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http://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/7cf2a12451929383a198dd7dc16ce5fa.pdf
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Page 06 • ~unlla~
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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV
Israel suspends
airstrikes on south
Lebanon for 48 hours, A2
Sheets, Brewers
slip past Reds, B1
•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
MONDAY, ,Jl' I.Y ;Jt, :.~uub
:;u CENTS • \'ul. 55- !\lo. :.!44
"""·mydail~·~enli•ll'l.•·•nn
'
August meeting-to outline state-run insurance plan
SPORTS
• Sutter's big dciy
is short and sweet.
See Page 81
"Good Cars For Good People"
Financing ~~.
Availabl& •
Pinecrest Drive
. Bidwell, OH 45614
7J.;:J
740) 446-1922
J
...
·suprerrit . , ·
Saving~
~
1393 Jackson Pike o Gallipolis, OH o 740-446-4400
www.ovbc.com ·
.1'
o
'
·qjest of luck
£arne
to a[[Contestantsf
Teaching Beginning Drivers To Be ·
Responsible And To Develop
Defensive Driving Skills That Will
· ·[french City
Last A Lifetime!
ICall For An Appointmentll
I 14 State Street
o
Gallipolis, OH
Sh~awn
~ntique &
L•yne
TraintriManager
040) .Ul-9970
Craft Vtlall
• Wreaths • Candles • Primitive Pictures
·Americana • Floral Swags & Arrangements
• Wooden Signs • Victorian Collectibles
··Grapevine Trees • Garden Arch • Pillows
• Blankets • Swings • Rockers •Amish &
Mennonite Furniture & More
• Antique Glassware ·Antique Furniture
& Kitchenware
l740) 709-1017
-·-· ·--,-·---------J
• NATO takes command
of security in south
Chiulene HQSftlchfphotos
AfghaniStan from
Above:
Getting
comfortable
didn't
seem
a
problem
for many fans at.
U.S.-Ied coalition.
the Blues Bash who came without lawn. chairs. They just perched on
See Page A2. ~t~
the parking lot wall. Right: The performance of bluesman Patrick
• UMW learns about
. Sweany and his band got a rousing reception from the hund reds of .
fans gathered on the Pomeroy parking lot Sweany is considered a riswomen's issues in
ing star in the country's music bus iness and widely known for his intrifaraway places.
cate acoustic work on guitar.
See Page A3
• Middleport Court.
See Page A3
• Jeffers joins staff.
See Page A3 .
• Van Meters announce
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
umbrellas, while others go t
birth. See Page A3
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
comfortable on the parking 101
• For the Record.
wall and benches along the
Page AS
POMEROY - The summer promenade.·
music program of the Pomeroy
From the time the music started
• Scouts post judging
Blues and Jazz Society closed out at 5:30 Friday nigh1 until the
results. See Page AS
the seasori with a bang as hun- Bash came to a close after mid• Missing headstone
dreds of fans poured into town .night on SaiUrday, a doze n bands
Friday and Saturday for the Big from around th.e country had perof Civil War veteran
Bend Blues Bash.
formed on the main stage, and
returned to Ohio.
They arrived early and stayed seven others had played on this
See Page AS
late so as not to miss any part of ye.ar's second stage in the Cotlrt
what ha s become one of Street mini-park .
• AEP reports 21
Southeastern
Ohio's biggest
It was apparent that these blues
percent decline in
musical events. Not only was enthusiasts, mostly in shorts and
2nd quarter earnings.
every parking place in town T-shirts wilh hals or caps to keep
taken .-by visiting motorists, but the sun off their heads, had opted
· See Page A6
LENDER
_
__,_
_ __
Details
2
Does YouT House
We Can Help!
on Page A6
•casH•
••••nl•.••crnnc~~ec•
216 Upper River Rd.
OHIO VALLEY
CASHING
&LOAN
Oalllpoll•, Ohio
204
Member FDIC
'I• Mile •outh or
the Sliver Bridge
. 446-2404
w. 2nd st-1
Pomeroy, Ohio
992.Q481
I
IJc:- C:C:'TDCI077..ocM
L k : - CI780NI 001
'
SEC£10NS- 12 PAGES
Annie's Mailbox
A3
Calendars
A3
Classifieds
B3-4
Comics
Editorials
Sports
Weather
---- --
-. -
......,... ,
PB&J's
series
Lots of
fans came .
to the
Blues Bash
in their
boats.
Dozens
docked at
the levee,
while
others just
floated in
and
listened
from the
comfort of
their boats.
for comfort over style and were
out for a good lime.
It was also apparen1 by their
reaction to the music, that they
had come to the ri gh1 place.
Racine's .water improvement
project continues
INDEX
Pomeroy, OH 740·992·2136
Gallipolis, OH 740-446-2265
Tuppers Plains, OH 740-667-3161
.
er:-:..
Sheriff's Department
•
•
receives
cruisers
,
BY BETH SERGENT
~ We're Your Ban.k for l~fe,~
.
Mason, WV 304-773-6400
f
'
-'
some nursing home care
He sa id the syslem is more
comparable to the Veterans
Adminislration heallh sys- ·
lem, or that in Canada. The
committee has estimated the
cost of adm ini stering the
system at one cent for every
dollar spent. while the curre nt Medicare system operates at a two to three-percent
admin istrative cost, and
most private insurance companies at 20 to 35 percent.
"Most of the · world'S
industrialized nations have
a single-payer system,''
Smidd ie said.
Ohio now has an estimated 1.3 million uninsured
citi ze ns.
BSER GENT®MYDAILYSENT1 NEL.COM
•
A
--
the dock was filled with boats,
and Court Street was lined with
motorcycles.
The fans relaxed in lawn
chairs, some covered with large
WEATHER
~allipoltg mailp 'Otrthune
825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis
446-2342
[F' n) Farmers Balli(.>
£.
see
((ij) Omo VALLEY .BANK
~~
POMEROY - A committee pushing for a total
overhaul of Ohio's health
insurance system will plead
its case for a state-run, universal, single-payer health
system at a . meeting in
Pomeroy next month.
Bob Smiddie of Pomeroy
is one of a five-member
committee pushing for a
state law or ballot initati ve
that would eliminate private
health insurance in favor a
single-payer health system
funded by payroll or other
taxes. The Single Payer
Action Network - SPAN
Ohio .- will conduct an a possible ballot initiative.
Smiddie said the proposed
informational meeting at
There are two proposed heallh system would offer a
6:30 p.m. on Aug. 22 at the funding plans for the pro- savings in efficiency and in
Pomeroy Library.
gram, Smiddie said, which dollars, not only to :Small
State
Rep.
Jimmy involve various payroll and employers bul also 10 local
Stewart, R-Aibany, and his income laxes lo be paid by governments and school
Democratic opponent in employers and ind•viduals systems. It would elim inate
November's
election. earning over $200.000 over 1,500 private health
Debbie Phillips, have been annually. The spec ific fund - plans and replace il with one
invited to attend the meet" ing formula for such a sys- state-operated system.
ing, Smiddie safd.
tem would be decided by lhe · Snoiddie emphasized th ai
The single-payer system legislature , Smiddie said.
the plan is not what many
'has been introduced in both
Smiddie sa id the single- would call "socialized medihouses of the Ohio legisla- payer plan )'lould ensure cine." a system in which the
ture by State Rep. Michael health in surance for all gove rnment pays health care
Skindell, D-LUkewood, and Ohio workers and their fam-~ providers. Instead. private
Senator · Bob Haga n, D- ilies, and would . eliminate physicians, dentists and
Youngstown. Legislation employers· he alth plans . . optometric doctors would be
was firsl inlroduced in 2004. Oul-of-state residents who pmd for services by the
The committee is also circu- work in Ohio would also be state's insurance syste m.
lating petitions 10 prepare for covered under I he proposal. Prescription medicalions,
Bash
to·
Since 1872
.
J•. REED
INSIDE
Trucking, Inc. Dave's Supreme Auto
c.c.
BY BRIAN
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Bs
A4
B Section
A6
© 2006 Ol)io Valley Publi'llhing Co.
RACINE -After a period
of three weeks when contraclors were waiti ng on slate permils, it now appears conslruction is back on track at the new
Racine water treatment plant .
anCI in addition construction
has begun on the village's two
new water wells.
Doug Rces, project inspector
for tile village, said barring bad
weather there should be no
more delays facing the plant's
construction. Last week workers from Downing Construct ion
were installing rcoar at the
plant and setting forms that lhe
J. Reed/ photo
concrete frost proof walls will Two "new" c,ruisers will be added to Meigs County Sheriff Robert
be poured into to construct the Beegle 's fleet, wi th Montgomery County Sheriff Dave Vore 's donation
50
feet by 30 feet plant.
Beth Sergontjphoto
. of two retired cars. Vore delivered the cars -and the keys to Beegle on
Rees said the placement of Friday. The two sheriffs are 'pictured with Chief Deputy Phil Plummer,
Workers from Ohio Drilling dive down 55 feet to
where the two new wells will be located in Racine styrofoam insulation against Major Mike Plummer, Major Mike Nolan and Major Ed Copher of
Ihe walls, some backfi II work
in the well f1elds along Vine Street. Expect the
Montgomery County Sheriff's. Department. The Dayton she riff' ~
project to be completed in arwnd two months.
Please see Racine, AS
department maintains a 100-car fleet. Vore said.
· '
·
'
!
•
�The Daily Sentinel
Israel
for48
NATION • WORLD
on
PageA2
Monday, July 31,2006
NATO takes command of
security in south Afghanistan
from U.S.-led coalition
BY FISNIK ABRASHI
BY KATHERINE SHRADER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
AND
. KATHY GANNON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS
JERUSALEM - Israel
suspended air attacks on
south Lebanon for 48 hours
in the face of widespread
outrage over an airstrike
Sunday that killed at least 56
Lebanese, almost all of them
women and children. when
it leveled a building where
they had taken shelter.
The announcement made by a State Department
.spokesman with Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice
in Jerusalem - appeared to
retlect American pressure
on Israel to make some concession after the strike.
In addition to suspe nding
air attacks, Israel will <rl.so
allow the opening of corri dors for 24 hours for
Lebanese civilians who
want to leave south Lebanon
for the north and would
AP Photo
maintain land , sea and air
corridors for humanitarian A Lebanese Red Cross volunteer tries to calm down Jeinab Shalhoub, 66, a childless
assistance, officials said.
widow, after she realized that many members of her extended family were·killed on a demolIsraeli government offi- ished building, background, that was struck by Israeli war plane missiles at the village of
cials confirmed
Prime Qana near the southern Lebanon city of Tyre Sunday. An Israeli airstrike killed at least 50
Minister Ehud Olmert agreed people - more than hall children..:... in a southern Lebanese village Sunday, the deadliest
to an immediate 48-hour halt attack in 19 days of fighting.
in airstrikes on Lebanon
around midnight Sunday peace'' in the Middle East taken refuge from fighting. rillas in the Taibeh Project
while the military concludes and said: America mourns That attack sparked an inter- area, about two miles inside
its inquiry into the attack on the loss of innocent life, national outcry that forced a Lebanon. Hezbollah said two
the south Lebanese village of those tragic occasions when halt to an Israeli offensive.
of its fighters were killed.
Qana. The officials spoke on innocent people are killed."
In Beirut, some 5,000 pro- The. Israeli military said eight
condition of anonymity
Before the suspension of testers gathered in downtown soldiers were wounded.
because they were not autho- . airstrikes was announced, Beirut, at one point attacking
Some 460 Lebanese,
rized to talk to reponers.
Olmert told Rice the cam- a U.N. building and burning mostly civilians, had been
The officials left open the paign to crush Hezbollah American tlags, shouting, killed in the campaign
possibility that Israel , might could last up to two weeks "Destroy, Tel Aviv, destroy
through Saturday, according
hit targets to stop inuninent more.
Tel Aviv" and chanting tor to the Health Ministry attacks, and that the suspen"We will not stop this bat- Hezbollah's ally Syria to hit
:sion could last less than 48 tle, despite the difficult inci- Israel. Another protest by before the attacks on Qana.
hours if the military com- dents this morning," he told about 50 people on a road Thirty-three Israeli soldiers
pletes its inquiry before then. his Cabinet after the strike, leading to the U.S. Emba"y have died, and Hezbollah
Lebanon said the Israeli according to a panicipant. " If forced security forces to rocket attacks on· northern
Israel have killed 18 civilsuspension was inadequate. necessary, it will be broad- close the roatl'there.
ians,
Israeli authorities said.
"There is no cease-fire ened without hesitation."
Images of children's bodKathy
Gannon reported
and ihere . is no cessation of
The
U.N.
Security ies tangled in the building's
hostilities," Lebanese spe- Council met in an emer- ruins, being carried away on from Qana, Lebanon.
cial envoy Nouhad Mahoud gency session and approved blankets or wrapped in plastold reporters at the United a presidential statement that tic sheeting were aired on
Nations late Sunday. "We expressed "shock and dis- Arab news networks.
are looking for something tress" over Israel's attack on
In Qana, Khalil Shalhoub
much more than that."
Qana but stopped short of was helping pull out the dead
·The
bloodshed . in condemning it.
until he saw his brother's
Lebanon prompted Rice to
After news of the deaths body taken out on a stretcher.
cut short her Mideast mis- emerged: Rice telephoned
"Why are they killing us?
sion and intensified world Lebanese Prime Mini ster What have we done?" he
demands on Washington to Fuad Saniora and said she screamed.
back an immediate end to would stay in Jerusalem to
Israel said Hezbollah had
the fighting.
continue work on a peace fired more than 40 rockets
A three-story house on the package, rather than .make a from Qana before the
outskirts of Qana was leveled planned visit to Beirut on· airstrike, including several.
when a missile crashed into it ·Sunday. Saniora said he told from near the building that
at l a.m. Red Cross officials her not to come.
was bombed.
·
said 56 were killed and
Rice decided to cut her
At a news conference in
police said 34 children and Mideast trip short and Tel Aviv Sunday night, mil12 adult women were among return to Washington on itary officers showed aerial
the dead. It was worst single Monday morning.
footage taken two days ago
strike since Israel's campaign
British Prime Minister of Katyushas being fired in
in Lebanon began on July 12 Tony Blair, who earlier sup- proximity to houses in
when Hezbollah militants ported the U.S. stance, said Qana, and of a Katyusha
crossed the border into Israel Washington must work launcher firing missiles and
and abducted two soldiers.
faster to put together the then being driven into Qana
The attack in Qana broader deal it seeks.
and hidden inside a house.
brought Lebanon' s death
Foreign Ministry official
But Saniora said talk of a
toll to more than 510 and larger peace package inust Gideon
Meir
accused
pushed American . peace wait until the tiring stops.
Hezbollah of "using their
efforts to a crucial juncture,
"We will not negotiate own civilian population as
as fury at the United States until the Israeli war stops human shields."
tlared in Lebanon.
Israel said residems of
shedding the blood of inno-.
The Beirut government cent people," he told a gath- Qan~ had been warned to
said it would no longer ering of foreign diplomats. leave. On Thursday, the
negotiate over a U.S. peace But he underlined that Israeli military's AI-Mashriq
package without an uncon- Lebanon stands by ideas for radio that broadcasts in\o
ditional cease-fire. ·
disarming Hezbollah that it southern Lebanon warned
: In Qana, workers pulled put forward earlier thi s residents . their villages
din-covered bodies of young week apd that Rice praised. would be "totally destroyed"
boys and girls -. dressed in · He took a tough line and if missiles were fired from
the. shorts and T-shirts they himed that any Hezbollah them. Leallets with similar
had been sleeping in - out re s pon s~ tu the airstrike at the messages were dropped in
of the mangled wreckage of village of Qana was justitied. some areas Saturday.
the building. Bodies were
"As long ·;rs the aggression
But Shalhoub and others
carried in blankets.
continues there is response in the village said residents
Two extended families, to be exercised," he said, were too terrified to take the
the Shalhoubs and the pr~r i s in g Hezbollah's leader road out of the village.
Hashems, had gathered in Sheik Hassan Nasrallah for
The road to the nearest
the house for shelter from his ·'sacrifices."
main city, Tyre, is lined with
anoth.er night of Israe li
Lebanon demanded an charred wreckage and
bombardment in the border international probe.
smashed buildings from
area when the strike brought
Hezbollah said on its AI- repeated Israeli bombings.
the building down .
Manar television that it will
More
than
750,000
"I was so afraid. There retaliate. vowing, ''The mas- Lehanese have tled their
was dirt and rocks and I sacre at Qana will not go homes in the fighting. But
couldn't see. Everything unanswered.'' It hit northern many thousands more are
was black." said 13-year- Israel on Sunday with 157 · still believed holed up in the
old Noor Hashem, who sur- rockets -- the highest one- south, taking refuge in
:Vived, although her five sib- day total during the offen- schools, hospitals or baseJings did not. She was . sive - with one Israeli mod- ments of apm1ment .buildings
pulled out of the ruins by erately wounded and 12 oth- ·amid the lighting - many of
her uncle, whose wife and ers lightly hurt, medics said. them too afraid to tlee.
Iraq 's top Shiite cleric,
Lebanese Defense Minister
five children also died.
Israel apologized for the Grand Ayatollah AI i ai- Elias Murr disputed allegadeaths but blamed Hezbollah Sistani, demanded an imme- tions that Hezbollah was firguerrillas, saying they had diate cease-fire in Lebanon, ing missiles from Qana.
"What do you expect
fired rockets into northern warning the Muslim world
Israel from near the building, will "'not forgive" nations Israel to say? Will it say that
Rice· cal led the Qana that .stand in the way of stop- it killed 40 · children and
women''" he told Qatar!)ombing "awfu l" and said ping the lighting.
Lebanese anger w.as based ai-Jazeera TV station.
she wanted "a cease-tire as
soon as possi ble ..,,It appeared heightened by memories of
Before dawn Sunday,
to be her tirst real q1 ll for a a 1'996 Israel i artillery bom- Israeli gro'und forces backed
bardment that hit a U.N. by hea vy artillery fire
quick end to the bloodshed.
Pre,ident Bu sh repeated ha'e in Qana. killin~ more c-rossed the border and
hi ' call for ~ .. ,u~tai n ab l e than I00 Lebane'e who had ' c:las hed with Hezbollah guer- ·
KABUL, Afghanistan NATO troops assumed
command Monday of military operations in volatile
southern Afghanistan from
the U.S.-Ied coalition.
marking the first time the
alliance has condu~ted land
combat operations.
A NATO-led force, made
up mostly of Briti,sh,
Canadian and Dutch troops,
took over in the south from
a U.S.-Ied anti-terror coalition that was first deployed
nearly five years ago · to
unseat the hardline Taliban
regime for harboring Osama
bin Laden.
"Today 's transfer of
. authority demonstrates to
the Afghan people that there
is a ·strong commitment on
the pan of the international
community
to further
extend security into the
southern
region's
provinces," Lt. Gen. Karl
Eikenberry, commander of
U.S.-Ied coalition forces,
said in a NATO statement.
The mission is considered·
the most dangerous and
challenging in the Western
alliance's 57-year history. It
coincides with the deadliest
upsurge in fighting in
Afghanistan since late 200 I
that has killed hundre'\s of
people - mostly militants
-since May.
The takeover followed
two days of intense fighting
that left at least 30 Taliban
dead.
Coalition and Afghan
troops killed 20 militants on
Saturday
in
southern
Uruzgan province, where
some I ,500 Dutch troops
have deployed. Another six
insurgents were killed
Sunday by Afghan forces in
the southeast. Four militants
died in separate explosions
The Daily Sentinel
POMEROY Mei~,
High School frc>hm~n orientation. II a.m to 4 p.m.
Tuesday and Wednesday.
For more information call
992 -2158.
Wednesday, Aug. 2
REEDS'VILLE - Olive
Township Trustees, 7:30
p.m.,
Olive Township
Garage .
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees will
meet at 6:30 p.m. at the
Pageville town·hall.
meetings
ARIEL
ESTABLISHED 1895
The Ariel Summer Theatre Presents
SHOWBOAT
Aug. 25 & 26 8 PM Nightly
www.arieltheatre.org
The Ariel-Dater Hall
Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, OH
740-446-ARTS "127871
428
SUPPORTS
BYTHEBEND
Monday, July 31,
Community Calendar
P~blic
while planting ·bombs in
southern Kandahar province.
The · alliance's 8,000strong NATO deployment
in the south includes some
U.S. troops and will be
under the command of
British Lt. Gen. David
Richards: Officials said
Richards
effectively
becomes the first non-U.S.
general
to
command
American forces in combat
operations.
.
"In one sense it is historical," Richards told reponers
Sunday before assuming
command. ''But also it is
imponant for the world that
Afghanistan is not allowed
to be tipped back to its pre9/ll state and allow a
Taliban lookalike government with its sympathies to
. come back into power."
NATO conducted aerial
combat · operations during
the' wars in Bosnia and
Kosovo during the 1990s,
but it has yet to conduct
major ground combat operations since it was founded
·in 1949 as a deterrent
against the Soviet bloc •.
NATO already has troops
in the more stable regions of
Kabul and the nonh and
west of Afghanislan. Most
of the forces deployed to the
south were moved into the
region months back, but
until now have operated
under coalition command.
PageA3
2006
ANNIE'S MAILBOX
Middleport Lodge #363.
F&AM, monthly busines,
meeting. Bring non-peri~h
able food items for Grand
Masters food bank program.
All Master Masons invited.
Medical Mutual Insurance
Companies. This is not a
luncheon meeting.
Church events
Office worker should
stop playing with fire
Monday, July 31
PORTLAND -- Lebanen
BY KATHY MITCHELL
Refre~hments.
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.,
Monday, July 31
AND MARCY SUGAR
TUPPERS PLAINS town~hip
building . All
RUTLAND
The
Ea,tern Music BOlh!Crs, 7
meetings for the remainder
Dear Annie: How can
p.m.
, high school band Rutland Frlh!will Bapti st
of the year will be the last
you
will
hold
vacation
tell when someone is
Church
room. Finalize fair booth
day of the month.
school
from
July
31Oirting
with you? I find
Bible
plans.
POMEROY - Veterans
CHESTER Chester Aug. 4, 6 to !1:30 p.m. myself attracted to one of
Service Commi"ion. 9 a.m.
Counci l 323, Dau~hters of . Theme will be "Trad in g my co-workers. We joke
Monday at office. 11 7
kid with each other, and
Ainerica. 7:30 p.1n. at the Places' ' There will be class- and
Memorial Drive. Pomeroy.
'ometimes
have heated
es
from
nursery
age
chilMasonic hall ..Charter to be
RACINE Southern
debate;
over
different
draped
for
Margaret dren to teens .
Board of Education. g p.m .
1ssues.
Amberger. Doris Koenig,
at the Media Center at
I've been married for
and Lillian Demoskey.
Southern.
three years, and I'm a little
Members to wear white.
