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Homemade fixes available
to fight garden-eating deer
Bv JoHN RAav
• ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

CHARLESTON, W.Ya. - It took hours to get those
impatiens looking just right in the front-yard flower bed and
those pole beans going in the backyard, only to be mowed
down by huil~ry deer.
"
This year it time to fight back.
. .
While quick fixes are available at stores ~ 1)0, not guns
- by way of ~prays and granular materials to repel deer,
help may already be at home. The possibilities are endless,
from bar soaps to hair to spicy solutions.
Now's the time to act. Once deer start foraging into a particular area, .it's a challenge to keep them out
Think scents. Think fragrances. The key is knowing what
deer's sensitive noses d9n't like.
They certainly don't like humans. And human hair, espe. dally those from freshly permed salon customers, works
great, as long as gardeners aren't shy about asking stylists to
sweep up several handfuls to place alongside thetr plants or
hang above the ground in nylon stockings:
Sandy Wilfong uses dog hair t0 keep both deer and raccoons from ravagln~ her sweet corn crop. The employee at
Zabm Greenhouses m Huntington, Ind., gets her hair from a
.
dog groomer.
, "It absolutely will get the 'coon out of there. We haven't
: bad the problem with the deer, either.~· she said.
.
. The creek behind Bob Matthews' home in Greece, N.Y., is
, a popular deer hangout. During the growing season, there's
an all-out blitz to keep them from harming his sunflower
and vegetable crop.
Matthews, who operates a Web site dedicated to horne
gardeners, swears by a garlic-and-water spray applie&lt;! every
. few w~ks. especially after a rainy peripct. But sprays can
·
contain virtually anything that oeer don't like. .
Other possible home remedies:
•
.
• Baby powder. If it's good enough for baby, it's good
enough for llaby plants. The scent might stave off deer. A
dusting of flour might also send deer's taste buds into a
.
stampede for gardens elsewhere.
. • Eggs. Crack a few, mix with 2.quarts of water and apply
the sol4tion to plantS. The eggs will iiecompose and ~eer
won't like the smell.
·
·
. • Deodorant soap and dryer sheets. Soap shavings could
be scattered on the ground, or drill a hole in the soap and
hang them'f..rom trees.
·
• Chili powder, cayenne pepper and hot ,peppers.
·Matthews suggests chopping some peppers in a blender and
add water, let the soluuon stand overnight, then strain it
throl!gh c~esecloth and ernpty into a spray bottle.
·
· •;rvenever seen ·a pepper plant, sweet or hot, that's been
bothered by adeer," Matthews said..
.
• Mothballs. ~ They're dangerous around vegetables
because of their chemical coptent and work great in flower
· beds but could be spotted by curious childre.n. Try crushing
them to a less-detectable size..
"Something unnatural like soap. dryer sheets or human
hair ....:. I don't .want h\lman hair on my tomato plants,"
. Matthews sa~d. "You've got to think logica)ly about how
you apply this stuff."
• Blood meal. The nitrogen"rich granular fertilizer repels
deer ~ut is attractive ~o do$s.
.
.. .
: If Vimal !ii;:III'C tlWties, ,SilCh as reflective matenal, flags,
" b'alliXms, ·aluminum piI{ plates· anit•pajler· s~ftl' MallY ·
, ·
, ·
·won't work ifthe wind is calm. ·
If cost isn't an option, a tall fence may outdo any horne
remedy.
.
· An 8-foot fences is the most practical use around largerscale operations such as orchards,. said Steve Miller, a
. research horticulturist at the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's Fruit Research .Stap,on in Kearneysville&gt;
, ''Somethirl~ in the kitchen cal;!inet is probably riot going to
work;" he sat d.
,
·
Al)otb~r ~ption is simply ·kn~wing what plants deer like .
and don t hke. ·
· . .•
Sorne of tbeir favorite candy? Columbine, daylily, geranium, hl&gt;stas, impatiens, pansies, r:edbud, rhododendron, roses
and tullps, and many vegetables, including beans, potatoes
and' tomatoes.
'
· ·
·, ·
Annual flowers usually left· alone by deer include dahlia,
. Four . O'Clock; Jlowermg tobacco, .larkspur, · marigold, ·
poppy, snapdragon, strawflower and vtrlca.
.
.
According to Dave Jensen, owner of Deer-Resistant
Landscape Nursery in Clare, Mich., s.ome top deer-resistant
perennials are barberry, bleeding heart, bAuebeard, box' wood, bntterfly bush, catmint, daffodil$, ~~xgl~ve, hellebores; hyssop, lavender, monkshood, mulleu\, ornamental
grasses, meadow and Russian sage, and spurge. . . ' · ·
Avoiding Bambi and family altogether might simply come
down to location.
·
"I myself have not had an issue ·with deer,''. said St~ven
Bess, an employee at Marilyn's Nursery in Lebanon, Mb. "l
live in the clly."
' ·1 ·.
·

s

GARDEt~It~G
.

PageD6
Sunday, July 13, 2008

· Attack on US base in
Afghanistan kills 9, A2

Grow these herbs to create a soothing homemade tea
mints. lemQil balm, or
jasmine green tea.
BEE BALM
Creating your own
Monarda spp, Mint
herbal tea can be a cinch Family . ·
with the right herbs. Here
"The flowers of this
are some options for your . herb are stunning," says
garden:
Me Vicar. True to its
ANISE HYSSOP
name, bee; balm is a
Agastache foeniculum , favorite of bees and
Mint Family
hummingbirds thanks to
Anise hyssop brightens . its sweet nectar and
mapy home gardens with bright red, pink and purits long-lasting purple pie blooms. Bee balm's
spikes. The leaves and great looks and lowflowers taste like licorice maintenance care have
and can be snipped into earned it a place in many
salad as easily as they can home gardens. However.
be turned into sweet tea. few realize that · the
Also consider root beer- lea~es andl flowers make
flavored sunset hyssop (A. one of our best herbal
rupestris) and bright pink tbs, in spite of its oiher
buoble gum mirit (A. common names:, Oswego
cana).
says
Tammi tea and bergamont.
Hartung, herbalist and
Growing Conditions:
author of "Growing I 0 I Bee balms prefer rich soil
APpholo
Herbs that Heal." These in full sun to panial shade. This undated photo shows Anise Hyssop. Anise hyssop
beauties attract butterflies, Water needs vary. by · brightens many home gardens with its long-lasting ptirple .
hummingbirds, and bees. . species. Grow it by seeds, spikes. The leaves and flowers taste like licorice and can
Growing Conditions: seedlings, or root division. be snipped into salad as easily as they can be turned into
This perennial is low-fuss. Divide roots after three sweet tea. Also consider root beer-flavored sunset hyssop
It will grow in rich or poor years. Harvest the rop
soil in full sun to •partial two-thirds of the · plant, (A rupestris) and bright pink bubble gum mint (A cana)',
shade. Grow from seed, just above a node, every says Tammi Hartung, herbalist and author of "Growing 101
Herbs that Heal." These beauties attract butterflies., humseedling, cutting, or root few weeks. Zones 4-9.
Special
Needs: mingbirds, and bees.
division. Harvest the top
two-thirds of the plant, just Powdery mildew can be
above a node, every few a problem, but regular
Special
Needs: almost any soil and in any
harvesting should keep it Chamomile is extremely position," says McVicar.
weeks. Zones 4-10. ·
Special Needs: Anis.e under controL OtherWise, low-fu ss.
You
can
purchase
hyssop rarely suffers from cut the plant to ground
Tea Attributes: Often seedlings, . grow it from
disease or pests. However, level and remove all conta- enjoye
seed, use a cutting, or root
it may seed itself through- minated leaves, recomd solo, fresh and dry division. Harvest the top·
out your garden.
mends McVicar. It will chamomile flowers also pro- two-thirds of the plant, just
Tea Attributes: Anise grow back.
vide a light pineapple-y tla- above a node, every few
hyssop will lighten and
Tea Attributes: Bee balm vor to tea. Consider blend- weeks. Zones 4-9.
sweeten any tea with its becalne popular after the ing chamomile with mints,
Special Needs: Lemon
licorice flavor. It blends Boston Tea Pany for its alfalfa; and lemon.balm.
balm's root runners can get
w.ell
with · mints, similar~t~. tU- black tea. "!t
LADY'S MfliNTLE
invasive. Keep it containchamomile, lemon balm. tastes like posh Earl Grey,"
Alchemilla mollis, Rose er-bound or dig out the
says McVicar. Its citrus- Family
and rose petals.
plant if it spreads too far.
BASIL
oregano-thyme flavor will
Many gardeners prize Also be sure to cut it back
Ocinium basilicurn, Mint change slightly from mild lady' s mantle for its before it goes to seed to
to spicy depending" on the crinkly, dew-kissed foliage prevent rampant reseeding.
Family
.
Most of us think of basil species, variety, and eli" even more than its subtle
Tea Attributes: This ·
as a· pes to plant. However, mate. It blends well with golden flowers. Lady's herb's bright lemon flavor
its spicy aromatic flavor mild, sweet miins like mantle is steeped in lore: is pi-ized by tea blenders;
also makes a surprisingly apple mint, pineapple Dewdrops collected from however, it is also slightly
delicious tea. Of the more mint, and spearmint.
its leaves were believed to bitter. Mints, anise hyssop,
than 400 herbs that Jekka
G E .R M A N
hold
magical powers and tarragon, chamomile, and
McVicar grows, she says CHAMOMILE
other lemony herbs like
Matricaria
recutita, keep women·young .. . .
"I consider basil my to be
lemon verbena, lemon
Growing
CondtttOns:
my morning cuppa." Also Sunflower Family
Lady's
mantle
like
s
full
grass.
and lemon thyme
The tiny daisy-like
.check out the purple-hued
holy basil (Octmum sanc- chamomiles cheer up any sun to partial shade in dry will all lighten lemon
tum), which has an aromat- garden and give it a mead- or slightly moi st soiL balm's flavor:
LEMON THYME
ic, sweet taste and is ow feeL The flowers and Grow this perennial from
Thymus
citriodorus,
revered in Ayurvedic med- foliage have a light pineap- seed, seedling, or root division.
Harvest
the
young
Family
Mint
ple-apple scent to them.
icine.
This shrubby evergreen
Also
consider the hardy leaves for tea. Zone 3-8.
Growing Conditions:
Special Needs: Lady's herb will wind around
This herb thrives in a perennial
&amp;
Roman
mantle
is low-maintenance, rocks and along walkways,
sunny location in well- chamomile (Chamaemelum
but
cut
it back after it flow- or hold its own in a formal
drained rich s.oiL Basil nobile), which can be used
ers to prevent it from reseed- garden bunch. It is less
species are well suited for similarly.
pung·ent than common
Growing Conditions: ing all over the garden.
containers,
as
seen
Tea
Attributes:
Lady's
(T vulgaris) and has
thyme
throughout
the Chamomile will thrive in
Mediterranean neighbor- most soils and conditions, mantle tea has a· mild, a citrus tlavor enjoyed by
hoods. as well as in Indian though it prefers a sunny astringent flayor that both herbalists and chefs.
temples. Grow from seed, spot. Grow boti:t types of resembles Chinese tea. ·It The tiny lavender bloO?JS
by
seed. blends well with mints , attract bees and other
buy seedlings, or use a cut- chamomile
Roman
chamomile
can lemon balm, hibiscus !low- winged pollinators.
ting. Harvest the top twoGrowing Conditions:
thirds of the plant, just also be grown by cuttings ers, and raspberry leaves. ·
LEMON BALM
Thyme likes poor, well·
root
divisions.
above a node, every few and
Melissa officinalis, Mint drained soi l in full sun to
weeks. Basil will grow in Dedicate a few leisurely
partial shade. Thyme can
mornings or afternoons Family
all zones as an annual.
Lemon balm masquer- be grown by seedling,
Sr.ecial Needs: Young throughout the growing
bas1l plants are prone to season to collect the small ades as its relative seed, cuttings, root divi"dampening off' due to flowers for tea. While it M.enthas until you rub it s . sion, or layering. Harvest
fungus in wet soiL "Water may take a while to har- leaves to release its intense the leaves and flowers at
the plants in the morning- . vest, their llavor will sur- lemon fragrance . It is any time. · Sheer it up to
not at night-so the . plant pass any store-bought loved by bees and other two-thirds down the stem. ·
German winged pollinators as well Zo'nes 5-9.
does not go to bed wet," chamomile.
suggests McVicar. Basil chamomile is an annual as herbalists, who use it for
Special Needs: Thyme
will not tolerate a touch of that often reseeds and can a relaxing tea.
requires little care, but it will
be grown in all zones.
frost.
Growing Conditions: rot if it becomes too wet duris
a
Roman
chamomile
Tea Attributes: Enjoy
True to its mint genes, ing a cold winter, warns
basil on its own, with perennial in zones 4-9.
"Lemon balm wi II grow in McVicar.
BY MARIA NOEL GROVES
FDA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o (') ·. :'&gt;ITS • \'ol. ;,X , No.:!

Racine approves, discusses ordinances

SPORTS ·
• Brewers' Sabathia
·homers, pitches .
complete game.
'
.
See Page 81

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINoLCOM

RACINE
Racine
Village
Co(mcil
has
approved its burned out
structure ordinance and
given a second reading to an
ordinance dealing with an
alley near the old Racine
.lunior High SchooL
Ordinance 998 proposes
to sell the excess villageowned property. known as
the Sixth Street Alley coming from Elm Street going

CONTRACTING
740-985-3444

Be amazed with modular.
The better,. stronger, faster way to build.

BY BRIAN

OBITUARIES

• Clllllllrtm hlndnlll Dl BDII'JIIIL

Page AS
• George Hensley, 71
• Granville Parsons

INSIDE

• Labor of love:
Missionaries join forces
to build new church.
See Page AS
·' Govemors talk of
.· moving beyond com-·
· b~sed ethanol.
..see Page A6.

PASSPORT
Cohtracts

WEATHER

,

INDEX
Annie's Mailbox
Calendars

Bs

Editorials

A4

Obituaries
'
Sports

·As

to 5:00 qm~ By Appointment
Sat: By appoiutment

will be se llin g the lot '
throt1gh the CIC for the pur·
Please see Racine, AS

REED

Weather

,..

•'\.
(; '

·;. . ,.·~~r.r "

Area Agency on
Aging Awards

Comics ·

-....._,-..,~f.!!}' -Frl8:00

J.

MIDDLEPORT - This
year's first citations for
alleged
non-compliance
with Middleport's building
codes and rental inspection
violations are expected to
be filed soon.
Building
In spector
Randall Mullins said citations to mayor's coun are
expected against at least
three building owners
have failed to make mandated repairs or otherwise
failed to comply with the
'program.
The inspection program
was instituted last year, in
order to improve the standard of rentl!l housing and
to make housing safer for
those who rent. Mullins was
hired first on a contract
basis and then, earlier this
year, on a full-time salaried
basis .. to inspect each rental
unit and to serve as the village's building inspector
and ·code enforcement officer ' and to oversee compliance with flood plain reguPiease see Building, AS

Pomeroy
(Between Five Points and Chester)

Design Center Hours

business into 'the vilhtge and

BREED@ MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Classifieds

• Featurin&amp; Ranch, Cape Cod, Two Story, and Multi-Family Homes.

down into · 213 rds of the
appraised value or $22 . !J~ X
arl acre less ex pen:-~es. Nu
fu.nds are due Southern until.
Racine receives funds from
the ultimate purclw ser nf
each part of the property
which is to be sold for wm mercial
development.
Racine is working with the
CIC to bring commerci i1l

·citations
expected in
building
inspections

34740 St. Rt. 7

www.karrcontracting.com
www.allamericanhomes.com

to the former Racine •Junior · Commercial Development will be · the mayor. clerk
High School property for Plan .. .for establi~hing a treasurer and two appointed
$10.000, less expenses. to business district for the gen- council members as OUt·
the
Community eral benefit of the citizens lined . in the Ohio Revised
Improvement Corporation of the Village of Racine ." ·
Code.
for the purpose of selling it . As reported earlier. counCouncil also recently
for business development. ci l approved the second approved a purchase agreeCouncil considers the prop· reading of an ordinance to ment drafted by Village
erty an ideal location for establish a Commercial Solicitor Douglas Little
further business deve'Iop- D~velopment Group for the which would transfer the
menl.
Ordinance
998 village. This group will for- deed to the Racine Junior
requires a third and final mulate a pian for develop- High School property from
• reading foll owed by a roll ing this property to be used Southern to Racine Vi.llage.
call vote before enacted.
as a business district for the The purchase price will be
The o rdinance is being citiz.ens of Racine. Sitting . no less than 53 cents a
enacted ' .to "further the on the development .group square foot which break s

----~---'-----------,-----------'---~----,-------·--

Details on Page A&amp;

KARR'

www.mydailyscnlincl.cum

MONDAY, .JULY 14, 2008

B3-4

8 Section
A6

© 2oo8 Ohio VaHey Publishing Co.

Sun: By.appoilflme'rJ

4

MARIETTA -· The Area
Agency on Aging District 8,
of which Meigs County' is a
part, has finalized selection
of 73 PASSPORT providers
for the 2008-20 I0 servke
term.
Ohio legi slation has
authorized a reimbursement
increase of three percent for
services provided by the
providers. PASSPORT is
administered
through
Buckeye
Hills-Ho~king
Valley
· Regional
Development District. It s
Area Agency on Aging 8
(AAA8) serves Athens,
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Perry, and
Washington Counties.
"For those who qualify,
PASSPORT helps older
ad ults ~emain independent
longer and relieves some of
the burden of care from
family members," said Rick
Hindman, Director of the
An;a Agency on Agilig.
"The goal of tile program is
to provide quality care at
home, where older Ohioans
say they prefer to be.''
The AAA8 case manager
works · with the family,
physician, and home health
workers to customize a care
plan for each lien!. Care
PleiSe see Passport, AS

'

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;

'

•

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-

. .. " " ~-:.::·
·"' ,· ,~
~

•
.•.·

·~ ~

..

.

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..

I ......

.

Charlene Hoellich/pholo

Albert "The Kid" Castiglia in a return appearance here for the Pomeroy Blu~s and Jazz Society's Rhythm on the River
series, attracted an enormous.crowd of blues fans for his Friday night concert. Not only was the amphitheater full , but lhe
fans filled the stage area on the parking lot and perched on the wall overlooking the stage to listen to Castiglia's unique
blend of guitar blues. The free Friday right Rhythm on the River concerts will conclude this week With Bill Lupkin an.d the
Chicago Blues Coalition. That will wrap up the Rhythm on the River series which traditionally leads up to the cl1max of
the Society's summer program -the Big Bend Blues B&lt;~sh, July 25,26.

Purple haze: Bug traps
attempt to catch a killer
aid ash borer sticks to it. It's
BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
not harmful (o humans, pets
or wildlife but the glue can
RACINE - At firsJ, you be messy. The traps are purthink you're seeing things, ple because·a study showed
but then you look again and the borers are attracted to
realize there actually is red and purple colors more
something purple hanging than any other color. .
from that tree you just
The traps are in counties
glanced at while driving by, where the insect has hOt
but what is it?
been found , yet, and are
The purple apparitions are being used to track the popactually insect traps placed ulation. There's no wideby
the
Ohio
there
spray to control
Department of Agriculture spread
wh1ch has 7,500 of them these insects according to
scattered
across
the ODA.
ODA cares about controlBuckeye State. The traps
are set to catch the emerald ling this Asian pest in part
ash borer, a pest which can because the state has 3.8 bilkill an ash tree within tlve lion ash trees, a staple of
Emrald ash
landsca-ping
years of infestation, repre- firewood,
senting a huge threat to ihe materials and used in the
production of baseball bats, 41 counties, of which Meigs
state's ash tree population .
According to ODA. the picnic tables and more. To is hot included. A violator
traps are 3-D pri sms made slow the sp(ead, ODA has could face up to a $4,000
of plastic and coated in a issued a quarantine, making
nontoxic glue on all · sides, it illegal for residents to tine.
The en)erald ash borer
along with a scented oil to move hardwood firewood
attract the insect. The emer- or ash iree materials from was first discovered in the
By BETH SERGENT

borer trap
United States in "that state
up north" in 2002 and have
continued to spread south .
The pests are believed to
haw b~~ n unknowingly
Please see Traps, AS

�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, July 14,

2008

'The Daily Sentinel

Government not
expected to help
•
more compames
•

NEW YORK (AP) - The U.S. government is $ignaling it won't throw a lifeline to struggling tinancial'
comr;J ni e, . - exc:ept for mortgage linchpins Fannie
Mue and Freddie :0.1;K' - marking &lt;1 shift to a new ;ind
po t~ nti a ll y more volat ile phase of the credit crisis.
Such an approach could mean beaten-down investm ent bank' like Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and
regiOnal h.tnks mu:-t now fend fo r themselves as they
try to rec:over fro m billi ons of dollars in mortgagerelated hiSses - urdi ke Bear Stearns Cos .. whose buyout the gove rnment helped orchestrate in March. That
is bound to unnerve an already turbulent -Wall Street
. and ni ake inv~s tQrs even more am~io u s as they await
fimulL·iiii n unpa ni e' · earnin g~ ex pected tu be dow·n. a
stunning lill i1crccnt from a year pgo when all the numbers are in.

ArrACK ON- US BASE IN AFGHANISTAN KILLS

9.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

BY JASON STRAZIUSO
ASSOCIATED PRE SS WRITER

Couple needs to
t!get out more often

KABUL , Afghanistan A multi-pronged militant
assault on a small , remote
U.S . base close to the
Paki stan border killed nine
American soldiers and
\Vounded 15 Sundav in the
deadJ iest a !lack 1Jn U.S.
forces in Afghani stan in

:'

three years. offic iab sa id .

The· attack on
the
Ameri can troops began
around 4: 30 a.m . and lasted
throughout the day. Militants
tired machine guns. rocketpropelled grenades and mor·
tars from homes and a
mosque in the village of
Wanat in the

mountainou~

northeastern province of
Kunar, NATO's International
Security Assi stance Force
Ahd . for consumers \rlrcady squeezed by tightening
said in a statement.
credit standards. it could mean getting a mor1gaoe will
" Although
no
final
become ~ven harckr.
.
e
.
a"essmenl
has
been
made.
The short -tc·rm un certa int v about Freddie Mac and
Fannie Mae - which together hold or guarantee· half it is bel ieved ~1 s urgent s suffered heavy casualti es durthe nation·, mort:,:agc debt -:- was to an extent relieved
ing several hours of fighton Sunday. Federa l ufficiab again threw their support
ing." NATO said in a statebehil1d the gove rnment-spon sored enterprises; the
ment.
·
Treasury pledged to expand its current line of cred-it to
U.S . offi cial s say militant ·
the two comp•inies and Treasc1ry Secretary Henry
allacks
in Afghanistan ~rc
Paulson alsb said the government could . if needed , buy
becoming more complex.
equit~' capital in the compani es. whose stocks lost half
intense and beller coortlinattheir v'a lu.e la&gt;t week. The Treasury's moves would
ed
than a year ago. Monthl y
require congress ional approval.
death .tolls of U.S. and
Mean whi le, the Federal Reserve said it will provicle
NATp troops in Afghanistan
additional loans if needed.
surpassed U.S. military
But some of Wall Street's biggest investors believe
deaths in Iraq in May and
there wa.s· anot her message in the government \
June . And last Monday, a
announ cement - the rest of the finan cial sector seems
stlicide bomber attacked the
unlikel y to get a helping hand. Global banks and broIndian Embassy in Kabul ,
kera ge., have already written down nearly $~00 billion
killing 5~ · people in the
in soureJ mortgage investments - a number proje~ted
deadliest attack in the
to ultimately reac}j $ 1 trillion.
Afghan capital since 200 I.
''The credit crisis has obviously ·entered into a new
·U.S. officials are considphase -:- th~ g 0 ve mm~n1 has 011~ bailolll left in-them,
ering dta'l-ving down add iand this is it ." said Jeffrey Ciundlach, chief investment
tional force s from Iraq in
officer of TCW Group in Los Angeles. · which invests
coming months. in part
$160 billion .
·
·
because of ·the need for
"One con sequence of Freddie and Fannie is that
additional U.S. troop s in
other tirm s are allowed to go under," he said . "If you
Afghanistan .. U.S. official&gt;
couldn't get your act together after four months of
have said they nee~ at kasl
unprecedented finan cing terms. maybe you' don 't
three more brigades in
deserve to be thrown yet another lifeline ."
Afghanistan - or more
Won·ies about finan ci;\1 companies failing intensified
than
10.000 troops.
afler a run on Ind yMac Bancorp Inc . led to the bank's
NATO c:onfirmed nine of
takeover by the government on Friday. It wasn 't the
its soldiers had been killed
Treasury or Fed helping to keep lndyMac in business,
and 15 wounded. A Western
but a transfer of control to the Federal Deposit
oflicial
said the nine dead
Insurance Corp . - which backs deposits on all the
were Americans. speaking
nation 's banks.
on condition cif anonymity
Analy :-ts &gt;&lt;uti t he~e kind of failures will curtail
competition among financial institutions , which . because he was not authorized to release the troops'
mi ght in turn make it even harder for some borrownationalities. Four Afghan
ers to ge t mortgages . personal 9r auto loans or credit
soldiers also were wounded.
ca rcls.
NATO said .
On Wall Street. Monday could be a critical da,Y,
Lt . Col. Rumi Nielsonwith inves tors quite nervous amid the uncertainty .m
Green, the top U.S. military
the - fi[mncial sector. Friday, as investors tried to
spokeswoman
in
assess the health of the mortgage financiers, the Dow
Afghanistan.
said
she
could
·Jones industrial average dropped below 11.000 for
not comment because the
the first time in nearly two years , and the .overall
market was left with its fourth straight weP-kly loss. · fighting was ongoing.
The attack was the dead- ·
The government's support of Fannie and Freddie in
liest
for U.S.. troops in
part was meant . to assuage investors around the
Afghanistan since June
world .
2005, when 16 American .
Wall Street will get a better sense of how concerned
troops were ~illed - also in
investors are with Faimie Mae and Freddie Mac's
Kunar province - ·when
future immediately Monday morning. Freddie Mac is
their helicopter was shot
scheduled to hold its weekly debt auction beginning at
down by a rocket-propelled
8 a.m. EDT. The auction closes at 9:45 a.m., shortly
grenade. Those troops were
after U.S. markets open.
on
their way to rescue a
Success ful completion of the debt auctions allows
four -man team of Navy
b~th lenders to remain liquid - replacing old debt
SEALs caught in a militant
Wtth new. Lrqu1dtty has been ·one of the key questions
ambush. Three SEALs were
. facing fin ancial companies during the credit crisi..
killed, the fourth was resFreddie Mac is auctioning off a combined $3 billion
cued days later by a farmer.
in three- and six-month securities. Wall Street will be
The latest assault came at
looking very closely at the number of bidders and the
a
time of rising violence in
· rate at which th~ securities are auctioned , said Bert Ely,
Afghani
stan.
Also
on
a banking consultant who has been critical of the comSunday, a suicide bomber
panies in the past.
·
largeting a police patrol.
'Til be surprised if the results aren't strong ," he said,
killed 24 people. includin~
noting the go vernment was likely heavily encouraging
19 civili ans. while U.S .
investors throughout the weekend .
.
coalition and Afghan solThe banking industry· was already dealt a severe
diers killed 40 militant s
blow in March when Bear Stearns nearly collapsed
in the south .
elsewhere
amid the evapomtion of its liquidity. JPMorgan Chp~e
More
than
2,300 people
&amp; Co. stepped i11 to purchase Bear Stearns in a deal
- mostly militants - have
orchestrated by the Federal Reserve .
died in insurgency-related
Bear Stearns was unhinged 'by mounting losses tied
violence this year, according
to investments in bonds backed by mortgages . As the
to an Associated Press tally
mortgages increa; ingly defaulted, the value of bonds
of official figures . Attacks in
backed by the troubled loans tumbled . After Bear collapsed , investment b~nks were given ihe opportunity to · east~rn Afghanistan arc up
40 percent this year coplborrow directly from the Fed, an option that was previpared with last year.
ously onl y granted to retail banks.
·
Adm . Mike Mullen , chairFinancial companies' reports of write-downs of trouman of the Joint Chiefs of
bled debt are likely to iDcrease this week as some of the
Staff. warned during a visit to
country 's largest institutions , including JPMorgan
Kabul last week that there are
Chase , Merrill Lynch &amp; Co . and Citigroup Inc., report
more foreign fighters . includsecond-quaner results. That trio has already taken a
ing ai-Qaida members, in
combined $73 billion in write-downs since the credit
Pt1kistan 's tribal areas. mili.
crisis began last summer.
tants' who cross the border
Lehman Brothers. whose shares have lost 78 percent
and launch attacks against
since this year's peak in February, is considered to be
on the shakiest ground becuuse it is the smallest Wall ' U.S. and Afghan troops. ·
Mullen has said he hopes
. Street bank and has significant mortgage holdings .
improved sec urity in Iraq
· Last month. the in vestment bank announced it l&lt;tst
will allow troops to be shiftnearl y $3 billion during the second quarter and was
ed
this year from Iraq to
forced to off~et that by raising $6 billion of fresh capAfghani
stan , where vioital.
·
lence is ri sing ..
Mean whi le, analysts believe regional banks in .areas
Violence in Iraq is at its
hardest h1t by the real estate downturn are also at risk
lowest
level in four years and
for failure. Some of the most bandied about names
Iraqi forces are takmg on
include Was hington Mutual fnc., National City Corp.,
mor,e responsibility. trend s
and Fi ft h Third Bancorp .
·
."fannic am! Freddie arc too big to fa il only because · that could allow Gen. David
Petraeus, the top American
nl the repcrcuss1n ns. not rn JU St the mortgage and houscommander in Iraq , to rec. ing markets but the entire fin ancial market," said Joe
ommend to Pre~ ident Bush in
Balestrino. lhed-income market ' trategi't ai Federated
September
that he resume a
Investors. "The U.S. i" in disarray .. .' these regionals
troop withdrawal that is being
. could be gone. they !Ire in a tnugh 'pot wi th housing
put on hold this month so
and employmen t goi ng ,outh ."
Petraeus has time to R&lt;Se"
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. the overall situation. A top

