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                  <text>Page D6 • Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, July ·6, 2008

·Middleport • Pomeroy • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WY

'

Rutland Independence
Day celebration, As

·ne
Printed on IOO 'k
Nt·wsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy; Ohio
;;o CE:'\TS • \"ol. ;;- . :\o.

:!.r

:\10N DAY, .JULY·7, 2008

•

SPORTS
• Nadal r;Jethrones
Federer at Wimbledon.
See Page Bl

.

mo. NoDown.
Money

mosfafi2,000 miles
· with approved credt 11001

. Amtricwr Motor Htwtda

2005 Honda Pilot EX

$349 per mo.Notf::',~Y

$329 per mo. N~~~~Y

36 mos. at 12,000 miles

36 mos. a~ 12,000 miles

wilh approved cred~ kom
American Molar Hoods

,

Hec~"cled

Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEO@ MYDAILYSENTINEl,,COM

POMEROY
- Meigs
County
Commissioners
have requested a legal opin.ion on whether or 'not
Emergency
Medical
Services dispatchers can
also staff the county's new
E:9ll service.
By law, the director of the
EMS , Doug Lavender, and
Sheriff Robert Beegle are

charged with nvP- rsP-~i ng th t&gt;
service .
County
Commissioners said Friday
they ha've ask~d Prosecuting
Attorney Pat Story to determine if EMS dispatchers
can al so dispatch call s to the
911 service.
Doing so. Commissioner
Jim Sheets said, will offer a
co,st savings to the service,
which will be funded '
through a 50-cent monthly
telephone line fee. The 911

www.rny.t .. ihst•ntinl'l.t·urn

·onE-911
servke does not e!iminate
EMS services, the service
will be operated from the
EMS office on Mulberry
Height s, and allowing EMS
to provide dispatch services
would provide a cost savings in operating the new
911 system , Sheets said.
According to . Sheets,
additional
dispatchers
would be needed to staff the
911 center, but current cti'spatchers can be trained to

' a11d clisoperate the system
patch emergency squads as
they now do.
The county has collected
$55,000 already from the,
telephone
surchitrge.
Collections are almost twice
what commissioners first
anticipated receiving.
·Commissioners anticipate
receiving $100 ,000 from the
Appalachian
Regional
Commission toward the
lease and pur~hase of com- ·

Festivities, ·firewQ_rliS
mark Rutland's celebration

win approved cr&amp;lit frQfll
AmericanMOIOr Hooda

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

INSIDE
• Liver donor's family, ·
recipient unite online.
See Page A;,, •..
,.,.,.,.RSVP announ&lt;ies · :
.,~Y,~tefY.ear essay
··.&amp;•wl.nners. See .Page A3

· • Weather helps crews
battling Calif's biggest
fire. See Page A6

WEATHER

,,,
Detalla on Page A3

Pluse see Celebration, AS

·INDEX
2

1\u the

11 c~ w

Piease see E-911, AS

Ordinance
targets
irresponsible
pet owners

Proving

a parade" were
of people who lined the
streets of Rutland Saturday
to view the 124 entries in
the annual Fourth of July
.Ox Roast celebration.
"America - Home of the
Brave" was the theme of the
10 a.m. parade through
town which kicked off allday festivities in the park
concluding with a giant fire.works display.
A patriotic theme was
depicted in costuming and
decorations of the floats.
vehicles of all sorts, some
vintage, trucks, · tractor,
bicycles and four-wheelers,
. numerous walking units of
scouts, ball teams, and
political candidates and
their supporters, along with
a group of horse riders , and
fire equipment galore.
An honor guard of legionnaires carrying American
flags led the parade followed by the Meigs
Marauder Band fronted by
the flag corps twirling red,
white and blue flags, and
the band playing patriotic
selections.
There was plenty of
action in the park following
the parade. Following the
opening ceremony where
the legionnaires raised the
flag and Chad Dodson sang
the National Anthem, trophies were presented to firs.t
and second places in the
several categories Of judging in parade entries.
The winners were, listed
first and second respectively:
religious, • Rutland
Nazarene Church-Y.BS float
and Victory Baptist Church;
non-religious Our Gang and
Rutland Little League and
Ferrell Gas; walking,
Rutland Reds peewee boys·
and minor boys, coached by
Mike Bartrum and Hannah
Cr.ane.
Antique cars , Don Hysell
in his yellow corvette and
Gene Whaley, a 72 Chevy
truck; four wheelers, Amber

puh~ l .:yui~llJt:lll

systenL Locatin g the &gt;Cr\' icc
in the EMS build ing will
reqtrire some "ru ctural
modifications and upgrades.
including installation of
new heating and air condi tioning equipment required
to maintain the correct temperature to maintain the .
equipment.
The system mu st be oper-

Scoop
or pay

HOEFLICH@MYDAILVSENTINELCOM

RUTLAND -

~

8\'

BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT @MVDAILVSENTINE~.C OM

Little Tessa
Coates got herself and her
bicycle all
decked out in
red, white and
blue for the
!".fl,yt\JM'tll.4111 Of

parade.
Charlene Hoeflich ·
/photos

SYRACUSE - Forrest
Gump ran through a big pile
of it , even bumper sti&lt;:ker&gt;
say it occasionall y "happens," but for village leaders in Syracuse it' s been
happening too often and it's
not.being cleaned up afterwatt\&amp;, .•

. ~··~.-.-~ .....,. ..

Due to numerous complaints from residents, .
Syracuse Village Council
recently adopted a village
ordinance, effective immediately, which will fine irresponsible pet owners for not
cleaning up after, or "curbing," their pets when those
pets defecate on village
property or property other
than their own. The ordinance also addresses how
pets, and any unsanitary
conditions asso.ciated with ·
them, must be addressed on
pri.vate propeny within the
village. lffound in violation
of this nuisance ordinan·ce. a
pet owner could face up to a
$150 · and court costs in
Syracuse Mayor 's Court.
The ordinance reads · as
follows:
No person shall keep or ·
harbor any animal including
bu't without limitatipn dogs
and cats or fowl within the
village so as to creme noxPiease see Ordinance, AS

Summer
reading
program has
record year
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTIIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

God Bless America, Home of the Brave, depicting things which protect, advance and make
America great was the theme of this Rutland Nazarene Church float in Rutland's parade.

POMEROY
The
Meigs County District
Public Library 's Summer
Reading Program for chi 1dren has seen a record
enrollment thi s year with
235 regi stered participants,
up from last year 's enrollThe 2008
ment of 163.
candidates
. The program is free for
for Junior
preschool age kids through
Fair queen
young adult s and not only
are, left to
features free. edu cational
right, front,
presentations that rnnge
Ashley Life, from live reptiles to magiKerri .
cians , but free meals . The
VanReeth,
meals are provided by the
·
and
Appalachian · Nutrition
Audrionna
Network after every weekly
· Pullins, and presentation . Last week
for king,
over 100 of these free meals
Daniel
were distributed to children
Buckley, left who attended the program
and Samuel that featured
reptiles ,
Evans.
according to Emily Stmders,
children 's services coordi SubmiHed
/photo
nator for the MCDPL.

Junior Fair candidates vying for royalty

SEcrroNs- 12 PAGES

Annie's MailbOx A3
Calendars
A3
Classifieds
B3-4
Comics
Bs
Editorials
A4
Movies
As
Sports . B Section
Weather
A3
© 2008 Ohio VaHey Publlshl~g Co.

•

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAtlYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Candidates
have been selected from
which the ~008 Junior Fair
royalty will be named .
Announcement of the winners will come on the opening .
night of the Meigs County
Fair,Sunday, Aug. 10.
The candidates for Junior
Fair queen are Audrionna
Pullins, Kerri VanReeth,
and Ashley Life. Candidates
,for king are Daniel Buckley
and Samuel Evans .
Audrionna is the daughter
of Tom and Stacie Pullins of
Long Bottom. She is 16 .
years old and an eight year
....... -

CandldMas, A5

Please see Prosram, AS

l

..

~

..

�.
The Daily Sentinel

NATION

RLD

PageA2
Monday, July 7,
.

2008

'

-

G-B summtl stte
Hokkaldo

'-w

BY JENNIFER

•Toylko

-

0

C.

YATES

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Pln'SBU~GH They
were precocious toddlers .
both blond-haired and bluerC.HINo( RUSSIA
eyed. separated by a thou ~ .. ·i l.&amp;iji : '.
sand miles between Mianii
NORTH
and a small K ~ ntucky town .
JAPAN
, KOREA Sell ry
• hqlfl /1 Th&lt;&gt;-lwo girls would never
P .wijic
SOUTH
meet. but would be brought
Or·eiln
KOREA
- Tokyo•
Iogether
through unthink 0 200mi
.'\. •,.·
tragedy:
Trine
able·
0 200km
was
born
with
Engebretsen
SOURCE. ESRI
AP
a genet ic disorder that
would require what at the
time was an extremely rare
liver
transplant,
and
~
Amanda DeLapp would die
at just 18 months after being
stricken with a brain.tumor.
In an operation in
TOYAKO , Japan (AP) Pittsburgh in 1984.Amanda's
Glohal ch;, llenge' Like ' " "r- · family dnnated their daugh ing oil prices and th e ter's liver to Trine, making
Earth's ri sing temperature her · one of the nation's
await President Bush at a youngest patients ever to
summit of top industriali zcu receive a liver tr;msplant.
nations, but firs1 he set out
For years, each family
to soot he emotion s on a se n- would try to contact the
sitive Japanese issue that's other. Trine 's family sent a
entangled in the nuclear picture of their ·uaughter
stan,doff with North Korea.
dressed for Christmas to the
Bush towched down in DeLapp family, a picture
Japan on Sunday, his 62nd that still sits on the bedroom
birthday, and was nying dresse ,· uf Alisha DeLapp .
aboard the M~rine One pres- Amanda's mother. That coridential helicopter to the respondence was followed
northem Japanese island of by years of miscommunicaHokkaio~ tor his eighth and tion , with each -fa mily misftnal Group of Eight summit. takenly thinking the other
His ,first meeting is with didn't want any contact.
Japanese Prime Minister
But Atmmda's younger sisYasuo Fukuda.
ter. born after her death, never
The Japanese government is gave up hop&lt;; of one day meeta key player in the six-party ing the girl who received her
negotiations dmt led to North sister's liver. Keish~BeLapp
Korea's recent declamtion had tound Trine on the
about its nuclear activities. Internet years ago. and read

•

I·

.

.

_

Bush, Fukuda
1ay out
goa1s lor G-8
summit in Japan

AP photo

.

Keisha Delapp, left. holds a +Jictur.e of her older sister Amanda, who in 1984, died and her iiver donated to Trine
Engebretsen, who is seen in the photo that Delapp's mother, Alisha , is holding at the ir,home in Mayfield , Ky., June 16 .
Now, 25 years after the surgery that forever connecte.d two families. Trine and the Delapps are slated to meet for the first
time. in July when the U.S. Transplant Games are held in Pittsburgh. ·

She w'" one of several herself in transplant-related the years . She kept the picThey had also mauc utl1cr
children who had transplants endeavors.
national TV appearances.
ture of Trine as a child in her
"I very much feel that it 's Christmas dress - eerily, it
The
De Lapps knew at the Pittsburgh hospital in
immediately · that their 198J and 1984. remembers import~nt and also I like ro was the same dress Amanda
daughter's liver had saved . pionecri11g transplant sur- give back. I don't feel like I'm . had 'worn in a Christmas
Trine 's life. (They later geon Dr. Thomas Starzl , under an obligation. I want to snapshot - and hoped one
learned that Amanda's kid~ who perl&lt;umed her opera- give back," Trine said.
day to be able to update it
neys were donated to a man tion. The patients were
She first attended the U.S. with a more recent photo.
known as · "Reagan chil- Transplant Games in 1992,
in hi s 20s.)
,
"I know it's not my d•ugi;!.__.
C"t.:J~·
_:
.
:
~'-n..-.rre-f-'I
OOu.l-her
9~..einat-~sr~nM-'dti'i't3
.e
i
dle
arttrl,:
dicu:·
because
thenand
'ha'
s
attended
most
of
the
ter, but it's just as special
·-o·n-..,-- ..,up&lt;-tllv .
1..-IULC
,
t'
t-'1
upset about the U.S. move to swimmer in tlic U.S. time, and in a mailer of hours President Keagan had been games since then. She has knowing that my . daughter
remove Pyongyang from the Tmnsplant Games. She read the local news channels were 'using his s.lturday radio participated in. swimming. saved her life," Alisha
State Depanment's terror about Trine's ~ wonderful calling the DeLapps tor com- adure~;e ; to drum up public running and even signed up DeLapp said. "I'm proud of
blacklist in exchange for Nonh health, including her complete ment. They agreed to an int10rcst in transplantation.
for the .shot put this year.
her. with the things that she's
Korea's decision to admit to· independence from dmgs that intervie'&gt;! with a local TV sta"At the beginning of the
She met her fiance, Ryan chosen to do with her life.
some of its weapons work.
prevent organ rejection.
tion, _which was broadcast im 1980s , the only place in the Labbe, in an online forum It's so impressive to me."
Japan has long pushed for
Like other twentysome- the "Today" show. .
'
U.S. that was doing these about organ transplants. He
The two families have
the resolution of North thmgs, Ketsha also kejlt a
The DeLapps ' wei·e inter- was here in Pittsburgh ," moved from New England been communicating via eKorea' s kidnappings of MySpace page, w.1th a s1m- viewed along with Trine 's Starzl said.
to.Miami to be with her, and mail since Keisha and Trine
Japanese citizens in the 1970s pie quo.re at ·the top; " Faith family. They didn'i speak
Starzl remembers Trine received his own iiver trans- made contact earlier ' this
and '80s as a condition for IS not simply believmg that directly to each other, but it and over the years says he has . plant earlier this year.
year. They've talked about
sending aid and improving God can ... It IS knowmg was the closest the families met several donor families ..
Trine has been off the many years they t~ied to
.
would come to it for yeaPs.
"I was profoundly and immunosuppressant medica- connect, and how thankful
relations with the impover- .that He wilL"
ished, reclusive communist
Earlier this year, Keisha
Trine Engebretsen now still am profmmdly grateful tions .for II years, something they are for each other nation. The abductees were looked for Trine online 26. doesn'.t remember' much to them, particularly in that's becoming more com- each in their own ways.
apparently used to train North again ,found heron My Space about her lifesavine liver those days because it wasn't mon among transplant recip- · "''ve ' waited 24 years to
Korean agents in Japanese and sent her a greeting: .
transplant when she- was 2 common (to donate organs). ients. She is applying for be able to say thank you,"
language and customs.
"Hi. I'm Keisha,OeLapp . 1/2 years old.
It required a lot of social medical school, in hopes of Trine says from her home in
Knowing that the U.S. Amanda DeLapp s Sister.
She had been horn with a conscience,'' Starzl said.
studying something trans- Florida.
action would put a wrinkle in Me and my family would genetic disorder called
•••
plant -related, and works for
When the transplant games
U.S.-Japanese relations, Jilush love_ to have contact With alpha-! antitrypsin deficienOver the years, Trine's the Life A II iance Organ commence on July I I, 'the
called Fukuda just before the you If you,would hke to. Let cy, which resulted in her family tried to contact the Recovery Agency in Florida. three will meet ·for the first
U.S., on June 26. announced me know.
·
body not producing enough DeLapp family. She knew
On a Friday night at her time
in
downtown
its plan to ease sanctions
Thts month, the . U.S . of a key enzyme in the liver. the
family
lived
in office. around 6 p.m., her Pittsburgh , just miles from
against North Korea and take Transplant Ga111es ':" 111 ~e
In addition to the family's Kentucky. but says letters Blackberry went off. It was where Trine's surgery took
the country he once labeled as held for the first ttme. m appeals tor help on IV. her her mother sent to an a friend request from her place. Starzl will also be
part of his "axis of evil" off Pmsburgh. one of the PIO- father, a Norwegian citizen, address for Amanda's My Space page.
there to greet them. The
the terrorism list. Bush told neenn~ centers for trans- appealed to the Norwegian grandparents ·were returned,
It was from 23-year-old women will give thanks for
Fukuda the U.S. would con- plants m the country, a~d 2 ~ government, which agreed unopened.
Keisha DeLapp.
each other through hellos and
tinue to push North Korea to years after the operation to pay for Trine's surgery.
Several years ago, Trine
"I almost fell off my hugs, and probably some
resolve the kidnapping issue. that forever connected the He was Norway's youngest wrote a thank you note to chair," Trine says.
tears.
"The Japanese public has fng~bretsen and DeLapp passenger ship captain. and the DeLapps for her transAlisha DeLapp, now 48.
"! never got to know my
very strong feelings about a~; 1~:th
· was lost at sea in a hurricane plant and gave it to the had gone on to have Keisha sister. I never got to meet
getting positive progress" on
.. e ~ames, ese two when Trine was 13.
organ-procurement organi- and a son before she and her her or anything. By no
the abductee issue. Dennis families wtll look each ~ther
When T;·ine arrived at za tion for Kentucky hoping husband divorced. She fol- means is Trine my sister, but
Wilder, the National Security m the ey_es for the first ttme, Children's Hospital of they could pass it along to lowed Trine 's progress that's kind of like a part of
exchangmg hellos, hugs and
·
.
'
Council's senior director for. memories of the event that Pittsburgh for the transplant. the family. The note never through online stories from her," Keisha says. "This
the various U.S. Transplant whole experience, I'm just
Asian Affairs, told reporters changed both their lives. ,
doctors estimated she had made it to them.
traveling with Bush aboard
less than 24 hours to hvc.
she
immersed
Meanwhile.
she competed in over glad that it happened."
Games
•••
Air Force One. "The presiAmanda was Alisha
dent has said we' re not going DeLapp's first child, born in
to forget that issue ... I think 1981 . The little girl known
the Japanese prime minister as Mandy to her family was
will, of course, want to hear healthy and happy, even
the president repeat those walking by the time she was
assurances."
8 months old, her mother
- Before leaders began arriv- re~alls.
ine for the summit, more than
A year later ~ever-:Ything
I ,000 peopl-e marched in-· changed. Amanda was hospinonhern Japan .on Satunday talized because she wa' vainto protest the event. Police iring and had pneumonia-like
arrested four protesters after a symptoms. Her parents rushed
brief scuffle. Demonstrators her to the hospital closest to
at a park in central Sapporo their Mayfield, Ky.. home, but
detnanded that the summit doctors were unable to figure
'.
nations take urgent measures out what was wrong. As her
: to·stop global warming. grant condition deteriorated. doctors
indigenous people greater senf Amanda to a hospital in
rights, com~at world poverty Nashville. about two hours
and battle discrimination.
away.
Fukuda h_as made climate
Doctors there found the
-change the centerpiece of the problem, telling Amanda's
: meetings involving leaders anxious parents th.eir daugh: from the U.S.. Japan. ter had a brain tumor and
Germany, 8ritain , France , was going to die. Amanda
Italy, Russia and Canada. The DeLapp was 18 months old.
Japanese prime minister, who
A nurse at the hospital
suffers from low approval asked the couple if they
ratings , would like to emerge would consider donating
witli an agreement on 50 per- Amanda's·organs.
: cent overall reductions . in
"To me, at that time, it
. greenhouse gases by 205Q.
had to be God helping us to
On the sidelines of the G-8 decide ," Alisha DeLapp
summit, there are other meet- remembers. "I can look
. ings involving the world's back at that now and know
biggest polluters. Bush , who it was the hardest decision I
pushed for these meetings, ever had to make."
Alisha and her husband
· says any international climate ·
: change deal will be'worthless returned home . On TV, they
: unless it includes commit- saw on the news that a little
ments from fast-growing girl named . Trine had
economies like China and received a liver transplant.
. India. He says these countries Alisha remembered the lit. must be held to the same tie girl; she had seen Trine
; greenhouse gas emi ssion- and her mom, Mary Ann ·
: reduction standards as older, Lunde, on the Phil Donahue
developed economies.
show appealing for help .

~be ~allipolis llailp ~rthune,­
~be ftoint ~Ieasant l\egister ·

and The Daily Sentinel
have launched a new page every
Friday called "Faith and Family".
If you have a testimonial story,
life-changing event about yourself
or even a poem that you would
like to share please email to:

Dear Annie: Two months ago, out of the blue , my 42: ~ea~-old -:v•fe of 25 years said, "!love you for the three kids
·you ve g1ven me and the years we've had, but I'm not in
:love ':"ith you anymore. I think we should separate. All I
~ want IS half the house." Then she told me to move out for
· a few months until things settle down.
~ I' m st~nding there wondering, "What is she talking about?"
. Anme, I m a good husband. I have a good job, I'm not abu:: sive., l don't drink or gamble, I don't even go out with my bud: dtes. How could she drop a 25-year maniage just like that?
· She has no interest in giving me a second chance. She
~ moved out and is living with a young gal she works with.
:Everyone we know is shocked. Some say it's a midlife cri: sis or she 's having an affair. Others blame online dating ser' VIces and chat rooms. Some say she wants the money from
~ the sale of the bou'e
::-- I've ·since leam..erl otnine other men..whose wives have done
:the same thing in the last three months. What happened to mar. riage vows? We've had our differences like every other couple,
: but we've always worked through them and carried on.
: Right now, she treats me as if I don 't exist. Do you think
:this is temporary and she 'II come to her senses? If she does,
•should I take her back? Is she l_ikely to do this -again?
:-Should I just move on without her? - Shell-Shocked
:-- Dear Shell-Shocked: Once upon a time, being a good
· provider and a sober, loving and decent husband was enough,
; but apparently, it wasn't enough for your wife. And the sur"prise factor indicates she'd been planning to leave the mar··riage for quite a while. We don't know if she'll change her
mind or not. Some j)!!Ople, after realizing the grass isn't any
· greener elsewhere, return home. But there's no reason for you
·to put your life on hold wai!ing. Get some counseling so you
can learn to deal with what happened and then move on.
Dear Annie: My parents, both in their 60s, recently
.retired. At a time in their lives when they should relax or
: travd, they are instead !Jombarded with family members
, lookmg for handouts.
. My parents have always been willing to help, but I feel
· they are being taken advantage of. Mom is constantly being
'asked to baby-sit the grandchildren, and at the end of thi!'
'day she complains of being exhausted. Dad is always doing
f::~ \IDtS-fur. .~s-nt~rnM0t:-9-1't:oc~hews. anti--jUst
. recently a neighbor asked to borrow money. He's a perpet_· ual . taxi service and tool lender, and the grandchildren call
him up and ask for ridiculously expensive things .
I have had enough. I've talked to my parents many times,only
to be told they don't mind - that's what grandparents do. I
refuse to sit back and watch them be used and abused. How can
·1 make them understand? - Aggravated in Shreveport, La. '
Dear Shreveport: Your parents give money, gifts and
time because it makes them feel needed and valued by family members and neighbors. They believe it will keep the
'grandchildren close. And they want , to do it. We know it
bothers you , but it's not your decision to make. When
·they've had enough, they will stop.
·
·
. Dear Annie: I read the letter from "Three's a Crowd,"
'who said his girlfriend's ex is always hanging around and
she treats him like a brother. I also have an ex-husband who
is a best friend.· We had a very bad marriage and there are
: no romantic feelings between us, but it's one of the best
friendships I've ever had.
· "Three" should be careful about asking his girlfriend to
end the friendship because it would be like giving up a family member. I would love to meet a nian who was strong
"enough emotionally to embrace my ex-husband as you suggestt;d. And I would love it if my ex found someone who
.would be friends with me. - Still Friends .
Dear Still: We hope both your wishes come true .

. Annie's Mailbox is wrilteh by Kathy MitcheU and Marcy
··Sugar, longtiiiU! editors of the Ann Landers column. Please
. e-mail your questions ro anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or
write to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O. /.lox 118190, Chicago, IL
. 60611. To find out more about Annie's Mailbox, and read
·features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, .
·visit the Creators SyndicoJe Web page oJ www.creators.com.

Local Weather
Monday...Areas of dense
. fog in the morning. Mostly
sunny, Highs in the upper 80s.
'South winds around 5 nnph.
Monday night ... Partly
: cloudy. A slight chance of
: showers and thunderstorms
~ after midnight. Lows in the
~ upper 60s. Chance of rain
; 20 percent.

Thesday ...Partly sunny
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
the upper 80s. Chance of
rain 50 percent.
TUesday night .. .Mostl y
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Humid with lows around 70.
Chance o.f rain 50 percent. ,

Community Calendar
-Pu--b-li_c_m_ee_t_in_g_s__r_er-en_c_e-r-oo_m__- . -M-e-ig_s_ _ _T-hu_sd_a_y.-J-ui-y-.o--s-ch_oo_l_.J- u-ly-8--II-,-6:-31-l
Monday, July 7
SYRACUSE _ Sutton
Township Trustees FY09
budget hearing, 7 p.m.,
Syracuse Village Hall, reguJar meeting to follow.
LETART FALLS _ Letart
Township Trustees ; regular ·
· 5
ffi b 'ld
meetmg , p.m .. o Ice Ul •
mg .

County Health Department.
CHESTER
Shade
POMEROY Me1gs River Lodge 453.7:30 p.ni.
High School band Boosters , at the hall. Scholarships to
6 p:m in the band room. be awarded. Refreshments.
Boosters will discuss summer band camp, band
TUPPERS PLAINS -,
schedule, plan events and VFW 9053 will meet at 7
fundraise! ' to support the p.m. A dinner will be held at
band program.
6:30 p.m.

Clubs and
. organizations

'1\tesday, July 8
POMEROY
- Meigs
Chamber
of
County
Commerce , business-minded
luncheon,
noon,
Pomeroy Library, featured
· speaker Phyllis Bohning,
Voinovich
School
of
Leadership and Public
Affairs at ,Ohio University,
Fntre.preneuria~ Signatl!-rc
·Program, Mike -Bartrum on
Meigs Local Enrichment
Foundation, Bob Evans of
Mason, W.Va. catering, call
992-5005 to RSVP.

Monday, July 7
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
regular meeting, noon, con-

HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville 255, Order of
the Eastern SDtar, will meet
at 7:30p .m. July 8 at the hall.

Tuesday, July 8.
CHESTER - Chester
Township Trustees will
have a . budget meeting 7
p.m. at the town hall.
POMEROY -:- Meigs
County Board of Flections.
8:30 a.m. at the Board office.

.

RACINE
- Racine
Southern FFA meeting. 6
b
p.m ., vo-ag room. (IICm ers
asked to attend to update
information.

Reunions
Sunday, July 23
RACINE - 17th annual
Theiss retltli on. Star r.t.ill
Park , Radne. Potluck at I
p.m. and pig in a poke auction. Rain or shine.

Church.events
Monday, July 7
POMEROY
Mt.
Hermon United. Brethren
Church. vacation Bible

"'

8:15p.m. Children ages I I&lt;'
12 . Theme is God's Bi ~
Backyard.
Saturday, July 12
RUTLAND Chuck
Compton w1ll be in gospel
concen at the Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church . 7
p.m. Pastor Ed Bamey invite'
public.

Birthdays
Tuesday, July 8
CHESTER
l'vb r-.
Virginia Kautz , formerh (; I·
Chester. will celebrate · l,ec
90th birthday on Jul ) R_.
Cards may be sent to her al
7786 Wethersfield Ori1 ,. .
West Chester. Ohio ~)IJ (ll;
Her tdephone number 1,
513-874-8790 .
.
Saturdav. Jull' 12
MIDDLEPORT .
Coleen Dunfee will obs~r' ,.
her 81stbi rthdayonJuly 1:!
Cards may he se111 to her ;&lt;
979 Hysell St.. MiddlepllrL
Ohio 45760.

RSVP announces Yesteryear essay winners
POMEROY - In a recog- Kaylyn Dickens , first and
nition program fifth graders Amber Davidson, · second;
who wrote winning essays Mikayla Van Matre, first ,
about their experiences at and Kerri Moon second;
Yesteryear, an annual pro- Cheyenne Gorslene , first
gram of the Retired Senior · and Jack Lemley, second;
Volunteer Program , were Matthew Smallwood, first,
presented trophies.
and Courtney Robinson,
The winners were from second; · Nate McClintock,
Meigs Elementary classes: first and Paige Phillips, sec-

ond. Mitchell Howard. first
and Kelsey Hudson, second.
Christian
Mid- Valley
School: all first places ,
Alyssa Deemer , Andrew
Bales, and Jacob Harris .
Southern
Elementary:
Bradley McCoy, first and
Bethany Theiss, second; Jesse
Connolly first apd county win-

net. and Chais RodrieueL. ,,.,.
ond: Kali Cunningl1am. lir-1
and Z1ck Carpenter. second.
Eastern
Elementan
Kylie Long. fi rst. ati d
Meloney Victory. secottd ·
Travis Adams. first. an u
autumn Wells. second. am !
Chantal Barnhart. first ""' '
Dustin Frost. second .

GALLIPOLIS - Karen
of
Stocker,
Director
Nutrition Services at Holzer
Medical Center, was recently named the facility's candidate for the Healthcare
Worker of the Year Award ,
sponsored by the Ohio
Hospital
Association
(OHA).
A native of Huntington,
W.Va., Stocker graduated
with her bachelor and master's degrees in dietetics
from Marshall University.
She began her employment
at Holzer Medical Center in
Karen Stocker
1992 as the Assistant
in
Nutrition timely manner, while conDirector
Services and became the tinually moving equipment
of
Nutrition during construction," said
Director
Services in 1999.
Karrie
Davison,
In 2000, she was instru- Community
Relations
mental in developing and Coordinator for Holzer
implementing the dietary Health Systems in a news
department for the facility release.
in Jackson, which required
"Stocker's commitmeni
many hours of · planning, to community service is
educating. and ~orking to outstanding," she continmaintain the excellent ser- ued. "She has willingly
vices being provided by worked with the Hospital's
Holzer Medical Center in Community Health and
Gallipolis
and Holzer Wellness . Department at
Senior Care Center.
numerous health fairs. com"Stocker was also respon- munity events, and has done
sible for the direct oversight numerous educational preof a complete remodel of sentations at local schools,
the Holzer Medical Center businesses and organizaGallipolis Cafeteria in tions. In addition, she has
2005. This was a massive taught nutrition courses at
project requiring a tremen- the University of Rio
&lt;lous commitment .to ensure , Grande and serves on an
that patients and visitors Advisory Committee at·
received quality meals in a Marshall University for stu-

dents who are pursuing a
career in dietetics."
The
release
credits
Stocker with great leadership strength which · is
reflected in her willingness
to work alongside the nutrition services staff in assisting with food preparation .
delivering trays to patients,
or wherever there is a need .
Her employees have a sense
of pride, ·respect, and loyalty to Stocker and the
Hospital. Through her mentaring, Stocker encourages
her employees to grow. professionally and pet:sonally,
· Davison said.
"I am proud to represent
Holzer Medical Center· as
the candidate for Healthcare
Worker of the Year," said
Stocker. " My co-workers
and I are just one big family

that I am proud to be a p&lt;~n
of."
Stocker
resides
'"
Huntington , W.Va. wit_h hc·c
husband. Rick , . who is ~'
Licensed Physical Therapist
Assistant at St. Mari s
Hospital. In her spare tim&lt;' .
she enjoys spending tinw
with her family .
Ohio
l:lospit&lt;li
The
ASsociation
recognizcl ~
Stocker ·and other. candi hospitah
dates . from
throughom the state ft)r
being named their facilit y·,
Healthcare Worker of til &lt;
Year at .a special dinner in
Columbus, on June 9 wher,·
several · Ohio caregivers
were presented with awards. ·
including the Albert E.
Dyckes Health Care Worker
of the Year Award.

i Smllel Now you can OWI1 the pict~.Jre ol that uo~rg eUe ble
moment captured in the naws.paper. Photos become umeless
when lramed or printed?" e mug or mouse pad.
and ·ciK:k the blue button.

Visit

: ~----------------------------------------------------------~

· Hey Moms and Dads, Grandmas·andGrandpas and Aunts and Uncles ...
In the Daily Sentinel

A Special supplement to highlight babie$,
Ages newborn to four years old.

r----------------------,
Name
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t

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1 Baby's
I

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Limit your story to
500-750 words. .

I ge
I Parents
I
.I
I Address
1 Phone

Please include a phone number
in your email.

,,

BY KATHY MITCI-IELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

~

.......

••

ANNIE ·s MAILBox

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0 50 krn

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So W hate~er happened
to marrlage Vows ?

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• Sapporo

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Address will not be published

I Simply send your baby's

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1l1 Court St. Pomeroy, OH

�.
The Daily Sentinel

NATION

RLD

PageA2
Monday, July 7,
.

2008

'

-

G-B summtl stte
Hokkaldo

'-w

BY JENNIFER

•Toylko

-

0

C.

YATES

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Pln'SBU~GH They
were precocious toddlers .
both blond-haired and bluerC.HINo( RUSSIA
eyed. separated by a thou ~ .. ·i l.&amp;iji : '.
sand miles between Mianii
NORTH
and a small K ~ ntucky town .
JAPAN
, KOREA Sell ry
• hqlfl /1 Th&lt;&gt;-lwo girls would never
P .wijic
SOUTH
meet. but would be brought
Or·eiln
KOREA
- Tokyo•
Iogether
through unthink 0 200mi
.'\. •,.·
tragedy:
Trine
able·
0 200km
was
born
with
Engebretsen
SOURCE. ESRI
AP
a genet ic disorder that
would require what at the
time was an extremely rare
liver
transplant,
and
~
Amanda DeLapp would die
at just 18 months after being
stricken with a brain.tumor.
In an operation in
TOYAKO , Japan (AP) Pittsburgh in 1984.Amanda's
Glohal ch;, llenge' Like ' " "r- · family dnnated their daugh ing oil prices and th e ter's liver to Trine, making
Earth's ri sing temperature her · one of the nation's
await President Bush at a youngest patients ever to
summit of top industriali zcu receive a liver tr;msplant.
nations, but firs1 he set out
For years, each family
to soot he emotion s on a se n- would try to contact the
sitive Japanese issue that's other. Trine 's family sent a
entangled in the nuclear picture of their ·uaughter
stan,doff with North Korea.
dressed for Christmas to the
Bush towched down in DeLapp family, a picture
Japan on Sunday, his 62nd that still sits on the bedroom
birthday, and was nying dresse ,· uf Alisha DeLapp .
aboard the M~rine One pres- Amanda's mother. That coridential helicopter to the respondence was followed
northem Japanese island of by years of miscommunicaHokkaio~ tor his eighth and tion , with each -fa mily misftnal Group of Eight summit. takenly thinking the other
His ,first meeting is with didn't want any contact.
Japanese Prime Minister
But Atmmda's younger sisYasuo Fukuda.
ter. born after her death, never
The Japanese government is gave up hop&lt;; of one day meeta key player in the six-party ing the girl who received her
negotiations dmt led to North sister's liver. Keish~BeLapp
Korea's recent declamtion had tound Trine on the
about its nuclear activities. Internet years ago. and read

•

I·

.

.

_

Bush, Fukuda
1ay out
goa1s lor G-8
summit in Japan

AP photo

.

Keisha Delapp, left. holds a +Jictur.e of her older sister Amanda, who in 1984, died and her iiver donated to Trine
Engebretsen, who is seen in the photo that Delapp's mother, Alisha , is holding at the ir,home in Mayfield , Ky., June 16 .
Now, 25 years after the surgery that forever connecte.d two families. Trine and the Delapps are slated to meet for the first
time. in July when the U.S. Transplant Games are held in Pittsburgh. ·

She w'" one of several herself in transplant-related the years . She kept the picThey had also mauc utl1cr
children who had transplants endeavors.
national TV appearances.
ture of Trine as a child in her
"I very much feel that it 's Christmas dress - eerily, it
The
De Lapps knew at the Pittsburgh hospital in
immediately · that their 198J and 1984. remembers import~nt and also I like ro was the same dress Amanda
daughter's liver had saved . pionecri11g transplant sur- give back. I don't feel like I'm . had 'worn in a Christmas
Trine 's life. (They later geon Dr. Thomas Starzl , under an obligation. I want to snapshot - and hoped one
learned that Amanda's kid~ who perl&lt;umed her opera- give back," Trine said.
day to be able to update it
neys were donated to a man tion. The patients were
She first attended the U.S. with a more recent photo.
known as · "Reagan chil- Transplant Games in 1992,
in hi s 20s.)
,
"I know it's not my d•ugi;!.__.
C"t.:J~·
_:
.
:
~'-n..-.rre-f-'I
OOu.l-her
9~..einat-~sr~nM-'dti'i't3
.e
i
dle
arttrl,:
dicu:·
because
thenand
'ha'
s
attended
most
of
the
ter, but it's just as special
·-o·n-..,-- ..,up&lt;-tllv .
1..-IULC
,
t'
t-'1
upset about the U.S. move to swimmer in tlic U.S. time, and in a mailer of hours President Keagan had been games since then. She has knowing that my . daughter
remove Pyongyang from the Tmnsplant Games. She read the local news channels were 'using his s.lturday radio participated in. swimming. saved her life," Alisha
State Depanment's terror about Trine's ~ wonderful calling the DeLapps tor com- adure~;e ; to drum up public running and even signed up DeLapp said. "I'm proud of
blacklist in exchange for Nonh health, including her complete ment. They agreed to an int10rcst in transplantation.
for the .shot put this year.
her. with the things that she's
Korea's decision to admit to· independence from dmgs that intervie'&gt;! with a local TV sta"At the beginning of the
She met her fiance, Ryan chosen to do with her life.
some of its weapons work.
prevent organ rejection.
tion, _which was broadcast im 1980s , the only place in the Labbe, in an online forum It's so impressive to me."
Japan has long pushed for
Like other twentysome- the "Today" show. .
'
U.S. that was doing these about organ transplants. He
The two families have
the resolution of North thmgs, Ketsha also kejlt a
The DeLapps ' wei·e inter- was here in Pittsburgh ," moved from New England been communicating via eKorea' s kidnappings of MySpace page, w.1th a s1m- viewed along with Trine 's Starzl said.
to.Miami to be with her, and mail since Keisha and Trine
Japanese citizens in the 1970s pie quo.re at ·the top; " Faith family. They didn'i speak
Starzl remembers Trine received his own iiver trans- made contact earlier ' this
and '80s as a condition for IS not simply believmg that directly to each other, but it and over the years says he has . plant earlier this year.
year. They've talked about
sending aid and improving God can ... It IS knowmg was the closest the families met several donor families ..
Trine has been off the many years they t~ied to
.
would come to it for yeaPs.
"I was profoundly and immunosuppressant medica- connect, and how thankful
relations with the impover- .that He wilL"
ished, reclusive communist
Earlier this year, Keisha
Trine Engebretsen now still am profmmdly grateful tions .for II years, something they are for each other nation. The abductees were looked for Trine online 26. doesn'.t remember' much to them, particularly in that's becoming more com- each in their own ways.
apparently used to train North again ,found heron My Space about her lifesavine liver those days because it wasn't mon among transplant recip- · "''ve ' waited 24 years to
Korean agents in Japanese and sent her a greeting: .
transplant when she- was 2 common (to donate organs). ients. She is applying for be able to say thank you,"
language and customs.
"Hi. I'm Keisha,OeLapp . 1/2 years old.
It required a lot of social medical school, in hopes of Trine says from her home in
Knowing that the U.S. Amanda DeLapp s Sister.
She had been horn with a conscience,'' Starzl said.
studying something trans- Florida.
action would put a wrinkle in Me and my family would genetic disorder called
•••
plant -related, and works for
When the transplant games
U.S.-Japanese relations, Jilush love_ to have contact With alpha-! antitrypsin deficienOver the years, Trine's the Life A II iance Organ commence on July I I, 'the
called Fukuda just before the you If you,would hke to. Let cy, which resulted in her family tried to contact the Recovery Agency in Florida. three will meet ·for the first
U.S., on June 26. announced me know.
·
body not producing enough DeLapp family. She knew
On a Friday night at her time
in
downtown
its plan to ease sanctions
Thts month, the . U.S . of a key enzyme in the liver. the
family
lived
in office. around 6 p.m., her Pittsburgh , just miles from
against North Korea and take Transplant Ga111es ':" 111 ~e
In addition to the family's Kentucky. but says letters Blackberry went off. It was where Trine's surgery took
the country he once labeled as held for the first ttme. m appeals tor help on IV. her her mother sent to an a friend request from her place. Starzl will also be
part of his "axis of evil" off Pmsburgh. one of the PIO- father, a Norwegian citizen, address for Amanda's My Space page.
there to greet them. The
the terrorism list. Bush told neenn~ centers for trans- appealed to the Norwegian grandparents ·were returned,
It was from 23-year-old women will give thanks for
Fukuda the U.S. would con- plants m the country, a~d 2 ~ government, which agreed unopened.
Keisha DeLapp.
each other through hellos and
tinue to push North Korea to years after the operation to pay for Trine's surgery.
Several years ago, Trine
"I almost fell off my hugs, and probably some
resolve the kidnapping issue. that forever connected the He was Norway's youngest wrote a thank you note to chair," Trine says.
tears.
"The Japanese public has fng~bretsen and DeLapp passenger ship captain. and the DeLapps for her transAlisha DeLapp, now 48.
"! never got to know my
very strong feelings about a~; 1~:th
· was lost at sea in a hurricane plant and gave it to the had gone on to have Keisha sister. I never got to meet
getting positive progress" on
.. e ~ames, ese two when Trine was 13.
organ-procurement organi- and a son before she and her her or anything. By no
the abductee issue. Dennis families wtll look each ~ther
When T;·ine arrived at za tion for Kentucky hoping husband divorced. She fol- means is Trine my sister, but
Wilder, the National Security m the ey_es for the first ttme, Children's Hospital of they could pass it along to lowed Trine 's progress that's kind of like a part of
exchangmg hellos, hugs and
·
.
'
Council's senior director for. memories of the event that Pittsburgh for the transplant. the family. The note never through online stories from her," Keisha says. "This
the various U.S. Transplant whole experience, I'm just
Asian Affairs, told reporters changed both their lives. ,
doctors estimated she had made it to them.
traveling with Bush aboard
less than 24 hours to hvc.
she
immersed
Meanwhile.
she competed in over glad that it happened."
Games
•••
Air Force One. "The presiAmanda was Alisha
dent has said we' re not going DeLapp's first child, born in
to forget that issue ... I think 1981 . The little girl known
the Japanese prime minister as Mandy to her family was
will, of course, want to hear healthy and happy, even
the president repeat those walking by the time she was
assurances."
8 months old, her mother
- Before leaders began arriv- re~alls.
ine for the summit, more than
A year later ~ever-:Ything
I ,000 peopl-e marched in-· changed. Amanda was hospinonhern Japan .on Satunday talized because she wa' vainto protest the event. Police iring and had pneumonia-like
arrested four protesters after a symptoms. Her parents rushed
brief scuffle. Demonstrators her to the hospital closest to
at a park in central Sapporo their Mayfield, Ky.. home, but
detnanded that the summit doctors were unable to figure
'.
nations take urgent measures out what was wrong. As her
: to·stop global warming. grant condition deteriorated. doctors
indigenous people greater senf Amanda to a hospital in
rights, com~at world poverty Nashville. about two hours
and battle discrimination.
away.
Fukuda h_as made climate
Doctors there found the
-change the centerpiece of the problem, telling Amanda's
: meetings involving leaders anxious parents th.eir daugh: from the U.S.. Japan. ter had a brain tumor and
Germany, 8ritain , France , was going to die. Amanda
Italy, Russia and Canada. The DeLapp was 18 months old.
Japanese prime minister, who
A nurse at the hospital
suffers from low approval asked the couple if they
ratings , would like to emerge would consider donating
witli an agreement on 50 per- Amanda's·organs.
: cent overall reductions . in
"To me, at that time, it
. greenhouse gases by 205Q.
had to be God helping us to
On the sidelines of the G-8 decide ," Alisha DeLapp
summit, there are other meet- remembers. "I can look
. ings involving the world's back at that now and know
biggest polluters. Bush , who it was the hardest decision I
pushed for these meetings, ever had to make."
Alisha and her husband
· says any international climate ·
: change deal will be'worthless returned home . On TV, they
: unless it includes commit- saw on the news that a little
ments from fast-growing girl named . Trine had
economies like China and received a liver transplant.
. India. He says these countries Alisha remembered the lit. must be held to the same tie girl; she had seen Trine
; greenhouse gas emi ssion- and her mom, Mary Ann ·
: reduction standards as older, Lunde, on the Phil Donahue
developed economies.
show appealing for help .