Tuesday, Aug. I
out of practice. I can' t tell if
Friday, Aug. 4
Wednesday, Aug. 2
CHESTER - Che >te r
Monday, July 31
his friendly demeanor and
POMEROY THE
POMEROY
Bob · extra-long stares are just
Township Board of Trustees
.POMEROY - The OHregular monthly meeting. 7 Kan Coin Club will meet at PERI Chapter 74 of Meigs Thompson will observe his him being friendly or a sign
' birthday
on of something else. Even
p.m .. Cheswr Town Hall.
. 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy County will meet at I p.m . 85th
at
the
Meigs
County
Senior
Orange' Library. There will be a
Wednesday. Aug. 2. Cards before I was married. · I
ALFRED · Citizens ·Q,enter. Guest may he sent to him at could never tell when a guy
Township Trustees, 7:30 meetin g and auction.
p.m at the home of fi scal
speakers will be representa- 42370 Thompson Way, was flirtin g with me. Mv
· Tuesday, Au!l. I
officer. Osie Follrod.
tives from Aetna and Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
MIDDL:EPORT
frie'nds would have to ale r~l
me when it was happening.
So, what signs should I
look for to tell if he's interested in me personally or
RA C IN E:
Articles impact i' bro"d," '<lid
Walker asked ''What robs Phill ipians about the "peace just f~scinated by my contaken from the Response Winebrenner, not ing thut you of peace ?" She made a that passcth all understand- versatiOn? - Dazed and
magazi ne. one on the treat- American workers are los- list of ideas from the group. ing.''· She suggested, "Take Confused
Dear Dazed: We wonder
ment of women in lndia .and . ing their jobs to companies They included the tele- a littl e bit of time every day
why you are look ing at all.
Afghanistan, and the other moving overseas. The phone, children, health to findpeace.''
The meeting opened with In an office where male and
on globilization. were employees in foreign coun- issues. stress, em(Jioyment
revi ewed
by
Cindy tries are often treated poor- issues, and lack of money.
a reading of the UMW pur- . female co, workers conver'e
Winebrenner at the recent lyund earn about $ 1 a day.
She made a column of pose and devoti.ons by frequ ently, llirting often
meeting of the Racine She 'aid stores like Wal- those things which bring Deborah Woodfocusing on comes with the territory,
and it can be completely
Mart thrive on foreign peace. Peace comes from Mark 2:21-22.
United Methodist Women.
Winebren ner said the made products, but said things such a> good health ,
Correspondences includ- innocent. A married woman
treatment of women in they are not the only com- the Ohio River. sunsets. ing a thank you for dona- should treat it just as it
those two countries is gen- panies benefi1ing from su~h friend s, sending children to tions to the Racine United appears- n<Jmore. no less.
erally harsh and that mental practices. Accon.Jing to the scho.ol. vacation, pets, a Methodist Church vaca- If your co-worker is lookin g
and physical abuse is com·- Response article a w~iy to blue sky with white Ouffy tion Bible school pool for something else,. you
mon. The UMW is provid- combat the problem is to clouds.
grandchildren. party as read. New busi- don't want to know about it.
ing safe houses for women purchase fair trade prod- chocolate and God. She .ne ss di scussed included Stop playing with fire .
Dear Annie: My 8-yearsaid it docs not take mtrch the new Foothills District
in both countries. espedally ucts, Winebrenner said .
old
daughter takes ~ dance
The program ·for the to
give
us
peace . for United Methodist
for victiins of physi cal
class.
While she is no
abuse. She noted that it is a. meeting was presented by "Sometimes you have to churches. The Festival of
challenge for the UMW to Karen , Walker. She gave just close your eyes lind let Sharing gifts were also Paula Abdul. she has fun,
be present in many areas three scripture references : · God give you peace. lt mentioned as well as the and it rea,lly helps in terms
there because of the reli- Romans I :7. I Corinthians doesn ' t cost anything," Annual Day Celebration of physical activity. developing friend ships with
l :3 and Galatians I :3. All Walker said.
gious laws.
September 9.
other
children, introducWalker le ft the group
The group will have a pic 'The impact of globaliza- of the scriptures refer to
tion to an art, etc.
with a sc ripture from nic on Aug. 28.
tion is far reaching and the , grace and peace.
A few weeks ago, the girls
performed at their annual
recital. It was a nervewracking day of preparing
French braids. stage makeup and costumes. My sister
was supposed to baby-sit
Coleman, Middleport, fail - sumption· (3}, disorderly · Middleport. underage con- . my 3-year-old son, but she
MIDDLEPORT
sumption; Clay Russell. became ill and had to cancel
.May!'lr · Sandy lannarelli ure to appear, disorderly conduct (2}. $825.
di sorderly at the last minute : My husrecently processed the fol- by intoxication, $330;
. Heather
Boyles, Middleport ,
lowing cases in Middleport · Roger Chadwell, Mason, Middleport, failure to com~ conduct, S165; Stephanie band was working, so I had
W.Va .. possession of mari- ply, failure to appear, disor- English, Middleprt, pos- no choice but to take my son
Mayor's Court:
Forfeiting bonds were: juana, possession of drug derly conduct, $495; John session of marijuana . with us.
Brittany
Hollingsworth, paraphernalia, $430: Dean Nebon, Middleport, open $165; Kenneth Currence,
While helping my daugh Pomeroy, container in a motor ;vehi- Middleport. speed, $75; ter prepare. I had my son in
Wilmington , wrong way on Whittin gton ,
a one way street, · $90; · disorderly conduct. fa ilure cle, contributing (2), $895; Keith Day, Jr. , Middleport, the dressing room for about
Albe11 Goff, Letart, W. ~-. to .comply, $695; Jamie Mary Todd, Middleport, dri- disorderly conduct, $ 165; 40 minutes,. After the perspeed, $90; Nancy Clark. Yost, Bidwell, speed. $77; ving under suspension, fail- Je ssica Tabler, Middleport, formance, we walked back
Pomeroy, speed, $80; Jacob Young, Maso n, ure to appear, fa ilure to failure to appear, failure to to the dres sing room. I was
Joseph Edwards. Cheshire. W.Va .. possession of mari- comply, menacing threats. comply, $330.
stopped at the door by
Raymond
Klein , another mother and told I
speed.
$78;
Ahgela juana, possesion of drug petty theft, posse ssion of
drug paraphe.rnalia, $1 ,525; Pomeroy. failure to appear, couldn't take mv · son
Mitchell , Vinton. speed. lJaraphernalia, $430.
Prddy, Syracuse, petty theft, open container, inside. I laughed and sa id
Jennifer
Rick Fraley, Middleport,
$78; Arthirr Conley, South
failme to appear. failure to OM VI, left of center, $790: $645; ' Jesse Leu schel, we'd already been ·in there .
Shore, Ky., speed, $90.
Rebec..:a
DeLong . comply (2). public intoxica- Larrv Elswick, Cllarleston, Guysville, squealing tires, We walked in to get my
speed,
$85; · $165;
James
Bias, daughter's belongings, and
Pomeroy, speed, $77: tion (3), $1,155; James W. Vir. ,
con- as· we left. I overheard thi >
Middleport,
underage
Myers ,
Heather Smith, Racine, Jamebon, Port~mouth, dri- Christopher
assured c.;lear distance , ving under sus pension, Pomeroy, speed, $76; Kathy sumption. ·$165: Curtis sa me woman complaining
$90: Dwayne Weaver. $350: Ri c:hard Wa rd. Jr.. Shockey .. Pdmeroy, petty Riftle, Middleport , criminal about me.
to theft, $315; Angela Carter. mischief. $265: Jame s
Pomeroy. speed, $84: Middleport , failu re
I went mer to her and
Raymond
Klein, appear, underage tonsump- Middleport. petty theft. Fitchpatrick . Middleport.
failure to appear, $165:
Middleport, speed, $77: tion, $330; Preciou s Moore, $315.
Harlev
McDonald . Brandon Roach , Pomerov.
Jeffrey Farmer, Coshocton. Middleport, OMVl. failure
disorderly underage
consumption.
speed. $93: Roger Cotterill, to appear, posess io n of drug Middleport ,
$165:
·
Beverly
Collins,
Rutland, expired registra- paraphernalia (2). petty conduct, $165: Jackie
tion. $90:. Shirley Buckner, theft. disorderly conduct, Smith, Middleport, di sor- Racine, speed, $81; Heather
$2,040; Charles Crabtree. der! y conduct.
$165: Roush. Middleport , disorLangsv ille, speed, $80.
derly conduct. $165.
Matthew
Wandling.
Fined were : Timothy Middleport, underage conMARIETTA - · Michm;l
and Mi ssy VanMeter of
Clubs and
organizations
Birthdays
UMW learns about women's issues in faraway places
MIDDLEPORT COURT
explained that I didn't have
u 'i ner. She said too bad. I
still shouldn't take him into
the dressing room becuu'e
the gi rls were completely
naked ;md her 8-year-old
daughter was offended.
Annie , mv son doe~n'l even
know ·the
differe nce
between boys and girls. and.
l1c was certain ly not watching them dress. He was
more interested in being
with his si>ter and playing
with his toys .
I apologized to the
woman lor offending her
daughter, but said. "He\
onl y 3. Tell he r to get over
it.'' l cou ldn 't just leave my
son in the hallwav. What do
you say? - The Last Dance
in Pennsylvania
Dear Last Dance: A 3year-o ld is riot sexually
interested in girls, and
since you had no other
place to leave your son. it
was fine to bring him into
th e
dressing
room ..
Howel'er, an 8-year-old girl
can be embamrssed by any
number of things. including
being naked in front of a
toddler, so please cut her
some slack.
Dear Annie: I am writing
in response to your repl y to
"Worried Mom." I was a
"good kid" in high school,
but whil e I maintained
excellent grades, my parents. to this day. don't know
many of the things I did and
lied about.
·
I consider myself lucky
to have found common
sense and a strong fa ith
immediately after graduating. I believe if my parents
had been more consistent in
their disciplinary effort s
rather than having ''heartfelt talks," I would have
fared better. Too man y hugs
and not enough action produce disrespect. - Awake
in the West
Dear Awake : Heartfelt
talks should not take the
place of appropriate discipline, but neither ~hould
discipline be all there is . A
parelll who is too lax is just
as ;,]effective as one who is
tuo strict. Thanks for your
perspective.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell atld
Marcy Sugar: longtime editors of the A1111 l.anders
column. Please e-mail your
questions . to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, I L
606/1. To find out more
about Annie 's Mailbox,
and read features by other
freators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creator.• .wm.
. VanMeters
announce birth
State employe'es told to take religious references out of e-mails
Brenda K. Jeffers
COLUMBUS . (AP) Workers 111 th e Ohio
Department of Taxation
have been told to stop
attaching feligious postscript·s and other messages
to their e-mails.
Internal audit <rdmini>trator William Con notified
employees last week that
workers who attach Bible
verses or other sayings :tt
the bottom of their e-mails
could be disciplined.
Employees ignored earli er requests to stop. >o Cort
Marietta
To see how your ad could a·ppear
in a Gizmos &Gadgets comic contact:
•
Dave or,Brenda
1
at 992-2155
The Daily Sentinel
1----------.:..''-----------------..:....__
•
MIDDLEPORT -, John
and Emily Acree of
Middl eport' · announ~e the
birth of li daughter. Cadence
Taylor Acret'. <_111 June 29. at
Hol zer Medical Center.
She weighed 7 pounds 5
ounces and was 20 inchc, .
long. Grandparents are
Betsy and Brett Jones of
Racine. Dun anti Beth
Stivers. and David and
Linda Acree of Middlcport.
Her great-grandmother is
Norma Custer of Pomeroy.
All
•
Ross Michael VanMetl!r
Ross Brown of Zanesville, .
and Mr. and Mrs. Ri chard
Weaver
of
Kevstonc
Height>. Fla.
·
styles of carpet are includl;d :
BERBER CARPET, SAXONY CARPET, TRACKLESS CARPET, SHAG
CARPET, LEVELLOOPCARPET,and SCULPTURED CARPET.
No extra charge for movi ng furniture or removing old carpet.
CALL US OR STOP IN! '
We'll come to your home and rhcasure for free no ob ligation quote .
Cadence Taylor Acree
,,
__J
lh~
1s ISSUing a more severe the place for proverbs, per- birth of their fir 't child. a
warning,
department sonal advice or reli giou s son . Ross Michael. born
Jul v 15 , at Mariettd
spokesman
Gary rele rences.
Cort found seve ral e-mail Me.morial Ho,pital The
Gudmundson said. Cor1 had
received about half-doze n sign-otfs he found inappro- infant weighed 7 pound s.
complaints from agency priate. One tax commission- 12 ounces.
Grandparents are Mr. and
er agent ended an e-mail
'tall about the messages.
Mrs.
Michael Wilfong of
uThere is a conlinuing with "Deuteronomy 30:15Middleport. Mr. and Mrs.
·
trend to voice perso nal 19ChooseLile."
Pre " ley
of
Another em ployee's e- Randy
views us pm1 of a salutatlon
imniediately before or after mail t1ffered these words: Syracuse. Mr. and Mrs.
the se nder 's nmne," Cort "Mav God continue to ble ss Roy VanMeter o}' Racine.
are
wrote in a message to you "and keep you from all Greilt-grandparents
department employees. Cort hurt. harm and danger. Thi s Lucy and the late Olen
Vinton.
of
wen t on to explain th at a I as k' in Jesus ' name . Wilfong
Genevieve and the late
business environment i~ not Amen."
Jeffers
joins staff Birth announced
POMEROY - Brenda K.
Jeffers has joined t~e staff
of Teaford Real Estate in
Pomeroy.
She has 15 years of experience and is a member of the
National Association of
Relators, the Ohio Associaton
of Relators. and the Athens
'Board of Relators.
Jeffers
re.,ides
in
Middleport with her husband, Dave, and can be contacted at 'In- 3056 or on line
at www.tcaforurcalestate.net.
annuuth'l'
�OPINION
The Daily Sentinel
The Daily Sentinel
PageA4
Monday, July 31, 2006
Pro-Iraq Democrats face uncivil war ·
Palace Theater had to do Clinton·, White House
with more than just saving chief of stafl~ also took
Lieberman from a looming Democrah to task for going
defeat: It also had to do with after Licbe~man.
his ' party's weakened pos"The late Con~ressman
ture on national security and Mo Udall used to' say that
fighting terrorism and, by when Democrats form a firproxy, with help ing hi s ing squad. they tend to form
wife, Sen. Hillary Clinton. it in a cin:le and ·end uP.
who, like Lieberman, thinks. shooting
each
other.·
the United States must con- Panetta told me in an intertinue to support the Iraqis in view over the weekend.
their struggle for democracy
''I'm a believer in
and is opposed to a with- Edmund Burke's philosodrawal until that in iss ion- is phy that people elect you to
accomplished.
exercise your conscience
· Like
other
pro-war independently. They don't
Democrats, Sen. Clinton elect you to reflect what~ver
has felt the wrath of anti- the popular will of th e
war activists who will be an moment is." Panetta said.
obstacle to her ambitions to
·:Democrats ought to
win the Democratic presi- stand b<>ck und ask themdential nomination in 2008. selves the most imponant
Bill Clinton does not question:
Does
Joe
mince words about what · Lieberman vote his conhis party's now-dominant science or is he controlled
antiwar wing wants to do to· by one interest gro up or
any Democrat who sup- another? I think the answer
ports the war - calling the is clear. He vote' his conattempt by leftist ideo- science. w1d I don't think
logues like MoveOn.org to he uught to he penalized
oust Lieberman "the nutti- (by Dcmonats) for that,"
est strategy I ever hearu in he sa id.
my life."
Last week's Quinnipiac
"I think the Democrats University primary poll
are making a mistake to go showed him trailing Lamont
after each other,.. he said _by 4 points (withiti the
earlier this month at a con- "poll 's margin of error), 51
ference at the Aspen percent to 47 percent.
wllile
In stitute - lecturing hi s · However,
party's rank and file not to Lieberman has infuriated
"allow our differences over his party's antiwar activists,
what to do now in Iraq ... it seems Connecticut's elecdivide us instead of focu s- torate ar large supports him.
ing
on
replacin g A second poll showed him
Republicans. "
winning in a walk in the
Clinton is not the only November election.
Democrat chastising his
"Lieberman is still strong
party's left. Leon Panetta, among Republicans and
BY DONALD I..AMBRO
11 1 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
WASHINGTON- Can a
divided
political party at
www.mydallysentlnel.com
war with itself attract
enough popular support to
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
win a majority in either
house of Congress?
Jim Freeland
This is the rarely asked
question
that · Democrats
Publisher ·
must confront in this election
year on the issue of
Chf)rlene Hoeflich
Iraq. It is an unshakeable
General Manager-News Editor
political axiom that parties
are successful when they
are united behind a clear,
compelling agenda. Yet
Congress shall make no law respecting an
Democrats are anything but
united on Iraq, nor do they
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
have a plan, beyond troop
free exercise tlaereof; or abridging the freedom of withdrawals, on what they
speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo- would do to bring about a
successful outcome there.
ple peaceably .to assemble, and to petition the
The latest evidence of the
Government for .a redress of grievances.
Democrats' uncivil war was
in full view this week when
- The ·First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution former President Clinton,
still the.most popular figure
in the Democratic Party,
told its antiwar forces to
cease their attempts to
Today is Monday. July 31, the 212th day of 2006. There purge Democrats who supare 153 days left in the year.
port the war.
Today's Highlight in History: On July 31, 1777, the
Clinton went to Waterbury,
Marquis de Lafayette, a 19-year-old French nobleman, was Conn .• Monday to campaign
made a major general in the American Continental Army.
for embattled Sen. Joe
On this date: In 1556, St. Ignatius cif Loyola, founder of Lieberman, who is trailing
the Society of Jesus - the Jesuit order of Catholic priests anti-war insurgent Ned
and brothers· - died in Rome.
Lamont in the Democratic
In 1875, the 17th president of the United States, Andrew primary. Clinton campaigns
Johnson, died in Carter Station. Tenn., at age 66.
for lots of Democrats, only in
In 1919, Germany's Weimar Constitution was adopted by this case he was speaking up
the republic's .National Assembly.
for a Democrat who is
In 1948, President Truman helped dedicate New York despised by his party's paciInternational Airport (later John F. Kennedy International fist, anti-war forces because
Airport) at Idlewild Field.
of his support for President
ln 1953, Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio, known as "Mr. Bush's war.
Republican," died in New York at age 63.
But Clinton's appearance
In 1964, the American space probe Ranger 7 transmitted at a packed rally in the
pictures of the moon's surface.
In 1972, Democratic vice presidential candidate Thomas
Eagleton withdrew from the ticket with George McGovern
following disclosures Eagleton had once undergone psychiatric treatment.
In 1981 , a 7-week-old Major League Baseball strike ended.
In 1991 , President Bush and Soviet President Mikhail S.
DI~O'SED
Gorbachev signed the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty in
Moscow.
Ten years ago:After President Clinton's announcement
WEA~M.TWILL
that he would sign it, 9R Democrats joined the House's
Republican majority to pass a historic welfare overhaul
bill. The White House won agreement with key Republican
lawmakers on a package of anti-terrorism measures.
One year ago: Police arre.sted seven people during a raid on
an apartment in southern England, bringing to 21 the number
in custody in the relentless hunt for accomplices in the failed
July.,21 transit bombings in London. Jeong Jang shot a 3under 69 to win the Women 's British Open by four strokes. ·
Today's Birthdays: Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton
Friedman is 94. Record executive Ahmet Erte~un is 83.
Actor Don Murray is 77. Jazz composer-musicmn Kenny
Burrell is 75. Actress Susan Flannery is 63. Singer Lobo is
63. Actress Geraldine Chaplin is 62. Singer Gary Lewis is
61. Rock singer Bob Welch is 60. Tennis player Evonne
Goolagong Cawley is 55. Actor Banry Van Dyke is 55. Actor
James Read is 53. Rock musician Bill Berry is 48. Actor
Wesley Snipes is 44. Country singer Chad Brock is 43.
Musician Fatboy' Slim is 43. Rock musician Jim Carr is 42 ..
Author J.K. Row ling is41. Actor Dean Cain is 40. Actor Ben
Chaplin is 37. Actor Loren Dean is 37. Actress Annie Parisse
is 31. Actor Robert Telfer is 29. Country singer Blaire Stroud
(3 of Hearts) is 23, Singer Shannon Curfman is 21.
Thought for Today: 'The art of life is to show your hand.
There is no diplomacy like cand'or. You may lose by it now
and then , but it will be a loss well gained if you do. Nothing
is so boring as having to keep up a deception ." - E.V.
Lucas, Eng! ish author and critic ( 1868-1938).
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
TODAY IN HISTORY
Local Briefs
independents, and that's
why he wins in a three-way
race if he runs as an independent in the general
election."
said
Doug
Schwartl.
Quinnipiac's
poll director. "In that situation. Lieberman polls 51 .
percent tn 27 percent over
Lamont · among registered
\'Diers, with Republican
attorney· Alan Schlesinger
at 9 perc·ent."
Still, if Lamont defeats
Lieberman in the primary,
it would surely send ari
intimidating warn ing to
Dcn~ocratic
lawmakers_
that anyone who dares to- .
vote their own consciences
will do so at their political
peril. It would drive a
deeper wedge in the party
on the war and, arguably,
fu rther weaken its already
anemic posture on national
security in the era of global terrorism.
This is already happening
in Washington state. where
Democratic Sen. Maria·
Cantwell, who has been
booed at party events over
her opposition to an immediate pullout. has begun to
soften her position. She,
too. faces antiwar oppo- ·
.
nents to her re-election.
Some aren't cowed by the
antiwar threats of political
retribution. Sens. Barbara
Boxer and Joe Biden are·
campaigning
for
Lieberman. But if he goes
down to defeat next month,
it will further' divide his
party on the most vital
national-security issue of
our time.
ADIABOLICAL NEW
LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
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BY RACHEL BECK
AP BUSINESS WRITER
NEW YORK - As if
investors in homebuildil)g
stocks need more to worry
about. They've already
watched their shares get
hit by the slump in home
sales and the weakening
economy.
Now add this concern to
the list: Companies writing
down . their land values
because they aren't worth
what they paid for them. It's
not a matter of if that could
happen, but how serious
and widespread those writedowns turn out to· be and
what they do to earnings.
How thi s turns out could
greatly influence where
these troubled stocks go
next.
The bursting of the five.year housing bubble is hard
to miss. As mortgage rates
have climbed over the last
two years while the Federal
Reserve boosted short-term
imerest rates 17 times, new
home construction and
buildin_g permits have
sharply declined, and the
demand for home loan s has
dropped. The National
Association
of Home
Builders said its index of
housing-market activity in
July slipped to its lowest
level since 1991.
That has sent homebuilding stocks tumbling. Since
peaking last July, the
Standard & Poor's 500
Homebuilders index is
down more than 47 percent.
making the sector its worst
performer.