AP photo

Face covered Tal1ban militants get ready fbr exercise before the y executed two Afghan
women in Gh.azni proviAce, Afghanistan, on Saturday. Taliban militants executed two women
in ce ntral Afghanistan after accusing them of working as prostitutes on a u.s .. base.
·
Rush aide. Ed Gillespie , said
Sund ay that withdrawing
more troops from Iraq after
that assessment always has
"hecn a possibilitv."
Another cau se for con.cern in Afghani stan is the
high casualty tolls for civilian s killed in violence . This
month. an Afghan governmen! commi ss ion · found
that U.S. aircraft killed 47
civilians during ;, bombing
run in Nangarhar province, .
whil e a separate incident in
Nuri,tan province is alleged
by an Afghan officials to
have killed 22 civilians.
The tnlls have prompted
the lmernational Committee
of the Red Cross this week
to ask all sides to show
restraint and avoid civilian
casualties. But violence
continued around the country on Sunday.
A suicide bomber on a
motorcycle blew himself up .
next to a ·police patrol in the
southern
province · of
Uruzgan . ki lling 24 people.
The bomb attack on a police
patrol at a busy inlersection of
the Deh Rawood district
killed live police officers and
19 civilians. wounding more

than 30 others, said Juma Gul U.S.-led coalition forces in
Himat , Uruzgan's police Helmand province , th;e
chief. Most of "those killed coalition said in a statement.
and wounded were shopkeep- The militants attacked the
ers and young boys selling combined force s near Sangi'n
goods in the street, he said.
on Saturday from "multipl'e
Elsewhere, Taliban mili- concealed and fortified positams executed two women tion s." the .coalition' said .
in central Afghani stan ·late Thirty "enemy boats" and
Saturday al"ter accu sing several small bridges have
them of working as prosti- been de stroyed · on the
tutes on a U.S. base.
Helmand River during two
The women, dressed 'in day s of fighting, it said.
blue burqa;, were shot and
Also Sunday, a soldier
killed just outside Ghazni with NATO's International
city in central Afghanistan, Security Assistance Forc'e
said Sayed Ism a I, a died in a roadside blast in
spokesman for Ghazni 's Helmand province, a stategovernor. He called the two ment said. The soldier's
"innocent local people."·
nationality was not released
· Taliban fighters • told and it wasn't clear if tlie
Associated Press Television death wa..&lt;. connected to the
New s the two wOinen .were lwu-day battle.
.
executed for allegedly runIn the north, a soldier servning a prostitution ring ing with ISAF died of
catering to U.S . soldiers and wounds caused by an exploother foreign contractors at . sion Saturday, the military
a U.S. base in Ghazni city.
alliance said in a statement.
1st Lt. Nathan Perry. a The statement did. not give
U.S. military _spoke sman , any further details of the
said he had not heard aile- explosion . The soldier)
gations "anything close to nationality was not disclosed.
that nature."
...,
There are nearly 53,00b
Meanwhile. at least 40 troops from 40 nations servmilitants were killed follow- ing in the ISAF i)l
ing an attack on Afghan a·nd Afghani stan.

BUSINESS
.CARD
DIREC,ORY

Special advertising supplement found ·July 30th only in the
This Pul&gt;llcatlon witi llliQ
be onllne1 , .
"'
www.mydallytrlbuoe.com .
www.mydaiJYregltter.C91!1
.. wwW.myd.HY,M(1\)"";0cHft
.

•.

'

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
~alltpohs iaiip

otrthune
~oint ~leasant l\egtster .

This is a special sized supplement which will be
published Wednesday, July 30. Do you know how many
phone calls the Area Chamber of Commerce, as well as
the newspapers and other businesses receive asking for
the name of a plumber, contractor, carpet cleaner, car
repair shop, etc? This special section will be easier to use
than a regular directory and cards will be arranged by
category.
·
'

We will be glad to use the information on your business
.card or we can create one for you.
Think how long it would take you to hand out 14,000
business cards. We can do it in just ONE DAY. All you
need to do is call 740-992-2155.
Ask for Brenda ·or Dave
(Ad deadline is Thesd~y, July 22nd)

•..

.

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY Su~AR

: • Dear Annie: My husband is in his early 50s and self: employed. We are lucky that business is good , but it means
[he works 24/7 . At most, he might take one or two days off
,a month. He works from home, so I can accept hi s long
f!lours , but his mood swings are hard to handle. He gets very
:angry, mostly with me (I work with him) . If I mention that
: ~e needs to chill out, he -only gets worse. He complains I
·Pon't communicate enough with him and he feels isolated .
:_pepression runs in his family, and when I s~gge_st ,he con. stder med1cauon , he' then makes an effort to change but it
,doesn't lasllong.
'
I don ' t k.nowwhat to do. I love him, but it's hard to be
· around. him because of his temperament and it seems to be
getting worse. What do you think? - Unhappy Worker
. Dear Unhappy: You both need to get out of the house
~ore often. Your husband is feeling closed in , which makes
fum nervous and 1mtable, and you are his nearest target.
Short breaks, along witb some sunshine, can alleviate his
-~ood and help both of ~ou get through the day. Don 't chas:Use h1m. Instead , explam that being cooped up all day hur!s
product1v1ty. Suggest an outdoor coffee break twice a day,
alone or together, and maybe the two of you can go some·. where for lunch or for a walk now and then. If he refuses to
_leave the house , you should do so without him, even if it's
just for a few minutes.
. Dear Annie:_ My in-laws did not attend my son's high school graduatton. Instead, they went to the wedding of
_their youngest child , "Dick." This was his fourth wec;lding. We were supposed to get an invitation , but it never ·
arrived.
Dick is 40-something and divorced his third wife ju;t six
. months ago. He knew about my son's graduation long
before he planned this wedding and could easily have
:selected another date. My husband feels his brother pur:posely scheduled it at the same time in order to steal the
. spotlight.
DiCk lias afway s been tfle favored chifcf. Tlie last time we
called my in-laws to say we'd be dropping by, Dick called,
.too, so they made plans to go out with him instead. I would
_like you to tell my in-laws how wrong they are to go to
l~eir son's fourth wedding instead of their grandson's only
h1gh -school graduatton. - Heartbroken Mom in
:Indiana
. Dear Mom: Normally, a wedding takes precedence over
a graduation. However, since this is Dick 's fourth walk
·down the aisle and he allowed it to coincide with his
:nephew's graduation. we agree that the in-laws should have
inade a .greater effort to attend the graduation or at. least
apologized profusely for l]lissing it: Still, it serves no pur,pose to hold a grudge. Since you recognize Dick is the
favorite, these slights should not surprise you. If you
:change your expectations , you will be less disappointed.
•: Dear Annie: Here is another suggestion for " Anonymous
:prandpa," the 90-year-old widower whose greedy grand~ch1ldren have cut off contact because he refuses to ·build
~them a million-dollar house. In addition to your sugges~11ons of volunteermg, I would suggest that he look into a
&lt;retirement community.
.
.
:- We moved into one three years ago. It has become the
:ideal place to live out our remaining years with excellent
·~ocial interaction. caring staff and innumenible activities.
~e have seen many widows and widowers move in and
~adjust easily. Everyone is friendly and sociable. We live
pndependently, but each of our apartments comes equipped
' ~1th emergency buttons 1f we need help.
: j There are many types of these facilities to meet most all
;mcome levels.] would highly recommend "Grandpa" look
~n1o one, and also rewrite his will. - Happy in Holland,
'"ich.
1: Dear Holland: That's a lovely testimonial to retirement
:-communities. We hope "Grandpa" will look into one when
t he's ready .
:; Annie's Mailbox is writ/en by Kathy Mitchell and
:fllarcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers col;:umn.
Please
e-mail
your
questions
to
'Jmniesmailbtix@comcast.net, or write to: Annie's
":;Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190, Chi£'ago, IL 60611. To find out
1;pwre about Annie's Mailbox, and read features by other
:.Creators Sy1.1dicate writers and cartoonists, visit the
~r:reators Sy1.1dicate Web page at www.creators.com. ·

.

~People

are wild about
~.. online retirement
•

'

BY ELIZABETH CRUMP
SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER IN ATHENS

.•£you've heard what we at Social. Security have to say
~:

~

about retiring online - that it 's fast , easy and
secure. Now see what some ·of our recent applihave written about applying for Social Security ben• efus online .
: ; "I am beyond thrilled about the online filing process.':
:said 'Priah from Ohio . "The retirement application was
:-easy to start. I did not feel rushed at all."
·
~ rom from Arizona had this to say : "I recently applied
tfor Social Security benefits online, which was painless
~and took about 20 minutes .. I followed that up wtth a car
•wash, which took longer. How about that? A federal ben: ~fit that took less time to apply for than getting a car
~
~ants

:wash."

;.: Melanie from Indiana, s~id, "I helped m~ husband apply
::for
retirement benefits online an!1 it couldn t have been eas;..c ,.
..,er.
~ Sven from Minneapolis said, "I filed for my retirement
fbenefits online and il worked great."
.
-: "I am amazed at the speed and efficiency," said Joe from
:~alifornia . "My wife turns 62 in September and will foi:Jow me in applying online." . .
•: Eileen from Pennsylvania said, "It took twenty minutes.
loved that after each page it would tell me if I had made a
~is take. It was very easy to use."
•! Vicki from Ohio said, "It's a no-brainer. Applying online
'"":as so easy, the application was very user-fnendly. I liked
.I
• t. "
: - And Bob from California had this to say: "Signing up for
;:my Social Security on line was a snap!"
.: So don 'r just take our word for it. Listen to what others
~re saying all over the country. Join the more than one
~1flillion people who have taken advantage of the most con!~enienl way lu apply for retirt:ment benefits - online. It
•sure beats waiting in line . Visit www.socialsecurity.gov to
:learn
more,
or
go
directly
to
www.socialsecurity.gov/retire2 to get started with your
retirement.

a

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

Monday, July 14,2008

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Lisa Queen singing . David members welc'ome , lu'nch Legion hall, Potluck at
Barringer will speak Friday provided, 992-6626 to noon. Family and friend s
and Tommy Scyoc will RSVP.
welcome.
sing . On Saturday , Dave
Dailey will speak and
CHESTER
Shade
COOLVILLE
Debbie Dailey and family . River Lodge . special meet- Des cendants of Arthur and
will sing.
mg . 7 p.m. for purpose of Nel son Watson will have
conferring
Entered reunion at noon at the home
•
ApprenticeDegree on one of Jim and Debbie Watson.
candidate. Refreshments to 42455 Woods Rd .: Coolville.
follow.

Thesday, July 15
RUTLAND - Rutland
•Village Council , rescheduled regular meeting , 7
p.m ., civic center.

Clubs and
organizations

Friday, July 18
LETART FALLS
Annual budget meeting of
Letart Township Trustees , 9
a.m.. oftice building.

Church events
~.

Monday, July
POMEROY County Republican
7:30 p.m. at the
, County Courthouse .

Monday, July 21
·,POMEROY - Vacation
Bible School at First
Southern Ejaptist Church,
41872 Pomeroy Pike . 6 to 9
p.m. For more inforn1ation
call Rachael Needs, 9491325.

14
Meigs
Party.
Meigs

Thesday, July 15
CHESTER - Chester
Council 323 , Daughters of
Americ , 6:30 p.m. picnic
adt the hall. meeting adt
7:30 p.m . Take- covered
dish.

Reunions
Saturday, July 19
POMEROY
Glaze
reunion will be held at the
home of Bill and Louise
Radford. Potluck at noon.
foll owed by games for the
children and mu sic for the adults. Relatives and friends
invited.

Other events
Thesday, July 15
RAC1NE Southern
Athletic Boosters , 6:30
p.m .. high school. discuss
upcoming sports . seasons .
also informational meeting
for parents of incoming
·
high school athletes .

Birthdays

Sunday, July 20
Friday, July 18
CHESTER - Runion of
Thursday, July 17
Thursday, July 17
POMEROY .
Bill
decendents of Guy and Iva
TUPPERS PLAINS POMEROY
- . Tile Singer, 12:30 p.m. Masonic Matlack wi II observe his
South Bethel Community ·. American Cancer Society Lodge . Chester. Take cov- 92nd birthday on July IS.
Church weekend revival, 7 Meigs County Advisory _ered dish.
Cards may be sent to him in
p.m.through Saturday. Gene Board meeting. noon, basecare of George Dallas:
Goodman will preach ment conference room at
RACINE - Cozart fami- 29918 Rolling Ridge Drive ,
Thursday, with Jerry and Pomeroy Library, new ly reuilon , Racine American Agoura Hill s .~alif.. 91301.

German family reunion held
POMEROY
The
Gernnan family reunion picnic was held June 30 at the
home of Donna Bowles near
Pataskala with Don Bowles
and Cheryl Coy assisting.
Five children of the late Mr.
rmd- ·Mrs. Howard German
attended. They were Howard
Curtis Gern1an of Langsville.

Betty German Bowles of
Pataskala. Robert Gernnan of
Newark, Edna Genman Coy,
John German of Galion, their
spouses, grandchildren and
great-grandchildren. A total of
70 family.. members and
guests we1e the1e. tmveting
from · Langsville, Newark ,
Pataskala,
Glenford,

Columbus,
Galion.
Caledonia, Iberia, Shelby and
Tiffin. The death of James
Bowles on May 23 was noted.
Featured was a cake
accented with a picture of
the Genman. children with
uames rnscnbeu pruvruetl
by Edna Coy which was
served with the covered

dish dinner. Prayer was
given ·by Jody German.
Betty Bowles was the win ner of a door prize.
Cornholc games and
cards were. played, while
others enjoyetl reminiscing .
Next vear's reunion wili be
held at th~ cabin on the old
home site near Rutland .

GCC announces achievment list.
GALLIPOLIS .
Gallipolis Career College
has released the list of students named to the achic;;vement list for ,Spring Quarter
2008.
.
Those ~tudents obtaining
a perfect 4.0 grade point
average were: Pamela
Bowles. Paul Carpenter,
Tabitha Chapman , Lori
Coen ;
Amber
Doss.
Gwenda Dyer, Robin Eblin,
Bessie · Fisher.
Marie
Gilbert , MiraCle Goodman,
Donna Gorslene, Robert
Harris, Cora Hill, Pamela

Hutchison , Deborah Hysell .
Rebecca Johnson, Lora
Langdon, Brittany Lee.
Paula Livingston, Amanda
Lucas, Donita McClintic,
Dreama
Miller. Anita
Morrissey, Sandra Musick.
Amy Ragland. Anginette
Rippey, ·Angela Runyon ,
Julie Sargent. Karen Sparks,
Lisa Stone , Joyce Turner
and Maria Young. .
Students achieving a 3.5
or better grade point aver·
age were : Christina Beaver,
Scott
Canter, "Kristie
Cremeans,
Nichole

Dickenson , Dustin Dixon ,
Kelly
Harmon,
Edith
Johnson , Tara Lee·, Monica
·Markin. _
Katherine
McGuire, Alicia Simpkins.
Lacie
Skeen.
Laura
Sowders, Christy Ward .
Stacie Weisend, Ryan
. Williams. Jessica Wisecup.
Melissa Vancooney and
Derek Wilson.
Those students who
achieved a 3.0 or better
grade point average were:
A lisa
Austin.
Angela
Brown. Tonya Burton,
Tammy
Casto,
Penny

'

OSU to host field night

PIKETON - The Ohio Registration begins at 5:45 and Farm Bill ·Highlights;
State University South p.m . with talks and presen- given by Abbe Copple ,
Centers, OARDC, and Pike lations beginning at 6:15 . District Conservationist ,
SWCD will be hosting the p.m. This .year's program Natural
Resources
annual Crop, Soil and Water ·will cover: Cover Crops, Conservation Services. Pike
Field Night on Thursday, · No-till and Water Quality; County.
July 24, beginning at 5:45 presented by Jim Hoorman,
There is no cost fur the
pm.
from OSU Extension Center dinner which will be 'erved
The event will be held at at Lima; Soil and Water at 7: 15 pm. Wagon Tours
Ohio State University South District Programs, given by , and demonstrations in the
Centers, 1864 Shyville Kevin
Yost,
District field will cover Rio-energy
Road
m
Piketon. Technician, Pike SWCD: Crops, and No-till and

Chri stian. Jennifer Clarke .
Jason Cremeans . Laura
Curtis . Jaime Davidson.
Shawna
Davis. Cathy
Gholston.
Amanda
Gillispie. Teresa Haner.
Michelle Jarrell. Brandy
Lane. Kayla
Marcum,
Jennifer
McGinness.
Connie Monroe. Jeanette
Newsome, Cary Patterson,
Brandy Rodgers, Michelle
Walker, Chauntell Williams.
Erica Wi II iams a11d Dennis
Williamson
Summer Quarter begins
July 7.

..
Cover Crops (Homegrown
Nitrogen) immediately following dinner with the
events concluding armtnd
8:30p.m.
For reservaliO!t\' (INd mon•

information, conrac1: Mai'v
Gulas a1 (740) 289-2071 exi.
2
I
3
(&lt;mailw:gulas.3@iJ.I"!I .edu&gt;

gulas.J@osu.edu) or Marv
Sibo/e ai (740) 947-5353 . ·

Official: Public to know sooner oftainted goods
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio officials will speed up
public notification of tainted food products in the
wake of an E. coli outbreak
that sickened people in
Ohio and Michigan, the
state 's agriculture director
said .
The department will noti:.
fy the public of laboratory
test results within three
hours,.instead of waiting for
other agencies or companies
to
make . their own
announcements, Agriculture
Director Robert Boggs told
The Columbus Dispatch . .
Ohio officials confirmed
on June 23 that beef tested
in state labs was contaminated with E. coli, but the
infornnation · was
not
released until June 25.
"1 think the industry
should have been more
forthcoming more quickly
m giving information to the
public that product in their
stores had been contaminated ," Boggs said.
·Food samples from federal agencies might be
exempt from the' policy,
Boggs said.
The tainted meat was later
traced to Nebraska. Beef
Ltd., prompting the company to recall 5.3 million
pounds of beef.
Some of the recalled beef
was sold by Cincinnati based Kroger Co . store s.
The grocer has recalled
ground beef products in
more than 20 states.
.. At least 41 illnesses in

Michigan and Ohio have i1 proposed. USDA spokesbeen tied to - Nebra!'.ka woman Amanda Eamich
said.
Beef's products.
Several . law suits have
The federal government
has criticized Nebraska been filed against privately
Beef for re~ponding slowly held Nebraska Beef as a
to indications that its prod- result of the E. coli outucts might be tainted with break and recall. The comE. coli.
·
pany slaughters · about
The company proposed a 2,000 head of cattle a day
new plan last week to satis- . and employs about 800
,fy the USDA's concerns, but people.
detail s of the changes were
Federal food safety regunot released.
lators should have more
USDA inspectors will power and focus on Iy on
check on the plant, which is public protection , said Dr.
in Omaha. over the next 90 William Schaffner, profesdays to make sure Nebraska . sor and chairman of the
Beef completes the changes department . of · Preventive

Medi.cine at Vanderbilt
University.
"The (USDA) is predi cat ed on the notion ih at
what the USA produces on
the farm and on the ranch is .
a good thing ," Schaffner
said.
The federal Centers for
Di sease
Control
and
Prevention eslimates that E.
coli sickens about 73.000
people and kills 61 each
year in the United . States.
Most of those who die have '
weak immune systems..
such as the ,elderly or very
young.

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�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, July 14,

2008

'The Daily Sentinel

Government not
expected to help
•
more compames
•

NEW YORK (AP) - The U.S. government is $ignaling it won't throw a lifeline to struggling tinancial'
comr;J ni e, . - exc:ept for mortgage linchpins Fannie
Mue and Freddie :0.1;K' - marking &lt;1 shift to a new ;ind
po t~ nti a ll y more volat ile phase of the credit crisis.
Such an approach could mean beaten-down investm ent bank' like Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and
regiOnal h.tnks mu:-t now fend fo r themselves as they
try to rec:over fro m billi ons of dollars in mortgagerelated hiSses - urdi ke Bear Stearns Cos .. whose buyout the gove rnment helped orchestrate in March. That
is bound to unnerve an already turbulent -Wall Street
. and ni ake inv~s tQrs even more am~io u s as they await
fimulL·iiii n unpa ni e' · earnin g~ ex pected tu be dow·n. a
stunning lill i1crccnt from a year pgo when all the numbers are in.

ArrACK ON- US BASE IN AFGHANISTAN KILLS

9.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

BY JASON STRAZIUSO
ASSOCIATED PRE SS WRITER

Couple needs to
t!get out more often

KABUL , Afghanistan A multi-pronged militant
assault on a small , remote
U.S . base close to the
Paki stan border killed nine
American soldiers and
\Vounded 15 Sundav in the
deadJ iest a !lack 1Jn U.S.
forces in Afghani stan in

:'

three years. offic iab sa id .

The· attack on
the
Ameri can troops began
around 4: 30 a.m . and lasted
throughout the day. Militants
tired machine guns. rocketpropelled grenades and mor·
tars from homes and a
mosque in the village of
Wanat in the

mountainou~

northeastern province of
Kunar, NATO's International
Security Assi stance Force
Ahd . for consumers \rlrcady squeezed by tightening
said in a statement.
credit standards. it could mean getting a mor1gaoe will
" Although
no
final
become ~ven harckr.
.
e
.
a"essmenl
has
been
made.
The short -tc·rm un certa int v about Freddie Mac and
Fannie Mae - which together hold or guarantee· half it is bel ieved ~1 s urgent s suffered heavy casualti es durthe nation·, mort:,:agc debt -:- was to an extent relieved
ing several hours of fighton Sunday. Federa l ufficiab again threw their support
ing." NATO said in a statebehil1d the gove rnment-spon sored enterprises; the
ment.
·
Treasury pledged to expand its current line of cred-it to
U.S . offi cial s say militant ·
the two comp•inies and Treasc1ry Secretary Henry
allacks
in Afghanistan ~rc
Paulson alsb said the government could . if needed , buy
becoming more complex.
equit~' capital in the compani es. whose stocks lost half
intense and beller coortlinattheir v'a lu.e la&gt;t week. The Treasury's moves would
ed
than a year ago. Monthl y
require congress ional approval.
death .tolls of U.S. and
Mean whi le, the Federal Reserve said it will provicle
NATp troops in Afghanistan
additional loans if needed.
surpassed U.S. military
But some of Wall Street's biggest investors believe
deaths in Iraq in May and
there wa.s· anot her message in the government \
June . And last Monday, a
announ cement - the rest of the finan cial sector seems
stlicide bomber attacked the
unlikel y to get a helping hand. Global banks and broIndian Embassy in Kabul ,
kera ge., have already written down nearly $~00 billion
killing 5~ · people in the
in soureJ mortgage investments - a number proje~ted
deadliest attack in the
to ultimately reac}j $ 1 trillion.
Afghan capital since 200 I.
''The credit crisis has obviously ·entered into a new
·U.S. officials are considphase -:- th~ g 0 ve mm~n1 has 011~ bailolll left in-them,
ering dta'l-ving down add iand this is it ." said Jeffrey Ciundlach, chief investment
tional force s from Iraq in
officer of TCW Group in Los Angeles. · which invests
coming months. in part
$160 billion .
·
·
because of ·the need for
"One con sequence of Freddie and Fannie is that
additional U.S. troop s in
other tirm s are allowed to go under," he said . "If you
Afghanistan .. U.S. official&gt;
couldn't get your act together after four months of
have said they nee~ at kasl
unprecedented finan cing terms. maybe you' don 't
three more brigades in
deserve to be thrown yet another lifeline ."
Afghanistan - or more
Won·ies about finan ci;\1 companies failing intensified
than
10.000 troops.
afler a run on Ind yMac Bancorp Inc . led to the bank's
NATO c:onfirmed nine of
takeover by the government on Friday. It wasn 't the
its soldiers had been killed
Treasury or Fed helping to keep lndyMac in business,
and 15 wounded. A Western
but a transfer of control to the Federal Deposit
oflicial
said the nine dead
Insurance Corp . - which backs deposits on all the
were Americans. speaking
nation 's banks.
on condition cif anonymity
Analy :-ts &gt;&lt;uti t he~e kind of failures will curtail
competition among financial institutions , which . because he was not authorized to release the troops'
mi ght in turn make it even harder for some borrownationalities. Four Afghan
ers to ge t mortgages . personal 9r auto loans or credit
soldiers also were wounded.
ca rcls.
NATO said .
On Wall Street. Monday could be a critical da,Y,
Lt . Col. Rumi Nielsonwith inves tors quite nervous amid the uncertainty .m
Green, the top U.S. military
the - fi[mncial sector. Friday, as investors tried to
spokeswoman
in
assess the health of the mortgage financiers, the Dow
Afghanistan.
said
she
could
·Jones industrial average dropped below 11.000 for
not comment because the
the first time in nearly two years , and the .overall
market was left with its fourth straight weP-kly loss. · fighting was ongoing.
The attack was the dead- ·
The government's support of Fannie and Freddie in
liest
for U.S.. troops in
part was meant . to assuage investors around the
Afghanistan since June
world .
2005, when 16 American .
Wall Street will get a better sense of how concerned
troops were ~illed - also in
investors are with Faimie Mae and Freddie Mac's
Kunar province - ·when
future immediately Monday morning. Freddie Mac is
their helicopter was shot
scheduled to hold its weekly debt auction beginning at
down by a rocket-propelled
8 a.m. EDT. The auction closes at 9:45 a.m., shortly
grenade. Those troops were
after U.S. markets open.
on
their way to rescue a
Success ful completion of the debt auctions allows
four -man team of Navy
b~th lenders to remain liquid - replacing old debt
SEALs caught in a militant
Wtth new. Lrqu1dtty has been ·one of the key questions
ambush. Three SEALs were
. facing fin ancial companies during the credit crisi..
killed, the fourth was resFreddie Mac is auctioning off a combined $3 billion
cued days later by a farmer.
in three- and six-month securities. Wall Street will be
The latest assault came at
looking very closely at the number of bidders and the
a
time of rising violence in
· rate at which th~ securities are auctioned , said Bert Ely,
Afghani
stan.
Also
on
a banking consultant who has been critical of the comSunday, a suicide bomber
panies in the past.
·
largeting a police patrol.
'Til be surprised if the results aren't strong ," he said,
killed 24 people. includin~
noting the go vernment was likely heavily encouraging
19 civili ans. while U.S .
investors throughout the weekend .
.
coalition and Afghan solThe banking industry· was already dealt a severe
diers killed 40 militant s
blow in March when Bear Stearns nearly collapsed
in the south .
elsewhere
amid the evapomtion of its liquidity. JPMorgan Chp~e
More
than
2,300 people
&amp; Co. stepped i11 to purchase Bear Stearns in a deal
- mostly militants - have
orchestrated by the Federal Reserve .
died in insurgency-related
Bear Stearns was unhinged 'by mounting losses tied
violence this year, according
to investments in bonds backed by mortgages . As the
to an Associated Press tally
mortgages increa; ingly defaulted, the value of bonds
of official figures . Attacks in
backed by the troubled loans tumbled . After Bear collapsed , investment b~nks were given ihe opportunity to · east~rn Afghanistan arc up
40 percent this year coplborrow directly from the Fed, an option that was previpared with last year.
ously onl y granted to retail banks.
·
Adm . Mike Mullen , chairFinancial companies' reports of write-downs of trouman of the Joint Chiefs of
bled debt are likely to iDcrease this week as some of the
Staff. warned during a visit to
country 's largest institutions , including JPMorgan
Kabul last week that there are
Chase , Merrill Lynch &amp; Co . and Citigroup Inc., report
more foreign fighters . includsecond-quaner results. That trio has already taken a
ing ai-Qaida members, in
combined $73 billion in write-downs since the credit
Pt1kistan 's tribal areas. mili.
crisis began last summer.
tants' who cross the border
Lehman Brothers. whose shares have lost 78 percent
and launch attacks against
since this year's peak in February, is considered to be
on the shakiest ground becuuse it is the smallest Wall ' U.S. and Afghan troops. ·
Mullen has said he hopes
. Street bank and has significant mortgage holdings .
improved sec urity in Iraq
· Last month. the in vestment bank announced it l&lt;tst
will allow troops to be shiftnearl y $3 billion during the second quarter and was
ed
this year from Iraq to
forced to off~et that by raising $6 billion of fresh capAfghani
stan , where vioital.
·
lence is ri sing ..
Mean whi le, analysts believe regional banks in .areas
Violence in Iraq is at its
hardest h1t by the real estate downturn are also at risk
lowest
level in four years and
for failure. Some of the most bandied about names
Iraqi forces are takmg on
include Was hington Mutual fnc., National City Corp.,
mor,e responsibility. trend s
and Fi ft h Third Bancorp .
·
."fannic am! Freddie arc too big to fa il only because · that could allow Gen. David
Petraeus, the top American
nl the repcrcuss1n ns. not rn JU St the mortgage and houscommander in Iraq , to rec. ing markets but the entire fin ancial market," said Joe
ommend to Pre~ ident Bush in
Balestrino. lhed-income market ' trategi't ai Federated
September
that he resume a
Investors. "The U.S. i" in disarray .. .' these regionals
troop withdrawal that is being
. could be gone. they !Ire in a tnugh 'pot wi th housing
put on hold this month so
and employmen t goi ng ,outh ."
Petraeus has time to R&lt;Se"
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. the overall situation. A top