~be ~allipolis llailp ~rthune,­
~be ftoint ~Ieasant l\egister ·

and The Daily Sentinel
have launched a new page every
Friday called "Faith and Family".
If you have a testimonial story,
life-changing event about yourself
or even a poem that you would
like to share please email to:

Dear Annie: Two months ago, out of the blue , my 42: ~ea~-old -:v•fe of 25 years said, "!love you for the three kids
·you ve g1ven me and the years we've had, but I'm not in
:love ':"ith you anymore. I think we should separate. All I
~ want IS half the house." Then she told me to move out for
· a few months until things settle down.
~ I' m st~nding there wondering, "What is she talking about?"
. Anme, I m a good husband. I have a good job, I'm not abu:: sive., l don't drink or gamble, I don't even go out with my bud: dtes. How could she drop a 25-year maniage just like that?
· She has no interest in giving me a second chance. She
~ moved out and is living with a young gal she works with.
:Everyone we know is shocked. Some say it's a midlife cri: sis or she 's having an affair. Others blame online dating ser' VIces and chat rooms. Some say she wants the money from
~ the sale of the bou'e
::-- I've ·since leam..erl otnine other men..whose wives have done
:the same thing in the last three months. What happened to mar. riage vows? We've had our differences like every other couple,
: but we've always worked through them and carried on.
: Right now, she treats me as if I don 't exist. Do you think
:this is temporary and she 'II come to her senses? If she does,
•should I take her back? Is she l_ikely to do this -again?
:-Should I just move on without her? - Shell-Shocked
:-- Dear Shell-Shocked: Once upon a time, being a good
· provider and a sober, loving and decent husband was enough,
; but apparently, it wasn't enough for your wife. And the sur"prise factor indicates she'd been planning to leave the mar··riage for quite a while. We don't know if she'll change her
mind or not. Some j)!!Ople, after realizing the grass isn't any
· greener elsewhere, return home. But there's no reason for you
·to put your life on hold wai!ing. Get some counseling so you
can learn to deal with what happened and then move on.
Dear Annie: My parents, both in their 60s, recently
.retired. At a time in their lives when they should relax or
: travd, they are instead !Jombarded with family members
, lookmg for handouts.
. My parents have always been willing to help, but I feel
· they are being taken advantage of. Mom is constantly being
'asked to baby-sit the grandchildren, and at the end of thi!'
'day she complains of being exhausted. Dad is always doing
f::~ \IDtS-fur. .~s-nt~rnM0t:-9-1't:oc~hews. anti--jUst
. recently a neighbor asked to borrow money. He's a perpet_· ual . taxi service and tool lender, and the grandchildren call
him up and ask for ridiculously expensive things .
I have had enough. I've talked to my parents many times,only
to be told they don't mind - that's what grandparents do. I
refuse to sit back and watch them be used and abused. How can
·1 make them understand? - Aggravated in Shreveport, La. '
Dear Shreveport: Your parents give money, gifts and
time because it makes them feel needed and valued by family members and neighbors. They believe it will keep the
'grandchildren close. And they want , to do it. We know it
bothers you , but it's not your decision to make. When
·they've had enough, they will stop.
·
·
. Dear Annie: I read the letter from "Three's a Crowd,"
'who said his girlfriend's ex is always hanging around and
she treats him like a brother. I also have an ex-husband who
is a best friend.· We had a very bad marriage and there are
: no romantic feelings between us, but it's one of the best
friendships I've ever had.
· "Three" should be careful about asking his girlfriend to
end the friendship because it would be like giving up a family member. I would love to meet a nian who was strong
"enough emotionally to embrace my ex-husband as you suggestt;d. And I would love it if my ex found someone who
.would be friends with me. - Still Friends .
Dear Still: We hope both your wishes come true .

. Annie's Mailbox is wrilteh by Kathy MitcheU and Marcy
··Sugar, longtiiiU! editors of the Ann Landers column. Please
. e-mail your questions ro anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or
write to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O. /.lox 118190, Chicago, IL
. 60611. To find out more about Annie's Mailbox, and read
·features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, .
·visit the Creators SyndicoJe Web page oJ www.creators.com.

Local Weather
Monday...Areas of dense
. fog in the morning. Mostly
sunny, Highs in the upper 80s.
'South winds around 5 nnph.
Monday night ... Partly
: cloudy. A slight chance of
: showers and thunderstorms
~ after midnight. Lows in the
~ upper 60s. Chance of rain
; 20 percent.

Thesday ...Partly sunny
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
the upper 80s. Chance of
rain 50 percent.
TUesday night .. .Mostl y
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Humid with lows around 70.
Chance o.f rain 50 percent. ,

Community Calendar
-Pu--b-li_c_m_ee_t_in_g_s__r_er-en_c_e-r-oo_m__- . -M-e-ig_s_ _ _T-hu_sd_a_y.-J-ui-y-.o--s-ch_oo_l_.J- u-ly-8--II-,-6:-31-l
Monday, July 7
SYRACUSE _ Sutton
Township Trustees FY09
budget hearing, 7 p.m.,
Syracuse Village Hall, reguJar meeting to follow.
LETART FALLS _ Letart
Township Trustees ; regular ·
· 5
ffi b 'ld
meetmg , p.m .. o Ice Ul •
mg .

County Health Department.
CHESTER
Shade
POMEROY Me1gs River Lodge 453.7:30 p.ni.
High School band Boosters , at the hall. Scholarships to
6 p:m in the band room. be awarded. Refreshments.
Boosters will discuss summer band camp, band
TUPPERS PLAINS -,
schedule, plan events and VFW 9053 will meet at 7
fundraise! ' to support the p.m. A dinner will be held at
band program.
6:30 p.m.

Clubs and
. organizations

'1\tesday, July 8
POMEROY
- Meigs
Chamber
of
County
Commerce , business-minded
luncheon,
noon,
Pomeroy Library, featured
· speaker Phyllis Bohning,
Voinovich
School
of
Leadership and Public
Affairs at ,Ohio University,
Fntre.preneuria~ Signatl!-rc
·Program, Mike -Bartrum on
Meigs Local Enrichment
Foundation, Bob Evans of
Mason, W.Va. catering, call
992-5005 to RSVP.

Monday, July 7
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
regular meeting, noon, con-

HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville 255, Order of
the Eastern SDtar, will meet
at 7:30p .m. July 8 at the hall.

Tuesday, July 8.
CHESTER - Chester
Township Trustees will
have a . budget meeting 7
p.m. at the town hall.
POMEROY -:- Meigs
County Board of Flections.
8:30 a.m. at the Board office.

.

RACINE
- Racine
Southern FFA meeting. 6
b
p.m ., vo-ag room. (IICm ers
asked to attend to update
information.

Reunions
Sunday, July 23
RACINE - 17th annual
Theiss retltli on. Star r.t.ill
Park , Radne. Potluck at I
p.m. and pig in a poke auction. Rain or shine.

Church.events
Monday, July 7
POMEROY
Mt.
Hermon United. Brethren
Church. vacation Bible

"'

8:15p.m. Children ages I I&lt;'
12 . Theme is God's Bi ~
Backyard.
Saturday, July 12
RUTLAND Chuck
Compton w1ll be in gospel
concen at the Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church . 7
p.m. Pastor Ed Bamey invite'
public.

Birthdays
Tuesday, July 8
CHESTER
l'vb r-.
Virginia Kautz , formerh (; I·
Chester. will celebrate · l,ec
90th birthday on Jul ) R_.
Cards may be sent to her al
7786 Wethersfield Ori1 ,. .
West Chester. Ohio ~)IJ (ll;
Her tdephone number 1,
513-874-8790 .
.
Saturdav. Jull' 12
MIDDLEPORT .
Coleen Dunfee will obs~r' ,.
her 81stbi rthdayonJuly 1:!
Cards may he se111 to her ;&lt;
979 Hysell St.. MiddlepllrL
Ohio 45760.

RSVP announces Yesteryear essay winners
POMEROY - In a recog- Kaylyn Dickens , first and
nition program fifth graders Amber Davidson, · second;
who wrote winning essays Mikayla Van Matre, first ,
about their experiences at and Kerri Moon second;
Yesteryear, an annual pro- Cheyenne Gorslene , first
gram of the Retired Senior · and Jack Lemley, second;
Volunteer Program , were Matthew Smallwood, first,
presented trophies.
and Courtney Robinson,
The winners were from second; · Nate McClintock,
Meigs Elementary classes: first and Paige Phillips, sec-

ond. Mitchell Howard. first
and Kelsey Hudson, second.
Christian
Mid- Valley
School: all first places ,
Alyssa Deemer , Andrew
Bales, and Jacob Harris .
Southern
Elementary:
Bradley McCoy, first and
Bethany Theiss, second; Jesse
Connolly first apd county win-

net. and Chais RodrieueL. ,,.,.
ond: Kali Cunningl1am. lir-1
and Z1ck Carpenter. second.
Eastern
Elementan
Kylie Long. fi rst. ati d
Meloney Victory. secottd ·
Travis Adams. first. an u
autumn Wells. second. am !
Chantal Barnhart. first ""' '
Dustin Frost. second .

GALLIPOLIS - Karen
of
Stocker,
Director
Nutrition Services at Holzer
Medical Center, was recently named the facility's candidate for the Healthcare
Worker of the Year Award ,
sponsored by the Ohio
Hospital
Association
(OHA).
A native of Huntington,
W.Va., Stocker graduated
with her bachelor and master's degrees in dietetics
from Marshall University.
She began her employment
at Holzer Medical Center in
Karen Stocker
1992 as the Assistant
in
Nutrition timely manner, while conDirector
Services and became the tinually moving equipment
of
Nutrition during construction," said
Director
Services in 1999.
Karrie
Davison,
In 2000, she was instru- Community
Relations
mental in developing and Coordinator for Holzer
implementing the dietary Health Systems in a news
department for the facility release.
in Jackson, which required
"Stocker's commitmeni
many hours of · planning, to community service is
educating. and ~orking to outstanding," she continmaintain the excellent ser- ued. "She has willingly
vices being provided by worked with the Hospital's
Holzer Medical Center in Community Health and
Gallipolis
and Holzer Wellness . Department at
Senior Care Center.
numerous health fairs. com"Stocker was also respon- munity events, and has done
sible for the direct oversight numerous educational preof a complete remodel of sentations at local schools,
the Holzer Medical Center businesses and organizaGallipolis Cafeteria in tions. In addition, she has
2005. This was a massive taught nutrition courses at
project requiring a tremen- the University of Rio
&lt;lous commitment .to ensure , Grande and serves on an
that patients and visitors Advisory Committee at·
received quality meals in a Marshall University for stu-

dents who are pursuing a
career in dietetics."
The
release
credits
Stocker with great leadership strength which · is
reflected in her willingness
to work alongside the nutrition services staff in assisting with food preparation .
delivering trays to patients,
or wherever there is a need .
Her employees have a sense
of pride, ·respect, and loyalty to Stocker and the
Hospital. Through her mentaring, Stocker encourages
her employees to grow. professionally and pet:sonally,
· Davison said.
"I am proud to represent
Holzer Medical Center· as
the candidate for Healthcare
Worker of the Year," said
Stocker. " My co-workers
and I are just one big family

that I am proud to be a p&lt;~n
of."
Stocker
resides
'"
Huntington , W.Va. wit_h hc·c
husband. Rick , . who is ~'
Licensed Physical Therapist
Assistant at St. Mari s
Hospital. In her spare tim&lt;' .
she enjoys spending tinw
with her family .
Ohio
l:lospit&lt;li
The
ASsociation
recognizcl ~
Stocker ·and other. candi hospitah
dates . from
throughom the state ft)r
being named their facilit y·,
Healthcare Worker of til &lt;
Year at .a special dinner in
Columbus, on June 9 wher,·
several · Ohio caregivers
were presented with awards. ·
including the Albert E.
Dyckes Health Care Worker
of the Year Award.

i Smllel Now you can OWI1 the pict~.Jre ol that uo~rg eUe ble
moment captured in the naws.paper. Photos become umeless
when lramed or printed?" e mug or mouse pad.
and ·ciK:k the blue button.

Visit

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· Hey Moms and Dads, Grandmas·andGrandpas and Aunts and Uncles ...
In the Daily Sentinel

A Special supplement to highlight babie$,
Ages newborn to four years old.

r----------------------,
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t

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1 Baby's
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Limit your story to
500-750 words. .

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,,

BY KATHY MITCI-IELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

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ANNIE ·s MAILBox

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So W hate~er happened
to marrlage Vows ?

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Address will not be published

I Simply send your baby's

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I $10.00, and we'll do the rest.
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The Daily
Sentinel
1l1 Court St. Pomeroy, OH

�•

Monday~ July 7, .2008

PageA4

OPINION

-,-

.

Monday, July 7,

&lt; .

200"8

Geert Wilders: Prisoner cifJslam

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court S1ree1 • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

· Congress shall make no law respecting an
establisllment of re~igion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
. of speech,' or of the press; or the rigllt of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
'Today is Monday. Jul y 7. the 189th day of 2008. There
are 177 days left in the year.
Today's Highli ght in Hi story: On July 7. 1865, four peopie were hanged in Washington, D.C.. for conspiring with
John Wilkes Booth 10 assassinate President Lincoln .
On thi s date: In 1807, Napoleon 1 of France and Czar
Alexander I of Russia signed a treaty at Tilsil ending war
between their emp ires ,
In 1896. the Democ ratic national convention opened in
Chicago.
·
In 1898. the United States annexed Hawaii.
In 1908. the Democratic National Convention opened in
Denver.
In 1930 . construction began on Boulder Dam (later
Hoover Dam).
. In 1948 , six female reservists became the first women to
. . be sworn into the regular U.S. Nav x.,_
~Pres id e nt Eisenhower signed the Alaska
· Statehood Act, whkh we nt into effect in January 1959 .
In 1981 , P,resident Reagan an nounced he was nominating
Arizona Judge Sandra Day O'Connor to become the first
female justice on the U.S. Supreme Court .
In 1983, 1! ~ y ear-old Samantha Smith of Manchester,
Maine ; left for a visit to the Soviet Union at the personal
invitation of Soviet leader Yuri YAndropov.
In 2005. su.icide terrorist bombings in three Underground
stations and a double-decker bus killed 52 victims and four
bombers in the worst attack on London since World War 11.
Five years ago : A chunk of foam insulation fired at shuttie wing parts blew open a gaping 16-inch hole , yielding
what one member of the Columbia investigation team said
was the "smoking guri" proving what brought down the
spaceship. NASA lalincl\ed its second Mars rover. A federal judge approved a settlement fining WorldCom $750 million for its $.11 billion acGounting scandal. Golfer Hilary
Lunke won the U.S. Women's Open.
One year ago: A Iruck bomb devastated the public market
in Armiii . lraq. killing at least 115 people . A 24-hour music
maralhon spanning seven continents reached the Western
Hem isphere with rappers, rockers and country stars taking
the s1age at Live Earth concens to fight climate change.
Venus Williams claimed her fot1rth Wimbledon title with:a
6-4. 6-1 victory over Marion Bartoli.
Today's Birthdays: Blues musician Pinetop Perkins is 95.
· Musician-conductor Doc Severinsen is 81. Historian. author David McCullough is 75. Rock star Ringo Starr is
68. Singer~musician Warren Entner (The Grass Roots) is
64. Actor Joe Spano is 62. Pop singer Dayid Hodo (The
Village People) is 61 . Country singer Linda Williams is 61.
Adress Shelley Duvall is 59. RSinger-songwriter Yanda
Shepard is 45. Actor'comedian Jim Gaffiga n is 42. Actress.
Jorja Fox is 40 . Actress Cree Summer is 39. Actress Kirsten
Vangsness is 36. Actor Hamish Linklater is 32. Olympic
silver and bronze medal figure skater Michelle Kwan is 28.
Rapper Cassidy is 26. Country singer Gabbie Nolen is 26.
Thought for Today: "There is no escape - man drags
man down , or man lifts man up." - Attributed to Booker
T. Washington. American educator and author ( 1856-1915).

THE
HAGUE'. The
signal 10 lhe Netherlands." reason to stop the immigraNelherlands - Having run
A "signal "? How about a tion. because the more we
the polite-but-grim gauntlet
gag'? Of course. like olher have an influx of Muslims
of Dutch government secuWestern peoples. the Dutch in the Netherla·nds. th e
rity to gai n access to Geert
seem content to censor strength of the (Islamic)
themse lves, .
happily culture will grow. and the
Wilders , I finally understood what lh e 24-hou r
Diana
mouthing
multicultural ch ~nge of our societies will
security requirements of the
West
platitudes thac effectively incre:1se ." He sees hi s
.man's continued existence
rationalize their · own cui- efforts as "a fight against an
reall y mean : To ,make the
ture's Islamization. Not ideology that i believe al the
survival of Western-style
Wilders.
,
end of the dav will kill our
liberty in the Netherlands Islam -inspired
I
recently
asked
the
44freedom. kill. our societies
polilkal
·
his political cause. this
year-old Dutchman what and change everything we
.
.
h
a"assination.At least il has.
, h.
d f ..
·
Dutc h par Immcntanan
as tracimatically, twice in w.as stronger tn ts cou nlry: stan · or.
to live under high-tech lock recent years: once, with the Islam or multiculturalism.
He\ ri ght - and. yes. it 's
and key.
"Unfortunately, they are politically incorrect to say
2002 murder of the anti This stunning paradox. Islamic-immigration politi- ~oth strong." he replied : that, too. Everyt hing lhe
with no end In sight , illus- cian Pim Fortuy n by an ani- sealed in his ligh tly fur- West sta nds for, starting
trates how far p.oiitical free- mal ri ghts activ ist who nished but iieavily gu.arded with freedom of speech, is
dom in the W!}sl has already claimed Fortuyn was scape- office . " But cu ltural rela- already changin g as our
erod ed . Think of it : For eoating Muslims; and . the tivism is tiie biggest proh~ inqitution-~ . up to and
wriling abouf'the repressive following year with the ritu- lem." He went on to including, for example, the
ideology of islam, for argu- alistic Islamic murder of exPJain:
"Multicultural U.S.
Department
of
ing agai nst the inequities of Van Gogh. director of soc iety would not be that Homeland
Security.
Shari a (Islamic law). for "Submission.'' a short video 'bad - I don't really believe · increasingly proscribe ~riti~
making a video ("Fitna") to niade with Hirsi Ali aboul in it - bu.t il would not be cal rl!fcrences. or indeed .
warn about Islamic jihad. Islamic ·mistreatment of that bad if. at least, we any refere nces to Islam . . · ·
Wilders li ves in his own women. In all. such Islam- would be strong enough to While it 's clear that the
non-Islamic country under a inspired violence has been say that our cu lture is better European manifestation of
specifically Islamic death enough to chill Islam - and dominant. But when Islam ic
ideo logy
has
threat.
inspired debate.
you combine multicultural already killed Wifders' per~
If it is politically incorrect
And that 's just the situa- society with a dominant sona! freedom in the
to notice this, it is also lion at home. Thi~ week, sense of cultural relativistil. Netl1erlands. the general
indispulably true. True , loa. even as Amsterdam's chief y.o u are headi ng · in I he ihlpact on freedom throughis that, sans state sec urity, public prosec utor. Leo de wrong direction . You are out the West has yet to be
this death threat could con- Wil , announced that no commilting suicide when it fully appreciated.
ceivably be carried out any- charges would be brought comes to your own culture.'' . " I have a mission.:•
time. anywhere - from the against Wilders for ''disHe continued: "I am not Wilders said. " ! believe
picluresque streets outside crimination" or "incitement advocating a monocultural very stron gly in what I say,
the Dutch pariiamenl. to the to hatred" · related to soc iety. I just wan1 what the . and my party fortunately
house Wiiders hasn' l slept Wiiders' writings or video Germans call leitkultur shares thi s view. An&lt;;l
in since 2004. That , of (" We find Mr. Wilders' (leading cultu re). ! want our nobqdy in the Netherlands
course, was when. on an remarks were limited to own culture to be dominant is doing (what I do). And
Amsterdam streeca Mu slim Islam as a religious move- - not the only one. but to so mebody snould. And I
assassin plunged a knife ment," De Wit said), Jordan be dominant. I have a big pay a high price for it."
into Th ea van Gogh'S announced 1t 1s bringing a probl em wtth the cultural
What is lhe expressionf.-¥c~m!.l·~s~
e . .· ~lhi.!Ju!!.'s"ta~tt:t~!¢&gt;.~h:~;~iJ,l11!&gt;g:':'b&gt;
th~~'---"
''Ei~r~kJ.ted- cnm'mll--~ati·:i~:s who say-every--i'otcdun i mr'r"ffe~·;
Islamic manifesto. threaten- case against the Dutch par- culture is equal. I don't literally and acute'ly the case
ing both Wilders and his liamentarian.
believe every c!t lture is when it comes to this heroic
then-parliamentary
col_. . In other words, Jordan equa l.''
and dedicated Dutchman .
league, Ayaan Hirsi Ali , will indict a Dutch poiiti- · Hoping to preserve the
(Diana West is a cohun,
with death.
c iim
according
lo primacy of Western culture nist for The Washingtoil
Nol long ago, politi ca l .Jordanian (read: Islam -. in thi s Dutch corner of the Times. Sire is tire author dj
debate in the Netherlands in spired ) law: "Jordanian West. Wilders ad.Qoeates a "The Dearlr of the Grown,
met with, well, more polili- authorities are not aiming halt to Islamic immigration. up : How America:1· Arrested
cal debate. Now, however. to arres t" the Dutch leader "I'm not saying that every DCI'e!opmem Is Bringing
with a. growing Muslim of the Freedom Party , Muslim in I he Netherlands Down
Western
minority - and it's politi- Radio Netherlands Online is a ·criminal or a terrorist," Civili:arion," and ha s a
· cally incorrect to notice this , reports. "They say the he explains. " We know the blog at dianawesr.ner. Shf
too - political debate decision to prosecute was majority is not. Still," he con be contacted · via
sometimes meets with taken in order to send a continues. ''there is good dianall'est@veriwn.net.)

AND I'M t;nu..
GOlNG UP

.

,../

~ -.

·-··-··---

-· .,

:. -

:·.

. ~

ALL BUSINESS:]ob ·cut surge keeps wage growth low
Bv RACHEL BECK
AP BUSINESS WRITER

LETTERS TO THE
•
EDITOR

NEW YORK - Ail those
job
cuts at automakers..
· Letters to the editor are welcome; They should be less
newspapers
and
even
than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing , must be
Starbucks
are
hard
te
stemj·igned, and inc/ude-uddre;~- and telephone num/5er. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in ach. But m a . roundabou.t
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of way, they may actually help
thanks to otganizatimis am/ individuals will lwr be accepi- the economy a btl.
No, that isn'l a mi sprint .
ed for publication.
.
The story here so lely has
to do wllh how soarmg layoffs impac.t wage growth
- a scary tnflat_1onary factor that econotmsts hate to
(USPS 213-960)
see , espectally tn a fmanReader Services
Ohio Valley publishing
ctal
cltmate . already
Co.
Correction Polley
plagued by surgtng pnces
Published every afternoon, Monday
Our main col")cern in aU stor.ies ls to
for food and fuel. .
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
be accurate . If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
When the public perSecond-class
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
cetves JObs ·as bemg scarce,
992·2156.
Member: The AssoCiated PI'Oss and
workers may be less
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
mciilred t\) demand higher
Poatml1ter: Send address .correcwages. And since labor is
Our main number Is
tions to The Daily Senllnel. 11t Court
the top cost for many bus1(~40~ 992·2156.
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
nesses, . holding salaries
Department extensions are:
down
mtght mean that cost
Subscrlptlon.Rates
By carrier or motor route
won't be passed on to conNews
One month
'10.27
sumers. ·
Edttor: Char1ene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
One year
'115.84
· That may be hard to grasp
Dally
50'
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
am1d.
the sea of headlines
Senior Citizen rates
Reporter: Beth Sergent. E&lt;t. 13
show.mg more bad news on
One month
'10.27
the JOb front. The latest
c;&gt;ne Y"l'
'103.90
Sutiocmeos shouid ...mit ~ advance
blow ' came Thursday:
Advertising
Outalde Sale1: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 &lt;lOud 10 the Doily SentineL No sub·
Empioyers
cut payrolls by
scription by mall permitted in areas
Ouialde Salee: Brenda Davis, Ext IS where home carrier servict is avail62,000 in June, the sixtlr
Cla..JCirc.: Judy Clar1&lt;. Ext. 10
&gt;traight month of nationable.
wide job losses, according
Mall Subscription
to the Labor Department.
General Manager
lnolde Melgo County
The unemployment rate
Chartene Hoeflich, Ext 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
stay~d at 5.5 percent for the
26 Weeks
'64.20
second
straight month, the
52 Weeks
'127 .11
E-moll:
highest
level it has been in
news@mydailysentinel.com
Outside Molgo County
more than three years .
13 Weeks
'53.55
That followed Starbucks'
Web: • ·.
26 Weeks
'1 07.10
announcement
earlier in th
www.mydaHvsentlnetcom
52 \"eeks
'214.21
week that up to 12,000

The Daily Sentinel

·-

workers. or} percent of its barrel. more than double
global WOrkforce, COUld be ycar•ago levels. Everything
out of jobs as the coffee from milk to bread is costchain closes 600 of its stores. in g consumers lots more
Over the last month . at than it did months ago. ·
leasl half a dozen newspaThe Federal Reserve has·
pers have said they pran to homed in on inflation
slash payrolls. Airlines, as because its policy-makers
they decrease their flyin g know that surging prices
routes and contend with can become unstoppab le.
higher fuel costs. will lower eating into paychecks,
their staffi ng levels. too. knocking down corporate
Then there is the troubled profits and er.oding the
auto industry. which has value of investments .
seen sales of SUVs slump
With pricing pressures
as gas prices surge .to . over clearly rising. lh e central
.$4 a gallon. With factories bank decided at its mosl
being shut and production .recent meeting in late June
shifted. thousands of work- to leave its key interest rate
ers will lose their jobs.
. stew,ly -al 2 percent. That
Alllhose layoffs will take en'ded the central bank's
a considerable toll on the most aggressive rate-cutting
economy. The lost wages in two decades to shore up
from fired . workers wiH an economy battered by the
lil&lt;,ely mean a pullback in housing. credit and financonsumer spendmg once the cial crises.
government's rebate checks
"Upside risks. to inflation .
run out, which could then and inflation expectations
cause the economy to con- have increased," the Fed
tract in the second half of said in its statement after its
this year. The economy meeting on June 25.
llrew at a I percent annual: · One thing that Fed
1zed rate in the first quarter. Chairman Ben Bernanke and
"This is the death blow his colleagues at the central
for the economic ex pan - bank are closely watching is
sian," said Chris Ritpkey. whether wages start to accelchief financial economist at erate sharply as other inflaBank of Toyko-Mit&gt;ubishi tionary pressures build.
UFJ Ltd..''The economy has
That's what happened
never been able to recover during the oil crisis m the
from this amount of lost 1970s, when
workers
jobs since the 1970s and demanded higher wages to
sti li remain on its feet."
keep pace with their higher
·But as anyone who buys costs. As a result , compagas or food knows, another nies ·raised theil prices fur.big worry for the economy ther (o offset the hi gher
is inOation. Oil prices have wage expenses, settin~ off a
surged to more than $145 a . vicious cycle that cnppled

•

the economy for years.
.
Right now, just the oppo'
site is happening - wage
growth is decelerating . The
average weekly paycheck
for rank -ami- file workers
grew by 2.8 percent in June
compared with a year ago.
That's down from a rate of
3.2 percent seen in May,
according to the Labor
Department.
At the same time·,
employers ·are cutting down
on the number of hours that
employees work and aver:
age hourly earnin gs are also
sho wing slower growth than
'the y did a·year ago.
.
or course . workers won't
sec any of thi s as good
news. They are getting paid
the same even though things
.cost more.
Part of that is because
their bargaining power isn't
what it was three decades·
ago - labor unions· don't
have the intluence they had
in the 1970s and they are UI!
against more competitive
wages abroad.
·
At the same time,
employers know findi ng
other work isn't easy given
all the layoffs, so they may
not have to give salary
increases. And the prospect
of moving to another city
for a higher paying job
becomes . more difficult
jliven the state of the hous•
mg market.
.
·
In Ihis lopsy-tu~vy econo:
my, sometimes down looks
like up. Bad news on wages
can mean good news on
inflation .

•

&lt;

·Candidates rrom ,PageAt

member of the Meig s County Better Livestock 4-H Dairy
Club. She attends Eastern High School and runs eros,
country, p_lays varsity basketball. and also shows dairy caltie at the ta1r. Audnonna ts the pres ident of the Dairy Club
as well as the trea&gt;urcr of the Juni or Fair Board.
· K~rri is the daughter of Gloria Van Reeth of Pomeroy.
She 1s 17 years old and IS a three year member of the Meigs
Htgh School FCCLA. She attends Meigs High Schoo! and
enJoys sewmg. cho1r, and church evems .. KetTi is a committee .men)ber of the Meigs FCCLA. president of Studenl
Counctl, and fte id commander of the Marauder Marching
13and .
· Ashley is the daLtghter of Larry and Janet Life of ,Racine .
She tS 17 years old and an I i year member of th~ .Pioneers
4-H Club . She •mends Meigs High School and enjoy&gt;
being a pari of the Meigs Local FCCLA and being a camp
counselor ' every summer nr Canter's Cave 4-H C•\ mp in
Jackson. Ashley is the secretary of her 4-H Club . is a member of the Meigs Local FFA. a Teen Leader. and the secretary of the Junior Fa ir Board .
Kine candidate Daniel Buckley is ·the son of Bryce and
.Pam Buckley of Pomeroy. He is 18 years old and is a nine
.year member of the Whiz Kidz 4-H Club. He graduated
fro m Eastern High School and enjoys hunting. fishing. and
· ~port~ Danie! is the vice prc~i dcnt- ef hi s 4-!: CluU. u Tt:ciJ
l,.eader, Teen Ambassador. and an active member of the
Junior Fair Board.
Samuel Evans is the son of Marlin and Debbie Evans of
Racine. He is 16 iears old !ltld a three year member of the
P1oneers 4-H Club. He allends Eastern Hi gh School and
enjoys hunting, •ull ique tractor puils.'and restoring garden
Jractors. Sam uel is the sa fety otficer of hi s 4-H Club. helps
with community scrvit·c projects and is an active member
9f the Junior Fair Board.
·.
Prince and princess candidates
. Horse Princess: Kel sey Turner. She is the daughter of
Kelly Turner of Pomeroy. She is 15 years old and a th'ree
year member of the Wooly Bulli es and More 4-H Clu b. Sh e
attends Eastern High School and .enjoys horses and pho,!ography.
. Goat Princess: Cara Amos. She is the daughter of Jeffrey
and Lori Amos of Coolville . She is 10 years old and a 4
year member of the Barnyard .Gang 4-H Club. She attends
~astern Elementary and enjoys horseback riding. camp ing
:.tnd swimming.
.·
: Beef Princess: Mallory Nicodemus. She is the daughter
of Betsey Nicodemus of Reedsville. She is i 2 years old
and a five year mem ber of the Klassy Klovers 4-H Club.
~he attends Eastern Elementary and enjoys raising her
feeder calf.
~
· Priiiccss; Jtbtgait HuuseJ. Sheis Ute daU}ti'irer of
Teffle Hou ser of Rutland and Frank Houser of Middleport _
She is 12 years old and an eight year member of lhe Dream
Catchers 4-H Club. She attends Meigs Middle School and
· enjoys girl scouts. the s~hoo i archery team, and band.
·
. Dairy Princess: Laura Pullins. She is the daughter ofTom
and StaCie Pullins of Long Bottom. She is 9 years old and
a four year member of the Meigs County Better Livestock
4 -H Dairy Club. She attends Eastern Elementary and
enJoys basketball and racing her motorcycle.
· Swine Prince: Mark Gibbs. He is the son of Robert and
Doris Gibbs of Reedsvill e. He is · i 2 years old and a three
year member of the Lakeside Leaders 4-H Club . He
attends Eastern Eiemen1ary and enjoys raising his pigs. ·
gym, and football.
Swine Princess: Jackie Jordan and Rebecca Chadwell.
Jackie is the daughter of Jason and Jody Jordan of Shade.
She is i 0 years old and a two year member of the Backyard
Critters 4-H Club . She attends Meigs Middle School and
enjoys playing softball .
Rebecca is the daughter ol' Jim and Cindy Chadwell of
Long Bottom . She is i 2 years old and is an eight year
member of the Lakeside Leaders 4-H Club. She attends
Eastern Junior High School and enjoys volleyball, basketball , and concert band.
Rabbit Princess: Whitley Leach, Sabra Bailey, Kelsey
JohnSOI). and Brittney Leach.
.
.
. Whitley is the daughter of Roger and Mary Leach of
· Long Bottom. She is II years old and a three year member
of the Chester Fireflies 4-H Club. She attends Eastern
Elementary and enjoys volleyball, basketball. and walking
dogs at the animal shelter.
·
Sabra is the daughter of Roy and Crystal Bailey of Long
Bottom. She is 10 years old and a two year member of the
Bashan Bunch 4-H Club. She attends Eastern Elementary
and enjoys raising her rabbit projects.
Kelsey is the daughter of Buck and Krista Johiison of
Coolville. She is i0 years old and is a four year member of
the Barnyard Gang 4-H Club . She attends Eastern
j:lementary and enjoys cloverbud activities and raising her
rabbit projects.
Brittney is the daughter of Roger and Mary Leach of
Long Bottom. She is 9 years old and a three year member
of the Chester Fireflies 4-H Club. She attends Eastern
Elementary and enjoy s softball. fishing. and walking dogs
for the animal shelter.

'

Ordinance rrom Page AI

ious or offensive odors.or unsanitary -conditions which are
a menace to the health. comfort or safety of hte public.
Any animal which destroys or damages any lawn, tree.
shrub, plant . building or other property other than property
·of its owner or person in charge or control of such animal
by scratchinl$, digging. running. defecating or urinating, or
otherwise inJures property of others as described above is
hereby declared a nuisance.
.
, · Any person being the owner of or in charge or control of
· any ammal shall immediate ly remove all feces deposi led
by such animal from another person's propriety, including
public parks or other public property. The responsible per:
son in charge or control of such ammal shall immed iate ly
dispose of same in a sani1ary manner.
,
The nui sance ordinance, which was approved by the
¥illage solicitor. passed in a unanimous vote at the most
recent coun ci l meeting . Also discussed at the meeting
was the London Pool wit h Manager l{eather Sm ith
breaking the numbers down fo r council. Smith said si nce
the pool opened . it has co llec ted $ 13,446.69 in admissions.. concessions. swim lessons, etc .. As of July 2 there
have been 2,900 people attend'the .pool with 34 passes
sold .
Smith reported this yem there have only been four reported "smoking incidences" where underage swimmer's were
,:aught smoking, which she said had decreased significantly from last year. .Du.e to low a.ttendance, council also
decided to move the t1me from mgh t swtms to 7-9 p.m .,
Wednesdays and Thursdays. Smieth said the nex t group of
sw imming lessons begins today with several slots already
filled.
: Smith and Mayor Eric Cunningham also reported it was
important to pul a new fence in around the pool and/or
repair it because 'young people had been · breaking in at
night and making a general mess. causing the doors on the
bathrooms to now be padlocked. Large rocks have also
been tossed in the pool during off hours.
, Cunningham said his biggest concern is if a young person cl'imbs that fence during the night and ends up drowning in the pool.

· www.mydailyscntinel.com

.

Rutland lndependen~e Day Celebration
'.

I

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Accepting trophies lor
parade entry winners in an
awards ceremony were
these representatives of Winning groups, lett to right
front , Zachary Shiltz,
Hannah Crane, Piper .Kidd,
and Anthony Kasler: and
back . ll!ft, Carla Wyanl ,
along with the Rutla.nd Reds
Little League and PeeWee
teams .
Charlene Hoeflichlphoto s

'

,

. ~ ··

'

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, _ , .,

•

For many year' the
Meigs Marauder Band
has been a leading uni t
for the Rutland
independence Day celebration. Here they
march down Main
Street with the flag
corps tw illing red , white
and blue fla gs, and the
band playing patriotic
songs.

.

..

l

In the car and truck
category of the
Rutland parade
entries were fire
trucks lrom across
the area, along with
antique vehic\es.

!i' &lt;'~jjj;;~~~ This blue 1931 is
···
owned by Arnold
'f"fjddy.

Program rrom Page At
The program also provides
The next free program wi II
free T-sh irts to children who be at 2 p.m., July 9 at the
attend three of the education- Racine Library when Dee
ai presentations and have ·Kimes. naturalist with Forked
already given out 100 of the Run S1a1e park, presents an
200 avail~1bl c shirts . The afternoon of "buggy outdoor
Friends of the Li brary are · flm ." Sanders sairl Kimes will
also fun ding a pool 1xu1y for , provide various bu~s and
the end of the summer read- insects for children to mspect.
ing program which will be There will also be a bug scavfrom !'i:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m.. cnger hunt. a &lt;:raft table and
July 25 at the London Pool.
free meals for lhe kids .

