Manager
Bargains,
Bargalna,
Sorgalno. Frt.ISot 8·2. t209 Need to consolidate or sta r1
a new bualneas .
Call
Main Street
National Sank toll fret 1·
Yard Sale July 31-Aug 1-2 888·e911-3064 Good crodll.
tlolllpollo Farry, Blolnt Lana. no credit, bankruplcy.
Loti of naw llama addad
dally. 2 motor cycl1a almoat Need 10 earn Money? leta
new, 8HP troy bu!lt tiller talk the &amp;E,W Avon . Call
u111d about 2hra. 10011, toys, Marilyn , 304-882·2e45 to
learn at! the ways It can work
Iota of mlao
tor you.
Yord aale SAT ONLYI e-1
Naw Hiring at Ha rris
Many IIams. Pond Branch
Rd Southside Watch for Steakhouoo. (304)875-9726
algna.
Over the Road Semi Driver
needed. 12 month verifiable,
Yard Sola Sat, Aug . tat. 8·1 all weather e~Cperlence
2320 Mt. Vernon.
required . (304)576-2644

u

t

3384.
Part-t1me pos1t10n requ1res
transport1ng consumers to
and !rom med1ca1 appo1nlmenls m the Mason County,
Wv area Must be able to
ma1nta1n accurate reports ,
and be able to assJSI consumers off and on va n as
needed Requues HS diploma or GED safe driv1n g
record and knowledge of
lcx:al routes Apply 1n person
or matl to .
PRESTERA CENTER
HA/Mason Van Onver
PO Box 8069
Hunt1ngton Wv 25705

benches 24' new, 740.446·
Pa r t - t 1 m e 4385
R ece pt IOnJSt f M ed IC a I
WA.&gt;mll
Ass1stant needed for physiCian office 1n Po1nt Pleasant.
To Do
PIQase send resume With
qu aliftcations and salary
O&amp;J Picky Painters
requirements to . Doctor's Free Est1males lntenor an
Off1ce
Box 45.
Po1nt edenor pa1ntmg G1ve your
Pleasant. WV 25550
home or garage a fresh
new look We pamt homes.
Person needed to clean progarages. mob1le homes
fessional ot11ce, 3-d 1/2 days bU1Id1ngs. barns and roots
a week, flex•ble hours prefer
Licenced and 1nsured
rettred woman , send letters
(Call M·S, 11-6)
ot mterest to Oh10 Valley
(304)895·3074
PubliS hing, PO Box 572
20 Years experience
Gallipolis , OhiO 45631
and references .
~OSmON ANNOUNCE·

MENT
The Gallla-Jackaon -Melgs
Board of Alcohol, Drug
Addiction and Mental
Health Services Is currently accepting appllcaUone tor the position of
COMMUNITY EDUCATOR.
Thla full-time position
lnetuda •hared dutlea
with tht Board and the
Gallla County Family and
Children fifll Council.
RaaponelbiiiUes Include
the de&lt;Jelopment, Implementation and al8ets· ·
ment of an educational
program on blhatf of the
Board, Ita provide,. and
the FCFC. AppUcant1
1hould potaeu a mini·
mum of a Bachelor'a
Degree In a related area
with strong communication and multimedia/pro·
duction tkllla. Related
experience Including pro·
gram 1upervlalon It preferred. Extentive trevellt
required with this poll •

lion.
The Board off1111 1 com·
petltl\le 1111~ with an
IXCIIIInt blneritl pack·
ogo.
RIIUMia Wllh thrtl (3)
lettera ot recommend•·
Uon muat be 1ubmltt1d
to:
Ronlld A. Adklna,
EKICUtlve Dlr.ctor
Qolllo.Jockton·MIIgo

Bo1rd oft Alcohol,
Drug Addiction ond'
Mental Heatlh Strvlctt
P.O. Bax 514
Golllpollo, Ohla 45831
Application deadline 11
Friday, Auguat 81h. EOE
RNILPN (HOME HEALTH)
Part or Full time per v1slt or
hourly,401k, cafeteria plan.
m1leage, uniform
allowances, CEU rei m·
bursement, Sam 's club.
Health &amp; Life ins. PTO
which accumulate s h om
f,rsl work day. Top pay 1n Tn, Stele Sign on bonus 800·
759·5383
EOE

New 14 wide only $799
down ahd only $t59 63 por
month. Call Karena 740·
385-7871

2 5 acres 4093 AddiSOn
P1ke, pnvate sen1n g. creek,
treeS, large porch . 3-4 bedrooms 3 baths , 2 car
garage llv1n g room, large
dlnmgfkttChen area. base·
men~ family room. laundry
room. kitchenette. central
25 Serious People Wanted a1r. all electriC appliances
Who want to LOSE wetght
stay $97.000. call Snyders
We Pay You Cash lor the (740) 367·0667
1
pounds you LOSE
Safe . Natural. No Drugs
3 bed room house, 4 1/2
800-20 1·0832
acres. double garage. severDoor 68x24, like new, 2-win- al sheds, central ale,
dows, 33 1/2x35. a-screens Eastern SchOOl O•stricl, TPfor windows, electnc fan . 3· C water (740)985-4288

·BAD CREDIT???·
CALL ,-866-269--6331
Low lntrest-various Loane
Newly approved programs
des•gned for YOU
Call ~ -866·269-6331 X1. 24
HRS

Gemges Por ta ble Sawmill
don t haul your logs to the
miU IUS! call 304-675· J957
In home care for an elderly
person Wan.llng 5 days a
week Hours 7am-5pm No
weekends (7 40) 949-2722
Kmghts E~Ccava!ln g , Sitedevelopments, ponds, we do
dm. no job to small all work
guaranteed. tully -1nsured
740·682 -3168
740·645·
0639
Wdl pressure wash homes.
trailers decks metal buildIngs and gutlers Call (74 0)
446·0 151 ask for Ron or
leave a message

Blilo~
OPI'ORTUNn1'
I NOTICE!
O HIO VALLE Y PUBLI SH·
lNG CO recommends that
you do business w1lh people
you know, and NOT to send
money through the ma11 until
you have ln&lt;Jesl1gated the
offenng

New 2003 Ooublowide. 3 8R
&amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down
and &amp;295/mo. 1·800-691 •

em

i·---iiiiiiiiliilllli.,l
LOis &amp;