AP photo

Face covered Tal1ban militants get ready fbr exercise before the y executed two Afghan
women in Gh.azni proviAce, Afghanistan, on Saturday. Taliban militants executed two women
in ce ntral Afghanistan after accusing them of working as prostitutes on a u.s .. base.
·
Rush aide. Ed Gillespie , said
Sund ay that withdrawing
more troops from Iraq after
that assessment always has
"hecn a possibilitv."
Another cau se for con.cern in Afghani stan is the
high casualty tolls for civilian s killed in violence . This
month. an Afghan governmen! commi ss ion · found
that U.S. aircraft killed 47
civilians during ;, bombing
run in Nangarhar province, .
whil e a separate incident in
Nuri,tan province is alleged
by an Afghan officials to
have killed 22 civilians.
The tnlls have prompted
the lmernational Committee
of the Red Cross this week
to ask all sides to show
restraint and avoid civilian
casualties. But violence
continued around the country on Sunday.
A suicide bomber on a
motorcycle blew himself up .
next to a ·police patrol in the
southern
province · of
Uruzgan . ki lling 24 people.
The bomb attack on a police
patrol at a busy inlersection of
the Deh Rawood district
killed live police officers and
19 civilians. wounding more

than 30 others, said Juma Gul U.S.-led coalition forces in
Himat , Uruzgan's police Helmand province , th;e
chief. Most of "those killed coalition said in a statement.
and wounded were shopkeep- The militants attacked the
ers and young boys selling combined force s near Sangi'n
goods in the street, he said.
on Saturday from "multipl'e
Elsewhere, Taliban mili- concealed and fortified positams executed two women tion s." the .coalition' said .
in central Afghani stan ·late Thirty "enemy boats" and
Saturday al"ter accu sing several small bridges have
them of working as prosti- been de stroyed · on the
tutes on a U.S. base.
Helmand River during two
The women, dressed 'in day s of fighting, it said.
blue burqa;, were shot and
Also Sunday, a soldier
killed just outside Ghazni with NATO's International
city in central Afghanistan, Security Assistance Forc'e
said Sayed Ism a I, a died in a roadside blast in
spokesman for Ghazni 's Helmand province, a stategovernor. He called the two ment said. The soldier's
"innocent local people."·
nationality was not released
· Taliban fighters • told and it wasn't clear if tlie
Associated Press Television death wa..&lt;. connected to the
New s the two wOinen .were lwu-day battle.
.
executed for allegedly runIn the north, a soldier servning a prostitution ring ing with ISAF died of
catering to U.S . soldiers and wounds caused by an exploother foreign contractors at . sion Saturday, the military
a U.S. base in Ghazni city.
alliance said in a statement.
1st Lt. Nathan Perry. a The statement did. not give
U.S. military _spoke sman , any further details of the
said he had not heard aile- explosion . The soldier)
gations "anything close to nationality was not disclosed.
that nature."
...,
There are nearly 53,00b
Meanwhile. at least 40 troops from 40 nations servmilitants were killed follow- ing in the ISAF i)l
ing an attack on Afghan a·nd Afghani stan.

BUSINESS
.CARD
DIREC,ORY

Special advertising supplement found ·July 30th only in the
This Pul&gt;llcatlon witi llliQ
be onllne1 , .
"'
www.mydallytrlbuoe.com .
www.mydaiJYregltter.C91!1
.. wwW.myd.HY,M(1\)"";0cHft
.

•.

'

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
~alltpohs iaiip

otrthune
~oint ~leasant l\egtster .

This is a special sized supplement which will be
published Wednesday, July 30. Do you know how many
phone calls the Area Chamber of Commerce, as well as
the newspapers and other businesses receive asking for
the name of a plumber, contractor, carpet cleaner, car
repair shop, etc? This special section will be easier to use
than a regular directory and cards will be arranged by
category.
·
'

We will be glad to use the information on your business
.card or we can create one for you.
Think how long it would take you to hand out 14,000
business cards. We can do it in just ONE DAY. All you
need to do is call 740-992-2155.
Ask for Brenda ·or Dave
(Ad deadline is Thesd~y, July 22nd)

•..

.

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY Su~AR

: • Dear Annie: My husband is in his early 50s and self: employed. We are lucky that business is good , but it means
[he works 24/7 . At most, he might take one or two days off
,a month. He works from home, so I can accept hi s long
f!lours , but his mood swings are hard to handle. He gets very
:angry, mostly with me (I work with him) . If I mention that
: ~e needs to chill out, he -only gets worse. He complains I
·Pon't communicate enough with him and he feels isolated .
:_pepression runs in his family, and when I s~gge_st ,he con. stder med1cauon , he' then makes an effort to change but it
,doesn't lasllong.
'
I don ' t k.nowwhat to do. I love him, but it's hard to be
· around. him because of his temperament and it seems to be
getting worse. What do you think? - Unhappy Worker
. Dear Unhappy: You both need to get out of the house
~ore often. Your husband is feeling closed in , which makes
fum nervous and 1mtable, and you are his nearest target.
Short breaks, along witb some sunshine, can alleviate his
-~ood and help both of ~ou get through the day. Don 't chas:Use h1m. Instead , explam that being cooped up all day hur!s
product1v1ty. Suggest an outdoor coffee break twice a day,
alone or together, and maybe the two of you can go some·. where for lunch or for a walk now and then. If he refuses to
_leave the house , you should do so without him, even if it's
just for a few minutes.
. Dear Annie:_ My in-laws did not attend my son's high school graduatton. Instead, they went to the wedding of
_their youngest child , "Dick." This was his fourth wec;lding. We were supposed to get an invitation , but it never ·
arrived.
Dick is 40-something and divorced his third wife ju;t six
. months ago. He knew about my son's graduation long
before he planned this wedding and could easily have
:selected another date. My husband feels his brother pur:posely scheduled it at the same time in order to steal the
. spotlight.
DiCk lias afway s been tfle favored chifcf. Tlie last time we
called my in-laws to say we'd be dropping by, Dick called,
.too, so they made plans to go out with him instead. I would
_like you to tell my in-laws how wrong they are to go to
l~eir son's fourth wedding instead of their grandson's only
h1gh -school graduatton. - Heartbroken Mom in
:Indiana
. Dear Mom: Normally, a wedding takes precedence over
a graduation. However, since this is Dick 's fourth walk
·down the aisle and he allowed it to coincide with his
:nephew's graduation. we agree that the in-laws should have
inade a .greater effort to attend the graduation or at. least
apologized profusely for l]lissing it: Still, it serves no pur,pose to hold a grudge. Since you recognize Dick is the
favorite, these slights should not surprise you. If you
:change your expectations , you will be less disappointed.
•: Dear Annie: Here is another suggestion for " Anonymous
:prandpa," the 90-year-old widower whose greedy grand~ch1ldren have cut off contact because he refuses to ·build
~them a million-dollar house. In addition to your sugges~11ons of volunteermg, I would suggest that he look into a
&lt;retirement community.
.
.
:- We moved into one three years ago. It has become the
:ideal place to live out our remaining years with excellent
·~ocial interaction. caring staff and innumenible activities.
~e have seen many widows and widowers move in and
~adjust easily. Everyone is friendly and sociable. We live
pndependently, but each of our apartments comes equipped
' ~1th emergency buttons 1f we need help.
: j There are many types of these facilities to meet most all
;mcome levels.] would highly recommend "Grandpa" look
~n1o one, and also rewrite his will. - Happy in Holland,
'"ich.
1: Dear Holland: That's a lovely testimonial to retirement
:-communities. We hope "Grandpa" will look into one when
t he's ready .
:; Annie's Mailbox is writ/en by Kathy Mitchell and
:fllarcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers col;:umn.
Please
e-mail
your
questions
to
'Jmniesmailbtix@comcast.net, or write to: Annie's
":;Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190, Chi£'ago, IL 60611. To find out
1;pwre about Annie's Mailbox, and read features by other
:.Creators Sy1.1dicate writers and cartoonists, visit the
~r:reators Sy1.1dicate Web page at www.creators.com. ·

.

~People

are wild about
~.. online retirement
•

'

BY ELIZABETH CRUMP
SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER IN ATHENS

.•£you've heard what we at Social. Security have to say
~:

~

about retiring online - that it 's fast , easy and
secure. Now see what some ·of our recent applihave written about applying for Social Security ben• efus online .
: ; "I am beyond thrilled about the online filing process.':
:said 'Priah from Ohio . "The retirement application was
:-easy to start. I did not feel rushed at all."
·
~ rom from Arizona had this to say : "I recently applied
tfor Social Security benefits online, which was painless
~and took about 20 minutes .. I followed that up wtth a car
•wash, which took longer. How about that? A federal ben: ~fit that took less time to apply for than getting a car
~
~ants

:wash."

;.: Melanie from Indiana, s~id, "I helped m~ husband apply
::for
retirement benefits online an!1 it couldn t have been eas;..c ,.
..,er.
~ Sven from Minneapolis said, "I filed for my retirement
fbenefits online and il worked great."
.
-: "I am amazed at the speed and efficiency," said Joe from
:~alifornia . "My wife turns 62 in September and will foi:Jow me in applying online." . .
•: Eileen from Pennsylvania said, "It took twenty minutes.
loved that after each page it would tell me if I had made a
~is take. It was very easy to use."
•! Vicki from Ohio said, "It's a no-brainer. Applying online
'"":as so easy, the application was very user-fnendly. I liked
.I
• t. "
: - And Bob from California had this to say: "Signing up for
;:my Social Security on line was a snap!"
.: So don 'r just take our word for it. Listen to what others
~re saying all over the country. Join the more than one
~1flillion people who have taken advantage of the most con!~enienl way lu apply for retirt:ment benefits - online. It
•sure beats waiting in line . Visit www.socialsecurity.gov to
:learn
more,
or
go
directly
to
www.socialsecurity.gov/retire2 to get started with your
retirement.

a

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

Monday, July 14,2008

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Lisa Queen singing . David members welc'ome , lu'nch Legion hall, Potluck at
Barringer will speak Friday provided, 992-6626 to noon. Family and friend s
and Tommy Scyoc will RSVP.
welcome.
sing . On Saturday , Dave
Dailey will speak and
CHESTER
Shade
COOLVILLE
Debbie Dailey and family . River Lodge . special meet- Des cendants of Arthur and
will sing.
mg . 7 p.m. for purpose of Nel son Watson will have
conferring
Entered reunion at noon at the home
•
ApprenticeDegree on one of Jim and Debbie Watson.
candidate. Refreshments to 42455 Woods Rd .: Coolville.
follow.

Thesday, July 15
RUTLAND - Rutland
•Village Council , rescheduled regular meeting , 7
p.m ., civic center.

Clubs and
organizations

Friday, July 18
LETART FALLS
Annual budget meeting of
Letart Township Trustees , 9
a.m.. oftice building.

Church events
~.

Monday, July
POMEROY County Republican
7:30 p.m. at the
, County Courthouse .

Monday, July 21
·,POMEROY - Vacation
Bible School at First
Southern Ejaptist Church,
41872 Pomeroy Pike . 6 to 9
p.m. For more inforn1ation
call Rachael Needs, 9491325.

14
Meigs
Party.
Meigs

Thesday, July 15
CHESTER - Chester
Council 323 , Daughters of
Americ , 6:30 p.m. picnic
adt the hall. meeting adt
7:30 p.m . Take- covered
dish.

Reunions
Saturday, July 19
POMEROY
Glaze
reunion will be held at the
home of Bill and Louise
Radford. Potluck at noon.
foll owed by games for the
children and mu sic for the adults. Relatives and friends
invited.

Other events
Thesday, July 15
RAC1NE Southern
Athletic Boosters , 6:30
p.m .. high school. discuss
upcoming sports . seasons .
also informational meeting
for parents of incoming
·
high school athletes .

Birthdays

Sunday, July 20
Friday, July 18
CHESTER - Runion of
Thursday, July 17
Thursday, July 17
POMEROY .
Bill
decendents of Guy and Iva
TUPPERS PLAINS POMEROY
- . Tile Singer, 12:30 p.m. Masonic Matlack wi II observe his
South Bethel Community ·. American Cancer Society Lodge . Chester. Take cov- 92nd birthday on July IS.
Church weekend revival, 7 Meigs County Advisory _ered dish.
Cards may be sent to him in
p.m.through Saturday. Gene Board meeting. noon, basecare of George Dallas:
Goodman will preach ment conference room at
RACINE - Cozart fami- 29918 Rolling Ridge Drive ,
Thursday, with Jerry and Pomeroy Library, new ly reuilon , Racine American Agoura Hill s .~alif.. 91301.

German family reunion held
POMEROY
The
Gernnan family reunion picnic was held June 30 at the
home of Donna Bowles near
Pataskala with Don Bowles
and Cheryl Coy assisting.
Five children of the late Mr.
rmd- ·Mrs. Howard German
attended. They were Howard
Curtis Gern1an of Langsville.

Betty German Bowles of
Pataskala. Robert Gernnan of
Newark, Edna Genman Coy,
John German of Galion, their
spouses, grandchildren and
great-grandchildren. A total of
70 family.. members and
guests we1e the1e. tmveting
from · Langsville, Newark ,
Pataskala,
Glenford,

Columbus,
Galion.
Caledonia, Iberia, Shelby and
Tiffin. The death of James
Bowles on May 23 was noted.
Featured was a cake
accented with a picture of
the Genman. children with
uames rnscnbeu pruvruetl
by Edna Coy which was
served with the covered

dish dinner. Prayer was
given ·by Jody German.
Betty Bowles was the win ner of a door prize.
Cornholc games and
cards were. played, while
others enjoyetl reminiscing .
Next vear's reunion wili be
held at th~ cabin on the old
home site near Rutland .

GCC announces achievment list.
GALLIPOLIS .
Gallipolis Career College
has released the list of students named to the achic;;vement list for ,Spring Quarter
2008.
.
Those ~tudents obtaining
a perfect 4.0 grade point
average were: Pamela
Bowles. Paul Carpenter,
Tabitha Chapman , Lori
Coen ;
Amber
Doss.
Gwenda Dyer, Robin Eblin,
Bessie · Fisher.
Marie
Gilbert , MiraCle Goodman,
Donna Gorslene, Robert
Harris, Cora Hill, Pamela

Hutchison , Deborah Hysell .
Rebecca Johnson, Lora
Langdon, Brittany Lee.
Paula Livingston, Amanda
Lucas, Donita McClintic,
Dreama
Miller. Anita
Morrissey, Sandra Musick.
Amy Ragland. Anginette
Rippey, ·Angela Runyon ,
Julie Sargent. Karen Sparks,
Lisa Stone , Joyce Turner
and Maria Young. .
Students achieving a 3.5
or better grade point aver·
age were : Christina Beaver,
Scott
Canter, "Kristie
Cremeans,
Nichole

Dickenson , Dustin Dixon ,
Kelly
Harmon,
Edith
Johnson , Tara Lee·, Monica
·Markin. _
Katherine
McGuire, Alicia Simpkins.
Lacie
Skeen.
Laura
Sowders, Christy Ward .
Stacie Weisend, Ryan
. Williams. Jessica Wisecup.
Melissa Vancooney and
Derek Wilson.
Those students who
achieved a 3.0 or better
grade point average were:
A lisa
Austin.
Angela
Brown. Tonya Burton,
Tammy
Casto,
Penny

'

OSU to host field night

PIKETON - The Ohio Registration begins at 5:45 and Farm Bill ·Highlights;
State University South p.m . with talks and presen- given by Abbe Copple ,
Centers, OARDC, and Pike lations beginning at 6:15 . District Conservationist ,
SWCD will be hosting the p.m. This .year's program Natural
Resources
annual Crop, Soil and Water ·will cover: Cover Crops, Conservation Services. Pike
Field Night on Thursday, · No-till and Water Quality; County.
July 24, beginning at 5:45 presented by Jim Hoorman,
There is no cost fur the
pm.
from OSU Extension Center dinner which will be 'erved
The event will be held at at Lima; Soil and Water at 7: 15 pm. Wagon Tours
Ohio State University South District Programs, given by , and demonstrations in the
Centers, 1864 Shyville Kevin
Yost,
District field will cover Rio-energy
Road
m
Piketon. Technician, Pike SWCD: Crops, and No-till and

Chri stian. Jennifer Clarke .
Jason Cremeans . Laura
Curtis . Jaime Davidson.
Shawna
Davis. Cathy
Gholston.
Amanda
Gillispie. Teresa Haner.
Michelle Jarrell. Brandy
Lane. Kayla
Marcum,
Jennifer
McGinness.
Connie Monroe. Jeanette
Newsome, Cary Patterson,
Brandy Rodgers, Michelle
Walker, Chauntell Williams.
Erica Wi II iams a11d Dennis
Williamson
Summer Quarter begins
July 7.

..
Cover Crops (Homegrown
Nitrogen) immediately following dinner with the
events concluding armtnd
8:30p.m.
For reservaliO!t\' (INd mon•

information, conrac1: Mai'v
Gulas a1 (740) 289-2071 exi.
2
I
3
(&lt;mailw:gulas.3@iJ.I"!I .edu&gt;

gulas.J@osu.edu) or Marv
Sibo/e ai (740) 947-5353 . ·

Official: Public to know sooner oftainted goods
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio officials will speed up
public notification of tainted food products in the
wake of an E. coli outbreak
that sickened people in
Ohio and Michigan, the
state 's agriculture director
said .
The department will noti:.
fy the public of laboratory
test results within three
hours,.instead of waiting for
other agencies or companies
to
make . their own
announcements, Agriculture
Director Robert Boggs told
The Columbus Dispatch . .
Ohio officials confirmed
on June 23 that beef tested
in state labs was contaminated with E. coli, but the
infornnation · was
not
released until June 25.
"1 think the industry
should have been more
forthcoming more quickly
m giving information to the
public that product in their
stores had been contaminated ," Boggs said.
·Food samples from federal agencies might be
exempt from the' policy,
Boggs said.
The tainted meat was later
traced to Nebraska. Beef
Ltd., prompting the company to recall 5.3 million
pounds of beef.
Some of the recalled beef
was sold by Cincinnati based Kroger Co . store s.
The grocer has recalled
ground beef products in
more than 20 states.
.. At least 41 illnesses in

Michigan and Ohio have i1 proposed. USDA spokesbeen tied to - Nebra!'.ka woman Amanda Eamich
said.
Beef's products.
Several . law suits have
The federal government
has criticized Nebraska been filed against privately
Beef for re~ponding slowly held Nebraska Beef as a
to indications that its prod- result of the E. coli outucts might be tainted with break and recall. The comE. coli.
·
pany slaughters · about
The company proposed a 2,000 head of cattle a day
new plan last week to satis- . and employs about 800
,fy the USDA's concerns, but people.
detail s of the changes were
Federal food safety regunot released.
lators should have more
USDA inspectors will power and focus on Iy on
check on the plant, which is public protection , said Dr.
in Omaha. over the next 90 William Schaffner, profesdays to make sure Nebraska . sor and chairman of the
Beef completes the changes department . of · Preventive

Medi.cine at Vanderbilt
University.
"The (USDA) is predi cat ed on the notion ih at
what the USA produces on
the farm and on the ranch is .
a good thing ," Schaffner
said.
The federal Centers for
Di sease
Control
and
Prevention eslimates that E.
coli sickens about 73.000
people and kills 61 each
year in the United . States.
Most of those who die have '
weak immune systems..
such as the ,elderly or very
young.

Attn: People who like to help

Volunteer now for a truly worthy cause.
We.are OSHIIP. We offer free, unbiased information and counseling ·about
health insurance to people covered by Medicare, their families and caregivers.
OSHIIP is funded by the federal govemment and the State of Ohio.
You may have family or friends who would benefit from our help. As an OSHilP
volunteer, you can make a difference in their lives.
OSHIIP has more.than .500 volunteers across the state, but we need people
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1-888-686-8657

Ohio

l&gt;eJNirtment of
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OSHIIP Is a program of the Ohio Department of Insurance.

�•

Monday, July 14, 2008

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street o Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

•

Co,gress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom ·
of speech, or of the press; or tl1e right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petitiorr
the Gover,mentfor a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.$. Constltullon

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, July 14. the I96th day of 200M. There
are 170 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
· · ·
On July 14, 1789, during the French Revolution, citizens
of Paris stormed the Bastille pri son and released the seven
!Jrisoners insi(le.
On this date :
·
In 1798, Congress passe(! the Sedition Act, making it a
federal crime to publish false, scandalous or malicious
writing about the United Stales government.
.
In 1853, Commodore Matthew Perry relayed to Japanese
officials a letter from President Fillmore. requesting trade
relations. (Fillmore's term of office had already expired by
the time the letter was delivered.)
In 1858, British suffragist Emmeline Pankhurst was born
in Manchester, England.
.
. In 1!1!0, outlaw William H. Bonney Jr., alias "Billy the
Kid," was shot and killed by Sheriff Pat Garrett in Fort
Sumner, N.M.
In 1908, the short tilm "The Adventures of Dollie," the
first movie directed by D.W. Griffith, opened in New York.
· In 1913, Gerald Rudolph Ford Jr., the 38th president of
the United States, was born Leslie Lynch King Jr. in
Omaha,' Neb . ·
. .
In 1933, all German political parties, except the Nazi
Party, were outlawed.
· In 1958, the army of Iraq overthrew the monarchy.
In 1966, eight student nurses were murdered by Richard
Speck in a Chicago dormitory.
.
. In 1978, Soviet dissident Natan Sharansky was convicted
of-treasonous espiomige and anti-Soviet agitation, and sentenced to 13 years at hard labor. (Sharansky was released in
1986.)
.
Ten years ago: Northern Ireland said a tear-filled farewell
to . Richard, Mark and Jason Quinn, three young brothers
burned to death in a sectarian attack in Ballymoney that
came as they slept.
Five years ago: Iraq's new gqverning council , in its lirst
full day on the job, voted to send a delegation to the U.N.
Security Council and assert its right to represent Baghdad
on the world stage. President Bush, facing questions about
his credibility, said the United States was working overtime
to prove Saddam·j;lussein was developing weapons of mass
destruction before. the United States invaded Iraq. .
Today's Birthdays: ACtress Nancy Olson is 80. Actress
Polly Bergen is 78. Former football player Rasey Grier is
76. Actor Vincent Pastore is 62. Former music company
executive Tommy Mottola is 59. Actor Jerry Houser is 56.
Actor-director Eric Laneuville is 56. Actor Stan Shaw is 56.
Movie producer Scott Rudin is 50. Singer-guitarist Kyle
Gass is 48. Country musician Ray Herndon (McBride and
the Ride) is 48 . Actor Jackie Earle Haley is 47. Actor
Matthew Fox is 42. Rock musician Ellen Reid (Crash Test
Dummies) is 42. Rock singer-musician Tonya Donelly is
42. Actress Missy Gold is 38. Rhythm-and-blues singe~
Tameka Cottle (Xscape) is 33.
Thought for Today: "Jealousy is ne more than fe eling
alone among smiling 'enemies." ,AI Elizabeth Bowen, Irish
novelist (1899-1973).

Page . 4. 4

OPINION

Monday, July 14, 2008

with Obama 's planned July
globctrut through. Europe .:Obama: The 2008 World
Tour? - the rock starKennedy connection is a
lock.
Why ? Because . one of
Obama 's gig,, I mean, campai gn stops, is Berlin. site of
President Kennedy 's memorable 1963 declaration: ;'lch .
bin ein Berliner' " Turns out
th ~ senator from Illinois
want s to make a major
speech there, too, and he
wants to make it from the
world-famoti S Brandenburg
Gate .
"The senator was criticized in the primaries for
showing insufficient interest in Europe,'' an unnamed
advise r told Der Spiegel
magazine. "This visit is an
answer to thi s criticism ."
Please. Showing 4P isn't
"int ere st" - it's tourism .
But whe re the Obama campaign is concerned, it' s also
a pilgrimage. As the Obama

adviser ra!her weirdly
&lt;idded : "The memories of
John F. Kennedy's 1963
· speech are still very fr¢sh."
Hi storic. to be sure. But
. "very fresh" ? Probably only
to Team Obama fanners of
the Kennedy flame, who,
conveniently. in their careful a&lt;.lvance work fail to flag
Ronald Reagan's more
recent address at the
Bra1.1denhurg Gate . In
de scribing Berlin to the
Gcq11an magazine as '"lhe
· bri( ~"e~ betwe-err East an&lt;.l
" they practically
West."
·seem to have missed the end
Df the Cold War, not to mention German reunification
exactly . what Ronald

Reagan was fighting _for;
when in 1987 .he forctbl;.:
challenged
Mikhatl
Gorbachev to "tear down
this wall." That was the
same Berlin Wall, come to
think of it, that in 1961 JFK
allowed to go up and siay
up.
.
Of 'course, the Obama
campaign isn't seeking his:
torical parallels, but perfect
props - . a telegenic and .
world-famous backdrop, an
increasingly mystical, if
apolitical Kennedy. connection, an ever-emotional
crowd. And with a whop:
ping 72 percent of Germans
backing Obatna l'n a recent
poll, they'll surely get the
crowd. It should be a great
concert, I mean, event.
·
Not that it really matters,
but what will he say? It's
impossible to predict, but
the London Times Online,
based on an "insider tip,"
has reported that Obama
(just like JFK, natch) will
address the masses in the
local lingo: "lch kann zuhoeren !"
. This niay sound great in
German. But it simply
means, "I can listen!" Not
the most stirring political
message, perhaps, but sure:
ly music, of a kind, to the ,
roaring crowd.
(Diana West is a columnist for The Washington
"Times. She is the author of
"The Death of the Grownup:. How
America's
Arre•ted /)evelopment -ls
Bringing Down Western
Civili-zation," and has a
blog at dianawest.liet. She
ca11 be contacted via '
dianawest@veri:Jm.!let.)

M'I'WHIN\NG

WA~OUTOF

CONTROL ...