The concern on Wall
Street is that more 1:!1td news
could be ahead should there
be a massive rise in landvalue write-downs. Not
only W\)uld that reduce
already weak earnings, but
it could lead to further -ero-sion in the "book· value" of
many homebuilders ·
which is generally defined
as the value .of a companfs
business should it have to
be liquidated.
" D.R. Horton Inc., for
instance, announced last
week that its profits slid 21
percent to $292.R million.
or 93 cents a share in its fis·Cal third quarter that ended
June 30. The results in the
latest quarter at the nation's
largest homebuilder include
a charge of $57.2 million, or
II cents a share. related to a
' land-option write-down.
It was a simi lar situation
at MDC Holding s Inc. ,
which reported secondquarter profit slumped 25
percent to $76.5 million , or
$1.66 a share. The company
took a $7 .9 million writeoff
for project costs. including
option deposits and other
costs related to lots it has
decided not to acquire.
Citigroup analyst Stephen
Kim wants investor> to realize that not all write-downs
are createu equal. and
encourages the.m to diller-
MIDDLEPORT - The OH-Kan Coin Club will have a
coin exhibition at Peoples Bank in Middleport from 9 a.m .
to 3 p.m. on Thursday. Appraisals will also be done at that
time. Meigs county tokens and currency along with a new
Buffalo $50 gold piece will also be on exh ibit. Door prizes
will be awarded during the day.
August reunions planned
POMEROY -The annual Arran Fry reunion will be held
Aug. 13 at Krodel Park shelter house in Point Pleasant.
Lunch will begin at I p.m. Take a covered dish.
For the Record
Foreclosures
POMEROY - Foreclosure actions were filed in Meigs
CountyCommon Pleas Court by MidFirst Bank ,-Oklahoma
City, Okla., against Michael A. Mattea, Cheshire, and others, alleging default on a mortgage agreement in the
amount of $57,748.53, and by Nationstar Mortgage,
Lewisville, Tex., against Darin Doyle Roach, Pomeroy, and
others, alleging default in the amount of $67,620.04.
Judgment
POMEROY -A judgment action was filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by U.S. Bank, N.A., St.
Louis, Mo. , against David See, Pomeroy, as executor of the
estate of Arthur J. Strauss, alleging default on a consumer
credit loan in the amount of $11,189.46.
·
A default judgment was issued to Wilmington Savings
Fund Society against Timothy W. Bentz, and others.
Dissolutions
cntiate between what's bad book ratios. which investors
and what'> worse.
often use to gauge whether a
As he sees it. it is not as stock is undervalued .
ser ious when companies
In rcc'e nt week s, the ·
take write-off's on option decline has SiJUrred some
deposits that they had pllt talk on Wall Street oxer
down for a piece of land but whether it is time to start
then . decide to not go buying
homebuilding
through with the project. shmes, as the ratio closes on·
That. in fact , generates free a level where it historically
cash now.
has bottomed. D.R. Honan,·
He contrasts that with a for instance, has a price-to-·
write -uown on · an asset book ratio of 1.05.
impairment, which means a
Not everyone, however, is
builder se~s the expected convinced the retreat for the
r.~ turn s from a project are
homebuilding stocks ts
insufficient to cover th~ over.
bui lder 's ti xed costs.
Analyst Rick Murray of. ·
.. A builder that walks away R<lymond
James
&
from an option is driving Associates notes that dur'hareholder value proactive- ing past housi ng-cycle
ly:•· Kim said in a recent note slu mps several builders ·
to clients·. "A builder record- took impairment charges
ing an asset impairment is tot<lling as much · as five to·
belatedly acknowledging I0 percent of their book
that shareholder value has value uri an annual basis for
been destroyed.''
severa l years . That pushed
Kim
suggests
that down stocks below book ·
investors try to ga uge the value, including after the
age of the land tl1at the 19HOs housing collapse
homebuilders own. Those when the price-to-book fell
with newer investments as low ·as 0.594.
·
especially those negotiated
With all. this to weigh. a
at the peak of the !10using move into homebuilding
market in 2005 - might be shares right now might not
at greater ri~k for asset be
so methin g
most
impairments. D.R. Horton investors can stomach,
and MDC are among those especially when considerwith the most exposure to ing how the current risks
recently priced lanu, while 'eem to outweigh the poten-,
Tnll Brothers Inc .. Pulte tial r~wards.
Homes Inc. and Centex
(Rachel Beck IS the
Corp. have oilier invest- narirmal busirle.\'S columnist
ments.
fur 7/w Anocimed Press.
Such write-downs are Write
tn
her
at ~
reducing companies' price-to- riJeck @aji.OI'/()
'
..
The Daily Sentinel • Page As
SCOU1S POST .JUDGING RESUL'IS
Customs and Traditions:
Troop 1271 , blue , grand
champion, Troop 1067, red.
Life Skills, other: Troop
1271, red. Girl Scout Ways:
Troop 1120. blue, grand
· champion. Life Skills,
sewing: Troop I067, blue,
grand champion.
reserve champion: Grace
Adams, . blue, honorable
mention; Kari Arnold, blue;
Meghan Short , red. ·
Communications: Katey
Hill, blue. grand champion,
Brownie
outstanding .
exhibitor; Kayla Spaun,
blue, reserve champion;
Lauren Dunn, red; Meghan
Short, white. Life Skills,
Other: · Katey Hill, blue,
grand champion, Brownie
outstanding
exhibitor;
Morgan Barringer, blue,
reserve champion; Kaylee
Werry. blue, honorable
mention; Grace Adams,
blue, honorable mention;
Grace Adams, blue, honorable mention. Life Skills,
· Sewing: Halley Wilson,
Blue , Grand Champion,
Brownie
outstanding
exhibitor; Kari Arnold,
White. Customs and Traditions:
Abigail Houser, grand
champion, Brownie outstanding exhibitor; Abigail
Houser, blue, reserve champion ; Taylor Parker, red;
Grace Adams , red. Girl
Scout Ways: Meghan Short,
blue, grand champion,
Brownie
outstanding
exhibitor.
Brownies
(individual
projects)
Junior Girl
Scouts (troop
·projects)
POMEROY Meig'
County Girl Scouts recently
held their fair judging at the
Syracuse
Community
Center. Judging result' are
as follows:.
·Daisy Girl
Scouts (troop
projects)
The Arts: Troop 5870,
grand champion. Customs
and Traditions: Troop 1292,
grand champ ion: Troop
1292, tlrst place blue ribbon.
Girl Scout Ways : Troop
1334, blue , grand champion,
Troop 1292, · blue. Out of
Doors: Troop ·1292, blue,
honorable mention.
Brownies
(troop projects)
exhibitor; Kim Deaver,
blue, reserve champion;
Kim Deaver, blue; Tess
Phelps, blue; Kim Deaver,
blue; Kim Deaver. blue;
Hannah Adams; red; Ashley
Deem, red; Holly McGrath,
red; Ashley Deem, red;
Holly McGrath, red; Kim
Deaver, red; Kim Deaver,
red.
Customs and Traditions:
Lindsey Putman, blue,
grand champion, Junior outstanding exhibitor; Alyssa
Cremeans, blue, reserve
champion; Hannah Adams,
white. Life Skills, other:
Ashley Deem, blue, grand
champion, Junior outstanding exhibitor; Hannah
Adams, white. The Arts:
Tess Phelps, blue, grand
champion, Junior outstanding
exhibitor;
Alyssa
Cremeans, blue, reserve
champion; Holly McGrath,
honorable
mention ;
Spaun, blue,
Bethany
Honorable Mention ; Ashley
Deem,
white;
Holly
McGrath, white; Tess
Phelps, w!Jite.
Out of Doors : Ashley
Deem, blue, grand champion. Junior outstanding
exhibitor; Lindsey Putman,
blue, reserve champion;
· Holly McGrath , white.
Cadette
Girl Scouts
(troop projects)
The
Arts:
Ashley
Life Skills, sewing: Troop
Buchanan , blue, grand 1204; blue, Troop I042,
Life Skills, other: Troop
champion, Brownie out- blue, reserve champion.
1254,
blue, grand champion.
standing exhibitor; Katey Life Skills, other: Troop
Hill , blue , reserve champi- 1042, blue, honorable menon; .Grace Adams, blue, . tion. Out of Doors: Troop
honorable
mention; 1276, blue, grand champiMeghan Short, blue, honor- on. Science and Beyond:
able mention; Stephanie Troop 1204, red.
Grady, blue ; Kari Arnold,
Communications: Troop
POMEROY - A divorce action was filed in Meigs blue. Culinary: Katey Hill . 1204,
red. Girl Scout Ways:
County Common Pleas Court by Robert William Arnott, blue, grand champion.
The Arts: Darci Bissell,
Troop
1204, blue, grand
Coolville, against Misty Dawn Lyons, Chester.
blue,
grand champion,
Brownie
outstanding champion. Customs and
A divorce was granted to Mini a R. Boggess from Gary exhibitor:
outstanding
Victoria Walker, Traditions: Troop 1204, Cadette
L. Boggess.
exhibitor.
Girl
Scout
Ways:
A divorce filed by Brad J. Steele against Jessica N. Steele blue, reserve champion; · blue, reserve champion; The Whitney Putman, blue,
Abigail Houser, blue, hon- Arts: Troop 1204, blue.
was dismissed.
grand champion, Cadette
orable mention .
outstanding exhibitor; Life
Lauren Dunn, blue, han- ,
Skills,
sewing:
Darci
orable
mention;
Kari
champiBissell,
blue,
grand
Arnold, blue, honorable
on. Cadette outstanding
mention; Ashley Buchanan.
exhibitor; Catherine Grady,
blue, honorable mention;
white; Ravenne Reed,
Stephanie Grady, blue;
Girl Scout Ways: Lindsey white. Out of Doors: Darci
ST. BERNARD (AP) -A stone for nearly two years Taylor Parker, blue; Katelyn
Bissell, red.
Michigan man has no idea while he searched military Ginther. blue; Katelyn Putman, blue, grand chamLife
Skills,
other:
how the missing headstone records for informatibn on Ginther, blue; Abigail pion, Junior outstanding Whitney Putman, blue,
of a Civil War veteran buried Wolf, a farmer who served Houser, blu~; Lauren Dunn, exhibitor; Lindsey Putman,
grand champion, Cadette
in suburban Cincinnati in Company K of the 102nd blue; Morgan Barringer, red; Life Skills, sewing: outstanding
exhibitor.
ended up embedded in the Ohio Volunteer Infantry blue; Kaylee Werry, blue; Lindsey Putman , blue, Science and Beyond: Darci
grand champion, Junior outKatelyn Ginther, white.
ground near his porch, but from 1862to 1865 ,
standing exhibitor. Science Bissell, blue. grand chamOut
of
Doors:
Katey
Hill,
The
records
finally
led
he's glad that it's back where
Beyond:
Holly pion, Cadette outstanding
blue, grand champion, and
him to Ohio .
it should be.
Maynard and his friend, Brownie
outstanding McGrath, blue, grand cham- exhibitor; Culinary: Darci
Brian Maynard, of Jackson,
Bissell, blue, grand champiMich., returned the heavy John Fatchett, of Parma, exhibitor; Abigail Houser, pion, Junior outstanding on,
Cadette outstanding
marble stone on Satmday to Mich., considered the head- reserve champion, blue; exhibitor; Ashley Deem, exhibitor;
Whitney Putman,
the unmarked grave of Joseph stone too precious to ship, so Ashley Buchanan, blue, blue, reserve champion; blue, reserve
champion;
Wolf, who died in 1867 and is they drove five hours south honorable mention, Katelyn Tess Phelps, blue; Alyssa
white.
Ravenne
Reed,
Cremeans. blue, honorable
buried in St. John Cemetery to make sure it arrived safe- Ginther, red.
Customs and Traditions:
ly.
Members
of
the
Michigan
Science and Beyond: mention; Shawna Murphy,
north of Cincinnati. Maynard
Whitney
. Putman, blue,
said he discovered the head- a-nd Ohio Sons of Union Ashley Buchanan, grand white.
Shawn11 grand champion, Cadette
stone while removing ·old Veterans of the Civil War champion, blue, Brownie ; Culinary:
exhibitor:
helped the pair install in the outstandil)g
exhibitor;··. Murphy, grand champion, outstanding
patio steps at his home.
Ashley
Bateman-Lee,
blue,
outstanding
Abig·ail
Houser,
blue, Junior
Maynard kept the head- headstone.
reserve champion; Whitney
Putman,
white.
Communications; Whitney
Putman, blue, grand c)lampion, Cadette outstanding
exhibitor; Darci Bissell,
from PageA1
blue; Catherine Grady,
white.
as well as piping and electrical work still remain to be
completed before a foundation can be poured.
There are four workers at
the site who work in four,
Communications: Lindsey
10-hour shifts per week.
Houser, red. The Arts:
Downing Construction's bid
Ericka Cogar, blue. grand
for its portion of the work
champion.. Senior outstandwas $1 ,086,000 for coning exhibitor. Life Skills,
struction of the actual plant.
other: Lindsey Houser, blue ,
Street
Commissioner
grand champion, Senior outJohn Holman said as far as
standing exhibitor and
he knew the completion
Lindsey Houser, blue,
date for the plant was still
reserve champion.
on track for December.
Customs and traditions:
The work on Racine's two
Lindsey Houser, blue, bonnew wells started last week as
orable .mention. Science and
well with Roses Excavating
Beyond: Ericka Cogar, blue,
as the general contractor and
grand champion, Senior
Ohio Drilling doing subconoutstanding
exhi,bitor.
tracting work. Roses' bid of
Culinary: Ericka Cogar, red;
$244,600 was accepted by
. Ericka Cogar, red.
Beth Sereentjplloto
council back in May. The well
replacement project is antici- Workers from Downing Construction are back on the job after a three week .delay waiting
on state permits . Expect the plant's concrete walls to be poured this week unless the
pate\~ to la~t eight weeks.
Holman said when the weather is bad.
work .is done the pumps will
be raised to avoid the flood ing for its water improve- posely inflated to cover any Small Cities Community
plain aQd rest on an elevated ment project in grants, the . unexpected costs the project Development Block Grant
metal platform in the well village will eventually have may have, keepin g the vil- Water and Sanitary Sewer
to draw upon its Ohio Water lage from taking out 'a sec- Program administered by
field~ along Yin~ Street.
Racine currently has three and Development Authority ond loan for lhe same pro- the Ohio Department of
wells from which their (OWDA) loan to complete ject. The tigure was also Development' s Office of
water is derived. Two of the the project, and loans, unlike agreed upon before the vil- Hou sing and Community
Auto Accidents
lage knew the $500,000 in Partnerships , a $375,000
wells were constructed in grants, must be paid back.
Worker's Compensation
The OWDA loan was for State and Tribal Assistance Issue 2 grant from the Ohio
1951 and both would've
• Sports Injuries • M~l htSUillllCC~
•Medkm
been required to run simul- up to $770,000 at one and Grant (STAG) money was Public Works Commission
• Same day ,appt.
• Acupuncture
and two grants from the
taneou sly to keep up with one-half percent interest for secure back in May.
Regional
Other grants sec ured for Appalachian
the rate of. usage from the 30 years to finance the vil new water treatment plant. lage's portion of the project. the $2.3 million water Commission, one in the
Mayor J. Scott Hill had improvement project which amount of $157:000 for the
The third well was con316 Washington St
previously emphasized that includes the plant, tank. pip- wate'r wells and one for
structed in 1995.
Despite Rac.ine receiving the village may not need the ing, water wells, etc. were a $300.000 for the water pro70 to 80 IX'fcent of the fund- $770.000. The figure is pur- )500,000 grant from Ohio ject.
POMEROY - An action for dissolution of marriage was
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Lana K.
Folmer, Pomeroy, and Daniel R. Folmer, Pomeroy.
Dissolutions were granted to Tina Mae Johnson and
Robert Eugene Johnson, and Debbie Marie Meldau and
Michael Jeffrey Meldau.
Missing headstone .of Civil
War veteran returned to Ohio
ALL BUSINESS: More trouble ahead for homebuilders? ·
Letters to the editor are welcome. Thev should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject ro' editing, must be
.vigned, and include addreH and telephone number. No
unsi/(ned letters will he published. Letters should be in
guod taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to orf!.anizatiom and individuals will not be accepted for publication.
Coin exhibit planned
www.mydailysentinel.com
Cadette
Girl Scouts
(individual)
Divorces
1HAVE
DESTROY AMERICA ...
Monday, July 31, 2006
Junior Girl
Scouts
(individual)
Racine
Senior Girl
Scouts
Police continue
search for escaped
suspect in
officer's slaying
LATTAVILLE CAP) Authorities using an airplane, helicopters and dogs
to searc h for an · escaped
suspect in the slaying of a
Chillicothe police officer
said they had surrounded
him in the central Ohio
woods late Sunday.
Witnesses chased John W.
Parsons after spotti n¥ him
riding a stolen b1cycle
around I0:30 a.m. Sunday,
but they backed off when he
went into thick brush on a
hillside; Ross County
Sheriff Ron Nichols said.
About l 00 officers searched
for more than eight hours in
90-degree heat, then pulled
back and firmed up a
perimeter as night fell.
A State Highway Patrol
helicopter equipped with a
thermal imaging camera
had been ineffective during
the day, but officers hoped it
might detect Parson s· body
heat at night, Nichols said.
Authorities were to resume
searching on foot Monday
morning.
" He ·has to be . getting
tired. He has no water. He
has no food. He is on the
run and he is scared,"
Nichols said. "So we hope
to make an apprehension
yet this evening or how long
it takes. We ' II be here until
we do." ·
Parsons. 35, is charged
with four counts of ·aggralvated murder in the death of
42-year-old officer Larry
Cox. A 19-year veteran of
the force, Cox was shot in
the neck April 21; 2005,
during a police pursuit of a
mun suspected of robbing a
gas stat1on and stealing a
car. Cox was off duty and
returning from hi s parents'
house when he came upon
the chase.
Parsons escaped from a
-jail .recreation area around I
p.m. Saturday using a rope
of toilet paper and bed
sheets, Nichols said. The
recreation area is surrounded by a wall of about 17
feet, topped with two lines
of razor wire.
Parsons hid the makeshift
rope behind a block he had
dug out of.his cell wall, the
sheriff said. He said Parsons
had . removed the block
using a piece of metal from
a table in the cell and
replaced the block using
toothpaste as his mortar.
Nichols said the recreation area was closed following the escape pending
an investigation. He said the
department .will 'review its
procedures and make any
necessary changes.
Parsons also is charged
with aggravated robbery.
tampering with evidence
and two counts of grand
theft. He has been held at
the Ross County jail for
about a year.
Parsons had served 3 1/2
years in prison for aggravated robbery and breaking
and entering. He was
paroled in August of 200 I.
Lattaville is 46 miles
south of Columbus.
Frame that newspaper
photo or pnnt it on a
mug or moose pad.
RAVENSWOOD
CHIROPRACTIC CENTER
i\. Kely K. )ws Htmkks
biJROPRAOOR
Chtwpmctor of the year
l'l'l'
V.P WV ChmlJlrm:til'
Soctety
~1emhcr
of American
Uuard of 1-orcn•~e
20 yr~ r~pentnce
Memher of Ament!Ul
..kad~m~ of Medi,ul
c 304-273-5321 :!'£
Ravenswood, W'l
�J?age~6
OHIO
AEP reports 21 percent dedine in 2nd quarter earnings
Highway officials tolerant
. of illegal roadside shrines
The Daily Sentinel
Monday, July 31,2006
Mihelich, ODOT district
CLEVELAND (AP) Roadside shri nes put up to manager for Cuyahoga
memorialize victims of fatal County. There's no set policar accidents put highway cy or lime for when they get
officials in a tough situation removed, but eventually the.
remove the markers·. mementos get old and
which are illegal, or step become debris that needs to
back and let people mourn. be cleared.
Makeshift
monuments
Families often avoid that
made up of crosses, teddy fate by maintaining the
bears and flowers are a shrines and replac ing old
common sight on major items.
roads. Some who have lost
Todd McCallum, assisloved ones find the. markers tant professor of psycholoto be therape'utic, a public gy at Case Western Reserve
way to remember. They also University, said people in
can serve as a valuable mourning can find closure
warning to passers-by about in seeing the place where
the dangers of driving, sup- their loved one died. Some
porters say.
feel their nlemorials carry a
But they are also illegal, message.
according to the Ohio
"They serve as a warning
Department
of to other drivers, saying .that
Transportation. Roadside they lost a family member
shrines obstruct the high- · here, so be careful,"
way's right of way, said McCallum said.
spokeswoman
Lindsay
Thomas Crellin cherishes
Mendicino. Highway work- the shrine his son built for
ers have the right to remove his daughter, Amanda, who
them at any time.
died two years ago when
That doesn 't mean lhev do. her car wllided with a trac"We're not out there mak- tor-trailer on Interstate 90 in
ing a big deal about them," . Westlake.
Mendicino said. " We're not
"Sometimes, when 'I drive
past, I'll give it a thumbsmonsters."
Worl<;ers usually leave up. just an acknowledgment
memorials alone until thev that Amanda was there,"
get too unsightly, said Jim Crellin said. "It's sad, but I
look for the memorial every
day."
Melissa Schroeter of
Brecksville is grateful that
friends and relatives have
created a roadside memorial
for her son, Robert, who
died las t year at age 20
when his SUV swerved into
another car along Interstate
480 in Garfield Heights.
A roadside marker has
been kept for state Trooper
James .Gross since he was
shot and killed by a niotorist
on Interstate 71 near Lodi in
1996. A retired patrol
sergeant mows the ar~a and
maintains the monument.
But the safety risks created by these memorials can't
be ignored, either. Police
are concerned about people
pulling onto the shoulder of
the road to get to - lhe
shrines, said Lt. Rick
Zwayer of the State
Highway PatroL
"We
understand the
desire for people to memorialize the place where a
loved one was killed, .a nd
there is an argument that
these memorials raise public awareness, but the last
thing we want is for an
accident to occur when
someone stops," he said.
Incompetent lawyers chief reason
for overturned death sentences
BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS
biggest death row at about a decision overturning the
650 inmates, 12 of the 25 death sentence of Dewaine
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
death sentences reversed by Poindexter, convicted· of
the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of fatally shooting his ex-girlCOLUMBUS
Appeals cited attorney friend's boyfriend in 1985,
Attorney incompetence is incompetence, or 48 percent, . The 6th Circuit judges,
the top re~son cited when according to the California · including Boggs, said attorfederal appeals judges over- Department of Justice.
neys hadn't done enough to
turn geath sentences in
Reversals for attorney · tum up evidence that could
Ohio, the state with . the incompetence came· into have persuaded a jury not to
nation's second-busiest exe- · question last week after the sentence Poindexter to death.
cution chamber, a review of 6th Circuit's chief judge
Judge
Martha Craig
court rulings shows.
criticized that court's han" Daughtrey criticized Boggs
for his comments, calling
The 6th U.S. Circuit dling of death cases.