ACREAGE

112 acralot, Tycoon Lake on
Ea~ Road,

3 Bedroom newly remodeled, in Middleport, call Tom
An derson after 5 p.m.
992-3348

33 WOODED ACRES
Great homesite with added
bonus of hunting out your
bacl&lt; door Only $43.000,
land conlract a"Jatlable
GaHia County, 15 minutes
tram Holzer. Other propertles located 1n Meigs, V1nton,
Atliens, Jackson, Monroe,
Belmont and Washington
Counties. Call tor free maps

4 bedroom, 2 story house,
out of high water. gas heater
&amp; ale, (740)992·2529 lor
appointment to 1nspect.
4br, 2ba, Dream Kttchen , ,
acre ot land, great neighborhood . 5 miles out Sandh1H
Ad
(304)675· 3929
or
(740)709·9065

II00-2t~

Lot for sale in Racine,
(740)992·5858
_N_ico_mall--lla_ho_me--lo-ts. q-u-ie-t
country satttng, 5115 per
month, includes water,
sewer. trash, 740-332_2167
1, I \ I \ l "

All real utele actvenlalng
In this MWSPIIP« Is
subfect to the F--.1
Fair Housing Act of 1MB
whic:h ml!k" It lllepl to
advertiH " any
preference, llmltellon or
dlsc:rlmln•don bi!Hd on
rac:e , c:olor, rallgion, MX
1amltlel 11atu1 or naltonal
origin, or •ny Intention 1o
make any euch
preference, Umtwtlon or
dltcrlmlnl'tlon."

t"' .=r
2 bedroom
house
1n
Pomeroy. No pets. (740)
992-5858
3 Bedroom House for rent
on Blaine Lane GallipoliS
Forry. $450. Rani $450.
Deposit.
(304)875·7155
after 3 pm.

Thll newapeper will not
knowingly accept
ldvertiMmenta for nNI
eatatl wh~h Is In
violation of the lew. Our
reeder• ..-. hereby
Informed thst 111
dwellings advert!Hd In

3 bedroom house m pt _
Pleasanl, $600+ depos1t,
water and trash pet call·
740-446-0924

vr

from Mason Walmart DIW,
whirl pool tub, 2br Lg .
K I t c h / L R I De c k ·
S4oo .ma/S400.
Sec .
Deposit. Full Basement ar
will
consider
salllrig .
(304)773·9te7
HOUSE FOR RENT- 2 BRS
Great In-town location.
$475.00 par month Dapoolt
&amp; referencea required . Call
Wlnman Flea! Eatate·740·

$129 ,000 740;245·9288

448·3644

RI&lt;Jer Frontage. 11/2 acres
more or less_ 3BA 2 Bath,
masler suite w/jacuzzl, full
basement, 2 decks w/rlver
(3) FHA &amp; VA homes se1 up v1ew. 2 docks, 1 floating 740tor 1mmed1ate possession ail 446·0531 .
w1thm 15 min of downtown
Gallipolis. nates aS low as
66/o (740)446·3218

110

HOMES
FOKSAJ,E

HOUSE FOR RENT· 2 BRS
Great ln·town location .
$475.00 per month. Dep011~
&amp; rtlorencao required . call
Wilemon Real Eltato-7.00·
New Homo· 3BRI, both,
attached gorogo.
Ntor
lnduolrlal pork. 1500. Por
mo.. depoolt required . Mu1t
havo QOOd rtlortnctl. Coli
74Q-4.48·280t

r

121166 2br new furnace
$1 ,000. (740)992-3194
197t 12x60 mobile home
with ale, S2,900, X740)949·
2472

tJii
·
1

Yard Sale. Friday, August 111
&amp; Saturdav. Augu1t 2nd. 38
Hudson Street, Middleport.

•

.

M~RENT

~

am 4dr. $2,395. 200t Atero
-:-:::--:.:..._ _ __
Buy or seU. Rivertne 2dr. $5,995. Others in stock.
1 eA.. unfurnished, AIC, Antiques, 1124 East Mam
We take trades Cook
W/0 on prerruses, no pots, on SR 124 E. POmeroy, 740Motons .. (740)448-0t03
utlli11es paid, $350. mth.+ 992-2526. Russ Moore,
1992 Ford Probe
_deposi1=.:..'.:..·.:..74Q.446..:..:..~..:366=7:__
1984 Buick. nice
1- Bedroom Unfurnished
1987 !lodge Ven
Apartment,
Range,
740-256-1102
Refngerator,
Disposal,
Garage Provided , Water,
1993 Ford Thur&gt;Oorbird.
20" Sony TV. $100.
Sewage, Garbage Paid.
loaded, looks good. runs
Sunbeam
Gnll
$75
Deposit
&amp; References
QOOd, depondabla, $1000.
Swivel Rocker $25.
Required , 136 First Avenue,
OBO. 740-388·9789 or 740740-446-2:140 eftar 6pm
Rear, Gallipolla, 740-446·
446-8507
2561
24,000 BTU . . ; . - air con1995 Grand-AM, 76,000 mi,
1br All utilities included. ditioner $100,. King size
2
dr, hunter green, new mag
$325. month. (304)675·3854 mattress &amp; box springs $50.
wheels &amp; tires, $5000.
740-441-1486
(740)992·3961
4 rooms ar&gt;O bo1h, all utilities
paJd, $400 month . 48 Olive Blackberries B1g &amp; Juicy
$,3 Gallon $3.50 quart. or 1998 Pontiac Grand Pn:~~~: SE
Street. (740)446-3945
door-auto-power·.AJC,
you piCk $1 o. Gallon 4
121,000 miles $3295. day·
A~RT • (304)458-1667
BEAUTIFUL
740·446·16t5, after 7pm
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
Central 740-446·1244
~RICES
AT JACKSON Cool Oown lt
ESTATES. 52 Westwood Cooling Systems, New and
1997 Cad1llac Sedan Dav1lle
Dnve from $297 to S38:J. Used. Installed. (740)44672,000
mil es.
$7,500
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call 6308
(304)675-5815
•0r
(304)674·
740·446·2568.
Equal
JET
0598
Housing Opportunity.
AERATION MOTORS
Clean 1 bedroom apt. , Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In 1997 Plymou'h Breeze.
Crown City (Village), $300. + Stock. Call Ron EIIBns, 1- 85.000 miles. Air &amp; new
Ures. (304)675-4014
s8curity dep.
(740)25e· 80().537·9528.
1249
1998 Ford Taurus 4dr.,
Duplex Apart. 3br. H 12 John Deere 265 tawn trac- moonroo1, 6-disk cd player.
both. $300. mo. + Oepostt, tor, hydrostatic, 17 HP 45• 82 ,000 miles. Excellent
Ret 7th Stroot, Pt. Pl. cut, bar tires, axe. cond . Contlltlon.. (~)675·1437
(304)675-2495 after 6pm
$1800. 740-446.Q07e
after 4pm
Extra nice quiet, 2-3 bed room apartment Forced air
heatiAC, kitchen appliances
furnished, deposit &amp; references required . (304)6757628