Celebration rrom Page At
and Dyl an Davidson , and
Bradley McGrath: bicycles.
_All ie Edens and Amher
Pierce: horses. Paiee Dill
and Eag le Rid ge Riciers.
. There was plenty of
action in the park during the
afternoon . The bands. MIA
(Missing in Affec tion and
JFK (Just for Kicks) played
durin~ the afternoon wilh
lhe Riverhound s performing
at in lhe eveni ng. Bal listic
Champ ions hip Wrestling
look place as did demonstrations of martial arts by
the Don Bitanga Martial
Arts Center. ·
Vendors. both food and

E-911
from PageAl
ational no Iuter lh.an the end
of this year - two years
after voters approved the
te lephone
.
fee.
Commissioners and the E911 committee expecl thai
to happen. Local townships
and fire departments are
now in the process of
approving amendmems to
tht: county's 91 1 plan to
allow the coumy to offer E- ·
911 service rigill away. Thm
service uses sate llite technology to help dispatchers
locate ca llers on cdlular
telephones.

cal l 992 -58 i 3 or vis it
WW\\!. meigs .Iib .oh.us.

Th en, Jim Kl eefe ld .
magician, will brin g hi s
ow n spec ial brand . of
magic to ch ildren at 2 p.m ..
Jul y 16 at lhe Pomcrov
Library .
·•
It 's no I too late to sign up
or parlicipale in til e summer
readi ng program. For more

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.__ ........ .. -.... - ·····-·-··--·-··-··-·-···-·merchandise , were on site. ·-·---··
1:Ill, 200, 4:115, 5:!11,
Bingo went on ali afternoon.
. 6:11, 7:35 5:tll, ID:fll.
as did games for the kids.And, · -;:;-;
~ITKlTJRFIJ\:F'
•
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of course there were plenty of
WUJ.·E'
.
,
,,
125,
4:!11,7:11,9:15.
&gt;&lt;mdwi.:hes prepared from the

ox roast meat which the firemen served along with a vatiely of other foods.
The temperature was just
right for a July celebratio n,
and while the park grounds
were a little soggy in places
due to the rece nt ru ins. no
one seemed to mind .

OLD

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�•

Monday~ July 7, .2008

PageA4

OPINION

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Monday, July 7,

&lt; .

200"8

Geert Wilders: Prisoner cifJslam

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court S1ree1 • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

· Congress shall make no law respecting an
establisllment of re~igion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
. of speech,' or of the press; or the rigllt of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
'Today is Monday. Jul y 7. the 189th day of 2008. There
are 177 days left in the year.
Today's Highli ght in Hi story: On July 7. 1865, four peopie were hanged in Washington, D.C.. for conspiring with
John Wilkes Booth 10 assassinate President Lincoln .
On thi s date: In 1807, Napoleon 1 of France and Czar
Alexander I of Russia signed a treaty at Tilsil ending war
between their emp ires ,
In 1896. the Democ ratic national convention opened in
Chicago.
·
In 1898. the United States annexed Hawaii.
In 1908. the Democratic National Convention opened in
Denver.
In 1930 . construction began on Boulder Dam (later
Hoover Dam).
. In 1948 , six female reservists became the first women to
. . be sworn into the regular U.S. Nav x.,_
~Pres id e nt Eisenhower signed the Alaska
· Statehood Act, whkh we nt into effect in January 1959 .
In 1981 , P,resident Reagan an nounced he was nominating
Arizona Judge Sandra Day O'Connor to become the first
female justice on the U.S. Supreme Court .
In 1983, 1! ~ y ear-old Samantha Smith of Manchester,
Maine ; left for a visit to the Soviet Union at the personal
invitation of Soviet leader Yuri YAndropov.
In 2005. su.icide terrorist bombings in three Underground
stations and a double-decker bus killed 52 victims and four
bombers in the worst attack on London since World War 11.
Five years ago : A chunk of foam insulation fired at shuttie wing parts blew open a gaping 16-inch hole , yielding
what one member of the Columbia investigation team said
was the "smoking guri" proving what brought down the
spaceship. NASA lalincl\ed its second Mars rover. A federal judge approved a settlement fining WorldCom $750 million for its $.11 billion acGounting scandal. Golfer Hilary
Lunke won the U.S. Women's Open.
One year ago: A Iruck bomb devastated the public market
in Armiii . lraq. killing at least 115 people . A 24-hour music
maralhon spanning seven continents reached the Western
Hem isphere with rappers, rockers and country stars taking
the s1age at Live Earth concens to fight climate change.
Venus Williams claimed her fot1rth Wimbledon title with:a
6-4. 6-1 victory over Marion Bartoli.
Today's Birthdays: Blues musician Pinetop Perkins is 95.
· Musician-conductor Doc Severinsen is 81. Historian. author David McCullough is 75. Rock star Ringo Starr is
68. Singer~musician Warren Entner (The Grass Roots) is
64. Actor Joe Spano is 62. Pop singer Dayid Hodo (The
Village People) is 61 . Country singer Linda Williams is 61.
Adress Shelley Duvall is 59. RSinger-songwriter Yanda
Shepard is 45. Actor'comedian Jim Gaffiga n is 42. Actress.
Jorja Fox is 40 . Actress Cree Summer is 39. Actress Kirsten
Vangsness is 36. Actor Hamish Linklater is 32. Olympic
silver and bronze medal figure skater Michelle Kwan is 28.
Rapper Cassidy is 26. Country singer Gabbie Nolen is 26.
Thought for Today: "There is no escape - man drags
man down , or man lifts man up." - Attributed to Booker
T. Washington. American educator and author ( 1856-1915).

THE
HAGUE'. The
signal 10 lhe Netherlands." reason to stop the immigraNelherlands - Having run
A "signal "? How about a tion. because the more we
the polite-but-grim gauntlet
gag'? Of course. like olher have an influx of Muslims
of Dutch government secuWestern peoples. the Dutch in the Netherla·nds. th e
rity to gai n access to Geert
seem content to censor strength of the (Islamic)
themse lves, .
happily culture will grow. and the
Wilders , I finally understood what lh e 24-hou r
Diana
mouthing
multicultural ch ~nge of our societies will
security requirements of the
West
platitudes thac effectively incre:1se ." He sees hi s
.man's continued existence
rationalize their · own cui- efforts as "a fight against an
reall y mean : To ,make the
ture's Islamization. Not ideology that i believe al the
survival of Western-style
Wilders.
,
end of the dav will kill our
liberty in the Netherlands Islam -inspired
I
recently
asked
the
44freedom. kill. our societies
polilkal
·
his political cause. this
year-old Dutchman what and change everything we
.
.
h
a"assination.At least il has.
, h.
d f ..
·
Dutc h par Immcntanan
as tracimatically, twice in w.as stronger tn ts cou nlry: stan · or.
to live under high-tech lock recent years: once, with the Islam or multiculturalism.
He\ ri ght - and. yes. it 's
and key.
"Unfortunately, they are politically incorrect to say
2002 murder of the anti This stunning paradox. Islamic-immigration politi- ~oth strong." he replied : that, too. Everyt hing lhe
with no end In sight , illus- cian Pim Fortuy n by an ani- sealed in his ligh tly fur- West sta nds for, starting
trates how far p.oiitical free- mal ri ghts activ ist who nished but iieavily gu.arded with freedom of speech, is
dom in the W!}sl has already claimed Fortuyn was scape- office . " But cu ltural rela- already changin g as our
erod ed . Think of it : For eoating Muslims; and . the tivism is tiie biggest proh~ inqitution-~ . up to and
wriling abouf'the repressive following year with the ritu- lem." He went on to including, for example, the
ideology of islam, for argu- alistic Islamic murder of exPJain:
"Multicultural U.S.
Department
of
ing agai nst the inequities of Van Gogh. director of soc iety would not be that Homeland
Security.
Shari a (Islamic law). for "Submission.'' a short video 'bad - I don't really believe · increasingly proscribe ~riti~
making a video ("Fitna") to niade with Hirsi Ali aboul in it - bu.t il would not be cal rl!fcrences. or indeed .
warn about Islamic jihad. Islamic ·mistreatment of that bad if. at least, we any refere nces to Islam . . · ·
Wilders li ves in his own women. In all. such Islam- would be strong enough to While it 's clear that the
non-Islamic country under a inspired violence has been say that our cu lture is better European manifestation of
specifically Islamic death enough to chill Islam - and dominant. But when Islam ic
ideo logy
has
threat.
inspired debate.
you combine multicultural already killed Wifders' per~
If it is politically incorrect
And that 's just the situa- society with a dominant sona! freedom in the
to notice this, it is also lion at home. Thi~ week, sense of cultural relativistil. Netl1erlands. the general
indispulably true. True , loa. even as Amsterdam's chief y.o u are headi ng · in I he ihlpact on freedom throughis that, sans state sec urity, public prosec utor. Leo de wrong direction . You are out the West has yet to be
this death threat could con- Wil , announced that no commilting suicide when it fully appreciated.
ceivably be carried out any- charges would be brought comes to your own culture.'' . " I have a mission.:•
time. anywhere - from the against Wilders for ''disHe continued: "I am not Wilders said. " ! believe
picluresque streets outside crimination" or "incitement advocating a monocultural very stron gly in what I say,
the Dutch pariiamenl. to the to hatred" · related to soc iety. I just wan1 what the . and my party fortunately
house Wiiders hasn' l slept Wiiders' writings or video Germans call leitkultur shares thi s view. An&lt;;l
in since 2004. That , of (" We find Mr. Wilders' (leading cultu re). ! want our nobqdy in the Netherlands
course, was when. on an remarks were limited to own culture to be dominant is doing (what I do). And
Amsterdam streeca Mu slim Islam as a religious move- - not the only one. but to so mebody snould. And I
assassin plunged a knife ment," De Wit said), Jordan be dominant. I have a big pay a high price for it."
into Th ea van Gogh'S announced 1t 1s bringing a probl em wtth the cultural
What is lhe expressionf.-¥c~m!.l·~s~
e . .· ~lhi.!Ju!!.'s"ta~tt:t~!¢&gt;.~h:~;~iJ,l11!&gt;g:':'b&gt;
th~~'---"
''Ei~r~kJ.ted- cnm'mll--~ati·:i~:s who say-every--i'otcdun i mr'r"ffe~·;
Islamic manifesto. threaten- case against the Dutch par- culture is equal. I don't literally and acute'ly the case
ing both Wilders and his liamentarian.
believe every c!t lture is when it comes to this heroic
then-parliamentary
col_. . In other words, Jordan equa l.''
and dedicated Dutchman .
league, Ayaan Hirsi Ali , will indict a Dutch poiiti- · Hoping to preserve the
(Diana West is a cohun,
with death.
c iim
according
lo primacy of Western culture nist for The Washingtoil
Nol long ago, politi ca l .Jordanian (read: Islam -. in thi s Dutch corner of the Times. Sire is tire author dj
debate in the Netherlands in spired ) law: "Jordanian West. Wilders ad.Qoeates a "The Dearlr of the Grown,
met with, well, more polili- authorities are not aiming halt to Islamic immigration. up : How America:1· Arrested
cal debate. Now, however. to arres t" the Dutch leader "I'm not saying that every DCI'e!opmem Is Bringing
with a. growing Muslim of the Freedom Party , Muslim in I he Netherlands Down
Western
minority - and it's politi- Radio Netherlands Online is a ·criminal or a terrorist," Civili:arion," and ha s a
· cally incorrect to notice this , reports. "They say the he explains. " We know the blog at dianawesr.ner. Shf
too - political debate decision to prosecute was majority is not. Still," he con be contacted · via
sometimes meets with taken in order to send a continues. ''there is good dianall'est@veriwn.net.)

AND I'M t;nu..
GOlNG UP

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ALL BUSINESS:]ob ·cut surge keeps wage growth low
Bv RACHEL BECK
AP BUSINESS WRITER

LETTERS TO THE
•
EDITOR

NEW YORK - Ail those
job
cuts at automakers..
· Letters to the editor are welcome; They should be less
newspapers
and
even
than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing , must be
Starbucks
are
hard
te
stemj·igned, and inc/ude-uddre;~- and telephone num/5er. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in ach. But m a . roundabou.t
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of way, they may actually help
thanks to otganizatimis am/ individuals will lwr be accepi- the economy a btl.
No, that isn'l a mi sprint .
ed for publication.
.
The story here so lely has
to do wllh how soarmg layoffs impac.t wage growth
- a scary tnflat_1onary factor that econotmsts hate to
(USPS 213-960)
see , espectally tn a fmanReader Services
Ohio Valley publishing
ctal
cltmate . already
Co.
Correction Polley
plagued by surgtng pnces
Published every afternoon, Monday
Our main col")cern in aU stor.ies ls to
for food and fuel. .
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
be accurate . If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
When the public perSecond-class
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
cetves JObs ·as bemg scarce,
992·2156.
Member: The AssoCiated PI'Oss and
workers may be less
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
mciilred t\) demand higher
Poatml1ter: Send address .correcwages. And since labor is
Our main number Is
tions to The Daily Senllnel. 11t Court
the top cost for many bus1(~40~ 992·2156.
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
nesses, . holding salaries
Department extensions are:
down
mtght mean that cost
Subscrlptlon.Rates
By carrier or motor route
won't be passed on to conNews
One month
'10.27
sumers. ·
Edttor: Char1ene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
One year
'115.84
· That may be hard to grasp
Dally
50'
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
am1d.
the sea of headlines
Senior Citizen rates
Reporter: Beth Sergent. E&lt;t. 13
show.mg more bad news on
One month
'10.27
the JOb front. The latest
c;&gt;ne Y"l'
'103.90
Sutiocmeos shouid ...mit ~ advance
blow ' came Thursday:
Advertising
Outalde Sale1: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 &lt;lOud 10 the Doily SentineL No sub·
Empioyers
cut payrolls by
scription by mall permitted in areas
Ouialde Salee: Brenda Davis, Ext IS where home carrier servict is avail62,000 in June, the sixtlr
Cla..JCirc.: Judy Clar1&lt;. Ext. 10
&gt;traight month of nationable.
wide job losses, according
Mall Subscription
to the Labor Department.
General Manager
lnolde Melgo County
The unemployment rate
Chartene Hoeflich, Ext 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
stay~d at 5.5 percent for the
26 Weeks
'64.20
second
straight month, the
52 Weeks
'127 .11
E-moll:
highest
level it has been in
news@mydailysentinel.com
Outside Molgo County
more than three years .
13 Weeks
'53.55
That followed Starbucks'
Web: • ·.
26 Weeks
'1 07.10
announcement
earlier in th
www.mydaHvsentlnetcom
52 \"eeks
'214.21
week that up to 12,000

The Daily Sentinel

·-

workers. or} percent of its barrel. more than double
global WOrkforce, COUld be ycar•ago levels. Everything
out of jobs as the coffee from milk to bread is costchain closes 600 of its stores. in g consumers lots more
Over the last month . at than it did months ago. ·
leasl half a dozen newspaThe Federal Reserve has·
pers have said they pran to homed in on inflation
slash payrolls. Airlines, as because its policy-makers
they decrease their flyin g know that surging prices
routes and contend with can become unstoppab le.
higher fuel costs. will lower eating into paychecks,
their staffi ng levels. too. knocking down corporate
Then there is the troubled profits and er.oding the
auto industry. which has value of investments .
seen sales of SUVs slump
With pricing pressures
as gas prices surge .to . over clearly rising. lh e central
.$4 a gallon. With factories bank decided at its mosl
being shut and production .recent meeting in late June
shifted. thousands of work- to leave its key interest rate
ers will lose their jobs.
. stew,ly -al 2 percent. That
Alllhose layoffs will take en'ded the central bank's
a considerable toll on the most aggressive rate-cutting
economy. The lost wages in two decades to shore up
from fired . workers wiH an economy battered by the
lil&lt;,ely mean a pullback in housing. credit and financonsumer spendmg once the cial crises.
government's rebate checks
"Upside risks. to inflation .
run out, which could then and inflation expectations
cause the economy to con- have increased," the Fed
tract in the second half of said in its statement after its
this year. The economy meeting on June 25.
llrew at a I percent annual: · One thing that Fed
1zed rate in the first quarter. Chairman Ben Bernanke and
"This is the death blow his colleagues at the central
for the economic ex pan - bank are closely watching is
sian," said Chris Ritpkey. whether wages start to accelchief financial economist at erate sharply as other inflaBank of Toyko-Mit&gt;ubishi tionary pressures build.
UFJ Ltd..''The economy has
That's what happened
never been able to recover during the oil crisis m the
from this amount of lost 1970s, when
workers
jobs since the 1970s and demanded higher wages to
sti li remain on its feet."
keep pace with their higher
·But as anyone who buys costs. As a result , compagas or food knows, another nies ·raised theil prices fur.big worry for the economy ther (o offset the hi gher
is inOation. Oil prices have wage expenses, settin~ off a
surged to more than $145 a . vicious cycle that cnppled

•

the economy for years.
.
Right now, just the oppo'
site is happening - wage
growth is decelerating . The
average weekly paycheck
for rank -ami- file workers
grew by 2.8 percent in June
compared with a year ago.
That's down from a rate of
3.2 percent seen in May,
according to the Labor
Department.
At the same time·,
employers ·are cutting down
on the number of hours that
employees work and aver:
age hourly earnin gs are also
sho wing slower growth than
'the y did a·year ago.
.
or course . workers won't
sec any of thi s as good
news. They are getting paid
the same even though things
.cost more.
Part of that is because
their bargaining power isn't
what it was three decades·
ago - labor unions· don't
have the intluence they had
in the 1970s and they are UI!
against more competitive
wages abroad.
·
At the same time,
employers know findi ng
other work isn't easy given
all the layoffs, so they may
not have to give salary
increases. And the prospect
of moving to another city
for a higher paying job
becomes . more difficult
jliven the state of the hous•
mg market.
.
·
In Ihis lopsy-tu~vy econo:
my, sometimes down looks
like up. Bad news on wages
can mean good news on
inflation .

•

&lt;

·Candidates rrom ,PageAt

member of the Meig s County Better Livestock 4-H Dairy
Club. She attends Eastern High School and runs eros,
country, p_lays varsity basketball. and also shows dairy caltie at the ta1r. Audnonna ts the pres ident of the Dairy Club
as well as the trea&gt;urcr of the Juni or Fair Board.
· K~rri is the daughter of Gloria Van Reeth of Pomeroy.
She 1s 17 years old and IS a three year member of the Meigs
Htgh School FCCLA. She attends Meigs High Schoo! and
enJoys sewmg. cho1r, and church evems .. KetTi is a committee .men)ber of the Meigs FCCLA. president of Studenl
Counctl, and fte id commander of the Marauder Marching
13and .
· Ashley is the daLtghter of Larry and Janet Life of ,Racine .
She tS 17 years old and an I i year member of th~ .Pioneers
4-H Club . She •mends Meigs High School and enjoy&gt;
being a pari of the Meigs Local FCCLA and being a camp
counselor ' every summer nr Canter's Cave 4-H C•\ mp in
Jackson. Ashley is the secretary of her 4-H Club . is a member of the Meigs Local FFA. a Teen Leader. and the secretary of the Junior Fa ir Board .
Kine candidate Daniel Buckley is ·the son of Bryce and
.Pam Buckley of Pomeroy. He is 18 years old and is a nine
.year member of the Whiz Kidz 4-H Club. He graduated
fro m Eastern High School and enjoys hunting. fishing. and
· ~port~ Danie! is the vice prc~i dcnt- ef hi s 4-!: CluU. u Tt:ciJ
l,.eader, Teen Ambassador. and an active member of the
Junior Fair Board.
Samuel Evans is the son of Marlin and Debbie Evans of
Racine. He is 16 iears old !ltld a three year member of the
P1oneers 4-H Club. He allends Eastern Hi gh School and
enjoys hunting, •ull ique tractor puils.'and restoring garden
Jractors. Sam uel is the sa fety otficer of hi s 4-H Club. helps
with community scrvit·c projects and is an active member
9f the Junior Fair Board.
·.
Prince and princess candidates
. Horse Princess: Kel sey Turner. She is the daughter of
Kelly Turner of Pomeroy. She is 15 years old and a th'ree
year member of the Wooly Bulli es and More 4-H Clu b. Sh e
attends Eastern High School and .enjoys horses and pho,!ography.
. Goat Princess: Cara Amos. She is the daughter of Jeffrey
and Lori Amos of Coolville . She is 10 years old and a 4
year member of the Barnyard .Gang 4-H Club. She attends
~astern Elementary and enjoys horseback riding. camp ing
:.tnd swimming.
.·
: Beef Princess: Mallory Nicodemus. She is the daughter
of Betsey Nicodemus of Reedsville. She is i 2 years old
and a five year mem ber of the Klassy Klovers 4-H Club.
~he attends Eastern Elementary and enjoys raising her
feeder calf.
~
· Priiiccss; Jtbtgait HuuseJ. Sheis Ute daU}ti'irer of
Teffle Hou ser of Rutland and Frank Houser of Middleport _
She is 12 years old and an eight year member of lhe Dream
Catchers 4-H Club. She attends Meigs Middle School and
· enjoys girl scouts. the s~hoo i archery team, and band.
·
. Dairy Princess: Laura Pullins. She is the daughter ofTom
and StaCie Pullins of Long Bottom. She is 9 years old and
a four year member of the Meigs County Better Livestock
4 -H Dairy Club. She attends Eastern Elementary and
enJoys basketball and racing her motorcycle.
· Swine Prince: Mark Gibbs. He is the son of Robert and
Doris Gibbs of Reedsvill e. He is · i 2 years old and a three
year member of the Lakeside Leaders 4-H Club . He
attends Eastern Eiemen1ary and enjoys raising his pigs. ·
gym, and football.
Swine Princess: Jackie Jordan and Rebecca Chadwell.
Jackie is the daughter of Jason and Jody Jordan of Shade.
She is i 0 years old and a two year member of the Backyard
Critters 4-H Club . She attends Meigs Middle School and
enjoys playing softball .
Rebecca is the daughter ol' Jim and Cindy Chadwell of
Long Bottom . She is i 2 years old and is an eight year
member of the Lakeside Leaders 4-H Club. She attends
Eastern Junior High School and enjoys volleyball, basketball , and concert band.
Rabbit Princess: Whitley Leach, Sabra Bailey, Kelsey
JohnSOI). and Brittney Leach.
.
.
. Whitley is the daughter of Roger and Mary Leach of
· Long Bottom. She is II years old and a three year member
of the Chester Fireflies 4-H Club. She attends Eastern
Elementary and enjoys volleyball, basketball. and walking
dogs at the animal shelter.
·
Sabra is the daughter of Roy and Crystal Bailey of Long
Bottom. She is 10 years old and a two year member of the
Bashan Bunch 4-H Club. She attends Eastern Elementary
and enjoys raising her rabbit projects.
Kelsey is the daughter of Buck and Krista Johiison of
Coolville. She is i0 years old and is a four year member of
the Barnyard Gang 4-H Club . She attends Eastern
j:lementary and enjoys cloverbud activities and raising her
rabbit projects.
Brittney is the daughter of Roger and Mary Leach of
Long Bottom. She is 9 years old and a three year member
of the Chester Fireflies 4-H Club. She attends Eastern
Elementary and enjoy s softball. fishing. and walking dogs
for the animal shelter.

'

Ordinance rrom Page AI

ious or offensive odors.or unsanitary -conditions which are
a menace to the health. comfort or safety of hte public.
Any animal which destroys or damages any lawn, tree.
shrub, plant . building or other property other than property
·of its owner or person in charge or control of such animal
by scratchinl$, digging. running. defecating or urinating, or
otherwise inJures property of others as described above is
hereby declared a nuisance.
.
, · Any person being the owner of or in charge or control of
· any ammal shall immediate ly remove all feces deposi led
by such animal from another person's propriety, including
public parks or other public property. The responsible per:
son in charge or control of such ammal shall immed iate ly
dispose of same in a sani1ary manner.
,
The nui sance ordinance, which was approved by the
¥illage solicitor. passed in a unanimous vote at the most
recent coun ci l meeting . Also discussed at the meeting
was the London Pool wit h Manager l{eather Sm ith
breaking the numbers down fo r council. Smith said si nce
the pool opened . it has co llec ted $ 13,446.69 in admissions.. concessions. swim lessons, etc .. As of July 2 there
have been 2,900 people attend'the .pool with 34 passes
sold .
Smith reported this yem there have only been four reported "smoking incidences" where underage swimmer's were
,:aught smoking, which she said had decreased significantly from last year. .Du.e to low a.ttendance, council also
decided to move the t1me from mgh t swtms to 7-9 p.m .,
Wednesdays and Thursdays. Smieth said the nex t group of
sw imming lessons begins today with several slots already
filled.
: Smith and Mayor Eric Cunningham also reported it was
important to pul a new fence in around the pool and/or
repair it because 'young people had been · breaking in at
night and making a general mess. causing the doors on the
bathrooms to now be padlocked. Large rocks have also
been tossed in the pool during off hours.
, Cunningham said his biggest concern is if a young person cl'imbs that fence during the night and ends up drowning in the pool.

· www.mydailyscntinel.com

.

Rutland lndependen~e Day Celebration
'.

I

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Accepting trophies lor
parade entry winners in an
awards ceremony were
these representatives of Winning groups, lett to right
front , Zachary Shiltz,
Hannah Crane, Piper .Kidd,
and Anthony Kasler: and
back . ll!ft, Carla Wyanl ,
along with the Rutla.nd Reds
Little League and PeeWee
teams .
Charlene Hoeflichlphoto s

'

,

. ~ ··

'

'

, _ , .,

•

For many year' the
Meigs Marauder Band
has been a leading uni t
for the Rutland
independence Day celebration. Here they
march down Main
Street with the flag
corps tw illing red , white
and blue fla gs, and the
band playing patriotic
songs.

.

..

l

In the car and truck
category of the
Rutland parade
entries were fire
trucks lrom across
the area, along with
antique vehic\es.

!i' &lt;'~jjj;;~~~ This blue 1931 is
···
owned by Arnold
'f"fjddy.

Program rrom Page At
The program also provides
The next free program wi II
free T-sh irts to children who be at 2 p.m., July 9 at the
attend three of the education- Racine Library when Dee
ai presentations and have ·Kimes. naturalist with Forked
already given out 100 of the Run S1a1e park, presents an
200 avail~1bl c shirts . The afternoon of "buggy outdoor
Friends of the Li brary are · flm ." Sanders sairl Kimes will
also fun ding a pool 1xu1y for , provide various bu~s and
the end of the summer read- insects for children to mspect.
ing program which will be There will also be a bug scavfrom !'i:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m.. cnger hunt. a &lt;:raft table and
July 25 at the London Pool.
free meals for lhe kids .

Celebration rrom Page At
and Dyl an Davidson , and
Bradley McGrath: bicycles.
_All ie Edens and Amher
Pierce: horses. Paiee Dill
and Eag le Rid ge Riciers.
. There was plenty of
action in the park during the
afternoon . The bands. MIA
(Missing in Affec tion and
JFK (Just for Kicks) played
durin~ the afternoon wilh
lhe Riverhound s performing
at in lhe eveni ng. Bal listic
Champ ions hip Wrestling
look place as did demonstrations of martial arts by
the Don Bitanga Martial
Arts Center. ·
Vendors. both food and

E-911
from PageAl
ational no Iuter lh.an the end
of this year - two years
after voters approved the
te lephone
.
fee.
Commissioners and the E911 committee expecl thai
to happen. Local townships
and fire departments are
now in the process of
approving amendmems to
tht: county's 91 1 plan to
allow the coumy to offer E- ·
911 service rigill away. Thm
service uses sate llite technology to help dispatchers
locate ca llers on cdlular
telephones.

cal l 992 -58 i 3 or vis it
WW\\!. meigs .Iib .oh.us.

Th en, Jim Kl eefe ld .
magician, will brin g hi s
ow n spec ial brand . of
magic to ch ildren at 2 p.m ..
Jul y 16 at lhe Pomcrov
Library .
·•
It 's no I too late to sign up
or parlicipale in til e summer
readi ng program. For more

SPR ING VALLEY
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FOR MON. 7/07/06

1 ~0~~_3:0~, 7~00 &amp; ~ : 0~ _·_

KIT KITIREDGE: AN AMERICAN

\til lllll 'l \I£&gt;S

GIRLlm_!jO, 3:30,7:30 &amp;9:30
WALLE (G)

II Inl 1····llt:ZIIH
ll ·"'·'·''
Ull, t35, 7111.
.__ ........ .. -.... - ·····-·-··--·-··-··-·-···-·merchandise , were on site. ·-·---··
1:Ill, 200, 4:115, 5:!11,
Bingo went on ali afternoon.
. 6:11, 7:35 5:tll, ID:fll.
as did games for the kids.And, · -;:;-;
~ITKlTJRFIJ\:F'
•
I·•
UJ,4:17:21! t40.
of course there were plenty of
WUJ.·E'
.
,
,,
125,
4:!11,7:11,9:15.
&gt;&lt;mdwi.:hes prepared from the

ox roast meat which the firemen served along with a vatiely of other foods.
The temperature was just
right for a July celebratio n,
and while the park grounds
were a little soggy in places
due to the rece nt ru ins. no
one seemed to mind .

OLD

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WED 7/2108 • THURS 7110/08

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�-

AcRoss THE NATioN

The Daily Sentin-el

PageA6
Monday, July 7, :!008

Inside
Olympics almost here, Page B2 ·
Brewers close to deal for Sabathia, Page B6
Twins rally past Indians, Page B6

Bl ~:

.The Daily-Sentinel

Monday, July 7, 2008

I ,400 others were warned to be ready to

BY CHRISTINA HOAG

flee .
- ·
The fire. fueled by 15-foot-high , halfLOS ANGELES - Cooler weather on century-old chaparral. still had the
Sunday gave a boo;t to crews battling potential to roll through a hilly area of
the en·o rmous wildfire th at was threaten- ranches, housing tracts and orc hards
ing nearl y 2.700 homes in Santa Barbara between the town of Goleta and Santa
Countv.
Barbara, keeping firefighters on the ir
The- four -day -old fire in the Los toes .
·
Padres National Forest , which had
Temperatures dipfled to around 60
blackened about 13 s4uare miles. spread degrees during the mght. but were foreslightly during the night but firefight ing cast to reach the high 70s later Sunday.
c rews we re able to keep u wit h it , counNearly I ,200 firefighters were assisted
ty spokeswoman Vickie Guthrie said.
by a DC- 10 ai r tanker. and other aircraft
A' of Sunday morni ng. the fire in the dumping water and fire retardant along
area of the town of Goleta was 28 per- ridges and in steep canyons.
In vestigators think the fire . which
cent contained . she sard.
And with lo we r wind Md higher began Tuesday, was human-caused . The
humidity foreca ' t for · Sunday. crews U.S. Forest Service on Saturday asked
were optimistic th'ey could ge t more for public help in determining hot it was
acreage under contrcll . Tempe ratures started .
were forecast to reach the upper 70s later
Meanwhil e, cooler weather he lped
crews attacking the two-week-old blaze
Sunday.
"They expect to make progress today," that has destroyed 22 homes in Big Sur.
at the nmthern end of the· Los Padres forGuthrie said.
Wildfirco have churrcd more than 800 est, but the fire continued to grow slows4uare miles of forest. brush and grass ly on all flanks Saturday night.
The fire, which had blackened Ill
and have destroyed at least 69 homes
. throughout Californ ia. mainly in the square miles. was only 5 percent connorthern part of t he~ stale, in the past two tained with full containment not expect- ·
weeks . One firefi ghter died of a heart ed until July 30, but morning fog that
moved in from the sea helped prevent it
attack.
Accordi ng to state forestry officials, at from advancing on Big Sur's famed
.
nne ·time there we re more than I ,700 restaurants and hotels.
"We 're gaining ground, but we're
active fires, but about I ,400 had been
contained , leaving more than 330 still nowhere near being done ," said Gregg
DeNitto, a spokesman for the U.S.
out of control Sunday morning.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who on Forest Service . "There's still a Jot of
Saturday visited a command post in the potential out there. The fire has been
coastal region 'of Santa Barbara County, less active the last couple ·of days .
has orde r~d 400 National Guard troops We've had favorable weather; they are
trained to hel p fi ght .the blazes. He also taking every opportunity to get some
urg'ed lawmakers to adopt his .budget line on it."
The weather was expected to become
pian fo r a $70 million emergency surAP photo
charge on home and business insurance hotter and drier over the next couple of.
A
firefighter
walks
out
of
a
brush
fire
burning
out
of
control
1n
the
Santa
Ynez
Mou
ntai
ns near
policies to buy more fi refigh ting equip- days , he said, with wind and temperaGoletC), Calif.. on Saturday July 5. A slew of wildfires. most ignited by lightning two weeks ago,
..
ment.
tures rising attd humidity droppin~.
Nearly 2,700 homes in S~nta Barbara
"The fire still has the potential for . have burned more than BOO square miles of land throughout California. The blazes have
Co unty remain.ed under mandatory evac- movement and the potential to get out of destroyed at le ast 67 homes and other buildings and contributed to the death of a firefighter who
suffered heart' attack while digging fire lines .
uation Qrders Sunday and residents of our containment lines," he said.
ASSOCIAT ED PRESS WAITER

a

The buck doesn't stop here; it just keeps falling
BY TOM AAUM
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

WASHINGTON
Things in the U.S. sure are
tough. Brother, can you
spare a euro?
Signs say ing "We accept
curos" are cropping up in the
wi ndows of some Manhattan
retailers. A Belgium company is trying to gobble up St.
Louis- based
Anheuser·Busch. the nation 's largest
brewer and iconic Super
Bowl advertiser.
·
The almighty do llar is
mighty no more. It has been
decl in ing steadily for six
years against other . major
currencies, undercutting its

role as the leading international banking currency.
The long slide is fanning
inflation at home and playing a major ,role in the runup of oil and gasoline prices
everywhere.
.
'
Vacationitfg Europeans
are findmg bargain s in the ·
U.S., while Americans in
Pari s and other world capitals are being clobbered by
sky -hi gh tabs for ho te ls,
travel and even sidewal k
cafes. Northern border-city
Americans
who
once
flocked into Canada for
shopping deals are· staying
home; it's the Canadians
flock ing here now.
Everything
made in
America - from .goods to
entire companies - is near
dirt .c heap to many foreigners. Meanwhile, American
consumers, both those who
travel and those who stay at
hom!!. are seeing big price
increases in energy. food and
imported goods. The dollar
has lost roughly a quarter of
its purchasing power agai nst
the currencies of major U.S.
trading partners from its
peak in 2002 .
Since oil is bought and
sold in dollars worldwide,
the devalued dollar has made
the recent surge in energy
prices even worse for
Americans , leading to $4
gasoline in the United States.
Analysts suggest that of the
$140 a barrel that oil fetches
globally, some $25 may be,
due to the devalued dollar.
Further declines in the
do llar wi ll add to oil 's
appeal as a commodi ty to be
traded .
Oil. suggests influential
energy consultant Daniel
Yergin, is "the new gold ."
The limp greenback has
had one big benefit to the
U.S. economy : Since it
makes American goods

L •

- -

experts worrying that the reading of consumer contieuro
might one day replace dencc in 16 years.
Weak dollar
The Fed must do a balancthe
dollar
as the so-called pri The dollar has been declining
steadily for six years against
mary reserve currency. And ing act between keeping the
other major curr8ncles .
that could trigger a dollar domesti c economy from
Dollar v11ue of one euro, monthly·
rout as foreign governments .goin!' into recession and
DOlLAR
and international investors keepmg inflation at bay.
W!AK~ A
flee from U.S . Treasury
Furthermore , no Fed likes
TljAN EUAO
1.5 ..
.......
bonds
and
other
'
dollart
o
raise rates aggressively in
Jut)' ·ge
11.10
denominated investments.
Making matters worse:
1.0
July '4, 20011
The
gaping U.S. current. 11 .11'
the
account deficit o.s ·~·--···--··· - -· DOli.Ait···- - -----· -- ·;:
amount by which the value
STFlOf'iilEA
of
goods, services and
THANEURO
0 ---...
bought in the
investments
•ge '00
·04
·oo ·os
U.S. from overseas exceeds
SOURCE Thomson F1rnmcial
AP
the amount the U.S. sells
cheaper overseas, it has · abroad -.: and the low levhelped manufacturers who els of domestic savings
export and other U.S. based means that fQreigners must
companies with internation- purchase more than $3 bilal reach . Exports have been lion every business day to
one of the few bright spots fund the imbalance.
in an otherwise darkening
Since roughly half of the
U.S. economy.
nation 's nearly $!0 trillion
Franklin Vargo, vice pres- national debt is held by forident of international eco- eigners, mostly in Treasury
nomic affairs at the National bills.and bonds , such a withAssociation
of d(aWal could have enor.Manufacturers, welcomes mous consequences.
ihe dollar slide, as do memYet Washington finds its
bers of his organization.
options limited . ·
President Bush asserts
"We can ·see that , when
the dollar's not overpriced, longtime support · for a
that people around the "strong'" dollar, and made
world want American goods that point again Sunday in a
and our exports arc going news conference in Japan
gangbusters now," he said .
with Prime Minister Yasuo
He doesn't see the dollar as Fukuda. "In terms of the dolundervalued. He sees it as tar, the United States stronghaving being overpriced in · · ly believes - believes in a
the 1990s - and what's hap- strong dollar policy and
pened since as something believes that the strength of
along the lines of a correction. our economy will be reflectStill , Vargo acknowledges ed in the dollar."
,
the dollar's decline has
But not once in his presibrought a measure of pain dency .has the U.S bought .
to some consumers . "As the dollars on foreign exchange
dollar has gone down in markets - called intervenvalue, that has added to the tion - to help prop up the
dollar cost of oil. No ques- greenback.' There's no
tion. So havi ng the dollar telling where the buck will "
decline is not unambiguous- stop these days, although
ly a plus. That's why we say for lhe past few weeks it
,..~
there's got to be a balance seems to be in a holding pat~,.
there somewhere . What we tern. Even as three Bush·
•..
want is a Goldilocks dollar. Treasury secretaries in a
Not tpo strong , not too row spouted the strong-dolweak. But just right. And Jar mantra. the dollar kept
only the market can deter- . tumbling against the euro,
mine that," Vargo said .
the pound , the ye n, the
Mark Zandi, chief econo- Canadian dollar and most
mist
at
MoodY,'s other major currencies.
The Federal Reserve
Economy.com. said expand·
ing exports due to a weak could prop up the dollar by
dollar are "an important increasing interest rates
source . of growth , but it under its control. Increased
doesn' t add a lot to jobs, it yields would make dollardoesn ' t mean very much for denominated investments
the ave rage Ameri~an more attractive to· foreignhousehold. For the average ers. But that could undercut
American , for the average the aiready anemic economIanasa S1.9U Shell
consumer, these are pretty ic" growth in a frail U.S.
- · $18.991 Shill
tough times."
economy rocked by soarin g
. . $10.991Shtet
• The loss of the dollar's fuel costs, falling home
p!Jrchusing power and inter- prices and rising unemployBlrclll $10.99 AShlet
. national respect has some ment - and the lowest ·
s2 . o .-~--~

··~ ·---....l-~

-~~

,f '"''''" .. -~-

~

a presidential election year.
It seems more incl ined to
hold interest rates low for
now to give financ;ial markets time to Tecover from
the housing meltdown and
credit crunch . It did just that
in its meeting on ·June 25.
lea ving a ke y shorHerm

rate at 2 percent. The rate
reached that level in April
after a seri eS of agg ressive
cuts that brought it down
3.25 percentage points since
September. Those .c uts
l1el ped ease the housing and
credit crises - but drov e
the dollar further down.