Court of Appeals
in
Judge Danny Boggs, who \hen! an affront to attorneys
Cincinnati blamed ineffec- has not looked kindly on and an accusation against
tive counsel 61 percent of coun decisions delaying exe- other 6th Circuit judges . .If
the time, or 13 of the 21 cutions in the past, said sensi- anything, defense attorneys
death sentences it has over- ble attorneys reading the "representing the absolute
turned since 1981 , the year coun's decisions could con- pariahs of society are freOhio's new capital punish- clude their clients had a better quently hamstrung by a critment law took effect, chance the less thorouglt job ical lack of relevant experiaccording to an analysis by they did as defense lawyers.
ence, an obvious lack of
The Associated Press.
"Thus. if counsel provides time and resources, or
The state has executed fully effective assistance and both," Daughtrey said.
three inmates this year and the jury simply do~s not buy
Public
defenders say
expects to put ·a fourth to the defense, then the defen- defense attorneys make 'the
death next month. Ohio has dant is likely to be execut· easiest rargei when couns are
executed 14 inmates since ed," Boggs said. "However, looking for ways to overturn
2004, behind Texas with 58 if counsel provides ineffec- questionable death sentences.
executions. Nonh Carolina tive assistance, then prisoner That's true whether the real
. executed 12 inmates during is likely to be spared, .cer- problem was errors by a judge
the same time period.
tainly for many years, and or misconduct by a PfOSC:i:\1;
In California, by compari- frequeptly forever."
tor, State Public Defender
son, which has the country's
Boggs' comments came in David Bodiker said.
.MARVELOUS MIDDLE
' A • CONSTRUCTION
i'l
llettoftk'l patflllld
Ina~
AEP raised its earnings
Analyst s surveyed by
COLUMBUS (AP) outlook
for the year to a
American Electric Power. Thomson Financial had
one of/ the nation's largest expected earnings of 54 range of between $2.65 and
$2.80 per share. from the
power generators, said cents per share.
"With the recent spate of ~~~evious range of between
Thursday its second-quarter
earnings declined 21 percent, extremely hot weather across $_.50 and $2 .70. Morns
partly because bf mild spripg the nation, it may be ditTicult attributed positive factors,
weather that held down to remember that April and including recently approved
power usage in much of the · May. the tirst two months of rate increase; in the East
company's service area. But the second quart er, were and new power supply conthe company also boosted its unseasonably mild across our tructs with municipal and
full-year forecast.
eastern states," said Michael cooperative customers.
For the year. AEP has
AEP, which has ,more than G. Morris, AEP chairman.
made
$556 mi II ion. or $1 A I
5 million customers in II president and CEO. "We
states, reported a profit of . were still able to record solid . a share. a 4 percent decrease
from $57 6 million, or $1.48
$ 175 ·million. or 44 cents a results for the quarter."
share, fur the 4uarler ended
Other factors that con- a share, a year ago. Revenue
June 30. The company made tributed to the earnings increased to $6 billiM frol)l
$221 million, or 58 cents per decline, AEP said, included $5.9 hill ion.
Shares of AEP rose 19 cents
share, last year, including the sale of the company's
interest in a Texas nuclear to $36.25 in trading Thmsday
charges of 3 cents a share.
Revenue was $2.9 billion plant that had provided rev- morning. on the New Yod<
for the quarter, up 3.5 per- enue in 2005 and unplanned Stock Exchange. The stock
cent from $2.8 billion in the outages at a number of plants has traded between $32.27
. and .$40.80 in the past year.
same quarter of 2005.
to address a safety issue.
Monday... Patchy fog in
the morning. Mostly sunny.
city/Region
Hot. Humid with highs in
Forecast for Monday, July 31
High I Low temps
the lower 90s. West winds
around 5 mph.
Monday night ... Mostly
clear. Humid with low s
Toledo•
around 70. Southwest winds
96" 173"
around 5 mph iri the
Youngstown •
evening ... Becoming light
92o I 69"
and variable.
Mansfield
•
~
Tuesday .. ,Mostly sunny.
90° !70" ~
Hot. · Hum ill with highs in
the mid 90s. Southwest
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Tuesday night ...Mostly
Dayton·• h-:.
*Columbus 6--.. ·
clear. Humid with lows m
92" 172; ~
92" I 72"
t:____::)
the lower 70s. Southwest
winds around 5.mph.
Cincinnati
·Wednesday ... M ostl y
• 93" I 70"
sunny. Hot with highs in the
mid 90s.
Wednesday night... Partly
.
92' 169°
cloudy. Lows in the lower
70s.
·
r;Y
· Thursday ... Partly
© 20011
cloudy with a chance of
/'!7-...... Cloudy \~,
f?:':\......_:g Th,t;.nder·
(?_./~ Flurries Ci:~·)
lett
showers and thunder- . c:::..._:)
s~nns •C.1 - ,., ,.?'•
, . .. .
storms. Hot with highs in
Partly ?"'""- '' '•' ~~ '''''""" 'C. :::J " •.. '~
ClOUdy ..__ ___ ) Showa.... "t~) ·Rair.
..~~
'"" '"f-~,.~
. ' .-~~-·.. Snow 1:'~~~
~·
the lower 90s. Chance of
rain 30 percent.
Weather Underground • AP
Today's Forecast
b Portsm~uth• b
:~· ZERO
IN ON 0%
~!
5iggi~ lJid ballr !1~
LIMIT[O TIME EVENT'
RESTONIC
PILlOW TOP.
~ing
set . .. .......... NJA
PLUSH ·
-
. . $3t9
. .. $449
.. $619
RESTONIC
SUPER PILLOW TOP
Twin set. ,
Full set .·.
Kmg set . . .
$318
. $379
.. $5. .
Full set .. .
Ktng set. ..
RESTONIC
SUPER PLUSH
RESTONIC
Twin set. . -.: . .
Full set .... .
King set. .. .
-
Twin set .. .
-
. $549
. $Mil
$191
Twin set. .
Full set ...... .
King set. ..... .
-
.. $419
... $54t
. $788
RESTONIC
ULTRA PILLOW TOP
Twin set .
full set .
King set...
...
$619
. . . . . . $741
. $1081
Pittsburgh edges out Giants, Page B2
NFL Roundup, Page B6
Monday, July 31, 2006
Nance,
four others
finalists to .
replace
Tagliabue
BY DAVE GOLDBERG
ASSOCIATED PRESS
All-star fast pitch
softball tourney
planned
MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport Youth League
will host an all·star girls fast
pitch softball tournament
August 5-6. It is o~en to
. girls in three age groups,
16-and-under, 14-and-under
and 12-and-under.
'T;o register, ca11590-0438,
· 992-7717 or992-7747. ·
Lady Lasers to
· hold tryouts
Set-Up &
Removal
OF OlD BEDDING
--C@§)--
12
MONTH'
S
SAME AS CASH
O.A.C. See store for de1flll3.
.....
Larry Crum/photo
NASCAR makes pit stop in Gallipolis
Pictured above is the No. 20 Home Depot Chevrolet driven by Tony Stewart and the No . 18 Interstate Battenes Chevrolet
driven by J.J. Veley. Both cars were on display Saturday at Smith Superstore in Gallipolis.
Sutter's big day is short and sweet
Bv
JoHN KEKIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON ROUTE 50/32
· ATHENS, OH • 740-593-3279/800-710-1917
"Your Fri~ndly Outdoor Power Equipment ~nd Tmctor Superstore"
CONTAcrUS,
I
OVP Scoreline (5 p.m.· 1 a.m.)
1·740-446·2342
exi. 33
or 992·5287 (Meigs Co)
Fax- 1-74D-446·3008
E~mail-
sports@mydailysentinel.com
Sl1llrt~i!l1
.
Brad Sherman, Sports· Editor
(740)446·2342, ext 33
bsherman@ mydailytribune. com
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(74d) 446-2342, ext 23
bwallers@ mydailytnbune.com
Larry Crum•. SportsWriter
(740) 446·2342, ext 33
k:rum@ mydailyregister.com
I
Please see Sutter, Bl
·
AP photo
Bruce Sutter, the newest rnductee into the Baseball Hall of Fame, holds h1s plaque on
, Sunday at the Baseball Hall of Fame induction in Cooperstown, N.Y.
·
A I s o
named
w ·a
s
Roger
Goode II,
the NFL's
c h i e f
operating
Notebook o f f i c e (
and one of
commtsstoner
Paul
Tagliabue's chief aides. The
47-year-old Goodell was
the only one of the five who
works in the NFL office
although another, Gregg
Levy, is the league's outside
counseL That is the sam~
job Tagliabue held when he;
was elected commissioner
in 1989.
The other tw'o finalists are
Robert . L. Reynolds, of
Concord, Mass., the vice
chairman and chief operat.
ing officer of Fidelity
Investments; and Mayo A.
Shattuck Ill of Baltimore,
chairman of the board, president
and
CEO
of
Constellation Energy.
They were selected from a
group of I I semitinalists by
a committee of eight owners
headed by Pittsburgh's Dan
Rooney and Carolina's
Jerry Richardson.
·
The committee had been·
extremely g11arded about
the identity of candidates only Goodell's name was
,well known when Tagliabue
·announced his retirement
last March and the search
committee was announced.
The new commissioner is
expected to be elected at
meetings in Chicago from
Aug. 7-9 with the eventual
successor to Tagliabue
ne~ding votes , from 22 of
the 32 teams.
Goodell has been with the
NFL for almost his entire
cateer, starting as an intern
in the league office in 1982
and joining the New York
Jets as a public relations
·intern the following year.
He was appointed chief
operating otTicer in 200 I.
He has ion& been considered Tagliabue's heir apparent and for the .last decade
he has been involved in
most of the major moves by
the league, including stadium construction. expansion
~
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y
- Bruce Sutter didn' t leave
baseba,ll the way he wanted,
booed relentlessly when
injuries sapped his talent.
That doesn't matter any
more ..
Eighteen years after he
hung up his spikes for good,
Sutter was inducted Sunday
into the Baseball Hall of
Fame.
.
"I am in awe,:' said Sutter,
who joined Hoyt Wilhelm,
Rollie Fingers and Dennis
Eckersley as the only relief
pitchers in the HalL "I wish
I could tum back the clock
and play one more game.
"When I got the call in
January. it brought closure.
MIDDLEPORT - The to a baseball career that did
Big Bend, Girls Fall Softball not end how I hoped it
League will be holding reg- would," said Sutter, whose
istration Monday, July 31 .. last · four years in Atlanta
Saturday,
August
5, were filled with taunts after
Monday August 7 and rotator-cuff problems eventually forced him to retire
Saturday, August 12.
· The Monday registrations with 300 saves after only 12
years in the major leagues.
will be held from 6 p.m. to 8 "It answered the question:.
p.m . and the Saturday regis- 'Do you belong?' The
tration days will be held thought of ha¥ing my name
from 9 a.m. to noon. All in is truly an honor and
registrations will take place humbling experience."
at the Middleport Park shelAlthough Sutter was the
ter hou·se.
lone player selected by the
Writers
The league ' is beginning Baseball
Association
of
America,
he
its second year and is open
to girls ages I 0-13 from was part of the largest class
Athens, Gall ia; Mason and of inductees in Hall of Fame
history. Seventeen players
Meig s counties .
For more information, and ex~cutives from baseball 's segregated past, all of
call Bryan . Swann at 416them !ieceased, were also
317 I, Jeff Johnson at 378- inducted, including Effa
6476 or Bruce Nottingham Manley, the first woman to
at 882-2504.
be so honored .
wi1h
....
,.,..,.~···
Jo
, , *l'!!!:il" ,.
COLUMBUS The
Lady Lasers, a girls fastpitch softball team, will be
holding tryouts for the following age groups: 18 and
under, 16u, 14u,. 12u, lOu
and 8u. They will be held 9
;1.m. Sunday, Aug. 13 at
Berliner Park.
v i s i
t
www. e tea mz . com /I adylasers for more information.
RACINE Students
interested in being on the
Southern golf team should
attend a meeting 6 p.m.
Wednesday Aug. 2, at high
schooL
Contact
Mick
~' Winebrenner for more
information at 949-2475
'FREE
EXPRESS
DELIVERY
NEW .
YORK
Firederick Nance, a lawyer
who worked to bring the
Browns
back to
the
Cleveland and has represented
Cavaliers
star
LeBron Jame~. is one of
five finalists announced
Sunday to be the next NFL
CommlS- .
sioner.
•
SPORTS BRIEFS
Southern golf
meeting on Wed.
$
~-299
~~.$·399'.
-
Bl-
Mariners rally past 'Iii be, Page B2
Big Bend Girls
Fall softball to
hold registration
tenW tltild ot tbl!: mattm.s. ttlllfflll!nl
Twin set. ...... . ..... $179
Full set ............. $229
The Daily Sentinel
Local Weather
I"CftS p;Gvidn more !ltlpporl ln t.t
RESTONIC
FIRM
Inside
Please see NFL, 86
Sheets, Brewers slip past Reds, 4-3
MILWAUKEE (AP) · Ben Sheets wanted tci finish
his f1rst win since coming
off the disablqd list.
·Francisco Cordero made
everyth ing all right in the
end.
Sheets allowed two runs in
eig ht•plu s innings, Kevin
Mench drove in four runs
and Cordero got one out for
hts ·first save with his new
club, leading the Milwaukee
Brewers over the Cincinnati
Reds 4-3 Sunday.
·
"Ben Sheets was outstanding," Reds manager. Jerry
Narron said. "It was one of
the hest games· we've seen
all year."
·
Sheets carried a five-hit
shutout into the ninth but
Adam Dunn singled and
Ken Griffey Jr. followed
with his 21st homer of the
AP photo season to chase lhe rightMilwaukee Brewers starting pitcher Ben Sheets tips his hat hander from the game. after being pulled from the game against the Cincinnati Reds in
'To battle back like thm
afte·r the dav Ben Sheets had
the ninth inning of a baseball game Sunday in Milwaukee.
'
I
against us was outstanding."
Narron said.
Brewers manager Ned
Yost pulled Sheets against
his wishes.
''Be nny didn't want to
come out of the game," Yosl
said. " It made no sense to
push him."
The Brewers then in serted
Derrick Turnbow, who
saved Milwaukee's 6·3 victory Saturday night after
blowing four straig ht save
opportunities. Rich Aurilia
gree1ed him with a home run
to cut it to 4·3.
Yost pulled Turnbow after
the Reds put runners on first.
and third with twci outs .
Pinch-runner
Brandon
Watson .stole second 'but
Cordero got pinch-hitter
David Ross lo ground out
for his first save with
Milwaukee.
The Brewers acquired
Cordero and Mench · on
Friday· in the deal that sen t
'
All-Star outfielder Carlos
Lee to the Texas Rangers.
Cordero, who was a ' closer
and then a setup man for
Texas, ,;aid whatever the
Brewers want him to do is
·
·
fine .
''If I'm going to contribute
to the team in any way ,
that's what I'm going to do;!
l1 e said.
Sheets (2-3) struck out 10
and issued one intentional
walk in his second start
since beiril;l reinstated off the
disabled ltst last week. He
was on the DL for 2 1/2
months with tendinitis in hi~
right shoulder.
:
'' I don't care about the
decision," said. Sljeets, whg
beat Atlanta on April 26 itt
his only other victory thi~
season. "We needed a wi~
bad."
·
The Brewers took two of
three from the Reds and wo11
for just the sixth time in 1g
"'
Please see Reds, Bl
.
�\
Monday, July 31, 2006
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel
Monday, July 3:1, 2006
www .mydailysentinel.com
\!tribune -· Sentinel - ~e-gl~ter
Mariners r~lly late to beat Indians, 7-3 Castroneves wins
Firestone Indy 400
CLEVELAND (AP) Jose Lopez and Raul Ibanez
each had two-run s1ngles
with two outs 111 the mnth to
help the Seattle Manners
beat the Cleveland lnd1.tns
7-3 on Sunday.
Jacob
Woods
(3- l J
p•tched a scoreless e1ghth
1nnmg for the win and J J
Putz got out ol .1 j.tm tor h1s
22nd save m 26 chances
Putz forced S1zemore to h1t
mto a jlame-end1ng double
play w1th the bases loaded
as Seattle won for the seventh t1me m I0 games
Cleveland lost tor the II th
time 111 15 games since July
I 4 and went 3-6 on a moegame homestand
The
Indians are 0-6- I smce last
wmntnjl a senes June 30 to
July 2 111 Cmcmnati
Fausto Cflrmona ( 1-4)
walked pmch-h1tter Ben
Broussard to start the mnth
He was bunted to second b)
Yuniesky Betancourt and
went to th1rd on an mf1eld
smgle by Rene Rivera, but
was cau~ht m a rundown
when pmch-hmer KenJI
JohJima grounded to tlmd.
With runners on second
and th1rd, Cabrera v.alked
lch1ro Suzuki mtentlonallv
to load the bases
Lopez, who entered the
game m an 0-for- 15 slump,
then lined a smgle to left to
score R1vera and Joh1ima
AP photo
Cleveland lnd1ans manager Enc Wedge, center, talks to
p1tcher Cl1ff Lee (31) and catcher Victor Martmez dunng the
e1ghth 111n111g of a baseball game against the Seattle
Manners on Sunday 111 Cleveland.
and break the tie. Lopez fin1shed 3-for-5.
After Cabrera hn Adnan
Beltre With a p1tch to load
the bases, Ibanez hll a tworun smgle to make ll 7-3.
Cleveland scored each of
Jts runs on groundouts- by
Trav1s Hafner m the f1rst
and third mnings and Joe
Inglett in the fourth off
Seattle starter Joel Pme1ro
Consecutive sm~les by
Suzuki, Lopez and Beltre 111
the f1rst off Cliff Lee gave
the Manners a l-0 lead.
Grady Sizemore walked
and scored m the first and
doubled and scored in the
th1rd to put Cleveland
ahead, 2-1, against Joel
Pme1ro.
R1ch1e Sexson sent Seattle
ahead, 3-2, w1th his 22nd
homer, a two-run shot m the
fourth
The lndmns t1ed it m the
bottom half on Inglett's
bases-loaded groundout.
Lee allowed three runs
and seven hits over 7 2-3
mmngs, stnkmg out two and
walkmg one The left-bander 1s wmless m three starts
smce July 13 and fa1led to
budd on hi s 5-l career
recond agamst Seattle.
Pmeiro gave up three runs
and tour hils over seven
mnmgs and fa1led to wm
consecutive starts for only
the second time th1s season
The n ght-hander walked
three, struck out four and
retired the last I 0 batters he
faced.
•
Notes Play was stopped
for a few seconds with two
outs in the top of the seventh
when the outfield sprinklers
went off - not a bad idea
on a sultry day that had
some fans leaving front-row
seats to go s1t in shaded
areas underneath the second
deck
.. Plate umpire
Hunter Wendelstedt was hll
in the left arm by a foul tip
m the first and attended to
by lnd1ans trainer Lonnie
Soloff, but stayed in the
game .... Suzuki played m
his 900th game .... Hafner
beat out an inf1eld single in
the e1ghth to snap an 0-for19 streak. .. Beltre doubled
to open the s1xth, givmg h1m
32 extra-base hits m June
and July after collectmg
only nine in April and May.
Pittsburgh edges out Giants in extra innings
PITTSBURGH (AP) Jose Hernandez's smgle 111
the I Oth mning scored Jack
Wilso n as the Pittsburgh
Puates completed a sweep
of the San Franc1sco
Giants wllh a 2-1 wm
Sunday afternoon
Hernandez's th1rd h1t
was a hne dnve down the
left-field lme ott Steve
Khne (2 -3) w1th W1lson on
second base Hernandez
had struck out m the e1ghth
111 a smular snuat1on and
P1rates down a run
The Pirates have won a
scason-h1gh hvc stra•ght
games, while the G1ants
have lost a season-worst
seven 111 a row
The game had been
delayed 2 hours, 5 m1nutes
by a heavy downpour that
came through P1ttsburgh ·
w1th one out m the top of
the seventh and the game
scoreless.
Todd Lmden , mak1ng
only h1s 1h1rd start of the
season and hrst 111 lelt
f1eld, drove a l-2 p1tch
from Matt Capps mto the
seats abo'e the nght-fleld
wall leadmg olt the e1ghth
for the game's f1rst run It
was Lmden"s f1rst home
run smce Aug 31, 2005.
The
G1ants
looked
AP photo
Pittsburgh Pirates' Jose Hernandez, center, IS congratulated
by teammates 1nclud1ng Freddy Sanchez, left, and Jose
Castillo (14) after hlttmg a walk off game wmn1ng smgle off
San Franc1sco G1ants reliever Steve Kl111e m baseball act1on
Sunday at Pittsburgh.
po1sed to av01d an 0-6 road
tnp until Jose Castillo led
off the mnth by sending an
0-1 pitch from Giants closer Armando Benitez to
center for h1s 12th home
run of the season and first
smce June 15 - a span of
180 at-bats.
Benitez has blown h1s
last three save opportuni-
ties after converting his
prevwus seven chances.
John Grabow
(3-1)
retired Randy Wmn to end
the top of the IOth to earn
the wm.
Wilson also had three
hits and Castillo two for
the P1rates, who have won
four of f1ve senes since the
All-Star
break
but
•
remamed 111 last place 111
the NL Central, four games
behind the Chicago Cubs
Lmden was on base three
t1mes
and
Shea
Hillenbrand was 2-for-4
for the Giants
The weather appeared to
be the only thmg that could
stop the starting pitchers,
who were cruising through
a fast-mov•ng, scoreless
game before the rain
The Pirates' Zach Duke
had thrown only 63 p1tches
when his afternoon ended,
while San Francisco's Matt
Morns threw 93.
Duke allowed onlv four
h1ts in his 6 1-3 innings,
and Pmsburgh managed
JUSt s•x Juts off Morris
through SIX innings The
starters combmed to strike
out only three batters - all
by Morns
While
Duke
never
allowed a runner to
advance past second base,
the Puates had their
chances agamst Morns but
could
not
convert
Pittsburgh loaded the bases
in the second, had Nate
McLouth at third wJth one
out m the th1rd and runners
on second and thud with
one out 1n the fourth, but
could not score.
For first time since 1995; Bettis.not in Steelers camp
LATROBE. Pa. (AP)- A
tractor trailer parked beh1nd
the Pittsburgh Steelers'
traimng camp practice fields
carnes a huge 1mage ol
Jerome Bett1s Sea1ch the
camp, though. and there's no
Bus to be found
For the first time smce
1995. the Steelers arc holding a trainmg camp without
the NFL's No 5 career rusher on their roster Th,ll 1111ght
be why the first pracuce ot
camp Sunday didn't seem'"
loud as many others held
smce !996
"It's a httle ditferent , not
seemg h•s sn11le," codch Bill
Cowher sa1d ·' But 1t's part
of that process of movmg
on.''
Quarterback
Roethlisberger,
Bettis' closest fnends on the
team. talked to BettiS last
week and recemly attended
Bettis' weddmg 111 Jammca.
