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.c p
rmse o r
for paris
7

c

c ub donates to

0

olzer Hospice, A6

Printed on toock
Recycled Ne"!'oprint

Middleport • Pome r oy, Ohio

SPORTS
• All-Star Game preview.
See Page Bl

Jury selection process

in Williams case outlined
BAEEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Jury
selection in the Sept. 28
death penalty murder tnal
of Charles S. Williams will
begin on Sept. 25, Judge
Fred W. Crow Ill said
Mondav.
Cro\.,: finalized the jury
selection process Monday,

Williams is charged with
during a ht:aring on pending
motions in the case. 10 counts in the robbery
Prosecuting
Attorney and murder of Doris
Colleen Williams ami Jackson, Tuppers Plains. in
Assistant
Prosecutor February, including two
Matthew Donohue were counts of aggravated murpresent on behalf of the der. His trial was continued
state. Attorneys Charles from July 7.
In !\1ay, Meigs County
Knight of Pomeroy and
William
Eachus
of Jury Commissioners Janice
Gallipolis
represent Young and Christopher
Wolfe~ oversaw the selection
William:-- on a:--signment.

of 250 names from the
county's voter rolls as
potential jurors in the case.
Those jurors will be personally served with a summons
to appear at the trial for pos·
sible service, Crow said.
Jury selection will begin
on Sept. 25 and will continue after a \\ eekend break
Please see

Jury, A5

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Ricky Lucus, 53
• Foster Rood, 72
• Alva B. Walker, 74

INSIDE
session
local infrastructure
See Page AS
•n~n,... ..,.,.,...,..unselor to
speak to support group.
See Page A6
• News of Local
Scholars. See Page A6
J'\tf'\rm·~tlrln

WEATHER

Submitted photos

Visiting the rain forest was a highlight of the Costa R1ca trip for Me1gs biology students, left to right, front, Nicki Smith,
Trinityh Kimes, Joey Blackston, and Ben Hood; and back, Cody Williams, Alyss Green and Joey Morgan. The hard hats
and gloves were required protective gear since the students traveled from tree to tree on a high suspended wire.

Ex eriencing Costa Rica
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Details on Page A6

INDEX
•

SEcriOSS- 12 P AGf.:.S

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Calendars

A3 ·

Classifieds
Comics

B3-4
Bs

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

B S,ection

POMEROY - Everything from planting
trees in a local rainforest reserve to visiting
active volcanoes and hot springs was
included in the experiences of seven Meigs
High School biology students on a recent
trip to Costa Rica.
The 10-day trip was arranged by biology
teacher lauren Hardgrove and partially
financed by local businesses. The students
and their chaperones traveled exten~ively
in Costa Rica. visiti ng San Jose, La
Fortuna Monteverde. the Central Pacific
coast and Sarchi.
They sa\\ many sites that are nath e on I)
to Costa Rica. In addition to sightseeing and
visiting places of historic significance, the
students went kayaking, horseback riding
and white water rafting, had a folklore These MHS students and their teacher pose for a picture at the Costa Rica
evening. visited two local schools where airport, just before leaving to return home. From the left, front, they are Trinity
Please see Costa Rica, AS

A6.

&lt;;&gt; 2009 Oh io \ 'alley· l'nbli.~hing Co.

HROUSHOMYDAILYAEGISTER.COM

NEW HAVEN. W.Va.A Point Pleasant man

liJJIJI,I !I!I.!1!11 .

rs

dead after a recent shooting
that took place in New
Haven.
The victim was identified

'' o r

et

B Y BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENTOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY
On
Saturday
night,
the
Pomeroy Police Department
participated in conducting
alcohol compliance checks
at 10 Pomeroy bu:-.inesses
resulting in the arrests of
three cashiers who allegedly
sold alcohol to an underage
customer at three differt!nt
businesses.
Pomeroy Chief of Police
Mark E. Proffitt said the
underage customer was
working with his department. was 19 years old and
presented a valid ID to
cashiers at the I 0 area businesses. Proffitt said the 19year old was allegedly sold
alcohol at the Pomeroy
Marathon. Pomeroy Exxon
and Jimmy's Sports Bar.
Proffitt said the workers
who allegedly sold the alcohol were taken to the
Pomeroy
Pol icc
Department, charged with
selling alcohol to an underage individual. a misdemeanor of the first degree
and were released on bond.
Those charged will appear
in Pomerov Mayor's Court.
Proffitt ·said. Patrolman
Jon Kulcliar Jed the sting
from his department with
assistance from Sgt. Ronald
Spaun and other Pomeroy
Please see Arrests, AS

Contracts
approved
for new
water meters
B Y BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENTOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

tmd a thorough investigation was conducted. ~o
charges \\Crc filed.
Ba)Jous said thnt it is
believed that alcohol could
ha'e played a part in the
shooting. and that state
Please see Shooting, AS

Please see Contracts, AS

Kimes, Alyss Green, and Nicki Smith, and back, Cody Williams, Joey
Blackston, Ben Hood, (Lauren Hargrove, biology teacher,) and Joey Morgan.

a!-&gt; Charles Scott Greenlee,
The
Mason
County
35, of Pomt Pleasant. Detachment of the We:.t
Greenlee is bclie\ed to have Vir!!inia State Police said
been :.hot and dtcd of that Greenlee's father.
wounds as the result of a Lyman Greenlee. was taken
domestic c;ituation at a into custody. According to
Seventh ,Street re!:.idence in Sgt. Baylous. public inforNew Haven around 8:45 mation officer, Lyman
p.m. Friday.
Greenlee was questioned

Alcohol
compliance
checks result
in arrests

POMEROY - Last night
Pomeroy Village Council
approved two contracts, one
for the purchase and one for
the installation of replacement water meters for the
entire "illage.
Council approved a bid
by Buckeye Pipe from
Marietta for S I 80,413.76
for the actual ~uppfy of digital meters, while local contractor Jeffers Excavating's
bid of $38,860 .I 0 was
approved for the actual
installation of meters.
Mayor
John
Musser
explained the entire prO.JCCt
has an estimate cost of
$269.469.00 with the village receiving S 188.430.20
in federal stimulus grant
monev. otherwise known as
the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009.
However, thb gmnt is a
70/30 match. meaning
Pomero\' will have to take
out a 'toan for roughly
$81 .000. Last month cou neil

Point Pleasant.man dead after shooting
BY HOPE ROUSH

Weather

pho sterJ C e

''
olution

1-740-992-7090 • 1-888-992-7090
Marty O'Bryant- Owner
Over 20 Years Ex perience

11Jel«te 7~ ~ ~ &amp; S~&amp;
carpettreatm nt.org
•

.a
D.,

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---

�PageA2

The Daily Sentipel

Tuesday, July

14, 2009

Study: 1918 flu survivors
seem immune to swine flu

President
Barack
Obama
reacts to a
question •
about hea
care shouted
out by a
reporter as
he leaves
the Rose
Garden after
announcing
his nominee
for Surgeon
General, Dr.
Regina

B Y S ETH B ORENSTEIN
AP SCIENCE WRITER

WASHINGTON - The way swine flu multiplies in the
respiratory system is more severe than ordinary winter flu.
a new study in animals finds.
Tests in monkeys. mice and ferrets show that the swine
flu thrives in greater numbers all over the respiratory system. including the lungs. and causes lesions. instead of
staying in the nose and throat like seasonal flu.
In addition, blood tesb show that many people who were born
before the 1918 flu pandemic seem to have immunity to the current swine flu. but not to the seasonal flu that hits every year.
The re~em·ch by a top University of Wisconsin flu
researcher was released Monda) and will be published in
the journal Nature.
.. I'm \ery concerned because clearly the (swine flu) \'irus
is different from ~easonal influenza,'' said stqdy lead author
Yoshishiro Kawaoka. "It's a lot more severe:·
But it is still not as severe as the 1918 influenza. he said.
With onl) a few months since s\\ ine flu was 5rst identified. doctors are '\till trying to get a handle on th1s flu strain
and how it is different from the yearly seasonal flu
The latest stud' paint~ a more pessimistic picture of the
flu's strength and the' ulnerability of the elderly than how
fedeml health officials have been portraying the situation.
Officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
said i\tonday ~wine flu is actms differently than seasonal flu
and they aren't comparing its vmrlence to the run-of-the-mill
influenta. \\ hich kills about 16,000 Amencans per year. The
CDC had no imm~diatc comment on the Nature study.
Unlike seasonal flu. the news\\ ine flu is continuing into
the surmner, and has caused severe illness mostl) in
younger peopk instead of the elderly. the CDC said.
The CDC\ Dr. Anne Schuehat said late last month that
people O\Cr 65, and maybe people over 50 "are less likely
to get ill with this\ irus even when the) 're in a family with
. . ornebod) who has it.''
A CDC stUd\ in ~hl\ also found that one-third of senior
citi:tens had solne imnl'unitv to swine flu.
But Kawaoka did not find that. He checked blood ...ampies from a wide number of age group:-. . With two exceptions, he found onl) people \\ho \\ere born before the 1918
pandemic to ha\C immunity.
W. Paul Glc7cn, a flu epidemiologist at the Ba) lor
College of Medicine in Houston who was not pan of the
studv, said he \\'Ould tend to agree with the earlier CDC
stud~ on immunit~. Cspeciall) since current figures ShO\\
)Oungcr pcople sicker.
But Glcten also a12rced with Ka\\ aoka that the S\\ ine flu
"appears to be more-virulent than the seasonal'' flu.
For his study. Kawaoka tested three monkeys with swine flu
&lt;Uld three with sea&lt;.;onal flu. His data showed that there was at
least twice as much vims in ~II parts of the lungs. the tonsils.
windpipe. and nose for the swine flu-infected monkeys.

Benjamin,
rear, Monday
at the White
House in
Washington.
AP photo

Obama challenges
Congress on health care •
B Y ERICA WERNER
AND
RICARDO ALONSo-ZALDIVAR
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

WASH! 'GTON - Back
in the White House after a
week overseas, President
Barack Obama pressed
Democratic leatlers to pass
health care legislation in
both houses of Congress
August
~ and
before
expressed confidence about
the ultimate outcome for his
top domestic priority.
"Don't bet against us. We
are goin~ to make this thing
happen,' a defiant president
..aid, eager to irnpar1 fresh
momentum after days of
delays in the House and
Senate.
ROANOKE. Va. (AP) - A man who pleaded guilty to
Chama delivered his fullsending an e-mail threat to t\\O Virginia Tech alumni on the throated promise m a Rose
e-.e of the first anniversar) of the university":- mass shoot- Garden appearance to
ing has been released from jail and ordered to undergo psy· announc~ hb surgeon genchiatric treatment.
eral nommee. Later, he met
Johnmarlo Balasta ~apa of La' Vegas tearfully apolo- private!) with Democratic
gized Monday in U.S. Drstrict Court in Roanoke for hurt- congressional leaders cruin2 the two women.
cial to the legislation - as
Judge James Turk sentenced him to the time served, well
ns
conservative
\\ hich is nearly 15 months.
Democrats who ha\ c robNapa. who has been diagnosed with paranoid schizo- giving:-.. The leadership's
phrenia, has said he sent the e-mails to draw attention to ambitious timetable for
'iolent lntemet postings.
' floor votes this summer has
The e-mail recipients had complained that Seung-Hui Cho slipped.
had stalked them. Cho was the student gunman who killed 32
"There was a strong
people and himself on Virginia Tech's campus in 2007.
agreement by everyone in
the room that we can get a
bill done before the start of
the August recess,'' said Jim
Manley. a spokesman for
Senate .Majori(¥ Leader
Harry Rdtl, D·Nev. ''Sen.
Reid intend... to take a bill to
TOKYO (AP) - Japan lifted a ban on organ donations t~e tl~or as quickly as posfrom children, revcrsin~ a restriction that created such a Sible.
dearth of -.mall organ' 111 the country that young patients
That \\as short of a comwere forced to seek tran-.plants abroad.
mitment, and left unanThe law ''ill allo\\ children, defined as those under I 5. swered how quickly the
who are brain dead to donate their organs - a sea change Senate Finance Committee.
in this countr). where organ donation is sensitive because chaired b) Sen. Max
of Buddhist beliefs that consider the body :-.acred and reject 8ducus, D·Mont., would act
its desecration.
- or whether the leadership
Until 1997. Japan barred organ donations from c\'en and White House would
adults who were brain dead. A law enacted that year lifted step in.
the ban but continued to prohibit children from donating.
"The urgency harometer
citing their inability to make such a mature decision. It also is going up," Baucus said
only authorized organs to be taken from patients who following
the
White
~pecifically gave their consent - contributing to a severe
House meeting. He and a
shortage in the country.
group of senators from
The law passed Monday will give relatives the authority both parties are meeting
to consent to donations in cases where the patient's own throughout the week to try
intentions were unclear, according to the document. which to finalize a compromise
was posted on the legislature's Web site. It will take effect bill, but they have set no
in the summer of 20 I0. a parliamentary official said on deadline.
condition of anonymity, citing policy.
Keiichiro Nakazawa. whose 1-year-old child died in the
U.S. this year while waiting for a heart donor, said the law
came too late for his son, but "opened a new big door for
other patients who are in need."
The new law brings Japan more in line with World Health BY DALE WETZEL
Organization guidelines, though it still places more restric- ASSOCIATED PRESS WAlTER
tions than some countries that consider consent for organ
COOPERSTOWN. N.D.
donation the default in the absence of specific instructions
- A former nuclear missile
that the body be left intact.
"WHO welcomes this,'' said spokesman Joel Schaefer, launch center that closed as
the Cold War was winding
calling it ''a very po itive step by Japan."
"The new law opens the way for Japan to progress down opened Monday to a
towards self-sufticiency in organ transplantation. and this public curious to see what
life was like at the once-top
~jJI improve acce:-.s to organ transplantation for Japanese
•
secret site.
people from Japanese society.'' he said.
The Ronald
Reagan
Largely because of its historically stringent laws on
Minuteman
site,
surrounded
organ transplant and donation. Japan performs only a
tiny fraction of' the number of transplants that the U.S. by wheat and soybean fields
and Europe do. S i nee 1997, just more than 2 .l 00 trans- in eastern North Dakota.
plants were performed in Japan. according to the Japan looked much as it would
Orl!an Transplant Network. the country's only organ h:nc in 1997 when it sti ll
donation coordinator. By contrast. the U.S. performs was active. The former livthousands and many Europe'an countries perform hun- ing quarter~. a building that
stands about 60 feet above
dreds each yenr.
Despite years of campaigning by activists. the legal the underground nuclear
·revision has long been on hold because of ~ensitivitv over missile control center, still
·the definition of death in Japan. where many believe one has the kitchen equipment.
is alive until the heart fails. Though for the past decade televisions, pool table and
Japan has allowed donations from brain dead patients, the magatine it did when the
new law goes further, dclining brain death as legal death site was closed.
for the first time.
"It's a true time cap ule,''

Judge releases man who
threatened VaTech alums

Japan lifts ban on
children donating organs

In the House, Democrats
said the) were nearly ready
to unveil comprehensive
legislation and push it
throul!h three committees
in ihe coming days.
Speaker Nanc) Pelosi has
long been on record as sayin!.! the full House would
ad by the end of July.
While the president ''as
out of the country sizing up
foreign leaders. rank-andfile lawmakers took a look
at the emerging details of
health care legislation and
many decided they didn't
like what they sa\V. They
called a time out. In the
House.
conservati vc
Democrats rebelled over
costs. In the Senate. the
leader:-.hip
Democratic
pulled the plug on a contro'&lt;er!)ial financing scheme to
tax health benefits tpat a
moderate Democrat \\ orked
out with Republican counterparts.
Late Monda) aftemoon.
Obama met with members
of the Blue Dog Coalition,
conservative -Democrats
\Vho forced the delav in the
House last week. Separately. in a wideranging meeting with union
leaders. the president said
taxation of employer-provided health benefits was
off the table and expressed
his strong commitment to a
voluntary public health
plan, according to a labor
activist familiar with the
session. The activist spoke
on condition of anonymity
to freely discuss the private
meeting.
Joining Reid, Pelosi and
Baucus at the White House
were
House
Majonty
Leader Steny Hoyer. DMd .. and House Wa\s and
Means
Committee
Chainnan Charles Rangel,
D-N.Y.
Despite Obama's detennination, there's no guarantee
he ·n succeed in the effort to
get all Americans covered
and try to better manage
costs. Wtth lawmakers concemed about the cost of an
overhaul above all else.
Congress may decide to
expand coverage slowly,

phasing it in over a number
of )Cars.
Baucus and Ran~el are in
charge of the crucml job of
coming up with how to pa)
for a comprehen ive health
care overhaul that \\Ould
cost at least $1 trillion O\ er
I 0 ) ears. mostly for subsidies to help cover near!) 50
million
uninsured
Americans. But the two
Democrats arc taking \'ery
different routes. Rangel is
sh&lt;.1ping
a
bill
that
Dem0cruts can support.
Baucus is ~!riving for a
compromise.
bipartisan
which would ha\ e better
chance of ''inning broad
suppon. and which- Obama
says he wants.
Ohama lost no time signaling that he intends to be
in the forefront of · the
action.
"I JUSt want to put e\cry'bod) on notice, because
there was a lot of chatter
during the '' eek that I "as
gone.'' the president ~aid.
"Inaction is not an option."
He also ruled out any tax
increase affecting the middle class. complicating lawmakers· efforts to pa) for
overhaul.
"During the campaign I
promised health care reform
that would control costs.
expand ~:overage and ensure
choice and I promised that
Americans
making
$250,000 a year or less
would not pay more in
taxes . These are promises
that we're keeping as
reform moves fon' ard.''
Obama said.
House Democrat-. mav be
able to muscle a bill through
the floor b) August.
"We \\ill be on chedule."
D-Calif..
told
Pelosi.
Nonetheless.
reporters.
release of a bill - ori!!inalh set for last Fridav ...::: was
delayed until Tuesday. And
Pelosi indicated more
changes arc likely as leaders
try to keep intact a
Democratic caucus that
includes liberals and conservatives. "It won't be the
final product," Pelost said.
"It is JUst the beginning."
Under~coring that politi-

cal challenge. the campaign
arm of the House GOP targeted more than 60 potentially 'ulnerable House
Democrats on :Monda\ with
news
releases
asking
"hether the) planned to
support the Democrats'
"massive
government
health care takeo,·er'' and
"job-killing tax hike.'' .
Up to no\\, the president
has avoided debating policy details. choosing instead
to make the broader case
for a health care overhaul,
and leaving the day-to-day
negotiations to his aides.
Yet if Congress is
stuck in a policy
Obama may be
one who can g
moving again. He
much
on
Mo
"Muscles in this tO\\
bring about big changes
a httle atrophied but we arc
whipping people back into
shape.'' he said.
House Democrats have
proposed raising income
taxes on the wealthy. That
faces opposition in the
Senate. where a bipartisan
group of senators is trying
to reassemble a financing
package now missing a key
component~ an unpopular
tax on high-cost health
insurance benefits, which
would have raised $320 billion out of a $I trillion
package.
On Monda\'. the Senate
Health. Education, Labor
and Pensions Committee
pushed to complete a partisan bill by Tuesda) that
would create a 20vernmentrun health plan- to compete
\\ ith pri\'ate insurer' and
require employers to pro\ ide coverage. Sponsors
say the legislation w.
lead CO\ erage for 97
cent of Americans. Its
incomplete price tal! is
$600 billion over I0 years
as the panel - one ot five
in Congress working on
health care - is leaving
some major cost issues to
the
Senate
Finance
Committee.
Associared Press writer
Alan Fram contribwed to
this report.