I

Letters to rhe ediro r are we lcome. Thev .1·/wuld be less
-than 300 word~. All letters are subject ro· editing, nuw be
signed, and include address and telephone number.. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters ·should be in
good taste, addressing issm·s, not personalities. Letlers of
thanks to O"Ranizatipns and individuals will not be accepted/or publication.

.

'

lv!issionari~s join forces

to build new.church

Bv Jov KocMouo
JKOCMOUDIIMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

BIDWELL- Area resiTUPPERS PLAINS - ·George A. Hensley, 71, of dents may have wondered
Tuppers Plains,Ohio passed away Sunday, July 13, 2008 at what exactly was going on
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va. ·
as they driove by the site
He was born April 5, 1937 in Long Bottom, son of the of a new structure being
late George 0. Hensley and Stella L. Triplett Hensley built near u .S. 35 ,
Chevalier. He was a retired Union Carpenter with Local between Ohio 850 and the
356, Marietta. with 42 years of service, and an avid fisher- roadside -rest in Bidwell .
man.
The site _seemed to
· He is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, Gregory and
· .
Linda Hensley of Tuppers Plains; three da~ghters and sons- appear overmght, packed
m-law, Deanna and Max Long, Sandra and David Mills anddw_ith volunteers working
1
ligently to erect a church
Angela and David Delacruz all of Reedsville; two brothers,
John and Barbara Hensley of Tuppers Plains and Henry and where, until a few weeks
1 H
f
ago, there was only an
Bevery
ensley o Long Bottom; and several grandchil- empty field belonging to~
~ren and ~reat-grandchildren.
small congregation brim. In &lt;tdditwn to his parents, he was preceded in death by a
ing with ho'pe , faith _and
sister, Mary Ev,ans; and a brother, Robert Hensley.
m
Services will be held II a.m., Wednesday, July 16, 2008 in spiration.
!II White·Schwarzel Funeral ·Home, Coolville; with Rev.
"By faith we have started to build a church to the
George Horner 9fficiating. Burial will be in the Sutton glory of God," said Janet
Cemetery, Bashan.
.
·
· Miller, a member of
P-~~ends may call at the funeral home Tuesday, from 6-8 1 Country side
Baptist
, You can sign the online guestbook at www.white- Cf hurch. "When 1 say by
schwarzelfuneralhome.com
aith, I mean by faith~ Our
congregation has been
holding services in a small
country church building
that has high water in the
basement when it rains ,
'
'
Joy Kocmoudtphoto
black mold on the walls
and a problem with the A construction crane carefully lifts one of the remaining roof trusses into position at the
children getting sick new Countryside Baptist Church, located on Harrisburg Road, between Ohio 850 and Rio
MIDDLEPORT Granville (Grant) Parsons, because of the black mold . Grande. Crews from the Macon Baptist Association's Builders for Christ have returned to
Middleport , formerly of Cheshire, died Sunday, July 13, About five years ago we Georgia aftr having spent six days working from sun'rise to sunset in an effort to construct
2008 , at Holzer Medical Center.' Arrangements will be were able to purchase a · an entire church building in about a week .
piece of property. "
l!nnounted later by Willis Funeral Home.
The Macon Baptist assembed decking and several of the walls- up , here has .come because we
Association's construction roofing components.
without rain, a beautiful believ e
1hat
Christ
group, Builders for Christ,
"We have prayed for a sunny morning . Thi s in structs us to help each
based in Macon, Ga., in church, a place where our morning driving to work I
other. " said Bub Franklin,
partnership
with
the 'children . would
not saw the ,rafters being put director of mi ssion s for
Scioto Valley Baptist become ill ," said Miller. into place."
the MBA .
Association, helps with "Now we wind up with
" You can .see a world of
"We : re a II part of the
the construction of new volunteers,
volunteers difference every day," said same family. and we're all
churches in the area.
SYRACUSE- A third rou'nd of swimming lessons has When they · found . out everywhere wanting to Pastor Chuck Stansberry .here to help th4s church ."
of the Countryside Baptist
"It's a mission for Chri st
been set at the London Pool. The half-hour classes begin about Countryside's need buiid ·us a church."
Monday,
Jcrrre:
~6.
trre:
On
Ctrun::il.
"Thi&gt;
C:lCW i; &gt;UV·
fuly-2"~·25 with r~gistration costing $25 pel' stuaen(. Space . for a new building, th e
to help our hrolhers ""rl
is limited and there will be six students in each class. groups decided to make it first crew arrived on the ing us about $300,000 in sisters
he re ,''
said ·
Classes will be given in a variety of skill levels from level . their mission to complete · church building si(e. Some construction labor cost s. JanOdom , kitch en ass isone through six. Call the pool at 992-5418 or stop in to reg- , as much of the structure as preparations had already We could not afford to tant for the MBA BFC.
ister.
possible in just seven been started with the con- build this facility without "This has been a vi sion of ·
crete and footers poured.
their generou s contribu- the congregation here for
days. ·
40
tion
of labor. They are the the last 20 years, and they
When
approximately
"We · do these missions
members
from
the
difference
betwee n us need ed our help to build
so that we can help
MIDDLEPORT - Freedom Center Ministries m churches that need to Builders for Chri st out of · having a buildi-ng and not this church. In our faith,
Middleport is selling cookbooks featuring southern-style build · better facilities so North Carolina arrived to having a building. We we are all brothers and si s·
recipes from members of the church. The cost is $12. They they can reach people set the concrete blocks in could never begin to repay ters in Christ. ·so it is more
may be purchased by calling 416-2763 or 992-FREE.
through Jesus Christ," said place , the ·excitement what these folks are doing of a ble ssing for us to be
for us. "
AI Andrews, building began to grow.
By
Wednesday,
June
18,
Builders completed the able to do this for theni
coordinator for MBABFC.
than it is forth e m to
"Now this congregation they had finished their job shingles prior to leaving. receive our help. which is
will have an adequate and the second crew was Morecrews will arrive in
·
TUPPERS PLAINS- South Bethel Community Church facility with plenty of O.n their way from Macon , the upcoming week s to the way it should llc."
will have a weekend revival at 7 p.m. Thursday through room to grow,"
Not
e:
The
Cowllry.&lt;ide
Ga., arriving on Thursday, complete the electric.
Saturday. Gene Goodman wil,l preach Thursday, with Jerry
'The construction team June 19, to inventory all plumbing. dry walling and Baptist Clnu·ch 11 as a mis :
and Lisa Queen singing. David Barringer will speak Friday
sian or the First Southerlj
from "Macon on the supplie s thar had been other items.
and Tommy Scyoc will sing. On. Saturday, Dave Dailey departed
Church
of
"We want to make a dif- Bapti st
Fnday, June 20, and purchased.
will speak and Debbie Dailey and family will sing.
Pomeroy
for
se
1•eral
"To
make
things
short.
ference
in
the
lives
of
the
returned to Macon on
Linda Damewood is pastor of the church; located on Satunlay, June 28. The it's sort of like the TV people in this communi- years. An e.1·tablished
Silver Ridge Road across from Eastern High School.
'Extreme tythrough an Evangelical church often jJrovides
team of 63 volunteers con- snow
said
Miller. Christian Church," · said assistance In a small con ~
Makeover,"'
structed floors, raised
gregarion inrenr 0 11 orga~
walls, installed rafters , "We held services on the Andrei"s ·
"Every person that ' s niz i11g Cl nell' church.
hungsheet
rock,
and tloor of the church with
POMEROY - Ohio Supreme Court Justice Evelyn L.
Stratton will meet the public from 3-5 p.m. on Thursday at
the Pomeroy Library.
·

Deaths

.

Granville (Grant) Parsons

Local Briefs

Swimming lessons set

Cookbooks available

Stratton visits

E-bulletin available

·Passportrrom Page At

plans may consist of a com· Carealot, Continuity · of
bination of services includ- Care, Critical Signal Tech,
MIDDLEPORT - The Village of Middleport has started mg; home·delivered meals,
Store,
Duraline
an e-bulletin service through the public works office. personal care, chore service, Drug
Customers will be advised of boil advisories and other- emergency response sys· Medical Products, Eastern
news from the village government. Those who wish to sub- tems, home medical equip- Burkholder Exterminators,
Care,
scribe can contact the public works office by e-mail at pub ~ ment, transportation that are Family · Senior
Iicworks@ village.middleport.oh. us.
Fosterbridge
,
Gentiva,
then delivered through the ·
by
regional
PASSPORT Goodcare
Cardiopulmonary Care, Inc,
provider network.
Medical
In the past year, more than Guardian
Page At
750 individuals participated Monitoring, Holzer . Extra
.._
Home
Care
imported into the United as part of the new survey in the PASSPORT program Care ,
affording the opportunity to
States . in wood packing funded by the United States receive quality care and Delivered, Home Health
Care of South East Ohio,
material. The insect has a Department of Agriculture.
support services in the com- Hoveround, Interim of
dark, metallic green body
Campers are asl. ed to buy fort of their own homes.
and flies only from mid- firewood locally as the The program makes better Southeast Ohio, James
Construction ,
May ,to September. The lar- insect is most commonly use of taxpayer dollars. Davidson
vae live und~ r the tree bark spread through the trans· Nearly five · people will be Lifeline Systems, Lorraine
and was first fqund in Ohio portation of firewood, ash cared for through state Surgical Supply Company,
logs, ash tree nursery stock funds avail~ble through Medi Home Health PC ,
in 2003.
ln addition to Ohio, 10 and other infected trees. The PASSPORT for the same MSI. Northstar Pharmacy,
other states like Michigan and emerald. ash borer spreads cost of providing S\ate: Nutritional ·consultation of
Pennsylvania have these pur- naturally less than one-half funded care for one person South East Ohio. Ohio Pe st
in a nursing facility.
Control, Ohio Valley Home
ple boiltes hanging from trees mile per year.
The Area Agency on Health, Quality of Life.
Aging funded 5,812 hours Rural Metro, Southeastern
of personal care; 12,538 Ohio Transportation, Stop
hours of homemaker ser· Leak, Tubclitters, Twin
Page Al
vice; 1,237 days of adult
Maples Health Care, Twin
would be set up solely as day care; 2,343 medical Maples Nursing .Home,
pose of "conveying deed."
Council also approved its security against the total escort trips to · medical Value Relationships Inc.
final reading and vote on cost of removing, repairing appointments; over 42,000 and the Vinton County
ordinance 996 dealing with or securing incurred by the congregate meals; and near- Health Department.
70,000 home-delivered
burned out structures. The village. The fund. shall be ly
funding from a
meals
For individual s who qualordinance meant 'to promote returned to the named varietywith
of
sources.
ify, the Area Agency on
the aesthetic value of the insured or insureds when
PASSPORT
Providers
village requires structures repairs or removals or serving Meigs County Aging will set up a free
meeting with a care professituated within the village securing of the building or include:
Access
to
sional to determine services
which are burnt be repaired other structure have been Independence,
ADT
by the owners in a timely · completed. If Racine has Security, Amity Home Care, available. To· learn more
and reasonable manner not not mcurred any costs for American Nursing Care, about PASSP.QRT or other
repairs, removal or securing
to exceed 90 days.
Assurity Home Health Care, services available for the
If repairs aren' t made in of the building or other Athens County Visiting aging, call 1-800-331-2644
this · time frame , the ordi - structure, such oosts shall be Nurses
Association, or 'visit the web site at
nance allows the village to paid from the fund and if Cambridge Home Health, www.areaagency8.org.
receive up to 15 percent of excess funds remain, . the
the insuran-ce claim money villa11e y&lt;ill transfer the
to help tear down tile struc- rematning funds to the
"!Ure. In some cases, the vii· named insured or insureds.
A three-panel committee
!age would receive a specific amount needed to denio!· consisting of the mayor, fire
ish the structure if that chief and police chief will
amount is certified by a help implement the ordi·
contractor. Updn rec ipt of nance wi th the mayor being Subscribe tO&lt;.lliY • 992-2155 • www.mydallysel')tinel.com
the money, a special fund the chairperson.

Traps from

THE TRU1H ABOUT MONEY
The·ABCs ifLTC
BY Rtc EDELMAN

round-the-clock hasis, the
averuge cost is upward of
When it comes time to · $170 a day, while hourly
buy your long-term-care care averages $20 an hour
insurance policy, choosing for a home health aide. It is
from the ,myriad of options not unusual for a m1rsing
can be confusing . Consider home to cost $70.000 or
•
this to be your LTC primer. more a year.
starting
with . the basic
(USPS 213·960) .
Middle -income
folks
.Reader Services
question: What is long- generally cannot afford to
Ohio Vallel:.ubllshlng
term care and why do I sustain such costs over a
Correction Polley
PubHshed every etternnon , Monday
need a policy for this ? long pe riod . Conditions
Our main concern in all stories is to
through Friday. 111 Court Street.
Hete's a blunt an swer : Do such
as
strokes,
be accurate. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohi o.
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When purchasing a long-,.

The Daily Sentinel

Labor of love:

The Daily Sentinel o Page As

Weekend revival

·----~----~--------------

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Obituaries
George Hensley, 71

·Obama rockin' to JFK tune
I think it was the
American Thinker blog that
first went publi c with the
sugge stion that we may see
post-convention
"mass
event s" for Barack Obama
Diana
"at least slightly remini sWest
cent of the stagecraft of
Leni Reifenstahl in 1934
Germany.''
1934 Germany. of course.
was Hitler' s Germany. And masses, · wh-ich. as Patti
Reifenstahl was Hitler's Johnson wrote in " Modern
adoring documentarian . Her Times." (Harper Perennial.
film "Triumph of the Will,'' 200 I) was th e fi rsl '" to
which captured the well - appreciate ,lhe power or
reh earsed . "mad orator"' amplification and the devil thrilling the German masses ry of the searchlight." This
at a Munich rally, remain s a description has always
, milestone in both film and made me think of the latterpropaganda.
·
day rock concert. And it is
I first read ·aboutthis star- that rock -concert errccl tling. but quite plausible, surely a pop- cultural tri notion on a conservative umph of the emotions, if not
blog, but I first heard the the will - that Obama is
Reifenstahl
comparison after. In the end, it is a polit. made by a libenil columnist ical high th;ot could take him
last week. In reacting to over the top.
Obama's plan to accept the
Yes, Johu r. Kennedy
Democratic Party nomina- accepted the Dcmo,cratic
tion for president - not at presidemial nomination. at
the indoor site of the LA's Memorial Coli seum in
Demm:ratic convention in 1960 - l;orgcl y " pre-rockDenver that seats 20,000, . concert era. incidenlall y.
but at the Broncos football And yes, the Obama camstadium that seats 75,000 paign has cmph;osized this
the liberal columnist said to precedent as fmther- evi me: What' s the first thing dence of the link they make
you think of in connection with JFK , even as history
with Obama standing before remembers the 35th presithose cheering masses?
dent as a supply-si&lt;.ler and
"TriLimph uf the Will ." he Cold Warrior (and womananswered. Not a good izer). or cour". such right1111agc, he mnduded. ;
wing positions are sH&lt;.ldenl y
This. obviously. is not ttl within Obama 's reach as the
:;uggcst Obama has a ! hlfer pr-emm11trvc Hill I rille,e u 111 complex. If anything, he ·tinues "lurching right when
may have too little histliri - it suits him ." ;o s lefty New
cal awareness of the .night- York Times columnist Bob
marish
re-sonance
of. Herbert put it. And now,
Hitlerian stagecraft for the .

· www.mydailysentinel.com

term -care policy, desij!n
your plan's main beneftts
from four -categories of
options:
• Daily Benefit : How
much you want the policy to
pay for each day of care
(between $50 and $500).
• Benefit Period: \Yhat
length of time you want the
policy -to pay you (between
two years and lifetime).
• Elimination Period:
When the policy should
start paying you once you
begin receiving services
(be!ween 30 days and_365
days).
•
Inflation
Option;
Whether the daily benefit
amount stays the same or
increases each year to help
keep up with intlation.
(Remember, you might
have thi s policy fQr 30
years before you need to
use .ot.I)
While none of us has a
crystal ball to see when or
if we might become dis·
abled, it is good to plan
ahead. Policies are least
expensive for folks in their
50s and increase in cost
for th ose who apply in
1i1cir 60s and 70s. Fo r
ex ample , 'd 53-year-old
who buy s a policy now
mig~t pay $2 ,300 a y~ar in
premium, wh!le a 73-year·

old would pay almost
$7 ,000 for the same policy:
Additionally, most people
are healthier in their 50s
and more likely to qualify
for cheaper rates. If you
think $2,300 a year is cost:
ly, the alternative might be
to pay $7,000 per month
for the cost of care.
Things to consider . for
you and your financial
planner to consider. when
thinking .about long-term
care:
o How much do you have
in assets and what are your·
plans for those assets?
o How much can you
afford to pay in premium•. ·
both now and in the future?
o Is there a history of
Alzheimer's in your family?
· Do you have current health
risks?
o There is much to consider when designing your
long-term care policy. Talk
to your financial adviser.
(Financial Adviser Ric
Edelman is the author of
several best-selling books
about personal finance,
including
"Ordinary
People,
Extraordi11ary
Wealth " and "OISCOver
the Wealth Within You."
You can e-mail him at
money@ricedelmlln.com.)

BuiJdirig from Page Al

lation.
Mullins said the program
is operating more efficiently
this year than it was last
year, mainly because both
property owners and tennants know what to expect.
He said the upcoming citations will include some
r~ntal property owners who
failed ·to comply with mandated repairs last year.
The "village can also cite
property owners for failure
to maintain their lawns and
for trash on their properties,
but he did not say what the
nature or the citations
would be.
There are 131 landlords,
owning 396 rental properties in Middleport. Those

'

'

landlords pay a $20 annual
fee for each unit.
Two property owners
were fined in Mayor'.s Court
earlier this year for failur~
to comply with the inspection program in 2007.

%ukrson 'MlDanief
'Fu!Ura( 'J{omt
Adnrn M c llnnl e l
&amp; Jnn1e s Andcu:m1n
DIR.EC.I ORS

I. Middleport

"'41ffl1J VtJiui PucktiJeJ AJ•tl/lal#t

992 -5 1~1

Pomeroy
992-5444

Racine from

·. PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
The Daily Se.nt(nel

.._

..... _

Meigs County Right to Life
Invites you to join with us on

Monday, July 21st
For a "REMEMBER UFE" Rally
8:30-9:15pm at the
Pomeroy Amphitheater

..

Join us for thla short candlelight ceremony 11 we
"REMEMBER LIFE"
Rain location: Middleport Church of Chrlat
Family Life C.nt!tr • Fifth &amp; Main - Middleport

Baby Shower- we are collecting items lor the Athena

Pregnancy Relource Center

NEW baby clothel (b-12), diaposable diapers,
receiving blankeiS, etc.

**For pick up of items can 992-3893"

�•

Monday, July 14, 2008

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street o Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

•

Co,gress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom ·
of speech, or of the press; or tl1e right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petitiorr
the Gover,mentfor a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.$. Constltullon

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, July 14. the I96th day of 200M. There
are 170 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
· · ·
On July 14, 1789, during the French Revolution, citizens
of Paris stormed the Bastille pri son and released the seven
!Jrisoners insi(le.
On this date :
·
In 1798, Congress passe(! the Sedition Act, making it a
federal crime to publish false, scandalous or malicious
writing about the United Stales government.
.
In 1853, Commodore Matthew Perry relayed to Japanese
officials a letter from President Fillmore. requesting trade
relations. (Fillmore's term of office had already expired by
the time the letter was delivered.)
In 1858, British suffragist Emmeline Pankhurst was born
in Manchester, England.
.
. In 1!1!0, outlaw William H. Bonney Jr., alias "Billy the
Kid," was shot and killed by Sheriff Pat Garrett in Fort
Sumner, N.M.
In 1908, the short tilm "The Adventures of Dollie," the
first movie directed by D.W. Griffith, opened in New York.
· In 1913, Gerald Rudolph Ford Jr., the 38th president of
the United States, was born Leslie Lynch King Jr. in
Omaha,' Neb . ·
. .
In 1933, all German political parties, except the Nazi
Party, were outlawed.
· In 1958, the army of Iraq overthrew the monarchy.
In 1966, eight student nurses were murdered by Richard
Speck in a Chicago dormitory.
.
. In 1978, Soviet dissident Natan Sharansky was convicted
of-treasonous espiomige and anti-Soviet agitation, and sentenced to 13 years at hard labor. (Sharansky was released in
1986.)
.
Ten years ago: Northern Ireland said a tear-filled farewell
to . Richard, Mark and Jason Quinn, three young brothers
burned to death in a sectarian attack in Ballymoney that
came as they slept.
Five years ago: Iraq's new gqverning council , in its lirst
full day on the job, voted to send a delegation to the U.N.
Security Council and assert its right to represent Baghdad
on the world stage. President Bush, facing questions about
his credibility, said the United States was working overtime
to prove Saddam·j;lussein was developing weapons of mass
destruction before. the United States invaded Iraq. .
Today's Birthdays: ACtress Nancy Olson is 80. Actress
Polly Bergen is 78. Former football player Rasey Grier is
76. Actor Vincent Pastore is 62. Former music company
executive Tommy Mottola is 59. Actor Jerry Houser is 56.
Actor-director Eric Laneuville is 56. Actor Stan Shaw is 56.
Movie producer Scott Rudin is 50. Singer-guitarist Kyle
Gass is 48. Country musician Ray Herndon (McBride and
the Ride) is 48 . Actor Jackie Earle Haley is 47. Actor
Matthew Fox is 42. Rock musician Ellen Reid (Crash Test
Dummies) is 42. Rock singer-musician Tonya Donelly is
42. Actress Missy Gold is 38. Rhythm-and-blues singe~
Tameka Cottle (Xscape) is 33.
Thought for Today: "Jealousy is ne more than fe eling
alone among smiling 'enemies." ,AI Elizabeth Bowen, Irish
novelist (1899-1973).

Page . 4. 4

OPINION

Monday, July 14, 2008

with Obama 's planned July
globctrut through. Europe .:Obama: The 2008 World
Tour? - the rock starKennedy connection is a
lock.
Why ? Because . one of
Obama 's gig,, I mean, campai gn stops, is Berlin. site of
President Kennedy 's memorable 1963 declaration: ;'lch .
bin ein Berliner' " Turns out
th ~ senator from Illinois
want s to make a major
speech there, too, and he
wants to make it from the
world-famoti S Brandenburg
Gate .
"The senator was criticized in the primaries for
showing insufficient interest in Europe,'' an unnamed
advise r told Der Spiegel
magazine. "This visit is an
answer to thi s criticism ."
Please. Showing 4P isn't
"int ere st" - it's tourism .
But whe re the Obama campaign is concerned, it' s also
a pilgrimage. As the Obama

adviser ra!her weirdly
&lt;idded : "The memories of
John F. Kennedy's 1963
· speech are still very fr¢sh."
Hi storic. to be sure. But
. "very fresh" ? Probably only
to Team Obama fanners of
the Kennedy flame, who,
conveniently. in their careful a&lt;.lvance work fail to flag
Ronald Reagan's more
recent address at the
Bra1.1denhurg Gate . In
de scribing Berlin to the
Gcq11an magazine as '"lhe
· bri( ~"e~ betwe-err East an&lt;.l
" they practically
West."
·seem to have missed the end
Df the Cold War, not to mention German reunification
exactly . what Ronald

Reagan was fighting _for;
when in 1987 .he forctbl;.:
challenged
Mikhatl
Gorbachev to "tear down
this wall." That was the
same Berlin Wall, come to
think of it, that in 1961 JFK
allowed to go up and siay
up.
.
Of 'course, the Obama
campaign isn't seeking his:
torical parallels, but perfect
props - . a telegenic and .
world-famous backdrop, an
increasingly mystical, if
apolitical Kennedy. connection, an ever-emotional
crowd. And with a whop:
ping 72 percent of Germans
backing Obatna l'n a recent
poll, they'll surely get the
crowd. It should be a great
concert, I mean, event.
·
Not that it really matters,
but what will he say? It's
impossible to predict, but
the London Times Online,
based on an "insider tip,"
has reported that Obama
(just like JFK, natch) will
address the masses in the
local lingo: "lch kann zuhoeren !"
. This niay sound great in
German. But it simply
means, "I can listen!" Not
the most stirring political
message, perhaps, but sure:
ly music, of a kind, to the ,
roaring crowd.
(Diana West is a columnist for The Washington
"Times. She is the author of
"The Death of the Grownup:. How
America's
Arre•ted /)evelopment -ls
Bringing Down Western
Civili-zation," and has a
blog at dianawest.liet. She
ca11 be contacted via '
dianawest@veri:Jm.!let.)

M'I'WHIN\NG

WA~OUTOF

CONTROL ...

I

Letters to rhe ediro r are we lcome. Thev .1·/wuld be less
-than 300 word~. All letters are subject ro· editing, nuw be
signed, and include address and telephone number.. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters ·should be in
good taste, addressing issm·s, not personalities. Letlers of
thanks to O"Ranizatipns and individuals will not be accepted/or publication.

.

'

lv!issionari~s join forces

to build new.church

Bv Jov KocMouo
JKOCMOUDIIMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

BIDWELL- Area resiTUPPERS PLAINS - ·George A. Hensley, 71, of dents may have wondered
Tuppers Plains,Ohio passed away Sunday, July 13, 2008 at what exactly was going on
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va. ·
as they driove by the site
He was born April 5, 1937 in Long Bottom, son of the of a new structure being
late George 0. Hensley and Stella L. Triplett Hensley built near u .S. 35 ,
Chevalier. He was a retired Union Carpenter with Local between Ohio 850 and the
356, Marietta. with 42 years of service, and an avid fisher- roadside -rest in Bidwell .
man.
The site _seemed to
· He is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, Gregory and
· .
Linda Hensley of Tuppers Plains; three da~ghters and sons- appear overmght, packed
m-law, Deanna and Max Long, Sandra and David Mills anddw_ith volunteers working
1
ligently to erect a church
Angela and David Delacruz all of Reedsville; two brothers,
John and Barbara Hensley of Tuppers Plains and Henry and where, until a few weeks
1 H
f
ago, there was only an
Bevery
ensley o Long Bottom; and several grandchil- empty field belonging to~
~ren and ~reat-grandchildren.
small congregation brim. In &lt;tdditwn to his parents, he was preceded in death by a
ing with ho'pe , faith _and
sister, Mary Ev,ans; and a brother, Robert Hensley.
m
Services will be held II a.m., Wednesday, July 16, 2008 in spiration.
!II White·Schwarzel Funeral ·Home, Coolville; with Rev.
"By faith we have started to build a church to the
George Horner 9fficiating. Burial will be in the Sutton glory of God," said Janet
Cemetery, Bashan.
.
·
· Miller, a member of
P-~~ends may call at the funeral home Tuesday, from 6-8 1 Country side
Baptist
, You can sign the online guestbook at www.white- Cf hurch. "When 1 say by
schwarzelfuneralhome.com
aith, I mean by faith~ Our
congregation has been
holding services in a small
country church building
that has high water in the
basement when it rains ,
'
'
Joy Kocmoudtphoto
black mold on the walls
and a problem with the A construction crane carefully lifts one of the remaining roof trusses into position at the
children getting sick new Countryside Baptist Church, located on Harrisburg Road, between Ohio 850 and Rio
MIDDLEPORT Granville (Grant) Parsons, because of the black mold . Grande. Crews from the Macon Baptist Association's Builders for Christ have returned to
Middleport , formerly of Cheshire, died Sunday, July 13, About five years ago we Georgia aftr having spent six days working from sun'rise to sunset in an effort to construct
2008 , at Holzer Medical Center.' Arrangements will be were able to purchase a · an entire church building in about a week .
piece of property. "
l!nnounted later by Willis Funeral Home.
The Macon Baptist assembed decking and several of the walls- up , here has .come because we
Association's construction roofing components.
without rain, a beautiful believ e
1hat
Christ
group, Builders for Christ,
"We have prayed for a sunny morning . Thi s in structs us to help each
based in Macon, Ga., in church, a place where our morning driving to work I
other. " said Bub Franklin,
partnership
with
the 'children . would
not saw the ,rafters being put director of mi ssion s for
Scioto Valley Baptist become ill ," said Miller. into place."
the MBA .
Association, helps with "Now we wind up with
" You can .see a world of
"We : re a II part of the
the construction of new volunteers,
volunteers difference every day," said same family. and we're all
churches in the area.
SYRACUSE- A third rou'nd of swimming lessons has When they · found . out everywhere wanting to Pastor Chuck Stansberry .here to help th4s church ."
of the Countryside Baptist
"It's a mission for Chri st
been set at the London Pool. The half-hour classes begin about Countryside's need buiid ·us a church."
Monday,
Jcrrre:
~6.
trre:
On
Ctrun::il.
"Thi&gt;
C:lCW i; &gt;UV·
fuly-2"~·25 with r~gistration costing $25 pel' stuaen(. Space . for a new building, th e
to help our hrolhers ""rl
is limited and there will be six students in each class. groups decided to make it first crew arrived on the ing us about $300,000 in sisters
he re ,''
said ·
Classes will be given in a variety of skill levels from level . their mission to complete · church building si(e. Some construction labor cost s. JanOdom , kitch en ass isone through six. Call the pool at 992-5418 or stop in to reg- , as much of the structure as preparations had already We could not afford to tant for the MBA BFC.
ister.
possible in just seven been started with the con- build this facility without "This has been a vi sion of ·
crete and footers poured.
their generou s contribu- the congregation here for
days. ·
40
tion
of labor. They are the the last 20 years, and they
When
approximately
"We · do these missions
members
from
the
difference
betwee n us need ed our help to build
so that we can help
MIDDLEPORT - Freedom Center Ministries m churches that need to Builders for Chri st out of · having a buildi-ng and not this church. In our faith,
Middleport is selling cookbooks featuring southern-style build · better facilities so North Carolina arrived to having a building. We we are all brothers and si s·
recipes from members of the church. The cost is $12. They they can reach people set the concrete blocks in could never begin to repay ters in Christ. ·so it is more
may be purchased by calling 416-2763 or 992-FREE.
through Jesus Christ," said place , the ·excitement what these folks are doing of a ble ssing for us to be
for us. "
AI Andrews, building began to grow.
By
Wednesday,
June
18,
Builders completed the able to do this for theni
coordinator for MBABFC.
than it is forth e m to
"Now this congregation they had finished their job shingles prior to leaving. receive our help. which is
will have an adequate and the second crew was Morecrews will arrive in
·
TUPPERS PLAINS- South Bethel Community Church facility with plenty of O.n their way from Macon , the upcoming week s to the way it should llc."
will have a weekend revival at 7 p.m. Thursday through room to grow,"
Not
e:
The
Cowllry.&lt;ide
Ga., arriving on Thursday, complete the electric.
Saturday. Gene Goodman wil,l preach Thursday, with Jerry
'The construction team June 19, to inventory all plumbing. dry walling and Baptist Clnu·ch 11 as a mis :
and Lisa Queen singing. David Barringer will speak Friday
sian or the First Southerlj
from "Macon on the supplie s thar had been other items.
and Tommy Scyoc will sing. On. Saturday, Dave Dailey departed
Church
of
"We want to make a dif- Bapti st
Fnday, June 20, and purchased.
will speak and Debbie Dailey and family will sing.
Pomeroy
for
se
1•eral
"To
make
things
short.
ference
in
the
lives
of
the
returned to Macon on
Linda Damewood is pastor of the church; located on Satunlay, June 28. The it's sort of like the TV people in this communi- years. An e.1·tablished
Silver Ridge Road across from Eastern High School.
'Extreme tythrough an Evangelical church often jJrovides
team of 63 volunteers con- snow
said
Miller. Christian Church," · said assistance In a small con ~
Makeover,"'
structed floors, raised
gregarion inrenr 0 11 orga~
walls, installed rafters , "We held services on the Andrei"s ·
"Every person that ' s niz i11g Cl nell' church.
hungsheet
rock,
and tloor of the church with
POMEROY - Ohio Supreme Court Justice Evelyn L.
Stratton will meet the public from 3-5 p.m. on Thursday at
the Pomeroy Library.
·

Deaths

.