--~-----··

· Timbers -

__.,-- . -:m

Wood

Paneling

has been out with a broken over as the d.esignated hitter. At lanta third
base man
left hand. but may return· in
Boston outfielder J.D. Chipper Jones . with Soriano.
time to play.
.·
Drew, catcher Jason Varitek Fukudome and Braun in the
NEW YORK - Red Sox
closer
Jonathan ou tfield. Soto will hecome
Cubs pitchers Kerry Wood and
slugger Manny Ramirez and
and Ryan Dempster and Papelbon were picked by a the fi rst rookie catcher to
Cubs leadoff man Alfonso
start for ihe NL.
third
baseman Aramis vole of'AL players.
Soriano · will see lots of
Rodri guez, the Yankees
"The beauty of .it. th ~ lans
Ramirez were chosen by NL
familiar faces at the All-Star
players. and pitcher Carlos third baseman. received the got to vote eight. the players
game.
pl ayer elected to stari. Zambrano was picked by· most votes overall with got to vote 16. at the end of
A record seven · Chicago Pitcher Scott Kazmir and NL manager Cl int Hurdl e of 3,934,5 18. Philadelphia sec- the day, the challenpes \'Ou
Cubs were joined hy &lt;even · catcher Dioncr Navarro Colorado.
ond baseman Chase Utley have from this. seat is you
Boston stars when rosters were added to the AL squad.
Bv J.oE .KAY
It's been a charmed season led the NL with 3.889,602. have to make sure there\ a
ASSOCIATED PRESS
were announced Sunday for
The AL starting lineup: representative fr om each
Th~re
was only one for the Cubs. trying to win
the July IS event at Yankee · change in the final week of their fi rst World Series in Yuukilis at first base. team." Hurdle said.
.
CINC IN NATI - Adam Stadium.
Fan voting for the stancrs
fan voting for starters - · 100 years. Twice beJ'ore, in Pedroia at second base, Jeter
Dunn hit a thre&lt;;-run homer
The New York Yankees Milwaukee outfielder Ryan 1988 and 1936. they put six at shortstop, Rodri guez at ended Wednesday.
that started Cincinnati 's will be well represented, too, Braun overtook Ke'n Griffey players in. the All-Star game. third base, outtielders Josh
Gritfey was second in the
comeback, and the Reds held for the game at their own Jr. in rhe NL outfield .
balloting
released
Ramirez: David Oriiz. Hamilton of Texas , lchiro NL
on to beat the Washington ballpark: Top vote-getter Griffey fini shed fourth and Dustin Pedroia and Kevin Suzuki of Seattle and · Monday. leading Braun by
Na!ional s 6-5 on Sunday, A lex Rodri guez, captain was left off the team.
· Youkili s were elected by Ramirez, · and Minnesota abou t 167.000 vote s. · But
completing a four~game Derek Jeter and reliever
Outfielders
·Kosuke fans from the World Series catcher Joe M au~r.
Braun wound up winning
series sweep.
Mariano
Rive ra
were Fukudome and Soriano and champion Red Sox. Ortiz
Starling for the NL: among NL outfielders while
Edinson Volquez (11 -3) picked.
. rookie catcher Geovany has an injured wrist and AL Hou ston fifSI baseman Griffey finish ed X7 .000
got !he victory and was choThe Tampa Bay . Rays, Soto were chosen to start for manager Terry Francona .of Lance Berkman , Utley at behind Fukudome .
sen for his first All-Star team, with the best record in the the Cubs, Whp own the best Boston said that Texas· second .base, Florida shortCincimiati's only representa- majors, did not have a sirgle record in the league. Soriano Milton Brad ley would take stop Hanley Ramirez ahd
Please see All-Star, Bl
tive. Volquez was a little off
with his control, but repeatedly pitched out of threats in
six innings against the NL's
worst offensive team.
Both teams were in last
place - the Nationals in the
East, the' Reds in .the Central
- when they opened the
series. The Reds rolled to
their ftrst four-game sweep
in two years, and their. tirst
four-game sweep ' of the
Nationals since 1973,' when
BY STEPHEN WILSON
the franchise was in
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Montreal.
The four-game · winning
WIMBLEDON, Eng land
streak is Cincinnati's second- Thi s time. big sister put
longest of the · season.
little sister in her place.
Washington has lost II of its
Advantage, Miss Venus
last 15 overall.
Williams.
Right-hander
Collin
She defeated Serena 7-5,
Balester ( 1-1) ran into prob6-4 Saturday for her fifth
lems the second time through
Wimbledon title and second
Cincinnati's batting order.
in a row. Venus avenged
The 21 ·year-old rookie made
two pre viou s losses to her ·
his second start in the majors
younger sibling in the fi nal
and retired the first II batat the All England Club and
. ters. Ken Griffey Jr. walked
reasserted her dominance
with two outs in the fourth,
on her fav ori te court and
Brandon Phillips singled and
favorite ~ras s surface.
Dunn hit his 22nd homer into
"I can 1 believe that it\
the Nationals' bull~en in
five ," said Venus. who now
right fi eld for a 3-all tte.
•
also has seven Grand Slam
David Ross doubled home
championships. "But wheti
the tiebreaking run in the
you're in the final against
•
fifth, and first baseman
no 0 " Nadal said after accept- row · at Wimbledon, and a set lead, managed to recover Serena Williams. fi ve seems
Bv HoWARD FENDRICH
Dmitri Youn ~ misplayed
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ing the golden trophy that record 65 in ·a row on grass, after wasting two match too far away."
Volquez's sacnfice bunt for
Venus came from 3- 1
has belonged to Federer thereby
stamping
his points in the fourth-set
an error that set up another
down
in the fi rst set to turn
WIMBLEDON, England since 2003.
supremacy in their rivalry, tiebreaker. He earned his
run. Catcher Paul Lo Duca - Back and forth they went
The No. 2-ranked Nadal no Jl}atter what the rankings fifth Grand Slam title, but around the match, break ing
llJOVed to tirst base for the in the Wimbledon final , ended No. I Federer's five- say.
first ~way from the French Serena four tim e ~; · while
eighth inning and had an Rafael Nadal and Roger title rim at the grass-court
dropping serve· tw ice in a
"Look, Rafa's a deserving· Open.
error that led to Jerry Federer. the two greatest Grand Slam tournament by champion," said Federer.
final
that produced breathNadal did it by showing
Hairston Jr. 's run·scoring tennis players of their gener- the slimmest of margins, 6- who hadn' t lost a set all tour- fortitude on his serve, saving taking
tenni s
despite
single for a 6-3' 1ead.
swirling
wind.
12
of
13
break
points.
He
did
ation producing one o,f the 4, 6-4, 6-7 (5), 6-7 (8), 9-7, nament before Sunday. "He
Francisco Cordero got his g re~test m~tches of any gen- Sunday night. Nadal is the just played fanta stic~lly."
Thi s was more than a
it by breaking serve four
18th save in 22 chances eration on the sport's grand- first man since Bjorn Burg
matchup
between siblings:
And that tremendous play times - · twice as many
despite givi ng up RBI singles est stage.
in 1980 to win -Wimbledon lasted a record 4 hours, 48 · times as Federe.r lost serve in it was a contest between
by Cristian Guzman and
For five sets,, throu gh rain, and the French ·Open in the minutes, longer than any of hi s previous six matches two of the hardest-hitting.
Austin Kearns in the ninth.
the classic Wimbledon combined. And Nadal did it most athletic players in the
is wind and descending dark- same season.
Guzman,
. who
"Probably my hardest men's final s it will be by being better from the world at the lop of their
Washington's All-Star repre- ness, the two men swapped
baseline. winning 24 of ,38 game.
sentative, extended his hit- spectacular shuts, until, loss, by far,'' said Federer, recalled alongside. including points that lasted I0 or more
Venus broke to finish the
ting streak to 14 games with against a slate sky, Nadal who was trying to become Borg's five-set victory over strokes, according to an match in I hour. 51 minutes .
earned !he ri ght to fling his the first man to claim six · John McEnroe in 1980
·
his single.
with Serena hitting a backunofficial AP tally.
racket
aside
and
collapse
on
consecutive
Wimbledon
Nadal.
the
first
Spanish
Balester was a fourth·
" He was rock-solid, (he hand wide on the second
· round pick in the June 2004 his back, champion of the championships since the man to triumph at the All way we know him," said match point. The sisters .
1880s.
England Club since Manalo
draft.' 1-je won his big league All England Club at last.
"Is
impossible
to
explain
Santana
in 1966, managed to
Nadal
slopped
Federer's
· debut Tuesday in Florida,
Please see Williams, Bl
Please see Nadal, Bl
what
1
felt
in
that
moment,
streaks of 40 victories in a regroup after blowing a twogiving up one nm and one hit
· in five innings of a 9-6 victory. Against the Reds, he j;ave ~
up five runs in 5 2-3 innmgs.
The Nationals played with- .
out outfielder Elijah Dukes,
who hurt his right knee when
he ran into the outfield wall
on Saturday night .' Dukes
will have surgery Monday to
" I just rnade sure I drove a
BY JENNA FRYER
repair torn cartilage and a
ASSOCIATED PRESS ·
· smart race and tlnished it
eartially torn patella tendon. - - - - - - -- - - out, and whatever came to
lie' II be sidelined for fou.r to.
DAYTONA BEACH , Fla . us would come to us."
.
six weeks.
- Kyle Busch fell a lap
What he got was his 12th
:: Washington had a chance down at Talladega and came victory of the season span·
lo take a big early lead back to win. So when a ning all three of NASCAR's
~gainst Volquez, who hit
steering problem dropped top series.
Balester's pitching hand as him to the back of the field
But he had to wait several
l)e tried to bunt in the third at Daytona, he didn't panic. anxious moments for this
inning, then walked three.
He simply settled in for one, which wasn't decided
The Nationals scored three the long drive back to the until NASCAR reviewed
runs, the ·last bn Young's front.
the running order at the
bases-loaded walk. Lo Duca
And back to Victory Lane . . moment the final caution
~rounde&lt;,i into an inning-endBusch
bested
Carl came out.
·
mg double play.
Edwards in a door-to-door
Busch and Edwards were
drag race Saturday night that drag racin¥ with a little over
ended under caution with a lap remaming when a mul- .
Busch earning hi s Sprint ticar accident brought out
CoNfACfUS
Cup Series-best sixth victo- the caution behind them.·
1-740·446-2342 ext. 33
ry of the season.
·
The field was frozen, and
.
"That'
s
him,"
crew
chief
while Egwards W!!,S pretty
Fax- 1·740-446·3908
Steve
Addi'ngton
shrugged.
sure
Busch was . a nose
E-mail - sportsCmydally1ribune.com
Say what you want about ahead, no one was 1.00 per$1lQ! lJ ..Sl,t!
Busch, .the driver NASCAR cent certain.
"I can't beli eve that we're
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer fans love to hate. But the kid
doesn't quit, not . when a here right now," Busch said
(740) 446·2342, ext 33
bwalters@mydailytribune.com
checkered fla g is on the line. in Victory Lane. "We didn't
"lt"s me who has to stay a have the best car. Luckily
Eric Randolph, Sports Writer
little
calm and get back in we were leading there when
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
the· rhyt.hm of what was it mattered most." .
spo rtsC mydailysentinel.com
AP photo
going on," Busch said of his
Edwards tinished second
!.lorry Crum, Sports Writer
NASCAR driver Kyle B4sch celebrates after winning the Coke Zero 400 auto race Saturday
knack for overcoming diver(740) 446·2342 , 91&lt;t. 33
sity at restrictor-plate tracks. Please SH Daytona. Bl
night at the Daytona International Speedway In Daytona l3each, Fla.
lcr um@ myda lty register.com
BY BEN WALKER

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Reds sweep
Washington

Venus tops
Serena for
Wimbledon
crown

at

·o~

landscape

Red Sox, Cubs highlight MLB All-Star rosters

Pressure

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Busch nips Edwards
to·win under caution

'

.

�-

AcRoss THE NATioN

The Daily Sentin-el

PageA6
Monday, July 7, :!008

Inside
Olympics almost here, Page B2 ·
Brewers close to deal for Sabathia, Page B6
Twins rally past Indians, Page B6

Bl ~:

.The Daily-Sentinel

Monday, July 7, 2008

I ,400 others were warned to be ready to

BY CHRISTINA HOAG

flee .
- ·
The fire. fueled by 15-foot-high , halfLOS ANGELES - Cooler weather on century-old chaparral. still had the
Sunday gave a boo;t to crews battling potential to roll through a hilly area of
the en·o rmous wildfire th at was threaten- ranches, housing tracts and orc hards
ing nearl y 2.700 homes in Santa Barbara between the town of Goleta and Santa
Countv.
Barbara, keeping firefighters on the ir
The- four -day -old fire in the Los toes .
·
Padres National Forest , which had
Temperatures dipfled to around 60
blackened about 13 s4uare miles. spread degrees during the mght. but were foreslightly during the night but firefight ing cast to reach the high 70s later Sunday.
c rews we re able to keep u wit h it , counNearly I ,200 firefighters were assisted
ty spokeswoman Vickie Guthrie said.
by a DC- 10 ai r tanker. and other aircraft
A' of Sunday morni ng. the fire in the dumping water and fire retardant along
area of the town of Goleta was 28 per- ridges and in steep canyons.
In vestigators think the fire . which
cent contained . she sard.
And with lo we r wind Md higher began Tuesday, was human-caused . The
humidity foreca ' t for · Sunday. crews U.S. Forest Service on Saturday asked
were optimistic th'ey could ge t more for public help in determining hot it was
acreage under contrcll . Tempe ratures started .
were forecast to reach the upper 70s later
Meanwhil e, cooler weather he lped
crews attacking the two-week-old blaze
Sunday.
"They expect to make progress today," that has destroyed 22 homes in Big Sur.
at the nmthern end of the· Los Padres forGuthrie said.
Wildfirco have churrcd more than 800 est, but the fire continued to grow slows4uare miles of forest. brush and grass ly on all flanks Saturday night.
The fire, which had blackened Ill
and have destroyed at least 69 homes
. throughout Californ ia. mainly in the square miles. was only 5 percent connorthern part of t he~ stale, in the past two tained with full containment not expect- ·
weeks . One firefi ghter died of a heart ed until July 30, but morning fog that
moved in from the sea helped prevent it
attack.
Accordi ng to state forestry officials, at from advancing on Big Sur's famed
.
nne ·time there we re more than I ,700 restaurants and hotels.
"We 're gaining ground, but we're
active fires, but about I ,400 had been
contained , leaving more than 330 still nowhere near being done ," said Gregg
DeNitto, a spokesman for the U.S.
out of control Sunday morning.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who on Forest Service . "There's still a Jot of
Saturday visited a command post in the potential out there. The fire has been
coastal region 'of Santa Barbara County, less active the last couple ·of days .
has orde r~d 400 National Guard troops We've had favorable weather; they are
trained to hel p fi ght .the blazes. He also taking every opportunity to get some
urg'ed lawmakers to adopt his .budget line on it."
The weather was expected to become
pian fo r a $70 million emergency surAP photo
charge on home and business insurance hotter and drier over the next couple of.
A
firefighter
walks
out
of
a
brush
fire
burning
out
of
control
1n
the
Santa
Ynez
Mou
ntai
ns near
policies to buy more fi refigh ting equip- days , he said, with wind and temperaGoletC), Calif.. on Saturday July 5. A slew of wildfires. most ignited by lightning two weeks ago,
..
ment.
tures rising attd humidity droppin~.
Nearly 2,700 homes in S~nta Barbara
"The fire still has the potential for . have burned more than BOO square miles of land throughout California. The blazes have
Co unty remain.ed under mandatory evac- movement and the potential to get out of destroyed at le ast 67 homes and other buildings and contributed to the death of a firefighter who
suffered heart' attack while digging fire lines .
uation Qrders Sunday and residents of our containment lines," he said.
ASSOCIAT ED PRESS WAITER

a

The buck doesn't stop here; it just keeps falling
BY TOM AAUM
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

WASHINGTON
Things in the U.S. sure are
tough. Brother, can you
spare a euro?
Signs say ing "We accept
curos" are cropping up in the
wi ndows of some Manhattan
retailers. A Belgium company is trying to gobble up St.
Louis- based
Anheuser·Busch. the nation 's largest
brewer and iconic Super
Bowl advertiser.
·
The almighty do llar is
mighty no more. It has been
decl in ing steadily for six
years against other . major
currencies, undercutting its

role as the leading international banking currency.
The long slide is fanning
inflation at home and playing a major ,role in the runup of oil and gasoline prices
everywhere.
.
'
Vacationitfg Europeans
are findmg bargain s in the ·
U.S., while Americans in
Pari s and other world capitals are being clobbered by
sky -hi gh tabs for ho te ls,
travel and even sidewal k
cafes. Northern border-city
Americans
who
once
flocked into Canada for
shopping deals are· staying
home; it's the Canadians
flock ing here now.
Everything
made in
America - from .goods to
entire companies - is near
dirt .c heap to many foreigners. Meanwhile, American
consumers, both those who
travel and those who stay at
hom!!. are seeing big price
increases in energy. food and
imported goods. The dollar
has lost roughly a quarter of
its purchasing power agai nst
the currencies of major U.S.
trading partners from its
peak in 2002 .
Since oil is bought and
sold in dollars worldwide,
the devalued dollar has made
the recent surge in energy
prices even worse for
Americans , leading to $4
gasoline in the United States.
Analysts suggest that of the
$140 a barrel that oil fetches
globally, some $25 may be,
due to the devalued dollar.
Further declines in the
do llar wi ll add to oil 's
appeal as a commodi ty to be
traded .
Oil. suggests influential
energy consultant Daniel
Yergin, is "the new gold ."
The limp greenback has
had one big benefit to the
U.S. economy : Since it
makes American goods

L •

- -

experts worrying that the reading of consumer contieuro
might one day replace dencc in 16 years.
Weak dollar
The Fed must do a balancthe
dollar
as the so-called pri The dollar has been declining
steadily for six years against
mary reserve currency. And ing act between keeping the
other major curr8ncles .
that could trigger a dollar domesti c economy from
Dollar v11ue of one euro, monthly·
rout as foreign governments .goin!' into recession and
DOlLAR
and international investors keepmg inflation at bay.
W!AK~ A
flee from U.S . Treasury
Furthermore , no Fed likes
TljAN EUAO
1.5 ..
.......
bonds
and
other
'
dollart
o
raise rates aggressively in
Jut)' ·ge
11.10
denominated investments.
Making matters worse:
1.0
July '4, 20011
The
gaping U.S. current. 11 .11'
the
account deficit o.s ·~·--···--··· - -· DOli.Ait···- - -----· -- ·;:
amount by which the value
STFlOf'iilEA
of
goods, services and
THANEURO
0 ---...
bought in the
investments
•ge '00
·04
·oo ·os
U.S. from overseas exceeds
SOURCE Thomson F1rnmcial
AP
the amount the U.S. sells
cheaper overseas, it has · abroad -.: and the low levhelped manufacturers who els of domestic savings
export and other U.S. based means that fQreigners must
companies with internation- purchase more than $3 bilal reach . Exports have been lion every business day to
one of the few bright spots fund the imbalance.
in an otherwise darkening
Since roughly half of the
U.S. economy.
nation 's nearly $!0 trillion
Franklin Vargo, vice pres- national debt is held by forident of international eco- eigners, mostly in Treasury
nomic affairs at the National bills.and bonds , such a withAssociation
of d(aWal could have enor.Manufacturers, welcomes mous consequences.
ihe dollar slide, as do memYet Washington finds its
bers of his organization.
options limited . ·
President Bush asserts
"We can ·see that , when
the dollar's not overpriced, longtime support · for a
that people around the "strong'" dollar, and made
world want American goods that point again Sunday in a
and our exports arc going news conference in Japan
gangbusters now," he said .
with Prime Minister Yasuo
He doesn't see the dollar as Fukuda. "In terms of the dolundervalued. He sees it as tar, the United States stronghaving being overpriced in · · ly believes - believes in a
the 1990s - and what's hap- strong dollar policy and
pened since as something believes that the strength of
along the lines of a correction. our economy will be reflectStill , Vargo acknowledges ed in the dollar."
,
the dollar's decline has
But not once in his presibrought a measure of pain dency .has the U.S bought .
to some consumers . "As the dollars on foreign exchange
dollar has gone down in markets - called intervenvalue, that has added to the tion - to help prop up the
dollar cost of oil. No ques- greenback.' There's no
tion. So havi ng the dollar telling where the buck will "
decline is not unambiguous- stop these days, although
ly a plus. That's why we say for lhe past few weeks it
,..~
there's got to be a balance seems to be in a holding pat~,.
there somewhere . What we tern. Even as three Bush·
•..
want is a Goldilocks dollar. Treasury secretaries in a
Not tpo strong , not too row spouted the strong-dolweak. But just right. And Jar mantra. the dollar kept
only the market can deter- . tumbling against the euro,
mine that," Vargo said .
the pound , the ye n, the
Mark Zandi, chief econo- Canadian dollar and most
mist
at
MoodY,'s other major currencies.
The Federal Reserve
Economy.com. said expand·
ing exports due to a weak could prop up the dollar by
dollar are "an important increasing interest rates
source . of growth , but it under its control. Increased
doesn' t add a lot to jobs, it yields would make dollardoesn ' t mean very much for denominated investments
the ave rage Ameri~an more attractive to· foreignhousehold. For the average ers. But that could undercut
American , for the average the aiready anemic economIanasa S1.9U Shell
consumer, these are pretty ic" growth in a frail U.S.
- · $18.991 Shill
tough times."
economy rocked by soarin g
. . $10.991Shtet
• The loss of the dollar's fuel costs, falling home
p!Jrchusing power and inter- prices and rising unemployBlrclll $10.99 AShlet
. national respect has some ment - and the lowest ·
s2 . o .-~--~

··~ ·---....l-~

-~~

,f '"''''" .. -~-

~

a presidential election year.
It seems more incl ined to
hold interest rates low for
now to give financ;ial markets time to Tecover from
the housing meltdown and
credit crunch . It did just that
in its meeting on ·June 25.
lea ving a ke y shorHerm

rate at 2 percent. The rate
reached that level in April
after a seri eS of agg ressive
cuts that brought it down
3.25 percentage points since
September. Those .c uts
l1el ped ease the housing and
credit crises - but drov e
the dollar further down.

--~-----··

· Timbers -

__.,-- . -:m

Wood

Paneling

has been out with a broken over as the d.esignated hitter. At lanta third
base man
left hand. but may return· in
Boston outfielder J.D. Chipper Jones . with Soriano.
time to play.
.·
Drew, catcher Jason Varitek Fukudome and Braun in the
NEW YORK - Red Sox
closer
Jonathan ou tfield. Soto will hecome
Cubs pitchers Kerry Wood and
slugger Manny Ramirez and
and Ryan Dempster and Papelbon were picked by a the fi rst rookie catcher to
Cubs leadoff man Alfonso
start for ihe NL.
third
baseman Aramis vole of'AL players.
Soriano · will see lots of
Rodri guez, the Yankees
"The beauty of .it. th ~ lans
Ramirez were chosen by NL
familiar faces at the All-Star
players. and pitcher Carlos third baseman. received the got to vote eight. the players
game.
pl ayer elected to stari. Zambrano was picked by· most votes overall with got to vote 16. at the end of
A record seven · Chicago Pitcher Scott Kazmir and NL manager Cl int Hurdl e of 3,934,5 18. Philadelphia sec- the day, the challenpes \'Ou
Cubs were joined hy &lt;even · catcher Dioncr Navarro Colorado.
ond baseman Chase Utley have from this. seat is you
Boston stars when rosters were added to the AL squad.
Bv J.oE .KAY
It's been a charmed season led the NL with 3.889,602. have to make sure there\ a
ASSOCIATED PRESS
were announced Sunday for
The AL starting lineup: representative fr om each
Th~re
was only one for the Cubs. trying to win
the July IS event at Yankee · change in the final week of their fi rst World Series in Yuukilis at first base. team." Hurdle said.
.
CINC IN NATI - Adam Stadium.
Fan voting for the stancrs
fan voting for starters - · 100 years. Twice beJ'ore, in Pedroia at second base, Jeter
Dunn hit a thre&lt;;-run homer
The New York Yankees Milwaukee outfielder Ryan 1988 and 1936. they put six at shortstop, Rodri guez at ended Wednesday.
that started Cincinnati 's will be well represented, too, Braun overtook Ke'n Griffey players in. the All-Star game. third base, outtielders Josh
Gritfey was second in the
comeback, and the Reds held for the game at their own Jr. in rhe NL outfield .
balloting
released
Ramirez: David Oriiz. Hamilton of Texas , lchiro NL
on to beat the Washington ballpark: Top vote-getter Griffey fini shed fourth and Dustin Pedroia and Kevin Suzuki of Seattle and · Monday. leading Braun by
Na!ional s 6-5 on Sunday, A lex Rodri guez, captain was left off the team.
· Youkili s were elected by Ramirez, · and Minnesota abou t 167.000 vote s. · But
completing a four~game Derek Jeter and reliever
Outfielders
·Kosuke fans from the World Series catcher Joe M au~r.
Braun wound up winning
series sweep.
Mariano
Rive ra
were Fukudome and Soriano and champion Red Sox. Ortiz
Starling for the NL: among NL outfielders while
Edinson Volquez (11 -3) picked.
. rookie catcher Geovany has an injured wrist and AL Hou ston fifSI baseman Griffey finish ed X7 .000
got !he victory and was choThe Tampa Bay . Rays, Soto were chosen to start for manager Terry Francona .of Lance Berkman , Utley at behind Fukudome .
sen for his first All-Star team, with the best record in the the Cubs, Whp own the best Boston said that Texas· second .base, Florida shortCincimiati's only representa- majors, did not have a sirgle record in the league. Soriano Milton Brad ley would take stop Hanley Ramirez ahd
Please see All-Star, Bl
tive. Volquez was a little off
with his control, but repeatedly pitched out of threats in
six innings against the NL's
worst offensive team.
Both teams were in last
place - the Nationals in the
East, the' Reds in .the Central
- when they opened the
series. The Reds rolled to
their ftrst four-game sweep
in two years, and their. tirst
four-game sweep ' of the
Nationals since 1973,' when
BY STEPHEN WILSON
the franchise was in
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Montreal.
The four-game · winning
WIMBLEDON, Eng land
streak is Cincinnati's second- Thi s time. big sister put
longest of the · season.
little sister in her place.
Washington has lost II of its
Advantage, Miss Venus
last 15 overall.
Williams.
Right-hander
Collin
She defeated Serena 7-5,
Balester ( 1-1) ran into prob6-4 Saturday for her fifth
lems the second time through
Wimbledon title and second
Cincinnati's batting order.
in a row. Venus avenged
The 21 ·year-old rookie made
two pre viou s losses to her ·
his second start in the majors
younger sibling in the fi nal
and retired the first II batat the All England Club and
. ters. Ken Griffey Jr. walked
reasserted her dominance
with two outs in the fourth,
on her fav ori te court and
Brandon Phillips singled and
favorite ~ras s surface.
Dunn hit his 22nd homer into
"I can 1 believe that it\
the Nationals' bull~en in
five ," said Venus. who now
right fi eld for a 3-all tte.
•
also has seven Grand Slam
David Ross doubled home
championships. "But wheti
the tiebreaking run in the
you're in the final against
•
fifth, and first baseman
no 0 " Nadal said after accept- row · at Wimbledon, and a set lead, managed to recover Serena Williams. fi ve seems
Bv HoWARD FENDRICH
Dmitri Youn ~ misplayed
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ing the golden trophy that record 65 in ·a row on grass, after wasting two match too far away."
Volquez's sacnfice bunt for
Venus came from 3- 1
has belonged to Federer thereby
stamping
his points in the fourth-set
an error that set up another
down
in the fi rst set to turn
WIMBLEDON, England since 2003.
supremacy in their rivalry, tiebreaker. He earned his
run. Catcher Paul Lo Duca - Back and forth they went
The No. 2-ranked Nadal no Jl}atter what the rankings fifth Grand Slam title, but around the match, break ing
llJOVed to tirst base for the in the Wimbledon final , ended No. I Federer's five- say.
first ~way from the French Serena four tim e ~; · while
eighth inning and had an Rafael Nadal and Roger title rim at the grass-court
dropping serve· tw ice in a
"Look, Rafa's a deserving· Open.
error that led to Jerry Federer. the two greatest Grand Slam tournament by champion," said Federer.
final
that produced breathNadal did it by showing
Hairston Jr. 's run·scoring tennis players of their gener- the slimmest of margins, 6- who hadn' t lost a set all tour- fortitude on his serve, saving taking
tenni s
despite
single for a 6-3' 1ead.
swirling
wind.
12
of
13
break
points.
He
did
ation producing one o,f the 4, 6-4, 6-7 (5), 6-7 (8), 9-7, nament before Sunday. "He
Francisco Cordero got his g re~test m~tches of any gen- Sunday night. Nadal is the just played fanta stic~lly."
Thi s was more than a
it by breaking serve four
18th save in 22 chances eration on the sport's grand- first man since Bjorn Burg
matchup
between siblings:
And that tremendous play times - · twice as many
despite givi ng up RBI singles est stage.
in 1980 to win -Wimbledon lasted a record 4 hours, 48 · times as Federe.r lost serve in it was a contest between
by Cristian Guzman and
For five sets,, throu gh rain, and the French ·Open in the minutes, longer than any of hi s previous six matches two of the hardest-hitting.
Austin Kearns in the ninth.
the classic Wimbledon combined. And Nadal did it most athletic players in the
is wind and descending dark- same season.
Guzman,
. who
"Probably my hardest men's final s it will be by being better from the world at the lop of their
Washington's All-Star repre- ness, the two men swapped
baseline. winning 24 of ,38 game.
sentative, extended his hit- spectacular shuts, until, loss, by far,'' said Federer, recalled alongside. including points that lasted I0 or more
Venus broke to finish the
ting streak to 14 games with against a slate sky, Nadal who was trying to become Borg's five-set victory over strokes, according to an match in I hour. 51 minutes .
earned !he ri ght to fling his the first man to claim six · John McEnroe in 1980
·
his single.
with Serena hitting a backunofficial AP tally.
racket
aside
and
collapse
on
consecutive
Wimbledon
Nadal.
the
first
Spanish
Balester was a fourth·
" He was rock-solid, (he hand wide on the second
· round pick in the June 2004 his back, champion of the championships since the man to triumph at the All way we know him," said match point. The sisters .
1880s.
England Club since Manalo
draft.' 1-je won his big league All England Club at last.
"Is
impossible
to
explain
Santana
in 1966, managed to
Nadal
slopped
Federer's
· debut Tuesday in Florida,
Please see Williams, Bl
Please see Nadal, Bl
what
1
felt
in
that
moment,
streaks of 40 victories in a regroup after blowing a twogiving up one nm and one hit
· in five innings of a 9-6 victory. Against the Reds, he j;ave ~
up five runs in 5 2-3 innmgs.
The Nationals played with- .
out outfielder Elijah Dukes,
who hurt his right knee when
he ran into the outfield wall
on Saturday night .' Dukes
will have surgery Monday to
" I just rnade sure I drove a
BY JENNA FRYER
repair torn cartilage and a
ASSOCIATED PRESS ·
· smart race and tlnished it
eartially torn patella tendon. - - - - - - -- - - out, and whatever came to
lie' II be sidelined for fou.r to.
DAYTONA BEACH , Fla . us would come to us."
.
six weeks.
- Kyle Busch fell a lap
What he got was his 12th
:: Washington had a chance down at Talladega and came victory of the season span·
lo take a big early lead back to win. So when a ning all three of NASCAR's
~gainst Volquez, who hit
steering problem dropped top series.
Balester's pitching hand as him to the back of the field
But he had to wait several
l)e tried to bunt in the third at Daytona, he didn't panic. anxious moments for this
inning, then walked three.
He simply settled in for one, which wasn't decided
The Nationals scored three the long drive back to the until NASCAR reviewed
runs, the ·last bn Young's front.
the running order at the
bases-loaded walk. Lo Duca
And back to Victory Lane . . moment the final caution
~rounde&lt;,i into an inning-endBusch
bested
Carl came out.
·
mg double play.
Edwards in a door-to-door
Busch and Edwards were
drag race Saturday night that drag racin¥ with a little over
ended under caution with a lap remaming when a mul- .
Busch earning hi s Sprint ticar accident brought out
CoNfACfUS
Cup Series-best sixth victo- the caution behind them.·
1-740·446-2342 ext. 33
ry of the season.
·
The field was frozen, and
.
"That'
s
him,"
crew
chief
while Egwards W!!,S pretty
Fax- 1·740-446·3908
Steve
Addi'ngton
shrugged.
sure
Busch was . a nose
E-mail - sportsCmydally1ribune.com
Say what you want about ahead, no one was 1.00 per$1lQ! lJ ..Sl,t!
Busch, .the driver NASCAR cent certain.
"I can't beli eve that we're
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer fans love to hate. But the kid
doesn't quit, not . when a here right now," Busch said
(740) 446·2342, ext 33
bwalters@mydailytribune.com
checkered fla g is on the line. in Victory Lane. "We didn't
"lt"s me who has to stay a have the best car. Luckily
Eric Randolph, Sports Writer
little
calm and get back in we were leading there when
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
the· rhyt.hm of what was it mattered most." .
spo rtsC mydailysentinel.com
AP photo
going on," Busch said of his
Edwards tinished second
!.lorry Crum, Sports Writer
NASCAR driver Kyle B4sch celebrates after winning the Coke Zero 400 auto race Saturday
knack for overcoming diver(740) 446·2342 , 91&lt;t. 33
sity at restrictor-plate tracks. Please SH Daytona. Bl
night at the Daytona International Speedway In Daytona l3each, Fla.
lcr um@ myda lty register.com
BY BEN WALKER

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Reds sweep
Washington

Venus tops
Serena for
Wimbledon
crown

at

·o~

landscape

Red Sox, Cubs highlight MLB All-Star rosters

Pressure

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~

Busch nips Edwards
to·win under caution

'

.

�-·

'

·~hrna will hold 'Olympics ort its own terms _,Daytona
You know the OlympKs
are ne.tr when the usu.il gang
ot JUiced-up Bulgandn
wetghth her- gets tossed
: !rom the games hctore even
; learmng how to s.ty tn
Chtnese, "These needles are
for therapeuuc use only
The tr.tdtuondl oustmg ol
Bulganans got under w.ty
edrly tor tlus Olympto alter
II ot them tested postttve lot
sterotds ids! month. ptompt·
111g the cquntry's we tghtlllt·
111g fedet.tiJon to thtow m the
tov.e l .1nd finally .tdmlt the
jig was up
The host countt} was udylllg up Its r.mks, too h,mnmg
a top swumner .md wrest ler
who were .t lso JUtced Just to
show they mednt bu smess.
the Chmese athletes were
banned tor lite
The only good news fot
Luo Meng and uuyttng
Kunpeng w,ts that tt dtdn 't
happen dunn g the games
It's bdd enough that those
pesky toretgners keep trytng
to embarrass Chma. but
Chmese c~ thl etes mtgh t get a
one-way tnp to some !ClllOte
outpost testing posl!tve whe n
the wotld athl ettc spot light IS
shmm g on thetr country
It wtll shme bnghtl y. too,
begmmng a mon th trom now
when thousdnds ot .1thletes,
coaches dnd h.m gers-on arc

JOmed by even more thousdnds ot JO Urnalists, cdmeramcn and h,mgers-on fat 16
days ot lun. games and total
excess that onlv the Summer
Olymptcs Cdn provtde
The othc•&lt;~ l s1.1rt wtll be on
the etghth d.ty ol rhe etghth
month tn the etghth year ot
the century, " dare ptcked by
the Chmese because tt ts
lucky Just a lew munths &lt;~go
!here dtdn't ~eem anythmg
lucky abo ut these g.unes, but
Chtna see ms to h,1ve
regrouped m the w.1ke ot "
devastating e,u thquake that
took people's mmds otf the
country's ttoubltng tssues
elsewhetc
Protests that threatened to

All-Star
from PageBl
Pedt Oid be&lt;1t out Texas'
fan Kmsler by ,1bout 34,000
votes 111 the closest race
whtle H.tnley Ranurez held
otf M1lwaukee's J J Hardy
and Houston's Mt guel
Tetad.t at shortstop Tetada
was taken stx months .1tter
ht s name showed up m the
Mttchell Report on drugs m
basebal l
All Internet vote v.tll be
held thts week to select the
fmdl pl&lt;~yet on edch tedm
The AL candtdates lot the
i&lt;~ s t
spot
outttelders

Nadal
from Page 81
Federer, who hit 25 aces
"He's detillltely unproved
hts game"
Borg
and
Santana
watched t rom the trotlt row
of thi; Royal Box at Centre
Court, whtch next yeat wtll
have a rerr.tct.tble roof
Perhaps Mother Nature
wanted one lasr chance to
leave her mark , delay mg
Sunday's st&lt;lrt by 35 mmutes wtth ram Showers
agam -caused a delay of I
hour, 2 1 mmutes late m the
thtrd set, then another of 30
mmutes at 2-2, de uce 111 the
lttth set
When act ton resumed at
8 23 p m , 1t .tlrc,tdy was
Iough to see, and the players
traded serv tce holds unttl 77 That's where Nad.tl fmally broke through, as
Federer's fore hand reall y
began to break down A
forehand mto the net gave
Nadal ht s fourth break
point, and a forehqnd long
conceded the game - the
first break of serve by erther
· man since the second set
Nadal still had to serve
out the match. though, and
he still hud to a void the sort
of nerves Federer nouced
when hi s opponent led ~ -2
In the fourth-set tiebreaker.
"I played terrible there,"
sard Nudul, who double·
faulted to 5-3.
Down 6-~, Federer erased
a match pornt with u 127
mph servrce winner. Down
8-7 - again. one point
from losing - Federer hit a
backhand passrng wmner
A forehand wmner put
Federer ahead 9-8, and
,

'

also a good ch,mce the gymIM&gt;ttts results w1ll perplex
mtlltuns
th.,ugh
th.tt's
,dmost dS much ,m Olymptc'
nte .ts the ~xpulston ot
Bulgan.m wetght ld ters
Wh.n vou v.on't 'ee I'
much Jn'uddlmg up these
games thdt the Ch tncse c.tn
control And . ltke most t ot&lt;~l­
uanan gmenunents. they ve
overwhelm the Olymptc had a Jo' ol cxpe1 tence .tt
torch pMade diSappeared &lt;.:ontrolhng thing' w1 th tn
,tbout the same tt l11e the theu own botdcrs
Chma says 1t h.ts mohttorch entered Chm.t. wh tle
llzed
,, I00 000-srron g .11111 even the more pohttLally
terronsm
lotc e to prorec:t tile
acme athletes hdve mo-tly
Olymp
tcs,
.1nd org,umed
kept qUiet about human
rt ghts t&gt;Sues m 1ecent ,mother 440 000 secunty
months Me,mwhtle the guards and \Olltnlcer' to
bloody cr.1ckdown 111 Tther ts keep &lt;~n eye on thmgs. Pollee
yeste rday's news, ,md Darfur have begun p.tttolltng the
actt\lsts are hav tng the same ,urpon wnh md~.:hme gLm".
trouble they always have m and surL.u.:e-to-a1r mis..,tk..,
explamt ng where the regton have been tn st,dled ne.tt
ts and why Chtfl.l IS to blame Olymp1c &gt;enues
E'eryonc who comes 111tn
tor Its current v.oes
the
country wdl be mont Prestdent Bush gave hts
tot
ed.
&lt;1nd dtsstdents and
•seal of approval to the g.tmes
the other d.1y by sayrng he underground 1eltgtou s to I·
would be ,,tte ndmg opemng lowers 111 otl1e1 p.trts of
ceremony, and French Chttla h.tvc ct thcr been J•ulcd
Prest dent Ntco las Sarkozy or b,mncd tlom le,tV IIH! the!!
has repone!lly changed IllS Cllles dun ng the ganle, to
mmd and wtll also be on preven t them fro m "tdgmg
h,md The Dala1 Lama hun- protests 111 Belj lllg
True beltc ve ts 111 OlymptL
selt say&gt; he supports the
tde,lis
wtll .ugue tl1.11 rhe
games. though that m.1y be
games
will help c h.mgc
because the Chmese have
threatened to cut ott talks th111gs ltke th.tt hy opcnmg
w1 th representatives ot the up Ch111a to democr.tcy Tt\e
ex il ed Ttbetan spmtual more CJ iliC.tl wtl l cou ntct
le.tder tf he docs anythmg to th.tt nothtng wtll ch,mge ,mu
th.tt Betjlllg should newt
dt shonor the1r Olymptcs
Chma IS ready to stage the have gotten the g.,mes 111 the
most elaborate games, and tt ltrsl place. Wllllllllg them
has left ltttle to chance m a onl y because the IOC w.ts
commg out party worthy ot a wov.ed by Cht tl.l s pot entt.ll
superpower The opentng tot buymg &lt;til th111gs Ad tdas
ceremony wtll surely dazzle, and Ntke
Wh,never the c.ISe. thcv ' re
buses wtll run on ttme and
there ts abo ut as much &lt;~I most here and the wrnld
chance of Sv.eden winntng Wtll :-.ou11 b~.; llt:LtteJ Lu lll1
the medal count as there ts of Olymptcs L&lt;mtested tnt the
a televtston camera catchmg most pat t 111 be.lllt tlull y
,my protester wt thm a mt le destgned tactltttes that wlll
look s pectc~c ul,u on h1gh detot Ttananmen Square
lllttt
on teJe, tston And tf
Yes, the atr wtll be polluted and sailors may have to perfornbnces so l.tr tht s yea•'
deal wtth huge clumps of are any mdtc,ltton the comalgae 111 the water There's petition wlll be outstandmg

Tim

Dahlberg

Jermatne Dye and Jose
Gut lien, ftrst baseman Jason
G1ambi, second basem an
Bnan Roberts and thtrd
baseman Evan Longoria
The NL candidates outftelders Pat Burrell, Corey
Hart, Carlos Lee and Aaron
Roward and thtrd base man
Dav1d Wnght
Among the posttton players left• off the team Cubs
ft rst basem,m Derrek Lee,
hmmg 302 with 15 homers
and 52 RBis go mg tnto
Sunday, Colorado thrrd
baseman Garrett Atkms
( 311. i2 HRs, 50 RBi s),
Detrmt outfteldet Magglto
Ordonez ( 307. 12. 50) and
Boston thtrd baseman Mtke
Lowelll,302. 13, 54)

Boston's
Datsuke
Matsuzaka (9-1 3 12 ERA)
and St Louts' Kyle Lohse
( 10-2, 3.6 1) were among the
p1tchers left out
' Once agdm

the lc,tg ue

that v. ms the All -Stat g,nlle
wtll get home !teld .!dhlll
tage 111 the World Set te'
The AL hds not lost .tn
All-Star game smce 1991i at
Veterans Stad1um Stnce
then. the AL ha s won I0 .tnd
ued one
" It's not so muLh gettmg
everyone 111 the game .mymore Thts ts not a ce lebt tty
golf lOLII namen t .my more
where everybody ge ts
together, shakes h,mcls c~nd
has Jots ol g•ggles · Hu1 dlc
s~u d

when Nadal mtssed a back- fourth matc h pomt
Federer made cle.1r .tltcrhand return, the match was
eve n Federer JUmped and w,trd he was not pleased
screamed, and the crowd of that play conttn ued de, plte
the low V" tbtf tty ell the
about 15 ,000 JOmed htm
No man smce 1927 had end
"It 's rough on me now,
come back to wm a
obviOusly,
you • know, to
Wtmbledon !mal after loslose
the
b1ggest
tnlllnament
tng the ftrst two sets, and
111
the
world
ove
r m.rybe a
' none had overcome a match
b1t
ol
ltght."
he
sa
td
pomt to setze vtctory smce
S.11d N.td.!l "In the l.tst
1948 If anyone could, It
game,
I dtdn't see nothfigured to be Federer, espetng."
c tally on thts parttcular
Both players Itguted that
lawn
had
Federer -managed ro
It was thetr stxth Grand
Slam !mal, already more bre.tk back tn 8-8, play
wo uld have be.en suspendthan between any other patr . ed
until Monday beco~use ol
of men 111 the 40-ycar Open darkness
era, and there could be sev" It wou ld h.!Ve been brueral to follow. Federer ts tal," Fcdc tcr satd
only 26, after all, and Nadal
It dtdn ' t happen
ts 22 Federer has Jed the
Nadal came thtough, .md
rankmgs for a record 23 1 when he arose fro m h1 s celcorbecuttve weeks, and ebratory llop on the
Nadal has been second for a ground, he had srass slams
record 154
on the b.tck ol ht s while
Nadal defeated Federer at sht rt He shook hands wtth
the French Open en route to Federer, then chmbcd mto
each of hts champtonshrps the player:) ' guest box to
tpere, m the 2005 semifi- hug ht s uncle/coach Ton t
nals and the past three and others Wtth tears m
ftna ls. tncludmg a 6-1, 6-3, Nadal's eyes. he grabbed a
6-0 rout last month that was red-and-yellow Spanish
Federer 's most lopsided flag and walked across the
loss in 180 career Grand top of the scoreboard and
Slam matches.
the roof of the TV
But the Swiss star kef?! anno uncers" booth to reach
reminding everyone tht s the Royal Bo~ for handweek that he has had the shakes with Spain's Pnnce
upper hand on surfuces Felipe und Princess Letizia.
other than clay.
As this scene unfolded,
Not this time.
Federer sat alone in hrs
Nadul lost to Federer tn changeover cl\urr, protcctetl
the 2006 Wimbledon final from the night's clirll by his
in four sets, and the 2007 custom-made cream curdi·
final In five. Although the gan wnh the goltl "RF" on
Iutter was certainly sus- fhe chest.
penseful, it featured neither
So many serves, so many
the drama nor the all- strokes, so much grit - ull
around
excellence of for nuught.
Sunday's encounter, which
"I am very happy tor
ended at 9.15 p.m, when me," Nadal satd, "but sorry
Federer pushed a forehand tor htm . because he
into the net on Nadal's deserved thts tttle, too."