Fonner ND nuclear missile site gets frrst visitors

..

said retired Air Force Capt.
Mark SundlO\', a former
missile officer who now
manages the site.
The li\'ing area contains
seven bedrooms. including
one Sundlov uses as an
office, a commercial kitchen
and dining room. a weight
room with a stationery bicycle. and a game room.
Visitors can go underground and view where Air
Force officers once sat to
wait for a possible nudeur
war. It was their job to monitor 10 nearby Minuteman
IH nuclear missiles - and
to launch them if ordered.
A freight elevator took
about 30 visitors Monday to
two ca\'emous room-. that
resemble railroad tunnels.
where the underground uir
-.melled faintly o(diesel fuel
and parts of the tloor \\ere
stick) with hydraulic tluid.

One room housed diesel
generators and air conditioners to cool the equipment. Another \\as for two
officer:-. who worked 24hour ~hi fts. Ro\\ s of 1ight on
a console showed the status
of each mi sile. One labeled
''missile away" \\Ould indicate a launch.
One officer usually :-.lept
in a muTow bunk while a
second was on dut). But
both officers. along with
another pair in a separate
facility. would have to give
the command for any
launch. Sundlov said.
"We want to beat down
that idea that one gu) who
has hull a had day can push
the button.'' he ~aid. "People
who don't knO\\ anything
about the s\ !;tcm. l think thev
go a\\3) feeling much -.afer.~·
l..ari llelgren, 5R, a fom1er
Air J·orcc em ironmental

maintenance technician, said
his ,·isit brought back memories from when he worked on
the launch center's air handling systems. die~el generators and warning lights.
"I've slept in this site and
eaten in this site, and l'\c
worked down in this site
many a time.'' Helgren said.
''I've seen ju~t abo,
every problem that cm
have possibly happened o
here.'' he said.
The missile site, about three
miles no1th of Cooperstown
and about 70 miles no11hwcst
of Fargo. is one of a htmdful
of U.S. locations that commemorate the Cold War. The
'1at10nal Park Sen icc opcr.ttes a fonner ~ l inuteman II
launch center and mi....,ile silo
in South Dakota. In Arizona,
historic presen:ationists operate . a fom1er Titan nuclear
missile site.

�---.,_...---~----·---

~

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____ ___________

---;-

..........

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

.....__.,

Page

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 14,

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Chester. Cover dish dinner
at 12:30 p.m.

Tuesdar, .Juh 14
EROY -. Meigs
nty Board of Elections,
8:30 a.m. meeting at the
office.
Wednesday, July 15
PAGEVILU.f - 'scipio
Township T:rustcl's, budget
meeting.
6:30
p.m ..
PageYillc Town Hall.

Church events

Clubs and·
organizations
Thesda). July 14
Sl RACUSE - Syracuse
' Co '111unity Center Board
of Directors, 7 p.m.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville O.E.S. #255
meeting . Refreshmenh at
6:30 p;n.: meeting at 7:30
p.m.
Thursdav, .Juh J 6
POMEROY. - • Meigs
County American Cancer
Society Advisory Board
meeting. noon. Pomeroy
'brary. new members wei, lunch provided, call
992-6626, ext. 24 to RSVP.
HARRISO.:-.JVILLE
Harrisonville O.E.S. p&lt;~st
matrons family picn1c,
noon. Racine Locks and
Dam picnic grounds. Table
service provided.
~leigs
RACINE
County Democrat Party
executive committee 6 p.m.
ar Star i\lill Park for a carryin picnic with meeting to
follow at 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT - Free
community dinner. 4:30-6
p.m , Dave Diles Park.
sponsored by Heath United
Methodist Church, August's
dinner has been canceled.

Reunions
Sunday, July 19
CHESTER
Singer
reunion at Masoinic hll in

4-H Fun Club
Swimminc and a cookout
at the home of Bruce and
Cindy
Hawley
were
enjoyed at a recent meeting
of the 4-H Fun Club.
T he members also discussed community projects
and fund raiser:; along with
the fl oat for the Junior Fair
parade and preparation of
the fair booth.
Attending were Heidi
Ryan
Hawley.
Willis,
Savannah Hawley, Christian
Speelman. Shanda Welch.
Brent Welch, Jesse Morris .
Courtney Fitzgerald, Steven
F itzgerald and Shawna
Murphy.

The Clover Club
Recent meetings of the
er 4 -H Club have
ded
a vanety of learn•
ing activities and discussions on fund raising. project work and the booth at
the Meigs County Fair.
The May 24 meeting was
held at the home of Mikayla
VanMatre where a July II
bake sale and canvash were
discussed along with setting
up the booth at the fair.
Alexis Carey gave a
demonstration on cats and
Kaleh King on how to hold

~ ··-- ·- ------

Thesday, July 14
POMEROY - Vacation
Bible School, Hysell Run
Church, "Jerusalem Market
Place.'' 6-8:30 k'·m .• starts
today through Fnday, adults
and children welcome.
COOLVILLE - Kids'
Bible camp "Cruising the
Word". July 12-16, 6 to 8
p.m. for children. three to
12 years of age. also adult
class. Faith Harvest Church,
Coolville. For more information call 740-667-6973.
Friday, July 17
MIDDLEPORT
Vacation Bible School, 6-8
p.m. today and 9-4 p.m.
tomorrow
at
First
Presbyterian Church, theme
is "Camp EDGE."
Sunday, .July 19
POINT PLEASANT Son Rock Kid's Camp
Vacation Bible School, at
the New Hope Bible Baptist
Church, 3 Robinson St.
Toddler through adult, 6
p.m . nightly through July
23. Program July 26. 10:50
a.m. at the church.
Monday, July 20
POMEROY
Bible
School "Studio Go Game
ShO\\," Zion Church of
Christ on Rt. 143. July 20 to
24. 6:30 to 8:45 p.m.
Saturday. practice and
p1zza. 10 a.m. to noon.
Program Sunday, 7 p.m. For
more information call
Kathryn Johnson. 992-5195

2009

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
•

Mom reneges on promise

Mom that l was counting on
that money, she said I am
selfish and shouldn't expect
Dear Annie: M) father to be paid to take care of my
was sick for several years own parents.
before he died. Dad told me · l am the only one who
that he and my mother were consistently helps my mothleaving their entire estate to er, and she still expects me
me. their only child . He to take her shopping. to the
even showed me their v.·ills. doctor, etc .. and I do. But
l tovk many days off of now I feel used. I am 62
work to help care for Dad. years old and suddenly
After he died, I took time to uncomfortable facing old
assist my 85-year-old moth- age with the small amount
er. Because of that. my of savings I have. Am I
retirement income was low- being
selfiih?
ered substantially. I also Ungrateful Daughter
used half of my savings to . Dear Daughte~: ~o. ~ad
"buy" early retirement in your pare.nts sa1d noth1~g
order to care for Mom. I about a will. we are certam
never mentioned to my par- you would still have taken
ents what this sacriticc was care of them. although probcosting me. I reasoned I ably no~ to the e:·a~nt. that
would recoup some of the your retirement was m JCOploss with my inheritance.
ardy. Mom reneged on a
Recently. Mom told me promise, which is not ~:mly
she is going to rewrite her hurtful. but puts. you m a
will, dividing the estate financially precanous state.
between my husband, our· There is nothing wrong with
two children and me. She saying so.
says my kids need the
Keep in mind that, batTing
money more than I do. divorce. you and your busAnnie, my adult children band will share that part of
are financ1ally stable. I the inheritance and. at some
helped them through col- point. you likely would have
lege and gave them money left some to your children
for their first home. which is anyway. Please try to forgive
more than my parents did your mother so this doesn't
for me. When I explained to curdle your relationship.
By KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: M\' brother

own~ a business with "Ted."

Ted is married and has three
kids. · bqt he's fooling
around with another friend's
girl. We've all seen the flirting and noticed Ted's truck
at her house. Her boyti·iend
would go crazy if he knew.
I think my brother should
tell Ted that we all know
and eventually his \\ ife is
going to find out. He refuses . saying it will come out
when it comes out. What do
you say? - Frank
Dear Frank: If your
brother docsn 't want to warn
Ted that he's playing with
fire. you can' t force him to
speak up. Stay out of it.
Dear Annie: This is for
"Midwest Farmer's Wife."
Being married to a farmer is
han.l work, but it helps to be
flexible. Certain operations
(planting, spraying. harvesting) must be done at specific
times, and you have to work
your butt off to finish them .
Our kids and grandkids
have birthdays, anniversaries
and school programs. and
they know we can't always
be there , but \\ill do something special with them later
to make up for it. When v. e
mi s~ed our granddaughter's
7th birthday party. her

response was, ··r·m SOIT) you
can't · come. but it's really
neat Papa is gettin~ his com
planted so I can v1sit in the
fall and help him drive ~h e
combine." Six weeks latt r
we made a trip to see her.
We have Jived our e ntil e
married life rearrang ing
schedules to fit with the
work that has to be d on ~.:.'
Plan your trips for the ''offseason," and your hubby
might make the effort to
join you . Instead of whining
about the horrid hours he
puts in. take supper out to
the field and join him for a
15-minute break . We mnke
every occasion speci; I • ~7.
when we have the time. ·!'l
A Farmer's Wife Who
Loves Her Farmer
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell am(
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers"'
column. Please e-mail your·
questions to anniesmail- ~
box@comcast.net, or writer
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, /!..
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, vi!&gt;·it the
CreattJrs Syndicate Web .•
page at www.creators.com.

---------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------

Amos family holds reunio

Birthdays
Saturday, July 18
POMEROY
Bill
Matlack will observe his
93rd birthday on July 18.
Cards may be sent to him
c/o George Dallas, 29918
rolling Ridge Drive, Agoura
Hills, Calif 91301.

the cat and care for it. Bob
Graham attended the meeting and showed his coin
collection.
For recreation there was a
water balloon toss. and
·Hannah Cremeans provided
refreshments.
The June 14 meeting was
held at the campsite of
Hannah Cremeans where a
discussion was held on
holding a service project to
raise money for God's Net.
Jeff Jones was invited to
attend a meeting to give an
archery demonstration.
Hannah Cremeans and
Mikayla VanMatre gave a
demonstration and speech on
photography. The group
~&gt;Warn in the river and
Submitted photo.
enjoyed refreshments. Alexis The Amos family members recently celebrated their 50th anniversary at the Harner Farm near Athens. Pictured are tre
Carey served refreshments.
Amos family sons and daughters, left to right seated, Lydia Amos Chestnut, Sedtlea, Ohio; Luther E. Amos, Cheshire ar J
At the June 28 meeting Oretha. Amos Rider. Bidwell, and standing. Lavada Amos Barcus and Lyvonnia Amos Boggs, Middleport; Maxine Arne.~
held at the Van.Matre home Harner, Athens; Jennie Amos McNeal, West Milton; and Galen Amos, Sr., Columbus .
further discussion was held
on various activities and the
service project. Project
reports for archery were
given by Kylie King and
Taylor Boggs.
Again the group went
swimming.
Lindsay
Patterson served refreshments, and it was noted that
on July 10 Jeff Jones would
give a demonstration on
archery.
Mikayla HmMatre, News
Reporter

Rocksprings UMC raises over $2,000 for parish ;

Holzer Clinic welcomes
board certified urologist
ATHENS
Board
Certified Urologist Rue! L.
Taylor. D.O. has joined the
team of :-.killed professtonals
at Holzer Clinic. according
to an announcement toduy.
Dr. Taylor is accom~-shed in all aspects of
logy and urological
surgery focusing on the
diagnosis and treatment of
diseases of the urinary tract,
prostate, adrenal glands and
adjacent organs. He is board
certified by the American
Association of Physician
Specialist and b a member
of
the
American
Osteopathic Association.
Taylor gained his Doctor
of
Osteopathy
from
Michigan State Universitv
in EaSt Lan:-;ing, .Vtichigan,
completed his internship
and reskloocy at Richmond

.

Heights
General
Hospital.
Richmond
Heights, Ohio
and conducted second resIdency
at
Dr. Ruel L a n c a s t e r
L. Taylor Osteopathic
Hospital in
Lancaster, Pennsylvania. He
holds medicaT licensure in
the State of Ohio.
Taylor is now accepting
new patients at the Holzer
Clinic Athens Campus
located at 2131 East State
Street, Athens as well as
Holzer Clinic Jackson, 280
Pattonsville Road, Jackson.
OH. To schedule an
appointment call 740-5893100 in Athens or 740-395880 I in Jackson.

Subniltted

A friendly fundraising competition between the men and women of the Rocksprings United Methodist Church resulted I
over $2,000 being raised for the Meigs Cooperative Parish's building fund. As a reward for the1r victory, the win
women's team will be treated to a dinner and entertainment hosted by the men. Pictured are, front row, (from left) Don
Crump, Arland King, Alva Clark, Scott Powell; back row (from left) Mildred Hudson, Ctndy Burkhamer, Russ Starche
Lloyd King. Cooperative Directors King and Clark are pictured receiving the donation check from Crump .
•

----

_......_.

•

�PageA4-..

The Daily Sentinel

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- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TOI)AY IN HISTORY

•

Today i~ Tuesday. July 14. the I 95th day of 2009. There
are 170 days left in the year.
T d · H ' 11·1 1 ·111 H'
o ay s 1g 1 g 1l
. tstory:
.
..
On ~uly 14, 1789. dunn_g the ~rench RevolutiOn. Citizens
of. Pans ~t.orr:ned the Basttlle pnson and released the seven
pnsoner.s II1M~e.
On this date.
..
. .
In 1798. Congress passed the SedJtton Act. makmg 1t a
fe~e:al crime to publish false.' scandalous or malicious
wntmg about the U.S. ~ovcmment.
In _I 853, Commodore M~tthe\\ P~rry rel~yed to Japanese
oific1ab a letter from Prestdent ~hllard Ftllmore. requesting trade relations. (Fillmore\ tenn of office had alread)
· db h ·
h 1
.
exlpireiQ8Jy t ctlttmei•·Jel. etteHr wBas dehveJredal.).
B.
n o , ou aw 1 tam . onney r.. 1as .. tlly the
Kid,'' was hot and killed by Sheriff Pat Garrett in Fort
Sumner, N.M.
In 1908. the short film "The Adventures of Dollie:· the
first mo\ ic directed by D.W. Griffith. opened in New York
l 191 :i G ld R I0 I h F d J h 38th
'd
f.
n . · • era . Ut P or r._. t e
pr~sl ent ?
the Untted States. was bom Leshe Lynch Kmg Jr. m
Omaha Ncb.
·In 1921. Italian-horn anarchists Nicola Sacco and
Bartolomeo Van1ctti were convicted mDedham, Mass., of
murdering a shoe company paymaster and his guard.
&lt;Sacco and Vanzetti were executed six years later.)
In 1933. all German political patties. except the Nazi
Partv, were outlawed.
In-1958, the army or Iraq overthrew the monarchv.
Jn 1966. eight student nurses were murdered bv Richard
'
Speck in a Chicago dormitory.
In 1978, Soviet dissident Natan Sharansky was convicted
of treasonous espionage and anti-Soviet agitation. and scntcn~ed to 13 ) cars at hard labor. (Sharamky was released in
1986.)
Ten years ago: Iranian hard-liners answered a week of
pro-democracy rallies with one of their own. sendin!!
100.000 people into the streets of Tehran. Race-based
school busing in Bo ton came to an end after 25 years.
Major league umpires voted to resign Sept. 2 and not work
the final month of the season. (The strategy collapsed, with
baseball O\\ ners accepting the resignations of 22 umpires.)
:Five years ago: The Senate scuttled a constitutional
a1pendment banning gay marr·iage. (Forty-eight senators
vgted to advance the measure - 12 short of the 60 needed
- and 50 voted to block it.) In Iraq. a suicide attacker det&lt;mated a massive car bomb at a checkpoint near the British
l~mhassy and the interim government's headquarters in
Baghdad, killing I I people; the governor of Nineveh
p(ovince was killed in an attack on his convoy.
;One year ago: President George W. Bush lifted an executive ban on offshore drilling which had stood since his
father \\as president. The New Yorker magazine featured a
satirical cover sho\\ ing Barack Obama dressed as a Muslim
and his wife. Michelle, as a terrorist. (The Obama campaign called the cover "tasteless and offensive.")
.Thought for Today: "J have never regarded myself as this
ot that. r have been too busy being myself to bother about
re,garding myself.'' - Rex Stout, American crime author
( 1886-1975).