Granville (Grant) Parsons

Local Briefs

Swimming lessons set

Cookbooks available

Stratton visits

E-bulletin available

·Passportrrom Page At

plans may consist of a com· Carealot, Continuity · of
bination of services includ- Care, Critical Signal Tech,
MIDDLEPORT - The Village of Middleport has started mg; home·delivered meals,
Store,
Duraline
an e-bulletin service through the public works office. personal care, chore service, Drug
Customers will be advised of boil advisories and other- emergency response sys· Medical Products, Eastern
news from the village government. Those who wish to sub- tems, home medical equip- Burkholder Exterminators,
Care,
scribe can contact the public works office by e-mail at pub ~ ment, transportation that are Family · Senior
Iicworks@ village.middleport.oh. us.
Fosterbridge
,
Gentiva,
then delivered through the ·
by
regional
PASSPORT Goodcare
Cardiopulmonary Care, Inc,
provider network.
Medical
In the past year, more than Guardian
Page At
750 individuals participated Monitoring, Holzer . Extra
.._
Home
Care
imported into the United as part of the new survey in the PASSPORT program Care ,
affording the opportunity to
States . in wood packing funded by the United States receive quality care and Delivered, Home Health
Care of South East Ohio,
material. The insect has a Department of Agriculture.
support services in the com- Hoveround, Interim of
dark, metallic green body
Campers are asl. ed to buy fort of their own homes.
and flies only from mid- firewood locally as the The program makes better Southeast Ohio, James
Construction ,
May ,to September. The lar- insect is most commonly use of taxpayer dollars. Davidson
vae live und~ r the tree bark spread through the trans· Nearly five · people will be Lifeline Systems, Lorraine
and was first fqund in Ohio portation of firewood, ash cared for through state Surgical Supply Company,
logs, ash tree nursery stock funds avail~ble through Medi Home Health PC ,
in 2003.
ln addition to Ohio, 10 and other infected trees. The PASSPORT for the same MSI. Northstar Pharmacy,
other states like Michigan and emerald. ash borer spreads cost of providing S\ate: Nutritional ·consultation of
Pennsylvania have these pur- naturally less than one-half funded care for one person South East Ohio. Ohio Pe st
in a nursing facility.
Control, Ohio Valley Home
ple boiltes hanging from trees mile per year.
The Area Agency on Health, Quality of Life.
Aging funded 5,812 hours Rural Metro, Southeastern
of personal care; 12,538 Ohio Transportation, Stop
hours of homemaker ser· Leak, Tubclitters, Twin
Page Al
vice; 1,237 days of adult
Maples Health Care, Twin
would be set up solely as day care; 2,343 medical Maples Nursing .Home,
pose of "conveying deed."
Council also approved its security against the total escort trips to · medical Value Relationships Inc.
final reading and vote on cost of removing, repairing appointments; over 42,000 and the Vinton County
ordinance 996 dealing with or securing incurred by the congregate meals; and near- Health Department.
70,000 home-delivered
burned out structures. The village. The fund. shall be ly
funding from a
meals
For individual s who qualordinance meant 'to promote returned to the named varietywith
of
sources.
ify, the Area Agency on
the aesthetic value of the insured or insureds when
PASSPORT
Providers
village requires structures repairs or removals or serving Meigs County Aging will set up a free
meeting with a care professituated within the village securing of the building or include:
Access
to
sional to determine services
which are burnt be repaired other structure have been Independence,
ADT
by the owners in a timely · completed. If Racine has Security, Amity Home Care, available. To· learn more
and reasonable manner not not mcurred any costs for American Nursing Care, about PASSP.QRT or other
repairs, removal or securing
to exceed 90 days.
Assurity Home Health Care, services available for the
If repairs aren' t made in of the building or other Athens County Visiting aging, call 1-800-331-2644
this · time frame , the ordi - structure, such oosts shall be Nurses
Association, or 'visit the web site at
nance allows the village to paid from the fund and if Cambridge Home Health, www.areaagency8.org.
receive up to 15 percent of excess funds remain, . the
the insuran-ce claim money villa11e y&lt;ill transfer the
to help tear down tile struc- rematning funds to the
"!Ure. In some cases, the vii· named insured or insureds.
A three-panel committee
!age would receive a specific amount needed to denio!· consisting of the mayor, fire
ish the structure if that chief and police chief will
amount is certified by a help implement the ordi·
contractor. Updn rec ipt of nance wi th the mayor being Subscribe tO&lt;.lliY • 992-2155 • www.mydallysel')tinel.com
the money, a special fund the chairperson.

Traps from

THE TRU1H ABOUT MONEY
The·ABCs ifLTC
BY Rtc EDELMAN

round-the-clock hasis, the
averuge cost is upward of
When it comes time to · $170 a day, while hourly
buy your long-term-care care averages $20 an hour
insurance policy, choosing for a home health aide. It is
from the ,myriad of options not unusual for a m1rsing
can be confusing . Consider home to cost $70.000 or
•
this to be your LTC primer. more a year.
starting
with . the basic
(USPS 213·960) .
Middle -income
folks
.Reader Services
question: What is long- generally cannot afford to
Ohio Vallel:.ubllshlng
term care and why do I sustain such costs over a
Correction Polley
PubHshed every etternnon , Monday
need a policy for this ? long pe riod . Conditions
Our main concern in all stories is to
through Friday. 111 Court Street.
Hete's a blunt an swer : Do such
as
strokes,
be accurate. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohi o.
Second-class
you
want;
y,our
son
to
be
Parkinson's
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's,
ln a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
feeding you dinrier?
or complications from diaMember: The Associated Press and
~- 2156 .
It is estimated that half betes can last up to ~5
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Po1tm11ter: Send address com~c·
the people over age t\5 will years. It's easy to see how
Our main number Is
l ions to The Daily Sentinel, 11 1 Court
need lung-term care in .th~ir the cost of care for th e di s(740) 992-2156.
Street . Pomerov, Ohio 4576.9
lifclillleS.
abled person cuulu eat up
Department extensions are:
Long-term
care
is
the
all . the family savings
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service
provided
to
you
intended for both r'n embers
By carrier or motor route
News
when
you
are
no
longer
One month
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1115.84
Editor: Charlene Hoellich, Ext. 12
One year
abl e to lake care of your inheritaoKc intended for
Dally
so•
Reporter: Brian Reed, Exl. 14
basic · needs yourself. Thi s ofTspring.
Senior
Citizen
rates
Reporter: Beth Sergent , Ext. 13
might
be due to frailty, or
A lung-term-care policy
One month
'1 0.27
phy sical or cognitive supplements .your out-ofOne year
'103.90
~ribe.s should romi! In odvance
impairment. These basics pocket
~xpen s e s
and ·
Advertising
direct to lhe Daily Sentinel. No subactiviti,es
of
daily
living
yoLI
to
preserve
allow
s
Oubldoo S.teo: Oa.ve Harris, Exl. 15
on by mall permitted in area£
(AD'Ls) - are bathing , your wealth. It is impmtant
Outolde S.ln: Brenda Davis, Ex116 scripti
where home carrier service Is avail· ·
dressing,
eating, transfer- to note that neither
ClaooJCtrc.: Judy Clarl&lt;, Fxl. 1o
able.
ring, toileting and, main- Medicare (which currently
Mall Subscription
taining continence. ,
pays for, at most. up to 99
General Manager
lnalde Meigs County
Very
often
this
care
takes
days
in a nursing hotile)
Char1ene Hoeflich, Ext. t 2
13 Weeks
'32.26
place
4n
your
home
or
the
nor
traditi onal
hea lth
26 Weeks
'64.20
home
nl
a
rci&lt;oti
vc
.
Or
you
insurance pl an s pay ' for
52 Weeks
127.11
E-mail:
might
oc·
in
an
assistcd-li
vlon g- t ~ rm -c arc
se rvices .
news Omydailysenli~eJ com
Outelde Meigs County
ing facility or u IJ.Ursing Mcdicaiu i&gt; an upttun only
13 Weeks
'53.55
home.
. after you have spent down
Web:
26 Weeks
' 107.t0
If you live in a metropoli- almost all your assets .
L--www
__.m
_y_d"'-·I_Y•_•_nli-ne_L.:. co.,..m___52_ w_ee_k_• _____
'2-t4_.2_1-' '"" tan area and need care on a
When purchasing a long-,.

The Daily Sentinel

Labor of love:

The Daily Sentinel o Page As

Weekend revival

·----~----~--------------

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Obituaries
George Hensley, 71

·Obama rockin' to JFK tune
I think it was the
American Thinker blog that
first went publi c with the
sugge stion that we may see
post-convention
"mass
event s" for Barack Obama
Diana
"at least slightly remini sWest
cent of the stagecraft of
Leni Reifenstahl in 1934
Germany.''
1934 Germany. of course.
was Hitler' s Germany. And masses, · wh-ich. as Patti
Reifenstahl was Hitler's Johnson wrote in " Modern
adoring documentarian . Her Times." (Harper Perennial.
film "Triumph of the Will,'' 200 I) was th e fi rsl '" to
which captured the well - appreciate ,lhe power or
reh earsed . "mad orator"' amplification and the devil thrilling the German masses ry of the searchlight." This
at a Munich rally, remain s a description has always
, milestone in both film and made me think of the latterpropaganda.
·
day rock concert. And it is
I first read ·aboutthis star- that rock -concert errccl tling. but quite plausible, surely a pop- cultural tri notion on a conservative umph of the emotions, if not
blog, but I first heard the the will - that Obama is
Reifenstahl
comparison after. In the end, it is a polit. made by a libenil columnist ical high th;ot could take him
last week. In reacting to over the top.
Obama's plan to accept the
Yes, Johu r. Kennedy
Democratic Party nomina- accepted the Dcmo,cratic
tion for president - not at presidemial nomination. at
the indoor site of the LA's Memorial Coli seum in
Demm:ratic convention in 1960 - l;orgcl y " pre-rockDenver that seats 20,000, . concert era. incidenlall y.
but at the Broncos football And yes, the Obama camstadium that seats 75,000 paign has cmph;osized this
the liberal columnist said to precedent as fmther- evi me: What' s the first thing dence of the link they make
you think of in connection with JFK , even as history
with Obama standing before remembers the 35th presithose cheering masses?
dent as a supply-si&lt;.ler and
"TriLimph uf the Will ." he Cold Warrior (and womananswered. Not a good izer). or cour". such right1111agc, he mnduded. ;
wing positions are sH&lt;.ldenl y
This. obviously. is not ttl within Obama 's reach as the
:;uggcst Obama has a ! hlfer pr-emm11trvc Hill I rille,e u 111 complex. If anything, he ·tinues "lurching right when
may have too little histliri - it suits him ." ;o s lefty New
cal awareness of the .night- York Times columnist Bob
marish
re-sonance
of. Herbert put it. And now,
Hitlerian stagecraft for the .

· www.mydailysentinel.com

term -care policy, desij!n
your plan's main beneftts
from four -categories of
options:
• Daily Benefit : How
much you want the policy to
pay for each day of care
(between $50 and $500).
• Benefit Period: \Yhat
length of time you want the
policy -to pay you (between
two years and lifetime).
• Elimination Period:
When the policy should
start paying you once you
begin receiving services
(be!ween 30 days and_365
days).
•
Inflation
Option;
Whether the daily benefit
amount stays the same or
increases each year to help
keep up with intlation.
(Remember, you might
have thi s policy fQr 30
years before you need to
use .ot.I)
While none of us has a
crystal ball to see when or
if we might become dis·
abled, it is good to plan
ahead. Policies are least
expensive for folks in their
50s and increase in cost
for th ose who apply in
1i1cir 60s and 70s. Fo r
ex ample , 'd 53-year-old
who buy s a policy now
mig~t pay $2 ,300 a y~ar in
premium, wh!le a 73-year·

old would pay almost
$7 ,000 for the same policy:
Additionally, most people
are healthier in their 50s
and more likely to qualify
for cheaper rates. If you
think $2,300 a year is cost:
ly, the alternative might be
to pay $7,000 per month
for the cost of care.
Things to consider . for
you and your financial
planner to consider. when
thinking .about long-term
care:
o How much do you have
in assets and what are your·
plans for those assets?
o How much can you
afford to pay in premium•. ·
both now and in the future?
o Is there a history of
Alzheimer's in your family?
· Do you have current health
risks?
o There is much to consider when designing your
long-term care policy. Talk
to your financial adviser.
(Financial Adviser Ric
Edelman is the author of
several best-selling books
about personal finance,
including
"Ordinary
People,
Extraordi11ary
Wealth " and "OISCOver
the Wealth Within You."
You can e-mail him at
money@ricedelmlln.com.)

BuiJdirig from Page Al

lation.
Mullins said the program
is operating more efficiently
this year than it was last
year, mainly because both
property owners and tennants know what to expect.
He said the upcoming citations will include some
r~ntal property owners who
failed ·to comply with mandated repairs last year.
The "village can also cite
property owners for failure
to maintain their lawns and
for trash on their properties,
but he did not say what the
nature or the citations
would be.
There are 131 landlords,
owning 396 rental properties in Middleport. Those

'

'

landlords pay a $20 annual
fee for each unit.
Two property owners
were fined in Mayor'.s Court
earlier this year for failur~
to comply with the inspection program in 2007.

%ukrson 'MlDanief
'Fu!Ura( 'J{omt
Adnrn M c llnnl e l
&amp; Jnn1e s Andcu:m1n
DIR.EC.I ORS

I. Middleport

"'41ffl1J VtJiui PucktiJeJ AJ•tl/lal#t

992 -5 1~1

Pomeroy
992-5444

Racine from

·. PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
The Daily Se.nt(nel

.._

..... _

Meigs County Right to Life
Invites you to join with us on

Monday, July 21st
For a "REMEMBER UFE" Rally
8:30-9:15pm at the
Pomeroy Amphitheater

..

Join us for thla short candlelight ceremony 11 we
"REMEMBER LIFE"
Rain location: Middleport Church of Chrlat
Family Life C.nt!tr • Fifth &amp; Main - Middleport

Baby Shower- we are collecting items lor the Athena

Pregnancy Relource Center

NEW baby clothel (b-12), diaposable diapers,
receiving blankeiS, etc.

**For pick up of items can 992-3893"

�PageA6

NATION. WOR

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

The Daily Sentinel

Spol'ls hri•f~. Page B2

M onday, July 14, :wo8

R1
- .....

Packers ready to move on, Page B6

Governors talk of moving
beyond com-based ethanol

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PHILADELPHIA (AP)
Texas Gov. Rick Perry
PARIS ...,- Forty-three
- Governors from the coal raised the stakes in the nations, including Israel and
fields of We, t Virginia to debate in April when he Arab states , pledged Sunday
the corn field s of Iowa asked the Environmental to work for a Middle East
talked Sunday at their sum- Protection Agency to cut by free of weapon s of mass
Iller mee\ing about moving half a requirement in last destruction at the. close of a
beyond ethanol produced year's energy law to pro- summit to launch an
just from food sources . .
duce 9 billion gallons of unprecedenied Union . for
They sometimes have.dif- ethanol in 2008 for blending the Mediterranean aimed at
ferent priorities in reaching into gasoline .
securing peace across the
this conclu sion :..... priorities
Perry and other opponents restive region.
that can be as simple as who of the requirement say the
In a final declaration ,
Syria ,
the
grows corn and who feed s it push to turn more corn in,to 'I srael ,
to livestock.
ethanol is raising food Palestinians along with
And they ' re al so not talk- prices and the cost of feed countries across Europe. the
ing about replacement so · for livestock .
Middle East and North
much as supple noenting :
The EPA hasn' t acted on Africa agreed to "pursue a
using switchgrass or wood Perry's request and the mutually and effectively
waste products. for exam- Energy Department isn't verifiable Middle East Zone
thrilled about it. saying it free of weapons of mass
pie. along with corn.
would slow investment in destruction."
Still, the conversation jncJuding an energy fo111m bi ofuel technology.
The countries committed
Sunday - has big imptic~~
Several Republican law - to "consider practical ~teps
tions. The nation ha 134 makers - but no other gov- to prevent the proliferation"
ethanol plants in 26 states ernors - have signed onto of nuclear, chemical and
with 77 more under construe- Perry's request.
biological weapons and
" ]truly do not believe that · their delivery systems. It
lion or expanding. according
to the Renewable Fu els a food-based product should was unclear. however. how
AP photo
Association. a trade group for he used for energy," said the signatories - who French President Nicolas Sarkozy, right, , shares a word with German Chancellor Angela
the ethanol industry .
Gov. Joe Manchin of West included Israeli Prime Merkel during a Mediterranean Summit round table meeting at the Grand Palais in Paris.
This year \ corn crop. Virginia, where almost all Minister Ehud Olmert and Sunday. The Uniqn for the Mediterranean will bring together leaders of 43 nations in:
expected to be a rec"rd, is energy needs are met by Syrian President Bashar Europe, the Middle East and North Africa , some of whom have never before sat around .a
coal. "It should be used for Assad - would enforce the . single table.
worth about $52 billion.
,
Meanwhile.
ihe human consumption ."
pledge.
.
Department
Gov. Mark · Sanford of
Israel is widely believed though Syrian officials said it announced six major pro- health and social welfare.
Agriculture
He said the union has better
says economic growth in · South Carolina called the to have a stockpile of was part of . a non-nuclear jects, from a .common university and easier travel chances of sttccess -th:m a pre:
developing countries, light EPA requirement "a totally nuclear weapon s but neither military program.
While trying to unify the visas for students to depol- vious cooperation process
global grain supplie s and bogus government mandate" confirms nor denies it has
demand for ethanol have at Sunday's energy forum.
them
an ambiguity region, the summit laid bare luting the Mediterranean sea launched in Barcelona in 1995
pushed corn prices to record
The current buzz is cellu- meant to scare potential the deep divisions that still and promoting solar power. ' because the new body focuses
It also spoke of democratic on prnctical projects paralle 1to
or near-record prices.
Josie ethanol, or ethanol enemies from considering slice through ·it and highlighted
how
hard
it
will
be
to
principles, human rights and cft{&gt;rts toward Mideast peace.
That in turn has led some made from plant matter. an annihilating attack while
The Union for the
to blame the push for Michigan Gov. Jennifer denying them the rationale · parlay the meetin~;'s good- fundamental freedoms ethanol on high food pri ces. Granholm pitched the idea for developing their own will and words mto real values Western critics have Mediterranean is Sarkozy 's
progress. Syria's president accused such miion members · brainchild and was timed to
.Disagreeing sharply, the Sunday of using more wood nuclear deterrent.
coincide with the French
Recently.
· tensions refused to shake the Israeli as Syria of violating.
ethanol industry and corn products because of the
Sarkozy wF.nt to &amp;peoial presidency of lhe Europemx
growers point the finger at large number of forests in between Israel and arch prim.e minister's hand. and
· record fuel price&gt; driving up her stace.
enemy !ran have risen over Morocco 's king snubbed the efforts ro hrin g Syria !nto I It]inn P-. ,· ;c: h n ld •· th " •o•o&gt;
the cost of growing and
Gov. Ed Rendell · of · n~hran 's nuclear program . meeting attended by the the international fold for the ing post until the end of this
"summit:
Assad
met year.
.
Pennsylvania says his state Iranian President Manmoud president of rival Algeria.
shipping food.
· Still. summit host Nicolas Lebanese President Michel
But SarkoLv 's ambitious
"Corn-based and com- "could be to cellulosic· Ahmadinejad has often spoSarkozy,
France's
president,
Germ:11i
Suleiman
and
plan
overlapped with Elf .
modities-based ethanol for e(hanol what Iowa was to ken of wiping Israel off the
states like Minnesota has corn-based ethanol." A new map. And Israel and ally the reveled at having brought so Chancellor Angela M ~ tkl . project s already in progress·, "
been a success story," said state Ia~ will require a·min- United
States
believe many leaders to the same separately, both for the lt r' l and it was melded into EU
time. And he met Sarkozy effort s and expanded to
the .state's governor, Tim imum of a billion gallons of Tehran's nuclear progmm is table for the first time.
"We
dreamed
about
a
after
years of chill between include 27 members of the
Pawlentv.
·
fuel annually pumped in aimed at producing nuclear
EU, not just those on the
"But ·we recognize that Pennsylvania come from weapons, despite Iran's Union for the Mediterranean, their countries.
Egypt's President HQsni Mediterranean coast.
insistence it is for producing and now it is a· reality,"
. this has to '.now move to renewable fuels. .
Sarkozy said in closing the Mubarak, co-presiding at the
The new union is to
Iowa Gov. Chet Culver nuclear energy.
phase two ," he said.
Pawlenty was among said he welcomed the
Syria, another Israeli foe, summit in a palace abutting summit with Sarkozy, called include at least 43 nations,
about half the nation's gov- debate as a way to reduce may also have nuclear ambi- the River Seine. He called it on the new union to tackle nearly all of which sent a
ernors who gl\thered for the the country's dependence tions. Last year, Israeli jets an "extremely moving, very reducing the ·wealth "gap" president .or prime minister
between north and south , to the summit. · Libyan
summer meeting, where on foreign oil. But h~ said destroyed what U.S. intelli- important moment."
The summit declaration and cited other southern leader Moammar Gadhafi
clean and renewable energy that "you can 't get to cellu- gence officials said was
also.
condemned "terrorism Mediterranean "challenges" obj~cted · to ·the· whole idea ' ' ' · .
is the top offi~iaJ,topi~, ,. ' ' ,. •losic' ethanol 'UiltiJ' yoU dO ' beheved· tO be' a ' partially
m
all
its forms'·' · a11d as education, food sufety, and refused to come.
Pawlenty, a Republican. ethanol first."
built nuclear reactor on Syria,
launched "Securing a Clean · He pointed to the con- -------------------------------,-~------------------------~
'""

' '"" ' ' • .....