'

from Page 81
and was d tsappumted not to
h.t&gt;e LlllC J.tst l.tp to lim~h hts
1.~ce wuh Busch
'M.tn I hate to lose the
thmg ltke that. · Edwards
s,ud · I wrsh we could have
t,Ked .!ltttle longer"
Matt Kcnseth, Edwards '
te.unm.tte c~r Roush Fenway
Rl!t.:lll~ wds th1rd He was
tollll\ved h)', Kurt Bu sc h,
Runsh dnver Davtd Ragan
.llld Rohby Gordon Kasey
K.tllllc. D.1lc Earnhardt Jr,
Clint Bo"yet and Mark
Mc~Jtm tuunded out the top
10
It seemed tot a bit that Jeff
Gotdon wds headed to hts
ltrst \IC tory ot the season .ts
he Jed 46 l.tps i&lt;~te and was
h,mcltly hold1ng off Busch as
the r.ILC wound down But
wnh lour l.tps t\) go. Busch
pullccl llhllk L&gt;l Gordon and
cJ,umeJ the le.td mere seconJ, he!OJc ,, multrcar accident hrou~ hr out ,, caution
It ser up' ,m oventme spnnt
to the lmtsh and Busl·h was
slow on the test&lt;~rt It st.1cked
the trail tc up bchmd him and
EJw,u ds r.111 11110 the bdck ot
Got don. sendmg hun spmlllng through the grttss
£dw,uds d.u teJ to the outstde to move ,,round the
,ILl to n .md w1th a push tram
Kcn seth. pu lled .tlon~;;stde
Busch to set up a thnlhng
d1c~g r,K·e But they dtdn't get
" ch,mce to race to the
checketcd Jl.1g because of
cont.1ct between Travis

Monday, July 7, 2008

.Monday, Ju1y 7, 2008

www .mydailysenti nel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

II/cr.i 1/J:J
2008 Sprint Cup Standings

After O.ytona
Name
1 Kyle Busch
2 Dale Earnhardt Jr
3 Jeff Burton
4 Carl Edwards
5 J1mm1e Johnson
6 Jeff Gordon
7 Denny Hamlin
a Kasey Kahne
9 Man Kenseth
10 Clint Bowyer
11 Greg B1ffle
12 Tony Stewart

Wms
6
1
1
3
1
0
1
2
o
1
0
0

Pts
2686
182
202
249
367
·437
446
509
520
·527
533
·541

Kvaptl and Sam Homtsh Jr
that tnggered a multtc.1r
acctdent that froze the tield
"I thmk tt's ours," spotter
Jeff Dtckerson rad toed to
Busch. "We were out front
Is It ours 0 "
"I don't know," Addmgton
replted "They are lookmg at
It r don't know "
Busch's team franttca lly
watched the sconng tower,
then Jllmped over the pH
road wall 1n ce lcbrat10n
when Busch s No 18· was
declared the wmne r
Busch celebrated with hts
customary sarcasttc bow to
the crowd But wtth e'ery
vtctory. the .fans who 'have
loved to hate htm are slowly
warmmg up to NASCAR 's
newest .star He wa~ cheered
thts ttme, JUSt hke he was
two weeks ago after wmnmg
on the road course 111
Sonoma.
Gordon, who seemed
poisea to end hts 22-race
wmless streak, wound up
30th and was disappomted
wtth the way the final restart
played out
"Everybody was laymg

embta(cd .tt the net. and
Venus kept het celebrattons
111 cheL k as she tWilled and
w.tved to the Centre Court
CiOWd
Venus .1ccepted the wmneJ\ trophy - a sterhn g
sdver s,1Jver aptly named
the Venus Rosewater d1sh
- !rom the Duke of Kent
"It's so rew&lt;trdmg to perform hetc." Venus satd
'Every ttme I come back I
know I have the chance to
play well and make htstory.
My Itt st JOb ts big stster and
I tc~k e th&lt;~l ve1y senou sly "
Watchtng ftom the players box w.ts the ststers·
mother, Ot.tcene Thetr
ldther R1 chard. had tlown
b.tck to the Untted States
hcc.ruse he c,m' t stand to
watch ht s daug hters play
cuch othct
Re!etntlg tu tl1e mtx ed
teeltngs ot het latmly about
whom to suppot t. Venus
s,ud, "It \ h.1rd tor all of
them hut I li ke to thmk they
w~uu me 10 \\ltn '"
The 26-yc.tr-old Serena
c~ccepted het runner-up trophy .rud p.ud tnbute to her
28-yc.lr-uld ' tster.
" I 111 so happy that at ]east
one of us wo~s .1ble to wm,"
SetetM s.ud ·She's played
gte.tt th ts yeo~ r We're JUSt
gl&lt;~d to be tn the fi nals
~'g ~un "
On Sund&lt;~y. ltve-trme
ch.tmpton Roger Federer
.rnd two-tunc runner-up
R.t!.tel No~dc~l wdl meet m
theu thud consecHllve fina l
.11 Wtmblcdon
Vcm" ''the lOth woman
- to wm live Wtmbledon singb titles. and on ly the third
111 the 40 yec~r htstory of the
Open et,t after Maruna
N,wr.nrlo\a ,md Stetti Graf.
·'Detm nely wmmng thts
tounwnent so many times
del tnttely puts you m the
stratosphetc." Ve nus satd.
She ts lour shy of
N,l\rdtl lova's record of 111ne
Singles champton~h tps
"Oh , my God, that would
be the ultimate," Venus
satd "That' s not easy. Her
c.treer also spanned hke
three decades, so I' m not
&gt;Ure tf I have that much
tune It I did, I thmk I
would defimtely dream of
that ·
Desptte her elatiOn, Venus
acknowledged that her oncourt ce lebrations were
toned down
"I'm tlefimtei,Y more in
tune with my stster's feelings hccuuse one of us has
to wm und one of us hlls to
Jnse." she sutd. "Of course.
the celebrutton rsn't us
c~cued h~cuusc my stster
JUSt lost You could never
dctntct !rom wmning a
Wrmblcdon, It doesn't
uctr.t~t trom that. But I'm
dettnttely thinking about
how my ,t;ter's feeh ng ."
A 'omber Serena found
nn solace m losmg to her

Meigs County, OH

Gallia
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OH
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HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
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Should Include These Items
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r

Ohio Valley

Publishing reserves
the right to edH,

'

Errors

Must

I

•'

·'

B

epol1ed on the firs
ay or publication an
h!' Trlbm11e-Sen! 1nel
agister
wtll
•epon11ble lor n
ore than the coal o

i ........._.
I.__
WANIW

~

GIVEAWAY

M1 xed breed Puppy 304
593 6038

Box number ada ar
lwaya confidential
Current rate car
ppllea

r
newapape
ccepte only hel
anted ads meetln
OE standanla

Yard&amp;Garage 5ate 4 m1 out
143
out
Pomeroy July
7 6 9 9 00to4 00 Car seat &amp;
stroller comb ro und table
wasner picture clothes more

y accept any adver

laament In vlolatlo
f the law

CLASSIFIED INDEX
....

.. . .. .. .., .... ...... 725
.................. ..... • •.•

030

Antiques ....... ..... . .... .. .. ..
... .. .. 530
Apol1ments lor Rent . .. ... .. .......... 440
Auction and Flea Market......,..................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories . •••
760
Auto Repair
.. .... .... .. ....... 770
Autos lor Sale ... .................. ....
. 710
Boats &amp; Motorl lor Sola .. ..... . ... • 750
Building Supplies .. . ... . .•. .... ...550
Buslnesa and Buildings ........... ... .. . 340
Business Oppol1unlty ... .. ... ... ... 210
Business Training .... .. ........................ 140
. 790
Campers &amp; Motor Homes.. •.
Camping Equipment .. ..... . .... . • .. .. 780
Cards o!Thanks ............................... 010
Child/Elderly Care .. :.............. ... .. ... . !90
Etectrlcai/Rolrlgeratlon . ..
840
Equipment lor Rent. .............................. 480
Excavating............................ .. . .... ... 830
Farm Equipment ...
... •. .... .. . . 810
Farm• lor Rent ...
..
.... .. .............430
Farms lor Sale. ........ ....... ...... .. . ..... . .. 330

.. . .... ••

.. ... ..

.•.. .. 490

For Sale.. .... .. . ............................ 585
For Site or Trade .... , ••• • .••. ••••
•• •••• 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetable&amp; .... .. ..... ......... 580
Furnished Rooms .......................... ....... . 450
Ganeral Hauling.........
.. .... .. .... ..... .. 850
Giveaway ...
.... .. . . .... .
.040
Happy Ada... ... ..... ..... ...... ....... ... . ..050
Hay &amp; Grain. ..... ... . .. .. . .. . .. ..640
~Mtp Wanted .. .
... .... •. .................. 110

Home Improvements................ ...

.. ...810

Homes lor Sale ...
... .... .310
............ 510
Houoehold Goods
Houeea for Renl ....................... .•.• .•. . 410
In Memoriam . ..
. . .. .. 020
Insurance •••

.••

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

WAATED

To Do

• ..... ................... 130

Lawn I Garden Equlpmant ..... ... ... .. 660
Livettock.. .
... ... .... ...... . .630
Lo1t and Found . ••
•............................ 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ... .... ..... ... ... ..... •.. 350
Miocellanaoua .... • .. ..... . ......... !70
MIBcellaneoua Merchandise...... .. ... . .. 540
Mobile Home Repair ... ... ..
.. .. 860
Mobile Homes lor Rent ............................. 420
Mobile Homealor Sale......... ..... ... . 320
Money to Loan ..... .. .... ....
.. .. .. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheetere. ...... . ........... .740
Mualcallnatrumenta ,. ..... ... . •.. ••• . .. 570
Pereonats ... . .
... .. . ..
........... 005
Poll lor Sate ... ..... ................... ... .. 660
Plumbing 1 Healing............ ...
.. ... 820
!'roluetonal Services ... .... . ............ 230
Radio, TV I CB Repair............ .. .. .. • • .180
Real Estate Wanted . . . .... ..... . .... . ..... 360
Schoolslnotructlon .................................150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer.. ... ...... . .... ..... 650
. .. .... ...120
Slluationo Wanted ....
Space lor Ront ....... _, ... _. ___ ,..... . .. ... 480

Sporting 00011 ..... - .. """"'~...,...,.,,,, .•. ..•........ 111
SUV'I for 8ate .............................................no
Trucka lor Sale ................................... 7!5
Upholotery ............ .. :........... ... . . ... ..... 870
Vtns For Sale... • .... ... . ....................... 730
Wonted to Buy.................... .. ..... ... ... 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Suppllu .................. 620
Wonted To Do ... ..... .................... .. ..... t 80
Wanted to Rent.......... .... .. ....... .. ........ 470
Ytrd Sale· Galllpolll ..... .. ......................072
Yard SaJ•Pomoroy!Middle........... .. . ...... 074
Yard Sal•Pl. Pleount. .. . ..... .... . ......... 078

a week
pos1tlon Ohio
w1th 40
some
lies
of Southern
hr
overtime
neeOed
Compensatory 11me provld
ed '
Benefits-Health
Insurance Pa1d Holidays
Two weeks vacation after
one year, three weeks a~er
live years Startmg salary
$26 000 10 $28,000 Must
ha\19 College Degree In
Human Serv1ces or m1nor 1n
human serv1ces field w1t1'1 a
mtnor 1n admlmstrallon At
least two years expenence
wo~1ng w1th the public 1n a
serv1ce poSitiOn
Send
resume and three refer
ences to Search Comtmltee
P:O Box 454 Gallipolis
Oh10 45631

HOMI:S

~

llJR SALE

Jbr 2ba Sect1onal on6
We w111 do your ctean1ng
acre Roseberry Ad Pt
and errands lor you to
Save you Prec ous t1mel
Pleasant w/ washe1 dryer
dishwasher&amp;
refr gerator
Free est1mates
Reasonable pnces Quality $65 000 1304)675 6628
of Servtce IS EXCEPTION - - - - - - -4 ~;;j,ijQI 2 i ~ lJdtni og
Ai..1 Can M1cne1e a1 \ 7&lt;tu
)446 3881 Lt~ave MeG sage hOme 34286 New Crew
Ad Pomeroy lg pole build
1ng &amp; oul bwld1ng on 6 acres
Will care for elderly have w/pond (816)668 0758
tra1nmg will work days or
Brand new Never hved 1n
even ngs 304·675 6727
2br 2 batl'1 w/ whirlpool tubs
large
LA on 3 acres mil
W1ll do pressure wash1ng
work to your home No $80 000 740 446 7029

1. r

0

MontLE Hm1..:s
mRS•t [

6

"

r
~

t,lt ~

~
NEA, Inc

~;::::=::::::::;-;;:======~~======~
110
110
1
1
lind
-·llflp--W•ANrnD--_.1
L,-•llw'
-'
W
•ANllll---'
·
t..-•llflp-•W-ANrnD--,.1
--,
.,
1..

Part Time AN

Part-t1me dental asstslant
needed Experience helpful
but not reqwred
Bring
resume m person to
2922 Jackson Ave Po.nt
'M-as_o_n_C-ou-n-ty_E_M_S_ IS
Plea sant WV No phone
accsptmg sppiiCBfiOns for calls please!
FT and PT Medrcs EMT.s
and Dnv6f's for more mfor· - - - - - - - POST OFFICE NOW
matlon cal/615·6134
HIRING
Needed DediC ated HHA s
A.vg Pay $20/hr or
PCA s CNA s &amp; STNA s
S57K/yr Includes
Established
and
well
F.ederal Benellts OT
respected local home heal th
Placed by adSource not
agency
Located
m offered w/ USPS who hires
Galhpohs Oh1o has ava1l· _ _t:_:B::66::·.:40::3:_:
·2::5::B2:__
able fu llt1me and part lime
cases If you have a desire Regional Dump Drlvtra
R&amp;J Truckml) IS seeking
lo work as a respected qualified COL A dr~vers to
call
TEAM
member
operate semi-dumps for
(740)446 3808 for 1mmed1 regional routes We fea1ure
ate 1nterv1ew
excellent home Ume health
-------Oh 1o Valley Home Heanh and dental 1nsurance
Inc hiring LPN for an ofl1ce 401(k) vacation bonus pay
and safety awards Qualified
scheduling/aide superv1sor
apphcaniS musl be over 23
pos111on Apply at 1480
yrs have a mlmmum of 1
Jackson P1ke GallipoliS or
phone
441·1393 year Qf commerlcat driVJng
experience &amp; clean MVA
compet1t1ve Wages and Prior experience wnh semi
benefits tnclud1ng 1'1eal11'1
dumps and roll oHs 16 he~·
1nsurance
ful Contact Kent at 800·
- - - - - - - - 462 9365 or flU out appt 1ca
Oh10 Valley Home Heanh
Inc h~ring STNA CNA liOn at Www rjtrucklng com
Home He'alth Aides &amp; EOE

·•

AesCare Home Care will be
accepttng app!JcaiiOns for
Support Associates CNA
and STNA II you would lilse
to take advantage of U'IIS
opportunity you may apply
at 8204 Carla Dnve
Galhpol 1s Ohio Monday
through Friday Bam to 4pm
You may also fax a resume

Io

rharrlsonOrescare com All
E(lualOpportunllyEmpfoyer
FIMION

AT 35 Adu~ V1deo &amp; Book
Store need Midnight Clerk
full or part t1me 304 937
4900

Home Heelth Cere South
East Ohio 18 currently hiring
Home Health Aides tor
Meigs Co Must be certified
or currently have one year's
experience Toll Free call+
P!T security Officers most
be able to pass drug test &amp;
Needed 1mmedlately 3 background cheek Sand
house cleantfl sam-12pm resume to www lnfoweare
or 1pm-Spm $20 per shift gonnagetem com or tax to
Dobbie 446 2451
74G-441·9645

r

740 377

9095, Quality Care NurSing

OPPOK!'tNIT\

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommends
that yOtt do bus1ness with
people you know and
NOT to send money
through the mall until you
have 1nvesllgated the
oflenng

1'111'11!"'"_ _ _ _ __, n'll!"'"_ _ _ _ __,

Lunch room Vending allen·
dant, part t1me, M·F aam •
1pm product delivered to
you Pa1d tra1nmg holidays
vacat1on, 401k Pre-employment drug testing EOE Call
304 485 5421

llUS!IilliS

•NOTJC'F•

"'l1'f

&lt;C&gt;2008

to

Brand New Restaurant for
Lease AT 2 good locatron
Owner has other 1nterests
call 304 549·569e Anytime

1-7

www.com•c• com

2 2006 1 6 x 80Ci ay1 on3h:~
2 bath
2000
16''
Fleetwood 2 bed 2 t !I
1999 Fortune 3 bed 2 L•uH
Dayt1me 368 0000 e.,.c 1 n
24592 13
- - - -- - 2006 A edmar~ 14r.65 r 1
new cond1110n on re1 11ed k
m Apple Grove WV 104
576 2000
2008 3 bedroom 2 bath se t:
t1onal hOme $279 per mont!
740 385 7671

Brand new 3bed 2ba1h on
house to b1g I small Call for . . - - - - - - - - . ... · hall acre 1n Pt Pleasnnt
OWNER FINANCE AVA!!
morelnlo 740 794 1340
ABLE 740 446 3570
II\\\( I \I

I)

Executl\/9 Director pas t1on
for
Dome sltc Violence
Agency servmg three countieS of Southern Ohio 40 hr
week pOSitiOn Wllh sorRe
weekend overtime needed
Compensatory 11me provld
ed
Benef1ts Health
Insurance Pa1d Holidays
Two weeks vacation after
one year three weeks after
liVe years Starling salary
$26 000 to $28 000 Must
have college degree m
Human Serv1ces or m1nor m
Human Serv1ces t eld w1t1'1 a
mmor 1n AdmiRIStraiiOn At
least two years expe r~ence
work1ng w1th the public In a
serv1ce pdslllon
Send
resume and three refer
ences to Seardl Comm1nae
PO Box 454 Galllpolts
OhiO 45631
Personal Care Aides Full
Part T1me &amp; Per Diem poSI
FEOERAL
tl ons available Apply at
1480
Jackson
P1ke
POSTAL JOBS .
$17 89·$28 27/hr now hlr GallipoliS or phone 441 ·
1ng For appliCation and free 1393 Competi tive Wages
governement lob Info call m1leage re1mbursement and
Amencan Assoc of Labor 1 other bene!lts mcludmg
913 599 8226 24/hrt emp health Insurance

866-368·11 00

~10

kltncarlyle@Jcomcast net

I~·--llflp-·W·ANrnD--

YARDSALE

_s,:.

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publlthlng reHI"'" the right to edit reject Of Clloctl tny td It any time Errort muat be reported on the fir st day ol publication nnd
Trlbune-Sentlnti-Regltter will be retpontlbla tor no mort thin the cot! or the tpace occupied by the error t nd only thellrstmter11on We ahall nol be liable
any ION or t ll pen•lhet retuHt from the publlc.llon or Oft!l .. ton ollrl advertl•menl Correction wtll De made In the l int a~allable ed1Uon • 801. number acl s
lfl alwayt conflclfl1tlal • Currtnl rete Cllrd appllet • "II r.. l ..tete advertltemente are eubJecl to the Federal Fa1r Houalng Act of 1968 • This newapap "t
accept• only htlp wanted ada mMtlng EOE tlandarda Wt will not knowingly accept any ldlllr1ialng In violtUon ot the ltw Will not be retpontlb le lor any
errort in an .ct t1"-n over the phone

Junk cars w1th or w1tt1out
1111es 740 3S8 0884

ePo=v~LEj

)We will not knowing

Lease.

Thureday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid'

rolln

Missing JOhn Deere Gator, Executive Director posnlon
$500
for return 740 949 for
DomestiC VIolence
2298 or 740·992-2423
Agency serv1ng three coun·

For

Sunday Dl•play: 1 : 00

An Excellent way to earn
Found on Add1son Pk small money The New Avon
(M ) Beagle(?) brown/white Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
weanng blk collar Very -----~-­
tnendly w/kkts 367·0537
AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
Sell
Sh1rley Spears 304·
Lost brown/wh1te Rat Terrier 675 1429
Horse Cave Rd area ch1ld s --~----­
pet please call 740·949· BENNIGAN S now hlrmg
1363 740 4161749Thanks grill cooks 304-675 5227

vallable edlllon

•

Publlcat:lon

5~~=~:~ In-Column: 1.00 p.m.
_F
For Sundays Paper

11 10

t rru:

ent Correction&amp; wll
made In the fir

Announcement

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Bualne•• Day• Prior To

Rescued K1ttens need lov1ng
l \ 11 '1 11,\ ll'\1
homes 8 weeks old liner
-.. 1 U\ I! I ...,
trained Delivery available
,:~::;---..;;;;;~;...
740 416 4927

he first Insertion
hall not be liable to
ny loea or e•.-n
hat reaulls from lh
ubllcatlon or omls
lon of an advel11t

4x4's For Sale

Dally In- Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday tor Jn•ertlon

hove borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
Borders$3.00/perod
f!
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

Absolute Top Dollar
sll
ver/gold
co1ns
any
Fre e halt wolf female 5 10K/14K/1BK gold J&amp;welry
months old 740 418 1877
denial gold pre 1935 US
currency proollmml sets
G1veaway 5 112 year old F diamonds MTS co 1n Shop,
Chihuahua dog Not good 1~1 ~nrl Avei'IU" Get•J::onll"
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*POLICIES*

..•;•
..•

Venus Wtlltams of the US and her stster-Serena dunng the
women's doubles final against Ltsa Raymond of the US and
Australta' s Samantha Stosur on the Centre Court at
Wtmbledon Saturday
·
"Serena also outaced her SISSISter
"It's defmrtely not any ter 9-4, but Venus won the
easter," she satd "I JUSt look btg pomts when she needed
at her as another opponent them
at the end of the day "
Both ststers struggled m
The ststers were set to the wmd, wtth Venus
return later to Centre Cout t repeatedly stoppmg to catch
to play for the women's her servtce toss and rallies
doubles tttle, JOmmg fo~ces often dtsrupted by sudden •
to face Ltsa Raymond of the gusts
"It was so not easy,"
U S and Samantha Stosur
Serena satd "Every time I
of Australia m the hnal
"Serena d ese rve~ to wm tned to htt a shot, the wmd
somethmg, ~o I' II try even would blow 11 "
harder for that," satd Venus,
The thtrd game of the secwho collected a wmner 's ond set was practically a
check of $1.49 m!lhon
match m ttself - 14 mmVenus, appeanng 1n her utes and 21 points Serena
seventh Wtmbledon fmal. broke on her seventh break
made up for her two losses potnt, hmmg an easy volley
to Seren,t m the 2002 and mto the open court after
2003 title matches and Venus shpped and fell backstopped her stster !rom wm- ward go mg tor a backhand
That gave Serena a 2- 1
nmg her nmth Grand Slam
Many all- Wtlltams fin als lead, but she failed to grab
have been awkward affatrs her chance and Venus broke
that didn't hve up to expec- nght back They remamed
tations, w1th the ststers hav- on serve, engagmg In a 23mg trouble playtng thetr stroke rally tn the mnth
best But thts final feat ured game, until Venus broke
long, corner-to-corner ral- again to end the match.
Ites. boommg serves and
Serena came out roaring,
wtnmng shots tlashmg all nppmg wmners to break tn
over the court
the lirst game and go up 3In the opemng game of 1, w1th two aces and rwo
the second set, Venus serve wmners m the tourth
smacked a serv1ce wmner game She earned a break
on game p01 nt at 129 mph point and a c hance to go up
breakmg her own 4-1, but Venus saved tt w1th
Wtmbledon record of 127 a stretch fmehand crossmph and matchmg her court volley
women's tour record set at
Two games later, the
last year's U.S. Open.
momentum changed when
"I thmk the level ol play Ve nus broke for 4-4, captwas really htgh," Venus tahzmg on her second break
satd. "I think a lot of the point with a backhand serve
times one of us was over- return
powenng the other In
Serena fashioned two
between us overpowenng break pomts m the next
each other, we had some game, but Venus ran down a
really competitive rallies drop volley and made a
and mtense pomts."
fore hand pass on the run to
Serena satd she lost her save the ftrst and erased the
rhythm after a fast start antl second wtth a deep fore·
hand re turn.
made too many errors.
"I don 'I thmk I played
The game ended when
well," she said. "I don't Serena, thmking her shot
think I'm satl~llcd with the was going out, shouted
way I played today. For me ''No" 6efore the bull landed
there's nothing to be salts· The choir umpire called a
fied about. She lifted her let. meaning the point •
game and I should have lift· should be replayed, but
ed mine, but tnsteud I think Serena conceded the point
mtne went down"
and the ga me.
Venus broke tn the next
Serena took more chances
and finished wi th 32 win- game to take the set, with
ners and II unforced errors, Serena swiping her racket in
Venus had 27 wrnners and disgust after netttng a back13 unforced mistakes hand return.

ter

CLASSIFIED

retecl ar cancel any
ad at any time

from PageH1

une - Sentinel - l\e

~rt

bael a1tfr trymg to ~et a run
on the last restart,' Gordon
satd. ''They got the Jump on
me I tned to block htm.
M,,ybe I came across
(Edwards' ) nose Hard to
say It's unfortunate We had
such a strong run "
But Gordon was more
upset he allowed Busch to
pass htm wt th four to go
"I should have stayed on
the bottom My car was so
good on the bottom.'' he
sard. "I'm probably more
mad at myself than anythmg
else"
Tony Srewan, wmner of
thts race m 2005 and 2006.
Jell til before the start and
had J J, Yeley on standby 111
case he couldn't make rt to
the limsh Stewart drove hts
car as htgh as th1rd. but gave
up the seat nght before the
halfway pomt and Yeley
took the car to a 20th-place
limsh
So there v.as no redcmp-·
tton fot Stewart. who Josr
the
season-opemng
Daytona 500 when winner
Ryan Newman passed htm
half,, l.tp from the hmsh.
Instead. It went to Busc h,
who ac;tuallv dommated the
500 by leadmg a race-htgh
86 l.1ps before he was shuffled back to fourth m the
closmg laps
But he recovered to earn
hts hrst re~tncto r-plate VIC·
tory two months later when
he won at Talladega m
Apnl It gave him confidence to return to Daytona
and gtve Toyota and Joe
Gtbbs Racmg the victory
they were demed tn the
500

Williams

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�-·

'

·~hrna will hold 'Olympics ort its own terms _,Daytona
You know the OlympKs
are ne.tr when the usu.il gang
ot JUiced-up Bulgandn
wetghth her- gets tossed
: !rom the games hctore even
; learmng how to s.ty tn
Chtnese, "These needles are
for therapeuuc use only
The tr.tdtuondl oustmg ol
Bulganans got under w.ty
edrly tor tlus Olympto alter
II ot them tested postttve lot
sterotds ids! month. ptompt·
111g the cquntry's we tghtlllt·
111g fedet.tiJon to thtow m the
tov.e l .1nd finally .tdmlt the
jig was up
The host countt} was udylllg up Its r.mks, too h,mnmg
a top swumner .md wrest ler
who were .t lso JUtced Just to
show they mednt bu smess.
the Chmese athletes were
banned tor lite
The only good news fot
Luo Meng and uuyttng
Kunpeng w,ts that tt dtdn 't
happen dunn g the games
It's bdd enough that those
pesky toretgners keep trytng
to embarrass Chma. but
Chmese c~ thl etes mtgh t get a
one-way tnp to some !ClllOte
outpost testing posl!tve whe n
the wotld athl ettc spot light IS
shmm g on thetr country
It wtll shme bnghtl y. too,
begmmng a mon th trom now
when thousdnds ot .1thletes,
coaches dnd h.m gers-on arc

JOmed by even more thousdnds ot JO Urnalists, cdmeramcn and h,mgers-on fat 16
days ot lun. games and total
excess that onlv the Summer
Olymptcs Cdn provtde
The othc•&lt;~ l s1.1rt wtll be on
the etghth d.ty ol rhe etghth
month tn the etghth year ot
the century, " dare ptcked by
the Chmese because tt ts
lucky Just a lew munths &lt;~go
!here dtdn't ~eem anythmg
lucky abo ut these g.unes, but
Chtna see ms to h,1ve
regrouped m the w.1ke ot "
devastating e,u thquake that
took people's mmds otf the
country's ttoubltng tssues
elsewhetc
Protests that threatened to

All-Star
from PageBl
Pedt Oid be&lt;1t out Texas'
fan Kmsler by ,1bout 34,000
votes 111 the closest race
whtle H.tnley Ranurez held
otf M1lwaukee's J J Hardy
and Houston's Mt guel
Tetad.t at shortstop Tetada
was taken stx months .1tter
ht s name showed up m the
Mttchell Report on drugs m
basebal l
All Internet vote v.tll be
held thts week to select the
fmdl pl&lt;~yet on edch tedm
The AL candtdates lot the
i&lt;~ s t
spot
outttelders

Nadal
from Page 81
Federer, who hit 25 aces
"He's detillltely unproved
hts game"
Borg
and
Santana
watched t rom the trotlt row
of thi; Royal Box at Centre
Court, whtch next yeat wtll
have a rerr.tct.tble roof
Perhaps Mother Nature
wanted one lasr chance to
leave her mark , delay mg
Sunday's st&lt;lrt by 35 mmutes wtth ram Showers
agam -caused a delay of I
hour, 2 1 mmutes late m the
thtrd set, then another of 30
mmutes at 2-2, de uce 111 the
lttth set
When act ton resumed at
8 23 p m , 1t .tlrc,tdy was
Iough to see, and the players
traded serv tce holds unttl 77 That's where Nad.tl fmally broke through, as
Federer's fore hand reall y
began to break down A
forehand mto the net gave
Nadal ht s fourth break
point, and a forehqnd long
conceded the game - the
first break of serve by erther
· man since the second set
Nadal still had to serve
out the match. though, and
he still hud to a void the sort
of nerves Federer nouced
when hi s opponent led ~ -2
In the fourth-set tiebreaker.
"I played terrible there,"
sard Nudul, who double·
faulted to 5-3.
Down 6-~, Federer erased
a match pornt with u 127
mph servrce winner. Down
8-7 - again. one point
from losing - Federer hit a
backhand passrng wmner
A forehand wmner put
Federer ahead 9-8, and
,

'

also a good ch,mce the gymIM&gt;ttts results w1ll perplex
mtlltuns
th.,ugh
th.tt's
,dmost dS much ,m Olymptc'
nte .ts the ~xpulston ot
Bulgan.m wetght ld ters
Wh.n vou v.on't 'ee I'
much Jn'uddlmg up these
games thdt the Ch tncse c.tn
control And . ltke most t ot&lt;~l­
uanan gmenunents. they ve
overwhelm the Olymptc had a Jo' ol cxpe1 tence .tt
torch pMade diSappeared &lt;.:ontrolhng thing' w1 th tn
,tbout the same tt l11e the theu own botdcrs
Chma says 1t h.ts mohttorch entered Chm.t. wh tle
llzed
,, I00 000-srron g .11111 even the more pohttLally
terronsm
lotc e to prorec:t tile
acme athletes hdve mo-tly
Olymp
tcs,
.1nd org,umed
kept qUiet about human
rt ghts t&gt;Sues m 1ecent ,mother 440 000 secunty
months Me,mwhtle the guards and \Olltnlcer' to
bloody cr.1ckdown 111 Tther ts keep &lt;~n eye on thmgs. Pollee
yeste rday's news, ,md Darfur have begun p.tttolltng the
actt\lsts are hav tng the same ,urpon wnh md~.:hme gLm".
trouble they always have m and surL.u.:e-to-a1r mis..,tk..,
explamt ng where the regton have been tn st,dled ne.tt
ts and why Chtfl.l IS to blame Olymp1c &gt;enues
E'eryonc who comes 111tn
tor Its current v.oes
the
country wdl be mont Prestdent Bush gave hts
tot
ed.
&lt;1nd dtsstdents and
•seal of approval to the g.tmes
the other d.1y by sayrng he underground 1eltgtou s to I·
would be ,,tte ndmg opemng lowers 111 otl1e1 p.trts of
ceremony, and French Chttla h.tvc ct thcr been J•ulcd
Prest dent Ntco las Sarkozy or b,mncd tlom le,tV IIH! the!!
has repone!lly changed IllS Cllles dun ng the ganle, to
mmd and wtll also be on preven t them fro m "tdgmg
h,md The Dala1 Lama hun- protests 111 Belj lllg
True beltc ve ts 111 OlymptL
selt say&gt; he supports the
tde,lis
wtll .ugue tl1.11 rhe
games. though that m.1y be
games
will help c h.mgc
because the Chmese have
threatened to cut ott talks th111gs ltke th.tt hy opcnmg
w1 th representatives ot the up Ch111a to democr.tcy Tt\e
ex il ed Ttbetan spmtual more CJ iliC.tl wtl l cou ntct
le.tder tf he docs anythmg to th.tt nothtng wtll ch,mge ,mu
th.tt Betjlllg should newt
dt shonor the1r Olymptcs
Chma IS ready to stage the have gotten the g.,mes 111 the
most elaborate games, and tt ltrsl place. Wllllllllg them
has left ltttle to chance m a onl y because the IOC w.ts
commg out party worthy ot a wov.ed by Cht tl.l s pot entt.ll
superpower The opentng tot buymg &lt;til th111gs Ad tdas
ceremony wtll surely dazzle, and Ntke
Wh,never the c.ISe. thcv ' re
buses wtll run on ttme and
there ts abo ut as much &lt;~I most here and the wrnld
chance of Sv.eden winntng Wtll :-.ou11 b~.; llt:LtteJ Lu lll1
the medal count as there ts of Olymptcs L&lt;mtested tnt the
a televtston camera catchmg most pat t 111 be.lllt tlull y
,my protester wt thm a mt le destgned tactltttes that wlll
look s pectc~c ul,u on h1gh detot Ttananmen Square
lllttt
on teJe, tston And tf
Yes, the atr wtll be polluted and sailors may have to perfornbnces so l.tr tht s yea•'
deal wtth huge clumps of are any mdtc,ltton the comalgae 111 the water There's petition wlll be outstandmg

Tim

Dahlberg

Jermatne Dye and Jose
Gut lien, ftrst baseman Jason
G1ambi, second basem an
Bnan Roberts and thtrd
baseman Evan Longoria
The NL candidates outftelders Pat Burrell, Corey
Hart, Carlos Lee and Aaron
Roward and thtrd base man
Dav1d Wnght
Among the posttton players left• off the team Cubs
ft rst basem,m Derrek Lee,
hmmg 302 with 15 homers
and 52 RBis go mg tnto
Sunday, Colorado thrrd
baseman Garrett Atkms
( 311. i2 HRs, 50 RBi s),
Detrmt outfteldet Magglto
Ordonez ( 307. 12. 50) and
Boston thtrd baseman Mtke
Lowelll,302. 13, 54)

Boston's
Datsuke
Matsuzaka (9-1 3 12 ERA)
and St Louts' Kyle Lohse
( 10-2, 3.6 1) were among the
p1tchers left out
' Once agdm

the lc,tg ue

that v. ms the All -Stat g,nlle
wtll get home !teld .!dhlll
tage 111 the World Set te'
The AL hds not lost .tn
All-Star game smce 1991i at
Veterans Stad1um Stnce
then. the AL ha s won I0 .tnd
ued one
" It's not so muLh gettmg
everyone 111 the game .mymore Thts ts not a ce lebt tty
golf lOLII namen t .my more
where everybody ge ts
together, shakes h,mcls c~nd
has Jots ol g•ggles · Hu1 dlc
s~u d

when Nadal mtssed a back- fourth matc h pomt
Federer made cle.1r .tltcrhand return, the match was
eve n Federer JUmped and w,trd he was not pleased
screamed, and the crowd of that play conttn ued de, plte
the low V" tbtf tty ell the
about 15 ,000 JOmed htm
No man smce 1927 had end
"It 's rough on me now,
come back to wm a
obviOusly,
you • know, to
Wtmbledon !mal after loslose
the
b1ggest
tnlllnament
tng the ftrst two sets, and
111
the
world
ove
r m.rybe a
' none had overcome a match
b1t
ol
ltght."
he
sa
td
pomt to setze vtctory smce
S.11d N.td.!l "In the l.tst
1948 If anyone could, It
game,
I dtdn't see nothfigured to be Federer, espetng."
c tally on thts parttcular
Both players Itguted that
lawn
had
Federer -managed ro
It was thetr stxth Grand
Slam !mal, already more bre.tk back tn 8-8, play
wo uld have be.en suspendthan between any other patr . ed
until Monday beco~use ol
of men 111 the 40-ycar Open darkness
era, and there could be sev" It wou ld h.!Ve been brueral to follow. Federer ts tal," Fcdc tcr satd
only 26, after all, and Nadal
It dtdn ' t happen
ts 22 Federer has Jed the
Nadal came thtough, .md
rankmgs for a record 23 1 when he arose fro m h1 s celcorbecuttve weeks, and ebratory llop on the
Nadal has been second for a ground, he had srass slams
record 154
on the b.tck ol ht s while
Nadal defeated Federer at sht rt He shook hands wtth
the French Open en route to Federer, then chmbcd mto
each of hts champtonshrps the player:) ' guest box to
tpere, m the 2005 semifi- hug ht s uncle/coach Ton t
nals and the past three and others Wtth tears m
ftna ls. tncludmg a 6-1, 6-3, Nadal's eyes. he grabbed a
6-0 rout last month that was red-and-yellow Spanish
Federer 's most lopsided flag and walked across the
loss in 180 career Grand top of the scoreboard and
Slam matches.
the roof of the TV
But the Swiss star kef?! anno uncers" booth to reach
reminding everyone tht s the Royal Bo~ for handweek that he has had the shakes with Spain's Pnnce
upper hand on surfuces Felipe und Princess Letizia.
other than clay.
As this scene unfolded,
Not this time.
Federer sat alone in hrs
Nadul lost to Federer tn changeover cl\urr, protcctetl
the 2006 Wimbledon final from the night's clirll by his
in four sets, and the 2007 custom-made cream curdi·
final In five. Although the gan wnh the goltl "RF" on
Iutter was certainly sus- fhe chest.
penseful, it featured neither
So many serves, so many
the drama nor the all- strokes, so much grit - ull
around
excellence of for nuught.
Sunday's encounter, which
"I am very happy tor
ended at 9.15 p.m, when me," Nadal satd, "but sorry
Federer pushed a forehand tor htm . because he
into the net on Nadal's deserved thts tttle, too."