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Tuesday, July 14,

2009 •

Sarah Pali11 (gulp!) still cottld beco111e 1101ninee
• C\ents she'll &lt;ihO\\ up at. ablv. Obama - without •
public spats \\ ith the being criticized.
Does she have a chance to
teemtge father of her out-ofwedlock grandchild and get nommated? You bctch~
nonstop lntttles with the She's attracthe. charism~.
media and her othc1· critic::.. ic. ambitious. tough to tl
Morton
Has she been s&lt;n aged? point of ruthlessness and '
Kondracke She has. Clearly Palin- smart. if still woefully igilohatrcd is rampant in the rant.
Before she announced her
media. the left-wing blugo~­
pherc. the Democratic Party resignation, she was tied in •
Nixon was back in 1968. and parts of the McCain a CNN poll with 2008 candidates Mitt Romnev and
His Water!!ate-installed suc- campaign staff.
Mike Huckabee, and rl Pew
no\\
comes
her
deciBut
cessor. Gerald Ford. surpoll shm'.ed that she had an
sion,
not
just
to
pass
on
runvi\ ed a challenge from
85
percent appro~al rating
ning
for
re-election
in
2010.
Ronald Reagan in 1976 to
amon!!
consen atn e::. and
but
to
quit
the
Alaska
go\
erbe the nominee. Then
Reagan won in 1980. after nor:ship with 18 months left white~ evangelicals , to 52
percent fpr Romne&gt;.
which his \ice president. in her first tcnn.
My bet is that primogeni- "
of
her
pulling
The
manner
George H.W. Bush. became
sort of out \\as weird, but the deci- ture still works
king.
or
and
that
Palin.
Romnev
sion
itself
has
logic.
Instead
After Bush lost in 1992,
Sen. Bob Dole (Kan.), of dealing \\ ith ethics Huckabee, familiar f:;ces,
Ford's 1976 running mate, probel&gt; and Jcgi,Jative fights will outrun national newwon the 1996 nomination. in far-off Juneau. she'~ no\\ comers like Minnel'oota Gov.
Arguabl} George W. Bush's free to make money for her- Tim Pawlcnt\ and Indiana
ascendancy in 2000 was a self and the GOP. pay off Gov. Mitch Daniels.
Let's hope , us cititcns. ,
break with primogeniture. her legal hills. roam the
But his name was Bush, lower 4R &lt;md get lionized at that all the GOP candipates,
right-wing rallies.
including Palin. get serious
after all.
And. run for president. about devising workable
. Even in the 2008 election.
Sen. John McCain (Anz) Clearly, !&gt;he intends to try it. conservative solutions to
In
her
re~ignation
America's problems and
was the next-in-line guy.
having run agatnst Bush in announcement. she said don't just figure out hmv to •
there b "a need to huild up pander to the party's right2000.
Palin. as McCain's run- and fight for our state and wing ba:-.e. as Romnev did '
.
ning mate. had every chance our country. I choose to for nlOSt of 2008.
Here·s a scary scenario;
to have primogeniture fight for it!
"And I'll work han! for for you, though: Obama. for !
working for her.
Even though she demon- others who 'till believe in all his talent. fails to re\'ive
stmted an utter lack of qual- free enterprise and smaller the economy. overburdens
ifications to be a heartbeat govemment: trong national the countrv '' ith debt and
away from the presidency sccurit) for our country and blunders in foreign policy.
last vear. aU she had to do to support for our troops: ener- making himself deep!) vulbecome the partv's clear gy independence; and for nerable in 2012.
\
front-runner wa!'&gt; · knuckle tho~e who will protect freeAnd his opponent i::. just a u
down. pick smart advisers. dom and equality and life:· slogan-shouting darling of .,
1 011
study hard. travel abroad,
That might sound like a the right. male or fl.!male. ,
d-~
;~
lo~t.
~~MuS,
~ld
1
0
make
serious
speeches
&lt;md
just to help fellow What ~a choice! So, let us
pledge
nt . ru. n ,~n
·. t woh
raise lots of money for the conservatives, but in a hope that the Republican race
nex ·Ill· 1me" ran agams eac
other. conservative Sen. Barry party.
Facebook message on becomes a battll' of ideas.
G I·' t (A · ) d N
Instead. she's become a Sunda), she compared hero uwa er
nz. an
cw
(Morton Kondracke is
York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller running soap opera. what self to other nfliciuls who executh·e editor of Roll
- an9 _Gold";ater won, then with disputes between her have left office early "for a Call. the 11ewspaju'r of
advisers. doubts about what higher calling" - presum- Capitol Hill) .
lost, disa'itrously.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

It used to be eas) to predict
who
the
next
presidential
Rcpubl ican
nominee \\Ould he. It was
decided by primogeniture:
The next oldest guy in line
got to be the king.
It's not so easy looking to
2012, with former Vice
President Dick Cheney out
of the running and a
woman. soon-to-be former
Alaska Go\'. Sarah Palin, in.
And l do believe ~he\ in
- damaged in her chances,
ma)bc. but full) intending
to make a run and very popular with the shrinking
hardcore of the GOP.
In the Democratic Party.
primogeniture sometimes
applies. as with Adlai
Ste\ em,on in 1956 and
incumQent or former vice
·Hubert
presidents
Humphrey in 1968. Walter
Mondale in 1984 and AI
Gore in 2000.
But. just as often. a candidate will come from relative. or not-so-relati vc.
obscurity and seize the
nomination. such as John F.
Ken ned ' in 1960, George
McGov~rn in 1972, Jimm ,
1 Carter in 1976, .\1ichail
Dukakis in 1988. Bill
Clinton in 1992 and Barack
Obama · 11 '1()()8
1~ th~ Republican Partv
however there's a rigid hi~~
tory of .:follow the leader.''
\Vh D · ht E'
h
•
end 'tvtg ·lsen O\\er. s
sccon cnn \\as over m
1960. the nomination went
to his vice
resident
R·1 ·ha d1N'
p
·
l:,. r txon.

•

WE SHOULD BEGIN

U51N6 PUBLI C
TRANSPORTATION.

I

GM

.

~EVAMPED
~ '{.-,...

I

1

f;t"'

--~~~

~

Are we ready for a post-racial society?
In it!) widely anticipated
v.
decision in Ricci
DeStefano the New
Haven firefighters' case a majority o~f the Supreme
Court evaded a significant
opportunity to serious!)
question the constitutionality of the long familiar affirmativ~-action claims b)
groups and classe!'&gt; that they
had been discriminated
against by race, gender. et
al. I agree with the late
Justice William 0. Douglas
- passionately opposed to
discrimination in any form
-that the 14th Amendment
guarantees ''equal protection of the laws" to individuals.
Although validating the
promotion of the 18 firefi~htcrs . (17 white and one
H1spanic) - despite New
Haven having discarded the
test because no black aspirants made the cut - the
court declined to deal with
the winners' citation of the
14th Amendment that forbids any state to "deny to
any PERSON "ithin its
jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.''
Instead, the majority of
the justices focused on· a
statute, Title VII of the I964
Civil Rights Act, that bans
intentional discrimination
because of "race, color. religion, sex or national ori·
gin.'' The COUI1's decision
included another law, codified by Congress in 1991,
that bars employment tests
resulting in a "disparate
(negative) impact" on hiring
unlcl&gt;s
the
minorities
employer can prove that the
tests wen:: job-related and
necessary to its business.
But Justice Antonin
Scalia, though concurring,

Nat .
Hentoff

cited a 1995 Supreme Court
case. Miller v. Johnson ignored by the majority stuting "the Government
must treat citizens as indi
viduals, not as simply com
ponents of a racial, reli
gious, sexual or national
class."
I began my controver:-;ial
opposition to class-based
?ffirmati ve action yearl&gt; ago ·
m the course of an interview
\\ ith Justice Douglas while I
was covering earl) affinnative-action cases. On that
morning. he was very angry
with his brethren because
the court's majority had
punted on an affirmativeaction case, DeFuni~ v.
Odegaard - declaring it
moot (no opinion issued).
Marco DeFunis. white.
had been denied admbsion
to the University of
Washington Law School
while 44 minority candidates were welcomed. 36 of
whom had lower scores
than DeFunis on the Luw
School Admission Test
(LSAT ). Charging reverse
discrimination.
Derunis
sued Dr. Charles E.
Odegaard. then president of
the
Uni~er::.ity
of
Washington.
When Douglas· brethren
declined to rule on the case,
he . vigorous!) dissl.!nted,
telling me when we met :
"This case is NOT moot!

This is an is,ue that is
inevitabl) going to come
before us, and so we should
address it NOW."
Instead of race-based
admission policie~. Douglas
argued in his dissent, decisions should be made "on
the basi~ of individual
attributes, rather than
according to a preference
solely on the basis of race."
In subsequent public
debates I had with arJent
supporters of class-based
affirmative action. I brought
Justice Dougla~ into the
stormy discussion. quoting
from his dissent:
"Such a policy (based on
individuals) would not be
limited to blacks or
Chicanos or Filipino!'&gt;, or
American ... groups such a'
these may in practice be the
principal beneficiaries of it.
But a poor Appalachian
white or a second-generation Chinese in San
Francisco or ome other
American whose lineage ts
so diverse as to defy ethnic
labels may demonstrate
similar potential and thu be
accorded favorable by the
(admissions) committee."
What did Douglas mean
by 'potential'!"
I* cited ··n hlack applicant who pulled himself out
of the ghetto into a junior
may thereby
college
demonstrate a Jc, el or motivation. perseverance and
ability that shows an admissions committee more
promise f01 law study tfian
the son of a nch alumnus
who achieved better gmdes
ut Harvard.''
Before and after the Hich
Court's decision on the NC\,
Haven firefighters, there
hnve been many specula-

tions on whether .Judge
Sonia Sotomavor's having
voted in the to\ver court" to
summarily dismi s the
white firefighters' case
would affect her nomination
to the Supreme Court.
In \ te\\ of her other mo.
considered rulings that
not narrowly categorize ht
constitutional \ ie\\ s. I think
she will ascend to the court.
But does she remember 1
''hat she said to a group of
students in 1994 about the
Brown
v.
Board
of
Education Court decision?
She told them: "Brown said
to the country it's a•'ainst
0
our Constitution to treat
each other differently.
Everybody has to be gh en
the same opportunit) ...
look around the room .
There's a lot of colors in this
room."
Each one of them an
American.
N
The named plamtiff in
Ricci \. DeStefano, Frank
Ricci. got to the heart of the
court's deci:·,ion on .Kational
Public Radio (June 29): "l
t~ink this is just proof po~d­
ttve that people should be
treated as indh iduals and not
statistics. And that won out
the Supreme Court this da\
Not all the wa) to a pcl.st- ,.
ra~i~l
sOL'iety,
.Justice ,
Wilham 0. Dott!!l~ts' 14th
Amendment 'icw~ on indi- •
viduals' equal protection of
the laws have )et to hl' considered by the Robl!ns court.
(Nat Hemoff 1.s a naricmally renowned authority on
the First Amendmellt and
the Bill of Riglzr.s . lie is a
member of the Reporters
Commiuee for Freedom of
rhe Pre.s.s. and the Cato
lnstirure, whae he i.\ a
senior fellow).

�-------------.......--------------~-----------------·--- -·-· -·-·.

Tuesday, July 14,

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2009

Obituaries
Alva B. Walker
POMEROY - Alva B. Walker, age 74. a resident of
passed away at Holzer Medical Center.
Gallipohs. Ohio, Saturday. July 11. 2009.
He was born in Jackson on Aug. 2, 1934. He was pre1ed in death by his parents. Lowell and Pauline (Mapes)
' ~lker: two brothers, William Walker and Ovid Walker.
Alva is survived by one son, Bob (Diane) Walker of
Grove City; two daughters, Karen (Craig) Azbell of
Glouster and Sharon Walker (Leslie Racer) of Mason; one
sister, Bett) Walker of Jackson: former wife, Helen Walker
of Glouster; long-time companion, Mary Hamilton of
Pomeroy with whom he made his horne for many years;
five grandchildren, six step grandchildren, one great grandchild and one step great grandchild.
Friends may call from 4-8 p.m., today, at the Mayhew
Funeral Horne. Jackson. where a funeral service will be held
at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, July 15 with Paul Rings officiating.
Burial will follow in the Fatrmount Cemetery. Condolences
may be sent to www.rnayhewfuneralhorne.corn.
Pomero~··

Submitted photo

The volunteers of the Meigs Cooperative Parish's. "Tuesday's Volunteers" complete work that needs to be done at t~e
Mulberry Community Center in Pomeroy. Volunteers Rex Houston, Bill Spencer, Dave Carter, Harold Rou.sh, Allan Dowme,
Greg Spencer and Eddie Ball help keep the building maintained. A number of these volunteers are AEP r~t1rees and employees like Ball, Downie and Fry who have volunteered hours for God's NET Youth Center. Volunteers are pictured above.

Deaths

AEP retirees earn grant for God's NET

Ricky Lucus

The AEP Connects proGod's \lET Youth Center
Ministry recently received a gram recognizes the commitgrant
from
American ment of AEP employees and
Electric Power in honor of retirees to their communities
AEP employee/retirees Jim and supports causes that arc
Fry, Alan Downie, Eddie tmportant to them. according
Ball and others for their sig- to Michael G. Morris, chairnificant volunteer service, man, president and chief
pccutive officer. More than
totaling $450.

Gt., YS\ ILLE - Rtcky Lucus. 53 of Guysville, dted
Monda), July ·13. 2009. at his residence. Arrangements will
be announced by White-Schwarzel Funeral Home.

Foster Rood
•

REEDSVILLE - Foster Rood, 72. Reedsville. died
Monda). July 13. 2009. at Arcadia Nursing Home.
Coolville. Arrangements will be announced by WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home.

ATHENS - The Ohio
Em ironmental Protection
Agency, as a member of the
Small
Communities
Environmental Infrastructure
Group, encourages small
communities facing char-•
lengcs to develop or upgrade
drinking water or sewer service infrastructure to attend
an information se~sion on
Jul) 21 in Athens.
SCEIG, an association of
federal and state agencies,
local governments and service organizations. will
cosponsor the events with
Senator George Voinovich

Meigs Democrats to meet
•

RACINE - The Meigs County Democratic Executive
Committee will meet at 6 p.m. on Thursday at Star Mill
Park . A covered dish dinner will be served. Bring lawn
chairs: table wear and drinks furnished. Meeting to follow dinner.

Community ~inner set
MIDDLEPORT - The Heath United Methodist
Church will sponsor a free community dinner from 4:30
- 6 p.m. on Thursday at Dave Diles. Park. August's dinner
has been canceled.

I

officers as well as members
from other law enforcement
agenctes. Proffitt explained
in addition to the 19-year
old person who presented
the lD to the cashier, an
undercover individual from
other agencies also entered
the store to witness any
alleged purchases.
"We commend those that
didn't sell:· Proffitt said of
the other employees at businesses which were also chosen at random for the compliance checks but did not
sell to the 19-year old.
Those employees/businesses which did not sell to the
19 year old during last
weekend's
compliance

Marriage licenses
POMEROY - Marriage ltcenses were issued in Metgs
County Probate Court to: Andrew Ryan Francis, 22,
Reedsville, and Coda Lee Click, 22, Mt. Alto, W.Va.;
Randall Gene Hawley, Jr., 37, Middleport, and Regina
Darlene Willis, Oak Hill: Michael Adam Edward Will. 23.
Pomeroy. and Christma Ann Layne. 19. Junction City;
Brad Alton Knotts, 33, Pomeroy. and Evalene Sue Fetty.
40. Pomeroy.
Derek Alan Holsinger. 27. Reedsville, and Rebecca
Dawn Jackson. 32, Reedsville; Willimn Cectl Fink, 42,
Middleport. and Jeri Lynn Evam., 41, Middleport;
Christopher Lawrence Smith, 42, Rutland, and Trinia
Darlene Smith, 38, Racine; Jeffrey Michael Kimes. 29,
Reedsville, and Ashley Dawn Ford, 20, Coolville; James
Randall Price, 51. Long Bottom, and Lisa Jayne Lutes.
47. Long Bottom.

Jury from Page Al

Costa Rica

Williams' motion for a
change of venue, and a
fromPageAl
motion to sequester the jury
during the two phases of the they interacted With the
trial, evidentiary and penal- local students, took several
ty phases. The jury will be nature hikes and spent a full
sequestered during delibera- day at the beach where they
tions, however.
interacted with the whiteWilliams' trial was con- faced monkeys.
tinued, in part. while a psy"This trip was a way for
chiatric evaluation was ~tudents to learn outside of
completed to determine if the classroom. Textbooks
Wilhams is competent to could never describe what
assist in his defense and these students experienced.
stand trial. The results of The trip was truly a once in a
that evaluation have not lifetime experience for them,
been made a part of the pub- and the educational value
lic record.
was worth every penny,''
Hardgrove commented.
Students on the trip were
Joey Blackston, Alyss
rrom Page At
Green, Ben Hood. Trinity
because the new digital Kimes, Joey Morgan. Nicki
meters will provide more Smith and Cody Williams.
accurate readings as to They were accompanied by
water usage. The meters Hardgrove, and chaperones,
will also be read with a Curt Hanstine, Jeremy
computer. Councilwoman Blackston, and Beatrice
Mary McAngus asked if Morgan.
this would result in a cut
back of employees needed
to read the meters to which
Musser said that was "hard
to say" but a possibility.
fromPageAl
Musser guessed the meter
replacement project would police are currently waiting
begin in September or to receive medical records
October and be done before before they turn the case
the year is out. The village over to the prosecutor's
According
to
has been searching. and office.
been turned down, for grant Baylous, after the investigamoney for several years to tion is complete the case
pay for water meter will be submitted to the
replacement.
prosecutor's office and will
Present for the meeting be introduced before the
were Musser, McAngus. grand jury. The grand jury
Councilmen
George will hear the facts o( the
Stewan, Dave Deem. Jim case and then decide
Sisson, Clerk-Treasurer whether or not to issue an
Kathy Hysell and Pomeroy indictment.
Chief of Police Mark E.
Trooper A.D. Wootton was
Proffitt.
the investigating officer.