Longaberger lots o Luck
basket. 1 , p, lid, tie-on
$100.: 2000 Century basllet
&amp; prot. $40.: 1999 Little Jllj
w/prot $40.; 1995 Woven
Traditions wlprot.
$40 .
For Lease Beau11f1A, 1600
(304)6 7s.6822
Sq Ft.. restored , second
NEW AND USED STEEL
floor apartment In HistoriC
Steal Beams, Pipe Rebar
DistriCt, Ideal for profession- For
concrete,
Angle,
al couple. all modem
Channel , Flat Bar, Steel
amenities 2 bedrooms;
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
spacious liv1n(1'dlnlng: lots
a! storage, 11/2 baths: rear Scrap Metals Open Monday,
deck, HVAC. $600/month
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
plus utilnies. Security ar&gt;O
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
key deposit. No pets.
Thursday.
Saturday
&amp;
Ret.rwnces requlrwd. 74Q- Sunday. (740)446-7300
446-4425 or 446-3936
Office Fumhurw
For Lease· One bedroom,
New, scra1Ch &amp; Dent.
unfurnished, newly redaco- save 70%. 1-800-527-4662
rated , second floor Apt.; at Argonaut 519 Bridge Street.
corner of Second and Pine . Guyandotte/Hunting1on. MIF
A/C; $300.00 per month ;
water mcludad. Security and Sears nding mower, 15 H.P.
key deposit. OH street parlt;- 2 blade cutting deck, excef.
ing. Rtferencu Required. lent condition,
740·256No pets. 740-446-4425 or 6444
446·3936
JlulwiNG
St.1PPuF:s
Furnished efficiency, all utilities paid. down stWrs. $225. ___
919 2nd Ave. 740-446Block, brick, sewer pipes,
3945
windows, Nntels, etc. Claude
Grac1ous liv1ng. 1 and 2 bed- Winters, A1a Grande, OH

2000, Red Plymouth Neon.
a1r, auto, $3000. or OBO
740-256·1233
LIVELYS AUTO SALES
90-01ds Cutlass Supreme
St600., 91 _ Fort Escort
$700., 92· Ford Tempo
$900., 87· Mercury Grande
Marquis $500. 93·Ford
Escort $1350., 89 Suzuki
GTI 5-speed $999., 91·
Ford Escort Station Wagon
$950., 94· Dodge Spirit
$900., 94· Plymouth
Voyager $1800, 95-Honda
Accent 5 speed $t800 .
Gall740-388-9303 about
more cars on lot! Mon-Fn
9am-5pm , Sat 9am-3pm
1o ed s
c s
un

Twin Rivers Tower Ia accept·
ing applications for waiting
llat for Hud· aubalzed, 1· br,
apartment, call 875·8e79
EHO

I

____

FOR

Country ~roduco Morlttt
Potatoes,
Tomatoes,
Meloni, Corn, etc. In aaaaon. Troyera WooPcraft 9
mllae wut of Oalilpolia
I ' StRtt41
I 1, 1: \l &gt;I 1'1 ' I II ",\ I I \ l '• I I II I,

. VIne St., (7.001448-7308
1

29670 Bashan Road
Ractne . Ohio

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Cellular

45771

74G-949-2217

••-1m

Jeff Warner Ins~
992-5479

Hours
7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

Stop &amp; Compare

SMALL
ENGINE
REPAIR

BISSEll
BUILDERS IOC.

New Homes • Vmyl
Siding • New Garages
• R•placement
Windows • Rocling

Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

WE REPAIR

FREE ESTIMATES

• Lawn Mowers
1 Power Mowers
• Chain Saws
• Snow Blowers
• Weed Eaters
Tillers • Edgers
Go Karta • Mini
Bikes

740-992-7599

JIM'S SMALL

·Septic Systems,
Footers and
Concrete,
Excavation, Utilities,
Back hoe and
Dozer, Ponds.

PC DOCTOR

HOME CREEK

Computers, Repairs,

ENT., INC.

Upgrades, Networks

ENGINE REPAIR
32119 Welshtown Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

992-7953
591-7002
591-4641

740.992-2432
Pomeroy Eagles
BING02171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early bir4s start
6:30
Last Thursday of
every month
AU pack $5.00
Bring this coupqn
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Gel

Wo

JONES'

Tree Service.

k

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

Make House Calls

(304) 675-5282
www.wvpcdr.cam
doctorOwv

Gravely

Snapper

GRAVELY TRACTOR

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

SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Street

Pomeroy. Ohio

992-2975
I.Awrr arrd Garderr Equipmerrl is rmr
busirress, not our sidelirre

1-800-822-0417
"W,V"s # 1

DURO-LAST

ROOFING

' ~ Don'1iea••elhe debl of
;. (~
-:. :(
" burial and nnalexpenses

HHINL; IN THIS AD
FOR ONLY ~L'llll PER HLJNIJHHJ

Flat Roof
Specialists·
Commercial and
Residential
Saves on Cooling .
Metal and Mobile
home roots· No
Problem. 15-Year
Guarantee

I(U)
1

... ... .-

Bring your
'Last checking stateman1
'Last pay check otub
'Photo I. D. "Phone Bill with name and address

116 Main St.
Pomeroy OH
740:912 CASH (2274)

II "ill Hold Fo r 30

·

Ir'.o

r.·'"'"'

E9V=T
ftU

j

~

I.