h &gt; II V I

~

1"-' I

U ..a ~

'

~~~gyth~ut~~~~s w~fn t~~ ~~~~~~bu~, aIo~~~t b~
National
Governors
Association last year as the
group's chairman, a oneyear post.

Pope arrives in Australia amid calls for apology to victims of clergy abuse

ethanol maker Poet where
the company hopes to produce cellulosic ethanol on a
large scale.
'

· SYDNEY, Australia (AP)
- ·Pope Benedict XVI has
raised expectations he will
apologize directly to victims of past clergy sexual
abuse while he is in
Australia this . week for a
Roman Catholic gathering
Wednesday
through of hundreds of thousands of
Thursday night .... Mostly pilgrims.
clear. Highs in the lower
The leader of the church
90s. Lows in the mid 60s.
told reporters during a 20Friday
throngh hour flight to Australia for a
Saturday... Partly cloudy. nine-day visit starting
Highs around 90. Lows in Sunday that he would do
everything possible to
the mid 60s.
Saturday night ...Mostly achieve "healing and reconcloudy. Lows in the mid ciliation with the victims"
60s .
· ·of maltreatment by priests.
Sunday ... Partly sunny
Activists in Australia,
with a chance of showers who have demanded the
and tllunderstorms. Highs in pontiff make a formal apolthe upper 80s. Chance of ogy to victims to help cool
rain 30 percent.
the scandal that has dogged

Local Weather
Monday •..Sunny. Highs
in the lower 80s. West
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Monday night ...Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper
50s. Northwest winds
around 5 mph in the
evening ... Becoming light
and variable.
,._..
Tuesday ...Sunny. Highs
in the mid 80s. North winds
around 5 mph.
Tuesday night ...Mostly
clear. Lows in the lower
60s.
Northeast
winds
around 5 mph.

tar-

the church in recent years,
He was greeted on the
an open-air papal Mass at a
cautiously welcomed .his mac by Prime Minister Kevin racetrack in Sydney.
comments. Still, they said Rudd and other government
During the !light from the
he should go further and and church officials, altbough Vatican, Benedict told
stop the church's opposition Sunday's arrival was relative- reporters he would work for
to compensation claims.
ly low-key, with crowds kept "healing and reconciliation
Senior clerics organizing away from the base.
with the victims" of sexual·
the World Youth Day festival
The pontiff was then abuse by Roman Catholic
in Sydney this wee)&lt;. have whisked by motorcade to a clergy in. .Australia "just as I
avoided using the word retreat in the city where he did in the United States."
"apology"
to describe , . will stay out of the public eye
At the start of a U.S. visit
remarks Benedict is expected until Thursday, when he will earlier this year. Benedict
to make about the problem of ride by boat through Sydney said he was "deeply
clergy abuse , but they have harbor to a wharf-side venue ashamed" of the abuse scanmade clear there will be and address a lilrge crowd.
dal and pledged to work to
some expression of regret:
Aides say the 81 -year-old make sure pedophiles do
Benedict touched . down pontiff is in good health , not become priests. He held
· Sunday at a military air base though hi s schedule has a private meeting with a
on the outskirts of Sydney. been arranged to include ~ group of abuse victims.·
where there is a growing few days of rest before
Bernard
Barrett,
a
buzz about the festival as pil- attending the World Youth spokesman for the victims'
grims flood into the city for Day events, which start group Broken Rites, said
the largest public event since Tuesday. The festival will Benedict 's comments did
the 2000 Olympic Games.
culminate on July 20 with . not go far enough.

.

Hey Moms and Dads, Grandmas and Grandpas .and Aunts and U~cles •..
,f,s"-~ i~l.iiU
~. io"{. ,,.£' i·: """"

·•

~#-•

In the Daily Sentinel

'

A Special supplement to highlight babies,
Your Baby's·Name Here Ages newborn to four years old.
r----~--~--------------,

I Baby's Name
.
I
I .
I Age
I Parerits
I
I
I Address
lp~~
. not be published
.
1I Add ress wall

•

Baby Edition '08
to be published
Friday, July 25

Your Baby's
Age
Parents Names Here
•

1
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1
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L-----------~----------~
Mail or deliver. to:
BABIES! The Daily Sentinel
Box 729, Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Deadline ror submission,
Friday, July 18

Simply send your baby's
photograph along with the coupon
to the left with your payment of
$10.00, and we'D do the rest.

Monday, July 14, 20U!l

homers,
phches complete uame

SPORTS BRIEFS

EHS volleyball
conditioning

· MILWAUKEE ( AP) -CC Sabathia:s first week
with
the
Milwaukee
Brewers can be summed up
with one key stat: Two
starts, 1wo win s. '
SaBathia homered in his
first National League complete
game
to
help
Milwaukee avoid a sweep
with a 3-2 victory over the
Cincinnati Red &gt; u11 Sunday.
Sabathia went deep off
Reds starter Homer Bailey
in the third. his third career
home run and second this
season. Sabathia became the
first pitcher to hit home runs
in both leagues in one season since Earl Wilson did it
in 1970 for Detroit and San
Diego, according to the
Elias Sports Bureau.
AP photo · After allowing run-scarMilwaukee Brewers' Craig Counsell hits the ·game·winning sacnfice fly during the nintl1 . ing sacrifice nies to David
inning of a base,ball game against the Cincinnati Reds Sunday in Milwaukee. The 'Brewers Ross 1n the second and
won 3-2.
Adam Dunn in the third,

. TUPPERS PLAINS
The Eastern High School
. volleyball team will start
conditioning for interested
players entering grades 912 today at 6 p.m. at the
EHS gymnasium.
Players are reminded to
read through .all information contained in the student-athlete athletic packets
and must turn in all
required forms to the athletic director before they will
be eligible to participate.

Southern High
volleyball camp

RACINE
The
Southern Volleyball Youth
Camp for all girls entering
fifth through eighth grades
in the fall will be held this
week from 9 a.m. to noon
Monday
through
Wednesday at Southern
High School.
The cost is $30 per student. A camp T-shirt is
CLEVELAND (AP) -included in the price.
The
All-Star break couldn't
The camp is meant to
at .a better time for the
come
teach passing, setting, hitting skills, and fundamen- Tampa Bay Rays.
The Rays hope· to rest,
tals. .
t'ontaCt Tonja Hunter at regroup. then resume base740-949-3088 for more ball ' s feel-good story after
finishing the first half on a
information.
sour note.
Jhonny Peralta drove in
three runs and the Cleveland
Indians beat Scott Kazmir
and Tampa Bay 5-2 Sunday,
handing the Rays their sea. Sign -ups for 'Middleport son-worst seventh straight
Fall Ball will be held for loss and dropping them out
boys and . 'girls ages 6 of first in the AL East.
"I hate what just happened
through 15 on Friday, July
!his
week, but we're sitting
19, and Saturday, J.uly 20,
from 1 p.m. until4 p.m. and in a very good spot," Tampa
on Wednesday, July 23, Bay manager Joe Maddon
- ·..~~
p.m. to 8 p.m. at the said.
,...
m epo&gt;r't ball fields.
The Rays' skid is their
more information, longest ·since an eight-game
cn11t.'tc:t Dave at 590-0438 losing streak last July. They
T " ' ' ""' at 992-5481.
had won seven in a row to
open a live-game lead last
Monday.
'"yle totally massacred pur
wmmng
·seven-game
streak," said ,!'vladdon .
.
adding that he'll meet with
TUPPERS PLAINS -- the club Thursday before
The First Annual Eagle 5K opening the second half with
Road Race and Walk and 1 a six-game homestand.
Mile Fun Run will be held
The Indians entered the
Saturday. August 2. at the series having lost 10
St. Paul United Methodist straight, their worst streak
Church. The event is spon- since .1979, but outscored
sored by the Eastern the Rays 31-8 to extend their
Athletic Boosters and ,will home winning streak over
begin at 9 a.m.
Tampa Bay to 13. The Rays
The race will start and have not won in Cleveland
end at the St. Paul United since Sept. 29, 2005, and
Methodist Church and will dropped 18 of the last 20
be run on the s.urrounding meetings overall.
streets and roads. The top
The Rays, who fell a halfthree overall male and game behind Boston for the
female finishers in both the
5K road race and fun run division . lead, went hitless
wi)l receive awards. T- after the third inning against
starter Jeremy
shirts will be given tothe Indians
Sowers and four relievers.
first 100 who register.
Age groups will be divided into six groups: 14 years
old and under, 1'5-18, 1925 , 26-35, 36-49, and 50
years old and older.
Registration will be held
beginning at 7:30 a.m. in
the parking · lot of the
Cheaper Place across . the
road from Subway. Pre-registration fee is $12, and registration the day of the race
is $15. Checks should be
inade l?ayable to the Eastern
l\thleuc Boosters, and registration forms should be
mailed to Josh Fogle, 2038
Campbell Street, Coolville,
Ohio, 45723 .
For questions or more
information, contact Josh
..Fogle at 740-667-9730.

111 Court St. Pomeroy, OH

1

Middleport Fall·
Ball sign-ups

Eagle SK Road
Race and Walk

AP photo
Cleveland lndii'jns' Grady Sizemore (24) and .Jhonny Peralta celebrate Peralta's -two-r.un hpme run in the fifth inni ng of a
baseball game against the Tampa Bay Rays Sunday in Cleveland.
"We played poorly here." otf Kazmir (7-5) in the fifth
After Sowers issued a pair in · the second despite not
Maddon said. "We ' re not · gave Cleveland a 4-2 lead. of one-out walks in the putting a ball in play. Sowers
swinging the bats. We Tom Mastny ( 1-2) pitched fourth , he struck out B.J. walked four. committ ed :1
pitched less. Defensively. two perfect innings to earn Upton and Carlos Pena to balk , and struck out the side
everything was just out of the
win
and
Masa start a siring of the final 17 during a strange 41 -pit ch
our reach . They o.utplayed Kobayashi , the Indians' fifth Tampa Bay batters going inning that included Indian '
us." ·
pitcher. worked the ninth for down in order.
Peralta's two-run homer hi s fifth save .
Tampa Bay took a 1-0 lead
Please see Indians, Bl

Busch wins.7th race of season Miles' 5 RBis lead

CoNTACT US
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

Pax- 1-740-446-3008
lls&gt;.oru._s~n

Eric Randolph, Sports Writer
(740)446·2342, Old . 33
efandolph C mydailysenlinel.com

bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740)446-2342 , OXI . 33
bwalters 0 mydailytribur1e .com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, .... 33

lcrumO mydallyregister,cOm

•

Please see Sabathia, Bl

Indians complete sweep of Rays with 5-2 victory

ai-m111- '!X&gt;rtsOmy&lt;lallysentlnel.com

The Daily
Sentinel

Sabathia (2-0) shut duwn
Cinci nnati . s trikin ~ l H II nine
batters. all from the ·fou nli
inning on. He struck ow the
side in the ninth .
··t kept us in the g am e~ g~ )l
out of some jams ancl
pounded the strike m ne
after that.'' Sabatl1ia said. " I
just try to go out and help
the team win ."
Manager Ned . Yos t le ft
Sabathia in for" the ninth
despite his high pitch coum .
"He was at Ill pitches.
but the lineup set up for him
with all left -banders. except
for (David) Ross ... Yost said.
"We sent him back out there
just for that instance . With
those lefr-handers. we felt
good with CC on the
mound." ·
Sabathia ended up -throwing 122 pitches. 82 fur

•

APphoto
NASCAR driver Ky le Busch waves the checkered flag as he stands on his car after winning
the Llfelock.com 400 auto race at Ch icagoland Speedway in Joliet, 111 .. Saturday. Busch
won Friday 's NASCAR Nationwide Series Dollar General 300 auto race at Chlcagoland , giv·
ing him a sweep of the weekend's races. A full recap of Satu rday's race was not available
at press time .

Cards·past Pirates
BY ALAN

ROBINSON

ASSOCIATED PRESS

PITTSBURGH -- The St.
Louis Cardinals rediscovered their offense: and a
worked-over
Pittsburgh
Pirates pitching staff will
have trouble forgetting this
weekend .
Aa(on Miles drove in fi.ve
runs with a home run and a
triple and the. Cardinals held
off a Pittsburgh comeback
this time; beating the Pirates
11-6 Sunday.
· Miles got three hits and is
batting .335 (64- for-191 ) in
46 games as a starter. His
three-run homer off Ian
Snell in the fourth inning -only his second of the season - came on an inside
pitch that was nearly shoulder-hi gh and put St. Louis
up 4- 1.
·
'
After Pittsburgh rallied for
the second da y in a row and
took a 6-5 lead on Chri s
Gomez's, two-run double in
the sixth, Miles fini shed St.
Louis' four-run. go-ahead

seventh with a two-run
triple. ·
Ryan Ludwick added his
21 st homer. a solo shot in
the eighth that was his third
in as many games . Troy
Glaus completed a 1o:for- 13
weekend with a home run ,
one of the Cardinals' 15 hits.
"It's called hot," nui nager
Ton y La Russa said . "We
knew he could get hot. but
that was scalding."
Franquelis Osori a (3-3),
brought in to protect the
Pirates' one-run lead in the
seventll. allowed five of the
six batters he faced to reach
base. Osoria hit Albert .
Pujol s with a pitc h after
Ludwick sin gled . Glaus
doubled in a run and Chris
Duncan had an RBI single
that put St. Loui s up 7-6. .
"It was a good weekend
for us. we put a lot of hits
together and scored a lnt of
runs," Glau s said. ''From the
offense:s pers pecti ve, it was
a prett y good series ."
Ple•se see Pirates, Bl

I

�PageA6

NATION. WOR

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

The Daily Sentinel

Spol'ls hri•f~. Page B2

M onday, July 14, :wo8

R1
- .....

Packers ready to move on, Page B6

Governors talk of moving
beyond com-based ethanol

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PHILADELPHIA (AP)
Texas Gov. Rick Perry
PARIS ...,- Forty-three
- Governors from the coal raised the stakes in the nations, including Israel and
fields of We, t Virginia to debate in April when he Arab states , pledged Sunday
the corn field s of Iowa asked the Environmental to work for a Middle East
talked Sunday at their sum- Protection Agency to cut by free of weapon s of mass
Iller mee\ing about moving half a requirement in last destruction at the. close of a
beyond ethanol produced year's energy law to pro- summit to launch an
just from food sources . .
duce 9 billion gallons of unprecedenied Union . for
They sometimes have.dif- ethanol in 2008 for blending the Mediterranean aimed at
ferent priorities in reaching into gasoline .
securing peace across the
this conclu sion :..... priorities
Perry and other opponents restive region.
that can be as simple as who of the requirement say the
In a final declaration ,
Syria ,
the
grows corn and who feed s it push to turn more corn in,to 'I srael ,
to livestock.
ethanol is raising food Palestinians along with
And they ' re al so not talk- prices and the cost of feed countries across Europe. the
ing about replacement so · for livestock .
Middle East and North
much as supple noenting :
The EPA hasn' t acted on Africa agreed to "pursue a
using switchgrass or wood Perry's request and the mutually and effectively
waste products. for exam- Energy Department isn't verifiable Middle East Zone
thrilled about it. saying it free of weapons of mass
pie. along with corn.
would slow investment in destruction."
Still, the conversation jncJuding an energy fo111m bi ofuel technology.
The countries committed
Sunday - has big imptic~~
Several Republican law - to "consider practical ~teps
tions. The nation ha 134 makers - but no other gov- to prevent the proliferation"
ethanol plants in 26 states ernors - have signed onto of nuclear, chemical and
with 77 more under construe- Perry's request.
biological weapons and
" ]truly do not believe that · their delivery systems. It
lion or expanding. according
to the Renewable Fu els a food-based product should was unclear. however. how
AP photo
Association. a trade group for he used for energy," said the signatories - who French President Nicolas Sarkozy, right, , shares a word with German Chancellor Angela
the ethanol industry .
Gov. Joe Manchin of West included Israeli Prime Merkel during a Mediterranean Summit round table meeting at the Grand Palais in Paris.
This year \ corn crop. Virginia, where almost all Minister Ehud Olmert and Sunday. The Uniqn for the Mediterranean will bring together leaders of 43 nations in:
expected to be a rec"rd, is energy needs are met by Syrian President Bashar Europe, the Middle East and North Africa , some of whom have never before sat around .a
coal. "It should be used for Assad - would enforce the . single table.
worth about $52 billion.
,
Meanwhile.
ihe human consumption ."
pledge.
.
Department
Gov. Mark · Sanford of
Israel is widely believed though Syrian officials said it announced six major pro- health and social welfare.
Agriculture
He said the union has better
says economic growth in · South Carolina called the to have a stockpile of was part of . a non-nuclear jects, from a .common university and easier travel chances of sttccess -th:m a pre:
developing countries, light EPA requirement "a totally nuclear weapon s but neither military program.
While trying to unify the visas for students to depol- vious cooperation process
global grain supplie s and bogus government mandate" confirms nor denies it has
demand for ethanol have at Sunday's energy forum.
them
an ambiguity region, the summit laid bare luting the Mediterranean sea launched in Barcelona in 1995
pushed corn prices to record
The current buzz is cellu- meant to scare potential the deep divisions that still and promoting solar power. ' because the new body focuses
It also spoke of democratic on prnctical projects paralle 1to
or near-record prices.
Josie ethanol, or ethanol enemies from considering slice through ·it and highlighted
how
hard
it
will
be
to
principles, human rights and cft{&gt;rts toward Mideast peace.
That in turn has led some made from plant matter. an annihilating attack while
The Union for the
to blame the push for Michigan Gov. Jennifer denying them the rationale · parlay the meetin~;'s good- fundamental freedoms ethanol on high food pri ces. Granholm pitched the idea for developing their own will and words mto real values Western critics have Mediterranean is Sarkozy 's
progress. Syria's president accused such miion members · brainchild and was timed to
.Disagreeing sharply, the Sunday of using more wood nuclear deterrent.
coincide with the French
Recently.
· tensions refused to shake the Israeli as Syria of violating.
ethanol industry and corn products because of the
Sarkozy wF.nt to &amp;peoial presidency of lhe Europemx
growers point the finger at large number of forests in between Israel and arch prim.e minister's hand. and
· record fuel price&gt; driving up her stace.
enemy !ran have risen over Morocco 's king snubbed the efforts ro hrin g Syria !nto I It]inn P-. ,· ;c: h n ld •· th " •o•o&gt;
the cost of growing and
Gov. Ed Rendell · of · n~hran 's nuclear program . meeting attended by the the international fold for the ing post until the end of this
"summit:
Assad
met year.
.
Pennsylvania says his state Iranian President Manmoud president of rival Algeria.
shipping food.
· Still. summit host Nicolas Lebanese President Michel
But SarkoLv 's ambitious
"Corn-based and com- "could be to cellulosic· Ahmadinejad has often spoSarkozy,
France's
president,
Germ:11i
Suleiman
and
plan
overlapped with Elf .
modities-based ethanol for e(hanol what Iowa was to ken of wiping Israel off the
states like Minnesota has corn-based ethanol." A new map. And Israel and ally the reveled at having brought so Chancellor Angela M ~ tkl . project s already in progress·, "
been a success story," said state Ia~ will require a·min- United
States
believe many leaders to the same separately, both for the lt r' l and it was melded into EU
time. And he met Sarkozy effort s and expanded to
the .state's governor, Tim imum of a billion gallons of Tehran's nuclear progmm is table for the first time.
"We
dreamed
about
a
after
years of chill between include 27 members of the
Pawlentv.
·
fuel annually pumped in aimed at producing nuclear
EU, not just those on the
"But ·we recognize that Pennsylvania come from weapons, despite Iran's Union for the Mediterranean, their countries.
Egypt's President HQsni Mediterranean coast.
insistence it is for producing and now it is a· reality,"
. this has to '.now move to renewable fuels. .
Sarkozy said in closing the Mubarak, co-presiding at the
The new union is to
Iowa Gov. Chet Culver nuclear energy.
phase two ," he said.
Pawlenty was among said he welcomed the
Syria, another Israeli foe, summit in a palace abutting summit with Sarkozy, called include at least 43 nations,
about half the nation's gov- debate as a way to reduce may also have nuclear ambi- the River Seine. He called it on the new union to tackle nearly all of which sent a
ernors who gl\thered for the the country's dependence tions. Last year, Israeli jets an "extremely moving, very reducing the ·wealth "gap" president .or prime minister
between north and south , to the summit. · Libyan
summer meeting, where on foreign oil. But h~ said destroyed what U.S. intelli- important moment."
The summit declaration and cited other southern leader Moammar Gadhafi
clean and renewable energy that "you can 't get to cellu- gence officials said was
also.
condemned "terrorism Mediterranean "challenges" obj~cted · to ·the· whole idea ' ' ' · .
is the top offi~iaJ,topi~, ,. ' ' ,. •losic' ethanol 'UiltiJ' yoU dO ' beheved· tO be' a ' partially
m
all
its forms'·' · a11d as education, food sufety, and refused to come.
Pawlenty, a Republican. ethanol first."
built nuclear reactor on Syria,
launched "Securing a Clean · He pointed to the con- -------------------------------,-~------------------------~
'""

' '"" ' ' • .....

h &gt; II V I

~

1"-' I

U ..a ~

'

~~~gyth~ut~~~~s w~fn t~~ ~~~~~~bu~, aIo~~~t b~
National
Governors
Association last year as the
group's chairman, a oneyear post.

Pope arrives in Australia amid calls for apology to victims of clergy abuse

ethanol maker Poet where
the company hopes to produce cellulosic ethanol on a
large scale.
'

· SYDNEY, Australia (AP)
- ·Pope Benedict XVI has
raised expectations he will
apologize directly to victims of past clergy sexual
abuse while he is in
Australia this . week for a
Roman Catholic gathering
Wednesday
through of hundreds of thousands of
Thursday night .... Mostly pilgrims.
clear. Highs in the lower
The leader of the church
90s. Lows in the mid 60s.
told reporters during a 20Friday
throngh hour flight to Australia for a
Saturday... Partly cloudy. nine-day visit starting
Highs around 90. Lows in Sunday that he would do
everything possible to
the mid 60s.
Saturday night ...Mostly achieve "healing and reconcloudy. Lows in the mid ciliation with the victims"
60s .
· ·of maltreatment by priests.
Sunday ... Partly sunny
Activists in Australia,
with a chance of showers who have demanded the
and tllunderstorms. Highs in pontiff make a formal apolthe upper 80s. Chance of ogy to victims to help cool
rain 30 percent.
the scandal that has dogged

Local Weather
Monday •..Sunny. Highs
in the lower 80s. West
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Monday night ...Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper
50s. Northwest winds
around 5 mph in the
evening ... Becoming light
and variable.
,._..
Tuesday ...Sunny. Highs
in the mid 80s. North winds
around 5 mph.
Tuesday night ...Mostly
clear. Lows in the lower
60s.
Northeast
winds
around 5 mph.

tar-

the church in recent years,
He was greeted on the
an open-air papal Mass at a
cautiously welcomed .his mac by Prime Minister Kevin racetrack in Sydney.
comments. Still, they said Rudd and other government
During the !light from the
he should go further and and church officials, altbough Vatican, Benedict told
stop the church's opposition Sunday's arrival was relative- reporters he would work for
to compensation claims.
ly low-key, with crowds kept "healing and reconciliation
Senior clerics organizing away from the base.
with the victims" of sexual·
the World Youth Day festival
The pontiff was then abuse by Roman Catholic
in Sydney this wee)&lt;. have whisked by motorcade to a clergy in. .Australia "just as I
avoided using the word retreat in the city where he did in the United States."
"apology"
to describe , . will stay out of the public eye
At the start of a U.S. visit
remarks Benedict is expected until Thursday, when he will earlier this year. Benedict
to make about the problem of ride by boat through Sydney said he was "deeply
clergy abuse , but they have harbor to a wharf-side venue ashamed" of the abuse scanmade clear there will be and address a lilrge crowd.
dal and pledged to work to
some expression of regret:
Aides say the 81 -year-old make sure pedophiles do
Benedict touched . down pontiff is in good health , not become priests. He held
· Sunday at a military air base though hi s schedule has a private meeting with a
on the outskirts of Sydney. been arranged to include ~ group of abuse victims.·
where there is a growing few days of rest before
Bernard
Barrett,
a
buzz about the festival as pil- attending the World Youth spokesman for the victims'
grims flood into the city for Day events, which start group Broken Rites, said
the largest public event since Tuesday. The festival will Benedict 's comments did
the 2000 Olympic Games.
culminate on July 20 with . not go far enough.

.

Hey Moms and Dads, Grandmas and Grandpas .and Aunts and U~cles •..
,f,s"-~ i~l.iiU
~. io"{. ,,.£' i·: """"

·•

~#-•

In the Daily Sentinel

'

A Special supplement to highlight babies,
Your Baby's·Name Here Ages newborn to four years old.
r----~--~--------------,

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1I Add ress wall

•

Baby Edition '08
to be published
Friday, July 25

Your Baby's
Age
Parents Names Here
•

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Deadline ror submission,
Friday, July 18

Simply send your baby's
photograph along with the coupon
to the left with your payment of
$10.00, and we'D do the rest.

Monday, July 14, 20U!l

homers,
phches complete uame

SPORTS BRIEFS

EHS volleyball
conditioning

· MILWAUKEE ( AP) -CC Sabathia:s first week
with
the
Milwaukee
Brewers can be summed up
with one key stat: Two
starts, 1wo win s. '
SaBathia homered in his
first National League complete
game
to
help
Milwaukee avoid a sweep
with a 3-2 victory over the
Cincinnati Red &gt; u11 Sunday.
Sabathia went deep off
Reds starter Homer Bailey
in the third. his third career
home run and second this
season. Sabathia became the
first pitcher to hit home runs
in both leagues in one season since Earl Wilson did it
in 1970 for Detroit and San
Diego, according to the
Elias Sports Bureau.
AP photo · After allowing run-scarMilwaukee Brewers' Craig Counsell hits the ·game·winning sacnfice fly during the nintl1 . ing sacrifice nies to David
inning of a base,ball game against the Cincinnati Reds Sunday in Milwaukee. The 'Brewers Ross 1n the second and
won 3-2.
Adam Dunn in the third,

. TUPPERS PLAINS
The Eastern High School
. volleyball team will start
conditioning for interested
players entering grades 912 today at 6 p.m. at the
EHS gymnasium.
Players are reminded to
read through .all information contained in the student-athlete athletic packets
and must turn in all
required forms to the athletic director before they will
be eligible to participate.

Southern High
volleyball camp

RACINE
The
Southern Volleyball Youth
Camp for all girls entering
fifth through eighth grades
in the fall will be held this
week from 9 a.m. to noon
Monday
through
Wednesday at Southern
High School.
The cost is $30 per student. A camp T-shirt is
CLEVELAND (AP) -included in the price.
The
All-Star break couldn't
The camp is meant to
at .a better time for the
come
teach passing, setting, hitting skills, and fundamen- Tampa Bay Rays.
The Rays hope· to rest,
tals. .
t'ontaCt Tonja Hunter at regroup. then resume base740-949-3088 for more ball ' s feel-good story after
finishing the first half on a
information.
sour note.
Jhonny Peralta drove in
three runs and the Cleveland
Indians beat Scott Kazmir
and Tampa Bay 5-2 Sunday,
handing the Rays their sea. Sign -ups for 'Middleport son-worst seventh straight
Fall Ball will be held for loss and dropping them out
boys and . 'girls ages 6 of first in the AL East.
"I hate what just happened
through 15 on Friday, July
!his
week, but we're sitting
19, and Saturday, J.uly 20,
from 1 p.m. until4 p.m. and in a very good spot," Tampa
on Wednesday, July 23, Bay manager Joe Maddon
- ·..~~
p.m. to 8 p.m. at the said.
,...
m epo&gt;r't ball fields.
The Rays' skid is their
more information, longest ·since an eight-game
cn11t.'tc:t Dave at 590-0438 losing streak last July. They
T " ' ' ""' at 992-5481.
had won seven in a row to
open a live-game lead last
Monday.
'"yle totally massacred pur
wmmng
·seven-game
streak," said ,!'vladdon .
.
adding that he'll meet with
TUPPERS PLAINS -- the club Thursday before
The First Annual Eagle 5K opening the second half with
Road Race and Walk and 1 a six-game homestand.
Mile Fun Run will be held
The Indians entered the
Saturday. August 2. at the series having lost 10
St. Paul United Methodist straight, their worst streak
Church. The event is spon- since .1979, but outscored
sored by the Eastern the Rays 31-8 to extend their
Athletic Boosters and ,will home winning streak over
begin at 9 a.m.
Tampa Bay to 13. The Rays
The race will start and have not won in Cleveland
end at the St. Paul United since Sept. 29, 2005, and
Methodist Church and will dropped 18 of the last 20
be run on the s.urrounding meetings overall.
streets and roads. The top
The Rays, who fell a halfthree overall male and game behind Boston for the
female finishers in both the
5K road race and fun run division . lead, went hitless
wi)l receive awards. T- after the third inning against
starter Jeremy
shirts will be given tothe Indians
Sowers and four relievers.
first 100 who register.
Age groups will be divided into six groups: 14 years
old and under, 1'5-18, 1925 , 26-35, 36-49, and 50
years old and older.
Registration will be held
beginning at 7:30 a.m. in
the parking · lot of the
Cheaper Place across . the
road from Subway. Pre-registration fee is $12, and registration the day of the race
is $15. Checks should be
inade l?ayable to the Eastern
l\thleuc Boosters, and registration forms should be
mailed to Josh Fogle, 2038
Campbell Street, Coolville,
Ohio, 45723 .
For questions or more
information, contact Josh
..Fogle at 740-667-9730.

111 Court St. Pomeroy, OH

1

Middleport Fall·
Ball sign-ups

Eagle SK Road
Race and Walk

AP photo
Cleveland lndii'jns' Grady Sizemore (24) and .Jhonny Peralta celebrate Peralta's -two-r.un hpme run in the fifth inni ng of a
baseball game against the Tampa Bay Rays Sunday in Cleveland.
"We played poorly here." otf Kazmir (7-5) in the fifth
After Sowers issued a pair in · the second despite not
Maddon said. "We ' re not · gave Cleveland a 4-2 lead. of one-out walks in the putting a ball in play. Sowers
swinging the bats. We Tom Mastny ( 1-2) pitched fourth , he struck out B.J. walked four. committ ed :1
pitched less. Defensively. two perfect innings to earn Upton and Carlos Pena to balk , and struck out the side
everything was just out of the
win
and
Masa start a siring of the final 17 during a strange 41 -pit ch
our reach . They o.utplayed Kobayashi , the Indians' fifth Tampa Bay batters going inning that included Indian '
us." ·
pitcher. worked the ninth for down in order.
Peralta's two-run homer hi s fifth save .
Tampa Bay took a 1-0 lead
Please see Indians, Bl

Busch wins.7th race of season Miles' 5 RBis lead

CoNTACT US
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

Pax- 1-740-446-3008
lls&gt;.oru._s~n

Eric Randolph, Sports Writer
(740)446·2342, Old . 33
efandolph C mydailysenlinel.com

bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740)446-2342 , OXI . 33
bwalters 0 mydailytribur1e .com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, .... 33

lcrumO mydallyregister,cOm

•

Please see Sabathia, Bl

Indians complete sweep of Rays with 5-2 victory

ai-m111- '!X&gt;rtsOmy&lt;lallysentlnel.com

The Daily
Sentinel

Sabathia (2-0) shut duwn
Cinci nnati . s trikin ~ l H II nine
batters. all from the ·fou nli
inning on. He struck ow the
side in the ninth .
··t kept us in the g am e~ g~ )l
out of some jams ancl
pounded the strike m ne
after that.'' Sabatl1ia said. " I
just try to go out and help
the team win ."
Manager Ned . Yos t le ft
Sabathia in for" the ninth
despite his high pitch coum .
"He was at Ill pitches.
but the lineup set up for him
with all left -banders. except
for (David) Ross ... Yost said.
"We sent him back out there
just for that instance . With
those lefr-handers. we felt
good with CC on the
mound." ·
Sabathia ended up -throwing 122 pitches. 82 fur

•

APphoto
NASCAR driver Ky le Busch waves the checkered flag as he stands on his car after winning
the Llfelock.com 400 auto race at Ch icagoland Speedway in Joliet, 111 .. Saturday. Busch
won Friday 's NASCAR Nationwide Series Dollar General 300 auto race at Chlcagoland , giv·
ing him a sweep of the weekend's races. A full recap of Satu rday's race was not available
at press time .