Contracts

•

and Senator Shenod Brown
to highlight resoun:es available for technical assistance, financing and ptanning projects.
The July 21 session will be
held from 9:30a.m. to 3 p.m.
at Ohio University: Baker
University Center. Ballroom
A. One Park Place.
All community leaders can
register to attend a general
presentation in the morning
about funding opportunities.
followed by a question and
answer session. During the
afternoon, a finance committee meeting by appointment

onlv will be held for communities that are planning projects. These sessions are limited to seven communities.
To attend the afternoon sessions. communities should
complete a community project prolile found online at
http://www.sccig.org/fmectings.asp and submit it to
Ohio EPA to be included on
the agenda by July 17.
Federal and state !!twernmcnts have begun tr1implement the economic recovery
plan to stimulate the national economy. Several federal
and state programs are

receiving supplemental federal funding to help create
jobs and address the .
natioG 's
infrastructure
needs. Information on the
latest developments will be ·
presented at this session.
The finance committee is
made up of representatives
from all state and federal
agencies providing 1inanc ial
resources for small community infrastructure needs .
They will be available to
advise community leaders
on a project-specific basis
concerning the best financing options"to pursue.

Arrests from Page AI

For the Record .

authorized Musser to apply
for the loan through the
Ohio
Water · Supply
Revolving Loan Account
which is zero interest. At last
month's meeting, council
thought the loan amount
would be lower because it
was under the impression
the stimulus money was. a
90110 match.
DesP.ite this. last night
counctl still voted to pro1.
d with the loan and
sser said $35,000 in
contingency money had
been set aside for water
wel I and meter base
replacements if needed.
Musser said if this money
isn't used, it is then deducted from the balance of the
loan. If the loan remains at
$8 I ,000. Pomeroy will be
looking at 60 payments to
pay off it off wnh payments
of $1 ,350 being made
semi-annually.
Musser said he believed it
was a good investment

ees and retirees give to
,,.·orth\vhile causes , the $150
grants made by this program
in the names of AEP volunteers will help schools and
nonprofit organizations like
God's NET meet the challenges of fulfilling impo1tant ,
human needs," Mtmis :-;aid.

Information session for local infrastructure projects

Local Briefs

until the jury and alternates
are selected.
Crow said he will call
groups of six prospective
jurors m 30 minute intervals
for votr dire. or questioning
attorneys m the case. The
ction will continue until
• JUrors and several alternates arc chosen.
In addition to the general
jury selection questions.
prospective jurors will also
be questioned as to the
effect of pre-trial publicity
and questions relating to the
death penalty.
Last month, Crow denied

780 grants were made company-wide last year representing more than 130,000
volunteer hours donated by
AEP employees and retirees
and their families.
"Although no monetary
grant can compare to the
value of the time our employ-

Shooting

~

checks were The Beacon.
Gloeckner's Cafe. Court
Street Grill. Jeff's Carryout.
Bun's Party Barn and
Emmet's Pub.
Proffitt said his department is required to partici-

pate in compliance checks
for alcohol and cigarettes.
He said at least two more
alcohol compliance checks
are planned this year though
budget and scheduling
restraints have hindered the

compliance checks for cigarettes.
"We've all got to be
responsible,'' P1uf1itt said.
"It's a given you can ' t sell
alcohol or tobacco products
to an underage person."

oming The 2009 5aby 5entin
The Daily Sentinel
,
Baby Edition is a Special
Edition filled with
photographs of local
children- ages newborn to
S years old. The Baby
Edition will appear in
July 24th issue. Be
your child, grandchild
relatives involved!
Complete the form below
and enclose a snapshot or
wallet size picture. Enclose
payment with piciure.
~

Send To: .

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Childs Name (s) &amp;Age (s): - - - - - - - - - Parent's Name:_________________
*** The above information will be used as is in the ad***
Phone Number:
Submitted by:_ _ _ __

�--- ---------------------------·---------------------~----~~~--------.---~~------~~--~~~~--~~~~------------~~---

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Financial counselor to
speak to support group

Club donates to HOlzer Hospice

GALLIPOLIS - Kevin
Petrie. a certified counselor
\\ 1th
Joinancial
Freedom
Counseling
Service. -..nil be the guest
speaker during the regular
monthly meeting of the
Holzer Medical Center
Cancer Support Group.
The group will meet at .6
p.m. on Thursda)
111
Conference Room A-B at
HolLer Medical C~nter in
Gallipolis.
Petrie is a 111\!mbcr of
natiOnally-known tlnancial
adYisor Da\e Ramsey's
Financial Peace University
and provides cducat ion

The Tumbleweed
Camping Club donated $100 to Holzer
Hospice on Friday,
July 10. The club
makes an annual
donation to support
Holzer Hospice.
Pictured from left to
right are Tumbleweed
Camping Club
Treasurer Sam
Holstein, Holzer
Hospice Nurse Paula
Gaul, RN, and Holzer
Hospice Secretary
Jean Petrie. For information about making
a donation to Holzer
Hospice or becoming
a volunteer, visit
www.holzer.org or call
740-446-5074 or toll
free 800-500-4850.

Birth announced
MIDDLEPORT -

J essamy and Rob Bright of

~1iddleport announce the birth of a daughter. Lu~ia

Rile) Bright , on July 2 at the O'Bieness Memonal
Hospital in Athens.

Submitted photo

Local Weather

Holzer physician receives. award

ATHENS
Family
Practice Phys1c1an. Lance F.
Bray. M.D. has been awarded the 2009 O utstanding
Family Practice Award for
the
Southeast
CORE,
according to a release from
Holzer Clinic.
Peter Bell, D.O. Assistant
Dean at the Centers for
Osteopathic Research and
Education Program (CORE)
presented Dr. Bray with the
award in appreciation of his
efforts and commitment to
excellence in medical education on July 7.
Bray was recognized for
his involvement with and
dedication to the Ohio
University
College
of
.Osteopathic
Medicine
&lt;OUCOM) in Athens, Ohio,
:where he serves as a
Clinical Instructor. The
Centers for Osteopathic
Research and Education
(CORE) system is an inte:grated statewide medical
education
consortium
'formed
by
affiliations
hetween OU-COM and
teaching medical centers in
Ohio. as well as other colh!ges of osteopathic medicine nationv. ide.
: He began working at
'Holzer Clinic in 2004. He is
board certified by the
~American Board of Family

about church. family and
business finances.
His
teaching topics include
benefit~ of debt-free livi
sound financial princi
establishing a written
cial plan and overcoming
existing debt.
All -cancer survivors
patients. family. friends and
other interested parties are
invited to attend the meetin!!. A li!!ht dinner will be
served. For information about the
Hol::;er Jfedical Center
Cancer Support Group, call
740-446-5679, or visit
wHw.hol::;er.org. '

Lance F. Broy, M.D.

Practice and his specialties
include Family Practice,
Pediatrics,
Preventive
Medicine. and Steroid
InJections. Dr. Bray gained
his medical degree from
West Virginia University
School of Medicine in
Morgantown, WV and completed his residency at the

Grant Medical Center in
Columbus.
Holzer Clinic is accredited by the Accreditation
Association of Ambulatory
Health Care. For a complete
list of services visit us on
the web at wwv. holzerclinic.com.
The
Centers
for

Osteopathic Research and
Education (CORE) system
is an integrated statewide
medical education consortium formed by affiliations
between O U-COM and
teachmg hosp1tals in Ohio,
as well as other colleges of
osteopathic
medicine
nationwide.
• CORE became the nation's
first accredited Osteopathic
Postdoctoral
Training
Institution (OPT!) in 1997
and established a model for
the osteopathic profession.
The American Osteopathic
Association (AOA) defines
an OPTI as a c.ommunitybased training consortium
comprised of at least one college of osteopathic medicine
,and one teaching hospital.
CORE internship and residency programs accommodate over 450 postdoctoral
trainees.
CORE clinical facultv
hold group IV faculty statu's
through Ohio University.
Physicians applying for a
CORE clinical
faculty
appointment must be actively teaching and mentoring
students. interns . or residents on rotations in aftiliatcd
teaching
hospitals,
ambulatory clinical settings.
or research labs within the
CORE system.

Tuesday... Sunny. Highs ~ot as cool with lows around .
in the lower so~. Southwest 70. Southwest winds 5 to 10
winds around 5 mph ... mph. Chance of rain 40 perBecoming northv.est around cent.
Thursda} ...Mostly cloudy
5 mph in the afternoon.
the
morning ...Then
Tuesday night ... Partly in
cloudy. Lows in the mid 50s. · becoming partly sunny. A
chance of showers. Highs in
Light and variable winds.
Wednesday ... Put I y the mid 80s. Chance of rain
sunny with a c:hance of 30 percent.
T)1llrsday n ight .••Mostly
showers with a sliuht
chance of thunderstor;1,s . cloudy in the evening .. .Then
Highs in the mid 80s. South becoming partly cloudy.
winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance Lows in the lower 60s.
of rain 40 percent.
Friday
through
Wednesday night ...Mostly Saturday...Partly cloudy.
cloudy with a chance of Highs in the lower 80s.
showers and thunderstonns. Lo\vs in the upper 5Gs.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE)- 28.75
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 44
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 25.60
Big Lots (NYSE) - 20.44
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 28.70
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 30.51
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 5.43.
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.59
Charming St.ops (NASDAQ) 3.77
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 29.43
Collins (NYSE) - 39.97
DuPont (NYSE) - 25.26
US Bank (NYSE) - 17.69
Gannett (NYSE) - 3.32
General Electric (NYSE) - 11.46
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 16.58
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 34.71
Kroger (NYSE) - 21.64
Limited Brands (NYSE)- 10.93
Norfolk Southern (NVSE) 37.39
•

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·
DAQ)- 29.90
BBT (NYSE) - 21.86
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 16.54
Pepsico (NYSE) - 55.67
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6
Rockwell (NYSE) - 32.52
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) Royal Dutch Shell - 47.51
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 57.59
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 47.83
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.20
WesBanco (NYSE) - 15.90
Worthington (NYSE) - 11.48
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of trans·
actions for July 13, 2009, provld·
ed by Edward Jones financial
advisors Isaac Mills In Gallipolis
at (740) 441·9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
(304) 674·0174. Member SIPC.

Traffic offenses jamming up Ohio courts
: DAYTON (AP) -More
than one of every 10 Ohio
drivers has a suspended
license. But many still
drive. And when they get
caught they land in one of
the state's 128 municipal
courts. where roughly half
the cases are related to traffie offenses.
The rise in traffic cases is
keeping police busy, crowding jails, swamping courts
and chewing up public

defender attorney time.
According to the Dayton
Daily News. 929,804 of the
state's 7.5 million driversor 12.4 percent - have suspended licenses.
For thousands of suspended drivers. getting a valid
license is out of reach
because they owe so much
money in fines, court costs
and reinstatement fees.
Dayton Municipal Court
Magistrate Chris Roberts

said it's not unusual to sec
someone with 50 prior convictions. 30 suspensions
and $10,000 in reinstatement fees.
"You know they're never
going to really dig it out."
Roberts said.
Last
year,
the
Montgomery County Public
Defender's office handled
19,000 misdemeanor cases,
and 65 percent to 70 percent
Wl!re traffic related.

Holzer sponsoring Jackson Ride for Relay benefit
JACKSON - Get your
motor running for the fourth
annual Ride for Relay.
sponsored
by
Holzer
Medical Center-Jackson's
Relay for Life team.
The HMC-Jackson Ride
for Relay is scheduled for
Saturday, July 18. with the
first bike out at noon, last
bike in at 4 p.m. The starting point for the ride is the
Twin Oaks Building in
Jackson, located next to the

BP convenience store on
Twin Oaks Drive off Ohio
32, just across the highway
from HMC-Jackson.
Registration will be conducted from 10 a.m. until
noon. The fee is $15 per dri
ver and $5 per rider. All proceeds will benefit the
American Cancer Society
2009 Jackso\} County Relay
for Life. which is scheduled
for Friday and Saturday,
Aug. 7-8 at the Jackson

Middle School track and
field complex.
Door prizes and food and
beverages will be available.
The rain date for the ride is
Saturday, July 25.
For information, contact
Jackie Rister at 740-39583/0, or Beth Kellv ar 740395-8408.
For more information
about Hol-:.er Medical
Center-Jackson,
vmt
www.holzerjackson.org .

Makes 4.0 GPA
first year

People World Leadership
Forum in Washington, D. C.
The forum is an intensive
six-day program geared to
expand individual knowledge and leadership skills. It
was e nvisioned by Pres.
Dwight D. Eisenhower as a
way to foster world citizen
ship when he founded
People to People in 1956.
During
the
World
Leadership forum, those
attending will gain a profound understanding of
America's history, build
leadership skills and selfconfjdence, form lasting
friends hips and interact
w1th peers from around the
world .
The forum will include

visits to the Smithsonian
Institution, hentage sites
like Colonial Williamsburg
or Gettysburg National
Military Park. and study
international relations at a
foreign embassy with other
like-minded students.
She has only a few days to
secure needed funding
required for attending.
Individuals or businesses
interested in helping the
.Meigs Middle School student is asked to call 7422646 immediately so that
she can retain her place m
the People to People World
Leadership Forum. Her
address is 34725 White s
Hi ll Road, Rutland, Ohio
4577'5.

.
News of Local Scholars

POMEROY Alexa
Yenoy has completed her
first
year
at
Miami
University, Oxford, with a
4. G PA. She is the daughter
of Mark and Melinda Yenoy
of Pomeroy. At Miami, she
is a member of Delta Zeta.

Meigs student
invited to
leadership forum
POMEROY - Abigail
Houser has been invited to
attend the 2009 Peop le to
I

.

We've extended
our hours for you!
Our office and drive thru located at

97 N. Second Street, Middleport
will now be open 7 am to 7pm Monday through Friday
and 8 am to 1 pm on Saturday.

Call us today at 800-374 -6123,
740-992-6661 or visit us at
www.peoplesbancorp.com
The right time. The right place.

..

•

�Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Obama hoslo; Columbus Cre". Page 82
Pujols enjo)S pia) ing host, Page 86

Ex-boxer Gatti murdered. Page 86

Thesday, July 14, 2009

·~======================================
Stotts wins ,
Schilling

Memorial run
Bv ScoTT WoLFE
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

Third week of Tri-County Junior Golf Tour complete
BYFRANK

C APEHART

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

GALLIPOLIS - Week
three of the 2009 Tri-County
Junior Golf Tour produced
some new faces, new winners. and generall) tightened
up the standings in several
age group&lt;&gt; as the young
ltnksters played at Cliffside
Golf Cou~e in Gallipolis.
~ick
Saunders
of
Gallipolis won the First
Place Fruth trophy with the

be:-.t score of the day at 41
with his first venture '' ith
the premier 15-17 ,,ge group.
Close t,chind \\ ith 45. fellow
Gallipolis hitter Corey
Hamilton collected the runner-up award at one stroke
ahead of Point Pleasant's
Justin
Ca\ender
\\hO
secured third place. Zane
Warner and Core) Arthur
tied for fourth on identical
47 stroke totaLs. Follt,wing
the leaders were Kevin Beck
with 56. Dave Green and

Daniel Rees with 60 each.
David Michaels at 65. and
Mall Cornell \\ith 68.
Previous leader Opie
Luca:-. was absent giving
Cavender the go-ahead to
~ecure the positiOn of bracket point leader with 21, one
ahead of Lucas' 20.
Hamilton is third at 15,
Warner at 11 , and Saunders
with I0 going into the final
point-earning-round.
.
Libh\ Leach of Cheshtre
earned.her third consecuti\c

STEWART
~leigs
Countv's Chris Stott~ made
it a dean sweep in taking
the ftrst annual Greg
Schilling Memorial Race
fo1 \1altc: A\1RA ~1odifieds
at Skyline Speedway Friday
nte:ht
Stotts grew up in Darwin
son of master auto-bod),
man Chuck Stotts ot
Precision Automotive.
M LB All-Star .Game Preview
Other Meigs winners taking Skyline wins were Tony
Roush. Reedsville. who
claimed his very first win in
the steel block "Stars and
Stripes 30": Ryan Wilson
who won the Pure Stocks:
Dennis Adkins. the Four
Cylinders: and Kyle Bond
the Mini-Wedges.
: It is often good to come
out on top. but for the
Roush boys of Meigs
County, two of three racing
brothers pulled the trick.
Tony of Reedsville. claimed
his tlrst ever feature win by
toming out on top while
brother Frank unfortunately
rolled his car and came out
on its top. Brother Roy fin- I
ished a strong fifth in the
late model - invitational.
Racine's Kevin Layne won
his Late Model qualifying
heat race.
Racine's Dennis Adkins
made it two-for-two at
Skyline in the 4-cylinders
followed by another Racine
driver Spike RiLer in an
Adkins team car. Cousin
Grumpy Adkins came home
fifth, while Meigs' Jeff
kin and David Banks
t d for position.
Spectators watch batting practice for the American and National Leagues in preparation
y virtue of winning the baseball game in St. Louis on Monday.
fast-car
dash,
Stotts'
Carthage Auto Parts/Stone
Ridge Stables #8s started on
the pole and led flag-to-flag
in a spectacular 30-lap
ST. LOUIS (AP) - A lot first pttch to Seattle's lchiro the ~L last year at old
green-to-checkered
run
sure
has changed since base- Suzuki on Tuesday night at Yankee Stadium. where
without a caution. It was a
big night, not only for ball's All-Stars last pulled the new Busch - after Michael Young's sacnfice
President Ban1ck Obama's t1y at I :37 a.m.~gave the AL
Stotts, but for. the Malta into the Gateway City.
Willie Mays, Roberto ceremonial tos:-. to Cardinals a 4-3. 15-inning victory.
AMRA series that drew 55
Now 11-0-l since its 1996
cars from six states and Clemente. Hank Aaron and star Albc•1 Pujol::. - the NL
be
seeking
its
first
win
defeat
at Philadelphia - the
will
Willie
McCovey
topped
the
packed the house at Billy
longest unbeaten streak in
1966 NL batting order. It in 13 years.
Jarrell's showplace.
''At some point this 'All-Star history - the AL
"I knew to win this thing I was 103 degrees in circular
had to be smooth and stay Busch Stadium, and Gaylord streak's going to end," has cut the overall gap to 40on the bottom," said an Perry got the win in relief of Yankees first baseman Mark 37-2 and hasn't lost in six
ecstatic Stotts, known for Sandy Koufax. Jim Bunning Teixeira said, ''but we ju~t meetings since the winning
don't want it to be this year." league started receiving
his 'big-race· persona. "This and Juan Marichal.
Welcome to one of the home-field advantage in the
And. most significantly.
is a big race for me and it
means alot because Greg the National League was in most one-sided rivalries in World Series.
"We would love to be able
was a good friend and his the midst of winning nine sports. what's become the
brothers are all great guvs." straight All-Star games and American League's annual to snap that streak." said
Philadelphia first baseman
domination of the i':L.
"I knew for a while t 'had 19 of 20.
Even a pregame pep talk Rvan Howard , a St. Louis
When San Francisco's
Please see Skyline, Bc:i
Tim Lincecum throws the by Ernie Bank:-. didn 't help native. ''It always seems like

tion overall at 16 point~. just
two better than Sam Gordon
of Mason. Fourth thi:-. week
was Christian Sparks with
80. ahead of Joshua Parker
82. and Trenton · Cook at
101.
The 11-12 age division
really turned into a competitive jumble for the season.
Logan Sheets of Bidwell
fashioned a neat 51 to grnb
the Fruth First Place weekly