WRITESEL

2002 Gulfstream lnnsbruck
camper. 27', like new, queen
bedroom. full bath, sleeps 6,
$10,500, (740)985·4416

•IDOFING
diME

•~

MaroacvCWl

i dEIMllll
I

2003 RM 125, only two
tonkt of goo uood, 13,900.
740-387-Cltl32
For Solo t100 Mulum .
"mnoho, $85(). OliO 740388·83Dt or leave a mtl·
Hgt

amER

•Fn• hllnilhli•
949-1405

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

I
I
I

Box 189 Middle_f(!rt

(740) 843-5:Z64

Dol)'-'

NELSON'S LAWN
Residential •
Commercial Mowing
• Mulching • Edging
• Fertlllzatl011 • Leaf
Removal • Pruning
• Landscaplf'Malntanance Spring
and Fall cleanup

BASEMENT

I

(740) 985•9829
(740) 591·3891

THE 944
STORE
Salvage
Parte &amp; Cars'
County Rd. jj35
Racine, Ohio

You'll ftnd
I (740) 517·9138 .
Eyt-PopplnlllriiiM
or
In tht Cllulflllls
(740) 949-0020
J

Me the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me de 1t fcr yc.ul

Sunset Home
Construction

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Bryan Reeves
New Homes, Room Additions ,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywalt &amp;
More

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Etectrleel &amp; Plumbing .
• Roofing &amp; Gunera
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch DieD

FREE ESTIMATES!

V. C. YOUNG Ill

740·742·3411

YOUNG'S

Free Estimates
992-5215

5!9·6/4

PomerO)'. Ohio
V

I

MYERS PAVING

Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month.

HendBrson, WV

8711-2487
or 448-2111
.
'

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304-675·2457

CARE

11188 Honey Dovldoon, Wldt
Glklo, 2 tono point. lata of
utrao. (3041875·5434

Let 'lle show you how
allord•ble and easy it Is to
get lhe ro••erage you need.

MIIITEWCE

1

111115 For&lt;! E·380 Van, 14 n. Unconditional lifetime guarhigh cube box, excellent antea. Local references lur·
cond . 740.448·&amp;4t6
nlohed. Eatabllahod t975.
19118
~lymouth
Grand Colt- 24 Hrs . (7401 448·
Vayogor 182,1500 mlloa. Vory 0870, Rogm Blaemanf
will molntolnod. $5,100, Wotorproollng.

111

Lrn.SIOCK

:HOWARD_L_

WATER~ROOFING

_ I Fill

KlnmortiHot Point wolhtra,
tQIHI Norrlo 14x75, 2BR, 2 Whirlpool, Nordgt dryoro,
Bath, CIA, llrtrtt. no poll. $88. ooch 740-441i·lloee coli 2 voorllng 1tud ponlto,
rent $428. Hit I 15.000. :•111=-r5~pm.::__ _ _ __ roocly to troln , IP!'rctlmotoly
740-4&lt;18·1082
Thomp1ono Apptlonao &amp; 40' ltll, t brown tho -atltlr
rod ~IZO 1101, (740)378·
2 bedroom mobile homo, Rtpolr.e75-7368. Far H it, 82t8
prllfllt lot, no poto, 535(). ro-oondltlonld
oulomotlc - - - - - - - nth 1300 "-"·~ rolf~ woohoro &amp; dryora, rofngora· 2·S1Hra For Salt, 740-387·
mo '
• _,_ '
tors, gaa and altctrlc
0832.
rongao, olr condlllonoro, ond
tncoo. 740-448"3153
1
2 BR, portoct, air, porch, wringer waohoro. Will do Moritz tlock troller, 14 , no
moro
thon
500
miiH,
new
very niCI. 740-448·2003 or rapalro on mljor brandt In
condition, (740)898·7244
740-448·t.009
ohop or at your homo.

2000 Dutch man Very n1ce
All optoons (304)675·2359

Malntenenca· Painting, vinyl
aldln g, ·oarpantry, doora,
wlndow1. batha, mobile
homt repair and more. For
lru 11tlmoto ooll Chat, 740·
982·8323.

for your family and
lond ones.

General
Contracting
New
Construction ,
Remodeling,
Backhoe and
Dozer Work.
Roofing.

Hardtop off 1993 Jeep
Wrang11erl woth upper half

-C&amp;-C-..,.tl-en-o-ra1 -H-om1

r

HOME CREEK
ENT., INC.
992-7953

ve.

t &amp;43 H Form oil, runo, $88, . (304)875-37231ftor 7~M.
(740111112•1483
2002 Jup Llbor!V. 311,000
Wonted to buy Cut troctoro mllu, block, oun rool, C/D
lhlt won"! work. FOR SALE Ollllftt, 4&gt;t4, $t3,800 OBO
con oruohor. 740-241i•m&amp; 740-:11"'2.,55•·-18•1•8----,

' · ·'

I

tAA=I

2001 Keystone Campe r.
E;.ccellent Condition . $9,800
Call (304 )675·8436

~.~ ~

."- . -~Zij~·

t:WI1

GEt Cash Today

1
I
I
I

'

)t INSTA- CA$H )t I

I

2003 , Jayco Eagle 2611 .
Electric Slldeout. fiberglass
t988 S·10 Blazer Good con · ext outside shower, sl~eps
dltlon. 4,100 miles on e. Lots of e~ras (304)675·
engine. 54.250 (304)675 · 6732
3723 after 7pm.
Camper for sale, 1999 Terry
1992 Chev. Astro Van . Runs with sllde·oul. like new. no
good,
good
condition . petS, non-smoker. 740·446·
193,000 'm iles. $2 ,900. e223
(0041675·3059
-. 1 I ~\ 14 ; "