But Roethlisberger d1dn't
thmk about Bettts not bcmg
on the lield Sunday until 1t
was mentioned to h1m
·The last thmg I was
thinkmg about was that
Jerome wasn't gomg to be
out there,'' Roethllsberger
smd. "But I' vc got thmgs to
worry about here - Wi !lie
PUJ ker IS back there and
Verron Haynes and Du ce
(Staley ), we've got good
1unmng backs the1e"
That there was .l•ttle talk
Sunday
ubout
Bett1s'
absence also reflects the
Steelcrs' put-11-m-the-past
Ben ment,dlty regardmg the1r
one of f1rst Super Bowl VIctory 111
Sutter
•
from PageBl
"It's a wonderful day," smd
Rachel Robinson. the wife of
Jackie Robmson. who broke baseball 's co!Qr bamer 59 years ago.
'Tm very '"bc1ted about i1 It's a
long ume conung. We're very, very
proud of the Negro Leaguers "
Sutter also shared the dws w1th
J G. Taylor Spmk Award wmner
Tracy Rmgol sby. current nat1onal
columnist for the Rocky Mountain
News. and Ford C. Fnck Award
wmner Gene Elston. former broadcast vmce of Houston bascb.tll
As he d1d during ht> ste ll dl 12year career. Sutter was the closer on
tim d.ty And he lnughl I11S emouons throughout !liS spcct'/J. wh1d1
26 years No player has been
seen weanng a Super Bowl
ring smce the Steelers
reported to camp Fnday.
"We don ' t even think
about that," Roethllsberger
smd. "No one here has the1r
ring on, no one's wearing
Super Bowl hats, no one's
wearing Super Bowl sh1rts.
We don't really care about 1t
- only the fans do We're
movmg on "
Also, 1t's not as though the
Steelers won't see Bettis
soon enough Now an NFL
an<~lyst for NBC, BettiS IS
likely to attend the Sept 7
opener agamst the Dolphins
that will be televised by the
network.
Bett1s, the No. 2 rusher in
Steelers history to Hall of
Famer Franco Harns, retired
minutes after the Steelers
won the1r first Super Bowl
smce the 1979 season by
beating Seattle 21-10 in
February.
Bettis was used mostly as
a backup last season, but had
a I00-yard game m a key
December victory against
the Bears that ended a threegame Steelers losing streak.
He also was thCJr leadmg
l'usher m two of the1r four
postseason games .
That large image of Bettis
is expected to remain for the
rest of camp. He is pictured
on the s1de of a truck that
brought some of the
Steelers' exhibits and memorabtha from Heinz Field to
St. Vmcent College for the1r
fans to see during camp.
honored everybody who helped called the split-finger," Sutter said.
hun become the first Hall of Farner "It was a p1tch that didn't change
who never staned a game m h1s how the game was played, but
career ,.
developed a new way to get hitters
'Th1s day 1s about the people who out Everybody who throws the
helped me along the w.ty. I would split-fingered fastball owes a great
not be standmg here Without them," deal ~f thanks to Fred Martm (who·
sa1d Sutter. h1s tamtllar beard now died in 1979) because he was the
turned gray ·'My dad was never too thst one to teach U."
tired to play catch. It was his temIn 1976, Sutter registered six wins
perament that rubbed off on me "
an<!IO saves and a 2.70 earned-run
Perhaps the b1ggest debt Sutter average 111 52 appearances. and hiS'
owed was to Fred Martm. the man career took off The next season he
who taught hun to throw the p1tch assumed the role of closer for the ·
that saved h1s career - the spilt-fin- Cubs and finished With 31 saves and
gered lastball. Alter undcrgomg a 1.34 ERA, and m 1978 registered
surgery to tix a pmched nerve 111 h1s n saves.
nght elbow. Sutter met M,1n1 n. the
Sutter was even better the next
rovmg mmor le.tguc p)tch1ng coach season. wmning the NL Cy Young
lor the Ch1 c,1go Cubs. 111 1971 ,md Award, posting a National League
thi CC ycaJs (,Iter W,IS rllch111g Ill reco1d-tymg .i7 saves, and also WdS
W11gley F1cld
the W11111111g pllcher 111 the All-Star
'Nnbod) W.IS llliOWI11g wild! he G,I!Jie lor the second stra1ght year
BROOKLYN.
M1ch.
(AP) - The race was
faster than the rain delay.
Helio Castroneves won
the Firestone Indy 400 on
Sunday, beattng Vitor
Me1ra by 1.62 seconds and
averaging 193 972 mph the third-fastest event in
the Indy Rac1ng League's
11-year history.
It took h1m 2 hours, 3
mmutes to win his serieshigh fourth VICtory and
move past teammate Sam
Harnish Jr for the points
lead after a 2 1"12-hour
delay ram delay.
"Thumbs up to every dnver for keeping it clean it was different than
Milwaukee,"
said
Castroneves, taking a shot
at Ed Carpenter after their
cars collided at last week's
race.
Just two caution flags
slowed, the race, a record
low for a 400-mile race at
Mich1gan
lnternatwnal
Speedway.
Castroneves gave Roger
Penske his 1Oth openwheel race at the track he
owned for more than 25
years, and h1s first since
1991 when Rick Mears
earned his last career wm.
"For years, he basically
owned
th1s
place,"
Castroneves said "For me,
it's an honor"
Castroneves took the
lead for the last time on lap
177 after h1s fmal ptt stop.
He nav1gated through a
pack of dnvers a lap
behmd to build a 3-plus
second lead over Mc1ra,
who cut h1s defic1t 111 half,
but couldn't get closer.
He won the lith IndyCar
senes race of his career,
and tirst at MIS.
Meira, who led 75 of 200
laps, was followed by
defending champion Dan
Wheldon , Tony Kanaan
and Tomas Scheckter 111 the
top f1ve,
Penske used to have h1s
drivers rely on fuel-saving
strategy at the secondlongest race on the Indy
Racmg League c1rcutt, but
wanted Castroneves and
Harnish to get 111 front a'nd
stay there.
It worked - early
Hornis~ fmished just 61
laps because of an eng1ne
problem. Hormsh started
Reds
from PageBl
games.
"Two out of three, we
needed to do that and we
did it," Sheets said "Hopin'
that's a step in the nght
direction for what we want
to do "
Sheets improved to 6-3
wtth a 2 36 ERA m 13
career starts against the
Reds, his best ERA agamst
any NL team He gave up
two runs in seven innings of
a 3-1 loss to Cincmnati un
April 21
Mench smgled in a run m
the first He hit a three-run
dnve m the seventh for h1s
f1rst
homer
with
Milwaukee.
Aaron Harang ( ll -7) left
after Mench's shot. He
allowed four runs and I0
h1ts while strikin~ out mne
and walking one m six-plus
innings.
"He made one bad pitch
there to Menchie in the seventh, but other than that he
•
CLASSIFIED
w,eove
Melg•, Gllllla,
And Mason
Counties Uke
NoOne
the race with a 25-point
lead over Scott Dixon, but
he earned JUSt 12 points
with h1s season-worst,
19th-place finish and has
368 points with three races
left Castroneves has 376
pomts.
"I'm not exactly sure
what happened, but I know
it was an issue with the
engine," he sa1d. "It's a
shame to end a day like
that "
The race started after a
long delay because of rain
and weepers, wh1ch are
water leaks resulting from
moisture trapped in the top
layer of the track.
"When we went out, it
was
still
damp,"
Castroneves said. "Sam
was running in front of me
and water was coming up,
but the car was staying
down"
. Castroneves and Harnish
started the race from the
front row and executed
the1r nose-to-ta1l plan helping save fuel - for the
first 40 laps. They wanted
to stick together until the
final 15 laps. but Harnish
didn't make 1t that far.
"I lost my wing man,"
Castroneves sa1d. "All of
the sudden, Vttor was
there."
Meira took the lead on
lap 54 and other than ~it
stops, he maintained 1t,
until Castroneves surged
ahead on lap 134.
They appeared to be dnving as teammates, not trying to pass each other, after
Harnish's day ended.
"At the beginning when I
was behmd Vttor I was JUSt
trying to work together
w1th h1m," Castroneves
said "I knew it was too
early 111 the race to try
somethmg crazy."
Damca Patnck f1mshed
17th m the 19-car f1eld
She stomped around the
track in anger· and threw
her helmet when her race
Was over because her car
was slow and havmg technical problems. Patrick
was coming off consecutive fourth-place flmshes,
her best of the season.
"It was a brutal day," she
said "I w1sh I would have
brought the car home m
seventh, .where
tt should
,
have been.
EIHCanl
In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW
\!t-ribune
To Place
Your Ad,
Call TOday...
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 {304) 675-1333
or Fax To (740} 446·3008
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
"hnul<i
or Fax To
\\\01 \( 1· '11 \I'\
*POLICIES*
r
Ohio Valley
reserves
Publishing
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display 1·00 _____ _
In Next Oay•s Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1·00 p m.
F•ld••• For Sundays Paper
Thursday for Sundays
• All ads must be prepaid'
I
any lime.
B
KIT & CARLYLE
ay of putlUcatlon an
he Trlbune..Sentlnel
eglster
will
b
esponslble for n
4 k1t1ens 2 gray and 2 black
Four weeks old 740·985·
ore than the cost o
he space occuple
y the error and onl
he first Insertion W
llall not be liable to
ny loss or expens
hat results from th
ubllcatlon or omls
lon of an advertise
ent Corrections wil
k1tncartyle~comcast
made In the firs
: BI:.ac::k_:L: :.:a: O:.:tna::.l:_e_
vailabte edition
loves chddren very fnendly
Needs
room
to
run
(
)
_
740 388 0069
>Box number ads ar
!ways confidential
Real
Male English Pomter Call
dvertlsements
ar
ubject to lhe Federa
air Housing Act o
0
~17_40'-'1_44_1-'0'-4_05_ _ _ _
c
0
Commun~ty
Center
Applicants must te cert1
f1 ecMrcensed to lea ch stu
dents •n grades 7 12 Th ~ 10
a 12 monl h poSitiOn salary
Will be based on e:..penence
and cerfl l lcatlondlcensure
accord1ng to the salary
i~
CLASSIFIED INDEX
MISC
For Lease . •.
......•.
.. 490 '
For Sale........ . ..... .
585
For Sale or Trade ........................... 590
Frulls & Vegetables . .....
580
Furnished Rooms .............
........
General Hauling. . .. . .
•....... 450
..
..850
. .......................................... 040
Happy Ads . ....
. ..
. ... .
....... 050
Hay & Gra~n ........... ............
...... 640
Help Wanted . . .. .... ........... .. ........ 110
Home Improvements .••.. .. . . . . •. 810
Homes for Sale... ................................... 310
Household Goods
510
. ......... ..
In Memoriam .....
410
.. ............. 020
Insurance
...... ...............
Lawn & Garden Equ1pment
L1veslock ............... .......
...••. .. 130
........ .. ..... 660
r
...... 630
Losland Found , ....... .. ................. 060
Lola & Acreage .. .
.
.. 350
Miscellaneous ....... .
. ...... . .......... 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise
..
540
Mobile Home Repair. .. . ........ . . ....... . 860
Mobile Homes lor Rent
....
......... 420
Mobile Homes for Sale.. . .......
320
Money 10 Loan . .
................ 220
Motorcycles & 4 Wheelers....
. . . 740
Musicallnstrumenls
...
...... ........ .
. ................... 570
.......... '~
Pets lor Sate. . . ......... . ..........
Plumbing & Healing ..
..
Professional Servtces
•
© 2006 by NEA.
www comtcs com
005
. .......... 560
.. 820
..... .... .........
..
230
Radio, TV & CB Repair . . ...... . ........ ...160
Real Eslete Wanted . . ........ ...... . .... 380
SchootC~tnslructlon
........ .. .. 150
Seed , Plant & Fertilizer.. .......
..
650
Situations Wanted.. . . . .. . .............. 120
Space for Renl.... ... ........
460
Sporting Goods .
... . .. ........... 520
SUV 's for Sale........ . .......
720
Trucks lor Sale ...
. .... .. ............ 715
Upholstery . .. ........ .. .
870
Vans For Sale .
.. ........ .. .. 730
Wanted to Buy ..... . .
... ... ......
090
Wanled to Buy- Farm Supplies.......... . 620
Wenled To Do .......
...... . . . 180
Wanled to Rent. . . .. ..................
.470
Yard Sate- Gallipolis.....
.. ..072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle.............
... 074
Yard Sate-Pl. Pleasant ....
076
'NO EliPI:HIENCE NECESSAR~
'
Ull H'-IE CLASSES
' .CDI. TRAitJING
• FIN ANC NG AVAILABLE
J06 PlACEMENT
ENPOlliNG
NO.~
Healthcare Serv1ces Group
the nat1on's largest prO'.'rder
of laundry and housekeepIng serv1ces lor long term
care IS currently seek1ng
laundry and housekeep•ng
managers 1n the Gall1pohs
and Pomeroy areas If you
want to grow w1th an estab·
lished publicly held company
fall resume to 614·577·
0125
Depot Street Rutland July
31 thru Aug 3 furniture
nrce sc hool clothes lots
more 740 742 2242
ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE VA
Garage
Sale Augus1
1 2 and3rd 9a m-? Weber
res1dence across from dam
1n ReedSVIlle
Vanety of
1tems tw1n bed and dresser
clothing and household
1tems
1-800-334-1203
L-:=
-~··~~~~~~~~'"~''"""'~""''"!!~:c!".....J
-------Heavy Equipment Operator
S1te Trucks CDL preferred
Pan
Operators
Dozer
Operators All operators
need hne grad1ng m1n1mum
2 years 8llpe r1ence P<ty
comParable w1th expen·
ence Please contact Patt1
(740)388 9515 or preferably
lax resume to (740)388
9530 EEO Employer
Dom(nos P1z.za Now H1 t1ng
Safe
Dnvets
Po1nt
Pleasant
Gallipolis
&
Pomeroy locations Apply 1n
Person
Health
Aides·
Hugt1 Yard Sale Thursday - - - - - - - - Home
Lookrng lot dependable and
Aug 3rd 2 mr les South of
car1ng stall to ass1st the eld
Tuppers Pla1ns on left The DRIVE
Grate Residence
Oo you have a Class A erty w1th home care needs
COL?
We offer flex1ble sclleduling
=~-~----, Immediate
driving vacatiOn 9nd other benefits
\V\NUJl
Opportunllles available Trammg also provided It
wrth Canton, OH Carrier to mterestod
please
call
Servfce our Jackson, OH (740)441·1377 or (740)992
Absolute Top Dollar US account
0990
Silver and Gold Cams
Proofsets Gold A1ngs Pre· •Weekly pay
Local Home Health Agency
1935
US
Currency
•Hosp•tallzatton and 401 K RN· Port or Full Ttme Able
Sofrta1re 01amonds· M TS
to prov1de supervisory f1ll 1n
•Late model equipment
Com Shop 151 Second
where needed We provide
Avenufl Gallipolis 740 446- •No NYC or Canada
vacatron day shrft l1ours
•95% no touch freight
mrnlmal weekends and
2842
•Homotlme on most week· many more benelltS Please
Want to
buy Junk Cars ends
send Resume to
Family Semor Care Inc
(304)77l·5004
•ssoo Sign on Bonus
PO Box 707
uspan
ea
a vage 1
uy1ng all meta)s at to
Must be at least 23 yrs Old
Gallipolis, OH 45631
nces Call for more mto
have a vat1d Long form DOT
nces 304 593 1904
Now Hiring ALL
phys1cal and have 2 years
Shifts
OTR e)(penence Ask tor
Epm up to $8/hrl
I '11'1
\II \ I
Bob
Lw--olliliDiiB·L·~--,.J
Sl
110
o'
ll\11 I s
1-800-652-2362
HtJJ>Wwnn
100 WORKERS NEEOED
Assemble cratls
wood Items
To $480/wk
Matenats prov•ded
Free 1nlormatran pkg 24Ht
801 428 ~549
A 9 year compa ny rs look1ng
for a well mot1vated HVAC
lfldiVIdU.al Must have a least
1 year hands on e)(penence
1n 1nstallet•cn Pay IS based
on expenence If Interested
call [740) 441 1236 ana
leave message .,.,1th recap
!torr st
EXP
OH and WV Coal
Mmers neededr
Send
resume to Dav1d Stanlev
Consu!lants Coal Mrner
152 Roush C1rcte Fa1rmont
wv 26554 or Fax to 304
534 3917 or go to OSC
LLC com to apply Online
FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$l5 67-$26 19/hr now h1r
1ng For application and free
governernent job tnfo call
American Assoc of labor 1·
913 599 8042 24!hrs emp
serv
Gallipolis Ferry man needs
An Excellent· way to earn nOo tolfrom Mouta1neer
money Tho New Avon
Plant $50/wk Work hours
Call Manlyn 304 682 2645
MF
7a·31~p
Call
AVON• All Areas! To Buy or
Sell
Sh1rley Spears 304
675-1429
,;;;IO;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;__..,
RLSINIX~
Inc.
and v.rII have
Board approved benellls
Subm1t letter of mterest
resume and references to
John
Costanzo
Superintendent
Athens
Me1gs Educational ServiCe
~:-------, Center
507
Archland
J:l1'r.10:-------, r'i10
Avenue SUite #108 Athens
lb.:J..p\\'ANIID
Ht.lJ,\\-'r\Nllll
OH 45701
Appl~cat10n
Fo~n
4x4's For Sate ..................................... 725
Announcement •••
••.• . 030
Antiques ...................... ....................... 530
Apartments for Rent...
. ... .. .•..•..• 440
Auction and Flea Markel. ....
.080
Auto Parts & Accessories •.•••• . .. ........ 760
Aula Repair .. ... .
no
Autos for Sale ...... . ............. ............ 710
Boats & Motors tor Sale
..
...... 750
BUJ!dJng Supplies...
........... ... . .. . .'550
Business and Buttdlngs
.... 340
BusJn~ss Opportumty. ......... ... .......
210
Business Training .
....... . . 140
Campers & Motor Homes ••..
790
Camping Equtpmenl
.................. 780
Cards o1 fhanks..
010
Child/Elderly Care ............................... 190
Etectrlcai/RelrJgeratlon . ..
840
EqUJpmenllor Rent. . ........... ......... ... 480
Excavaling .. .:..
..
.. ....
830
Farm Equipment... . ........ .........
610
Farms lor Rani. .
. ..... 430
Farms lor Sate.. .....
........ .......... .330
Personals
UJ12.1Ultt
'"
3 Fam1ly Yard Sate 813· 8/4
(Thurs &Fn) 9-3 Oes•gner
FOUND Black dog yoi.:Jng Maternity Clothes baby and
female, purple collar Oshel childrens clothes Lots of
m•sc
1tems ton numerous
Road (304 )675 402 7
to mention
35670 State
Found Puppy rn GallipoliS Route 7
OH
Call
to
1dent1fy
Aug 1 2
lOam?
300
(740)446 9.457 •
Broadway St Middleport
Clothes Household and
y accept any adver
lsement In vlolatlo
fthelaw
Houses tor Rent..
LA~
-
')-We wm not knowing
Giveaway.
1-~t
Po~:~1S,;.',ji.;I)U
Lo&r.<No ,.JIIo sell
_______
newspape
ccepls only hel
anted ads meetin
OE standards
Bon 11 1e s Pr vate Ch1ldcare
Now
hOls
Open.ng
Corwenmmly lor.nred by new 5 vear old Colcnral en 3
highway on SAT 7 Call 740 ilcres approx 1 !lOO sq tt 3
bdt 2 baths, 2 car garage
985 4326
master bdr 1::. 28~24 wrth a
1acuzzr tub $125 000 V1ew
online
at
orvb com
sc heduIe
Pitt Bull Pupp1es (30.4)675- utes trom Pomeroy Fn·Sat
4869 or (304)675-7371
8m 3pm multifamily pnced
968
lliEI nFKI ,.
s•gns 7/31106 B/3106 9am
11474
Pleasanton
Ad
Athens {off new 33) ten m1n
3BR House for ::;ate Pretty
::'lean Ceda Stree t
FP
C"<>ntr<=~l neatmu Fll•mshed
K11~hen C1ty St hools Ca I
740 446 996' S1 18 OOC
4 bed1oom 2 bath on SR
279 near Cenle1V1IIe lOO"c
Res Care 1S an Equal Aegtstered Dental HygenliSI fmancmg available Pr1ce
Employer look ing tor part t1me work rn red uced (740)742 2376
Opporluntty
Mason Galha or Me1 g~
FIM IDN
County Contact at PO Boll
Ttle
Athens Me1gs 56 Polm Pl easant WV
Educattonal Serv1ce has a
pos1tron open1nq for a l90 CMII
Teacher at the Hockmg
C\Rf
Valley
Res1dentrBI
Fa1r week yard sale Name
your Prtce Appltances bed
room su1te w1cker day bed
clothmg tools household
1tems etc 114 m1le north of
Porter on SA 160 lo ok for
~74
HO\-WS
mRSAU
MF
~~~~----- :.:4p~
m~~~~--~
Free Reg Male Yellow Lab
310
To Do
ouse a
a1r ilrr.
o
D Sf.t!:ll cd Sfut ~ ~~
C.lrts
Sl~les. MaPIClH ' !>
Serve
Are ' 5 BelprH I J Athl"!r15
M1d dlepurl & 111 bel>Jeen
Call Jenny 740 278 &i82
8204 Carla Dnve 6 00 4 00 L!2.~~~~=-.....J
337 Roush Lane 8/310&
815106
Baby plus
s•ze
(womens) clo the's house
hold 1tems toys
baOy
Items mise
Born 11111105 (740)446
8822
\\'<\:\IIIJ
Res Care/Middleton Estates
will be hmng a fullhmc
AdminiStratiVe pos1t1on W 1!.1
be proi1C1enl m M1crosott
Word
and
E~cel
Applications w11! be taken at
GAI.LIPOLt~
Amencan Stafford Sh1re
Terrier male dog Free to
good home Great w/k1ds
Ronn1e Wnght
{304)576
2273
-------Beauttlul lnendty 1 1/2 yr
old Male Beagle ! Needs
good home (304)675 2209
leave message
_ _m_o_o_ld11
180
net
Y•Rn SM F-
4490
{J
I tO
2 Lab Mt)( Pupp•es Black 7 ~r~------.,
weeKs 1 Male 1 Female
YARD SAL£
(740]441·5305
eported on the ff'rs
Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large
POliCIES Ohio Valier Publl1h1ng tUI!II'\1811ha rlghl to edit reject or cancel any ad at any Ume Errors must ba r1ported on 11\e t11st day of publication and
Tnbune-S.ntlnai-Aegtater w111 btl reeponalble lor no morel".,.. the colt olthe space occup ied by the error and only the f~rst 1naer11on We shall not be liable for
any lots or lllpiiJet that resulle from the pul:lllcatlon or omleeion of en advert11emenl Correctu:m wrll be made 1n the lrrst available edrtron • Box number ada
are alwav• conlldenhal • Current rate card appl!ea • All real ntate advertlsementa are tub jeCt to the Federal Farr Houstng .Act or 1968 • This newspaper
etandards We will not
I In vrolatlon ot the law
accept. ontv help wanted ada
6 montlls old Last seen
1 Golden & 1 Black Upper 2nd Avenue If found
Retrtever (304)458 2214
call [740)4116·4216
reject or cancel any
Mu~
All' Display: 12 Noon 2
Monday-Friday for Jnsertlon
L_ _ _ _ _ _ _,. Lost dog Black Lab female ,
the right to edit,
ad at
>Errors
GJVl'AWAV
GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED
Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Description • Include A Price • A\lold AbbreviatlonJ
~;~~))
Or Fax To (304} 675·5234
Display Ads
• Include Phone Number And o\ddre1s When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 oavs
tI
992·2157
OeacltirM
• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • !nclude Complete
Successful Ads
These Items
~egister
Sentinel
Word Ads
did a pretty good job today,"
Narron sa1d
Sheets worked out of a
Jam m the second. Aurilla
singled and Scott Hatteberg
struck out before Brandon
Phillips doubled to left
Juan Castro struck out and
Jason LaRue was walked
inten!tonally, but Harang
struck out to end the innmg
The Brewers' defense
helped out Sheets with b1g
double plays to end the
SIXth and seventh innings
· Another new Brewers
addttion , Tony Graffam no,
who was acquired from
Kansas City in a trade for
reliever Jorge De La Rosa
on Tuesday, went 2-for-4
w1th two smgles and a run
scored
Notes: Griffey's homer
was the · 557th of his
career... Graffanmo made
his fourth start at second
for R1ckie Weeks (nght
wrist) who ·was placed on
the !5-day disabled hst
July 29, retroactive to July
25. ... Dunn struck out
twice and leads the NL
wtth l I 8 stnkeouts
But when he won an arbitration Senes. "Well, I'm one of the luc~<r,
award of $700,000 after the season, ones who got to realize that dream. '
the Cubs, who had Lee Srmth wattSutter was a bundle of nerves. On
mg for his chance, traded him to St. Saturday mght, he received word
Louis after the 1980 season.
that the Cardinals were going to
Sutter signed a four-year contract retire his No 42, and his w1fe,
worth an estimated $3.5 rmllton Jayme, 1s facmg surgery in two
with the Cardinals, making him the weeks to remove a cancerous kidh1ghest-prud reliever in the game. ney Jayme Sutter was s1ttmg w1th
He averaged almost 32 saves a year several fanuly m~mbers under a tent
and led the league three times, far to the nght of her husband, who
estabhshmg a league-recond 45 in wa~ reluctant to look out at all of his
1984, and keyed the Cards' 1982 supporters.