'

from Page 81
and was d tsappumted not to
h.t&gt;e LlllC J.tst l.tp to lim~h hts
1.~ce wuh Busch
'M.tn I hate to lose the
thmg ltke that. · Edwards
s,ud · I wrsh we could have
t,Ked .!ltttle longer"
Matt Kcnseth, Edwards '
te.unm.tte c~r Roush Fenway
Rl!t.:lll~ wds th1rd He was
tollll\ved h)', Kurt Bu sc h,
Runsh dnver Davtd Ragan
.llld Rohby Gordon Kasey
K.tllllc. D.1lc Earnhardt Jr,
Clint Bo"yet and Mark
Mc~Jtm tuunded out the top
10
It seemed tot a bit that Jeff
Gotdon wds headed to hts
ltrst \IC tory ot the season .ts
he Jed 46 l.tps i&lt;~te and was
h,mcltly hold1ng off Busch as
the r.ILC wound down But
wnh lour l.tps t\) go. Busch
pullccl llhllk L&gt;l Gordon and
cJ,umeJ the le.td mere seconJ, he!OJc ,, multrcar accident hrou~ hr out ,, caution
It ser up' ,m oventme spnnt
to the lmtsh and Busl·h was
slow on the test&lt;~rt It st.1cked
the trail tc up bchmd him and
EJw,u ds r.111 11110 the bdck ot
Got don. sendmg hun spmlllng through the grttss
£dw,uds d.u teJ to the outstde to move ,,round the
,ILl to n .md w1th a push tram
Kcn seth. pu lled .tlon~;;stde
Busch to set up a thnlhng
d1c~g r,K·e But they dtdn't get
" ch,mce to race to the
checketcd Jl.1g because of
cont.1ct between Travis

Monday, July 7, 2008

.Monday, Ju1y 7, 2008

www .mydailysenti nel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

II/cr.i 1/J:J
2008 Sprint Cup Standings

After O.ytona
Name
1 Kyle Busch
2 Dale Earnhardt Jr
3 Jeff Burton
4 Carl Edwards
5 J1mm1e Johnson
6 Jeff Gordon
7 Denny Hamlin
a Kasey Kahne
9 Man Kenseth
10 Clint Bowyer
11 Greg B1ffle
12 Tony Stewart

Wms
6
1
1
3
1
0
1
2
o
1
0
0

Pts
2686
182
202
249
367
·437
446
509
520
·527
533
·541

Kvaptl and Sam Homtsh Jr
that tnggered a multtc.1r
acctdent that froze the tield
"I thmk tt's ours," spotter
Jeff Dtckerson rad toed to
Busch. "We were out front
Is It ours 0 "
"I don't know," Addmgton
replted "They are lookmg at
It r don't know "
Busch's team franttca lly
watched the sconng tower,
then Jllmped over the pH
road wall 1n ce lcbrat10n
when Busch s No 18· was
declared the wmne r
Busch celebrated with hts
customary sarcasttc bow to
the crowd But wtth e'ery
vtctory. the .fans who 'have
loved to hate htm are slowly
warmmg up to NASCAR 's
newest .star He wa~ cheered
thts ttme, JUSt hke he was
two weeks ago after wmnmg
on the road course 111
Sonoma.
Gordon, who seemed
poisea to end hts 22-race
wmless streak, wound up
30th and was disappomted
wtth the way the final restart
played out
"Everybody was laymg

embta(cd .tt the net. and
Venus kept het celebrattons
111 cheL k as she tWilled and
w.tved to the Centre Court
CiOWd
Venus .1ccepted the wmneJ\ trophy - a sterhn g
sdver s,1Jver aptly named
the Venus Rosewater d1sh
- !rom the Duke of Kent
"It's so rew&lt;trdmg to perform hetc." Venus satd
'Every ttme I come back I
know I have the chance to
play well and make htstory.
My Itt st JOb ts big stster and
I tc~k e th&lt;~l ve1y senou sly "
Watchtng ftom the players box w.ts the ststers·
mother, Ot.tcene Thetr
ldther R1 chard. had tlown
b.tck to the Untted States
hcc.ruse he c,m' t stand to
watch ht s daug hters play
cuch othct
Re!etntlg tu tl1e mtx ed
teeltngs ot het latmly about
whom to suppot t. Venus
s,ud, "It \ h.1rd tor all of
them hut I li ke to thmk they
w~uu me 10 \\ltn '"
The 26-yc.tr-old Serena
c~ccepted het runner-up trophy .rud p.ud tnbute to her
28-yc.lr-uld ' tster.
" I 111 so happy that at ]east
one of us wo~s .1ble to wm,"
SetetM s.ud ·She's played
gte.tt th ts yeo~ r We're JUSt
gl&lt;~d to be tn the fi nals
~'g ~un "
On Sund&lt;~y. ltve-trme
ch.tmpton Roger Federer
.rnd two-tunc runner-up
R.t!.tel No~dc~l wdl meet m
theu thud consecHllve fina l
.11 Wtmblcdon
Vcm" ''the lOth woman
- to wm live Wtmbledon singb titles. and on ly the third
111 the 40 yec~r htstory of the
Open et,t after Maruna
N,wr.nrlo\a ,md Stetti Graf.
·'Detm nely wmmng thts
tounwnent so many times
del tnttely puts you m the
stratosphetc." Ve nus satd.
She ts lour shy of
N,l\rdtl lova's record of 111ne
Singles champton~h tps
"Oh , my God, that would
be the ultimate," Venus
satd "That' s not easy. Her
c.treer also spanned hke
three decades, so I' m not
&gt;Ure tf I have that much
tune It I did, I thmk I
would defimtely dream of
that ·
Desptte her elatiOn, Venus
acknowledged that her oncourt ce lebrations were
toned down
"I'm tlefimtei,Y more in
tune with my stster's feelings hccuuse one of us has
to wm und one of us hlls to
Jnse." she sutd. "Of course.
the celebrutton rsn't us
c~cued h~cuusc my stster
JUSt lost You could never
dctntct !rom wmning a
Wrmblcdon, It doesn't
uctr.t~t trom that. But I'm
dettnttely thinking about
how my ,t;ter's feeh ng ."
A 'omber Serena found
nn solace m losmg to her

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Gallia
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r

Ohio Valley

Publishing reserves
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'

Errors

Must

I

•'

·'

B

epol1ed on the firs
ay or publication an
h!' Trlbm11e-Sen! 1nel
agister
wtll
•epon11ble lor n
ore than the coal o

i ........._.
I.__
WANIW

~

GIVEAWAY

M1 xed breed Puppy 304
593 6038

Box number ada ar
lwaya confidential
Current rate car
ppllea

r
newapape
ccepte only hel
anted ads meetln
OE standanla

Yard&amp;Garage 5ate 4 m1 out
143
out
Pomeroy July
7 6 9 9 00to4 00 Car seat &amp;
stroller comb ro und table
wasner picture clothes more

y accept any adver

laament In vlolatlo
f the law

CLASSIFIED INDEX
....

.. . .. .. .., .... ...... 725
.................. ..... • •.•

030

Antiques ....... ..... . .... .. .. ..
... .. .. 530
Apol1ments lor Rent . .. ... .. .......... 440
Auction and Flea Market......,..................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories . •••
760
Auto Repair
.. .... .... .. ....... 770
Autos lor Sale ... .................. ....
. 710
Boats &amp; Motorl lor Sola .. ..... . ... • 750
Building Supplies .. . ... . .•. .... ...550
Buslnesa and Buildings ........... ... .. . 340
Business Oppol1unlty ... .. ... ... ... 210
Business Training .... .. ........................ 140
. 790
Campers &amp; Motor Homes.. •.
Camping Equipment .. ..... . .... . • .. .. 780
Cards o!Thanks ............................... 010
Child/Elderly Care .. :.............. ... .. ... . !90
Etectrlcai/Rolrlgeratlon . ..
840
Equipment lor Rent. .............................. 480
Excavating............................ .. . .... ... 830
Farm Equipment ...
... •. .... .. . . 810
Farm• lor Rent ...
..
.... .. .............430
Farms lor Sale. ........ ....... ...... .. . ..... . .. 330

.. . .... ••

.. ... ..

.•.. .. 490

For Sale.. .... .. . ............................ 585
For Site or Trade .... , ••• • .••. ••••
•• •••• 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetable&amp; .... .. ..... ......... 580
Furnished Rooms .......................... ....... . 450
Ganeral Hauling.........
.. .... .. .... ..... .. 850
Giveaway ...
.... .. . . .... .
.040
Happy Ada... ... ..... ..... ...... ....... ... . ..050
Hay &amp; Grain. ..... ... . .. .. . .. . .. ..640
~Mtp Wanted .. .
... .... •. .................. 110

Home Improvements................ ...

.. ...810

Homes lor Sale ...
... .... .310
............ 510
Houoehold Goods
Houeea for Renl ....................... .•.• .•. . 410
In Memoriam . ..
. . .. .. 020
Insurance •••

.••

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

WAATED

To Do

• ..... ................... 130

Lawn I Garden Equlpmant ..... ... ... .. 660
Livettock.. .
... ... .... ...... . .630
Lo1t and Found . ••
•............................ 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ... .... ..... ... ... ..... •.. 350
Miocellanaoua .... • .. ..... . ......... !70
MIBcellaneoua Merchandise...... .. ... . .. 540
Mobile Home Repair ... ... ..
.. .. 860
Mobile Homes lor Rent ............................. 420
Mobile Homealor Sale......... ..... ... . 320
Money to Loan ..... .. .... ....
.. .. .. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheetere. ...... . ........... .740
Mualcallnatrumenta ,. ..... ... . •.. ••• . .. 570
Pereonats ... . .
... .. . ..
........... 005
Poll lor Sate ... ..... ................... ... .. 660
Plumbing 1 Healing............ ...
.. ... 820
!'roluetonal Services ... .... . ............ 230
Radio, TV I CB Repair............ .. .. .. • • .180
Real Estate Wanted . . . .... ..... . .... . ..... 360
Schoolslnotructlon .................................150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer.. ... ...... . .... ..... 650
. .. .... ...120
Slluationo Wanted ....
Space lor Ront ....... _, ... _. ___ ,..... . .. ... 480

Sporting 00011 ..... - .. """"'~...,...,.,,,, .•. ..•........ 111
SUV'I for 8ate .............................................no
Trucka lor Sale ................................... 7!5
Upholotery ............ .. :........... ... . . ... ..... 870
Vtns For Sale... • .... ... . ....................... 730
Wonted to Buy.................... .. ..... ... ... 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Suppllu .................. 620
Wonted To Do ... ..... .................... .. ..... t 80
Wanted to Rent.......... .... .. ....... .. ........ 470
Ytrd Sale· Galllpolll ..... .. ......................072
Yard SaJ•Pomoroy!Middle........... .. . ...... 074
Yard Sal•Pl. Pleount. .. . ..... .... . ......... 078

a week
pos1tlon Ohio
w1th 40
some
lies
of Southern
hr
overtime
neeOed
Compensatory 11me provld
ed '
Benefits-Health
Insurance Pa1d Holidays
Two weeks vacation after
one year, three weeks a~er
live years Startmg salary
$26 000 10 $28,000 Must
ha\19 College Degree In
Human Serv1ces or m1nor 1n
human serv1ces field w1t1'1 a
mtnor 1n admlmstrallon At
least two years expenence
wo~1ng w1th the public 1n a
serv1ce poSitiOn
Send
resume and three refer
ences to Search Comtmltee
P:O Box 454 Gallipolis
Oh10 45631

HOMI:S

~

llJR SALE

Jbr 2ba Sect1onal on6
We w111 do your ctean1ng
acre Roseberry Ad Pt
and errands lor you to
Save you Prec ous t1mel
Pleasant w/ washe1 dryer
dishwasher&amp;
refr gerator
Free est1mates
Reasonable pnces Quality $65 000 1304)675 6628
of Servtce IS EXCEPTION - - - - - - -4 ~;;j,ijQI 2 i ~ lJdtni og
Ai..1 Can M1cne1e a1 \ 7&lt;tu
)446 3881 Lt~ave MeG sage hOme 34286 New Crew
Ad Pomeroy lg pole build
1ng &amp; oul bwld1ng on 6 acres
Will care for elderly have w/pond (816)668 0758
tra1nmg will work days or
Brand new Never hved 1n
even ngs 304·675 6727
2br 2 batl'1 w/ whirlpool tubs
large
LA on 3 acres mil
W1ll do pressure wash1ng
work to your home No $80 000 740 446 7029

1. r

0

MontLE Hm1..:s
mRS•t [

6

"

r
~

t,lt ~

~
NEA, Inc

~;::::=::::::::;-;;:======~~======~
110
110
1
1
lind
-·llflp--W•ANrnD--_.1
L,-•llw'
-'
W
•ANllll---'
·
t..-•llflp-•W-ANrnD--,.1
--,
.,
1..

Part Time AN

Part-t1me dental asstslant
needed Experience helpful
but not reqwred
Bring
resume m person to
2922 Jackson Ave Po.nt
'M-as_o_n_C-ou-n-ty_E_M_S_ IS
Plea sant WV No phone
accsptmg sppiiCBfiOns for calls please!
FT and PT Medrcs EMT.s
and Dnv6f's for more mfor· - - - - - - - POST OFFICE NOW
matlon cal/615·6134
HIRING
Needed DediC ated HHA s
A.vg Pay $20/hr or
PCA s CNA s &amp; STNA s
S57K/yr Includes
Established
and
well
F.ederal Benellts OT
respected local home heal th
Placed by adSource not
agency
Located
m offered w/ USPS who hires
Galhpohs Oh1o has ava1l· _ _t:_:B::66::·.:40::3:_:
·2::5::B2:__
able fu llt1me and part lime
cases If you have a desire Regional Dump Drlvtra
R&amp;J Truckml) IS seeking
lo work as a respected qualified COL A dr~vers to
call
TEAM
member
operate semi-dumps for
(740)446 3808 for 1mmed1 regional routes We fea1ure
ate 1nterv1ew
excellent home Ume health
-------Oh 1o Valley Home Heanh and dental 1nsurance
Inc hiring LPN for an ofl1ce 401(k) vacation bonus pay
and safety awards Qualified
scheduling/aide superv1sor
apphcaniS musl be over 23
pos111on Apply at 1480
yrs have a mlmmum of 1
Jackson P1ke GallipoliS or
phone
441·1393 year Qf commerlcat driVJng
experience &amp; clean MVA
compet1t1ve Wages and Prior experience wnh semi
benefits tnclud1ng 1'1eal11'1
dumps and roll oHs 16 he~·
1nsurance
ful Contact Kent at 800·
- - - - - - - - 462 9365 or flU out appt 1ca
Oh10 Valley Home Heanh
Inc h~ring STNA CNA liOn at Www rjtrucklng com
Home He'alth Aides &amp; EOE

·•

AesCare Home Care will be
accepttng app!JcaiiOns for
Support Associates CNA
and STNA II you would lilse
to take advantage of U'IIS
opportunity you may apply
at 8204 Carla Dnve
Galhpol 1s Ohio Monday
through Friday Bam to 4pm
You may also fax a resume

Io

rharrlsonOrescare com All
E(lualOpportunllyEmpfoyer
FIMION

AT 35 Adu~ V1deo &amp; Book
Store need Midnight Clerk
full or part t1me 304 937
4900

Home Heelth Cere South
East Ohio 18 currently hiring
Home Health Aides tor
Meigs Co Must be certified
or currently have one year's
experience Toll Free call+
P!T security Officers most
be able to pass drug test &amp;
Needed 1mmedlately 3 background cheek Sand
house cleantfl sam-12pm resume to www lnfoweare
or 1pm-Spm $20 per shift gonnagetem com or tax to
Dobbie 446 2451
74G-441·9645

r

740 377

9095, Quality Care NurSing

OPPOK!'tNIT\

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommends
that yOtt do bus1ness with
people you know and
NOT to send money
through the mall until you
have 1nvesllgated the
oflenng

1'111'11!"'"_ _ _ _ __, n'll!"'"_ _ _ _ __,

Lunch room Vending allen·
dant, part t1me, M·F aam •
1pm product delivered to
you Pa1d tra1nmg holidays
vacat1on, 401k Pre-employment drug testing EOE Call
304 485 5421

llUS!IilliS

•NOTJC'F•

"'l1'f

&lt;C&gt;2008

to

Brand New Restaurant for
Lease AT 2 good locatron
Owner has other 1nterests
call 304 549·569e Anytime

1-7

www.com•c• com

2 2006 1 6 x 80Ci ay1 on3h:~
2 bath
2000
16''
Fleetwood 2 bed 2 t !I
1999 Fortune 3 bed 2 L•uH
Dayt1me 368 0000 e.,.c 1 n
24592 13
- - - -- - 2006 A edmar~ 14r.65 r 1
new cond1110n on re1 11ed k
m Apple Grove WV 104
576 2000
2008 3 bedroom 2 bath se t:
t1onal hOme $279 per mont!
740 385 7671

Brand new 3bed 2ba1h on
house to b1g I small Call for . . - - - - - - - - . ... · hall acre 1n Pt Pleasnnt
OWNER FINANCE AVA!!
morelnlo 740 794 1340
ABLE 740 446 3570
II\\\( I \I

I)

Executl\/9 Director pas t1on
for
Dome sltc Violence
Agency servmg three countieS of Southern Ohio 40 hr
week pOSitiOn Wllh sorRe
weekend overtime needed
Compensatory 11me provld
ed
Benef1ts Health
Insurance Pa1d Holidays
Two weeks vacation after
one year three weeks after
liVe years Starling salary
$26 000 to $28 000 Must
have college degree m
Human Serv1ces or m1nor m
Human Serv1ces t eld w1t1'1 a
mmor 1n AdmiRIStraiiOn At
least two years expe r~ence
work1ng w1th the public In a
serv1ce pdslllon
Send
resume and three refer
ences to Seardl Comm1nae
PO Box 454 Galllpolts
OhiO 45631
Personal Care Aides Full
Part T1me &amp; Per Diem poSI
FEOERAL
tl ons available Apply at
1480
Jackson
P1ke
POSTAL JOBS .
$17 89·$28 27/hr now hlr GallipoliS or phone 441 ·
1ng For appliCation and free 1393 Competi tive Wages
governement lob Info call m1leage re1mbursement and
Amencan Assoc of Labor 1 other bene!lts mcludmg
913 599 8226 24/hrt emp health Insurance

866-368·11 00

~10

kltncarlyle@Jcomcast net

I~·--llflp-·W·ANrnD--

YARDSALE

_s,:.

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publlthlng reHI"'" the right to edit reject Of Clloctl tny td It any time Errort muat be reported on the fir st day ol publication nnd
Trlbune-Sentlnti-Regltter will be retpontlbla tor no mort thin the cot! or the tpace occupied by the error t nd only thellrstmter11on We ahall nol be liable
any ION or t ll pen•lhet retuHt from the publlc.llon or Oft!l .. ton ollrl advertl•menl Correction wtll De made In the l int a~allable ed1Uon • 801. number acl s
lfl alwayt conflclfl1tlal • Currtnl rete Cllrd appllet • "II r.. l ..tete advertltemente are eubJecl to the Federal Fa1r Houalng Act of 1968 • This newapap "t
accept• only htlp wanted ada mMtlng EOE tlandarda Wt will not knowingly accept any ldlllr1ialng In violtUon ot the ltw Will not be retpontlb le lor any
errort in an .ct t1"-n over the phone

Junk cars w1th or w1tt1out
1111es 740 3S8 0884

ePo=v~LEj

)We will not knowing

Lease.

Thureday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid'

rolln

Missing JOhn Deere Gator, Executive Director posnlon
$500
for return 740 949 for
DomestiC VIolence
2298 or 740·992-2423
Agency serv1ng three coun·

For

Sunday Dl•play: 1 : 00

An Excellent way to earn
Found on Add1son Pk small money The New Avon
(M ) Beagle(?) brown/white Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
weanng blk collar Very -----~-­
tnendly w/kkts 367·0537
AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
Sell
Sh1rley Spears 304·
Lost brown/wh1te Rat Terrier 675 1429
Horse Cave Rd area ch1ld s --~----­
pet please call 740·949· BENNIGAN S now hlrmg
1363 740 4161749Thanks grill cooks 304-675 5227

vallable edlllon

•

Publlcat:lon

5~~=~:~ In-Column: 1.00 p.m.
_F
For Sundays Paper

11 10

t rru:

ent Correction&amp; wll
made In the fir

Announcement

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Bualne•• Day• Prior To

Rescued K1ttens need lov1ng
l \ 11 '1 11,\ ll'\1
homes 8 weeks old liner
-.. 1 U\ I! I ...,
trained Delivery available
,:~::;---..;;;;;~;...
740 416 4927

he first Insertion
hall not be liable to
ny loea or e•.-n
hat reaulls from lh
ubllcatlon or omls
lon of an advel11t

4x4's For Sale

Dally In- Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday tor Jn•ertlon

hove borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
Borders$3.00/perod
f!
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

Absolute Top Dollar
sll
ver/gold
co1ns
any
Fre e halt wolf female 5 10K/14K/1BK gold J&amp;welry
months old 740 418 1877
denial gold pre 1935 US
currency proollmml sets
G1veaway 5 112 year old F diamonds MTS co 1n Shop,
Chihuahua dog Not good 1~1 ~nrl Avei'IU" Get•J::onll"
w!tn c1'11ldren 740·992·7335 446 2842

he spaca occuple
y the error and on

'·'

Pisolay Ads

In Next Day's Paper

675-5234

~w. ~woo

Word Ads

1 Slart Your Ads With A Keyword e Include Complete
1 Desttlptlon e Inc:lude A Price e Avoid Abbreviation•
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

\\\Ill'\( I \II \1-.,

*POLICIES*

..•;•
..•

Venus Wtlltams of the US and her stster-Serena dunng the
women's doubles final against Ltsa Raymond of the US and
Australta' s Samantha Stosur on the Centre Court at
Wtmbledon Saturday
·
"Serena also outaced her SISSISter
"It's defmrtely not any ter 9-4, but Venus won the
easter," she satd "I JUSt look btg pomts when she needed
at her as another opponent them
at the end of the day "
Both ststers struggled m
The ststers were set to the wmd, wtth Venus
return later to Centre Cout t repeatedly stoppmg to catch
to play for the women's her servtce toss and rallies
doubles tttle, JOmmg fo~ces often dtsrupted by sudden •
to face Ltsa Raymond of the gusts
"It was so not easy,"
U S and Samantha Stosur
Serena satd "Every time I
of Australia m the hnal
"Serena d ese rve~ to wm tned to htt a shot, the wmd
somethmg, ~o I' II try even would blow 11 "
harder for that," satd Venus,
The thtrd game of the secwho collected a wmner 's ond set was practically a
check of $1.49 m!lhon
match m ttself - 14 mmVenus, appeanng 1n her utes and 21 points Serena
seventh Wtmbledon fmal. broke on her seventh break
made up for her two losses potnt, hmmg an easy volley
to Seren,t m the 2002 and mto the open court after
2003 title matches and Venus shpped and fell backstopped her stster !rom wm- ward go mg tor a backhand
That gave Serena a 2- 1
nmg her nmth Grand Slam
Many all- Wtlltams fin als lead, but she failed to grab
have been awkward affatrs her chance and Venus broke
that didn't hve up to expec- nght back They remamed
tations, w1th the ststers hav- on serve, engagmg In a 23mg trouble playtng thetr stroke rally tn the mnth
best But thts final feat ured game, until Venus broke
long, corner-to-corner ral- again to end the match.
Ites. boommg serves and
Serena came out roaring,
wtnmng shots tlashmg all nppmg wmners to break tn
over the court
the lirst game and go up 3In the opemng game of 1, w1th two aces and rwo
the second set, Venus serve wmners m the tourth
smacked a serv1ce wmner game She earned a break
on game p01 nt at 129 mph point and a c hance to go up
breakmg her own 4-1, but Venus saved tt w1th
Wtmbledon record of 127 a stretch fmehand crossmph and matchmg her court volley
women's tour record set at
Two games later, the
last year's U.S. Open.
momentum changed when
"I thmk the level ol play Ve nus broke for 4-4, captwas really htgh," Venus tahzmg on her second break
satd. "I think a lot of the point with a backhand serve
times one of us was over- return
powenng the other In
Serena fashioned two
between us overpowenng break pomts m the next
each other, we had some game, but Venus ran down a
really competitive rallies drop volley and made a
and mtense pomts."
fore hand pass on the run to
Serena satd she lost her save the ftrst and erased the
rhythm after a fast start antl second wtth a deep fore·
hand re turn.
made too many errors.
"I don 'I thmk I played
The game ended when
well," she said. "I don't Serena, thmking her shot
think I'm satl~llcd with the was going out, shouted
way I played today. For me ''No" 6efore the bull landed
there's nothing to be salts· The choir umpire called a
fied about. She lifted her let. meaning the point •
game and I should have lift· should be replayed, but
ed mine, but tnsteud I think Serena conceded the point
mtne went down"
and the ga me.
Venus broke tn the next
Serena took more chances
and finished wi th 32 win- game to take the set, with
ners and II unforced errors, Serena swiping her racket in
Venus had 27 wrnners and disgust after netttng a back13 unforced mistakes hand return.

ter

CLASSIFIED

retecl ar cancel any
ad at any time

from PageH1

une - Sentinel - l\e

~rt

bael a1tfr trymg to ~et a run
on the last restart,' Gordon
satd. ''They got the Jump on
me I tned to block htm.
M,,ybe I came across
(Edwards' ) nose Hard to
say It's unfortunate We had
such a strong run "
But Gordon was more
upset he allowed Busch to
pass htm wt th four to go
"I should have stayed on
the bottom My car was so
good on the bottom.'' he
sard. "I'm probably more
mad at myself than anythmg
else"
Tony Srewan, wmner of
thts race m 2005 and 2006.
Jell til before the start and
had J J, Yeley on standby 111
case he couldn't make rt to
the limsh Stewart drove hts
car as htgh as th1rd. but gave
up the seat nght before the
halfway pomt and Yeley
took the car to a 20th-place
limsh
So there v.as no redcmp-·
tton fot Stewart. who Josr
the
season-opemng
Daytona 500 when winner
Ryan Newman passed htm
half,, l.tp from the hmsh.
Instead. It went to Busc h,
who ac;tuallv dommated the
500 by leadmg a race-htgh
86 l.1ps before he was shuffled back to fourth m the
closmg laps
But he recovered to earn
hts hrst re~tncto r-plate VIC·
tory two months later when
he won at Talladega m
Apnl It gave him confidence to return to Daytona
and gtve Toyota and Joe
Gtbbs Racmg the victory
they were demed tn the
500

Williams

www.mydailysentinel.com

nc: IrifuCision
Take InbOund cuatomer
service calls lor
Fortune 100 Companies
Including

MONEY
roLoAN

Federal Funds fUSt relea o;;cd
tor land Owners No ciiJs
1ng cost and ZERO DOWN '
All real estate ad11ertlslng
In !hie newspaper 1s
Will
dO
LaP&lt;.
subject to the Federal
• lmpro\lements Ban kr u pK~
Fair Housing Act of 1968
&amp; Bad Cred1t OK 2 3 4 ar11
wht&lt;:h makes' II Illegal to
5 bedrooms ava1lable 74\"t
ad'tlertl.. any
446 3384
preiaran&lt;:e, Umllellon or
til.-r\m\l\8\lon HMO em
New 3 Seoroom homes ,rom
race , color religion sex
$2 14 36 per month Include ~
familial status o r nallonat many upgrades delivery ~
origin or any Jntantion to
set up (740)385 2434
make any such
preference limitation or
Lm~&amp;
dlacrlmlnatlon
ACREAGE
This newspaper will not

knowingly accept
adven11ements tor real
"tate which Is In
violation of the law Our

MOBILE HOME LOT FOf
RENT 1031 Georges Creek
Ad 441-1111
IU '\1\l"\

readers are hereby
lnformad that al!

dwellings advertised In
this newspaper ere
avallable on an equal
opportunity blsee

Borrow Smart Contact
11'18 OhiO DIVISIOn of
Flnanc1al
lnst1lut1on s
Olf1ce
9f Consumer
Affa1rs BEFORE you rel1
nance your home or
obta1n a loan BEWARE
of requests lor any large
advance payments of
fees or msurance Call the
Otf1ce
of
Consumer
Affa1rs toll free at 1 866
278 0003 to learn I the
mortgage
broker or
lender
properly
1s
licensed (Th1s 1s a publ1c
ser.,. ce announcement
from the Oh 1o valley
PubliShing Company)

r

Hm~SJN

FOR RINT

199/mol 3 bed 2 bath Ban~
Aepol (5% down 20 yea rb
8% APR) tor listings BOO
• Up to $8 50/hour
620•4946 ex R027
1 Prev1ous experience
-------1br
$375/month
3br
w1th customer service a
Me gs County Syracuse For $500/month
1n Syracuse
plus
Sale Of rent 3 bed 2 bath
depos1 t Hud App No Pet~
1 Paid Tra1n1ng Ons11e
laundry
room detached (304)675 5.332 weekend ~
1 H ea~h Benefits
garage near -pool $700/M 740 591 0265
plus depoSit NO PETS Jill
:..:_::._::.:_.::...::_ _ __
Catt to IChedule an
Please call740 949 2513
2 bedroom house for ren1
Interview
no pets (740)992 5858
l·S8S·IMC-PAYU
New Haven 3 br 2 balh 4
acres hot tu b gas log lire 2416 B Monroe Ave 3 bed
Ext. 2311
place great v ew (304)882 room lull SIZe basement N,
Vlsll us at
302 t $53 000
Pets $500 month $50 0
http:ll}obs iniO&lt;:Ielon com
deposit Senous tnqu1re
PRICE REDUCED $69 900 Only 304 675 5t55
2712 lincoln Ave 3br 1ba
2BR In town Gall polls Nl
..,,.:--~----, - ; ; : ; : : : : : : : : : : : w1th detached garag'e pets
$500/r en t + depos 1
mot1
vated
seller
304
675
1150
ScHool$
111
Call441
0110 or 591 5174
6757
304 610 131 3 or
INsntucnoN
PRoflX'itnN&gt;\L
SERVIC»:
Ass st 2 Sale 304 755 2980 2br 1 small pet ok
Gllllpolli career College
Very n1ce 4br 2 ba on $400/ren t
S400/dep
TURNED DOWN ON
{Careers Close To Home)
SOCIAL SECURITY !SSI? K1neon Dr n Gall1polls Owte Refe1ences reqwred 740
Call Todayl 740-446·4367
neighborhood on dead end '_.'.:6:.:3:.::8..:70:__ _ _ _ .
2 14 52
No Fee Unless We W!nl
1" 8
-&lt;&gt;4
1 888·582 33!45
street Large 2 car garage 4BR aYallable 1st weelo: 1
- ~ ipoll~~e~reercollegl!llldu
and f1n1shed basement 740
.a.cc 1edled M&amp;mbe• Accredtt 111g
July
Add1son P1ke
256•1109
eounc11 fOI' tndap.~ndenr eouege• -;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;; tii:i:-~~-'!'!'---, $650 rent $650 sec dep
and Schools m~e
~rid
HOI\-II':S
Mouru. Hfll'tU·)I NO PETS Call 446 3644 lo

Time Warner Cable

L.,-.:i·;i;O-IIio_.l

Foreclosure 4br 2ba on ly
$29 9001 Pnced to Selll For
L1st ngs 800 620 4946 e~
T462

t..-lllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-_.1

oo

1170 Mtsc!:ti.ANExm;
.

I
•

FOR SAU

1.~-------

2br 1ba Home on N Park
Pat Cremations Call 740· Dr new Carpet updated Kit
446·3745
&amp; Ba Full bsmt scr porch
WAN1ID
lg 2 112 car gar Must Sell
To Do
304 675 6395 leave mes
sage

I'"

Looking ror part t1ma work •
2nd Iob• mill l.ry• coo Sl rue
tlon security food hen·
dhng/cookmg landscaping
pnor expenenoe and have
worked cons1stently for the
past 12 years Injury free In
marH1me Industry 304675
2017

·--lii'ORiiiiSiii''liiLiiii-_.J ~m.:o.:r•_:10_:10::__ _ __
16X80 3 Bedroom 2 Balh
V1nyl S1d1ng Shmgle Root
$230 per month 740 385
9948

4br 2ba HUDI on ly $31
monthl Gr.eat Locallonl (5"'
down
20yrs
8%APR
L s11ngs BOO 620 4946 e)
T461

1974 2br 2 bath lamment Sandhill Road 3 oedroom I
hardwood lloors cia $5000 1/2 baths
5730 plu
- - - - - - - - Call 740·256·6382
ctepos 1 Gallipolis Feny
2br WID hookup 8K10 out
bedroom 2 balh •soo pi'
1979 Fa1rmont MH 1971
'&lt;~&gt;
l
bUIIdmg 2 lois n ClitiOn Budd)'
MH
Several dapoSII 2017 Jel19fson
$39500 between 10am Airstreams 19711 977 Call bedroom 1 bath $450pk1
9pm 304-773 9192
446 8945 or 339 3440
deposit Prck up eppliC&lt;'
-------t1ons at ERA Town r3 bed HUO Homes1 only 1997 14x70 MH . 3br 2ba Country Real Estate BrokP
$100001 for liStings BDO- $t1500 negohabl9 740 1911 Jefferson Boulevar&lt;..
620 4946 ex R019
245 5466
Po1nt Pleasant WV 25550

�.

'

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, July 7, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

.Monday, July 7, 2008
:ALLEY OOP

.

to.
-Lr_...,;:;,;;:;
.f!lR
':'!!!!'!•AoillituR
\\liKl~RLvr
'r.iiENJ'S_
i , ._ ;,;;p;;;;.;;;~--....,
V~ASAL
NS;;·-E._.·,1 ;:::H;e:lp:W:a:n:te~d~·=-==H=e=l,p:W::a::n:::te:d::::;
·~ .
rto. F•••t
I \In I._,, 1'1 '1 II '

.• ..,J
·B-tu:Rf:r-.'
·•H•mT;.IES
L,-•M•OI"OR

®

,\ I I\ I ._, 14 14

N1ce 2BR. central rur, near N. 3fd Ave . Middleport, 2 br.
"'-ftl'
Hwy 160. $375 month plus furnished apartment. no "--..iiEQuiiiiiiill'r&gt;iiliiiEiiio
Nl·•.
security deposit &amp; refer - pets , deposit &amp; references, ..,

1993 Ford 250 (:argo Van , 6
cyl .. auto. $1450 446-4999
or 446-6352

,..I

ences (740)379·2923 o• (740)992·0165
EBV, INTEGRITY. KIEFER ~40::-M~OTIJ--R'-"-.,-. L-"-.~
,
(740 446-6865
--------'--,-:'C':: BUILT,
VALLEY
--~ ,._..,

AI 1AR'n lt:, T!-i
FUR Rtx r
1 and 2 bed room apart ments. furn1shed and unfurnished , a·nd houses in
Pomeroy and M1ddleport .
secumy depos1t required . no
pets, 740-992 -2218.

0

Nice. qu1e128R apt. and 2BR
house.
References
&amp;
depoSII reqwed . No Pets.
446·1271 or 709-1657

--~-

ftoATS

2 bedroOm apartmen t for list for HUd-subsidized. 1-br WWW CARMICHAE L · 1!:

rent in Middleport no pets. apartment

(740)992·5858
2 12 3rd Ave 3 rooms and
bath , furnished, no pets.
Rem+ Dep. 740-441 ' 0245

tor

the TAAILERS.COM 740-446-

•
~'~,..~~~~ .·

&amp;
446-24 12
Lw-l.liiliii
aiii'
O
.
II
IIR.iHiio.
~
iiiF.'iO.
. .....
.:.::c::.:.:.:_______ -

Unlurmshed 1 bedroom ept Carmichael Equipment 740-

.

r

adiusted income. Call 304·

LIVBTOCK

1

10

HOME

"-"""'liiiliitPRiiilolil'iil•:r-.iitiiiE~
-:_.,
some with calves,

" - - - - - - - · 2 limousine bu lls. Ca ll 740·
BASEMENT
Berber Carpet ·ss.95 yard ::.25:.:6_·1_77_4_ _ _ _-,-WATERPROOFING
Re.m1nents $40 &amp; up,
Unconditional lifetime guar·
Burrows for sale, I male and
L
1
1

~ "'" ~··;
Disabled

---------

availa~~n ~~~ =r"'to~"""~H~O-LS-1:11-0-u-,--, ~
a n d
GooDs
38 cows.
•

people.

Molloha'n Carpet
2212
antee. ocal re erences ur14 tamales. Ca ll lor mo re
n1shed. Established 1975.
Eastern Ave Gallipolis Oh
1
nlorma
tion.
740·643-2430
C
· Hrs. (740) 446B eautlfu I A pts. at J ackson 446 . 7444
all 24
Estates. 52 Westwood j!i~~-----,
0870, Rogers Basement
Drive. from $365 to S560.
Ml'iC1J...lANEOUS
Waterproofing .

740·446·2566

Equal "--iiMiiEii
.RiiilliAiiililiMii.JISiiiiitE_.I r10

A~

Ho':'sing Opportunity. Th.is
1
FOR SAu:
instit ution is an Equal Coucl). C,ha1r &amp; OttOman,
Opportunity Provider and Jewel-tone pta1d, Ex . Cond
06 Dodg e Stratus, cruise ,
Emptoy~r
$750. Two-Glass Top Med.
tilt, ai r, aJJIO, 4 cyl. , 60,000
WoOd End Tables $75. Call
mites, $5800 obo. 740-256CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- 674-5713, Leave Message
9031 Br 256-1233
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments.
FIQwer
Flat s,
$3.50, 16' Lowes tishm g boat. 25hp
and/or small l!ouses FO R
Geran iums,
3/Sl.OO, John son, $2,500
2003
RENT. Call (740)441 · 1111
El ephant Ear s, Canna s, Polaris 700, $3,500 OBO.
for application &amp; information. Also have Goldfish, Koi,
200 1 Lexus 300 ES 304Pond Plants. (740)446- 1576 ,
_
773 5109

L.o.-...;oiiiiiliiiiiiiiii-,..1

080,

Free Rent
Special!!!