1994 Chevy S10. e~endod
cob, 4x4 4.3
auto, with
bed llntr, topper, new tlrae,
runo good, looko good, call
740-258·6180

Chevy. Pontiac. Buick. Otds

SFREE

r lb~s~IORS I

AKC Lab pups, Vel chocked,
1994 Nlssan piCkup, runs
dews removed, 1st shots,
great, good mpg , $1500,
yellow·$350. black·$300 .
;,__:_
(7.00)992·1493
740·441.0130
1996 OOdg~ Ram 1500, 4x4
Chocolate Male Lab pupClub Cab. towing package,
pies, sewn weeks old, AKC
axe. cond. $10.500 080.
registered,
shots
and
740·388·8391
wormed $250.00 call 740245·5585
2000 Chevy S·tO Ext. cab, 4
cy, Ssp, CD, cruise, 35 ,000
miles, air $8400. 740-446Registered 6 waek old,
2300
female Pomeranian, parents
on alte, had 1st shots and Full length running board tor
wormed. $300. 740·441· F-150 Ford truck extent cab,
0368
etaclrlc
red
in
color,
(740)985·3840
Small AKC York!a pups, 3·
males, now taking deposits,
will be reedy 1st week of
Sept. $500. 74D-245·12t7

Thumba11na,
female,
Chihuahua , with papers,
very tlnv. wolgho 2 t/2
ltENr
pounda, serious Inquires
lnexpenstve retail-commer- only 740-256·1997
Cial office apace tor rent,
FRurrs&amp;
Main St, Pomeroy, facing
VFGEI'AIIIJIS
river, available now, call

HOOii!HOLDGooos

BISSEll
UAIIICD.

r111

c•---::
.....--.,
j
SPACE

"-••iii

Hill 's Self
Storage

ROIERT

Z-28 hood for SO's $100.
1980 Cad can be demo'
derby car or wdl set! 403
engine &amp; trans. $200 1984
992-7953
T·Bird, suitable for drag·
591-4641
racer , 5400:. hav&amp; 351C
Ford engine wl2;.c4 carbs &amp;
591-7002
race ready $2000 or wt TBird $2200. 1982 Ford
Escort wagon, for parts
$75, 1980 Camara $300.,
1989 Hon GMC van, no
title, $200., several 400 1998 Marada MX3·20fl 5.0
Pontiac eng1nes &amp; 400 auto 111er 305, 64 hours, top
trans. · 74()-446-1822, early cover,
740-446-6857 or
Larry
1,!!~~~~--., ~o r Iii-at,.•--:::-----, 740-446-6959
$10,900 00
"
TRUCKS
~-loiiiiiiiiii-_.1 L~--aiFORIIiliiiSAI..Eiii0·-.,1 81mtnl top fils boats 22- 28tt.
long, 25 pitch stain less
.,
8 mth. old Dotson, blackltBn ,
1973 Chevy truck, 46,000 steel pro p for a mercrui ser.
female, housebroken , nat
.
miles, runs good , new (304)675·3354
good with small children exhaust, $1500, (740)992·
$100. call 740-388·8962
1493

i

Good U1td Appllonou ,
Small one bedroom houn In RtcondiUontd
ond
Mlddloport, Oh , $300 pluo Guorontted .
Woohoro,
ulllltltl &amp; dopo1~ requlrod, Dryor1,
Rongtl,
ond
(7.00)1182·8t54
Rolrl go&lt;atora, Same oton at
lloMml $95. Skogga Applloncoo, 78

Yard sale- 35 Riverview Dr ,
Middleport, Aug 1 &amp; 2

}11!
J!,j

3901

Ortve- a- little saY&amp; atot.

740-446-2957

448-3644

17+acres, hou se, barns Call
Sh ~rle ne
740 ·286·2447 10 used homes . under
$2,000 Will help with deliv·
Agent
Century
Homes
ery, call Nikki 740-385-9948
Holley &amp; Assoc1e1es
Cherry
R1dge
Road
house/3 5
acres
Call
Shirlene
740 -286 -2447 ,
Agent Century
Homes
Holley &amp; AssoCiates

chevys.
etc!
9162 Free Estimates, Easy Hondas.
carsllrucks lrom SSOO. For
linarciOQ, 90 days samo u
cash V isa/ Master Card . lishngs l-800-719-3001 ext

740-446-&lt;4782
Gallipolis,
1 BR., CIA, Quiet Location, OhiO HAS 10-4pm Stop 8v Royal, good cond. $1500.00
catl740-256-1332
near Holzer, WID Hookup,
$359.00 plus utilrtles, tease
1989 Plymouth Voyager
1 loaded, $895. 1993 Grand
&amp; deposit raqu1red, no pet$.

3 or 4 bedroom . 1 bath,
great room. garage, CIA. 2 room apar1ments at V111age
miles out of town, $450 mth . Manor
and
Riverside
740·446·6585
Apartments in Mlddlepart
From $278·$348 Call 7408 Room House 1768 sq. ft., 992- 5064. Equal Hous1ng
3 bedroom, 2 bath, CI A,
Opportunities.
heat-pump, Lg. family room ,
w/gas fireplace ,kitchen Modern 1 br. apt (740)446·
w/appliances &amp; Sm•lh cus· 0390
tom made cabinets, ceramic
Now Takmg Apphcationstile floors· kltchen &amp; bath,
35 West
2
Bedroom
hardwood floors-dining &amp;
Townhouse
Apartments,
hall, AIC &amp; heated, 2 car
Includes Water
Sewage ,
garage-2 storage buildingsTrash, $350/Mo., 740-446you pay utilities, Green
0008.
School district, vary nice
neighborhood, 5-10 m1nutes Tara
Townhouse
from work or restaurants , Apartments, Very Spac1ous,
senous inquiries onty, 740· 2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
379-9184
, l2 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool ,
Home for sale 3br. Corner lot Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
2~00 Lincoln Ave . Call after Pets, Lease Plus Security
6pm . (304)675-2495
Deposit Required , Days .
House for rent In west 740·446·3481 ; Evenings :
Columbia on At 62 1 mile 74Q-367-0502.

this newspaper •r•
available on •n equal
opponunlty baHI.