World Senes triumph over
"I'm not usually an emotional
Milwaukee, the1r first title smce guy," .said Sutter, who was greeted
1967
before h1s speech by Hall of Famers
"Every pitcher dreams of pitchmg . Owe Snuth and Johnny Bench
m the maJor leagues and unagmes weanng long, gray beards in an
himself striking out the final batter effon to relax Sutter. "My kid sa1d
to end the seventh game of the the first tune anybody ever-saw me
World Senes," sa1d Sutter, who did cry was when I got that phone call
JUSt that when he fanned Gonnan (m January). A lot of people have
Thomas to end the 1982 World seen me cry now."
~
The Daily Sentinel • Page 83
www.mydailysentinel.com
(304)675 6782
-W-a-nl-ed--C-0 -,- -,-.,-,-·
0
6
w1th
tanker
L•conse
Reg•ol'al
Jom the Avon team Local endorsement
Corporate tralntng
Call routes S!er1 and slop 1n
a11eryday
(740)379·9422 to start today Gallipolis
11q 55/ho 1740)24i'S514
for only $10
Jo1n lhe Fastest
Grow1ng Company 1n
Town I Make calls lor
some of the nat1on s
lead•ng non prof1t
orgamzat1ons n1clud1ng
St Jude Children's
Research Hospttal
•:•N o Sales Quotasl
.:0 No Prov1ous
Experience Necessaryr
•:•Comprehensive
Tra1n1ngs
>!•ProfesSional
Work•ng
Enwonment
·:·Weekly Pay &
Bonuses
.:OPius much more, ..
~
.
Come see why
tnloCISion was voted
one ot the 2006 ' Top
Ten Beat Places to
Work In Ohlol'
Call NOW to apply
by ph0ne 1
1-877-463-6247
ext 1941
01-PURl ~1 f\
•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends
I hat you cJo busmess w1th
people you know and
NOT to send money
through tho ma1! until you
have mvest1gated the
olfe11ng
deadline August 7 2006
The AMESC IS an equal
Qr,,o Valley Home Health o ppo1tun11y
Inc htrmg lor Part T1me and employer/prov,der
220
Full T1me CNA STNA
MONI.\
The Eastern Lm.:al Sd1ool
CHHA PCA Competrt1ve
1'0 (.A)\\
01str~ct 1s seek1ng qualif1ed
Wages and Benel1ts mclud
cand1clates to 1111 vacancres
mg health Insurance and
tor the following pos111ons
Mileage Apply at 1480
Intervention Spec1a11st w1th
Jackson Prke Gall1pol1s or
MD Cert1f1cat10n/L•censure
24t !'i Jackson Avenue Po1nt
EducatiOnAl
A1de
Borrow Smart Contac t
Pleasant WV or phone toll Interested
candidates
the Oh1o Drv1s1on ot
free 1·866·441·1393
contact
R1ck
should
Fmanc1al
lnstl1utron s
Edwards Supenntendent at
Ofl•ce
ol Consume~
Ohto Valley Home Health 740 667 6079
Affatrs BEFORE you ref1
Inc hmng for Full T1me RN
mmce your home or
Full T1me and Part T1me TransportatiOn dnver need
obta in a lonn BEWARE
CNA STNA CHHA PCA ed for 100 bed sk1fled nursof requests tor any large
and Per D1em OT ST mg facll1ty Provided trans
advance payments d
Accepting appf1cat1ons for portahon
tor
phys1C1an
fees or mflurance Call t~e
LPN s Compet1t1ve Wages appointments consults etc
Of11ce
of
Coros ume
and
BenefitS
lnclud•ng Must have good 611vrng
Atfa1rs tell f1ee .1t 1 866
health
msurance
and recotd enjOy workrng W1lh
278 0!.,;03 :u i(!aJrr 11 lh('
Mileage Apply at 1480 res1dents
and la m111c~
mortgage
broke r
or
Jackson P•ke , Gallipolis or Pos1t1on 1s part !1me state
tenrier
p 1operly
1s
24 t5 Jackson Avenue Po1nt tested ntlfsrng ass1stan1 pre .. licensed (ThiS s a public
1
Pleasant WV or phone toll !erred
not
requtred
servtce announce ment
free 1·866·441·1393
Interested applicants shOuld
from the OhiO Valley
apply
In
person
to
Pubhshlng Compa ny)
----~--
Part T1me
Cook/Helper RockSpnngs Renab Center
needed lor 100 bed sk1lled 36759 Roclo.sprmgs Road
l11teresled Pomeroy
Oh1o
45759
(~Oir.:S."'iiO~AL
nursmg faCil ity
appl1cants should apply to Extend1care
Health
SERVICES
Rockspnngs Aehab111tat1on Serv1ces Inc 1s an equal
Center 36759 Aocksprrngs opportunrty employer that
TURNED DOWN ON
Oh10 encourages
workplace SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI'
Road
Pomeroy,
No Fee Unless We Wm
"!!!"l;;,y~Mi!''!!F~D~N~'!!!'!!
45769 Extendtcare Health ~d~ov!'!!
Serv1ces Inc IS an equal
1 1388 582 114rJ
We have What You
opportun.ty employer that
encourages
wo(kplace
Are Lookmg For'
diVersity M/F ON
•Great Pay'
------,--'I()){ S II I
Up
to S81hour +
Parts Salesperson wanted
bonuses
Computer e:-~perlence and
116 S Park Dr 5br 2ba 2
•Greal Hours
knowledge of farm eqUip
story b•·level deck above
40
hours/week
full
men!
preferred
Salary
ground pool call 304 675
It me
nego tiable depending on
7808 aherl5pm
Health
expenence
•Great Benefits!
Insuran ce prov1ded Send
Pa1d tra1n1ng
2 homes for sate close to
resume to CLA Box~ cto
vacat1ons and holidays
town c1ty schools 1· 3 bed
GallipoliS Tnbune PO Bo~
•Great Job I
room ranch 2 baths newly
469 GallipoliS OH 45631
Call on behalf ol tne
remodeled alec heat Cf4.
National Riffe
City wate r
Peoples Federal Cred1t
Aasoclatton and he lp
1 otdor 3 bedroom 1 1/2
openmg new branch 1n PI
protect ou r 2nd
ball1 large tam1ly room gas
Pleasant
PoSitions ava1l
Amendment r ghts 1
heat & cooktng
C 4.
able
,740)446 3907 ( 119 1 '56 ~
Branch Manager
Loan
Calf loda y
1137
OffiCer, Teller Ellpenenced
1·877·463-6247
preferred Full benefit pack
ext 2311
Subm1t resume with
WMv lnlocJSian cwm
salt! or 3nu • cr l.. 1' 70
age
{740)446 7029
5bd FORECLOSUAEI Must
Sell $33 000' For listings
800·391·5228 ext F254
Anentlon 1
Local company oHenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" programs for yCiu to buy your
rome •nstead of renhng
' 1OO"o flnanc1ng
• Less lhan perfe ct cred1t
accepted
~
Payment could be th(l
sa me as rent
Mcrtgage
Locators
(740)367·0000
All real estate advenlslng
In this newspaper Is
subJecl1o the Federal
Fa1r Housing Act olt968
which makes 11 rllegal to
advertise Hny
preference ilmrlfltton or
drscnmmatwn bas.,d on
race color religiOn se•
larmhal status or national
ongrn or any mtentlon to
make any such
preference l1mrtatron or
dlsc:rrmlnat1on
This newspaper w1ll not
Mnowlngty accept
advertisements lor real
estate which IS 1n
v1o!.t1tlon of the law Our
re~ders are hereby
lnfQrmed tnat all
dwellings advertised In
thrs newspaper are
lw--iiliiiiiiiiiii-r
JIO
~======~
'salary reqUJreme nts to
Peoples Federal Cred1t ;.
Un1on 419 F~tst Avenue 150
South Nitro wv 25143
c,.,.,{XII.S
~n
Attenllon LOIS Nogoda t.-.:t:,;N;;,STR-l~Cl;;,l;oU•~-,.1
Peoples Federal Credit ...,
Unlon 1sanequatopportunt Concealed Prstol Class
ty employer
Ohio WV ~ug 5 2006 •
$ 75 00
w ooam
VFW
R&J TRUCKING
Leadmg The Way
A&J Truckrng now Hlr1ng el
our New Haven WV
Terminal For Aeg1onal
Hauls-Dump D1v 1 year
Mason WV Ph (740)843
5555
Gafllpohs Career College
(Careers Close To Home]
Call Todayr 740 446 436i
1 600·21 4 0452
OTR
vent•abte e:-~p
Call I 800..462·9385 ask lor
Kent
Tak1ng applicatiOns tor Prep
Cook Apply m person
J1manetrt s
P1zza
Rio
Grande
.::o ,c, r
~M
5
11C'liS
1
...
1~ '4 E
·~·
llollf'
·
.nva1lable on an equal
o~po rlunrty b~se~
COUNTRY LIVING
Gy Owner 2 acre5 ne ·•
ranch 4 bdrms 2 baths n
dry wall stage less than 1 yr
from Gallipolis 574 500
Owner F1nancmg (740)489
9145
For Sale
Syrac~.o st:!
2 8J0 sq II
bu1lt mu!tr e1~1 OriC k
1-jr m<> mJ. lP'"fl 1C t'e t
NCA 0 l(!t nV:J I:Jt ''1. ) [j I
1 bedroon1s ~ 1 ~ ~ J ''J wr'l'l
hatO\'IOOd t' 1m rr1
~1rn t: rOy
uho l r
L1n c: c P Ha '11:.
(740 )9!?2 5858
U sh?f=\ed krtcnen ~ ~''' JO of
cab1nets Wood burn1ng 11re
3 bedroom 2 bath w1th fn e place 2 112 car detached
place 40x60 barn R10 garage N1cely landscaped
Grande area On 8 flal aces 60 acre lot lmma ct.Jiate
$120000 (740)7091166
cond1tron
Low utliltres
3 Bedroom
2 Baths Set11ng J.lfiCe S249 000 Call
·easement large deck dou 740 441 5171 ShOwn by
ble garage 306 Secol1d appt only
Ave
M1ctdlopofl
$63,000 00 740·992 2571
lr
~u :'lli!y
·~
3 BR 1 bath • 1 2 stn
neuse
bAsement
heat
fi,Jmp .,., ,lh propant: fut nace
J ea' n l.:. itCfiP I1 " th (Jill..
1 ,_ x.! l
•lbi rlt' IS
0 •111" \-J
(J t'
1c
' h.. 1r '
I C! ... \ 'A.lo..k 01'-Cio..
li yl Sl1
1ng 2 car carport shade
trees 1 acre flat lawn 1 m1!e
south ol A10 Grande
$85 900 Phone (740)245·
Hl)use for Sale 1n Syracuse
two bedroom With oath
attached g~rage and base·
mcnt
An estate sale
$70 000 PMne (740)992·
5811
3690
�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel
House ror sale, 46A. 2BA, 2-3
bedroom
Monday, July 31_. 2006
on Mobile home sitee for up to Tara
Townhouse
t6xBO In CoUfllr.y Homes. Apartments, Very Spacious.
(740)385·4019.
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1{2
Bath, Adult Pool & Baby
MobHe Home sites for up to Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
16x80 in Country Homes. No P'eta, Lease Plus
1740)385-4019.
Security Deposit Aequired,
full basement. Green atten- Nelgl'1borhood Fload, no
dance area St30.000. Call lns1de pets. $400 plus
(740)446·7633
deposit,
references.
(740)446-6890 an)'tlrne.
Lovely starte'r or ret~rement
hOme In country. Nice neigh" 2BA home- Vinton St. $375
bOrhood 2 Bedroom, LA, mo. +sec. dep. You pay utiliOR, Kitchen , 1 Bath, .6 acre, ties. Gas heat. (740)446 $58,000.00. (740)446-2801 3644
for more info
- - - - - - - - 2BR house- Garfield Ave.
Mason Co. Rebel Ridge Ad ., $460 rent & sec. dep. 3BR
2 miles from Hannan Hrgh hOuse- LeGrande Blvd.
School. 3 bed! 2 bath, 3 car $000 rent & sec. dep. You
garage
Livmg
AMI pay utitittes. Lease & referFireplace. 2 ac. Land. U\led ences required . (740)446tn 2 months. $20,000 down 3644 for application.
Owner
will
Finallce - - - ' - ' - - - - (3041562.5840.(304)552. 3 Bdrm. Parrish Avenue.
$675Jmonth & $67-5100,
0756
Available now. {304)6 17·
Nice. 3 bedroom. 2 bath, 1.5 1456 or (304)674-4687
story. gas tireplace AC , ntce
flat lawn, not quite an acre. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, near
nice co\lered porch, large Holier.
S6501mo
plus
buildtng 1ncluded, that could depoSII. No pets, no smo~
be used tor a business or 1ng m house. (740)245·
worksMp_ Located 1 mite 9880, (740)645-3836.
Trailer 2BR ln Mercerville.
For sale, 3BR dooblewlde
off Teens Run . Poaslble
linancing.l740)256-8132.
r~
1
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
ments, furnished and unfur·
nished, security deposit
required, no pets, 740-992·
2218.
Have some hauling to do?
Ca rmichael
Equipmentyour source lor quality
IJC)Osenecks, dumps and util ilies. Your dealer for Prostar
and Load Trail hailers.
(740)446-2412.
1740)387·7086.
t
s~
,
~800-·5-37_·_95_2_8.____ 1
~.,
~
$9,995. Will help with deli\/·
able July 15th. Newty reno·
ery. Ca ll ~740)385-7671
d ·
·
· hb
vate , f.ltce qu1et ne1g orhood. Can show on notice.
fOR SAtE
The Tan Shak call (740)446·
74 25 for an appt
,
-----'-'----36 acres +Or- with 1,1 00fl on In Syracuse 4 Bd.·- 1 Ba!h,
the Ohio River, appro)( Newly remodeled, all alec·
2.400ft on State Route 7 & tric. Country setting with Big
Valley View Dr. 312, C.H. & yard/trees and shrubs. $650
air. 10 room house. barn Month. Call 740-843-5264.
59'x79 It shop w/220.
New 2 bedroom house in
$265,000. 740 256-6668.
Gallipolis. Clean and com·
Lors&
fortable Central eir, laundry
ACRFAGE
room, also New 1 Bedroom
House, Call for details
1 acre +, Prime Location. 6 (740)441 -0194 or (740)441 ·
mile out Rl 2 (304)675-7282 1184 .
r
F.ARMS ·
L.w...iiiiiiilliiilii..,J
1.75 Acre Lot
Mason co.
Rt. 2 Box 127,
Leon, Wv 25123
Approx. 500'
Road FrOntage
Utilities Available
$11,000
(a04)29 5-9090
wv
RfALEsrATE
__
·WANllD
Need to sell your home?
Late on payments, divorce.
job transfer or a death? I
can buy your home . Ali cash
alld quick closing. 740·4163130.
MOBroiLER~~~
tv.~ ~ 1
roRREN"r
ro·Rc......
2 bedroom .m Famity p ark.
Water & trash service
Included. Call (740 )441 •
7033 .
2 bedroom water/trash paid,
near Porter, NO PETS.
Reference , deposit required .
$32.5/mo. (740)388· 11 00.
5 14x70 traile rs to r rent. Call
2 bedroom house in 1740)367·7762 1740)446Pomeroy. $450 plus utilities. 4060 or (740)367-7762.
No pets.
Aeterences &
For rent Nice 2 bedroom
Dopostt. 740·992-5502.
mobile home in Country
House lor rent. No Pets. Homes $325 + deposit.
740·992-5858
1740)385·4019.
ROGERHVSELL :
GHRHGE :
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949·2217
to 10'x30'1
,a
Hours
pets. Ref/deposit required. wormed ready to go
1740)446· 1519.
593·3820
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
Manor
and
Ri\lerside
Apartments in Middleport.
From $295-$444. Call 740992·5064. Equal Housing
Opportunities
Immaculate 2 bedroom
apa rtm ent In · the country.
New carpet & cabinets,
freshly painted & decorated,
WID hookup. Beautiful coun·
try setting. Must see to
apprecia1e.
$399/mo.
1614)595-7773 or t-B00798-4686 ..
304-
AKC & CKC Min.iature
Pinscher pups. POP, tails,
docked & dew daws. Shots,
wormed. (740)388 -8788.
Toy Poodles, 2 females, 1
male $300. CKC papers on
hand.l740)256· 1101
Wi emaraner Regi stered 7
month old puppy, house
trained, moving must sell to
good home (304)593·0675
r
- b
-.-d-ro_o_
m_ a-pt.
Phone:.(740)446-0390.
a bushel.
B-K Farms, Letart.
(304)882 2567
---------'-
North 3rd Ave ., Middlennrt,
p#V''
2. bedroom, furnished ,
deposit & previous rental
references required, No
pats. 1740)992-0165
U
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones
.Free
,
·r.·o--·A···IJfOS---,.11
V
S
I
. FOR
ALE
Electra Glide Classic, 6.600
$3,995
miles, like, new with tots ol
l998Toyota Camry $5,995
2000 Grand Am GT $5,995 96 Chevy Suburban. FMICD, Chrome $16,000 (304)675·
2002
Hyundai
Accent 3rd seat, dual air, leather 8172
interior, custom rims, high
S6,900
mileage, runs great. $5,500 2002 Yamaha VStar 1100
2003 Kia Rio $6,900
OBO. Cell (614)554·4526.
2004 Ford Taurus $7,950
Classic. 5,500 miles, black.
2004 Chev. Impala $9,995
new co ndition, leather bags,
8o's Classic. Cars
1968 24 Cavalier con\lert· 5Dmpg. $5,000. (740)245Four Seasons Auto Sales
ible: 1993 AS Cavalier con- 5934
1740)44 1·85.85
vertible: 1991 Ford Mu stang
1994 Ford Tempo 4d oor pur- 5.0, V8. convertible 1997
CMIPEHS&
ple tinted windows new tires Olds Cutlass. 2001 Suzuki
Maroa HO~IES
spoiler awesome stereo 250 street bi k~. 750 actual
2000 firm 256·1 020
mies. Other to choose from 1997 35 ft. Hitch Hiker 5th
(740)245·0045,
cell Wheel with 2 slide outs
1995 Dodge Intrepid. Good 17 40)208·0028.
Excellent condt1ion, awning,
condition. Phone (740)245air conditioning & much
L&L Auto Sales
5493.
01 Neon 4dr, $3,500: 95 510 more. · $11,900. Cell phone
1999 Toyota Corona $4,200:
4x4 new motor $3.500; 98 1330)234· 1;73.
1993 Nissarr extended cab
Chevy Cavalier 4 dr $25.00:
$3,200; 1997 S- 10 Blazer
96 Dodge Gralld Caravan 2003 Log cabin camper.
$4,500: 1995 Firebird red, T· $2,800; 86 Jeep Cherokee sleeps 6 Brand new
lops $3,500: 2000 Neon $900. Buy here pay here. 91 17401446·6.783.
$3,800. Others in stock from Buick Century: 92 Pl y
$1,600 to $6,900.
!;)undance; 98 Sunflre. HaVe 2004 Hi-Low 22tt Campe1
Cook Motors
many more . Buy here pay w/awning .
Sleeps 6
328 Jackson Pike
here. On 325 South off 141 Bathroom
&
showe r,
1740)446-01 03
1740)379-2354
AC/Furnace. Kitchen with
2000 Ford Taurus. Call after
Relrigera!or, Sink and stove
l5
TRUCKS
tpm 1740)446·0425.
Used two Hrnes. Can be
!'OR SAl£
seen 3 miles out Sandhill
2002 Mercury Mountaineer
Road on lef1. or cal l
Loaded with only ·48,000 1991 Ford 150. 302 motor.
(3040675-2217
miles.
new ti res, many new parts, 4
2002 Ford Lighting F150 Wheel
Drive
$t.400
Sllt\HIS
pick up 30,000 miles. Call 304 675- 1739
(740 )256- 1245
evel'1ings
10
4x4
HOME
and weekends.
FORSAl.E
1990 7.3 diesel 5 speed,
BASEMENT
4x4. 150.000 miles. $4,700.