1740)645·1361 '

AERATIONMOTORS
Ellm View Apts .
Repaired, New &amp; Rebui" tn
Slack. Call Ron Evans, 1.(304)882·3017
-~------ ' 800-537·9S2B.
Gracious Living 1 and 2

NEW AND USED STEEL
Bedroom. Apts. at Vill age
Stee l Beams, Pipe Rebar
Manor and Riverside Apts. in For
Co ncrete,
Angle,
Middleport, from $327 to Channe l, Flat Bar, Stee l
$592. 740-992-5064. Equal
Gralin g
For
Drains,
Housing Opportunity.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Large, charming, unlur·
nished 3 bedroom apt., 2nd Tuesday, Wedne s day &amp;
floor, LA, DR, overlooking Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Saturday
&amp;
the
Park
downtown Thursday,
Gallipolis.
References Sunday. (740)44&amp;--7300

r

Pt.T8

f)

General Contractor 35 Years
Experience. New Homes,
Remodeling &amp; Home Repair,
Licensed and Insured WV

Pharmacy Buyer
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for ' a full -time
Pharmacy Buyer. State regislra tio n and
National certification as a Pharmacy Tech.
A minimum of 3 years ' as a hospital
pharmacy teen. Previou s Business and/ or
pu rchasing/buying experience· in
a
Pharmacy setting preferred.

~--oii"OiiiiRiiSiALEiii.;.._.l.

304-511-075~9~{C~)~~:Sii~i~~~~~~;;l0l;~~~;

VOTEF~

..

Commissioners

www~timbercreekcabinet.ty.wm

Meigs

County Paving

aloud.

m:tmel -.&amp;enttnel

P•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Subscriber's Name --~-~~-

:I ,Address ___ _______~--I
I

: City/State/Zip - - - - - - - - 1
I

I

: Phone ________~~~-----------1
I
I

Mall or drop Off this coupon along
with a copy of your photo 10 to
1
1
1 . Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Galllpolla, OH 45631 :
1

I

·····----- ---------··········---·

I
i

AN ' NOW WE
RETURN TO
"TH' HOPEFUL
AN' THE
RECKLESS "!!

DIDN ' T YA
SAY
· M OVE OVER,
THI S IS M Y FAV'RITE
1----- .
SOAP !!

j
l
•

~:LU-~ B......___...,........_...J.U,J
BORN LOSER
Racine, Ohio 74()..247-2019
Cell: 740·416·5047
email:
·jrshadfrm@aol.com

.

~t..l«.U.\lOOt&gt;LEWffiTTOTOWN~ ~E'i, ['~E. GOT 1'\E.~ fOR YOU-~
:~lt&gt;IW. Ot-1 ~

FEi--'MER

'IN-II&lt;EL

lAS\rJW(I

J

~

l""

~
!

10" hang ing Ha.,kels
$7,75
4" G er aniu ms .60c
Bedding Plann•
4X per llal $6.00
Vegetable plams
$2.50 p~·r dozen

FOR YOUR II'-IFO ~TI0\-1, T\1.1 ~ I ~
flt\TI0!-11\L ~T RI\W£~i&lt;:l~'i
5Ut-1\&gt;ll.( Dt\'i I

Kl~o:h• tu

N&lt;'"''"P•"·I' I

l'uhl k N ulkc;o; In
Know, l&gt;clh·L·n.:d N:l ~ lll IH y,_m r

M-F 7:30- :'i:(}(J

S•ll. RJO - 4:.10 Sun. 1-S
Ed 's Greenhouses
Noble Su rnm iLRd .
Middlcpor1 . OH

and plans and speciflca·
School. tlo~s . check made
The existing walkwa~ payable to . .The full
is to been closed as a amount
will
be
corridor and expanded returned within thlrt~
to an adjacent corridor (30) days after receipt
in the high school.
ol bids.
Sealed bids will be Each bid must be

~() y~ ar s

. in
D r&lt;~ pes.

electrical

Including a . bid bond in an

work.

amount of 100% of the

be held on Wednesday, certified
the

project

site

in

• ----..""'--'r--

or all of CR 25 (6) 30 (7) 7, 14 3tc
Tuppers
Plains.
Pomeroy Pike, CA 30
Meeting locatad at
, existing
canopy
Forest Run, CR 39
Hemlock Grove. CR55
Public Notice
between the high
Old SR346, CR 75
school and the ele·
Hiland and CR 345 NOTICE TO BIDDERS menlary.
Story&amp; Run. The engi- Bids will be received Contract Documents
near's estimate for this by
Eastern
Local may be reviewed or
project
Is School District, 50008 obtained · from the
$571 ,066,l00.
ST 681, Tuppers Plains. Architect or from the
DOMESTIC
STEEL Ohio 45783, Ph. (740) Eastern
Local
USE REQUIREMENTS 667-6079, for the fol· Super In I end en I ' s
AS SPECIFIED IN SEC· lowing project:
office at 50008· State
noN 153.011 OF THE Corrlijor Alterations. Route 681 ; Tuppers
' REVISED
CODE For:
. Plains, Ohio 45783.
APPLY TO THIS PRO· Eastern Local High (6) 30. (7) 7
JECT. COPIES OF School
SECTION 153.011 OF .38900 State Route 7
THE REVISED CODE Tuppers Plains, Ohio
Public Notice
CAN BE OBTAINED 45783
FROM ANY OF THE In accordance with the ' NOTICE TO CDNTRAC·
OFFICES OF THE Drawings
and TORS
DEPARTMENT
. OF Specifications
pre· Sealed propoools for
ADMIN IS T RAT IV E pared by
the Pomeroy Fire
SERVICES.
Panlch,
Noel
&amp; Da p a r t m e n t
Bid documents may be Associates
Equipment,
Mslgs
secured at the office of Architects
and County, Ohio as per
The Meigs County Engineers
spoclflcaflona In bid
. Engineer,
34110 507 Richland Avenue, packet will be received
Folrgrounds
Road, Suite 301
by the Mslge County
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769;· Athans, Ohio 45701
·Commlsaloners
at
Phone Number 740· Telephone : 740/592· !heir offi&lt;e al the
9i2·2911 for e $10.00 2420 Telefax: 7401592· Courthouse, Pomeroy,
nonrofundablo fee.
3824
Ohio 45769 until 1:00
Each bid mull be lnternl1: pnorch.com
pm, July 24th and then
tccompenlect by eHher Any propo11d Equal 11 1:15 pm at said
1 bid bond In tho for a Stondllrd ohall be cHico opened and rud
amount of 10% of the oubmmed
to
the aloud for the rollowlng:
bid amount with a Archhect no Jatar than Pomeroy
Fire
sursty llliolactlon to ton (10) days prior to D e p 1 r I m e n I
the' aforellld Meigs the bid opening. If no Equipment
, C o u n t y Addtncle It IIIUtd SpecHlcatlons, and bid
Commlstloners or by acctptlng
the forma may be secured
certified
check, Propooed Equal, the at the offict of Meigs
calhlers check, or 111· propooed Equal shall .c·. o u n t y
ttr of credit upon a110l- be c_onaldered re)ect· Co m m I s a I on e r s ,
· vtnt bank In lhe ed.
Courthouse. Pomeroy,
amount ol not loss The project Is an alter· Ohio 45769 Phone 740!
than 10% of tht bid atlon and addhlon to 992·2895. A deposit of
amount In lawr of the the existing walkway \) dollars will be
aforeM!d
Meigs between the High required tor each sot of

vent bank In the
'amount of not less
than 10% .of the bid ,
amount in favor of the
aforesaid
Meigs
C o u· n I y
Commissioners. Bid
Bonds shall be accom-

ponied by ~root of
Authorhy of the official
or agent signing the
bond.
Bid' shall be sealed
and marked as Bid for
Pomeroy Fire Dept.
Equipment and .malled
or delivered to :
Meigs
County
Commissioners
Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 45759
Attention af bidders Is
called to all ol the
requlremenla
con·
!lined In thla bid pack·
et, particularly to the
Fe~eral
Labor
Standards Provision s
and
Davlo·Bacon
Wages, various in sur·
ance
requirements.
various equal opportu·
nlty provisions, and
the requirement lor a
payment bond and per·
formance bond lor
100% of tht contact
price. No bidder may
withdraw his bid within
thirty (30) cleye after
the actual data of the
opening thereof. The
Meigs
County
Co m m I s s I on e r s
reaerve , the right to
reject any or all

bids.

Jim Sheets, Preeldenl
Meigs
County
Commissioners
(7) 7, 14, 21

! r

\..,--....

OK S

Sheers. Rod

S IN CE WH E N
DOES T H E
MO~ILE L tBRARY
PLAY .I CE

CREAM TRU(K
MUSIC."'

WHAT
A

l&gt;t RTY
Tf'.tCK.

R(1 man Shades nnd
More ...
Plu ~ Pi l low. Bcdsk irt s

Table

C1w~r~ . &amp;

Table

Rlmne rs

CALl. SANDY
Home:740-992-J220
CeH :740·416-M44.

503 MHI St. • Mlddlt1110rl. DH 45180

J40-112·3194

PEANUTS
WJ.I'r' ARE 'I'OV SITTING I-IERt
WJ.IEN 'I'OV COVLD 6E VP
TI-IERE FLVING AROUND WITH
ALL THOSE OTI-IER 81RD5?

I KNOW
Wl-lAT VOIJ
MEAN ..

O. . llllndlltfrllln 9:88 lmi:OO Ill
Sllann9:18 •12:00Jm

PAYING TOP PIICES RIR
IIIIIIIIIICIII • lllllllniiiWhlll

CltiiJtlr C••••ll!a• C..J•
llllllllrlllll .....

lhllr. Clrrtll Prlcllsl

PSI CONSTRUCTION
RICK PRICE
New Humes. Room Additions, Remodeling,
Metal &amp; Shingle Roofs, Siding, Decks,
Bathroom Remodeling Lkensed &amp; Insured
wv 1040954 Cell 740·590·7666 740-992-07 30

J&amp;L
Construction
• VInyl Siding
• ·Replacement

Windows
• Roofing
• Decks

• Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2~32

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Eleclric, Plumbmg,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions.
Local Contractor

'CO'W and BOY
WHY DOESOURGOVERN·
MENT ONLY LISTEN TO

THATSWHY I'MLAUNCHING

allfORATE UlliBYISTS?

ARE YOU WITH ME?

OUR COIJ.ITRY ISSUPPOSED
TO BE FOR THEP[OPLE.
BYTHE PEOPLE. I THINK
IT'S TIME THEYSTARTED
LISTENING TOUS.

~--:

_j

NOT BEARD. BE HEARD.
LIKE WE WANT TO
BE HEARD.

lftRAmN BE HEARD.

,~)

J

'

(

c:EALLY7
ACTUALLY.
I THINK I'M
KINDABUSY ...

lfti!ATION
IIEARJm

YOU BET I AM 1

we've BfEN &lt;OC:rffHfR A
I.ONG- iiMf, GARFieL.t7

RfMfM8ER iHf

GOOP OLP 17AYS?

740-367·0544
Free Estimates

740-367-0536

FINE, WELL

SWEET. I'LL
CALLIT
GO GET OUR
OPERATION
BEARDS!
BEARD. •
(_

t )

"';',)

~ ~~/.tl

f

f.- . L&lt;:.

REMEMBeR WHEN I G-OT

THE EIRU55EL.5 SPROUT STOCK

IN MY NAVEL.?
1"H05E W~RE
THE &amp;TUPIP
Ot.D [7AY5

For Remodeling and New House Building
Call:

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Rooti ng • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWIER
472.19 Riebel Road, Long Botlom, OH

Cell : 740-4 16· 1834

I DoN'T
tV£\-\ Tlt.Y
io foL\.PW

25+years experie,ce Free Estimates

\01..\i lCS"

740-985-4141

A~YM~

Advertise
.in this space for
$64 per month
I,

'I

53 Pride
. member
.54 Fitzgerald

Nort h
3A
Pass

or Raines
55 Un it of WQrk

18 Masca ra
target

56 Fudge s !he ""-'-,_
· facts
16 TKO off i·

35 Calm

19 Large

57 Sure thing!

37 Had food

PD ~s

2 Arm bone

26. Persuaded

3 Mr. Perol
25 Pl ace
4 Bea01 in the 26 Curly· ·

attic

p rovider

.

as wood

enthusiast

43 Doe's mate
45 T~pe of pad

cabbag e
27 French
waters

46 Burrowing
.animal
47 Jacket

7 Part of FBI 28 Mosque
closura
8 Athletic
topper
. 50 Roman 12
shoe WM! 30 Typ~ ::;izo 51 ~ernel
9 Jac ket style 32 Part

10 Forked out
12 Reverber·

· holder

of UCLA
34 By -

ated

distinction

42 PC

leafed

5 Recede
6 Hamlet's
oath

33 Floor
34 Van Gogh's
me(tium
35 WresUing
style
36 Subtle

38 Prez's
stand·in

disapprova l 40 Brown
23 A Gershwin
songbirds
24 C ut ,
41 Put awav

23 Cays

30 Combine
31 E-mail

Pn:-:s

20 Negligent
22 Shows

Go down
the t ubes

29 Sp~akea sy
risk
East

cials

DOWN

a9ain
22 Lmgerie
item

lhis deal is an elementary .example.
How shOUld East and West ca rd to
deleat four spades?
On another subject. if you were We.&lt;&gt;t.
would you make a two-heart overcall on
,the first round?
To take the bidding question first. in the
old days no one would have bid two
hear ts. lhtlich req uired the high-card values lor an qpening bid. Now. though,
many »'auld overcall. Two hearts takes
up a lo t of b1dding space and indicates a
good lead to partner
AI trick one. East must play h1s heart
n1ne, starting a high-low (an echo) with
his dOubleton. Then it ought to be the ..
work of a mo m€nt for West to cash the
heart k1ng and to give h1s parln£!r a tl eart
ruff. And a momen t later Wesrs spade
king takes the setting trick.

"~

Pol"kCl Drapes.
Swilgs, Vahml·efoi,

Manley's
Recycling .

check,

ter of credit upon a sol-

-.V)~!fl !.!"

experie nce

~ew ing

School

Elementar~

/ ......... _. ........... __

'

case

52 Grassland

antelope
21 Again and

~
. ': Astro.,
1 Graph

2008 at 2:00 pm, when surety satisfactory · to

Second

l~

!

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio July 9. at 10:00 a.m. at cashiers check, or let·

Resurfacing portions 45769.

I
I

Project

office opened and read CoUrthouse,

1\.egi,ter
The Daily Sentinel

IT'S A MORALITY
TALE, MIZ TUTTLE,
' BOUT TH'' EVILS OF
INFIDELITY !!

.2459 St. Rt. 160

45769 until 2:00 P.M., Meigs
County they will be opened the aforesaid Meigs
July 17, 2008, and then Commissioners, The and read.
C o u n t y
County A Pre-Bid Meeting will Commissioners ·or by
at 2:00 P.M. at said 'Meigs

~oint ~lea:Ua:ttt

WHATCHA
WATCHIN ',
PARSON
TUTILE 7

740-247-2113

Count~ Contract,

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio or delivered to:

mall!' tn:ribune

LAnLY.

BARNEY

740.446

Courthouse , Second Round 22 and mailed Until Thursday, July 17, bid amount with a

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

~~UNION

Jim O'Brien

at and marked as Bid received for: General accompanied by either

their office .at The · for:Meigs

A tiiGtl 5CtiOOL

~~oNES

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

West
Pass
Pass

49 Special

award
H Ms. Hagen
offilms
15 Auto-

(alon e)

Primo Levi. an Italian who wrote two
mte resting books about his time in
Auschwitz and h1s even lengt hie r top
home after the war ended, cla1med· "The
a1ms of life are the best defense agamst
deattt"
At the bndge table , the declarer a1ms at
life by making his contract . wh1le the
defense is attempting to kill the contract
And as we all know. th e declarer l1as a
big edge- life is easier than death. Th1s
week. though , we will' took at deals in
wh1ch the defense should triumph ·
The t1rsf line of dete'nse. if . you will
excuse the pun. is tne attitude Signal. If
partner leads an honor in the su1t ana
you would li ke h1m to continue that SUI!.
you play the highest card you can afford.
(In contrast. if you would prefer partner
to try elsewhere. drop the lowest card
you have and hope he !1nds the nght
shift.)

A,OUT Ct'!ANG~
t'IA5N'T r~EN TO

'

74().1)92.7960

C o u n t ~
Commissioners . Bid
bonds shall be accom·
panied b~. Proof of
Authority ol the official
or agent signing the
bond.
•
Bids shall be sealed

OPTIMISTIC

~

l l:id\\n'n ll l.l&lt;ll1uf) It Rtnl ,111ol1

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for
the Meigs Count~
Paving
Project
ROUND22 will be
received by the Meigs
C o u n t y

/

C:HAN4E

28 Years Experie nce

~~~=ij+~
· ~·

... KQJ!Oj2

Declarer lives
or dies on defense ·

ANY,Ol&gt;Y it'IAT

tzEAL

Hardwood Cabhle1ryAnd Furniture

::a=~

... 9 8 5

:.1 2

Opening lead • A

Open 1·6.M.f
ll-121at

t:lassilieds
\ 'u u r

when you pay for a 6 or 12
· month subscription on your
home delive.r ed subscription!

I

Insured &amp; Bonded

Concretf Work

f'he

(j

South
I•
4•

Seamless Gutters
Roofing , Siding, G1.11ters

Hr ~

Senior Discount*

1
1
I

H&amp;H
Guttering

mc.ssa c

David Lewis
. 740-992-6971

fl::!

•

' Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

(£.11

Shop
S~~

BAR AlNS
.IN THE
CLASSlFlEDS

If so, you qualify for a

~unbap

Call Gary Stanley

•

• '9 8 5

... A

lh: f~.Tcn.:c~o. Av~ilablc ~

Farm Letart Falls

or 446·6352

together

· 44 Empires

Mauric e

• AK 8 f4

111411 1110 pd

* E.xpcr i cn~cd

Need a
lob Done?

1968 Chevy Pick-up, VB · 3
spee d, long bed ,.$2500 Call

Bridges

13 Drama

• 7 :i

• 65a
t ;\J J07

*Insured

HOME-GROWN
CABBAGE

Are you 65

~alltpolh~

"'Rra!.onuhlr R at l:' ~

t

Stop &amp; Compare

740-653,9657

FRESH

S
"---I"OoiiiiiRiiiiAiil.iiit:-,..1

40 Say I do
41 Melts

17 Me, to

4 A I 0865

140-992-5682

•

wrap
4 Goldblum

graphed
East

Sout h

SL 11. 1241'1menw. 01

TRUCKS

or older?

A K

ROGER HYSEllS
GARAGE

1
Middleport N. 4th Ave. 2 t KC Mfnature Pinscher 2 9Be OMC Dump trut:k w; •

•

Wurk

MONTY

\\'('S!

740-992·1611

Hours .
7:00AM · 8:00PM

wvoma2 Free Estimates

79 Corvette T- Top, 3SO
engine, auto trans, ver y
clean. 70, 400 mil es . 740"
388-0236
::.::.::_:_:::.:__ _ __ _
Police Impounds! Cars from
$500 1, Hondas, Chevys.
Jeeps. Fords, &amp; more:! for
listi ngs 800-620-4876 a• V435

'

''
Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
*Prorn pl &lt;md Quali ty

Insured

Por.tt:;.c O~and - Pri:&lt;GT
coupe fully aqulp. 80,000 mi
excellent co nd .
$8, 000.
Barry McCoy 740-992-5082

Middleport Beech St .. 2 br. German Wi rehair/Pointer
fu rn ished apart ment, utilities mixed puppies. 5wks , 5
paid. deposit &amp; references, black, 3 brown , $60 each ,
no pets. (740)992-0165
(7 40)696·, 077

Pomeroy Oh10
25 Years Loc al Expenence

10

• 7 6 :1

• New Homes
.• Garages
• COil) plete
Remodeling

Sizes 5'x1 0'
to 10'x30'

Oi Oi·1l8

• KQ 4

~II Types Of

AA/EOE

0303 18 304·458·1668 {H)

·QOO~

room et11c'iency Apt. (Jlillties ma les, 4 mon. old , ears 7.4 gas engine. Truck works
paid. no pets, dep. &amp; ref.. cropped. tail S docked, shots. great and is ready to work.
;.1::;
39::;o;;:o·-:'.:;4o.,-64rs·*8o"o=....,
740 _388_8788 ·
740-992-0 165

Ill

29670 8ashan Road
flacine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

• Q ,f

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

( 740 ) 992 _ 7 ~ 0 1

I 446·4999

wv 03672S
V.C. YOUNG
992-6215

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

North
• Q J 9l

IIIII"
( 0\J( )(I II
{ ()i\&lt;,J )(L! litH\

2002 Ford Mustang, $7500f
199 9 Ford F-150. $7 40 0;
both very good condition,

~15

Patio and Porch Decks

Plca~c k&lt;.~ve

Send resumes to :
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/ o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pl easant, WV 2555 0
(304) 675·4340
Fax: (304) 675·6975
or apply on ·lipe al www.pvalley.org

1 Expensive

11 - vera lotion 48 Devotee

Hill's Self
Storage

74 11-5~1 - XIIH

:_:_::..:_:_:.:__ _ ___:_

Hot Tub I Swim Spa Outlet.
$1000 oH. Huge selection. .
2&amp;3BR apts. $385 and up, New Styles. Free De livery.
Top Quality. 606-929-5655
Cebtral Ai r. W/D Hqokup.
Thnant pays electr ic. t;HU
JET

required, no pets, security
depos it, $600 per month.
C al\ 446-4425 or 446-3.936

-

C AMPIJIS

2nd floor, corner of Second
Pine.
No
pets.
Apartment available now and
Rlverbend Apts. New Haven References
requi red. New Holl and 256 Rake,
AV Service at Carmichael
WV. Now accepting applica· Sewrity deposit. $275 per Ga lfrie 6' Drum M ower.
Trai lers 740-446-3825
lions for Hud-Subsidized . month, water included. Call Ga lfrie g· Tener . 740 -446 one B'edroom Apls . CJ'IIril1es 446-4425 or 446-3936
'fimTE
i 4 10
included. Based on 30% 01

BB2-312te.

":::::::::::::::--:::::::::::::::=

Deere lately? You' ll be sur- y$r1 8o01do e(n
74g0inie9,92ne6w72b8atste9•\y,
prised! Check out our used
,
·
,
·
inventory
at 4407
WW W. CAREQ . CO M ,;::::-~--~-.,

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
New Garagea
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutte rs
VI nyl Sidiri g &amp; Painting

AA/EOE

38 Provokes
39 Herbal
infu sion

or

Room Addition• &amp;

Angie Cleland,
Director of Nursing at (304) 675-5250 .

ACROSS

8 Energy

Remodeli ng

elderlyld, abled. call 67S- 382S
"--...;lii'OiiRiiSiiiA
iiiiii.E;...,I
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
6679
----------------::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::;
Have you priced, a John 1996 Kawasaki STS 750 , 2 r

2BA apt CIA. 1740) 441·
0194

&amp; I\101URS

Please contact

E"A -C rossword Pu.zzle

BRIDGE
Phillip
Alder

Pleasant Valley Nursi ng and Rehabilitation
is currently accepting applications for full·
time and per diem LPN's. Long te rm care
experience preferred. Must have WV
license. 12 hour shifts.

CA RGO/CO NCESSION 3279
TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE-

Apartments, Very Spacious,
2 BeQrooms, CI A, 1 1/2
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby "NECK
HITC HES. 07 HD Dyna Street BobEQU IP- deep cobalt blue $1100 In
PooL Pallo. Start $425/Mo. CARMICHAEL
No Pets.
Lease
Plus M E NT ICA AM IC HA EL el(tras $13,500 Firm. 99 HD
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA1BR Apt, WID hookups. Security Deposit Required . VICE . SPECIAL 20 FT Sporlster XI 883, loaded w/
chrome, llas trike kit $6000
satellite TV 1nct wlrenr. (740 )367 -0547
GOOSENECK FLATBED w/ kit or $4500 w/o kit. 740close to.h ospltal. Call 740·
Tw1n R1vers Tower IS accept- $3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE 441-1037 or 740 -645-7086
339-036? .
1ng applications lor waiting TRAILER INVENTOAV AT -:::~--~"!""--,

The Daily S\'ntinei • Page B5

Licensed Practical Nurses

L-4ioWiitiHiiFiifiiliii''RS•'--,.J

H 0 A S E /ll VES T C K
TRAILERS, LOAD MA X
EQUIPMENT TRAILERS.
05 Suzuki King Quad,
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp; 700cc, 4W D, 92 miles, winch
HO M ES T E A D ER &amp; ramps $4,800 ~-674 ·
Townhouse

Tara

www.mydailysentinel.com

- . . 'lllrlhlll\Y :

Tuesday, July 8 , 2008
Bv Bernice Bade Oaol
You 're apt to at1ract soma persons who
are obstinate or headstrong in the year
ahead, but you 'll be smart enough 10 utilize this stubbornness to your advanlage .
You'll use their doggedness to achiovo
sorri e toug h goa ls thai can' t be reached
on you r own.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) - Be careful no t to show your disdain or resentman! for someorle in lronl of others with
whom you've ltad a rece nt disagree·.
men I. When things straighian oul - and
they wi'll - you won'l Want to explain
th•ngs.
,
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22l- Th1s w111' be a
period when your ex,l ra\Oagance IS vying
tor a IOI ol satisfacllon and eas1l)f' ga1ns
the upper hand. Later on, when your wal lel IS empty, you'll be sorry you weren"l
more disciplinet:l
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep l. 22) - Provided
everybody is 1n accord wrth your aims
and desires , you'll be an easy person tO
gel along with. If someone shou ld wanl
lhing s differen tly, lhe less charming
aspects of your personality will arise.
LI B RA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) Although
you ~ight get lhe opport unity to do
something oul of spile, don 't even con lemp lal e 1! because 1r.1e boomerang
etfect co'utrJ be unpleasant. Carrying a
grudge •s an unnecessary burden.
SCORPtO (Oct. 24 -Nov. 22) - When
you give without expec1ing any th1ng in
return, rewards will be a pleasant sur·
prise. Conversely, when you give expectIng lo receive a b1g response, you II be
sorely disappoin ted .
SAGIHAA IUS (Nov. 23· Qec . 21 )
· The ra 1s a strong posSibility thai you are
spending tar too much time and ettort on
goals lhS.I are severely lack1ng in s•gnlll· ·
cance Take soma time to re-evaluate
your objectives
CAPR ICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) - If you
sense you are oUt of sync with l1fe and
feeling lost . unhappy o r deserted .
chancd!'&gt; arc you ar£J pulling your !oars in
front ol your fai lh. Return to your philosophical beliefs lor 1he answers.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20·Feb. 19 } Someone wilh dub1ous ways may
altempl to prey upon a friend of yew s. II
it becomes obvious to you what is occurring. do you r best lo warn and protect
yo~on pal the best you can .
PISCES (Fi!!b. 20-March 20) - Although
you delegate well, this could be at the
core otlhe compliCations you are expenancing . Should someone who resentS
your authority act" up, don't deal with him
or har.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - When an
Important job Is at stake. don 't rely sole ·
lyon your own data, lnslructlons or tech niques for advancing it. Tum to co-workIHB who can offer knowledge you're nol
familiar with.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)- II you gel
Involved Jn a joint endeavor, spell out in
advance who Is reaponalble lor what , or
e11e the 111u1t1on 11 apt to gel out or hend
and create hard leellrig• bstwaan you
and your cohort.
GEMINI (May 2,-June 20) - Someone
with whom you gat Involved could and up
1evaraly te l ling your p1111ience. Tht more
you gtva. lhl mort ht or Jhl will upect
of yo~,~ , ,.n undlrtlandlng 11 "'~nt • 11l ,

SOUP TO NUTZ

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lu is Campos
Celebnly C1~ner C')'D'og•an"s a• e cr u :ed !rc'l'l ouota!•cn~ ;&gt;y !amc~;s oeope DJSI ana presenl

Eacn 1ener 1n tre c•pner s1aros tc• aro:~er
Tcday's ('/ue: X equa1s 0

" D Y WAWZ HMV F FL
E MJ J,

O JMKDYC

F G WK ' JJ GM A W F L T IF

IVDB L ZN
LB

XI DF

OF ."

LBB

L B NW

· ZLK

F L CWF

F GDP
NW

LIF

TMNOM ,VWJ J M

PREVIOUS SOLUTIO~ - "May the ~un 1n hts course VISit no larld more !ree.
more happy. more lovely. than lh1s our own country~" - Oan1el Webster

~~~i:~:~y e©~4\l~-~t.Zf~®
Rearrange

I

lttleu of the

scro mblod words b~
form four simple word!.

I

F ACERA

f. I

~A hi I

WOod by CLAl R, IOU.lN

O·four
low to

WORO

I I PI

NAL P T

S NY I 0

"
0

\
~

'

A famous educator once "Tote,

~

IG)

"Edu cation i s nollhc fillin g of a .
pail but lhc lighting of· ·--- ."
l
i

I

the chLICkle quoted
in the i
word$
.
I .

SCRAMtErs ANSWERS 714108

Jovial ·· Unity - Venue · Emblem - YOU'VE BEF'N

"the greatlhing about gettingolder." lhc old man stated, "is .lhat
you do~'l losc all the olhcr ages YOU'VE BEEN.'"

ARLO &amp; JANIS
YE-AH ... R I G.H~ .. OK ...

SoRRY· I

L.O~T YOUR C~~l

FOR A MO/o\Wf.

�.

'

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, July 7, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

.Monday, July 7, 2008
:ALLEY OOP

.

to.
-Lr_...,;:;,;;:;
.f!lR
':'!!!!'!•AoillituR
\\liKl~RLvr
'r.iiENJ'S_
i , ._ ;,;;p;;;;.;;;~--....,
V~ASAL
NS;;·-E._.·,1 ;:::H;e:lp:W:a:n:te~d~·=-==H=e=l,p:W::a::n:::te:d::::;
·~ .
rto. F•••t
I \In I._,, 1'1 '1 II '

.• ..,J
·B-tu:Rf:r-.'
·•H•mT;.IES
L,-•M•OI"OR

®

,\ I I\ I ._, 14 14

N1ce 2BR. central rur, near N. 3fd Ave . Middleport, 2 br.
"'-ftl'
Hwy 160. $375 month plus furnished apartment. no "--..iiEQuiiiiiiill'r&gt;iiliiiEiiio
Nl·•.
security deposit &amp; refer - pets , deposit &amp; references, ..,

1993 Ford 250 (:argo Van , 6
cyl .. auto. $1450 446-4999
or 446-6352

,..I

ences (740)379·2923 o• (740)992·0165
EBV, INTEGRITY. KIEFER ~40::-M~OTIJ--R'-"-.,-. L-"-.~
,
(740 446-6865
--------'--,-:'C':: BUILT,
VALLEY
--~ ,._..,

AI 1AR'n lt:, T!-i
FUR Rtx r
1 and 2 bed room apart ments. furn1shed and unfurnished , a·nd houses in
Pomeroy and M1ddleport .
secumy depos1t required . no
pets, 740-992 -2218.

0

Nice. qu1e128R apt. and 2BR
house.
References
&amp;
depoSII reqwed . No Pets.
446·1271 or 709-1657

--~-

ftoATS

2 bedroOm apartmen t for list for HUd-subsidized. 1-br WWW CARMICHAE L · 1!:

rent in Middleport no pets. apartment

(740)992·5858
2 12 3rd Ave 3 rooms and
bath , furnished, no pets.
Rem+ Dep. 740-441 ' 0245

tor

the TAAILERS.COM 740-446-

•
~'~,..~~~~ .·

&amp;
446-24 12
Lw-l.liiliii
aiii'
O
.
II
IIR.iHiio.
~
iiiF.'iO.
. .....
.:.::c::.:.:.:_______ -

Unlurmshed 1 bedroom ept Carmichael Equipment 740-

.

r

adiusted income. Call 304·

LIVBTOCK

1

10

HOME

"-"""'liiiliitPRiiilolil'iil•:r-.iitiiiE~
-:_.,
some with calves,

" - - - - - - - · 2 limousine bu lls. Ca ll 740·
BASEMENT
Berber Carpet ·ss.95 yard ::.25:.:6_·1_77_4_ _ _ _-,-WATERPROOFING
Re.m1nents $40 &amp; up,
Unconditional lifetime guar·
Burrows for sale, I male and
L
1
1

~ "'" ~··;
Disabled

---------

availa~~n ~~~ =r"'to~"""~H~O-LS-1:11-0-u-,--, ~
a n d
GooDs
38 cows.
•

people.

Molloha'n Carpet
2212
antee. ocal re erences ur14 tamales. Ca ll lor mo re
n1shed. Established 1975.
Eastern Ave Gallipolis Oh
1
nlorma
tion.
740·643-2430
C
· Hrs. (740) 446B eautlfu I A pts. at J ackson 446 . 7444
all 24
Estates. 52 Westwood j!i~~-----,
0870, Rogers Basement
Drive. from $365 to S560.
Ml'iC1J...lANEOUS
Waterproofing .

740·446·2566

Equal "--iiMiiEii
.RiiilliAiiililiMii.JISiiiiitE_.I r10

A~

Ho':'sing Opportunity. Th.is
1
FOR SAu:
instit ution is an Equal Coucl). C,ha1r &amp; OttOman,
Opportunity Provider and Jewel-tone pta1d, Ex . Cond
06 Dodg e Stratus, cruise ,
Emptoy~r
$750. Two-Glass Top Med.
tilt, ai r, aJJIO, 4 cyl. , 60,000
WoOd End Tables $75. Call
mites, $5800 obo. 740-256CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- 674-5713, Leave Message
9031 Br 256-1233
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments.
FIQwer
Flat s,
$3.50, 16' Lowes tishm g boat. 25hp
and/or small l!ouses FO R
Geran iums,
3/Sl.OO, John son, $2,500
2003
RENT. Call (740)441 · 1111
El ephant Ear s, Canna s, Polaris 700, $3,500 OBO.
for application &amp; information. Also have Goldfish, Koi,
200 1 Lexus 300 ES 304Pond Plants. (740)446- 1576 ,
_
773 5109

L.o.-...;oiiiiiliiiiiiiiii-,..1

080,

Free Rent
Special!!!

1740)645·1361 '

AERATIONMOTORS
Ellm View Apts .
Repaired, New &amp; Rebui" tn
Slack. Call Ron Evans, 1.(304)882·3017
-~------ ' 800-537·9S2B.
Gracious Living 1 and 2

NEW AND USED STEEL
Bedroom. Apts. at Vill age
Stee l Beams, Pipe Rebar
Manor and Riverside Apts. in For
Co ncrete,
Angle,
Middleport, from $327 to Channe l, Flat Bar, Stee l
$592. 740-992-5064. Equal
Gralin g
For
Drains,
Housing Opportunity.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Large, charming, unlur·
nished 3 bedroom apt., 2nd Tuesday, Wedne s day &amp;
floor, LA, DR, overlooking Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Saturday
&amp;
the
Park
downtown Thursday,
Gallipolis.
References Sunday. (740)44&amp;--7300

r

Pt.T8

f)

General Contractor 35 Years
Experience. New Homes,
Remodeling &amp; Home Repair,
Licensed and Insured WV

Pharmacy Buyer
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for ' a full -time
Pharmacy Buyer. State regislra tio n and
National certification as a Pharmacy Tech.
A minimum of 3 years ' as a hospital
pharmacy teen. Previou s Business and/ or
pu rchasing/buying experience· in
a
Pharmacy setting preferred.

~--oii"OiiiiRiiSiALEiii.;.._.l.

304-511-075~9~{C~)~~:Sii~i~~~~~~;;l0l;~~~;

VOTEF~

..

Commissioners

www~timbercreekcabinet.ty.wm

Meigs

County Paving

aloud.

m:tmel -.&amp;enttnel

P•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Subscriber's Name --~-~~-

:I ,Address ___ _______~--I
I

: City/State/Zip - - - - - - - - 1
I

I

: Phone ________~~~-----------1
I
I

Mall or drop Off this coupon along
with a copy of your photo 10 to
1
1
1 . Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Galllpolla, OH 45631 :
1

I

·····----- ---------··········---·

I
i

AN ' NOW WE
RETURN TO
"TH' HOPEFUL
AN' THE
RECKLESS "!!

DIDN ' T YA
SAY
· M OVE OVER,
THI S IS M Y FAV'RITE
1----- .
SOAP !!

j
l
•

~:LU-~ B......___...,........_...J.U,J
BORN LOSER
Racine, Ohio 74()..247-2019
Cell: 740·416·5047
email:
·jrshadfrm@aol.com

.

~t..l«.U.\lOOt&gt;LEWffiTTOTOWN~ ~E'i, ['~E. GOT 1'\E.~ fOR YOU-~
:~lt&gt;IW. Ot-1 ~

FEi--'MER

'IN-II&lt;EL

lAS\rJW(I

J

~

l""

~
!

10" hang ing Ha.,kels
$7,75
4" G er aniu ms .60c
Bedding Plann•
4X per llal $6.00
Vegetable plams
$2.50 p~·r dozen

FOR YOUR II'-IFO ~TI0\-1, T\1.1 ~ I ~
flt\TI0!-11\L ~T RI\W£~i&lt;:l~'i
5Ut-1\&gt;ll.( Dt\'i I

Kl~o:h• tu

N&lt;'"''"P•"·I' I

l'uhl k N ulkc;o; In
Know, l&gt;clh·L·n.:d N:l ~ lll IH y,_m r

M-F 7:30- :'i:(}(J

S•ll. RJO - 4:.10 Sun. 1-S
Ed 's Greenhouses
Noble Su rnm iLRd .
Middlcpor1 . OH

and plans and speciflca·
School. tlo~s . check made
The existing walkwa~ payable to . .The full
is to been closed as a amount
will
be
corridor and expanded returned within thlrt~
to an adjacent corridor (30) days after receipt
in the high school.
ol bids.
Sealed bids will be Each bid must be

~() y~ ar s

. in
D r&lt;~ pes.

electrical

Including a . bid bond in an

work.

amount of 100% of the

be held on Wednesday, certified
the

project

site

in

• ----..""'--'r--

or all of CR 25 (6) 30 (7) 7, 14 3tc
Tuppers
Plains.
Pomeroy Pike, CA 30
Meeting locatad at
, existing
canopy
Forest Run, CR 39
Hemlock Grove. CR55
Public Notice
between the high
Old SR346, CR 75
school and the ele·
Hiland and CR 345 NOTICE TO BIDDERS menlary.
Story&amp; Run. The engi- Bids will be received Contract Documents
near's estimate for this by
Eastern
Local may be reviewed or
project
Is School District, 50008 obtained · from the
$571 ,066,l00.
ST 681, Tuppers Plains. Architect or from the
DOMESTIC
STEEL Ohio 45783, Ph. (740) Eastern
Local
USE REQUIREMENTS 667-6079, for the fol· Super In I end en I ' s
AS SPECIFIED IN SEC· lowing project:
office at 50008· State
noN 153.011 OF THE Corrlijor Alterations. Route 681 ; Tuppers
' REVISED
CODE For:
. Plains, Ohio 45783.
APPLY TO THIS PRO· Eastern Local High (6) 30. (7) 7
JECT. COPIES OF School
SECTION 153.011 OF .38900 State Route 7
THE REVISED CODE Tuppers Plains, Ohio
Public Notice
CAN BE OBTAINED 45783
FROM ANY OF THE In accordance with the ' NOTICE TO CDNTRAC·
OFFICES OF THE Drawings
and TORS
DEPARTMENT
. OF Specifications
pre· Sealed propoools for
ADMIN IS T RAT IV E pared by
the Pomeroy Fire
SERVICES.
Panlch,
Noel
&amp; Da p a r t m e n t
Bid documents may be Associates
Equipment,
Mslgs
secured at the office of Architects
and County, Ohio as per
The Meigs County Engineers
spoclflcaflona In bid
. Engineer,
34110 507 Richland Avenue, packet will be received
Folrgrounds
Road, Suite 301
by the Mslge County
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769;· Athans, Ohio 45701
·Commlsaloners
at
Phone Number 740· Telephone : 740/592· !heir offi&lt;e al the
9i2·2911 for e $10.00 2420 Telefax: 7401592· Courthouse, Pomeroy,
nonrofundablo fee.
3824
Ohio 45769 until 1:00
Each bid mull be lnternl1: pnorch.com
pm, July 24th and then
tccompenlect by eHher Any propo11d Equal 11 1:15 pm at said
1 bid bond In tho for a Stondllrd ohall be cHico opened and rud
amount of 10% of the oubmmed
to
the aloud for the rollowlng:
bid amount with a Archhect no Jatar than Pomeroy
Fire
sursty llliolactlon to ton (10) days prior to D e p 1 r I m e n I
the' aforellld Meigs the bid opening. If no Equipment
, C o u n t y Addtncle It IIIUtd SpecHlcatlons, and bid
Commlstloners or by acctptlng
the forma may be secured
certified
check, Propooed Equal, the at the offict of Meigs
calhlers check, or 111· propooed Equal shall .c·. o u n t y
ttr of credit upon a110l- be c_onaldered re)ect· Co m m I s a I on e r s ,
· vtnt bank In lhe ed.
Courthouse. Pomeroy,
amount ol not loss The project Is an alter· Ohio 45769 Phone 740!
than 10% of tht bid atlon and addhlon to 992·2895. A deposit of
amount In lawr of the the existing walkway \) dollars will be
aforeM!d
Meigs between the High required tor each sot of

vent bank In the
'amount of not less
than 10% .of the bid ,
amount in favor of the
aforesaid
Meigs
C o u· n I y
Commissioners. Bid
Bonds shall be accom-

ponied by ~root of
Authorhy of the official
or agent signing the
bond.
Bid' shall be sealed
and marked as Bid for
Pomeroy Fire Dept.
Equipment and .malled
or delivered to :
Meigs
County
Commissioners
Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 45759
Attention af bidders Is
called to all ol the
requlremenla
con·
!lined In thla bid pack·
et, particularly to the
Fe~eral
Labor
Standards Provision s
and
Davlo·Bacon
Wages, various in sur·
ance
requirements.
various equal opportu·
nlty provisions, and
the requirement lor a
payment bond and per·
formance bond lor
100% of tht contact
price. No bidder may
withdraw his bid within
thirty (30) cleye after
the actual data of the
opening thereof. The
Meigs
County
Co m m I s s I on e r s
reaerve , the right to
reject any or all

bids.