Ladies First Place trophy
and stands alone in the girl_s
bracket with 30 points.
In the 13-14 age diviswn ..
Dakota Si:-.k of New Haven
posted 54 to earn the First
Place Fruth Trophy nnd
locked up the 2009 Tour
champ award at 28 points.
Jacoh Leach of Cheshire had
65 for runner-up this week.
Gus Slone of Gallipolis collected 70 ~trokes for third
place points which earned
him the second place posi-

Please see Golf, Bl

Norris wins
--------. · Riverside Open

•

l

J

STAFF REPORT
MDSSPORTSO MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

MASON - Ryan Norris of
Letart Falls; Ohio has captured the first place trophy m
the 2009 Riverside Open Golf
Toumement. Noms · shot
rounds of 66-72 to accumulate a 138 total. winning by
one shot over Jon :McDonald
of Jackson. Ohio and Joey
Gossett of Ripley. West
Virginia. It was the second
win of Norris· at Riverside.
A total of ll 0 players competed in this year's event with
68 in the championship fligl
and 42 in the flighted portion
of the toumement. Over
$7500 in prizes were awarded
to the winners. This was the
first year that the Riverside
Open was to be used as a
player of the year point
toumement by the West
Virginia Golf Association.
The flight winners for the
2009 Toumement are a&lt;; follows:
CHAMPIONSHIP FLIGHT
Ryan Norns
Jon McDonald
Joey Gossett
Tony Dugan
J.R. Jones
JeremyTUCker
Nathan Kerns
Jeff Harper
Tony Brown
Cart King
Jeremy Valle!
Ben Palmer
Ryan Stewart
Doug lson
Morgan Dobbins
Trent Roush
Tim Mumns
Steve Fox

AP photo

for tomorrrow's MLB All-Star

American League doininates NL these days

e Cavaliers sign veteran

J

Williams and Delonte West
and forward LeBron James ,
the reigning league MVP.
Parker is the latest addition to a Cleveland team that
had the best regular-season
record in the l\BA last season but lost to the Orlando
Magic in the Eastern
Conference
finals.
Cleveland's biggest addition
since then has been
Shaquille O'Neal. 37, the
dominating center who
came to the Cavs from the
Phoenix Suns for Ben
Wallace. Sasha Pavlovic. a
second-round pick in 20 I0
and S500 ,000.
"When you have players
like Shaq. LeBron and Mo
Williams, it makes every
body else's job a lot easier,"
Parker said. "I benefit from
other players demanding a
lot of attention."
Ch:veland has spent the
last four years following
Parker, who has split his
career evenly between the
NBA and Europe. He played
five seasons with Maccabi

Please see cavs, Bl

140
142

143
143
143
145

145
145

146
147

147
147

147
147

FIRST FLIGHT
Jim Freeman
Colby James
Gray Murray
Roy Johnson, SR
Scott Hussell
Joe Ramella

149
150
151

153
154
154

SECOND FLIGHT
Steve Salford
Jim Anderson
Larry Whobrey
Mike Ralston
Chris Johnson

150
156

158
158
158

THIRD FLIGHT
David N1bert
Heath Rickard
Fred Bryant

171
172

173

FOURTH FLIGHT

Please see All-Star, 86

Na1ee Muhammad
Gabe Scott

180
186

Fielder wins HR Derby

swingman Anthony Parker

INDEPENDENCE (AP)
- Anthony Parker's fondest
basketball memories came
overseas, where he won
three Euroleague championships and twice was
named league MVP.
After signing Monday
with
the
Cleveland
Cavaliers, Parker believes
tie has a legitimate shot at
winning his first NBA title.
: "For me it's always about
who really saw me fitting in
with what they're trying to
do," Parker said. "Cleveland
has been that team from the
beginning. They showed the
most interest and pur::.ued
me the hardest. It just so
happens they're also a team
that's contending, which is
even better. It was a fit all
·
the way through."
• Parker. 34, :signed a two~; deal worth ahout $6
•
Ilion. He averaged 10.7
points and 3.4 assists in 80
games for the Toronto
Raptors last season. At 6foot-6, he provides the type
of length the Cavaliers have
been searching for in a
perimeter defender.
"He's as perfect a piece as
you could find,'' Cavaliers
assistant general manager
Lance Blanks said.
Parker started 7 I games
last season and should fall
into the rotation behina
Cleveland
guards
Mo

they kind' of pull it out
to\\ ards.the end of the game
but. you kno\\. hopefull)
this )Car it will be different.''
Even v.•hcn the All-Stars
aren't playing in a stadium
tilled with crimson-colored
seats. NL players seem to
see n:d more often than not
when they meets their AL
counterparts. Since interleague play hegan in 1997,
the AL had a l .673-1.534
advantage, according to
STATS LLC. This year's
season serie~ went 137-114
to the junior circuit, its sixth
strnight winning record and

138
139
139
140

ST. LOCI$ (AP) - Prince
Fielder beat the hometown
boppers on their own turf.
With Albert Pujob and
Ryan Howard eliminated
early, Fielder won baseball's
Home Run lRrby on Monday
night with a steady power display that included a jaw-dropping drive estimated at 503
feet.
The Milwaukee Brewers'
fiN baseman outslu~ed
Texas outfielder Nelson cruz
6-5 in the finals at Busch
St~1dium to take homl.! a title
that St. Lotus fans surely
hoped \\OUid go to one of their
0\\n,

AP photo

This Feb. 18 file photo shows Toronto Raptors forward
Anthony Parker, rear, dnving over Cleveland Cavaliers
guard Daniel ~ibson, during the first half of an ~BA bask~tball game 1n Toronto. The Cleveland Cavaliers have
s1gned veteran free-agent Anthony Parker to add depth to
the backcourt.

"It's what I expected. Thi~ is
Albert's :-.tadium and Rvan is
from here." Fielder said. ''I
\\as just happy I was able to
put on a show &lt;md I'm glad I
won.''
Pujob, the Ou'dinals' big
first basem;m, and HowarJ.
who grew up in the Gateway
City, \vere knocked out in the
second round .
Th1s year's All-Star festivities were supposed to belong
to Pujols in his home ballpark.
But t-ickler snatched the spotlight in the annual warmup for
Tuesday night's Midsummer
Cl&lt;lssic.
With three oub remaining
in the final round, Fielde-r
smacJ..:e.d a drive onto the
gmssy hill in center field to

rbi1~1~ 11~1 ~~~et~~'~i.1t~· h~b~~~~

high. then embraced Brc\\Crs
Iteammate
Ryan Braun ncar
home plate.

Pujols. who leads the
majors wtth 32 homers, needed a !are rally just to avoid
elimination in the first round.
With one out to \vork with. he
connected on consecutive
sv. ings to force a three-player
swing-off for the final spot in
round 2. sending the red-clad
crowd of 45,981 into ·1 high
fiving frenzy.
One fan in the bleachers lent
a helping hand, too. appearing
to reach over the fence in
right-center to catch one• of
Pujols' homers. During a
game it might have been ruled
tan interference. but there's no
video replay in the derby.
Carlos Pena hit one homer
in the fi\'e-.swing tiebreaker
and Joe ~Iauer was shut out.
So "'hen Pujols homered
twice he moved on - but not
for long.
Looking tired. he managed
six homers next time up for a
two-round total of II, easily
surpassed by Fielder. Ctuz
and Howard. the ::!006 derby
champ.
"I wish I would have put a
better show for our fans,"
Pujols said. "l was nervous a
little bit."
.
After his tina! swing. he
received a \•.:ann ovation anyway.
''TI1ank you so much for
your support," Pujols told the
crowd. '
fielder hit the longe.... t shot
of the nicht, a 503-foot drive
to ri~ht:-center that di~ap­
pearea between two secttons
of bleachers.
l

f

._.,..
----~--.~

---

-- -

�~-------~---~-------------~-~~-~ ~-- -~-

Tuesday, July 14,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

-

2009

Snyder to defend Police interview Pitino after complaint filed
Ohio Amateur title
DAYTON
(AP)
Former Ohio State player
Vaughn Snyder is back to
defend his title this week
at
the
I 03rd
Ohio
Amateur golf championship that starts Tuesday
at Moraine Country Club.
Stn•der. a native of
Mas~illon, had rounds of
7 I . 71. 70 and a closing
71 last :xear at Findla)
Countr) Club to finish at
1-under 284. two strokes
better
than
Blake
Furgerson of Concord,
Alex
Martin
of
Mtddleto~ n and Ethan
TraC) of Hilliard. All
three of Snyder's closest
pursuers are also back for
this week ·s tournament.
which begtns with four
rounds of stroke play.
Six other former Ohio
Amateur champions are
also in the 144-player
field: Stephen Anderson
( 1990). Matt Ehlinger
(1998).
\!an
Fadel
(l995), Robert Gerwin II
(1996. 200 1). Andrew
Montooth ( 1997) and
Randy Reifers (1986).

Also qualifying are 15year-olds
Michael
Bernard of Huber Heights
and Chad Merzbacher of
Dublin along with the
oldest entrant, 66-yearold Skip Snow of Dayton.
This is the fourth time
Moraine. home of the
1.945 PGA Championship,
has hosted the Ohio Am.
John Cook won there in
1979, Rob Moss in 1989
and Ben Curtis in 1999.
Snyder won two tournaments in the fall for Ohio
State and was secondteam All-Big Ten this season. He was second on the
team with a 73.57 stroke
average over 37 rounds.
He made it through qualifying for the U.S. Open,
missing the cut after
rounds of 76 and 78.
Only nine players have
won the Ohio Amateur in
back-to-back years. Three
of them are Arnold
Palmer ( 1953-54), Cook
( 1978-79) and Ben Curtis
(l999-2p00), each of
~hom went on to stardom
on the PGA Tour.

Obama welcomes
Crew to White House
WASHINGTON (AP) President Barack Obama
has welcomed soccer's
Columbus Crew to the
White House to congratulate the team on its MLS
championship.
Obama
on
Monday
jomed the team from Ohio
in the Rose Garden to
honor a turnaround from a
losing season in 2007 to
the best record in the
league for 2008.
The president joked that

he's been watching plenty
of soccer these days - for
his daughters' games. He
says he's learned two main
rules for youth soccer: no
matter the position, players should run toward the
ball all at once; and snacks
at halftime must never be
forgotten.
Obama says soccer's
popularity is on the rise in
the United States and that
the national team has been
playing with distinction.

LOUlSVlLLE, Ky. (AP) Police have interviewed
Louisville basketball coach
Rick Pittno about allegations
brought by a woman charged
with trying to extort him, his
lawyer said Monday.
Attorney Steve Pence said
Pitino has been cooperating m
the investigation and· that the
allegations are false. The
woman, Karen Cunagin
Sypher, has pleaded not guilty
in federal court to charges of
trying to extort money from
Pitino and lying to the FBI.
Commonwealth's Attorney
Dave Stengel said the·
Louisville police sex-offense
unit contacted him last week
to tell him Cunagin Sypher
had made a complaint and
that it was turning the matter
over . to Stengel after the
investigation is complete.

probably this week.
Louisville police spokeswoman Alicia Smiley said
police have spoken with the
woman but wouldn't comment further.
Authorities have not said
what information Cunagin
Sypher might have been trying to use to allegedly extort
Pitino. They have said the
coach believed the matter was
related to an unspecified 2003
encounter with her.
Pence said Pitino went to
authorities after leaming
Cunagin Sypher had contacted police.
''Coach Pitino has been
interviewed by the (police), is
cooperating with their investigation and has passed an independent polygraph examination refuting Karen Sypher's
allegations," Pence said.

"Her recent allegations to
Louisville Metro Pol ice
Department are false and just
another pa1t of the fraud she
has tried to perpetrate against
Coach Pitino and his family,"
Pence said in a statement.
''Facing federal charges. she
is no~ attempting to create a
defense.''
Cunagin Sypher's attorney.
Thomas Clay, filed a motion
last Thursday asking to withdraw from the case, citing
irreconcilable differences.
The coutt has not yet ruled
on the motion.
Clay told The Associated
Press on Monday that while
he remains Cunagin Sypher's
legal counsel, ''I am not
authorized. nor will I speak
about anything involving
her."
No trial date was set after

prosecutors and Clay agreed
last month that they needed
more time to review evidence
in the case.
Cunagin Sypher's longtime
friend,
Lester
Goetzinger, has been
with taking part in
alleged extortion plot.
Gqetzinger reached a .
with prosecutors that. 10
exchange for having his
record cleared. he would testify against Cunagin Sypher.
Prosecutors say Goetzinger
left three voicemail messages
on Pitino 's unlisted cell
phone number between Feb.
26 and Feb. 28 at Cunagin
Sypher ·s
request.
Goetzinger's attorney, John
Berry of Louisville, said
Cunagin Sypher traded sexual favors in exchange for the
phone calls.

Cavs

experience. I had great support in Israel and it really
gave me the opportunity to
develop as a player."
Parker will wear No. 18
with Cleveland out of
respect to his time in Israel,
where 18 is a symbol associated with life and success
in the Jewish faith.
His best season in Europe
v.as 2004-05. when he averaged 14.4 points and 4.7
rebounds to win his first of
consecutive league MVP
awards. The Cavaliers
began following him during
his final season in .Europe,

when Blanks was part of a
contingent that flew to
Europe to watch him play.
Ultimately, Parker signed
with Toronto.
"At the time it made sense
because of the type of person he is and the player he
is," Blanks said. "We've
watched him ever smce. We
knew the clock was ticking
and we were hopeful we'd
have another crack at getting him. Fortunately he
became free and we went
after him extremely hard in
free agency:·
Parker comes frO!Jl a fam-

ily with a rich basketball
history. His father, Larry,
was the first freshman to
start a basketball game at
the University of Iowa. His
sister. Candace, is a WNBA
star with the Los Angeles
Sparks after being selected
with the first overall pick in
the league's 2008 draft out •
of Tennessee.
"She got all the positive
genes in the family," Parker
said. "If I had her genes as a
guy, I'd probably be
LeBron. But I didn't. so I'm
the Danny De Vito of the
family."

106.
Overall, Schenkelberg
holds the lead with 24
points. Graham and Hoback
are tied at 16 each. Sheets
has 15, and Edelman I 0, so
the final points week should
be an exciting one.
Addison
Stanley
of
Gallipolis just about locked
up the 10-and-under division with his third First
Place Fruth trophy in a row
at 30 points. Jasiah Brewer
of Pomeroy is second overall with 20 points on his
third place weekly total of
74.

But, Jonah Hoback of
Racine picked up his second
consecutive Fruth runner-up
trophy this week on 63
strokes, gaining eight more
points, and is third overall
at 16 points, challenging for
second overall next week.
Garrett Jones eamed fourth
at Cliffside with 95, so this
division could see exciting
changes too in the points
final at Mason.
The Juniors assembled
Monday at Riverside Golf
Course in Mason for an
eventful nine holes that will
ultimately decide final

standings or ties, or whatever else that could be in
store.
Next Monday, July 20, at
Hidden Valley Golf Course
play will resume for awards
and a fun finale where seasonal plaques and prizes
will be presented. So, all
area young linksters once
again are urged to join in.
Play begins each week with
a 9 a.m. tee off, just show
up for registration at 8:15
a.m. to 8:30 a.m.
Play. eat, enjoy the learning and fellowship, and
make memories.

from Page Bl
Tel Aviv (2000-02, 200306) and one with Virtus
Roma (2002-03). He has
averagedt I 0.1 points and
3.4 rebounds in six NBA
seasons with Philadelphia,
Orlando and Toronto.
''I went over there obviously with the intention of
trying to get back to the
NBA as soon as possiqle,"
Parker said. "But once I got
over there, it was a great

Golf
from PageBl
gold, while Jacob Hoback
of Racine was nght behind
at 53 for the second place
trophy. Zack Graham of
Gallipolis posted 65 points
for third, and division
leader Ryan Schenkelberg
of Meigs was fourth on 72.
Close behind at 75 was
Michael Edelman, ahead of
Mike McKnight 86, Hunter
Rose 102, and Jacob Click

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•

'
-- - ·-

- --'--~-..,...;._..,

�Tuesday, July 14, 2009
'~ ~-~-

...

.