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar17401388·8358
antee. Local re lerences fur·
1999 Chevy Silverado 4WD nished. Estabtis'hed 1975.
P/U, 85,000 miles, 5.3 VB. Call
24 Hrs. (740) 446all options. shoit bed with 0870. Rogers Basement
topper. Excellenl Condition , Waterprooring .
$1 1,000.1740)645·0626.
September 29, 2006 to
October 2, 2006
Includes ,tran.sportation,
ho1:el,·breakfasts & tours
$320/person (double)
$31 0/person (triple)
$300/person (quad)_
$450/person (single)
to make reservations
please contact PVH
Community Relations
(304) 675-4340,
Ext. 1326
LIMITED SEATS!
I
Door open at 4:00
Bingo starts at 6:30
Starting July 1st
1st pack is $10.00
·2nd Pack Free
All other packs .is
$5.00 each
Going back the way we
used to play
'IOK~HtS· PAGEfOR ·,'
AS LOW /IS
..,..
.
•
.
Middleport American .
J_eglon ·
~
• Wheelchairs
FRANK & EARNEST
'
Hardwood Cabinevy And Furnlftlre
EllNI~ --
BARNEY
www.timberueekoabinetry.cam
740.446.9200
UH-OH, LI'L TATER, ·
SHE'S GITTIN' TH'
GLOBE--THAT
,
MEANS WE'RE HAVIN' ...
2459 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis
U.f RfREt
T
'{;
,
q
~
·,
$21.00 PERMONTH!
The Daily Sentinel
992·2155
THAR'S YOUNG-UNS
o;T.o.c•.rl~l'"'
. HERE, AN'
MERE, AN'
HERE,
AN' . ..
I I II I.'
I 0\( Rl II ·
0\~
IRl I 110\
Concrele RemoVal
and Replacemenl
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complele
Remodeling
. AD ..... ' (»\~'
~ ..~~~; . t_l~'""':· ;'-'t:l'
. .CCuwme W•d! ,,
26 Years Experience
THE BORN LOSER
David Lewis
140-992-1611
Wf\00~ f"'
740-992-6971
Stop & Compare
Pass
"'l
HOW 11\UCf\
WOI<:!£ CAl'~
1'\'( Ll/C.ll. &.?
\ 5£'>/E,N'(CA,I(5
Insured
Free Estimates
U.D LUCK!
Wf
pi?"
FoR bool
JoR
49
Dry run
51
Grau oklrt
go-with
11 Shuttlt
53 - Lobos ol
course
pop mualc
54 Adda
oeasonlng
Plalna
dweller
14 Tllurman
55 Rainbow
ol fllmdom
shape
15 Uke tall
56 Picnic ptlll
graao
57 OKI
l& House alta 58 Som as
17 Supported
19 Showy
,
Libra
23 NBA taam
t Hell meao. 24 Contess
Kitchen
21
22 PI"""' or
DOWN
·lallher
41 Billy and
nanny
42 Lavish
party
2 Lag , lor one 25 Do a clerk's 43 Heavy
3 Run quickly
lob
molal
23 Raatauranll 4 Flull-.,. 26 WRhhold 44 ~
26 Bn111k up
5 Retired
27 Struck ·
llfll1ll1ri
30 Eager
6 Spanlah
allant
45 [ongaat
East
Pass
Pass
Dbl
Pass
31 -out (rllax)
hero El32 Butter up
7 Llltguago
33 Mag. laaue
~ver
2B Playwright
-Coward
wllh cllcka
8 Bohr's
atudy
9 Rozel..
34 Waylaror'e
mugo
35 Hull bollom
Ruffs, discards
and underruffs
MON~Y"f
29 Allot
46 Jolt de
vlvro
31 lnluRion
47 Bone-dry
35 Date onder, 50 Starlloh
otten
arm
37 Downed
52 Ho181
38 Rtly on
ot loolboll
(2 wdo.)
11 Flon:oaoub
31 ~dgo paat 12 Soria
38 Makea
40 -liwon do '18 Mimicked
aocane
41 Dentlll'l
20 PhyiiCI
39 Welghl
annthotlc
workpiece
. lreeble
anchor
0\ler the last three weeks, we have
looked at ruff01g, discarding and OYO!Tuff·
ing. It seems only fai r thai we feaMe a
deal involving one of the rarest plays in
the game: an underrutt. This layout
comes from Jose le Dentu's book "Les
Jeux du Figaro.' T)'e author, who died In
1996, wrote for the French newspaper Le
Figaro for maO)I·years.
You reach six spades. How would you
plan the play alter Weslleads the heM
king? You may look at all 52 cards.
In the book South began with an oldfashioned strong two-bid. (Nowadays,
South would open two clubs.) The fivespade bid by Nonh would not be every· •
one's choice, but he liked his heart void.
It is oot often that one is offered a tuft.
and-sluft at trick one, but given the preamble, you probably realized that it
would be incorreCt to take advantage of
it. There is on ly one way to make six
spades: Ruff with the spade three on the
board and underruff w~h the two in your
hand!
Next, you play a spade to your lline, cash
the ace-king of djamonds and ace of
club s, and lead a club lo West's remaining honor. West must concede another
ruH -arld-sluH, but again you must not
take advantage. Ruff with dummy's
spade si• and underruH with your spade
five. Then lead winning diamonds from
the board. If East ever ruHs, overruff,
draw his remaining trumps, and run the
clubs . If instead East discards, then at
trick 11 you will lead a card from the
dummy and have your A·K-J of spades
hove ring O\ler East's
CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos .
.
Celtbrty lltter tr'f!liOgrams are cre11ed lrom ~;JJotaticm by t~s ptqlle, past <rid ~sent
Each 1et1ec In toe ci~ stands 101 Bllot!ler
Today'& clue: I eqU!lJs W
" E' W T.Z W Y L S S X F Z K S D D E P W R S
G S K W Y0 J Y F X MP Z MP U
EP
-
WRS IYTKW
AYJLSZ
F Z R Y T K S K.
YO JYFXMPZ ."
IINSPW DSPPZ NYYUFMP
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'One of... !he greatest keyboard players of an nme
and not to:o shabby a vocalist either."- Elton John, of Silly Preston
0-1(}8.
WOlD
GUll
~ Astro-
·,
BIG NATE
IMPORTS
Athens
!:'t9.!::1!:1.!:'S..L\..~l:!!:LI.:l£LI!f.!::l!:
L:
H.l. Writesel
and Sons
L:
Advertise
in this
space
for
'54 per
month
A (' ,
All types of roOfing:
New or Repair
Seamless Gutter
Downspout
~
~ ;, 83
.'
PEANUTS
00 VOl! T~(NK (T'5 P0551BLE
TO ~IDE CLEAR ACROSS T~E
LAKE ON A BEACH 6ALL ?
Cornerstone
Construction
R~sidcnth1t ~ Commerchtl• Gentral <.:o ntnu: ting
P~mtml! • Door~ • Windows • Decks
• Sid in!,' • Ron l1ng • f{ own Additi om • Rcmudclmg
WV 038992 . • Plumbing • Electrical 740-367.0~
OH 382.W
• 1\.:cousti..:: Ceiling
740·339-3412
·'
SUNSHINE CLUB
-Economy Beef $8.25
-Shade R1ver Beef $8.75
-Whole/Shell Corn $7.25/Bag
-Cracked Corn $8.25/aag
-Soybean Meal $13.25/Bag
-Shad.e River Hog Feed $9.50
Why Drive Any_vJhere Else?
GARFIELD
.Shade River AG Service, Inc
CHOO!
FOR RENT- MEICS COUNTY
1-4 BR Houses & Apts.
1 Luxury- Also HUD
Also Commercial Space
. 740-416-5547
YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
MANlEY'S
SERVICE
SElF STORAGE
Additions
Room
Remodeling
97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH
992-3194
or 992-66l5
"Middleport's only
.Self-Storage"
V.C. YOUNG Ill
2~ V rom s
i
·'
GRIZZWELLS
~ ... \\11\ER~ t:l>YoU S\l~ 11\~Y
11\lei \II' "\\IE ~\tk?
~ i\\1'0 to\~
'S\TtrlM?
l.
lncn l: xpN1tncr
~~
-------~----------",----------------------------------~------------------------------------------~-----·~~---
•
I
I
99262 15
Pomeroy Oh1 o
Tf
A
I
New Garages
10x10x10x20
I
•
&
Electric::all Plumbing
Roofing & Guttert
Vinyl Siding & Painting
Patlo 8tld Porch O.c::ki
wv 036725
'
5NEEZEI7 IN "T"HE
CAAAWAY SEEI75
AGIAIN
AH
35537 St Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
7.40-985-3831
, Graph
~
-'lllrthday:
0 ~e:Jrrcnge
0
e. '
0
.
;
~
5;; ~i 1
(. """_-'J.,_
-fr
By Bernice Bede Oaol
In the year ahead, your chances for success look exceptionally good when you
depend solely on yourself. Friends <and
associates can play Important rol~ on
your behalf. but their input is likely to be
more indirect than direct.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - There is a
strong likelihood you will lare far better in
commercial dealings today than you .
could tomorrow, so do whatever It takes
to get thi ngs rolling now whi le conditions
favor you. Know where to look for
romance, and you'll find il.
VIAG_Q (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) - Be a bil
bolder and more assertive, and something in which you're presently in\IQived
can be favorably! accelerated for you .
Tak.e actvantage of the opening when you
recognize it.
U8AA (Sept 23-0cl . 23) - U you're
negotiating an Important business maltar, do not play your hand too premature·
ly. Your chances are enhanced for getting
a good deal If you play your trump card
at the right time.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) -Because
you'll express yourself in a self-assured
manner that signals to your friends and
associates you know where you're going
and how to get there, they'll be following
your lead.
SAGITIAAIUS ~Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Something exciUng could happen that
would tgnite new ambition and objectives
for you concerning work or caraer, You
maY feel an urgency to fulfill th~se
desires.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)- Tl;tis
may be a better·lhan-average day to
exchange 1mporlant business viewpoints
with a person whose intel ligence you
respect. Even il your Opinions aren't in
hartnony, you can learn much.
AQUARIU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Someone you hear about - who accomplished a difficult fea t you've been trying
to master - could salVe as an Inspiration _Learn about hisfher tactics and put
them to work for yo u.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) ...,... In order
to be successful. you mU'st have' the
courage ol your convl'ctlons. Study care- ' full}> all know ledge yot need to gather
and then, when you're ready to g6, don't
lose heart.
AR IES (March 2 t -April 19) - One ol
your more creative assets Is the ability to
take outdated things and transform them
into pertorming, luncUona t activllles
again. Use it where you can .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Things
should turn out rather woll for you when
participating in situations thai call lor
dealing with other.s in an ambitious manner. Your energies will stimulate their
Interests.
GEMINI (May 2t-June 20) - Olher.s
mtghtlet grass grow under their feet, but
th1s will not be the case for you. There is
nothing you'll like better than having a
· busy agenda partaking in important, ·
challenging tasks .
'
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- You won't
intentionally be looking for recognition,
yet your flamboyant and dramatic style
will ,draw olhe fll to you like Illes. In spite
of yourself. you'll command lots of posi·
~·ffttJ
o!
IC;,U JCrQ !I'IbitC 1¥0fDI
boA· to form four ,,,,,,,,
tilt
b•·
wordJ .
I
TRYELM
Tuesday, Aug. 1, 2006
NO, T-HANK YOU. I 'M
.._L!I.EADY GOt NC. TO
·KARATE CAMP. I't'l •
A ftRST-DE6REE
BL,._C 1<. BELT
ADVERTISE IN THIS
. SPACE FOR $54 PER
MONTH
BUSINESS'
,lj )
• Hospilal Beds
(
Pass
Pass
48
10 FIIWn
Opening lead: • K
IMI'KOV.:MENTS
·' ADVERTISE YOUR.
•
~
'/ MO/lPtl
fOil YOU#l
5595,ah:er 6pm
BINGO
Pass
• CPAP
ROBERT
BISSELl
West North
Pus
•• ••
'"'s•'"' ••
South
"Dlt
$12,900
Auto, Decent over all cond1·
2002 Toyota Camry V6 lion. dependable. $895.00
$12.900
080. 740·949·2693
02 PT Cruiser Touring, low 2003 Nissan A1t1ma 2.5S
miles, like new, auto, $7995,
$13,690
99 Che\ly Astra· Conversion
(740)742-3020 or 740-992- 2003
Honda
Accord
Van . Excellent condition,
33 9 4
~___ _ _ _ _ __ (loaded) $1 7,900
loaded, .TVNCR. captain s
1990 Pontiac Grand Prix, 4 2005 Ford Mustang V6 seats. towing package.
door, 110,000 miles, family $16,900
.
• ASk(ng
$7,300 .
Call
owned. damage to passen(740)367-0622.
ger door. $500. Call 740· Four Seasons Auto Sales
1740)441 -8585.
40 MmoRcYcusl
992·7689 atler 5:00
·-
45
118m
22 Daep Wiler
Dealer: South
Loca/1 (J'Mmed. We cart about ·ou!
;·tsllngs
·
a~3
vv- 91-5 22 7 x3901
•s •
KQ
Vulnerable: Both
• Nebulizers
Delivering Daily *One Stop Shop*
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
POLICE IM POUNDS! 2002 Toyota Camry 4 cyl 1995 Dodge Caravan V-6
c$500!
arsf1irueks 1rom $<001
~
. For
10 8 7
. A K
. A J752
'OXYGW
. VANS
FoR SALE
East
"' Q
.
(740) 742-2690
30
1098542
10 9 6 3
42 Auumed
Cldlr
13
South
. AKJ952
The only storage units within
-mero~ Police's jurisdiction
___
A_IIIUS
___
_ _1
loUR
SALE
'"'
1....11
•
'East 'En Storage
•
BUS TRIP FROM
.PVH·
Charleston,
South Carolina
Bo logn• U.0-'5 lb Honry 1-lo~~m S4.70 lb
Turkey HrrMI S4.85lb
Swl!iS Cheese s-1.05 lb
Fresh Mouou.,lla $b. 59 lb.
llummu ' S~.SQ lb .
A.misl1 Putalo S• l;ul SJ.-&5 lb .
P•sl• Sal.tod $3.50 lb.
"Orivt> Thru For Local Tomatoes and olht'r Produce"
89r 211t@r of Pepsi, Die! Pepsi or MI . Dew
• Helios
• Homefill
OHl-06
• KQJ 1076432 • ' A 9 8 5
I QJ
+ 763
Kahn'~
• Portable Oxygen
3D Yrs. Exp.
'
West
"' ·-
MONTY
& MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
Bucket Truck
0_
r
.
•
~~~;:::~1/~l~~l~mo~. p~d~~~~~;;;;~~
(7r- •••:I. •
JONES'
I ll \ \-.;J>OIU \ I HI\
Canning ·tomatoes picked,
Rowe Farm, bring your
owen containers, (740)2474292
.,----,---Peaches
Plclc. Bring
Rent cqntainers, SR 7 south,
Rooms
for
Construclion
workers GaiWpotis, OH Raynor's.
$150~00 per week, utilities
1 \ tnl "-1 1'1'11 1'
paid. Kitchen privileges.
,\ 1 1\ l .... tt~t "
2002 Monte Carlo pace car.
740-992·
740-992·3569 ,
0031 , or 304-662-3449
1~1"""-~~---, Exoollenl condition, loaded.
1984 39 112 fl . Ty Brook
iO .
FARM
Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
EQuiPMENT
framet ess dump trailer. 1983
ing applications for waiting .......iiiiiiiiiiiiiio•rl D15 Dodge Ram pickup.
list for Hud-subsized, 1- br,
(740)446-ll783.
apartment, call 675-6679 8N. Ford tractor, good condition $2,000. (740)446·4734. 2003 FOrd Mustang, bright
Equal Housing Opportunity
yellow, excellent condition
44,000 miles. $8~00 080.
17 40)709-1989.
740-992-612 1
pe!j & K;ikrey
1Wh l ldo~pl>ll"
·North
"' 6< 3
l'l"lmf'rtl)', 0 11
Cali A.h@ad For Daily Spedals 992.·ti l21
Try Our Br@akfut
Breakfast H.tm &: Ch@@'@ RalPs $1.75
Btukf,ul Tumildo..-.. 2/52 .00
Sausagto Bhu:uil $1.75
SaUsage Biscuit wiCnVy $2.50'
Donuts, TUrnovel'!l &: Laulces
JSr cup of coffee 7-8am·
992-5682
7 :OO AM • 8:00 PM
1 i.a'lch
autllr
4
7
b.'\6 E.1~t Maiu St
rn~as:
3 miles west of
Pomeroy,OH
on State Rt. 124
.-s·ir1o• '
~j
~twi-:
Auto & Truck
Repair
29670 Bashan Road
~
~~
~---liilil""'""iiiiii.•.,i
-------~
1993 HOnda Accord $2,995 2005 Pontiac G6. · GT.
4 WHEH .f:R~
~
F
male
Miniature 1997 Honda Accord $4,995 loaded,
5
14,000
miles
urnished apt, 3 rooms &
ba'h , ups1at·rs. ctean, no Dachshunds first shots & 1998 Ford Expl orer 4x4 1304)675-4230 or !304)593· 2002 Har ley Da\l.idson ,
I~M~o-do~r-n'--1
IH \I \t..,
HOUSE';
r
Newer 3 Bedroom, 1 Bath,
attached garage, Good
Neighborhood, No Pets,
Reference
&
Deposit
requirad . No
Smo~ ing
Kimbel Artist Conoole Piano,
Inside, $500/mb. (740)446- Large, Newer 2 Bedroom
good condition . $500 call
2801
unit with 1 car attecehed
304 675·2217
garage. Very quiet neighbor·
Small house lor rent in . hood, $4 50/mc, Reference/
FRurrs&
Middleport
$400.00/plus Deposit, No Pets, No
VEG£rABLES
dep
Call 740·992·3823. Smoking l n~de. 1740)446·
Avatlable August 1st.
260 1
Blue Lake Green Beans $.24
r·------· r
Hill's Self
Storage
Ll\mu<:K
Registered
Charolais
Yearling Bull, $1·,200 born
6/22105, great di sposition
medium lrame size and
ready lor breeding contact
Larry Leport~304)675 c23 11
or Tony Leport {304)675·
3105
Phillip
Alder
'"IVL Y MONTHLY SPECIALS .. '
'
Tree Service
Quality horse end li\lestock
tra ilers now available at
Carmichael Equipment New
dealer for Valley and
Kieferbuilt
Horse
and
Livestock Trailers. Many
options available- steel. alu·
minum, dressing rooms, ll\1ing quarters. {740)446-2412 .
NEA Crouword Puzzle
'
Ouali1y John Deere Hay
Equipment for less-round
bafers, square balers &
mower conditioners @4.7%
Fixed for 48 months through ·
John
Deere
Credit.
Carmichael
Equlprnent
(740)446·2412.
I
The Daily Sentinel • Page B5
ACROSS
John Deere Mint Excavator/
Tractor leader Backhoe/
Skid Steers. Carmichael
New Sofa & Lovesea!, $400; Equipment (740}446·2412
Sola & Chair, $350; New John Deere Compacts
Recliner, 5200. Open 9amand 5000 Series Utility trac·
3pm Sat., Mollohan's. 202
tors @0% Fixed for 38
Clark Chapel Road, Porter.
montha through John
Ohto.
17<0)388·0173:
Deere Credit. Carmichael
(740)446-7444.
Equipment (740)446·24 12
r
www,mydailysentinel.com
,,
BRIDGE
John Deere 10 ft. No Til Drill
for
rent.
Carm1cttael
Equipment (740)446-24 12.
rio IJoiJsEHow
~-Goou5--·.....,
1BA apt in Spring Vel ley.
WID hookups. HUD/PRC Thompsons Appliance &
accepted. Call (740)446- Aepalr·675·738B. For sale,
re-conditioned automatic
083411740)339-0362.
washers & dryers, retrigera2 bedroom Apartment avail· tors, gas and electric
able in Syracuse. $200 ranges, air conditioners, and
from new Gallta Co. local 3-4 BR home. Gee. Creek deposit $350 per month wringer washers. Will do
schools. {740)388-0301 .
Ad .- Non smol<ing rental· rent. Rent includes water, repairs on major brands in
No Pets.
NO DOWN PAYMENT even $600/mo. sec. dep. Call sewer, lrash.
shop or at your home.
Sufficient
income
to qualify.
with less than perfect credit (740)446·3644.
74()-378·6 111.
is available on this 3 bed- :3bd HUD home! Buy tor
room 1 bath home in $l 5.9001 For Listings 800· 3 Bedroom Apartment,
Middleport. Corner lot. vtnyl 391 . 5228 xl70 9
·
s!o\lelrefrigerator included.
siding. llreplace in living
Washer/Dryer
hookup. For Sale: Rem ington 22-250
room, good carpet. tile floor 3Bdr + 2 1/2 bathS, ·2 car Jackson A\lenue, Point Bot! ·Action, 4 shot clip, Like
in kitchen. French doors garage, all appliances, close Pleasant. No pets. Deposit iiNi
ew
r ..lo7:,;40~4:;;46;;:.·;:;2~
72;;;4--.,
open to master bedroom, to Holzer Hosptlal. $750 required. $345/montn, plus
jacuzzi tub, oH street park- month. ~7 40)441 ·0310.
Utilities. Call after 5PM
ing. Payment around 5550
(304)675-7499
per month 740-367·71 29.
4 to 5 Bedroom Home in· .:_.:__ _ _- : - - Mason.
$425/month, BEAUTIFUL
' APART· Buy or sell. Riverine
MORIU: Ho~mi S3001deposi1. No Pets MENTS AT BUDGET Antiques, 1124 East Main
FOR SALE
1304)882·3652
PR1CES AT JACKSON on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992-2526. Russ Moore,
4BR hOuse lor rent on Stale ESTATES, 52 Westwood owner.
16x80 tra11er, 2bdrm, 2ba, Route 7S. $650/mo. plus Drive hom $344 to $442.
dream kitchen w/alt appli- dep. Call (7 ~0)446-3644 lor Walk to shop & movies. Call
ances,
12x 16 . covered info.
740-446-2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.
porch, plus .shed. Rented
Attention I
land near Green.(740)339· NO Brand new 2 Bedroom
JET
3429.
Local company offertng "
AERATION MOTORS
"
Apartments
Washer/dryer
DOWN PAYMENT
2000 161180 Clayton . Vinyl
·
.... pro- hookup, stove/relrigftrator Repaired, New & Rebuilt In
grams 1or you 10 IJ\Jy your
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1Sldirig, Sh1ng le Root, Heat
Pump, New Carpet. 6 9ther home
ad ot renting.
included.
• 100%inste
financing
Also available units State
hOmes on Lot . Call for • Less than pertect credit Route 160, Call tor details
1740)441·0194 or 1740)441· NEW AND USED $TEEL
Pricing.
(740)388·0000· accepted
1184
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
days,
{740)388-80 17• Payment could be the
·
For
Concrete.