Jim Sheets, Preeldenl
Meigs
County
Commissioners
(7) 7, 14, 21

! r

\..,--....

OK S

Sheers. Rod

S IN CE WH E N
DOES T H E
MO~ILE L tBRARY
PLAY .I CE

CREAM TRU(K
MUSIC."'

WHAT
A

l&gt;t RTY
Tf'.tCK.

R(1 man Shades nnd
More ...
Plu ~ Pi l low. Bcdsk irt s

Table

C1w~r~ . &amp;

Table

Rlmne rs

CALl. SANDY
Home:740-992-J220
CeH :740·416-M44.

503 MHI St. • Mlddlt1110rl. DH 45180

J40-112·3194

PEANUTS
WJ.I'r' ARE 'I'OV SITTING I-IERt
WJ.IEN 'I'OV COVLD 6E VP
TI-IERE FLVING AROUND WITH
ALL THOSE OTI-IER 81RD5?

I KNOW
Wl-lAT VOIJ
MEAN ..

O. . llllndlltfrllln 9:88 lmi:OO Ill
Sllann9:18 •12:00Jm

PAYING TOP PIICES RIR
IIIIIIIIIICIII • lllllllniiiWhlll

CltiiJtlr C••••ll!a• C..J•
llllllllrlllll .....

lhllr. Clrrtll Prlcllsl

PSI CONSTRUCTION
RICK PRICE
New Humes. Room Additions, Remodeling,
Metal &amp; Shingle Roofs, Siding, Decks,
Bathroom Remodeling Lkensed &amp; Insured
wv 1040954 Cell 740·590·7666 740-992-07 30

J&amp;L
Construction
• VInyl Siding
• ·Replacement

Windows
• Roofing
• Decks

• Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2~32

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Eleclric, Plumbmg,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions.
Local Contractor

'CO'W and BOY
WHY DOESOURGOVERN·
MENT ONLY LISTEN TO

THATSWHY I'MLAUNCHING

allfORATE UlliBYISTS?

ARE YOU WITH ME?

OUR COIJ.ITRY ISSUPPOSED
TO BE FOR THEP[OPLE.
BYTHE PEOPLE. I THINK
IT'S TIME THEYSTARTED
LISTENING TOUS.

~--:

_j

NOT BEARD. BE HEARD.
LIKE WE WANT TO
BE HEARD.

lftRAmN BE HEARD.

,~)

J

'

(

c:EALLY7
ACTUALLY.
I THINK I'M
KINDABUSY ...

lfti!ATION
IIEARJm

YOU BET I AM 1

we've BfEN &lt;OC:rffHfR A
I.ONG- iiMf, GARFieL.t7

RfMfM8ER iHf

GOOP OLP 17AYS?

740-367·0544
Free Estimates

740-367-0536

FINE, WELL

SWEET. I'LL
CALLIT
GO GET OUR
OPERATION
BEARDS!
BEARD. •
(_

t )

"';',)

~ ~~/.tl

f

f.- . L&lt;:.

REMEMBeR WHEN I G-OT

THE EIRU55EL.5 SPROUT STOCK

IN MY NAVEL.?
1"H05E W~RE
THE &amp;TUPIP
Ot.D [7AY5

For Remodeling and New House Building
Call:

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Rooti ng • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWIER
472.19 Riebel Road, Long Botlom, OH

Cell : 740-4 16· 1834

I DoN'T
tV£\-\ Tlt.Y
io foL\.PW

25+years experie,ce Free Estimates

\01..\i lCS"

740-985-4141

A~YM~

Advertise
.in this space for
$64 per month
I,

'I

53 Pride
. member
.54 Fitzgerald

Nort h
3A
Pass

or Raines
55 Un it of WQrk

18 Masca ra
target

56 Fudge s !he ""-'-,_
· facts
16 TKO off i·

35 Calm

19 Large

57 Sure thing!

37 Had food

PD ~s

2 Arm bone

26. Persuaded

3 Mr. Perol
25 Pl ace
4 Bea01 in the 26 Curly· ·

attic

p rovider

.

as wood

enthusiast

43 Doe's mate
45 T~pe of pad

cabbag e
27 French
waters

46 Burrowing
.animal
47 Jacket

7 Part of FBI 28 Mosque
closura
8 Athletic
topper
. 50 Roman 12
shoe WM! 30 Typ~ ::;izo 51 ~ernel
9 Jac ket style 32 Part

10 Forked out
12 Reverber·

· holder

of UCLA
34 By -

ated

distinction

42 PC

leafed

5 Recede
6 Hamlet's
oath

33 Floor
34 Van Gogh's
me(tium
35 WresUing
style
36 Subtle

38 Prez's
stand·in

disapprova l 40 Brown
23 A Gershwin
songbirds
24 C ut ,
41 Put awav

23 Cays

30 Combine
31 E-mail

Pn:-:s

20 Negligent
22 Shows

Go down
the t ubes

29 Sp~akea sy
risk
East

cials

DOWN

a9ain
22 Lmgerie
item

lhis deal is an elementary .example.
How shOUld East and West ca rd to
deleat four spades?
On another subject. if you were We.&lt;&gt;t.
would you make a two-heart overcall on
,the first round?
To take the bidding question first. in the
old days no one would have bid two
hear ts. lhtlich req uired the high-card values lor an qpening bid. Now. though,
many »'auld overcall. Two hearts takes
up a lo t of b1dding space and indicates a
good lead to partner
AI trick one. East must play h1s heart
n1ne, starting a high-low (an echo) with
his dOubleton. Then it ought to be the ..
work of a mo m€nt for West to cash the
heart k1ng and to give h1s parln£!r a tl eart
ruff. And a momen t later Wesrs spade
king takes the setting trick.

"~

Pol"kCl Drapes.
Swilgs, Vahml·efoi,

Manley's
Recycling .

check,

ter of credit upon a sol-

-.V)~!fl !.!"

experie nce

~ew ing

School

Elementar~

/ ......... _. ........... __

'

case

52 Grassland

antelope
21 Again and

~
. ': Astro.,
1 Graph

2008 at 2:00 pm, when surety satisfactory · to

Second

l~

!

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio July 9. at 10:00 a.m. at cashiers check, or let·

Resurfacing portions 45769.

I
I

Project

office opened and read CoUrthouse,

1\.egi,ter
The Daily Sentinel

IT'S A MORALITY
TALE, MIZ TUTTLE,
' BOUT TH'' EVILS OF
INFIDELITY !!

.2459 St. Rt. 160

45769 until 2:00 P.M., Meigs
County they will be opened the aforesaid Meigs
July 17, 2008, and then Commissioners, The and read.
C o u n t y
County A Pre-Bid Meeting will Commissioners ·or by
at 2:00 P.M. at said 'Meigs

~oint ~lea:Ua:ttt

WHATCHA
WATCHIN ',
PARSON
TUTILE 7

740-247-2113

Count~ Contract,

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio or delivered to:

mall!' tn:ribune

LAnLY.

BARNEY

740.446

Courthouse , Second Round 22 and mailed Until Thursday, July 17, bid amount with a

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

~~UNION

Jim O'Brien

at and marked as Bid received for: General accompanied by either

their office .at The · for:Meigs

A tiiGtl 5CtiOOL

~~oNES

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

West
Pass
Pass

49 Special

award
H Ms. Hagen
offilms
15 Auto-

(alon e)

Primo Levi. an Italian who wrote two
mte resting books about his time in
Auschwitz and h1s even lengt hie r top
home after the war ended, cla1med· "The
a1ms of life are the best defense agamst
deattt"
At the bndge table , the declarer a1ms at
life by making his contract . wh1le the
defense is attempting to kill the contract
And as we all know. th e declarer l1as a
big edge- life is easier than death. Th1s
week. though , we will' took at deals in
wh1ch the defense should triumph ·
The t1rsf line of dete'nse. if . you will
excuse the pun. is tne attitude Signal. If
partner leads an honor in the su1t ana
you would li ke h1m to continue that SUI!.
you play the highest card you can afford.
(In contrast. if you would prefer partner
to try elsewhere. drop the lowest card
you have and hope he !1nds the nght
shift.)

A,OUT Ct'!ANG~
t'IA5N'T r~EN TO

'

74().1)92.7960

C o u n t ~
Commissioners . Bid
bonds shall be accom·
panied b~. Proof of
Authority ol the official
or agent signing the
bond.
•
Bids shall be sealed

OPTIMISTIC

~

l l:id\\n'n ll l.l&lt;ll1uf) It Rtnl ,111ol1

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for
the Meigs Count~
Paving
Project
ROUND22 will be
received by the Meigs
C o u n t y

/

C:HAN4E

28 Years Experie nce

~~~=ij+~
· ~·

... KQJ!Oj2

Declarer lives
or dies on defense ·

ANY,Ol&gt;Y it'IAT

tzEAL

Hardwood Cabhle1ryAnd Furniture

::a=~

... 9 8 5

:.1 2

Opening lead • A

Open 1·6.M.f
ll-121at

t:lassilieds
\ 'u u r

when you pay for a 6 or 12
· month subscription on your
home delive.r ed subscription!

I

Insured &amp; Bonded

Concretf Work

f'he

(j

South
I•
4•

Seamless Gutters
Roofing , Siding, G1.11ters

Hr ~

Senior Discount*

1
1
I

H&amp;H
Guttering

mc.ssa c

David Lewis
. 740-992-6971

fl::!

•

' Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

(£.11

Shop
S~~

BAR AlNS
.IN THE
CLASSlFlEDS

If so, you qualify for a

~unbap

Call Gary Stanley

•

• '9 8 5

... A

lh: f~.Tcn.:c~o. Av~ilablc ~

Farm Letart Falls

or 446·6352

together

· 44 Empires

Mauric e

• AK 8 f4

111411 1110 pd

* E.xpcr i cn~cd

Need a
lob Done?

1968 Chevy Pick-up, VB · 3
spee d, long bed ,.$2500 Call

Bridges

13 Drama

• 7 :i

• 65a
t ;\J J07

*Insured

HOME-GROWN
CABBAGE

Are you 65

~alltpolh~

"'Rra!.onuhlr R at l:' ~

t

Stop &amp; Compare

740-653,9657

FRESH

S
"---I"OoiiiiiRiiiiAiil.iiit:-,..1

40 Say I do
41 Melts

17 Me, to

4 A I 0865

140-992-5682

•

wrap
4 Goldblum

graphed
East

Sout h

SL 11. 1241'1menw. 01

TRUCKS

or older?

A K

ROGER HYSEllS
GARAGE

1
Middleport N. 4th Ave. 2 t KC Mfnature Pinscher 2 9Be OMC Dump trut:k w; •

•

Wurk

MONTY

\\'('S!

740-992·1611

Hours .
7:00AM · 8:00PM

wvoma2 Free Estimates

79 Corvette T- Top, 3SO
engine, auto trans, ver y
clean. 70, 400 mil es . 740"
388-0236
::.::.::_:_:::.:__ _ __ _
Police Impounds! Cars from
$500 1, Hondas, Chevys.
Jeeps. Fords, &amp; more:! for
listi ngs 800-620-4876 a• V435

'

''
Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
*Prorn pl &lt;md Quali ty

Insured

Por.tt:;.c O~and - Pri:&lt;GT
coupe fully aqulp. 80,000 mi
excellent co nd .
$8, 000.
Barry McCoy 740-992-5082

Middleport Beech St .. 2 br. German Wi rehair/Pointer
fu rn ished apart ment, utilities mixed puppies. 5wks , 5
paid. deposit &amp; references, black, 3 brown , $60 each ,
no pets. (740)992-0165
(7 40)696·, 077

Pomeroy Oh10
25 Years Loc al Expenence

10

• 7 6 :1

• New Homes
.• Garages
• COil) plete
Remodeling

Sizes 5'x1 0'
to 10'x30'

Oi Oi·1l8

• KQ 4

~II Types Of

AA/EOE

0303 18 304·458·1668 {H)

·QOO~

room et11c'iency Apt. (Jlillties ma les, 4 mon. old , ears 7.4 gas engine. Truck works
paid. no pets, dep. &amp; ref.. cropped. tail S docked, shots. great and is ready to work.
;.1::;
39::;o;;:o·-:'.:;4o.,-64rs·*8o"o=....,
740 _388_8788 ·
740-992-0 165

Ill

29670 8ashan Road
flacine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

• Q ,f

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

( 740 ) 992 _ 7 ~ 0 1

I 446·4999

wv 03672S
V.C. YOUNG
992-6215

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

North
• Q J 9l

IIIII"
( 0\J( )(I II
{ ()i\&lt;,J )(L! litH\

2002 Ford Mustang, $7500f
199 9 Ford F-150. $7 40 0;
both very good condition,

~15

Patio and Porch Decks

Plca~c k&lt;.~ve

Send resumes to :
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/ o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pl easant, WV 2555 0
(304) 675·4340
Fax: (304) 675·6975
or apply on ·lipe al www.pvalley.org

1 Expensive

11 - vera lotion 48 Devotee

Hill's Self
Storage

74 11-5~1 - XIIH

:_:_::..:_:_:.:__ _ ___:_

Hot Tub I Swim Spa Outlet.
$1000 oH. Huge selection. .
2&amp;3BR apts. $385 and up, New Styles. Free De livery.
Top Quality. 606-929-5655
Cebtral Ai r. W/D Hqokup.
Thnant pays electr ic. t;HU
JET

required, no pets, security
depos it, $600 per month.
C al\ 446-4425 or 446-3.936

-

C AMPIJIS

2nd floor, corner of Second
Pine.
No
pets.
Apartment available now and
Rlverbend Apts. New Haven References
requi red. New Holl and 256 Rake,
AV Service at Carmichael
WV. Now accepting applica· Sewrity deposit. $275 per Ga lfrie 6' Drum M ower.
Trai lers 740-446-3825
lions for Hud-Subsidized . month, water included. Call Ga lfrie g· Tener . 740 -446 one B'edroom Apls . CJ'IIril1es 446-4425 or 446-3936
'fimTE
i 4 10
included. Based on 30% 01

BB2-312te.

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prised! Check out our used
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at 4407
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CARPENTER
SERVICE
New Garagea
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutte rs
VI nyl Sidiri g &amp; Painting

AA/EOE

38 Provokes
39 Herbal
infu sion

or

Room Addition• &amp;

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Director of Nursing at (304) 675-5250 .

ACROSS

8 Energy

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elderlyld, abled. call 67S- 382S
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2BA apt CIA. 1740) 441·
0194

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Please contact

E"A -C rossword Pu.zzle

BRIDGE
Phillip
Alder

Pleasant Valley Nursi ng and Rehabilitation
is currently accepting applications for full·
time and per diem LPN's. Long te rm care
experience preferred. Must have WV
license. 12 hour shifts.

CA RGO/CO NCESSION 3279
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1ng applications lor waiting TRAILER INVENTOAV AT -:::~--~"!""--,

The Daily S\'ntinei • Page B5

Licensed Practical Nurses

L-4ioWiitiHiiFiifiiliii''RS•'--,.J

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TRAILERS, LOAD MA X
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- . . 'lllrlhlll\Y :

Tuesday, July 8 , 2008
Bv Bernice Bade Oaol
You 're apt to at1ract soma persons who
are obstinate or headstrong in the year
ahead, but you 'll be smart enough 10 utilize this stubbornness to your advanlage .
You'll use their doggedness to achiovo
sorri e toug h goa ls thai can' t be reached
on you r own.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) - Be careful no t to show your disdain or resentman! for someorle in lronl of others with
whom you've ltad a rece nt disagree·.
men I. When things straighian oul - and
they wi'll - you won'l Want to explain
th•ngs.
,
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22l- Th1s w111' be a
period when your ex,l ra\Oagance IS vying
tor a IOI ol satisfacllon and eas1l)f' ga1ns
the upper hand. Later on, when your wal lel IS empty, you'll be sorry you weren"l
more disciplinet:l
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep l. 22) - Provided
everybody is 1n accord wrth your aims
and desires , you'll be an easy person tO
gel along with. If someone shou ld wanl
lhing s differen tly, lhe less charming
aspects of your personality will arise.
LI B RA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) Although
you ~ight get lhe opport unity to do
something oul of spile, don 't even con lemp lal e 1! because 1r.1e boomerang
etfect co'utrJ be unpleasant. Carrying a
grudge •s an unnecessary burden.
SCORPtO (Oct. 24 -Nov. 22) - When
you give without expec1ing any th1ng in
return, rewards will be a pleasant sur·
prise. Conversely, when you give expectIng lo receive a b1g response, you II be
sorely disappoin ted .
SAGIHAA IUS (Nov. 23· Qec . 21 )
· The ra 1s a strong posSibility thai you are
spending tar too much time and ettort on
goals lhS.I are severely lack1ng in s•gnlll· ·
cance Take soma time to re-evaluate
your objectives
CAPR ICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) - If you
sense you are oUt of sync with l1fe and
feeling lost . unhappy o r deserted .
chancd!'&gt; arc you ar£J pulling your !oars in
front ol your fai lh. Return to your philosophical beliefs lor 1he answers.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20·Feb. 19 } Someone wilh dub1ous ways may
altempl to prey upon a friend of yew s. II
it becomes obvious to you what is occurring. do you r best lo warn and protect
yo~on pal the best you can .
PISCES (Fi!!b. 20-March 20) - Although
you delegate well, this could be at the
core otlhe compliCations you are expenancing . Should someone who resentS
your authority act" up, don't deal with him
or har.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - When an
Important job Is at stake. don 't rely sole ·
lyon your own data, lnslructlons or tech niques for advancing it. Tum to co-workIHB who can offer knowledge you're nol
familiar with.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)- II you gel
Involved Jn a joint endeavor, spell out in
advance who Is reaponalble lor what , or
e11e the 111u1t1on 11 apt to gel out or hend
and create hard leellrig• bstwaan you
and your cohort.
GEMINI (May 2,-June 20) - Someone
with whom you gat Involved could and up
1evaraly te l ling your p1111ience. Tht more
you gtva. lhl mort ht or Jhl will upect
of yo~,~ , ,.n undlrtlandlng 11 "'~nt • 11l ,

SOUP TO NUTZ

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lu is Campos
Celebnly C1~ner C')'D'og•an"s a• e cr u :ed !rc'l'l ouota!•cn~ ;&gt;y !amc~;s oeope DJSI ana presenl

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Tcday's ('/ue: X equa1s 0

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PREVIOUS SOLUTIO~ - "May the ~un 1n hts course VISit no larld more !ree.
more happy. more lovely. than lh1s our own country~" - Oan1el Webster

~~~i:~:~y e©~4\l~-~t.Zf~®
Rearrange

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scro mblod words b~
form four simple word!.

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O·four
low to

WORO

I I PI

NAL P T

S NY I 0

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A famous educator once "Tote,

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"Edu cation i s nollhc fillin g of a .
pail but lhc lighting of· ·--- ."
l
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the chLICkle quoted
in the i
word$
.
I .

SCRAMtErs ANSWERS 714108

Jovial ·· Unity - Venue · Emblem - YOU'VE BEF'N

"the greatlhing about gettingolder." lhc old man stated, "is .lhat
you do~'l losc all the olhcr ages YOU'VE BEEN.'"

ARLO &amp; JANIS
YE-AH ... R I G.H~ .. OK ...

SoRRY· I

L.O~T YOUR C~~l

FOR A MO/o\Wf.

�.'

.

, Monday, 'July 7,

www. ritydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

2008

But with one out, Craig
Monroe walked. Delman
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Young reached on an intield
si
ngle when third baseman
MINNEAPOLIS - Cliff
Andy Marte lost the ball tryLee was cruising, anJ the
ing to pull it from t,;s glove
Cleveland
Indians
were
on
BY COLIN FLY
after
a diving stop and a s pi~
the
verge
of
a
much-needed·
ASSOCIATED PRESS
move left him on the ground.
victory.
.
Then
came
the
seventh
Brendan Harris fqllowed ·
MILWAUKEE The
and
a
sign
of
julit
with
a single to load the
inning,
Brewer&gt; are extremely dtN~
how
fragile
the
defending
bases.
and Nick Punta pulled
to a deal lll acquire Indians ·
AL Central champions curthe Twins within one with
ace C.C. Sabathia in a trade
rently
are.
The
Twins
took
his base hit on a 3-1 pitch.
that bolsters their rotation for
full
advantage,
using
a
handLee went to a 3-1 coun:t
a playoff push. a person with ' out of contention making a
ful
of
walks
and
well-placed
ag~in on Span. and ball four
direct knowledge of the deal move . likely. Milwaukee
tied the game. Gomez gave
told The A"oci~teJ Pre".
wants Sabathia. now to make · singles to send the Indians to
their
eighth
straight
loss
Minnesota its first lead oil
The person requested as many starts as possible .
Sunday.
his
groundout to shortstop. :
Sabathia. who was slated
anonymity because the trade
Carlos Gomez capped the
"I try not to look at th~·
has not been finalized and to · start for Cleveland
name of the back of the jersaid there were a few remain- 1uesday at Detroit, rejected a three-run seventh against
sey." Span 5aid. "They ' ve
ing issues to work out. ·
$72 million, four-year exten- Lee with an RBI groundout ,
and
Minnesota
rallied
for
a.
got to throw strikes just like
Sabathia went 19-7 with a sion from the Indians during
anybody else. whether dow~
3.21 ERA to win the AL Cy spring
training
and. 4-3 victor)' over Cleveland.
"I have to do a better job of
in the minor leagues or U(&gt;
Young last season and would announced he wouldn ' t
damage
control
there,
and
I
here."
.
give the Brewers another negotiate any deal until after
didn'l
,"
:;aid
Lee.
who
Lee was critical of hinisett:,
p&amp;-.vcr pi:rhcr 1:0" pair w ~rh the season.
especially for the bases,
Ben Sheets as Milwaukee
The Brewers starling learned before the game he
tries to make the playoffs for pitching has been thin ever was selected for the All-Star
loaded \valk to Span. but he
team.
"And
they
got
a
win
the first time since 1982.
since Yovani Gallardo went
still found a way to be opti.
The big lefty is 6-8 with a on the disabled list with a because of it. That is totally
mistic .
·
3.83 ERA for the Indians, but torn knee ligament that on me right there."
':1 think we can turn it
Lee ( 11-2) lost for the tirst
has also been plagued with a required surgery. His rehab
around ," he said. "It's just
in nine starts. hurt by a
time
lack of run support. In nine was supposed to take four
going to take everybody
of his 18 starts. Cleveland months, which gives him an rare lack of control in the
playi_~g the game the right
has scored two runs or less outside chance of returning seventh that helped the
way.
Twins
put
before the end of the season. resourceful
for him.
AP photo · The
Indians are· off
"I'm good.' . excited."
Sheets ( 10-2,2.77 ERA) is · together another· one of their Cleveland Indians' pitcher Cliff Lee wipes his brow after giv· Monday, a welcome respite
Sabathia wrote in a text mes- easily off to the best start of small-ball rallies. They bat- ing up the go-ahead run against the Minnesota Twins' dur- after a mi serable weekend
sage posted on ESPN .&lt;:am. his career, but the All-Star ted eight times that inning ing the seventh inning of a baseball game Sunday in made worse by the uncer'·It's weird leaving these righty is in the final year of a and hit the ball out of the Minneapolis.
tainty of C.C. Sabathia's
guys."
$38.5 million, fqur-year con· intield twice.
status amid trade talks the
17 walks in Ill 2-3 innings team is having regarding
"We've got a good attitude offense.
To
get
Sabathia, tract and hasn' t wanted to
Perkins allowed seven hits all season before Sunday.
Milwaukee will have to part talk about his upcoming free on the bench. Guys are into
,
"When you're going the big left-hander.
it," manager Ron Gardenhire in .seven innings before turn·
with a package of prospects agency.
need
to
get
away
"They
Milwaukee, which hasn't said. "We feel like some- ing the lead over to Matt through strerches like we're from it. give themselves a
including Matt LaPorta, a
power hitting left fielder been in the postseason since thing's going to happen Guerrier and Joe Nathan , going ·through right now, break,"
Wedge
said.
selected in the first round last the days of Robin Yount and eventually. We've just got to who celebrated his third All- that's usually the way it "Obviously, it was a very
manager
Eric
.
Star selection by pitching .a works,''
year who was scratched from Paul Molitor, fell two games keep plugging away."
tough road trip. We have a·
Since losing 12-2 to the perfect ninth . for this 25th Wedge said.
a Double-A game in short of the division title last
Until Span stw1ed the sixth Jot going on rig_ht· now.
Huntsville on Sunday night. year. The Brewers are per- Indians in Cleveland on June save.
Perkins, who hasn't lost in with a triple, the only hils by Hopefully, with the good
LaPorta was hitting .288 centage points ahead of St. . 12, the Twins are 18-3. They
with 2{} oomers an&amp; 56-R-BI; Ltmis for !he- sceoiid-bes! have swept four of lh~ir last · sden starts since iVi ay 30, the Twins didn 't (eave the off day w~ can put a lot of
iti 84 games for ljuntsville.
record in the NL, and both six series.' The surge looks has been one of Minnesota ',s infield - a popped-up bunt this behind us and take a
"It's kind pf flattering to teams are chasing Chicago, 3. more impressive upon exam- most consistent starters. The by Alexi Casilla that just positive step forward."
Notes: Twenty-four of the
ination of the recent list of left-hancier has allowed three cleared Lee's .. head and a
have your name brought up . .1/2-games ahead.
Twins'
50 wins have come
for one of the best pitchers in
The, Brewers play four losing opposing pitchers: runs .or Jess in his last six grounder that Gomez beat
after
they
fell behind. ...
out, drawing a _brief argu·
the game." LaPorta told the games at St. Louis to cap a Lee, Ben Sheets, G'reg appearances.
Lee needed 37 pitches ro ment about the call from Injured· Indians starter
Huntsville Times. "There seven-game road trip after Maddux, Trevor Hoffman,
Fausto Carmona threw a
Wedge.
would be no 'hard feelings the All-Star break and have a Brandon Webb and Randy tinish the seventh.
strong
bullpen session of 35
He walked two, including
Lee struck out Gomez
one way or another. This is a four-game series .against the Johnson.
"It definitely proves we Denard Span with the bases after Span's triple,and traded pitches before the game,
business, and. I understand Cubs at Miller Park at the
c,an
hit. We can score · runs loaded, and wasted a 3-1 an out for a run when Casilla and he 's set for 50 pitches
that."
end of July.
· The Indians, who were one
The trade was lirst report- against anybody;" said Glen lead cushioned by Jhonny hit a grounder to shortstop, Tuesday as he progresses
win from the World Series ed by the Milwaukee Journal Perkins (5-2), the latest ben- Peralta's two-run homer in still taking a 3-l 'lead into the toward a return 1n the sec'•
, om.l half.
last year, have quickly fallen Sentinel.
.eficiary of the uptick in the sixth. Lee had issued just seventh.

Torn.ACLs, other big
injuries hit little
athletes, A2

BY DAVE CAMPBELL

•

at
.')0

t'ENTS

o

Vol.

,}7,

"

·'

ZTT42
ZERO-TURN TRACTOR
o Zero-turn maneuverability with traditional

,,.,.'

• Sabathia traded to
B.rewers .for tour
prospects. See Page Bl

tractor steerins

heavy-duty twin-blade
3-in-1 mowing deck
• 18 HP' Kohler. Courage• OHV engine
o 42"

'

• Dual hydrostatic transmission and

adjustable ...t

• Award winner for innovation excetlenct

''

.&amp;2!! •4.0.

.,

PAYIIIIINTS

LOW
IOTftOOutTOftV

M,LOWAS.

/Motmf

PAYMENTS

SALE ' 2 &amp;99 "

$55
.

ASLOWAS

/MONTH.

SALE '3 &amp;99 "

'
'
......................................•........••..•.•....•......••.......

'

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY- The rising
cost of gasoline affects
everyone and on Thltrsday
staff at the Meigs County
Council on. Aging will
attempt to raise funds to
keep the cost from affecting
services the Meal s on
Wheels program provides to
80 people, five days a week.
From II a.m . - I p.m. on
Thursday at the Meigs
Senior Center. staff will be
selling a hot dog lunch with
grilled hot dogs. with or
without sauce, macaroni
salad, baked beans and
dessert for $5. The staff can
deliver to local businesses

. ,. .

· lERO·TURN Rlf;)ER

,,
·

• 50" lloa1ina 1riple-lilade 3-irt-1 ~ina. ~.

• 221;iP' Kawasaki~ v~Twin OHY qine
• Pivoting fron1 _ . a!ld llaltlnl deck.
• 3-yw limited wamnty"** · ·, ,

.

LT 1045
LAWN TRACTOR
o 46" heavy-duty triple-blade mowing deCk
o 20 HP' Kohler, Courage· engine

THE TANK" M48 HEAVY-DUTY
COMMERCIAL ZERO-TURN RIDER
o Ex~tusive 48" Select Cut Systom"
ultra-premium mowing deck
• 23 HP' Kewauki 0 V-Twin OHV engine

.J: '1

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I'AY!IIINTS

':

SALE ' &amp; 999"
HAIIOE«
. '

'

'25

INDEX
ASWwAII ·'
/MONTH'

2 SECTIONS -

Calendars
'

- BECAUSE VOU DO ENOUGH l-IARD WI)Rk ALREADY.
M

0

'

o

Classifieds

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
FAMILY OWNED SINCE 1996
1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE • RT. 33 JUST SOUTH OF LANCASTER
8880 UNITED LANE• ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON RT. 50/32
LANCASTER. OH 43130 • (740l 653-2827
ATHENS, OH 4570i • (740l 593-3279
STORE HOURS MONDAY-FRIDAY 9:00-6:00, SATURDAY 9:00·5:00
~~~~~~~ ~c• r·~• ~~ '""~ I• lll')oofl&lt;r.~c·~:tt•t&gt; UY'II!

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Editorials

• "t

Sports

r...,. ·.,. t&lt;C'\ol:'...._.., ........,._ • •••""'"'"'" ',.."'' ,,.., ... ,.,.,.,,~, ... •·•r&lt; dJ tl1)1lo;..,.,olo)~,. -~ ..... . \'!ol'&gt;"• ~n r.. ..,..,,&lt;l ,~ ...,,,oa;,~·~o,......, •., .,,,_. 1,;-:t. ,. ,, ,,,, ··•. ... ~· · .,.,.., .. ,,~ ., ,· ··· ,., .,... ""-" 1....,•.., ,., •••

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Weather

,_,

As
As
B Section

A3

I

CuhCade.t:

'~&lt;~" ~""' -.•.'

3-4

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Qbituaries

, ,., .. , • 11 ... ...,.. ·•;. ,.;
"tot•• ••. ,.. ~· .,.
~ • ... J. ., .. , .:,,,. • l"!oJ. /'- &lt;~~• ,_......,. ·, .., ..._.,..,.' ~·.I'• ,

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Movies

- ...,.... - ........... . tlllO&lt;Io4--. ,. .... .,....,... , ,.,.. • • ll&lt;... _ol'f'"'&gt;:lli •...... _

.. _ , . ~,., ... W ,., " ., , ., &gt;&lt;' L, ~' "' ... -~ ..-, lor&gt; '" 'f" •...,

t:i PAGES

Annie's Mailbox

SALE '1 &amp;49 "
'

'

"

.

Pago A3

• Automatic hydrostatic transmissior.

.(J!tZT 42 lllo IVItillbiiJ I~ it, ~r'l
f' '

on

• Pivoting st1ll front axllt and premium

LOW
tH1'fiOOIICTOAY

@.2.008 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.. .

._... •• ,., · - ......... , """ ..... ,.............. ~ ! .... . . .... 4."' , .,.•• 1'4~i" '

'

'

WE MEAN BUSINESS:

YOU CAN'T GET ANY

BETTER ~
4

'

'

.,

just ca ll 992-2161 to place
an order. All proceeds go
towards supplementing the
gasoline fund for the Meals
on Wheels program .
MCCOA Director Beth
Shaver said so far this year
the gasoline expense has
been under . budget but it
appears if something is not
done to offset the increased
cost in fuel, that line item will
be over budget by the end of
the month. The hot dog lunch
is meant to help offset the
increased cost and Shaver
hopes around $1,000 will be
mised though she said she
and th~ staff will be happy
with whatever is given.
"We've been blessed with

people in the community simply check in on the funding source.
who are always willing tO client which .can make a
In Meigs County, th e
give," Shaver said.
huge difference to someone Meals on Wheel s program
Shaver also explained that living alone.
has already been affected by
in some places some pro·
With 80 current clients on rising prices. havin~ to cut
grams are cutting back to the route, that means around back on deliv e rin~ frozen
delivering meals three days 400. meals . are delivered meals on Friday ' fo r the
a · week' and delivering weekly though Shaver said weekend . Shal'cr said they
frozen meals on those deliv- due to rising gas prices no are doing their best not to
ery days to compensate for new clients who are off the make anv further cuts from
the two days drivers are not already established routes now untli the end of ihc yea r
on the road.
are being accepted. She through fundraiser&lt; Iike the
"We don't want to do added this was an unfortu- one on Thursday.
that." Shaver added. "Some nate circumstance because
This isn't just atlecting
of our people are so isolat· some of the most isqlated our program, this is clear
. ed, our drivers are the only people may be off.that' beat- aGross the country," Shaver
human contact our clients en path/established routes. said of the situation many
might have all day."
. She did say there are some· Americans find themselves
Shaver said often drivers times exceptions but they are in these days, searching for
bring in a client's mail, help exceptions who are clients in the money to pay at the
with other simple tasks and dire situations with no other pump and the grocery sto,re.

BSEAGENT@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Page AS
o Nellie E. Michael, 83
• Eloise Rea, 89

Details

su.pension seat w~h erm reots

""w . mrdailv,~nlinel.t·om

TUESHAY, .lli.LY H, :wo8

Syracuse :showz
~'ng~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;
(zero tolerance'
on cuifew
OBITUARIES
Bv BETH SERGENT

.WEATIIER

RZT~O

.

D ....

·Bentjit' lunch to supplement fuel prices

Bush and German
leader meet on G-8
challenges.
See Page A2
o Wahama alumni
gather for annual
banquet See Page A3
• Ohio woman pleads
guilty in bridge crash.
See Page AS
o Bomber kills 41
outside Indian Embassy
in Kabul. See Page AS
• Housing rescue
advances in Senate
See Page A6

Z-FORCE• 44
HEAVY-DUTY ZERO-TURN RIDER
o 44" floating heavy-duty ,;;pte-blade mowing
deck with foot pedal deck height adjustment
o 20 HP' Kohler®Courage. PRO V
·Twin ·
OHV engine

Nn.:.ql-1

~

Gas prices pinch Meals on Wheels

SPORTS

o

..

l"rinttd on JOOt;r
Reqded N.-:wsprinl

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE

' i.

ne

SYRACUSE
-The
Village of Syracuse is
,showing a "zero tolerance"
attitude .towards its underage curfew currently in
effect from the hours of II
p.m. to 6 a.m. , seven days a
week · for young people
under 18.
Young J?eople under 18
mu st be off the streets and
off village property during
the curfew time unless
by
a
accompanied
parent/guardian. Violators
of this e~isting village ordinance will be subject to
citations
in
Syracuse
Mayor's Court .
At its most recent meeting, council heard concerns
from residents Stacy and
John Brickles about the curfew. The Brickles had
recently paid $315 in total
lines and court costs after
their underage son was cited
by Syracuse Chief of Police
Shannon Smith for being
out past the curfew, around
II :30 p.m. The Brickles
were not arguing the fine
but added their 17-year old
son had never been in trouble before. They felt the
zero tolerance curfew was
being enforced at the
expense of "good kids" like
their son who were being
punished for others who
habitually ignore the curfew
and have been causing
property damage around the
village .
"It doesn' t matter whose
kid it is or where they are,"
Mayor Eric Cunningham
said about the zero tolerance ·approach to cut down
on escalating incidents of
vandalism in the village.
Smith told the Brickles
and counci I the Brickles'
son was 'cooperative and
well behaved. Mrs. Brickles
suggested council might
consider using some of the
fine money taken in on cur·
few fees to give the kids
something to do, such as a
dance or activity at the pool ,
hdding there aren't 'many
positive activities for kids in
the village to take part in.
The pool has become a
favorite target for · vandals
after dark who have repeatedly broken into the facility
this summer, tossed rocks in
the pool and did damage to ·
the
restrooms .
The
restrooms have since been
padlocked and Cunningham
told council the fence needs
replaced to prevent not only
vandalism but an accidental
drowning . It appears. the
vandals are getting into the
pool through a week' spot in
the fencing.

.
Brian J. Reed/photos
Shandi Beaver and Bre Bonnett took best "kid-powered entry" honors in Middleport July 4 parade .·Middleport Community
Association President Brenda Phalin presented their trophy. Hope Baptist Church was awarded first place for its float
entry, and the Meigs Marching Band was judged the best marching unit.
.
·

Association begins plans
for '09 fireworks show
Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREED@ MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM

helby Johnson and her Pomefanian, Belle, received the trophy for
best four-legged entry in Middlepott's July 4 parade .
·

MIDDLEPORT - A last-mmute change tn Joe a·
tion made July 4 firewor~s difficult for some to
see, but the Middleport Community Association
has already begun plans to improve the fireworks
display for 2009.
According to Mayor Michael Gerlach , the U.S.
Coast Guard, which regulates the discharge of fire ·
works from the Ohio River, rc4uired the American
Electric Power towboat used to discharge the dis·
play to move downriver just before the sllow
began. Spectators in Dave Diles Park were mlvisetl
of the move , Gerlach said, but many were dis:tp·
pointed that the move ; combined with bad wcath·
er, affected visibility.
This is the first July 4 celebration to be llelu in
Dave Diles Park in three years. 2007 and 2006 eel •
ebrations centered around Gener;Jl Hartinger Park
and the football stadium. but those event' were
spoiled by rain.
.
Although rain threatened this year\ celehratinn ,
the crowd grew as afternoon became ,,veni ng. and
Association President Brenda Phalin s:~id it W:l&lt; a
successful day, despite some di,appuint mcnt " ith
the fireworks show.
·
"We have to adhere to the Coast Guard ·, rule, ...
Phalin said. "I think people do not :~!way' understand that we can'tjust park the boat in tl1c miudk
of the-river and set off fireworb . There i' a permit
process and rules that must be followed ."
Phalin said the association and village hal'e identified a government-owned riverfront lot wl1ere the
boat can be tied·up for next year's tircworks sl1ow.
Phalin said Hamburg Fireworks. the company
which puts on the show for the village. has indicated
a much bigger show can be had for around $7.000.
She said the association plans several more fu11drai s·
ing luncheons in Dave Diles Park thi&gt; summer to
begin raising money for next year\ show. The next
luncheon will be. served on July 25, and all pnlCL'C&lt;h
will be earmarked specifically for the tircworks
show.

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