~

,.;

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

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Lost &amp; Found
M:sslng- Chocolate Lab
(more orangelred) last
seen on Skinner Rd., no
collar, family pet, Reward
please can for her return
740-416-1665
Lost· Black and while
Walker Coonhound. Flat·
woods
Rd.
and
Rocksprings area,
No
collar,
please
contact
740·992·3356
Found on Sandhill Ad. fe·
male
Black
Lab
MIX,304-674•3085
Lost

female
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area,

MIO BJkfvVhtEI

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304-675-5978.

lost' Gold Bracelet Sun
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Main Entrance Lobby.
Senbmental value Ae-

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Give away2 ptne trees
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the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will be
discarded.

300

lg. yard sale Blame t.n
At 2 Gal polis-ferry, JLly
Autos
t5-18 fum.,clothes sad·
dlo, 4 wheeler, lots of
1997 GMC 1500, Z..VL
msc. tools.
short bed, 4.3. 5 spee
1
miles,
org
Recreatio; 79,000
1 •• ~ '
1000
. ·. ., . Ve!11Cies
'·""
pa1nt, $5500.00 080
'.)·
~ l
.J
•al'.tt.
• -, "740·645·4243
AI
1PM
Boals I Accessories
SUV's, TIUCkS, C
fr
1984 Thunder craft Cita- $1600' tO $5900 ~II W
tion t 7 ft. fiberglass. ranty. Cook Motors 3,
140hp, 1nboard $2800.00 Jackson
Plkc.
304·675·3328.
7 40-446-0103

Home Improvements
Basement
Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local references furnished. Established 1975. Call24 Hrs.
740·446-0870, Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.
Other Services
Call

Personal s

someone
between 50
and 70. I have brown
and grey hair, blue eyes.
and not bad to look at. so
I am tol~. If you are interested, my name IS Bob
and my phone no. is
740·367-7084. I w111 answer all calls. If I am not
home leave a message.

-

Read~

newspaper and learn
something today!

1989 Four Winns 170
freedom 17ft. 130 hp.
In board w/ Four
Wmns
89
tra ler
S3500 304-674-3638.

Profeuional Services
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We W1nl
1·888·582-3345

For
Sate-Hundreds
cars, trucks, SUVs &amp;
mobile home. All prlci 1
to se I. 740-446-7278
'

,-

.'

't
Pont&lt;&gt;O:l boat
t'll :;an motor.tro ~ J 0 350 Ooze
motor 2 yrs
d bu 1 great sh
S!.5000C 304·638-16t9
740-256-9200
24

SEPTIC
Galraa
Co.

Mason

Co.

wv.

7\Q

Ron

Evans
Jackson,
800-537·9528
400

50hp

PUMPING
OH
and
OH

Financial

'7 -I~

Parts &amp; Acceuories

~~

Campers I RVs &amp;
Trailers

www.comlcs.com

C 2009 by N EA Inc.

Money To Lend

Garden &amp; Produce
500
Education
NOTICE Borrow Smart.
~;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Home Grown Vegetables
Contact the Ohlo Diviand
Raspbernes
row
sion of Financial tnstiluBusi ness &amp; Trade
available. McKean Fann.
tions Office of Consumer
School
556
Centenary•
Ad.
Affa1rs BEFORE you refinance your home or ob- ;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= 740-446-9442
Gallipolis Career
tain a loan. BEWARE of
College
requests for any large
advance
payments
of (Careers Close To Home)
fees or insurance. Call Call Today! 740·446·4367
1·800·214·0452
the Office of Consumer
Antiques
gall poi~Searcorcollego.edu
Affiars
toll
free
at
Accred11ed Member Acerecl•t·
1·866·278-0003 to leam
lng Courlell for lndepenoenl
Anllques, trunks, coke
11 the mortgage broker or eonoges anc1 Schools 12748 s1gn,
books.
scales,
lender IS property II· I
show cases. glass ware,
censed. (This Is a public 6
00
Ammals 011 lamps. Farberwaro,
service
announcement
brass fire extinqu1sher,
from the Ohio Valley
oak piano stool, misc., by
Publishing Company)
appt. 740-992-4192
Pets

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals ...........................................................100
Announcemen ts .......................................... 200
Blrthday/Annlversory..................................205
Ads ...........- .....................................210
Found ............................................... 215
You ..................................... 220
......................................................... 225
Personals ..............................- .................... 230
, Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services ....................................................... 300
Appliance Servlce ....................................... 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Bulldlng Materiols ............ _., ...........~ .......•• 306
Buslnesa ...................................................... 308
Catering ............................: ...........................310 .
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors .................................................. 316
Domestics/Janitorial ................................... 318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Flnancfal.......................................................322
Health ........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328
, Home Improvements 330
Insurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334
Muslc/Dance/Dromo .................................... 336
Other Servlces.............................................338
Plumbfng/Eiectrfcol ..................................... 340
Professional Servlces................................. 342
Repafr.s ......................................................... 344
Roofing .........................................................346
Securlty ........................................................ 348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
Travel/Entertainment ..................................352
Financfal .......................................................400
Financial Scrvlces .......................................405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lond .............................................415
Educatlon ..................................................... 500
Business &amp; Trado School ........................_ 505
Instruction &amp; Trolnlng ................................. 510
Lessons........................................................ 515
Personal ....................................................... 520
Anlmals ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605
rses .......................................................... 610
l iVIISt&lt;)Ck......................................................615
...........................................................620
Want to buy..................................................625
Agriculture ................................................... 700
Farm Equlpment ..........................................705
Garden &amp; Produce.......................................710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grai n ............................... 715
, Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720
Want to buy..................................................725
Merchandise ..•~............................................ 900
Antlques .......................................................905
Applfance ....:................................................ 910
Auctlons .......................................................915
Bargain Basement .......................................920
Collectlblea .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equlpment/Supplloa....................................935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel Oil CoaVWood/Goa ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................._ ............... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .................................... 955
Kid's Corner................................................. 960
Mlsceilonoous.............................................. 965
Want to buy.................................................. 970
Yard Sole ......................................- ............ 975

Yard Sale

Services

Pel
Cremations.
740·446-3745
I would like to meet that
special person who en·
joys the same things I do
such as country music,
f1shing, going to the movies. watch1ng. sports on
TV. gotng OUI to &amp;al,
sunsets and sunrises.
You must have a good
sense of humor and l1ke
to have fun. I am 5'9 112"
1 weight about 220tbs
and 1 am 3 young 71 yrs
old I am loolong for

..

POUCIES Ot'lo Yall~ PubHIIllf'O I'KIIfVM!Ilt nglltto eel II. rvjoc:1. or cancel any ed at any lime. Errors m11111 ~reponed on the 1•1111 day of pUblica! ion and llllt
Tn~ntlntl~l•er wm be responalble tor no m01etllan the c:oec or tno ~P~Ce occupied by the etror and onty I he nret InsertiOn. we shlln not be liable lor
any low or ~ u.t r""'t• from the pubflcatiOn or oml•lon olan ac!vertiiOmlnl Correction v.1U be made In the !!I'll an!lab!e velltion. • eox number
are lliWa'f11 conlldonllal • Clli'Qilt rme ea«l app~tt. • 411 real ~· acl;artlumcma arll Wbjed to the FeCletal Fair HoUilll\g AC1 ol1iea ·This .,.,_.1iP;rp;.t
eecopte only help wantod aos meeting EOE liUird:mS.. We wlll not l;nowlngty ac:copl any edvertltll1g In vlolotlon of the taw Wln not be rceponclblo for 7
errora1n an ed takln ovct the phona.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
200

E

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LIN.E AD NOTICED

D i spJay Ads

Dally In-Column: 0:00a.m .
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In N ext Day'a Paper
Sunday In-Col umn: 0:00a.m.
Friday For Sundaya Paper

JUSJ SAY
CtiARGE II!

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Blcycles......................................................1010
Boats/Accessories .................................... t 015
Camper!RVs &amp; Trallers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto Rental/l.ease .......: .........: ................... 2005
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Classlc/Antlques ....................................... 2015
Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessorles .................................. 2025
Sports Utllity .............................. ,............... 2030
Trucks ......................................................... 2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................ 2045
Want to buy ............................................... 2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commerclal ................................................ 3010
Condominfums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Ow ner.....................................3020
Houses for Sale......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ............................................................3035
Want to buy................................................ 3040
Real Estate Rentals ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commercla1................................................3510
Condomfnlums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage....................................................... 3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housfng ............................. 4000
Lots .........................................................-.4005
Movers ........................................................401 o
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales ...........................................................4020
Supplfes ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property ......................................... 5000
Resort Property for aale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employrnent.. .............................................6000
Accounting/Financial ................................ 6002
Admlnlstratlve!Pro fesslonal .....................6004
Cash ler/Cierk ............................................. 6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical ....................................................... 6010
Constru ctlon ...................................l.......... 6012
Drivers &amp; Dellvery ..................................... 6014
Edu catlon ................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumblng ...................................6018
Employment Agen cles..............................6020
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
Foo d Servlces............................................ 6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted - General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Mai ntenance/Domestic ............................. 6032
Management/Sup ervisory ........................ 6034
Mech anlcs...............................: .................. 6036
Medical .................. - .................................. 6038
Muslcal .......................................................6040
Part-Tim&amp;-Temporaries ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales...........................................................6048
Tech nical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052

Give

Away

Black

Lab

WantTo Buy

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;=
Absolute Top Dollar - s1J..
ver/gold
coins.
al"y
10KI14KI18K gold ,ew·
elry, dental gold, pro
1935
US
currol"cy,
p oof/m t
set s. dia·
tn
r
monds, MTS Coin Shop.
151 2nd Avenue. Galli·
pol1s. 446-2842