Gallipol is, 3br Ranch on Mill
Creek Ad 1 mile from Golf
co urse BriCk front
wtvlnyl sld1ng Excellent condition Convenient location
Reduced price
$77,500.
25 Sarlaua People Wenttd Call after 5pm (304)e75·
Who want to LOSE weight. 5038
We Pay You Cash ror the
Home !rom $199/month.
pounds you LOSEI Safe.
foreclosure homes 4%
Natural. No Drugs 1·800·
down. 30 years at 8 !5% epr.
203·9604
41tstlngs call 800·319·3323
Apl Bwtdlng 1n GallipoliS. 4 ext 1709.
rentals Will take · mobile
home on trade 740-367· House for 1ale 8 rm 3 31~
basement . 2
old gar
7886
28x32 en 3 acrea LIIVIng
Fully equipped 2 station Rd. West Columbia, VW.
beauty sal on located In (304)773-e343
Gallipolis Ferry Salon Ia a
1993 14x52 mobile home. Letarl Falla, OH ; 3 bedroom
Can be moved or stay on house, 1 bath, detached
rented
lot
E;.ccellent garage, new root. aiding,
Condition. $8,500 (304)675· windows, carpet, &amp; kitchen.
1e89 dsy or (304)576·2998 $65 000.00 (740)247-2000
after 7pm
Mercerville- 3 Br. 2bth. on
nice lot, walking distance to
JlRoF'ESSIONAL
schools . Owner financing
SER\'1~
available, $35,000, $300.
down , $230. per month.
TURNED DOWN ON
740-256·1 666
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wm l
NEW HOUSE Debbie Or~ve
1-888-582·3345
3 bedrooms, 2 baths,

HHI i ' II II

clly water, no

septic, nice shade trees,
asking $8500. (740)247·
1100

Yard sale beh11'1 d Pomeroy
Rite Ald ,.Sat. 9am.

II
Jl

East, Athena, Ohio.

Land Home Padcage~ avail·
able. In your area, (740)""6·

Yard sale Sat Aug 2, 8-12
Part-Time
Positi on
Needle work supplies, fab - Available, Interested In mer·
ric. new g1tt Items &amp; much chandislhg greetlnQ ca rds
more 3104 Kathnor Lana.
and related products In local
retail sfores. Prefer mature
Yard Sale Saturday 812103
Individuals, interested in
2618 Lincoln Ave.
workmg up to 20 hours a
week, training prov1ded, no
eiCPenence necessary. Call
1·800·543-4 110 ask for
SCHOOL
e~CtensJon 1928, dunng regFUNORAISING
Flea MarkeUCraft Sale- July
ular
businesS
hours
Area Director needed for
31st &amp; Al.Jgust 1st·10:00 Amencan Greellngs, EOE
established co tor local
5:00. August
1st·Bake
area Celt on coaches ,
steak dlnner-$5.00 per din· P a r t - t i me
ner. Eat In or take out.
Rece pt i on i st/Medic a! PTA's, &amp; Prtnc1pals. $46K
813·783-2928
Assistant needed lor physiWM'IlD
ci ans
off1ce In
Point
TOBU\'
Please send
Pleas ant.
resu me w1th quali!lcat1ons
AbSolu te Top Dollar: U,S. and salary requ irements to ·
S1 lver,
Gold
Coins, Docto rs Off1ce PO Box 45, Gallipolis Career College
Proofsets, D1amonds, Gold Point Pleasant WV 25550
(Ca reers Close To Home)
Rings,
U.S Currency,·
Call Todayl 740-446-4367.
M.TS Coin Shop, 151 Wanted full time waitress,
1·800·214·0452
Secon d Avenue. Gallipolis, apply in person, Holiday Inn, www galllpollscarearcollege.com
Clalllpolls.
740-446·2842.
Reg #90·05·12748.

t~~ - ,

so

45701 , 740-592· 1972

I \I I'll)\ \11 '\I
.., I I&lt;\ IC J -.,

wr1nger washer warmmg hold tlems. mise Aug, 1 &amp; 2
slo\19 washer/ctryer, some 9am to 5pm, 1741 Chatham
fu rniture , 346 Spruce St. ~ve .
Ext Sat. 7am-4pm
Yard 5ale· Friday- SaturdayAu~ 1&amp;2 10 Mmu tes past Sunday, old
JtemsJcolVmton on 160 Wilkesville lect1bles, 61 Hubbard Ave
SQuare. 6 tam1hes HUGE Kanauga
Yard Sale Clothing all Sizes.
ba by 1tems. Ionga berger . Yard Sale-Mitchell Ad . Aug
new ttems &amp; more. 9am-7 1"2• gam-? , priced cheap,
Ram or Shme
watch for Signs

,
,;;: , Beer Carry Out perm1t
b' sale, Chester Township,
tfeios COunty, send letters
ef Interest to · The Da lly
Semmel . PO BoiC 729·20,
POmeroy, OhiO 45769

Glaele&lt; !Ia)' &amp; Moen, light
fiJtures. cabinet pulls &amp;
knobs dir9CI from Home
Depot (easy to match 1ust a
lew QOOd reasono why your
next new horne Should be
!rom: Colo'a Mobile Homos,
15268 US 0 East, Athent,
Ohio,
1· 740-592-t972,
"Where rou get your
money's worth"
Cole's Mobile Homes

or
•nv •d st •nv lim• Error• mu•t b4l r.,:~orted o n th• flr•l !Uiy ot
COlli Dl ,...,
oecupiOJCI by 1~ ..-ror snd only 1~ first in ..rtlon. W•
oml••ton of sn ~v.-rtl_.,•nl. Cor r•cllo n will b-6 m•d• In 11'1• llr•t •v•llabl• .alltlon
• All •-•
-=lv•rtl_rn.,t• •••
t o lhs F•d•uol Fooir Housing A c t ol 1M&amp;
W• will not
In vio l•tlon ol !he l•w.

elf

• lnelud• Pttoft41 Num•• And Add,....

·t ~I rA~t

ll\.egister

Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at.· (304) 675·5234
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydallyreglster.com

P•p•r

O..Crlptton • Include " Prlc. • Awold Ataaw..wl•tlan•

mRSw:

-.n

Used Furniture Store, 130 1988 Oldsmobile 88. Lool&lt;s
Bulavitla Pike. mattrasses. good and runs good Power
ing · ""'· 'E'" lhof. 2218.
mopane windows by K1nro
dressers, couches. bunk everyth ing. 51200 olla
carriage carpets &amp; Hooting 1 bedroom apt. on Vine
beds,
bedroom
surtes. (304)882-3955
by Congoled, appliances by 5treet in Gallipolis 740-367·
recliners, grave monuments.
1989 Oldsmobile Oolta 88.
General Electric, faucets by 7886 or 740-446-7396

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must: Be Prepaid

• lilart TOWr ACt• Wtl" A IICeywtJrll • lnclutl• Compl.-t.