Cards·past Pirates
BY ALAN

ROBINSON

ASSOCIATED PRESS

PITTSBURGH -- The St.
Louis Cardinals rediscovered their offense: and a
worked-over
Pittsburgh
Pirates pitching staff will
have trouble forgetting this
weekend .
Aa(on Miles drove in fi.ve
runs with a home run and a
triple and the. Cardinals held
off a Pittsburgh comeback
this time; beating the Pirates
11-6 Sunday.
· Miles got three hits and is
batting .335 (64- for-191 ) in
46 games as a starter. His
three-run homer off Ian
Snell in the fourth inning -only his second of the season - came on an inside
pitch that was nearly shoulder-hi gh and put St. Louis
up 4- 1.
·
'
After Pittsburgh rallied for
the second da y in a row and
took a 6-5 lead on Chri s
Gomez's, two-run double in
the sixth, Miles fini shed St.
Louis' four-run. go-ahead

seventh with a two-run
triple. ·
Ryan Ludwick added his
21 st homer. a solo shot in
the eighth that was his third
in as many games . Troy
Glaus completed a 1o:for- 13
weekend with a home run ,
one of the Cardinals' 15 hits.
"It's called hot," nui nager
Ton y La Russa said . "We
knew he could get hot. but
that was scalding."
Franquelis Osori a (3-3),
brought in to protect the
Pirates' one-run lead in the
seventll. allowed five of the
six batters he faced to reach
base. Osoria hit Albert .
Pujol s with a pitc h after
Ludwick sin gled . Glaus
doubled in a run and Chris
Duncan had an RBI single
that put St. Loui s up 7-6. .
"It was a good weekend
for us. we put a lot of hits
together and scored a lnt of
runs," Glau s said. ''From the
offense:s pers pecti ve, it was
a prett y good series ."
Ple•se see Pirates, Bl

I

�Page B2 • 1l1e Dad~ Senhr'lel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Monday, July 14, 2008

"

SPORTS BRIEFS

SHS Basketball
Golf Scramble set
fl. A( 1'\L

lhe Snuthll 11

B ,"k ~tb,dl J'l11 0 !,11ll 1\ll l
ho ... t .t lour rn.m ..!oil -.u.un
hle on \u!.! 1 .t'i I~I\Lt'ttk

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Go lt ( lu h In
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The ' l l tmhl~ 11111 lit "'
K 10 "rn ' hot ~u n "·'" u1J
the tormc~ t 1.., brt ll L. · \O llt
u\\11 ll: .un 0 111\

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1v1th .tntllll.ki- IOh.tndll
pu tc Llll "11h "tot II
tc.un h.llldl t 11l ul ~ () 111

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Till' LL"i lllll be \(&gt;() pel
pC!\(lll (\~-10 pe'l lc.llll I II th
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Ulllf,Lll Ll LLil it' ll ( 1ldllc il
.11 740 &lt;J-Jl) 11 'CJ

EHS fall sports
athletic packets
T l PPI RS 1'1 \1\S
Atl!lctl c p.lll.ct• lu1 the cOO~
l.tll \ [)(J Jh

"L.J .... l]Jj

)Jl:

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lellth 11 11 1 hie o~l I ·"tun
HI Ll! Scll&lt;" ll 11 dcKcl• l Ill he
p1Lked up Ill lhe oll lle lllllll
X \() 1 lll "nli \ 111 p m
ILl&lt;sd 11 til lll \1~ 11 h lli.L \
i\ 11 •tmk nr .uhletcs "' 711&gt;
thl oLI.'h I:'t il r Hi e 11 hll 11 " h
to p.uttLIJl.! lc, lll" l o~ ll sptlll
lllll "l

ll.l

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jl.IL~l!t

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wllh o1 p.ucrlf 111 order to be
el tgl hlc It&gt; 1'1 ''' .L'P"n rnthe
t,Li l r\ddrtron,Lil ) ,til sl ude nt -.ttillct~s must h.tve .1

rw..,:. " l l ..' ~

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IUI11 ed 1ll Il l OH.. k:l

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p.Hl l(.; l

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Fur nHHL l nlot lll.l llol1
cont.t el I' nn Doutln tt ut
E.tsterll ll1uh Scho ol
1

•

BBYFL sign-ups
Saturdays in July

I~
7-Ill ()llX- 0 K(L-1 ll II&lt;' if 11) I 1- - - . L -,_ 1('
(r7-1 'ii7X MtSI \ .ttl04-77:l- IIU:'Il ~Uil :'IU cUIIUU:
'::'11J 01 RILk 117-10 167
RIO GRANDE - Both
0~ 1X
UnJVCISlty of R1o Grande
men\ dlld women's basket
b,dl progr,uns .ue 'ponsorrng
•r Golf Scr.tmble to be held,
Sunday August 1 .tt the
Frankhn Y,llley Golf Club m
C HESTER - A D.t) ' ol
J.tck
The shotgun start IS
(d&lt; ll )
Co bJ
Soltb.tll .II 8 son
10 ,1 111
rmll n,unent ho~s heen set tm
The
event rs a tour person
r\u~ X tl1rou~h 10 .rt the
scramble
' A ' Fl1ght wJII
( h ~stc 1 Ball Ftelds wrth .t il
)lllleecds to hc ncllf the consrst of a total te.tm handrCllc, ter 13.1 11 A"ocrull on c.t p ot 75 or below while " B
o~ntl
lhc An~cl.t E.tson llrght wrll constst of a total
te,un handrcap ot more than
~icllHlii ,Li ill•ld~
75
l lll' th " "'' '' ~ 100 .r te.rm
pius 1110 12 llllh ~-J lOIC De.tdlrne tor entry tor the
h,LII s Thts rs slo11 pllch Ilie Go it Scramblers July 3 1
The cost 1!\ $40 per person
m de• tnd l11 c tem.tle 011 the
300 club members and
tor
lrcl d rt .LII t1mes men h.tl
$60
per person fm those who
opposr tc h.tlld• o~g es 2 1 .t)ld
.tre
not
300 club members
old u ,mtl slo11 potch h lis
T1ckets tor the annua l 300
rlltil 11 1th double elimo1.t
club
raffle. to be held
! l Oll one hou r !I.J illt:~
S,uurd,ty
Augu&gt;t 2. are also
Sr.tcc· " itln!l cd w 12
.t\.trldble (or purch.tse The
11 tm ' Fur nw1 ~ JJl h lfll h ti Jllll
L.tll l),n!'IC Fdll.trds rt 740 cost of the 300 club uckets
dl C $ J0(1 ,mcJ the gr~nd prr 7P
-+ J (1 -(,t)~(,
ul
MdllliJL:
.111 ard ts $ 10,000
lrr ucsc r .tl 7~0 -II 6 0'!110
On Auu '! thell wrll he 1 Fot reservattons or more
hm.! JOd"i't d111ne J tl Sh pc1 rnt ormalron COllldct Rro
Head
Men s
pe1 son .1 l10me run tier h) .t l Gr ,mde
Coach
Ken
S'i per per•on 111111 50 per- B.tsketbdll
French
.tl
(740)
245
7294
or
cent o f the pioLeetb _gl llllt.
emarl
ktrench@rro
edu
and
101 Ill'! 'Cclln d tnd thlld
pi.tee p11 zc' .md .t 1.trretl ot he.td women s basketball
w.tch David Smalley at
doo1 p11/e..,
(740 ) 245 7491 or e-mail
d'rnalle) @l no edu

.

Softball tourney
set for August 8

OU baseball camps

ATHENS l llc Ol1w
UrmeJS!I) h.LStb,tll pr &gt;g l.tlll
wr ll he h ns 1111 ~ 1110 prospctt
C.llllJl' ihl' SU ill lllCI .lllu 1. 11 1
t01 2009 20 I 0 1110 20 I I
hH?.h o..;&lt;..hool u.tdu.ttc " The
t u'st c.unp \,Ill be held
August 2l .1nd tile second rs
sc he du led to1 Oc tuber 4
The c.trnps '" II grve stu
dent .nill ete' tile opportunrty
to SllOII L,l\C lilCll 'klffS Ill
trorll ol colk _c co.tches
lrom .111 d,;rs1ons ,md pro
tessrondl scouts hom Ohm
and 1ts swwund111g dteas
0 U ba 'e b,li I , u&lt;~ c h es wII I
also be on h&lt;tnd
E,tch c.unp wrll bcgrn wnh
regJst• .ttton at 8 a m at Bob
Wren St.tdlllrn ,md conclude
dt dpprox rm.rtely 6 10 p 111
There wr ll be ,1 l1mrt of 72
student .tthletes per cdmp so
pt e regt str,ttton I' encouraged to ensure" p.u !Jctp,mt 's
place Cost tor the c.rmp 1s
$205 pet player
To pre reg t&gt;teJ
Hstl
http //o hrobobcats cstv crrm/
c.trnps/ohlo-c,unps html For
mo1e 1nfmrnatton contact
Brtdn Hosk rnson .tt 740-)93134 1 or hoskrnsh @ohro edu

lilc BI L Bend Yo uth
Foot b.rl l L e.t ~uc Wi ll be
holciln c )out b,lll .tnJ chcclk~Jd ln g s 1~n up ~ e\e l j
S.tturd.ty 111Jul y for .tll Ydied
vouth II om Oh10 or We st
y,,fpntd lllh.:rc -.ted 111 J1l!W rp.1t1ng ..
Sr gn-ur' ~&gt;til he held .rt
the VeteldllS Mcmorr ,li
St.rd!Ulll m Mrddlcport llllm
10 .tIll unttl I p 111
Fo• questrons 01 mor e
tnlormatmn cont.tct S.trdh
dt 7-J0-698-4054 Re~ u1 .~

Rio basketb aII t o

Indians

Cleve land Ired If rn tile bottom h.rlt Fr,mklm Guuerrez
stngled ott Long or'" s glove
from Page 81
at tlmd. took thn d on Jamey
C.tr toll s one-out smgle,
scot ed on Ben
manager Enc Wedge s eJCc- ,mel
tton by plate urnprr e Kerwm F1 ancrsco ~ b.tse lut to nght
Peralta drove tn Carroll
Danley
wtth
a sacnftce lly
Attcr f.tnnrnc" Afl St.tr
All
St.u Grady Stzemore
Evlln Longolltl
Sowe rs
walked Jonn 1 Gnrnc' W1th opened the lnd1ans' ftfth
wrth " w.tlk ,mel scored on
,\11 0-2 Ulllrll "" Sh.twn
Rrggan s Gnrncs broke lo1 Pe1.t lt.t 'two-out home1 the
second ,1, So\\crs tl11 cw to shollstop's 16th of the se.tdnd fourth 111 se ven
lu st ,md D.rnlcy rul ed lhc son
g. Hnes
le lt-h,mtlct b.tlkcd Wedge
Andy Marte m.tde rl 5-2
yelled h orn the dugout 111 lldth d leadott homer m the
rl otest
SIXth
AtteJ Gomes stole th1rtl
We pl.tycd some prett)
,md Rr gguns .tlso Wd lked, good b.\seb,tll the J,tst tour
Wedge quest roned D.mley\ d.tys agarnst a ver) good
stnke zo ne too .md WdS
tedm.' W--edge-sa'd
tossed for the thrr d trrnc th iS
Sowe1 s had the oddest
season
ouun g ot hts young career
Sowers l,mnecl
Ben The lett ha nder gave up
Zobnst then walke tl both thn:e htts &lt;~nd two runs over
G,tbe G10" ,md Akmor 1 tour mmngs settmg career
IW(.II11UrJ t o torce 111 d ru n
hrghs of seve n walks ,md
The umr11 e h.1cl .t prc111 c1~ht strt kcout' In hts lust
tou gh slltke zone but I h 1ve I&lt;J6 tmungs rn the maJors
to do .t better JOb c,ul rcr 111 the tu st-round ptck m the
the !!dille of Cd lllltl !.! thL: 2004 dr,tlt l~ad only 53
tone' Sov. e1~ Sli td It \\ '" w,ilks .tnt.l 77 stnkeouts
.t p1 ett y btl,u re Hl!Hng
Kazmtr one of Tampa
R 1ggd n 'i
R Rl -.;rngk 11 1 B.ty s three All Stars. gave
the tlmtl 111.1tlc If 2-0 hut up ttvc runs ,md e1ght hns

Rio hoops to hold
annual 300 raffle
RIO GRANDE - l he
Un1versuy of Rto Gr,mde
wt ll holcb lis anmt.tl 100
Clu b. Rattle drawrng on
Saturddy August 2 The rattle wdl be held m the Newt
Olrver Aren.t wrth begmnrng
tt" r m \mdW.e Qr...!_HIIt\g at-7.
pm
The 1affl~ ~~ uue uf tht:
maJor fundratsrng e\ents for
both the men's and women' s
basketball te&lt;tms Proceeds
from tillS event provtde both
programs the opportunrty to
trave l '• and partre1pate lll
Hawm1 dunng the upc01mng
2008-09 SCdSOn
The cost for a !Jcket to the
:lOO Club raffle ts $100 and
the gr,md prrze .lwdrd 1s
SIO.OOO
II you .tre mterestcd 111 partrclp.lll ng m the 300 Club ratlle contact Rro Grande head
rnen s basketball coach Ken
French .11 (740) 245-7294 or
b) e-marl .tl ktrench @rro edu
You m.ty .tlso contact Rm
Gr.tnde head women's basketball coach Dav1d Smalley
at (740) 245&gt;7491 or by erlMli at dsmalley@no edu
over SIX rnnmgs, d10ppmg
to 1-4 rn hts last seven stmt s
stnce Jurte II tollowrng a
stx ga me wmmng stre.tk
" It's been a gttat ftrst
h&lt;tlf," Kazmtr sard "There
are gm ng to be tunes lrke
tlu ' m a seaso n We're
gomg to go through ,, bump
01 a slow st.1~e but we hd\e
to be able to bounce back
We h&lt;tve to not dwell on
thi S "
Notes: T.tmp.t Bay 1s :l6
14 and 19-25 on the ro,td
Accordtng to Elms Sports
Bure.ur the lndtUns home
11 mntng stre.Jk over T.tmpa
Bay rs the longest current
one ol rts kmd mthe maJors
The lndtan s defeat~d th e
DetrOit T1gers 15 stratght tn
Clevel.rnd from 1-994 to
1997
M&lt;~rte 's homer was
hrs f1rst m lhf maJot s smce
Aprrl 4, 2007
Srzemore
has 23 homer&gt; ,md I S the
first lnchans player to lead
the AL rn th at c,ttegm y at
the All-Star break stnce Jrm
Thom e (26) rn 2001
Rays OF Carl Cr dll ford , 111
the worst hllless stteak of
h1 s c.treer (0-lor-25) drdn't
pl.ty
R&lt;~ ys DH Wrlly
Ayb.tr went 0 101 3 and ts m
a 1-l or-16 sktd

I

Let Favre~ next retirement be less temfitl

The Brewm ('i2 41) head
mtu the All-Star break 111
th11d pla~e NL Centra l. f1ve
from Page Bl
g,unes behmd Ch1cago and a
IMit-game behrnd St Lout s
The game was tJed at 2 111
sltlkC'
the
mnth when ptnch-httter
Dunn smd th.tl C\Cil
though the Reds h&lt;itl f.tcctl Craig Counsell hll d gameS,to.llhr ,l Ill the p.t&gt;t , II Jtd- wummg sacrt!rce fl y to help
the Brewers uvo1d hemg a
11 1 mu k~ h,tiiJng ,tg.un st
threc-gumc sweep to end the
llllll Ull )' C.l&lt;LCI
111 st hull ot the sen,on
" H ~ ' plllhuhl y one ol tile
1~111 Hull leu uft the bot·
most ~Clll'l'l~tll p11ehcrs tom of the nrnth wtth u stn·
you ' ll cvc1 l,tcc · Dunn glc nit Duvtd Wettthm (2·
smtl "Evcrytll lle yo~1 tuec S) M1kc Cumeron dropped
hun. you know whut yo u're down u bum rn front of' the
gomg Ill get ..
plut~ th,tt Weathers grubbed
Subuth1.1 tmp10ved to 4-0 und threw wtldly to first
m nrne !tarts agarnst Hull .tlertly took oft tor th1rd
Cmc mnall He beat them 6- and beat the thrQw Jaso n
0 on June 27 at Progressive Kendall was walked tntenFteld
ttonally

Francrsco
Cordero
replaced Weathers to face
Counsell who hll a fly ball
to rrght frelder Jay Bruce on
the fmt prtch 1-!Jlll tagged
up on the play and beat the
tl\row home
"CC brought the excttement. struck oUt the side in
th~ mnth tnmng," Hall satd.
"We wunted to go out and
g1vc him u win tn the ninth
lnnlna So we had the
excilement, we hud the
momentum It's a great way
to end the first half and,
hopefully, it continues on
Fnduy: ·
In h1s second stun s1nce
bemg traded from Cleveland
to Milwaukee. Subathm
pttched an etght-hlller, h1 s •
loullh complete game of the
•

•

•

~ter

CLASSIFIED

~

COunties Like
NoOne
Else Can!

In One Week With Us
classtfred@~~~a~:~,rrbunecam REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
~-.:._~~~y
AD N

a

Pirates
frpm PageBl
· Fwm the Plrates' pttchmg
pe!Specttve, 11 was lernble
The Cardmals scored 28
runs ,md h,td SO hots whtle
wrnmng two of three m the
serres - after bemg held to
two runs or fewer in SIX of
theu p1evtous seven They
could have swept thetr final
se rr es belore the All-Star
brc,tk but couldn't hold
le.tds ot '!- :l and I0-4 while
losmg 12- 11 m I 0 mntng s
s.uwd.ty mght desptle getling a se.tson-hrgh 22 hils
fhe Cdrdmals bullpen
dtdn I let that happen aga m,
even .titer Staller Joel
Pmeu o - prev10usly 4-0
ag.unst the Prrates - gave
up I0 hns and s1;; runs m 5
2-3 tnnmgs
Jason B,ty had a tymg
two tun srngle rn the f1fth,
g1vtn g htm seven RBis m
two g,1mes, but Ru ss
Spnnger
(2-0),
Kyle
McCiell.m
and
Ryan
Fr,lllklrn combmed for 3 1-3
scoreless mnrngs Sprmger
retned the only batter he
faced tor the Victory, and
McC le llan pnched two
shutout mmngs
fh e
mght
before,
season and 20tl1 of hts
career On Tuesday. he
pttched s1x sohd mnmgs to
beat the Rocktes 7-3
The Reds (46-50) lost
leadoff httter Jerry Hamton,
who had to be camed off the
field after strutnrng h1s nght
humstnng runmng out a
bunt single
He led ott the third inning
by bunttng toward third.
About u quarter ot' the way
there, he pulled up and
II mped ucross the bag. He
mude it to tlrst safely, then
fell over cllttching hi~ upper
rrg ht leg
Manager Dusty Baker,
Joey Vott o und tramer Mark
Mann earned htm off.
Hmrston· wrll have an MRI
111 tnt: mnau on Monday.

Sentinel

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nn 6 1986 Holley c-ark 14x70

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reasonable rates m Mason acre Rose ber-ry Ad PI
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7029
pnor expenence and have
wl 1eels
po ch
cement
worked conststently for th e
steps Out butl dtngs 1nclud
past t 2 years 1nrury tree '"
ed $5 000 304 674 46B9
marttlme ndustry 304-675
2017
Brand new 3bed 2balh on
+ half ac1e tn PI Pleasant
OWNER FINAN CE AVAIL
Super1or
Home
All real e1tate adverlltlng ABLE 740 446 3570
Mamtenaoce
Carpentr y
In thll new1p1per Is
p 1umb1ng Bathrooms No
Federa, ft.Jnds JU&amp;t rel! aJ
subject
to the
Job to Small Call 339 3442
Fair Houtmg Att OJ 1 8 ~r Land Owners No
which makes h tllog .,
' Q &lt;AI&gt;) n Q#IiRO Q
Will care for elderly 1 have
advertlu any
wm ·T ao
a
tra1mng w1ll work days or
praference llmlbttlct! 01
lmpro•ement9 Bank pt~
evenmgs 304 675 6727
discrimination bll~ on
&amp; B8d Cn dtl OK 2 3 4 and
race color religion •~
II\\\( 1\1
5 be~rooms ava lable !710
ramlllal 1tlllua or nat1onal
446
3384
ortgln Of any Intention lo
make any aueh
New 3 Bedroom home frorr.
pref&amp;rence Umlbttlon or
$214 36 per month Inc des
--.
discrimination
many upgrades deiiV
&amp;
Brand New Restaurant for
sal
up (740/385 2434
Lease AT 2 goOd locahon
This newapaper will not
Owner has other mterests
knowingly accept
l..&lt;m&amp;
advertltem1nt1 tor real
ACHEAGI
304
549
5696
call
Anytime
tslata which Is In
...--~~!"""-"'1
violation of the law Our
MOBILE HOME LOl FOR
•NOTICE•
readers are hereby
RENT 1031 Georges Creek
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
tnlormed that all
Rd 4411 111
1NG CO recommends
dwelling
I advertlnd In
this news...,,_
are
that you do busmess whh
.--r-11 va11Bble on an equal
people you know and
opportunity basea
NOT to send money
through the mall until you
HouSJ:S
have Investigated the
"
ron "ENr •
Foreclosure 4br 2ba only L----~iii!liiliiioo_.lr
IOo;ff;er:ln:g::;;:==~ ,$29 9001 Pnced to Sell I For I!!!
Listings 800 620 4946 e~ 199/mo 1 3 bed 21Jath Bank
MONEY
n 62
Aepo.! '50),., down 20 years
loAN ____:__
a~,. AF'R) for listings 8QO

1

YARDSALE-

Pr. PLEASANT
11----'-+

Feder.!

7-rq

~

10 BUY

www comics com

Ftve adorable lovmg Kinens
cute cuddly litter tra1ned 7
weeks old 505 Holloway St
Henderson 304 675 5391

~rl':
1 0~~-----,
HElP WAN11D

:~~IOI;sse~;;:n,t~h ~~k~~~
8

FEDERA~

S1 7 89 528 27/hr now hlf
lng For applicatiOn and free
governemenl JOb InfO call
American Assoc of Labor 1
9t3 599 8226 24fhrs emp
serv
Fresen1u s Med1cal Care
Dialysis services posit on for
reg1stered nurse 30 4Q
hours 1 yea r med surgery
experience preferred com
pet1t1ve wages great benem
package paid on the JOb
lra1nmg r86ume s requ1red
applications available at
Jackson Pike IJalllpohs
Ohio 45631 cell 740-441

roo

11300 Full Time Maintenance
Assistant needed $8 00 hr
Must have valid dr1vers
•liCense and transportatton to
and from wortc. Background
check Will bt run Call 740
446 010t tor Info

prr Security Officers must
be able to pass drug lest &amp;
background check Send
resume to www 1nloweare gonnagetem cot! or fax to
740 441 9545

i

rto

LABORER EARN AS YOU

sponsored COL training
The nght candidates WIH be
responsible goal seeking
md1v1duals w1th a team 9rl
entad approach Only sen
ous HARD WORKING lndt
viduals need apply Send
work history and day time
phone
number
to
TechniCIS.n Tra1nee PO Box
565 Marietta Ohio 45750
EOE
- - - - ---.,--LPN Dnl!'ld Loop p 1stance
Onves HeCI!C Enwooments
&amp; HIQh Gas Pnces Got Yoy
QQwnl Work
1n
Locally
a
Fam1ly
Atmosphere Where You Can
Feet
Good About Serv1ng Others
Applications Are Now Be1ng
Accepted For A Part Time
P
"' F·'l
Time LPN 2
OSSIUie
Ul 'rl
Eve nIngs
2 m
" 1dn1ghls
EnJO'V A C.r••f Worklnn
··~
W1th The Elderly In A large
Personatt.,. Ownecl Ueented
Home
Plaaaant

Now Hiring 20 FuiiTime

employee~ for openings

In our Gallipolis location I
Take Inbound customer
serv 1ce calls for
Fortune 100
1 dlCompames
Wlncau eng Cable
me
rn r

Tl

Coli

to schedule your

Interview
1-8881Mc-PAYU
Ext 232,
Apply online
hHp:l1obtlnfoclalon com
Ohio Valley Home Health
Inc hlrmg STNA CNA
Hom e Health Aides &amp;
Personal Care Atdes Full
Part Time &amp; Par Clem pos1
liOns available Apply at
1480
Jackson
Pike
Gallipolis or phone 441
1393 Competitive Wages
m11eage re mbursement and
other benefitS mcludmg
health Insurance
-------Partt1me merchitnd1ser help
wanted ~ to 2 days a week
morchanclls~ng magazines
in the followrng area
Ge.lllpolls Averag o pay IS
$9-SiO per hr If ln1erested
send us a postcard With
note or resume mcludmg
your phone number to the
News
Group
3755
Interchange Ad Columbus
OH 43204 or lax 614 351
5283 or calf 1-877-639· 7477
e~ct 117 and leave a mes
sage Please spe cify the
area you re calling for

**NOTICE**

Support Associates CNA &amp;
STNA MR/DD e~~:p pre
!erred Apply at 8204 Carte
Dnve Gall polls Mon Fn
E
84
ma 1resume 1o
rhamson@rescare com

Borrow Smart Contact
the OhiO DtviSIOO of
F1
1
1 II II ,,,
1nanc1a
ns 1u o.n s
0111ce ot Consumer

AT 35 Adult VIdeo &amp; Book
Store ne ed Midnight Clerk
lull or pi\rt 11me 304 937
4900

Affa rs BEFORE you. retl
nance your home or
BEW RE
obta1n a loan
A
of requests 1or any 1arge
advance payments of
fees or Insurance Call the
Otf1ca ol Consumer
Affa1rs tol l free at t 866
278 0003 to learn 11 the
mortgage broker
or
lender
IS
properly
1~eense d (Th 1s 1s a pUU!
"'lc
ser v ce ennouncemenl
1r om the Oh&lt;o Valley

s

, 10P;u;b:l's~h•:ng:C:o:m:p:•":Y:I~

o

===----;-;Tru ck
Dnver
needed
Henderson Wv based COL
Lteense &amp; 2 years expert
ence MVR reqwed Call
,:3_:.04_6;_7.,;5_7_434_____
wanted live In hOusekeeper
lady no smok 1ng or dr nk1ng
own transporlatron Call

i
l!e

PRo~ONAL
SFllVICFS

Busy Bee Cleamng Service
0111ce
&amp;
Homes
Profession ally
Cleaned
Reasonable rates Good
Quality
Honesty
References Nancy Icard
740.446 2262 Also Ask fof
Nanct at Michael &amp; Fnends
Mens &amp; Women s Hair your
wff1740 446 0698
-~----:-::-TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wml
1 888 582 3345

IH\11 .., 1\11

740 992 2460
:_::::;;;:::::..::.=:_
__-; 0::'::"-~~----,

ro

Ho~
Patrioti c FOOds Inc lOOking wv BOhr Underground
....-w S" r
for Roi.Jie Sales Managers M1ner Class startmg soon t.,--···~-'~iiii--'
Pa1d Traln1ng 304 674-8683 Whit Co Tra 1ntng 304 372
OK 304 812 0270
8346
2br W/D hook~ Bx10 out
ScHool
building 2 lots In Clifton
POST OFFICE NOW
h6nt~
$39 500 between I Oam·

Enwonment Caring Staff
HIRING
Pa1d Vacat1on Discounts
Avo Pay $20/hf or
Partial Patd Insurance
S57Kiyr 1ndudes
Available Discounted Rent
' Federal BenefitS OT
on Efficiency Apartment
Placed by adSource not
Available
Interested offered w/ USPS who hires
APOhcenls May App~ Dally ___I:..:B:c:66:c:-4..:::03:..:2:c:58_:.2::__
M Sun
1a 4
Ravens
wood
26164 (Acroes Walk·ln Interviews
}:\ltctue Brld~ Turn Right
Monday Friday
Ver y Last Busmess on
9 00 am 3 00 pm
Right North 68) Resume
242 Th1rd A\18
May Be Faxed To (304) 273
Gallipolis OH
9236 Reterence Required
Hiring AA Shifts!
Eo E
1-Bn-46!HI247 x2859

wv

ro
~==~=====~
f

ResCare Home ·care ts
accepting applications lor

The
Athens Me1gs
Educat 1ooal Serv1ce Center
has an ava table position tor
a Murt1ple
Disabilities
Teacher 1n Mergs County
Intervention Spec1altst cert1
1cat 1on 1s reqwed
atary
based on certl11cat1on and
expenence
Th 5 pos1tlon has Board
approved
benefits
Appllcatloos will be accept
ed until po s1llon IS filled
Send Lener of mteresl
resume and reference s to
John
0
Costanzo
Superintendent
Athens
Meigs Educat 1onal serv1ce
Center 320 1/2 E Main St
Pomeroy OA 45769 Equal
p p 0 r 1u n 1t y
Employer/Provider

L.-0:·---;;l'
r50

I

.rt

9pm 304 773 9192

-

Galllpofl• Career College :~.yr old House m H artford
(Caree rs Close To Horne)
t 900 sq ft 3 bedroom 2
4387
Call TodayiJ40 446
baths F..al m Kitchen..
1 8()0-214 0452
~
••.., vuU
-~
Dming Room I Den &amp; Family
.,_ gMI'"""•acar&amp;erc...
I
Accred tsd M8!11b! l Accradi!lnQ Room Level 01 A11 app 1
Coundl 101 lndooen&lt;lent Colle~&amp; au ces ~asher,
Dryer &amp;
•od Schoolii12H9
Wmdow dr~s.s mg mduded
$93 suu 304.-882 2494

I

t..--------

riO

Misc!LLAI'IrA~" .