Used

rebut
manual lo
hubs, lor Ranger PIC~
92 Sou!hWind 30 motor truck 4 Wheel Clr v
homo w. a r, power gen· 245-56n or 645-7400
eralor w awning fully
\
se'f
contained
asking
Sports Utility
1
$7900. 740·256·6346
~~~~~--=--..;~ l
2003 Geo Traci&lt;Or
d
~R~V------- auto,
a11, 4 cyl 4 t
Sei'VIce 81 Cannlct&gt;aei 740-256-6890.
Trailers
740-446-3825
fully
loaded
RV Sorv1ce at Carmi- miles. exc. cond
chao!
Tratlers
740-446-3825

SJon,

Computers

rna o 2 yrs old dog
Computer
Deff..precislon
box
and
cha111.
530 duel Xeon 1.7GHz
304-882-2925
l1llX

2 Male Yorkies 12 wks
old. vet checl(ed will be
small 3·5 lbs S650 each
t yr old male York1e
weighs 3 lbs. 446·3398

processors. 2GB Ram
2120 GB hrd-drvs, new
graph1cs-card.
Geforce
WlndowsXP protess1onal.
(tower-only)$250.00
304-593-8974

Hobby/ Hunt &amp; Sport
Found on Sandhill Rd female
Black
Lab Gun Show · Chillicothe,
mtx.304·674·3085
July 18 9·5 &amp; July 19
9·3. Ross 'Co. Fair·
Free: 4 cute kittens 3 grounds Sl AI 23 lo St Rt
gray and while· and 1 ail 104 follow the s1gns. 6'
gray
very
playful IbiS $35 740·667·0412
740·446· 7644
700

Miscellaneous
Agriculture
24 It above ground pool

Farm Equipment

S600. Newer one and a

half horsepower pump
EBY,
INTEGRITY, and sand filter. Needs
~ner Pool located in GalKIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/liVE· l polis. 740-89Hl490
STOCK
TRAILERS.
LOAP
MAX
EQUIP·
Jet Aeration Motors
MENT
TRAILERS, repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
In stock. Call Ron
HOMESTEADER
Evans 1·800.537·9528
l;ARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
S.:W
GOOSENECK FLATBED Bargin Tools· AT 554
$3999 VIEW OUR EN· buying- mecl1 &amp; carpen·
TIRE TRAILER iNVEN- ter lools. lawn &amp; garder
tools mowers, weed eat·
TORYAT
ers, cha111 saws also, lap·
WWW.CARMICHAELtops
computers,
coli
TRAILERS.COM
phones,
!pods,
Black
740-446·3825
Berrys. GPS &amp; e1s.
Home 740-388-1515 Cell
For sale 1954 'Ferguson 794-1188
30• small farm lractor
304·937-2705.
-08- -A-v-eo- -lo
..w- ·m-i-le-s,
Have you priced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
surpns&amp;dl Check out our
used
1nventory
at
www CAREO.com.
Car·
michael
Equipment
740-446-2412

510,000; Cozy LP wall
furnace. $500; chipper,
$300,
dlsh
washer
wlbutcher block top, $50;
Colman gas generator
5,000.
S300;
740-949-2796

For sale miSSy clothing
STIHL Sales &amp; Service size smaD &amp; medium, anNow Available at Cannt- tiq ue
love
seat
chael
Eqlupment 304~75-6894.
\
740-446-2412

®nllipolis

~nil'?

\!tribune

(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

1point lDiensnnt

~egister

(304) 675-1333

..

�-·- -- - ---

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Utittty Trailers
l!OOS I !th wheel two car
tllll cr ns de
box
45
long
wh te
exce ent
cond uon w !h three sldo
cloo:-s e actnc wench
Prloe S9 500 call tor
More
nlormatlon
{7401949-2217

1 and 2 bedroom apts ,
fum shed
and
unfurniShed, and 110uses In
Pomeroy and Middleport,
sccunty depos I requ•red,

bedroom apt.
furWant To Buy
niStled
References reQUired 740-446-8519
Want to buy Junk Cars, ..;.;...;.;.._.;.......;.._ _ _
1600 sq. It boautnut, uncai1740·388·0884
furn1shed, 2BR apt., 2nd
Real Estate floor, LR, DR, t 112
3000
Sales baths, downtown Gallipo·
lis, ideal for professional
couple, References reFor Sale By Owner
qwed, no pets, secunty
depos1t, $600 per month.
For saro by owner· M1d· Call
446-4425
or
deport bock, all olectnc, 446-3936
correr lot, woodod area,
new roof, new 35' patiO 2br apt Rodney area. No
awn ng, out of flood pets. Dep/Aef required
plane 8 roons, 3 br., 2 74a-.46-1271
kitchens 2 112 b!h, 2 fire 28R APT Close to HotplaCes hot water heat zer Hospltal on SR 160
water softener 2 lots, 2 CIA (740) 441.0194
garages, 740-Q92-4197
CONVEN ENTLY
LOCATED
&amp;
AFFORDHouses For Sale
ABLE! Townhouse apart+· 46 acres w new 4 bed ments,
and/or
small
2112
bath.
Possible hOuses tor rent
Call
7 40-441·1111 for apphowner f n;:nce 446-3570
catiO!l &amp; lntormatoo.
2 bed 1 bath $249 ~-~~-~--month. 740-44 6•3384
Free Rent Special !I!
2&amp;3BA apts $395 and
.!br ~ c-.a J;:~ugc I:!Sx90 up, Central Air, WiD
comer lot on F'AJr\IC\\ Rd hookup,
tenant
pays
Camp
Coole)
$1ROOO electnc. EHO
304 67
~ llblS
Ellm VIew Apts.
3 bed 2 bath new con(304)882-3017
struction on +1- 5 acres ~-~..;..----­
$525 month. Owner fl. Tw•n Rivers Tower is acnanco
ava•lable. ccpllng applications for
'740-446-3570
wa1hng list for HUD subsidiZed, 1·BR apartment
.J
Bcdl
Bath
HUD lor !he elder1y/dlsabled.
'~ '0 yiQ9 'amon 5
call675·6679
d~&gt;

t~)

10-6'

t8

~9-16

rorhsl

Commercial

Apartments/
Townhouses

1'10 pets 74().992·2218

til

living- 3·5BR, ~ecded c&lt;ll'Cgl\'i:! for eld2·3 SA oo property erly lad) Pt Pk3S3111 area
Many floor plans! Easy Dutlt$ mel pro'ldmg combathmg/11ght
Rnanclng' We own !he p31l on h1p
Call
tOday! housek~pmg must ha\e re=======~ bank.
liable
uansponauon
866-215-5n4
Houses For Rent
JO.I-67.S 59JS

2· br. house &amp; 2 br mobile home tor rent on
At2 N. 304-895-3129.
3BR, 1 bath, stove &amp; refng. fum. Gas heat. CIA,
No Smoking, WID hook

4000

Manufactured
Housing

2BR 1 Bath all elect. No
Pets.
1624
Chatham.
or
740-446-4234
740-208-7861

N1ce 38R Pt, Gallipolis
City Part. Furn. WiD.
some utll. met. No Pets.
$595/mo. 740-591-5174

NICe 2 BR mobile home,
water paid, no pets. $375
5375 dep.
mo.
Call
74044 829
1-0
2br mobile home
3 br., 5400 a mo. plus Small
at
Johnsons
Mobile

1

Home Pari&lt;.
h
d
lras
pal •
740-645-0506

Water
no

&amp;

pets.

Sales
1997 Horton 14x80 2 br.

~=~ed ~;~~"no pe~:. d~;: b:201~ds ~~

Apartments/
Townhouses
,..Move-In Speci8T'
$50.00 off 1st months
rent rent, must move
in by August 1st.
Aural Development
Property Currently rent·
1ng 1 &amp; 2 BA umts SpaCIOUS floor plans, ranch
&amp; townhome style hv•ng playground &amp; bas·
ke!ban court, on-sue
laundry lac• ty, 24 hr
emergency mruntenanoe, qu et country locatlon close to major
medical
faCI ities
pharmaCieS grocery
store just m:nutes
away from other IT18j0r
shopping 10 the area.
Honeysuckle Hills
Apartments
266 Colona! DriVe #113
Bidwe I, OhiO 45614
740-446-3344
Office Hours M, W, F
9AM
5PM

.

Government Loans. sngle w1de &amp; double WldO Help Wanted - General
homes. Call to prequal·
1fy. 866-215·5774
Tho Hobday Inn of Galli~------- polis IS now accepting
Land/horne
packagos
available wllh payments applications for d1mng
starting around $6001mo. room servers. Morning &amp;
can
to
prequallly. evening shifts available.
No expenence neces866-215-5774
sary, smiles mandatory.
78 E~ona Trailer 14X70 PICk up applications at
good shape you move C front desk, No Phone
635
Paxton. Calls Please.
740-645·1646
or
740-446-2515.
C7200
ATIENTION
080
Local company wl FT &amp;
The BIG Sale
PT pos liOns 1n our cusUsed Homes &amp; OWner
tomer
seMce departF1nanclng -New 2010
ment Company tram ng
Doublewlde $37,989
provide, must be a HS
Ask about $8,000 Regraduate. FT positions
bates
S16 per hr. For 1nteMew
mymldwes!home com
ca 1866-339-7797

740-828-2750
up, No Pets.
deposit.
Nice$600/mo
lOcation.+ _ _"Th
_
_____
Gallipolis. Call 446-3667
e ProclorvUio
D•fforenco·
S1 and a dood 15 all you
Very noce home for rent
m Middlepodrt. good need to own your dream
neighbomood. Newly rehome. Call Now!
modeled.
New
appli·
Freedom Homes
ances, 2 bedrooms, 1
888·565-0167
bath, central a1r &amp; heat.
large deck on back, gaResort Property
rage
available,
call 5000
740-992-9764
or
740-9'92-5094 for more
deta•ls
6000
Employment
~;;;,;;;;_ _ _ _ __

Newly remodeled 38R 2
3BR FA bath laundry, NOW LEASING Jordan bath oo farm SSOO m!h
new Windows &amp; C&lt;:1)et LllndiOQ 2 &amp; 38R Avail- 540-729-1331
GaV!Il
St
Rodney able No Pets. Tenant 38R dble-Wide lum1shed,
Renllland
contract
a Responsible lor Rent &amp; SR 143 · Pomeroy. $625
poss ty
740-446-45-43 Elcctnc 304-674.0023 or mo. 1nct. most ut1hlles &amp;
lawncare. 740-591-5174
or645-4834
304-617·9986

plus depOSit, 3rd
4 Bed 2 Bath! Only utilities,
St., Racine, No pets,
$25.000.
for
listings 740-247-4292
800-620·4946 ex A019
Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 br fur6372 SA 7 S A1ver Prop· mshed apt., no pets, dep
ertyl Gallipolis I LA, kit. &amp;
ref.
required,
DR, Den, 3 BA, 2 full (740)Q92-0165
b!hs Basemont I 2 car
gar $189,000 or OBO•
BUILDING
LOT
FOR
ref
required
SALE (bes de trls prop- &amp;
(740)992.0165
erty) river !rootage in·
oluded SSO 000
Call Beautiful Apts. at Jackson Es•ates. 52 West740-709wood Dr., from S31i5 to
11 71
$560.
740-446-2568.
446-0538.
Equal Hous ng Opportunrty ThiS lnstitullon IS an
Equal Opportumty Provtdor and Employer.
.
Real Estate
3500
Gracious Living 1 and 2
•
Rentals
Bedroom
Apts at
Village
Manor
and
RIVerside

Country

======-- ~------ === === ==

SJ99mo' 4 hcd 2 hath,
Bank Repo! (5'&lt; down, 15
)ear-., ~% -\PRl r&lt;&gt;r lo,tings
X00-6~0-494bt\ R0l7
- - - - - -- 1 bdrm poss 2 w/ 1 full
bth. Lg kitchen washer
dryer hookup ctr1 ate gas
heat no pets allowed
1940 Eastern Ave. Rent
S4SO Sec. Dep. $4
50
_
740446 3481
-------1 or a possible 2br.
house in New Haven
S300 a mon. + $300
dep.,
no
pets
304-882-3652.

Renta ls

3BR, 1 bath 1n C1ty
School DISVGreon Has
Foyer 2 car garage,
newly remodeled on 3.5
acres, secluded setting.
S82 500. 740·446·9278

Child/ Elderly Care

Sales

Pnme Commercial space
lor rent at Spnng VaUey
Plaza.
Please
call
740-446-3481 for details.

e. T401

LeGrande
Blvd
3BA
bllek. hardwood f oors 3 room and bath downFR 2 full baths central sta rs first months rent &amp;
a 10X14 met bu ld- depos t. references re•!19 5 mlnS from town, qu red, No Pets and
S89 000 74().709·1858
clean 740-441.0245

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

304-S42.0280.
1998

Schutz

double-

wide 3br 2ba. sitting

on

112 acre Sandhm Ad
area 304-675-1280
304-675-1762
2003
Claytoo
14x70
3br ,2 ba. wa:k-tn closets. garden tub, must be
moved ask•ng pay oH
$19.000.
304-875-8056
after
5pm.
;;.;.;;.;.,;:
_ _ _ _ __

Apts. 1n Middleport, from 76 Holley 14X70
$327
to
$592. bath
$6000
740-992·5064.
Equal 740-256-6321
Hous•ng Opportumty.

Child/ Elderly Care
Wanted, full t1mo baby
Sitter/nanny to work 1n
our
home.
AppliC8nts
muSl have expenenco
canng tor and worldng
With
mult•ple
Ch1ldron.
Excellent pay. Weekends
off. Looking for an expeMol.'le~ Grandnenced
mother tyue of a person.
Call 740-416-0241 dur·
lng
!he
day
and
740-416·6301 In !he everung.

---~--~-.
Local
Home
Health
Agency
now
hmng
STNA's, HHA's &amp; PCAs.
Aex1ble scheduling. tf •nterested
call
740~ 1-1377
2 Cosmetologtsts, lull or
part lime 10 busy local
salon &amp; tanning, 60%

g for

J 1-...~kin
L'-'V

,

ANew Home?
Tr the
Classifieds!!
t

U
I

We are currently
seeking long-term full
and part time
employees to help
fulfill client needs. You
will take Incoming and
make Outgoing calls
for well known
organizations.
Take advantage of our
company's
comprehens•ve benohts
package,pertormanco
bonuses. professional
working enwooment,
advancement
opportun111es and much
more•
Stop by and Complete
Your Application :
1nloC1slon Management
Corporation
242 Th•rd Avenue
Gall pohs, Ohio
Or Call and Schedule
Your Interview:
1-888 IMC-PAYU
ext. 2456

YOUNG'S
Carpenter Service
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
· New Garages
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
·VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks

WV036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
740-591-0195
Pomeroy. Ohio
30 Years Local Experience
FULLY INSURED

9000
'

Tare
Townhouse
Apartments • 2BR, 1.5
bath, back pallO, pool,
playground, (trash sewage, water pd.)No pet.s
allowed
$450/rent,
$450/sec.
dep.
Call
740-645-85Q9
Commercial
Office/
Warehouse/Storage
Great Location 149 fn.td
Ave. Gall•polls•
$399/month lor 1800
sqft. Bu•ld-out negotiable
Call Wayne
404-456-3802

Service I Bus.
Directory

Get A Jump

on
SAVINGS

hnp:/l)obs.lntoclalon.com

740-367-0544
Free Estimates

740-367-0536

I

S&amp;L
Trucking
Dump Truck

Sen ke
We Haul GraH~I.
Limestone, Coal.
Compost. Top Soil
Call Walt or Sand)'

Quotes for Supplies
Eastern Local School
District, 50008 State
Route
681,
Reedsville,
Ohio
45n2 Is accepting

Hours
7:00am-8:00pm

Advertise
in this
space
for

$70
per
month

ABiNETRY
~

.

GRAPHICS DESIGNER

0
2459 St. Rt 160 • GaiUpolls

I:\1MEDIATE OJ&gt;.:NJNG

CALl. FOR FREE fSTIMATES

work atmosphere is &lt;.·urrentl) accepting resumes for a Graphics D&lt;.·sign&lt;.·r to
create, design &amp; prepare ads for u
newspaper and the \\l'h sill'S. The following skills are highl) dt•sirable:
• QuarkXPrcss
• Pbotoshop
• Multi-Ad Creator
• Adobe Acrobat
• Microsoft office &amp; p&lt;m er point
• and be familiar \\ith :\lacs.
Should also hale knouledge of four·
color and spot-color separation. Fulltime position \lith bl'ndits. Paid lOCation. healthcare/dentaVl ision, paid
holida)·s. ~Olk.

Send resumes to:
Pam Cnld\\ell
Advertising Dirl'ctor

The Gallipolis Daily Tribune
P.O. Box ~69, Gallipoli!o., Ohio 456.:\1
or e-mail
caldwell@ heartland ublication,.clmt

~c~

'"

~

lOIII

..

A'tlOX,UC

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

Cell: 740-416·5047
email:
jrshadfrm@aol.com

MIKE MARCUM

.

.

&gt;-.j

ROOFING &amp; R EMODELING ( 0 :
(
Rubber Roofing, Room Additions, Ded($, Shingles
Siding, Windows," Pole Bams, Gltrages,
Insurance Work, Residential &amp; Commercial
7 2
37
30 Years
Uccnsed &amp; Bonded 40- 45-04
Free Estimates
·
Experience

J&amp;L
Construction
·Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
·Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742-2332

Where Can You
Find the Perfect Pet?

..

etey.com

H&amp;H
Guttering
Seam ess Gutters
Roof ng S d ng, Gutters

Insured &amp; Bonded
7 40-653-9657

BAD CREDIT?
NO CREDIT?
BANKRUPTCY?
We can help!
Call out Toll Free
866-564-8679

I
&gt;1

•

LUV HOMES

I

I

Fre'h 'iorth Carolina
SHRI\1P
(7.$0) 7-'2-256]
l.aarl:f',lh'\tr fn1nn, htad' on

'I

..•
...
I

SlOper lb C.t&gt;h on I) .
l'mt "requ1rcd tn ad\ ance
%1pmcn1s ,,m,c C\CI)
olht'r Fnua'

8,\:'\KS
COS~'TRt,;CTIO:"'

co.
Pomcro). Ohio
CommeiTinl •
Rc,idcntial

• Free F...stimat~
(740) 992-5009
C"us1o Home Butldmg

i\o\\ Selhng:

• l·ord 8:. ~lotorcraft
Pans •

Steel Fr.lmc Bu1 ldmg~
Bu .dmg, Rcmodehng
General n:pa1r

\"'".bank,rdb.rom

Engmc~.

Translcr Cases 8:.
1 1-:111\llliS.,IOils

.Johnson':-. 'fret•

Senicc

H

(;allipolis. Off .$:;631

II
I

• Aflcnnarket
Replm:ement Sheet
~1cwl &amp; ComponL'nt'
1&lt;11 All

\l,t~e'

,,f \ehtcb

Rneinc. Ohio
7-'0-9-'9-1956

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Public Notice

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

740-992-3220

CONSTRUCTION

quotes
for
transportation
supplies,
dairy
supplies and bakery
supplies.
Specifications can be
obtained by calling
the superintendent's
office
a~
740-6676079. Quotes will be
opened
In
the
treasurer's office a
noon on Tuesday,
July 28, 2009. The
board reserves the
right to reject any o r
any part of the q uote.
Quotes s hould be
labeled
~supplies
Quote" and mailed to:
Eastern Local School
D istrict
Treasurer's Office
QUOT E FOR
SUPPLIES
50008
State Route 681
Reedsville,
Ohio
45n2
(7) 14

740·949·2217

Local Contractor

ROBERT
BISSEll

The Ascal Year 2009
Financial Statements
of the Eastern Local
School District for the
year ended Juno 30,
2009
has
been
completed. They are
available for public
Inspection
In
the
treasurer's
office
located et 50008 SA
681, Reedsville, Ohio,
between the hours of
8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Monday
through
Friday.
Lisa M. Ritchie
Eastern
Local
Treasurer
740-667-3319
{7) 14

29625 Bashan Road
Rac1ne, OH 4577t

-=======

Island Vtew Motel has
vacancies
$35.00/Night.
740-446-0406
Spac1ous
secondlthird
floor
apt
overlook•ng
Gallipolis City Pari&lt; and
A1ver. L.A. don, lrg.
K1tchen-d1mng area with
a I new appliances &amp;
cupboards, 3 BA, 2
baths,
laundry
area.
S900 per month Call
446·2325 or 446-4425

Roofing, Sidmg,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Wmdows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall.
Remodeling, Room
Additions

Mechanics
commiSSIOn,
send
resumo to 33105 Hyland Service Technician pos•·
Rd., Pomeroy, Oh 45769 lion available for diesel
and hydraulics. Experi·
before July 30th.
ence ,
necessary.
HealthiAebrement
&amp;
Care GIVer 1s needed.
Benefits. Fax resuMe to
Thls IS a FULL TIME po740-446-9104 or e-ma11
sitiOn, meamng you will
to LLC@CAREO COM
be lrvmg here as if II
were your home. ThiS tS
NOT a dayt me or r~ght
time only position. Sleep
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
here at n ght and do normal
household
dulles
thru the day Person
need ng
BSSIS!aOCC
IS
mobile and can funcllon
on
her own.
FREE
FREE
UTILI·
--.-..
RENT&amp;
TIES plus small salary
Progressive company with a great
740-367-7129

r;:'----::o=::=::-:":"--.:".....""'":'.....':""".....~:-:":"~~
~

NowHmng
Shei'Win-W1 ISms
Gahpohs, OH
Part·llme 15-20 hrslwk
Prefer Customer Service
or Reta1l Expenence
HS D1ploma or GED req
Call 740-446-2511

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

Replacement
\\ indm1s and
\ inJ I Siding
Spl'('ialists. t:rn
&lt;7~0) 742-2563

ltl\ur~d.

Free

E\tlmalt•s, 20~ n E'l)·
7.$11-~.$1-93l!7

Rkk John~on•O\\ ncr

J

I

"'
•

..

I.I~ W.IS

CONCRETE
CO:'\STRLi C'I'IO~

Concrete Removal
and Replacement
\111~ pes Of
Concrete \\ork
29 \cars I• xpcricnre

David Le\\ is
740-992-6971

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

• Siding • \'in) I
\\indo\\ s • 'fetal

and Shingle Roofs
• u~~·ks • Additions
•Eie~·trical

• Plumbing
• Pule Bnrn\

*h.p&lt;.'nenced
Refercnc~s

\\'ail.thic!

Call G.u) Stanlc) @
740-591 -R044
Plea~c lea\ e mess ... £e

.

. PSI . CONSTRUCTION
Room Addition,, Remodeling. Metal &amp;
Shingle Ruof,, ~C\1 lfHIIll'S, Siding, l&gt;ecks,
Bathroom Remodeling. Licensed &amp; lnsurrd
WV1040954

Cell740-416-2960

740.992.0730 ..

,

...

�The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, July 14, 2009
ALLEY OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

"'I&lt;J'LI. :sTAY 'TIED uP 1'-1
e£l.T LlNTII. '100 'Tal.
YO()'\"t;: PJ(.EN AMOS BRI:lNS(~

BRIDGE
ACROSS

NOW WHER-E IS

Phillip
Alder

:"iorth

01 14-0t

A K6 4
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10 7

• J 6 4
tfoQI0876
[~[\~(

A ,J 10 3

¥ AKQ81
•

10 6 5

tfo K 4
South
#.t A Q

• J 9 62
t K Q3
tfo AJ95
Dealer: East
Vulnerable: North-South
South

West

'liorth

Pass

2 :\"T

East
1¥
Pass

Pass

Pass

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Opening lead: ¥ 5

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

.I'M NOT 5AYII"'G THE CU~f' 15
v/0~$~ it-fAN THE l&gt;t5~A$E, .I'M
/ ,\ '~
JUST SAYING TH~
l&gt;I5~A5~ l&gt;0~5N'T
~UN ALl, THO$~
Af'INOYING

The guideline
worked yet again
~;r

!i~
~!;_

~~i
;;;~

COMM~~CIAL$! ~;~

STAND BY FOR
AN IMPORTANT
MESSAGE FROM
THE I.R.S . --

PAW!! WHAT'D
YA DO THAT
FER?

SO WHEN THEY COME
A-KNOCKIN' WE CAN
SAY WE NEVER HEARD
NUTHIN'
'BOUT IT

THE BORN LOSER
P"' fv\"( I W~l\\ "'

'(OU'R(. WE:.LC.Ofl\(!

MG~\{:\C.E.t{\

I&gt;"'"&lt; T~\~ I~!

COW and BOY
WHEN I HA.VE A
LOT ON MY MIND,
I START TO FORGET
um.E THINGS.

'j

IT'S LIKE MY SWAIN,
IN AN EFFOWT TO KEEP
ALL THE IMPOWTANT
STUFF, JETTISONS ALL
THE EXTWANEOUS
INFOWMATION.

(}\.\,
RA\.\Gt~

q\.)\4·

1\\~R
?

ctbu.r 'lltthdll\y:

Very fast jet
Avoid
Mountain
goat
Cream puff
Cloudseeding
compound
Mollusk
Ancient harp
College
credit
Freeway
strip
Sailor's
shout
Nothing but
Mischiefmakers
Drywhite
wine

37 Snatch

COOL Y~A~ •. APPAR'£\-IT\.Y 50)/\£

43 Kind of
arcade
44 Roll of bills
45 Monster
46 Commuter
vehicles
48 Woodwind
49 Thing
50 Time long
gone
52 Give-break
53 Collar
54 Moon, e.g.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

c.cn:v C¢e' Clyp!Ogramt are Clelled from Q\JOiat(lnS by famous peop'e oalltld prnecu
tne Ciplle sta~ for L"'CXher
Ttxlay·s Clue: S eqt,BIS C

EICI:I~eter on

"ZA

.

JSSANFCPIE

BG

NKIZ

YOGJN:

LAZ
LAZ

TGCPGOG."

MDGJZ

ALCV
ALCV

•

ZEPLMI,

JSZ,

TKZ

FCJL,

JLJZACG

TKZ

JCIA
JCIA

XDJLSG

PREVIOUS SOLUTION· 'Success 1s your friends, your family, what you do,
and if you're happy when you wake up."- Actor Michael Pitt

~~~:t~~y s~~~}t- !£ "Btrs·

WORD
GAM I

- - - - - - !Cit•d by CI.A Y R. POLLAN

0 four

letters of tht

Reatronge

serombled words be-

low to form four simple word$.

iI

LOVARF
2

I I I 1

l

MOCAM

I Ia I I' I
I.