\'\\ul '\1 I \ II \ I '

--

~¥"~00 p.~.

Monday t:hru Friday
.8:00 a.ITI. t:o 5:00 p.ITI.

GC».TS FOR SALE
4· 100% Boer Buks,
6mtloll14mtho in age. Full

rod!af $36, ~choir
$20, 2 nice rocker raclinor1 registration, papers, parMobllo Homo lor rent. 3br. 2 $50, lull size bod S125. dinents on farm, 740-2~
full bath, in Henderaon, on
ing table/&amp; chairs S95., after Sjlm.
lot No pets.. $375. mo. S300
dresser/ matching night
deposit (304)576-3231;
stand $95 ,TV $15
eacn , Skaggs Appliances.
78 V1no Sl 740-448-7398
Auros

r~

Ext F1""

·

(740)992·3194

120 year&amp; of housing- (740)446-2200
once.. Patriol Homos outstanding 1/5 year warranty, 1 and 2 bedroom apart·
shingles &amp; Insulation by rnants. furnished and unfur·
Owens Coming, vinyl siding nished, security doposrt
by Vipco. James Harlfio sJd. required, no pets, 740-992·

JUST SAY
CHARGE ill

Visit us at:, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
E-mail us at:
classlfledO mydallysentl nel.com

homo lor rent
Mid .......... lumlture mo. + depoeit no pets. cou:h
&amp; chair $100, -

carpe~. 202 Clark
Cote's Mobile Homes an 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom apartment
Chapel Road, Porter. Ollio.
assemttled team wtth ower lor rent tn Point PMtasant
17.001""6· 7444 1 -an-630- $I50Q POLICE IMPOUNOS

....