Angle,
e... enings. (740)794 -0460same as rent.
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· Channel , Flat Bar, Steel
cell, (7 40)645-6150- cell
Mortgage
Locators. ED & AFFORDABLE!
'Grating
For
Drains,
2007 28x80 wl game mom 1.7_
40_:)~36_7_·0000
_ _ _ _ _ Townhouse
apartments, Driveways & Walkways. L&l
Only $59,995. Includes tree ~
Clean, pretty, 3BR house for and/or sma11 houses FOR Scrap Metals Operl Monday,
delivery & set up. Call rent. Cedar Street $750+ RENT. Call (740)441-1111 Tuesday, Wednesday &
1740)385·2434.
utilities. Call 740·446·9961. for application & information. Friday, Sam-4:30pm. CloSed
&
Thursday,
Saturday
91 Breezewood 14x70 3
House for Rent 2br, $275 Currentty taking applications Suoday. (740)446-7300
bedroom. 1 bath, total elecplus Utilities, No pets, Ret for 2 & 31 bedroom apts. -z~--:::----,
tric. Call (740)256-6687.
Deposit. (304)675·4874
Pleasant Valley
IF
Apts .
Can •
l'l:rs
Greal used BA home only House for tent. Will be avail· 1304)675-5806.
.
3
Monday, July 31, 2006
ALLEYOOP
L 0 E' S T
,------,~
Ke)lllole speakers at conventions
can talk on and on and say linle. I
5
Urink Ural more people would be
~;::~;::;::~;::~;::~;:::::_"...., smaner if tlley didn' t already lhink
~
FW!HF
f-...,...:,...Er-I..;.H,_..;.R..;IE:.__N,:-1,, ;
1
•
1•
•
1.
.
'--'--..._....!._...__.___,
:;lt>ji 'JUM5f~EO
: . ·;~~~ lr.j S'JUMf~
I'
~:m•'"' ,,, ''""' a."'"d
oy fillln; In the m1 ~hg wares
you develop from sret) No. 3 Otlow.
•'•
'
II
!
I'
ICUMUTI AIIIWUI 112!11>6
Unbind- Value~ Mince ~ Demean~ INEDIBLE
"My wifecouid stan her own cooking show:· a fellow
told his liiend "Wow, is she that good!" 1he fiicnd
asked. "Not really." he grinned, "we could call the show
That's
INEDIBLE!"
ARLO & JANIS
live attention.
C~iNG .• CHtNGa ...
CHiNG
C~1~G ... CH1NG... CHINGa
CH1N68C~N68CI-I1NG"a
CHtNG .. CH I'/. G .. C~
... CHi N G ...
�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel
Monday, July 31,
www .mydailysentinel.com
2006
Fidel Castro steps down
temporarily because of
intestinal surgery, A2.
With little effort, Big Ben Summertime heat and NF~
has Steelers fans fired up c~~~. ~r~.~! ~t'"'~~~~ ~~~ j~~~~
Ben Roethlisberger only
needed to show up at training camp to get Steelers fans
fired up.
They screamed in delight,
yelled out his name, asked
him to slow down so they
could snap more pictures.
"They were loud, and they
were cheering for any little
thing that happened," coach
Bill Cowher said of the
10,000-plus fans watching. a
practice that couldn't have
been more routine, with a
few passing and blocking
drills and not much else.
That Roethlisberger was
back with his teammates~
throwing passes to firstround draft pick Santonio
Holmes and gelling a bit of a
scare when he banged his
right thumb off a lineman 's
helmet, was anything but
ordinary.
The youngest quarterback
to win the Super Bowl is less
than two months removed
from. a potentially tragic
motorcycle accident that
easily could have ended his
life, and having him back on
the field so soon is more
than the Steelers and their
fans could have expected.
"I got the arm loosened
up, and the body. and proved
a lot of people wrong,"
Roethlisberger said.
No wonder the fans were
so eager to see him wearing
a helmet again - even if it
wasn't the kind of helmet
that might have lessened the
severity of the injuries in
that Jurie 12 crash, when he
broke his jaw, nose and
some orbital bones.
It was evident many of the
fans gathered on St. Vincent
College 's hillsides were
focusing on Roethlisberger's
every move during two-hour
practice that was uneventful
except when his pass protection broke down on one play
and his right thumb struck
left guard Alan Faneca's helmet.
Roethlisberger grimaced
for a play or two, talked with
trainer John Norwig, then
· jumped back into the drill as
if nothing .had happened.
"He hit his thumb on a
helmet so it's good, he's
back into football," Cowher
said. "He looked fine."
Felt fine, too, according to
Roethlisberger.
"I felt real comfortable,"
he said. "The body feels real
good, the head feels good, so
it was a good day. This is the
first time I've thrown in
ture making it feel like I05 them selves.
degrees. the Titans hit the
The New York Jets, for
As a coach. Marv Levy field in full pads for the first example, practiced twice on
alwa>"s ran relatively e&sy time in training camp Friday, then had only one
traimng camps. He's doing Sunday afternoon.
session on Saturday - in
the same as Buffalo's new ·.' Haynesworth was treated 95-degree heat. ·
general manager, although inside the Titans' locker
But what was scheduled to
that didn ' t keep the Bills room al Austin Peay State be a session of a little over
from havin g the first player University and did not two hours turned into three
hours because Eric Mangini
of the NFL pre,eason to be return.
hospitalized for neat-related
.. Albert went real hard - at 35. less than half
problems.
early in practice and got Levy's age - was dissatisTlwt wa' John McCargo, diny," coach Jeff Fisher fied with the practice. He
Buffalo\ -~.:,md pick 'in the said. "We're not going to kept having the offense rerun
first round and the 26th over- take any risks there, so we plays and twice had the
all choice last April. The took him in to cool him off" teams run laps around the
295-pound defensive tackle,
Stringer's death also led to ·field - something more
was taken Saturday to a hos- a gradual change in policy common to high school
.pita! in the Rochester, N.Y., by coaches, including cut- coaches than those in the
area, thou~h he was back at a ting down on two-a-day NFL.
light pract1ce on Sunday.
practices in the heat. Many
;'Yesterday I didn't think
"He just overextended coaches now alternate ses- was very good. It was the
himself." said hi s agent, sions - two on one day, hottest day that we've had in
Hadley Engelhard.
· then one the next. And more four years, according to our
"Overextend" ·is a word teams schedule practice at trainers. I think that it
that man.Y NFL teams have night, when it's cooler.
showed," Mangini sa id
been trymg to avoid since
"It was (lifferent in the old Sunday. 'The heat is a good
the death of Minnesota days," says the 80-year-old thing. I hope we get a lot of
offensive tackle Korey Levy, the Hall of Farner who heat because as I've told the
·Stringer five years· ago from took over as Buffalo 's gener- players we have got to learn
heat stroke.
al manager this year, nine to play in all the different
The concerns may be espe- years afte.r retiring as the . elements."
cially important right now, Bills' coach. "I'll even go
Other coaches are well
when most of the country is back in my experience to· aware of the problems heat
engulfed b~ a heat wave that Division Ill. Then if you had can cause- especially those
is blamed lor as many as 141 a drink if water during prac- · in hot climates.
deaths in California. High tice you were a sissy : ' You
"We give a test to all the
tempera~ures and humidity shouldn't drink water. Come guys that is mnscle mass,
in the East and Midwest are on. Get tough.' We might body fat and hydration,"
expected to continue well think it's not that demanding Miami '' Nick Saban said.
into next week.
to go twice a day. but it's nut "Almost 100 percent of the
NFL spokesman Greg easy. These g_uys are. big, tal- time when a guy has high
Aiello said Sunday that no ented. they re m shape. body fat he has low hydranew guidelines had been sent We 've just to get them ready tion. That 's not good for
to teams before camps this for the season."
.
player safety in the climate
season, but that those · The existence of team we have to work in. We have
strengthened after.Stringer's workouts and minicamps structured programs to bring
death in 2001 were still in throughout the ollseason them down."
force. They ensure that play- also has contribllted to fe:-'ler
Nothing works perfectly in
ers be monitored regularly two-a-days.
any sport.
• by medical personnel and
"Guys would come to
Last summer, Thomas
that water and other drinks to camp to get in shape some- Herrion, a lineman with San
help avoid dehydration are at times in those days," said Francisco, collapsed and
the practice facilities.
Bills coach Dick Jauron, an died after an exhibition game
The Tennessee Titans NFL safety from 1973-80. in Denver, a conte'st played
opted for caution Sunday by "It was different, very differ- in 60-degree temperatures.
letting defensive tackle ent. There are better medical An autopsy determined that
Albert Haynesworth leave insights and training insights Herrion died of heart dispractice early with heat- now than there were then."
ease. not of any heat-related
related dizziness. With
New coaches often work problem.
,
AP photo
Pittsburgh Stealers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger. left,
teases about a golf swing as coach Bill Cowher smiles
before the start of practice at the Stealers training CilmP in
Latrobe, Pa. on Sunday.
months, so I've got to ease
my ann into it a little bit but ,
no, I didn't hold back."
Two more first-round draft
picks · got deals done on
Sunday.
. The St. Louis Rams
agreed to. terms cornerback
Tye Hill, the 15th overall
selection. Contract terms
.were not immediately available for Hill, who missed the
first six practices. Coach
Scou Linehan said the Rams
would get the fOrmer
Clemson player to training
camp as soon as possible
and expected him on the
field for the first of two
workouts on Monday.
The Seattle Seahawks and
first-round draft choice
Kelly Jennings agreed on a
multiyear contract - two
days after he was due to
report to training camp. The
31st overall pick in April 's
draft will compete for a
starting job.
Late Saturday night, No. 2
pick Reggie Bush agreed to
terms with the Saints and
Ernie Sims, the ninth pick,
came to a deal with the
Lions. That left only two of
the to p-I 0 picks unsigned.
One of them was Matt
Southern
Leinart,
the
California quarterback, who
fell to Arizona at No. 10.
Leinart's
agent,
Tom
Condon, was talking with
the Cardinals, who begin
workouts Monday.
Donte Whitner, the No. 8
pick by Buffalo, also was
unsigned.
Bush agreed to a six-year
deal, but had trouble finding
an immediate flight from
Los Angeles to Mississippi's
capital city and was again
'absent from training camp
Sunday.
"I'm kind of shocked he's
(coming) here this early, but
I'm glad, al)d I'm sure the
rest of the team is glad Baby
Matrix is here," said wide
receiver Joe Horn. who
came up with the "Baby
Matrix" nickname for Bush.
"You ever seen "The
Matrix" ... when he's dodging those bullets> That's
Reggie Bush. I thought of
that because it was real.
That's what I was seeing out
there. I mean, the guy's phenomenal with his moves and
the way he runs with the
football. It's fact."
Sims reported to the Lions
on Sunday after getting
word from his . agent
Saturday night.
"I was lying down and trying to get some rest, just in
case I would be practicing,"
the linebacker from Florida
State said. "I had mixed
feelings - I really wanted
to be out here, but I didn't
want to be under this sun."
The 6-foot, 221-pound
Sims missed the first two
days of training camp. He .
made an immediate impact
Sunday, cracking fellow
rookie Brian Calhoun with a
forearm to the head on his
first play.
"That felt good," Sims
said. "I couldn't unload on
him like I wanted, but it was
. nice to get a lick in."
NFL
final nine games.
"Anything that we have
to do is just some mtnor
adjustments. and
s o m e
cleaning
out," said
Tucker,
who said
Notebook he his leaning. toward
having the procedure. "My
goal is being there the first
game of the season."
The
Browns·
need
Tucker, who has been
their steadiest and healthiest lineman the past few
seasons. Earlier thi s week ,
the club lost center
LeCharles Bentley, their
prized free agent signing,
left Sunday with Nance's
staff.
The 53-year-old Levy is a
from Page Bl
partner at Covington &
Burling in Washington,
which is where Tagliabue
and labor. Like Tagliabue, worked when he was electhe is close to Gene Upshaw, 1 . ed comm issioner. He has
the ·NFL's union head, and '--~ been the lead counsel .in
was ..clo'sely involved in the several recem court cases,
delicate talks last March . including the one involving
that led to an extension of Maurice Clarett, in which a
the collective .bargaining decision to ' let the Ohio
State running back enter the
agreement.
Nance is managing part- draft a year before league
ner of the -Cleveland office rules stipulated was overof Squire Sanders & turned on appeal.
Dempsey. The only black
The 54-year-old Reynolds
finalist, the 52-year-old has been vice president of
handled the negotiatio~ for Fidelity's management trust
the city when the Browns company and held several
returned to the NFL in 1999 executive jobs with the firm
and was the lawyer for the before that. He has heen in
group that developed the his current job since 2000.
construction of the new
The 51-ye<tr-old Shattuck.
Bro.wns Stadium. A me s- who began hi s career as an
sage seeking comment1 was in vestme nt banker, worked
TANK' N4B·KW PROFESSIONAL
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•Pltellltd arliculalilg
• Report: Synthetic
testosterone found in
Landis urine sample.
See Page 81
J. REm
unleaded gasonline has less revenue from the tax .
placed an added burden on The cou.nty has ~een a tenthe operation," Triplett said. percent drop in gas tax revPOMEROY - Oil prices "Then, another of the enue in the past year,
that have put the cost of biggest expense~ for the Triplett said.
gasoline over the $3 mark department is the bitumiPaving materials are
have also caused an added OIJlls material used for petroleum based. For all the
financial burden for local paving and road repairs, and difficulties experienced by
governments charged .with those· prices have increased the county highway departmaintaining roads.
dramatically."
ment, the township trustees,
Meigs County Engineer
The third hit, Triplett said, . who operate on a shoestring
Gene Triplett said the high comes from a decrease in in the best of times, are
cost of petroleum products gasoline sales to the gc:neral dealing with an even greater
have caused a "triple public. Retail gasoline buy- hardship.The high cost of
whammy" problem for his ers pay a tax which, in turn, bituminous materials forced
depar~ment.
funds highway department all 12 of the county's town"Fuel is a major expense operations. When people ships to forego du st control
for this department, so the buy less gasoline, the high- on roads under their control
high cost of diesel fuel and way department receives this summer.
BY BRIAN
The . material used by
trustee> to control dust on
their roads incre<;sed from
$1.20 per ton ,;.,t sum mer to
$2 this summer -· an
increase the townships cannot afford.
''A lot of the townships
really strugg led wi th the
cost last year. and it went up
so much that no township is
doing dust co ntrol · this
year:· Triplett said.
Triplett said trustees in one
township - Orange- been
creative, using seal slripS
with a cheaper emul>ion
material and gravel 011 top of
it in order to control du st.
BREEOOMYDA\lYSENTINEl.COM
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Ruth Elaine
Lambert Mouming, 83
Gamp site will give fairgoers an opportunity to see what life was like for the
Welchtown
Road fire
destroys home
Conf~derate general, the impact of
the actual raid on Meigs and sur-
Racine
Please see Fair, AS
SVracuse
AND 0% FOR 36 MONTHS*
Details on Page A3
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- ------------------------·-------
2 SECTIONS ~ 12 PAGES
Annie's Mailbox
A3
Calendars
A3
Classifieds
Bs-4
Comics
Bs
Editorials
A4
As
<\
:,.td• V.F<'! II'.'•' ':'":1>'1";,- '"• t..::,.,'!!:loiN
·-·" ·.. :.o""" '"'~ -1111•
INDEX
Obituaries
Sports
YOU CANTW ANY BtTTER~
B Section
Weather
A3
© 20o6 Oh;o Va.llcy Publishing Co.
•
POMEROY- A fire that
began late Sunday night
destroyed a house and left
one person homeless.
Pomeroy
firefighters
received the call at II :54
p.m. Sunday and responded
to 32195 Welchtown Road,
a Dequaise residence.
Pomeroy Chief Rick
Blaettnar . said when his
department arrived the fire
bad already reached the roof
and the structure was fully
engulfed. fjJ:efighters from
both
Pomeroy
and
Middleport used around
12,000 gallons of water to
put out the blaze, making
several trips to the hydrant
near Water Works Park .
Blaeunar said a Mr.
Dequaise, who was home at
the time of the incident, didn' t appear to have sustained
Please see Fire,
A~
BREC urges
c·onservation
a.s demand
nears peak
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM
BY BETH SERGENT
aJB CADET RETAILER Km
POMEROY - .With all
the sobering news about
substance abuse in Meigs
County, many residents are
looking for a way to help
and one way. may be
becoming a mentor through
the
Meigs
County
Mentoring program offered
by
Health
Recovery
Services, Inc. of Athens.
For the past five years the
program has been trying to
educate, empower and
encourage the youth of
Meigs County at Meigs
Middle School and the
~astern
Local School
District. This year the program hopes to expand into
the Southern Local School
Dlstrict.
Although the program is
for any middle-school-aged
child. it has focused on atrisk kids. Middle-schoolagcu children are particularly targeted because they are
vulnerable to peer pressure.
From 1-5 p.m. two days a
week at Meigs Middle
• U.N. Security Council
gives Iran until end of
August to suspend
uranium enrichment.
See Page A2
• Hysell family holds
reunion. See Page A3
• OU announces
new IT security plan.
See Page A3
OVP file photo
Civil
War
reenactors
on
horseback
will
stage
a
battle
scene
at
the
Meigs
County
Fair.
3
p.m.
on
Saturday
of
fair
week.
• Alkire named
office manager.
See Page A3
• Middleport men
rounding counties, where the troop s
BY CHo\RLENE HOEFUCH
cavalry during the Civil War.
arrested in railroad
HOEFLICHl.'MYOAILYSENTI NEL. COM
Saturday's activities will begin at were trying to go, ancl the route they
theft. See Page AS
I2:30 p.m. with Mike Church showing took. will be given by Darrell
POMEROY
For
the
first
time
uniforms
of Confederate and Union Markejohn who portrays General Please see Mentoring. AS
• Carbon dioxide
Civil War reenactors will be coming to ·cavalry · members followed by a I :30 Morgan in local reenactments.
from fire leads rescuer5
the Meigs County Fair for a presenta- p.m . .presentation by Bob Vance who
The tinale will come when the reento men in mine.
tion on period lifestyle and a demon- will sound the bugle to demonstrate actors saddle up their horses and stage
stration of battle skills during the 1860s. the communication it provided . to a battle at 3 p.m. Saturday in front of
See Page AS
The reenactors and 20 to 30 horses direct 'o!Ctions to be taken by the troops the grandstand .
• O'Bieness Memorial
will arrive at the fairgrounds on Friday during times of war.
At 7 p.m. there will be public Civil
Hospital to offer childbirth evening, Aug. 18, and set up camp
At 2 p.m. a talk on John Hunt War ball in the small animal barn in
down by the draft horse barn. Thtt Morgan, the person, his role as a
class. See Page AS
the midway area.
BSERGENT!IMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
YOUR LOCALLY OWMED
Triplett said the cost of
bituminous materials has
not yet caused a Liecrease in
road maintenance work on
the county level.
The cost of hot mix paving
material has increased from
$38 per ton' a year ago to
$51.25 per ton this summer.
That cost is for material "in
place." or laid on the road by
the contractor.
Triplett said his department pays ahout the same
cost for fuel. as the retail
consumer, less the federal
gasoline tax - $2.57 per
gallon now, with a 42-cent
state fuel tax.
Bv BETH SERGENT
•Hu¥y-liily drrt! sy1tem wit.
cast-iron~ and wlieel n»>oB
•Convnerci~ air f~ralion sy~em
• 3-year limil~ COIII!Ieftial WIITIIl~"'
ZERO DOWN
"t.11 t"''"''""' '"'"
Mentoring
program
in need of ·
volunteers
WEATHER
fi'UIIllle wi~ lodoot plis
111
Fuel costs put hurt on county engineer, trustees
SPORTS
Meigs Fair to feature Civil War reenactors
for the season after he tore
a patellar tendon in his
left knee during practice.
"Ryan- knows his body,
he 's looking at the big picture ,"
Browns
coach
Romeo Crennel said. '' If
he doesn't feel like it's
getting good enough, he
might want to get it taken
care of before the games
start."
While Tucker is · out,
third -yea r veteran Kirk
~hambers is getting the
bulk of work with the
first-team offense.
Tucker started all 16
games at right tackle
last sea.son. In 2003, he
was the only offensive
player to participate in
every snap.
at Bankers Trust as vice
chairman and was chairman
of the board at Deutsche
Bank in Baltimore before
JOimng
Constellation
Energy. which ranks I 25th
on the Fortune 500 list and
owns energy-related businesses that had Sl7.1 billion
in revenues in 2006.
In addition to Rooney and
Richardson, the other members of the selection committee arc Woody Johnson
of the New York Jets, Jerry
Jones of Dallas, New
England's Robert Kraft, AI
Davis ,of Oakland, Kansas
City's Lamar Hunt and
Mike
McCaskey
of
Chicago.
The ages of the ' candidates all retlect the desire of
the committee to hire a new
coml)1issioner who could
serve for a length of time
similar tu Tagliabue's.
\..
INSIDE
Thcker leaning toward surgery
BEREA (AP) - Browns
right tackle Ryan Tucker
likely will have minor
surgery on his left knee but
expects to be back in time
for Cleveland' s season
opener ·Sept. I 0 against
New Orleans.
Tucker missed his second straight day of practice Sunday to rest his
knee, which. flared up during Friday's practice .
The 31-year-old said a
decision on whether to
have arthroscopic surgery
would be made Monday.
An MRI revealed cartilage
damage, the result of years
of wear and tear on the
same · knee Tucker i njurcd
· in the 2004 season and
'caused him to miss the
•
ASSOCIATED PRESS
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Wilson, miniature
horses compete
in first show, A3
Submitted photo
Last week the Racine and Syracuse Volunteer Rr~ Departments had their hands fu ll with a·
tully engulfed house fire along Ohio 124 in Antiquity. The house, which sits on property
owned by Chuck and Debbie Johnston, had been unoccupied for several years and besides
knocking out a telephone line no other dwellings were affected. No injuries were reported
from the 15 firefighters from Racine or from the three firefighters from Syracuse who
assisted. The incident remains under investigation .
..
RIO GRANDE - Heat
indices predicted to be at or
above lOll degree s this
week will result in a nearrecord air conditioning load
on th e Buckeye Rural
Electric
Cooperative
( BREC) system .
Co-op nmnbcrs are being
asked to conserve electricity
between tlte hours of 3 and
7 p.m. to help avoid se tting
a new peak.
BREC spokesman Steve
Oden said the peak alert
warning doesn't mean there
· i' a shonage of power.
Rather. the cost of electricity muy be driven up by high
demand . Consumers will
continue to he · charged for
the peak event as a wholes~ilc
general ion
passtil rough. even when consumption retunis to normal.
"Mayne lhe hest way to
explain th~ effect of peak
Jcm;:ind i~ to imagine that
every time you were hungry
fur a ha111burger from your
favorite restaurant. they
Please see Peak. AS
�
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