I

IT5 II NrH NI I~~
.

.

.

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1-.....,.~-.,.,-,,.......,,-w
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'--...L..--11...-...1..--L-...L.....-1

@ PRINT

Philosopher lectured to ills class
"solitude proves time to develop
a talent you never had- -.·•

O Complete

the chuckle quoted

by filling in the

rn1SllnQ words

you cieverop from step No 3 below.

NUMBERED lETiE?.S

1

2

l

4

5

IN T'!ESE SQUARES

-@)~U~N~S~CR~A~M~S~LE~l-E-TT_E_~s~~--~~~--•'-~--._FO~

ANSWER

.

.

SCRAM-U:.IS ANS\\'ER..'i 7/10.109

Editor Taupe Verge- hearse- REPHRASED
Lovesick teen to mom, ''Iflove is the answer, can the
question be REPIIRASEDT'

ARLO &amp; JANIS

goal, things will work out •n a manner
that rewards you. too.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) -You're
a competent person to begin w1th, but
work-related endeavors are likely to
reqUire more •mag1nat1on than sktll
Fortunately, that's nght up your alloy as
well.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - F1nally.
the p aces Will beg n to fall tnlo placo
regard ng somethtng you've boen hoptng
would work out we A po$ tive outlook
will help bring it to fruition
ARIES (March 21-Aprd 19)- Many of
your hopes and ex~bons have a
good chance ol futf llment, but which
ones WI t depend upon you Solect your
mosl presstng ones, and simply opomte
along noi"Tlal lines.
TAURUS (Apnl 20·May 20) Some
type of long-hidden ambitiOn has an
excellent chance to tum out exactly as
you have env.stoned It may be due to
new changes in your hfe.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- Request
the help of colleagues lo asslsl you In
accompli~hing something you can't do
alone. They'll be t"lappy to have the
chance to porform lhe favor.

?ER~£~~1oRRA~?AG~

ED \-\\5

A~D

Rt.H~.\6ERP..1oR,

1 \\AD \o DU'51 fOR
F\\-.l6tR~R\~1'0

•

41 FYI notes

helping o.nothor o.ooompllsh on 1mportant

GARFIELD

60\l'\6

AstroGraph

Wedneaday, July 15, 2009
By Bernice Bede Oaol
It will be your imag nation and Cl'eatM1y
that generates add1t1onal sources of
Income In the year ahead There s a
strong chance that what beg ns as a
hobby will tum Into something quite
lucrative.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Accolades might not be that 1mportant to
you, but what you are able to accomplish
is Important. Plan your day by pu«mg
your aims first, and don't stop until
you've reached your goals.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Do not permit
yourself to think that your dreams ere
beyond reach. If your behef tn yourself
and your ab1ht1es 1S strong enough, any·
thing is possible. Go for it, and see whlll
happens.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) - The
aspects are movtng In your favor espe·
cially with regard to work or career Don't
senle for the status quo; look for new
opportun•lies to expand your base
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23) - Follow your
tnstincts With regard to something that
affects you and your assocmtes. II you
have an 1dea to expand on somoth ng or
tf it needs to be renegotiated lor boner
terms, do so on behalf of everyono.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Lady
luck Will be on your Side With regard to
any cnlical maner you noed to handlo
correctly and Wisely. F1re your best shots
because she Will make sure that thoy htt
the target.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Doc. 21) You're lucky enough, but are you bold
and enterprising enough to try to
improve upon what you already have
going? If you've cons•dered tak1ng a cal·
culated nsk to get more 1n retum, do so.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) Sincerely try1ng to a1d someone else
could produce a surpflse twist. While

PEANUTS

GRIZZWELLS
WrlAI'G

Bndge has many gu1detmes, some more
reliable than others. This deal h•ghlights
one of the most dependable - which
one?
Take the East cards. You open one
heart, but end up delend•ng against
three no-trump. Partner leads the heart
live. How would you plan the defense?
North's two no-trump was aggress•ve,
but he knew that bis partner would place
the Key honors accurately. given your
revealing opening bid.
From the potnt-count, West wnt have
one useful card. II that IS the dub ace.
you can wm the lirstiJve tncks. But Hhe
has a high spade or d amond then tak·
mg your three heart wmners and sh ft ng
to a club would be fatal
Remember the pnnciple that if declarer
has a wtnner 10 the surt you are try.ng to
estab sh, gtve 114m that trick as quickly
as poss be - and Irick one IS (a most)
never too soon; When declarer plays
dummy's heart seven. cover With your
eight.
South's best shot 1s a low diaMond at
trick two, but West can rusl' 1n with h1s
ace and return his remain1ng heart. Your
side takes one diamond and lour hearts.
Note, though, that if you start w•th lour
rounds of hearts, declarer then leads h•s
diamond king. West must duck to stop
dummy's jack from becoming an entry.
South now cashes h1s spade ace, over·
takes the spade queen w1th dummy's
king, and takes a club finesse. He collects two spades. one heart, one dia·
mond and five clubs.
Did somethmg occur to you? If so. tune •
10 tomorrow. II not. tune 1n torrorrow!

G

BIG NATE

42 MPG
monitor
1 Qt. parts
44 Interlaced
4 Leftovers
47 Piano-key
dish
wood
8 Heel
51 Trojan War
11 Louvre item
king
12 A law55 Scare word
itself
56 First 007
13 Kimono
movie
sashes
(2 wds.)
15 False story 57 Merit
16 Snaps and 58 "-Town"
buttons
59 Double
18 Desi~n
curve
20 Parktng
60 Advice
attendant
giver
14
21 So long I
61 Flight dlr.
17
23 Mr. Fleming
19
24 Evidence
DOWN
27 Chunk of
22
dirt
1 Coconut
23
29 Mademoisource
selle's date 2 Small band
32 Tufted-ear
3 Dele's
24
cat
undoing
25
33 Burden
4 Sulky
26
34 Border
5 Santa 35 Uris hero
winds
28
36 Jaipur
6 Ave.
princess
crossers
29
37 Trail mix
7 Summer
38 NY baseforecast
30
baller
8 Role for
31
39 Made haste
Arnold
40 Bread grains 9, Gance or
36
41 Cosmonaut's
Ferrara
station
10 Really bad

I Learneo ~ c.a~-.•
l&lt;~eP BaRAN(:, !ENG &lt;lfie~
.,ov ~~INK 'tbu fiNI~D

�~ -~-~-·---..,._-----------------~~~--~~~- ~--

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 14,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2009

Puiols enioving his home citv showcase

•

AP photo

In this Jan. 24, 2004 file photo, Arturo Gatti celebrates after
defeating Gianluca Branco of Italy tor the WBC junior welterw~ight championship in ~tlantic City, N.J. Officials say
Gatti has been found dead m a hotel room at the seaside
resort of Porto de Galinhas in northeastern Brazil on
Saturday, where he arrived on Friday with his wife and oneyear-old son. He was 37. •

Police eye wife in Gatti's
death, rule out nothing
RIO DE JANEIRO (AP)
- Police investigating the
death of former boxing
champion Arturo Gatti are
working on the assumption
his wife strangled him with
her purse strap while he
drunkenly slept.
While cautioning that
nothin~ is being ruled out,
lead mvestigator Moises
Teixeira told The Associated
Press on Monday he is certain the woman acted alone.
"It was technically impossible for a third person to
have been in the flat," where
Gatti was found dead early
Saturday, Teixeira said. "The
investigation isn't finished,
but we continue to think she
did this alone."
Gatti's
23-year-old
Brazilian wife, Amanda
Rodrigues, told investigators
she awoke Saturday about 6
a.m. to find her husband's
body in the apartment they
rented in Porto de Galinhas,
a seaside resort in northeastern Pernambuco state.
Rodrigues told police she
had a fight with Gatti after
dinner Friday night and be
pushed her to the ground,
.resulting in minor injuries to
her elbow
and chin.
Witnesses also reported to
police the couple fought and
that Gatti was drunk.
Rodrigues told police the
37-year-old former junior
welterweight champion then
got into a cab with their son
and returned to their rented
apartment, leaving her alone

downtown.
Teixeira said witnesses
told police Gatti left his son
to sleep in the apartment,
then returned to the city center to find his wife. She
arrived at the apartment
before he did and waited for
him. They then both went
upstairs together.
Rodrigues told police she
slept on the second floor of
the apartment with her son,
while Gatti slept on the first
floor. She told police she
awoke at 6 a.m. to feed her
son and discovered her husband's body. Police say he
most likely had been killed
at least four hours before
that.
Teixeira said police do not
think anyone else entered the
apartment and killed Gatti
- he said there were no
signs of forced entry and
electronic locks indicated
nobody else had entered the
room aside from Rodrigues
and Gatti.
The investigator said
Rodrigues told them she
thought her husband had
committed suicide or that
someone had entered the
apartment and killed him.
Teixeira ruled out both scenarios.
Rodrigues' sister, Flavia,
told the newspaper Folha de
S. Paulo there is "no way she
could have strangled a man
of that size."
He retired in 2007 with a
career record of 40-9 and 31
knockouts.

the Toronto Blue Jays willing to consider trades, he
could help the AL get
home-field advantage, then
fromPageBl
get dealt to an NL contender.
ninth in 13 years.
"Going into 'the postsea"It's a more powerful
son, it was nice to know that
league,
maybe,
the we had home-field advanAmerican League," said
tage throughout. We just did
Dodgers manager Joe Torre, not utilize it," said Tampa
who managed the AL All- Bay's Joe Maddon, the AL
Star team six times after manager. "It definitely takes
winning pennants with the on a different shape because
Yankees. "Not that you of all of that. I'm all for it. I
don't have stars that mea- think it makes this moment
sure up in the National a lot more interesting, I'll
League, but maybe not as tell you that. And a little bit
many of them."
tighter, I'll tell you that, too,
AL dominance has not because you're playing for
carried into October. While the entire league."
unbeaten in the last 12 AllYankees captain Derek
Star games, the AL has won
Jeter takes the contrary
seven of the past 12 World
view, preferring the team
Series. But those are bestof-seven matchups, so regu- with the better record get
lar-season totals are proba- the extra home game. That
would pose logistical cl)albly a better barometer.
"For whatever reason, the lenges for baseball, which
numbers have been what wants to finalize hotel and
they have been for the last travel plans as far in
10 or 12 years. I don't think advance as possible.
But maybe that's thinking
it's a true assessment of
how well the game is played too far ahead for too many
in the National League," people.
On Monday, Howard was
said career saves leader
Trevor Hoffman, who basking at the attention in
squandered a chance to end his hometown.
He thought about hitting a
the NL drought three years
ago in Pittsburgh, when he St. Louis landmark anq, no,
allowed Michael Young's it wasn't the Gateway Arch,
go-ahead, two-run triple which rises temptingly
beyond the right-center
with two outs in the ninth.
All-Star victories have field fence but in reaHty is
blocks
away.
taken on increased impor- seveqtl
tance because of the con- Rather, he remembered his
nection to the World Series. Little I:.eague days at the
In 18 of the last 23 Series. suburban Ballwin Athletic
the team with home-field Association. He was 12 or
advantage has gone on to 13, and the home run is still
win.
talked about.
Imagine what must be
Where did the drive down
going on in the mind of AL the rig'bt-field line land?
starter Roy Halladay. With
"Red Lobster," he said.

All-Star

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Albert
Pujols relaxed behind a table
riser, his right arm draped
over the shoulders of his 8year-old son, and calml)'
fielded questions in two languages.
Much easier than chasing
the Triple Crown. Pujols is
used to this type of attention.
The two-time MVP was
the centerpiece of the AllStar game long before it was
played, often adding the role
of pitchman to his already
weighty duties of can·ying
the St. Louis Cardinals. His
mobbed interview session
Monday was nothing new just another day for baseball's biggest star.
A few hours later. Pujols
suited up for the Home Run
Derby. On Tuesday night.
before batting third in a
power-packed NL lineup.
he'll catch a ceremonial first
pitch from President Barack
Obama.
"Probably Wednesday and
Thursday I'm going to look
back and say, 'Wow, that
was unbelievable,'" Pujols
said. "Right now you just
get caught up doing so many
things, you've really lost
that focus of 'Wow, you're
an All-Star."'
A clean one, he insists.
Questioned in Spanish
about skeptics assuming he
uses steroids, Pujols dido 't
mince words. Defiantly. he
said he's put up these
astounding numbers without
taking shortcuts.
"My house is always
open," the slugger said in
Spanish. "They can come
anytime to do all the tests
they want during the offseason.
"I challenge them to try
training with me during
three months and a half.
They can come and check
every place in my house,
they can even come with me
in my bathtub. I have nothing to hide."
Pujols' legacy has become
increasingly important to
baseball, especially with star
sluggers like Barry Bonds.
Alex Rodriguez and Manny
Ramirez linked to performance-enhancing
drugs.
Many view Pujols as the

sport's best hope - perhaps
its last hope - to erase the
steroid stain in the record
books.
Red Sox outfielder Ja~on
Bay said the recent scandals
make questions about Pujols
"understandable."
·
'"But you can say that
about anybody,'' Bay said.
"You've still JUSt got to go
out and do your thing and
he's done it right from the
get-go.
"People can speculate all
they want about anyone and
anything, but )'OU can't
diminish what he ·s done."'
The extracurricular activities that have often filled
Pujols' few empty hours photo shoots, promotional
pieces, in-depth interviews
- obviously have not hUit
his game. He ·leads the
majors with 32 home runs
and 87 RBJs, and his .332
average is 17 points off the
NL lead - setting up a possible Triple Crown run.
"I think there's no question that he's the best player
in baseball," Mets All-Star
third baseman David Wright
said. "And I think that the
gap between him and everybody else has grown a little
bit the first half of this season."
The last major leaguer to
win a Triple Crown was
Boston's Carl Yastrzemski
in 1967 - and the last in the
National League was another St. Louis slugger, Ducky
Medwick in 1937 .
Still, some opponents
think Pujols has a shot.
"He's a guy that just never
ceases to amaze me,'' Wright
said.
Pujols is a modern-day
menace, in the mold of
Mickey Mantle. Hank Aaron
and Jimmie Foxx. Pitch to
him, you're asking for trouble. Try nipping at the corners, he'll take a walk. And
when the game is on the line,
nobody's better.
Cardinals catcher Yadier
Molina. a first-time All-Star,
has been Pujols' teammate
and a close friend for five
years. Molina cites Pujols·
offseason conditioning program and his teetotaling diet
as a source of his greatness.

Skyline

be up high."
Robbie Evans, Mineral
Wells. WV has had a great
year, despite some motor
problems in his primary car.
Evans claimed his heat race
win and was fifth in the
dash before posting a solid
second place run in the feature with a last lap pass of
Andre Layfield.
"I got caught up in some
traffic early and Andre
passed me for second,"
explained Evans. "I had a
strong car. and felt if I got a
break or a caution I could
get ·him back. Chris was

fromPageBl
a big lead, but I wasn't
about to slow down. I guess
Andre and Robbie closed
the gap a little at the end. I
thought the traffic might
hurt me, but everyone drove
a great race and we were
able to go through the traffic surprisingly well. I wasn't about to give up the bottom. If they caught me and
passed me it was going to

AP photo

National League's Albert Pujols of the St. Louis Cardinals
hits during the first round of the MLB baseball Home Run
Derby in St. Louis on Monday.
"He eats a lor of rice and game's history also provides
chicken. Nothing illegal," perspective.
Pujols is to Cardinals fans .
Molina said. ··He should
take bows for what he's this decade what Stan
!\lusial was to the franchise
doing.''
Cardinals closer Ryan in the 1940s and '50s, and
Franklin served a I 0-da)' has been tagged with the
steroids suspension in 2005 nickname of ''EI Hombre."
while with Seattle and is He embraces that moniker
peaking at age 36 with his only in homage to "The
first All-Star nod, saving 21 Man:· whose likeness is
games in 22 chances. He's captured in two statues outnot one to judge Pujols' side Busch Stadium.
Pujols had his first lengthy
exploits.
chat
with the 88-year-old
"You live for now. man.
Musial
a few weeks ago and
you don't look in the past,''
came away amazed at bow
Franklin said. ''It's right relatively
little
money
now. and he's the best hit- Musial amassed during a 24ter."
year career. Musial made
Pujols can be haughty and about $1 .5 miJlion~ Pujols is
dismissive, at times stiff- in the sixth of a seven-year.
arming questions he's not $100 million contract.
fond of answering. He can
"I told him. 'How much
be humble. too.
money do you think you
The inevitable failures are would have made if you
a reminder that while he would have been playing
might make it look it easy. right no'&gt;'.?'" Pujols said.
it's not.
"Imagine. That's unbeliev·•If you were perfect. this able. That's the pressure I
game wouldn't be fun." have, to make sure I follow
Pujols said. ''1 \vouldn't have those great players to work hard for it."
the Man. Red Schoend ·
An acute sense of the all the great Hall of Famers."
a~fully strong though. I
don't know if anyone could
have caught him."
For a
time Andre
Layfield. Grafton. W.Va. -the Rocket Chassis master
craftsman and maker of his
own Topp Gunn Chass,
looked like he might have a
chance to bag Stotts for the
win. Layfield cut Stotts·
lead in half when the winner
ran into a gaggle of lapped
cars \\.' ith ten laps to go. A
lap later he was within six
car lengths of the leader,
and edging closer. But
Stotts· experience allowed

him to weave his way
through to the checkered.
Stotts·
Pierce
Chassis/Hovis
Powered
mount bolted into the lead
early and went flag to flag
for the win. Evans diced it
up with Rob Stambaugh
and Dave Me Williams
early in the event. then took
over the runner up slot to
the midpoint ""hen Layfield
moyed into the catbird's
scat.
For more information
please contact Skyline at
740-662-4111
or visit
www.skylinespeedway.net

TUESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

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