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

2br -

$350

Driveways • Tennis Courts
·,Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets
1

~~~
Hi~&amp;Dry
SeU~Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232

·FLEA

WV Contractors Lie.' #003506

I

MANLEYS
l{iH'n\:n
SELF STORAGE • ( 'al'i-

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
[lO'xlO' 610'x20'J

MARKO .
. ........ .La.. (740) 992-3194
.. -.:1Lt2•
992-6635
••••itlllldlll

In Syra(Ust
( Fonnrrlv Whlmn•',f )

Under new ownership
nnd new manngement.

A

COME JOIN US
7
Weeki

oaillt _l p i d l l l .

..-..~PI!.m'' SUI

. Mltlltf.it:&amp;
lilt lip . . .·

·q.,. ••.,..
IIW!IIilllle

with the big 1as1e"

�raw- Do • 1ne uany ::tenttnel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

. ''
Friday, August 1, 2003

\

ACROSS .43 Chapeau
44 Hamster,
maybe
1.Chop off
45 Low voices
4 Tabbies
48 Tux
8 ''60
- go·wlths
Minutes"
(2 wds.)
network
52 Untrained
11 Genuine
53 Bad day
12 With,
for Caesar
to Pierre
55 Latin I verb
13 Tropical
56 Yves' frie,nd
14 Pocket
57 Zither
bread
with the engine running while to the principal of the school. 15 Motion
cousin
she went inside the school to Adults should NEVER leave ·
58 Entranced
picture
retrieve her other child. At children alone in a vehicle 16 Crimson
59 Plead
60 Time period
. Tide st.
times, the woman was away with the engine running. What
61 Starry vista
17
Team
from her van for at least five that mother did was child
symbols
endangerment. Carjackers. as
minutes.
DOWN
and
Rather than confront the well as a child accidentally 19 Neat
smart
mother with my concern, I putting a vehicle into gear, are f1 Lilly or
1 Solo's
Wallach
beloved
stopped by our local police very real dangers.
Take comfort in the fact that 22 Triangular 2 Equine
department to ask if there are
sair
fodder
any laws against this. I was althou~h the mother reacted
23
Evil
spell
3
Locations
hoping an information flier defenstvely, you may have 26 Whare
4 Spiny
was available that I could saved her child's life. That
protons are
plants
share with her, but there was woman was lucky. Other par- 29 Autumn
5 Rara mo.
6 First-down
not. An officer asked me to ents have not been so fortu30 Portent
yardage
describe the woman's vehicle nate.
32
Tar's
saint
7
Picturesque
(Dear
Abby
is
written
by
and the approximate time of
34 High spirits 8 Talk online
Abigail Van Buren, also 36 Peeves
day she came to the school.
9 Flash
Evidently, the police officer known as Jeanne . Phillips, and 38 Med. staffer
of lightning
10 Remain
mentioned to the mother that was founded by her mother; 39 Scale
"another mother" had notified Pauline Phillips. Write Dear 41 Breakfast 11 Tachometer
food
meas.
them about her. Now she and Abby at www.DearAbby.com
several other parents in our or P. 0 . Box 69440, Los
preschool are upset. A friend Angeles, CA 90069.)
m whom I confided that the
"other mother" was me, told
me I should have minded my
own business! (She, too, has
been guilty of leaving her little ones in her parked car with
Reading the
the engine running.)
•
Did I go about this all
~~'~!~~~~=-~keeps
• you
and
wrong, Abby? - SAFETYin tune with
CONSCIOUS IN NORTHwhat's happening
ERN CALIFORNIA
now, whether
DEAR SAFETY-CON·
it's across the
SCIOUS MOM: It would
globe or in your
have been better to have spoown backyard.
ken directly to the woman, or .__ _.=:;;:...._ _ _ _.......J

What's good for the,gander
lands the goo~ in hot water
DEAR ABBY: My husband, "Jerry," and I have been
married for 10 years. Nine
months ago, he had an affair
and moved in with the
woman. During the time Jerry
and I were separated - and
he had filed for divorce - I
inet a man and slept with him.
Two months later, Jerry
came to his senSes and realized life wasn't greener on the
other side of the fence. He
begged for forgiveness and
came home professing his
love for me and our children.
Abby, I love my husband
with all my heart or I wouldn't have taken him back. I am
not proud of sleeping with
another man, and as a matter
of fact, I had blocked it from
my memory because I felt so
a~hamed. My problem is,
when Jerry found out about
the other man he freaked out
and ever since then he accuses me of having affairs with
many men. He continuously
recounts "my indiscretion,"
forgetting what led up to it.
· Jerry scrutinizes my cell
phone bills and calls unfamilIar numbers to find out who
I'm talking to. It is driving me
crazy. We both agree we want
to be together, but I can't take
his accusations any longer.
Help! -IN LOVE, BUT IN

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
AGONY
DEAR IN LOVE, BUT:
Tell "Jerry the reformed" that
unless he agrees to marriage
collJ!seling, he will have to
move out. His behavior
proves the truth of the old
saying, "A man .never looks
behind the bedroom door
unless he has stood there himself." ·
Unless your husband can
overcome his "convenient
amnesia" and is willing for
both of you to make a fresh
start, his guilt, suspicion and
inability to forgive will
destroy your marriage.
DEAR ABBY: Several
times over the past month
while I was dropping off or
picking up my son from
preschool, I observed a mother of one of the other
preschoolers leaving her
mfant alone in her vehicle

18 Dairy-case 42 River
buY.
· mammals
20 Skilled
44 Tough
22 Throw away question
23 Gear tooth 45 Swift horse
24 Brulna sch. 46 Weak, as an
25 Country
excuse
addrs.
47 Branch
26 Teen
48 High-speed
outoast
electron
27 First name 49 Wrltar
In jau
- Dlnesen
28 Scamps
50 Spot ·
31 Tea herb 51 Congeal
33 Mich.
54 Expected
neighbor
35 Nymph who
plnad away
37 Worry
40 Without
effort

~'!:!"-...,__..-

~~(.t

Astrograph
Bv DeucE BEnE Osot.
Your chances for material
acquisition look guite promising
in the year ahead. Larger commissions, bonuses or raises all
could be ~ible through the diligence and hard work you're wiUing put forth.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) There is a ~ibility that you
could encounter someone today
in your social world who would
be an asset in your commercial
affairs. Try to establish a working
relationship.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
- Personal interests can be
advanced !oday if you make certain your affairs remain under
your control. Stay on top of anything im~t, and don't let the
reigns shp from your hands.
. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Your instinctive perceptions are
apt to be quite accurate today, so
don't hesitate to give credence to
your hunches or feelings. Let the
mner you direct your actions.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
_You'd better make some plans
to do something that takes you

where the action is today, because
chances are you will be in a rather
gregarious mood that will need to
be satisfied.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21)- Good humor coupled
with sincerity are traits that can do
a great d~ to enhance your
image today. Lei others see that
you're a nice person with whoth
all can get along.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) - Fall back on that old
advice of judging others in the
same manner as you would like to
be judged if the roles were
reversed. It's a surefire formula
guaranteed to win you fiiends.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19)- Treat your fmancial situarion with a bit more seriousness
today, because material benefits
can be derived from sources other
than your usual channels. Have
the drive to search them out
· PISCFS (Feb. »March 20)
-Take a middle-of-the-road attitude in aU your dealings with others and you wiU be guaranteed a
pleasant, hannonious day. You
can comfortably adjust to any

to YoU K\lclt.l 'N\P ~~ 'SoMEWI-I~t. ~R
. \\-\£' ~11-16oW'?

changing circumstances today.
ARIES (March 21-Apri119)
- It would do you a world of
good today to do somethin~ that ·
requires you to be outside m the
freSh air. It doesn't have to be anything too strenuous or rime-consuming, just health~.
TAURUS (April »May 20)
- Instead of taking life so seriously today, try to get an early
start on the weekend. Anything
social, relaxing or enjoyable you
engage in will refmbish your outlook and put you in a good mood.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
1Those around you, especially
family members, are likely to
emulate the example you set

today. If you're at peace with
yourself and project a calm
demeanor, you wiU also put them :::====~~====~=~~=:::::=~~
at ease.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
-A change of scenery may be in
order today, especially if you've
been a bit restless and uneasy latehiOOWN
ly. Going someplace different
could get you out of your funk
.
and into healthy thinking.
(Get a jump on life by wuier&gt;ndOOWN
standing the influences which are
governing you in the year ahead
Send for your Astro-Graph yearahead predictions by mailing $2
31'c1 00WN
to Astro-Graph, do this newspaper; P.O. Box 167, Wickliffe, OH

WORD®©®CD@@®@®N
0000000
(9@@@@@® !'~~~~~otal

0000000
®®®®®®@

44092-0167.)

,_.,=.,..--------------......, .---WORD SCRIMMAGE'" SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK
o,.., ............. ..,_..."'
151

DOWN

: Answer

=..lL
·....!L

4th DOWN

AVERAGE GAME 155-1&amp;5
Juoo·s TOTAL
248
,__•._.. _.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____J

I'M 6UE'5S\I-\6 li W/e

~~ 6 LEI41-\ ~
1-!Eili&gt;.I&lt;M~~c,.
dK Otl.t r:F

to
previous
Word
Scrimmage ·

0
0

~~~22~ 0
~~m::::'~ 0

4th DOWN

AVERAGE GAME 14().150

by JUDD HAMBRICK

FOUR PLAY TOTAL
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

=

DIRECTIONS: Make a 2- to 7-letter word hom !he letters on each yard!tne.
Add points to each word or letter USklg scoring directions at n~t ~eo-letter
words gel a S().point bonus. All words can be lound 1n WebSter's New World
College Dlcllonary.
JUDO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW
C 2003 Unlled FeM~• Syndbte, lnc.

L---....J

...-----~

YEA\L

11-\AiWASI.I'i
f.'I'. t.'?

~1!.1.:(
.).

~a..N5

Vl~tM HA':&gt; "CRIITE
l'if.IJE5: COULD WE ORIIIE
tr.l 5iEAD OF 1'1.'i 0"
OUR VACATION"&gt;

HECTRA HA5
D\.tiiTI~· 15~UE5 ."

KATE~

5HE

8EIN6 COPIED.

WHAT KIND OF
WIMP ARE YOU?!!

'--~

' 00·• fLO' .

-Ji- I WONDER W11AT IT WOULD
REALLV BE LIKE IF 0065
COULD TALK ...

•

- Ttie MeANING Of t.IFe1
SUile·-· WAIT A MINUTe
ANP

~'t.L

GOOGLe IT.

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