Pet Cremations Call 740
446-:1745

f

i

:..J/

LEARN Start bulldmg for
Potnt Pleasant WV location your future NOW by jolmng
our professional team and
Wages based on expenence learn I he skills to become a
and benefits lnctudmg 40 t K
Heahh Insurance and Paid High Pressure Cleaning
Vacation are also available M.lnl.nanc' TECHNICIAN
Please apply In person For All positrons require e;.~tend
TRAVEL outs1de the
any more 1nfonnabon con .d
l'cl •eddy Lamberl @ 304 stale company provides
''
675 3930
lodg1ng transportation and
Per D1em We provide PAID
AHn local Company w1th tra1mng excellent BENE
FT &amp; PT pos1Uons 1n our FITS 401 (K) Retirement
Customer Serv1ce Dept No plan Layover &amp; Travel Pay
exp reqwed Permanent Pre employment
DRUG
poSIIIon Company training TEST IS reqwed Class A
provided Must be HS grad COL and Dnvers ltcense 1s a
uate FT PQS11•ron $585/Wk plus but not required
rap1 d ad""ncemenls
""
+ bene Qualified cand1dates may
I II s For an Inl.f vlew car l become ehg1ble for company
(740}446 7798
AVON• All Areas! To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears 304
675 1429
-------,-~--,CountryfSouthern
Rock
Band l oo~tng for Lead Gu1tar
player &amp; Bass player 740
645 t800

Regional Dump Drivers

A&amp;J Trucking ts seektng
qualified COL A drlwrs to
operale sem1dumps tor
reg onal routes We feature
e.11cellenl home lime health
and
dental
Insurance
401(k) vacahon bonus pay
and safety awards Qualified
Need someone to spray lor
applicants must be over 23
Polson Ivy around out
lm m of 1
yrs have a m1 n u
mobile home and yard 446 year of commerlca l dnvlng
7039
expenence &amp; clean MVA
Pnor exper ence With semi
d
d 011 Off' S help
umps an t
t
•
ful Contact Kent at 600
462 9365 or fill out apphca
~
tlon at www rjtruek1ng com
CE_O-::-E--:-:---.::---;-

Free to Indoor home only Ju{lk cars wlth or Without
!f) RatTerr er pup excellent titles 740 388 01384
w/ yuung ch1ldren and other
I \11'1 tJ', 'II \I
an1mals 38B B166
.., IIH II I ..,

--·

ro·~

©2008 by NEA, Inc
LPN/.AN posttlons available
for ped1atnc home health
care tn Vrn19n ruea Exp
w/ventltrach/g tube
pre
tarred Days PT!PAN 20 to
30 hrs per week Contact
Mtehele at PCNS aoo 518
2.273

Free K11tens 6 7 weeks old
740 992-4165

Appalachian Tire Products

•

I

~

+IAVFJ
A 1All..

An Excellent way to earn
md"ney The New Avon
Call Marilyn 304 882 2645

I

HOI11'1i

FOR SAil

r---....,---.,
A f

F1rewood already cut you
load 304-675 1645

Two 30 1nch White Bathroom
Vaniltes n good shape 304
675 1645

Mrlltlll

191"7 14x70 2 bedroom
and Improvements Call A1ck Middleport on land conuact Fuqua Tratler furn1shed &amp;
740 992 2910 01 740 274 $3 000 down plus S400 per Pellet Stove can oe seen on.-1
~.Mij
montn (740)416 1354
Bnghton Ad 304 675 3697

J

of everything Including Tools

___

I

All types of Home Aepa1rs L
3-0r_h,;
ouliisiii
e iiliii
orliii
sa•le_.l•n

112 German Sheppard 6
months old all shots &amp;
neutered 740 645 6909

Female Calico cat beautiful

\t~~

too

Found on SA 141, 8wk old
Stamese kttten Please call
740 645-8684 to den

r

'"~:;';,~:~

All reel estate advertlumenta are aubject to the Fednrel Fa r Houein'il Ad of 1968 Thla n
accepts only help wanted ada metllng EOE standards We will not knowingly accept ony ldvertlalr'lg In violation olthe lsw Will not be respon1illle
error• In an ad taken over the phone
are alway• conlldentlal

!r Yw

POSTAL JOBS

l

POUCIES Ohio Velley Publishing re..rvee the r1gf'lt to edit rejeet or cancel any ad at anv time Errors must be reported on the flrtt Clay ol
Trtbune-Sentlnal Reg later will be re1pon_.blt lot- no more then the cott of tht apace occupied by the error and o nl~ tha ftret lnaurtlon We
any toea or expense that reautta from tl\e publication or omtnton or an advertltament Correction will bt made In the lirst avalleble edition

1y colored litter trained to ~&amp;i:i]~ra;;;IIB;;;r~::-----,
good home only. 304 675
WANTID

ubJeot to lite Fedora

"I tweaked It a httle btl," deep
June
21 , Wllh
sa1d Hatrston who was also Cleveland agamst the Los
htt tn the elbow whtle he Angeles Dodgers
tned to bunt leadmg off the
Ba1ley left w1th a runner at
game. "I thmk I was more ftrst and 2- 1 lead m the
scared than anythmg My stxth. but the buflpen let h1m
hamstnng JUSt locked up on down Rehever Btll Bray
me really, really bad Maybe promptly walked Pnn~e
I'm not dnnktng enou~h Ftelder and then allowed a
water. I'm hoptng that wtll run-scormg double by Gabe
be it."
Kapler
Bailey, recalled from
Noles: A crowd of 42,108
Triple-A Loulsvtlle before wns the Brewers' fourth
the aame. matched up well consecutl ve sellout und 20th
with Sabathla eurly. He overall . Snbuthlu's homer
allowed two runs and five extended the Brewers nom~·
hits over ~ 2-3 Innings. dtd· run streuk to 13 ~umes...
n 't wulk a butter uncf struck Bailey wus 4· 7 wuh a 4.42
out four.
ERA tn 16 starts at
Batley's only mtstake was Lou1svtlle this year .. Last
a 0-2 pttch 111 the th1rd that season, the Brewers were
Sabathta hned over the wall 49-39 at the
break
m nght Sabathta also went Cmcmnall was 36-52

• All ads must be prepaid'

5 kittens 7 wks old Indoor
Huge Yard Sale
litter lramed 1 Manx 2 long
July 14th to 201h
haired W111 pay $10 towards Corner of At 2 &amp; Blame
spay or neuter 367 7574
lane GaU 1pol1s Ferry lo1s

Estat

:iL

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days PriCi r To
Publication
Sunday Display 1.00 -,;;;;;,,.
Thursday for Sundays 1

yyff

4 k1ttens some long hatred
yellow/white black tabby
740 992 2335

Real

Now you can hove borders and graphics
AI-'
added to your classified ads
(.
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SOc for small
$1.00 for large

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

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Djselay Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
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r

Or Fax~~~6!..:_75-~5~2~34~_ __:.·:__ ___

Oei:u/tirM

Dally In-Column: 1 00 p.m
Monday·Frlday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
sunday In-Column. 1.00 p m
For Sunday• Paper

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Items
To Help Get Response ...

&gt;

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

Offtee 11o~~

.

outtng
agamst ~ the
Cat dumls, gtvmg
fp.'e
hus and four runs m f1ve
mnrngs 111 hts second start
smce commg off the disabled list wah a sore elboW
He hds a 9 00 ERA m tour
start s agarnst them thts season
"They came out really
aggress rve lrom the start,"
Sdrd Snell, who has won
only once smce Apnl 12
That one pttch (to M1les)
teally got me I dtdn't realtze he had that much
powet '
Notes: Glaus, Duncan
and Mtle s all had three hlts
Accor dmg to the Elu)s
Sports
Bure.1u,
tire
Card111als hadn't had as
many h1ts as they dtd
Saturday and lost smce they
had 23111 a 19 15, 10-mnmg
defeat to the Reds on July 1, 1956
Cardmals rookie
LHP Jarme Garcm, who
made h1s maJor league
debut as a reliever Fnday, is
scheduled to start Sunday
vs San Otego Mde&amp;' five
RB)s were the most by a
Cardm.1ls pl~y~r th1s season Hrs career hogh IS spt
RBis, m 2004 agamst
Anzona
After the game,
the Prrates oplloned RHP
Romulo Sanchez to TnpleA l ndranapoils.

0

{[ribune

Webs1tes
www mydatlytrrpune com
www mydarlysentrnel com
www myda1lyregrster com

1\egi~ter
(740) 445=2342 (740) 992--2155 (304) 675-1333

To Place
C ¥1D
1 uTr dAd,

dvertisements

Cardmals relrevers gdve up
e1ght runs o;er the tmal
four rnnmlls
" It was Important we put
that game last no ght behrnd
us," La Russa s,ud ·We
came out and showed
everybody, look, you bedt
us lust n1ght and we ' re
gmng to try to beat you
today"
St Lours IS 53-43 at the
break. the NL's second best
re cord The Cardmals trm I
Ch1cago by 4 1/2 games rn
the NL Central
"It's good to go rnto the
bre,tk wnh a lot of guys
swmgt ng the bat well and
teeltng good," Mtles satd
The Prrates, SIX uame s
under .tt the break, ~unex ­
pected) y have one ot the
NL's best offenses, but the
pttchrng staff has been
much worse than expected
wnh a 5 13 ERA- more
than a run per game hogher
than St
Lou1 s' 4 08
Pmsburgh's bullpen gave
up 12 runs rn the senes
"We' ve kmd of been
hmpmg for about lO days
now,"
manager
John
Russell satd "The bullpen
has been overused Guys
are g" mg what they have
but they don't have a lot left
m the tank - and they' ve
been used a lot "
Snell had another rough

Meigs County, OH

We Cove
Meigs, G8111a,
And M«11son

Dahlbe ,

•

Sabathia

{[rtbune - Sentinel - l\e

The te.tl s alone were wor'rewed wnh the ~a me reverth y ol " spot 111 the H~ll of
ence that prev10us ge neraF.tmc
'""" reserved for Batt
Brett F.tlle ' hed them,
StMr WJth good rea son .
dnd all of Wt ;ro nSJ n cned
too. 11 you look at the stats
.dong wtth htm The rest of
that Jeltne htm as one of the
tire country go t a btl tearytnp I0 quarterbacks ever
eyed, too and who could
and an eventual unammous
blame us
rg ;ore rnt o the H.111 of Fame
Hrs storybook nrn to the
They're not gomg to cut
Super Bowl may have come
hun nnw ellher wh1ch
up JU St short, but FaHe had better part of two decade s r111 ght get general manage1
gtvcn us one last gr~at sea- After fmally comtng to Ted Thompson a tew votes
son to remember And now, terms Wllh the1r hero' s deer hume[ t as NFL execulive
look in g more \ulnerable s1on to reure, they must of lhe )edl He s standmg
tll.Hl he had ever been on now confront the fac1 tha t tm11 whtt;h for now mean s
the f&gt;eld he announced he all those· years of cheenng Fav1e can erther return to
w.ts l111all y done after 16 Favre on apparently meant the P.tckers as ,m awfully·
seasons as the quanerback a lot more to them than If expens 1ve holder on extta
lor the Green Bay Packers dtd to h1m
pomts and fr eld goals Qr
It s over," Favre sa1d
How could they lhmk hope that the team sees fit
·As hard ,\s th at 1s for me to otherwise, when Favre 10 tt.tde htm
s.ty rt s over
wants the Packers to release
It 's hard 10 Jmagme Favre
It seems like 11 was JUst h1m so he can play for pia) rn g tor any orher te am ,
ve&gt;terd,ty, but rl wa, fu ut anothe1 team, perhaps even and equally hard to belteve
long months &lt;tgo One of the
hated
Mmne sota 1 ,1y teJ!l' \' ou!d be all that
the gre.ttest players ot hts V1kmgs
mtere&gt;ted 111 a 38-year-old
11111 e w.1s done, headmg
That the Packers have no who c.mt seem 10 make Lip
home to Ml sS tSslppl wnh plans to do so should help hrs mmd whether he wanls
nothmg lett to do but wnte boost the spmts of some m to plav or not Accordmg (o
h1s .tcceptance speech for Green Bay Thetr summers Tl
•
th
p k s
e
ac e(
Canton
are way too short as 11 ts ' wrnp son
And we be lteved h1m and there' s no pomt rummg wete eager to welcome
How couldn't we when the th1 s one enttrely by lettmg Favte b,rck when he began
hd vJng second thoughts
tears see med so genume, Favre get away so easily
the ernollons so raw?
Besides, payback can be .tbout illS •etlfement monti)s
How co uldn't we when tun Let Favre twiSt 111 the ago but F.tvre satd no
.
lm .t ge llt mststed JUSt a wmd tor a ~&gt;hile, wonderIf you belteve Thompson
month late1 thdt reports he mg rt h1s only optron rs to - and I II t.tke h1s word
w.ts shoppr ng Favre around return to the Packers as the agam st someone who seems
to oth er teams were false'
backup to Aaron Rodge 1s
stan ed too attentiOn- l]e
Srll y us
After all, he 's been play dtd e;e1ythmg but get on
We should have under- mg the game wnh the team ht s knee&gt; and ktss FavreJs
stood that old quarterback s and 1ts fan s for a lot longer Supet Bowl nng to make
Jon t s1mply qu11 unles s He vactllated last year hm1 happy before dectdn}g
someone torces them to We about retunung, and the the team had to move on
should have trgured out that }car before called a pre ss
Now the Packers and
after pl.tymg two years of conference 1n Tunrca F,tvt~ are on the verge Qf
cat and mouse w!th the Mrss, to talk about whether dtvmcm g, and already tt's
po~s~b~hty Of fCtlrCffiCfi!, he Wo ,.'d
uf
"y '""
- ; ,rg,uq fll
t'I~
1 ~ 11 becc nc u lilc,_,1 uffaJt Th~.F.tvre w,\sn' t done playmg told reporters who tra;e led team ts on the defensive,
games
there that he drdn' t kno\\ wi111e F.lV!e "u11 Lite v~rge
We should have known why they wasted a tnp of dest10ymg all the goodthat a player who has pro- because he had no news for will he built up 111 Green
v1ded so much drama on the them
Bay dunng hts many years
ft eltl mtght be the btggest
Cheesehedd Nation wall- leadtn g the Packe1s
drama queen m sports offtt ed untd Apnl th at year
Favre may play-agatn , b~t
The only consolation ts before Favre bestowed the II wdl never be the same
that 11 ~uuld have been g1ft ot another season upon The l.tlly t.tle story of a
,worse All we dod was them Asked what the team quartet back and the small
mvest a little emotiOnal • thought of h11n delaymg town he owned won't have
bondrng wtth Favre
prepardtJons !01 the ne xt a tatry tale endt ng
We cou ld l1ve m Green season that lon g, Favre
About the onl) thmg we
tl.t)
responded
can hope for IS thdt the next
The CJil zens there woke
"What are they gomg to trme he retrres, he'll spate
up Saturday mornmg wtth a do, cut mel"
us all the tears
gJUnt cJtywtde hangover
They weren' t, of course ,
.md d lot of quesuons they'd because there would have
T"" Dahlberg r$' a
p1obably like to ask the been rrotmg m the streets ot a/ spo1 Is t olumn/51
quarterback th ey've gtven Green Bay where Favre A Hocwred P1ess
theu allegmncc to tor the has, for the most part, been lwu at rdc,hlbe.•;~£-tp,,o,R

3 bed HUO Homesl only

$ 10 0001 tor hstlngs 800
620-4946911 ROI9

~,b-r--$3_7_5-tm"o-nl-h--3~b,

PRICE REDUCED $69 900 620 4946 ex R027
2712 lmcoln Ave 3br 1ba
With detached
garage
motJVated seller 304 675
6757 304 6t0 1313 01
AsSist 2 Sale J04.755 2980

MORU..E HOfdEii

S5001month
In Syracuse
deposit Hud App No Pets
)675 5332 wq,eke f'lds
1304
740 591 0265
•
2 bedroom house tor rent

·--FOtiiiiRrtiSiiAiLEioo-"

oo peLs 1740)992 5B58

14x70 2 bedroom 2 bath In
V.nton area must be moved
Good Cond $4500 740
S53-1 143 or 446 1648

2br 1n Pt Pleasant $465
month Homestead Rea ly
Broker Ncmcy 304 675 4024
or 304 675 0799

2BH 1BA gar lfl Ctty limitS
e.11pando 3 ne wly remodeled no pefs
br 1 5 bath great cond no smoktng $600/rent+sec
$5000 304 593 985 I
dep 740 446 7596
14&gt;~70

wf

8~20

16X80 3 Bedroom 2 Bath Jbr/2bth house w1 central
V&gt;nyl Sldmg Sh~ng le Root AC WID dishwasher n A10
$230 per month 740 385 Grande area Ret req Rent
+ dep 845 729 6092
9948

�Page B2 • 1l1e Dad~ Senhr'lel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Monday, July 14, 2008

"

SPORTS BRIEFS

SHS Basketball
Golf Scramble set
fl. A( 1'\L

lhe Snuthll 11

B ,"k ~tb,dl J'l11 0 !,11ll 1\ll l
ho ... t .t lour rn.m ..!oil -.u.un
hle on \u!.! 1 .t'i I~I\Lt'ttk

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Go lt ( lu h In
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The ' l l tmhl~ 11111 lit "'
K 10 "rn ' hot ~u n "·'" u1J
the tormc~ t 1.., brt ll L. · \O llt
u\\11 ll: .un 0 111\

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1v1th .tntllll.ki- IOh.tndll
pu tc Llll "11h "tot II
tc.un h.llldl t 11l ul ~ () 111

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c~ho \~..:

Till' LL"i lllll be \(&gt;() pel
pC!\(lll (\~-10 pe'l lc.llll I II th
·O JJlH l!l.l[ i..d\h pPI ... ~lth

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)JI O\ td l:d
j , L lll LI
pll hl

Ulllf,Lll Ll LLil it' ll ( 1ldllc il
.11 740 &lt;J-Jl) 11 'CJ

EHS fall sports
athletic packets
T l PPI RS 1'1 \1\S
Atl!lctl c p.lll.ct• lu1 the cOO~
l.tll \ [)(J Jh

"L.J .... l]Jj

)Jl:

&lt;..liJ w

lellth 11 11 1 hie o~l I ·"tun
HI Ll! Scll&lt;" ll 11 dcKcl• l Ill he
p1Lked up Ill lhe oll lle lllllll
X \() 1 lll "nli \ 111 p m
ILl&lt;sd 11 til lll \1~ 11 h lli.L \
i\ 11 •tmk nr .uhletcs "' 711&gt;
thl oLI.'h I:'t il r Hi e 11 hll 11 " h
to p.uttLIJl.! lc, lll" l o~ ll sptlll
lllll "l

ll.l

npktL

jl.IL~l!t

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wllh o1 p.ucrlf 111 order to be
el tgl hlc It&gt; 1'1 ''' .L'P"n rnthe
t,Li l r\ddrtron,Lil ) ,til sl ude nt -.ttillct~s must h.tve .1

rw..,:. " l l ..' ~

ut.~

p 1.... ~ c ..l

IUI11 ed 1ll Il l OH.. k:l

t{l

.md

p.Hl l(.; l

p,ne
Fur nHHL l nlot lll.l llol1
cont.t el I' nn Doutln tt ut
E.tsterll ll1uh Scho ol
1

•

BBYFL sign-ups
Saturdays in July

I~
7-Ill ()llX- 0 K(L-1 ll II&lt;' if 11) I 1- - - . L -,_ 1('
(r7-1 'ii7X MtSI \ .ttl04-77:l- IIU:'Il ~Uil :'IU cUIIUU:
'::'11J 01 RILk 117-10 167
RIO GRANDE - Both
0~ 1X
UnJVCISlty of R1o Grande
men\ dlld women's basket
b,dl progr,uns .ue 'ponsorrng
•r Golf Scr.tmble to be held,
Sunday August 1 .tt the
Frankhn Y,llley Golf Club m
C HESTER - A D.t) ' ol
J.tck
The shotgun start IS
(d&lt; ll )
Co bJ
Soltb.tll .II 8 son
10 ,1 111
rmll n,unent ho~s heen set tm
The
event rs a tour person
r\u~ X tl1rou~h 10 .rt the
scramble
' A ' Fl1ght wJII
( h ~stc 1 Ball Ftelds wrth .t il
)lllleecds to hc ncllf the consrst of a total te.tm handrCllc, ter 13.1 11 A"ocrull on c.t p ot 75 or below while " B
o~ntl
lhc An~cl.t E.tson llrght wrll constst of a total
te,un handrcap ot more than
~icllHlii ,Li ill•ld~
75
l lll' th " "'' '' ~ 100 .r te.rm
pius 1110 12 llllh ~-J lOIC De.tdlrne tor entry tor the
h,LII s Thts rs slo11 pllch Ilie Go it Scramblers July 3 1
The cost 1!\ $40 per person
m de• tnd l11 c tem.tle 011 the
300 club members and
tor
lrcl d rt .LII t1mes men h.tl
$60
per person fm those who
opposr tc h.tlld• o~g es 2 1 .t)ld
.tre
not
300 club members
old u ,mtl slo11 potch h lis
T1ckets tor the annua l 300
rlltil 11 1th double elimo1.t
club
raffle. to be held
! l Oll one hou r !I.J illt:~
S,uurd,ty
Augu&gt;t 2. are also
Sr.tcc· " itln!l cd w 12
.t\.trldble (or purch.tse The
11 tm ' Fur nw1 ~ JJl h lfll h ti Jllll
L.tll l),n!'IC Fdll.trds rt 740 cost of the 300 club uckets
dl C $ J0(1 ,mcJ the gr~nd prr 7P
-+ J (1 -(,t)~(,
ul
MdllliJL:
.111 ard ts $ 10,000
lrr ucsc r .tl 7~0 -II 6 0'!110
On Auu '! thell wrll he 1 Fot reservattons or more
hm.! JOd"i't d111ne J tl Sh pc1 rnt ormalron COllldct Rro
Head
Men s
pe1 son .1 l10me run tier h) .t l Gr ,mde
Coach
Ken
S'i per per•on 111111 50 per- B.tsketbdll
French
.tl
(740)
245
7294
or
cent o f the pioLeetb _gl llllt.
emarl
ktrench@rro
edu
and
101 Ill'! 'Cclln d tnd thlld
pi.tee p11 zc' .md .t 1.trretl ot he.td women s basketball
w.tch David Smalley at
doo1 p11/e..,
(740 ) 245 7491 or e-mail
d'rnalle) @l no edu

.

Softball tourney
set for August 8

OU baseball camps

ATHENS l llc Ol1w
UrmeJS!I) h.LStb,tll pr &gt;g l.tlll
wr ll he h ns 1111 ~ 1110 prospctt
C.llllJl' ihl' SU ill lllCI .lllu 1. 11 1
t01 2009 20 I 0 1110 20 I I
hH?.h o..;&lt;..hool u.tdu.ttc " The
t u'st c.unp \,Ill be held
August 2l .1nd tile second rs
sc he du led to1 Oc tuber 4
The c.trnps '" II grve stu
dent .nill ete' tile opportunrty
to SllOII L,l\C lilCll 'klffS Ill
trorll ol colk _c co.tches
lrom .111 d,;rs1ons ,md pro
tessrondl scouts hom Ohm
and 1ts swwund111g dteas
0 U ba 'e b,li I , u&lt;~ c h es wII I
also be on h&lt;tnd
E,tch c.unp wrll bcgrn wnh
regJst• .ttton at 8 a m at Bob
Wren St.tdlllrn ,md conclude
dt dpprox rm.rtely 6 10 p 111
There wr ll be ,1 l1mrt of 72
student .tthletes per cdmp so
pt e regt str,ttton I' encouraged to ensure" p.u !Jctp,mt 's
place Cost tor the c.rmp 1s
$205 pet player
To pre reg t&gt;teJ
Hstl
http //o hrobobcats cstv crrm/
c.trnps/ohlo-c,unps html For
mo1e 1nfmrnatton contact
Brtdn Hosk rnson .tt 740-)93134 1 or hoskrnsh @ohro edu

lilc BI L Bend Yo uth
Foot b.rl l L e.t ~uc Wi ll be
holciln c )out b,lll .tnJ chcclk~Jd ln g s 1~n up ~ e\e l j
S.tturd.ty 111Jul y for .tll Ydied
vouth II om Oh10 or We st
y,,fpntd lllh.:rc -.ted 111 J1l!W rp.1t1ng ..
Sr gn-ur' ~&gt;til he held .rt
the VeteldllS Mcmorr ,li
St.rd!Ulll m Mrddlcport llllm
10 .tIll unttl I p 111
Fo• questrons 01 mor e
tnlormatmn cont.tct S.trdh
dt 7-J0-698-4054 Re~ u1 .~

Rio basketb aII t o

Indians

Cleve land Ired If rn tile bottom h.rlt Fr,mklm Guuerrez
stngled ott Long or'" s glove
from Page 81
at tlmd. took thn d on Jamey
C.tr toll s one-out smgle,
scot ed on Ben
manager Enc Wedge s eJCc- ,mel
tton by plate urnprr e Kerwm F1 ancrsco ~ b.tse lut to nght
Peralta drove tn Carroll
Danley
wtth
a sacnftce lly
Attcr f.tnnrnc" Afl St.tr
All
St.u Grady Stzemore
Evlln Longolltl
Sowe rs
walked Jonn 1 Gnrnc' W1th opened the lnd1ans' ftfth
wrth " w.tlk ,mel scored on
,\11 0-2 Ulllrll "" Sh.twn
Rrggan s Gnrncs broke lo1 Pe1.t lt.t 'two-out home1 the
second ,1, So\\crs tl11 cw to shollstop's 16th of the se.tdnd fourth 111 se ven
lu st ,md D.rnlcy rul ed lhc son
g. Hnes
le lt-h,mtlct b.tlkcd Wedge
Andy Marte m.tde rl 5-2
yelled h orn the dugout 111 lldth d leadott homer m the
rl otest
SIXth
AtteJ Gomes stole th1rtl
We pl.tycd some prett)
,md Rr gguns .tlso Wd lked, good b.\seb,tll the J,tst tour
Wedge quest roned D.mley\ d.tys agarnst a ver) good
stnke zo ne too .md WdS
tedm.' W--edge-sa'd
tossed for the thrr d trrnc th iS
Sowe1 s had the oddest
season
ouun g ot hts young career
Sowers l,mnecl
Ben The lett ha nder gave up
Zobnst then walke tl both thn:e htts &lt;~nd two runs over
G,tbe G10" ,md Akmor 1 tour mmngs settmg career
IW(.II11UrJ t o torce 111 d ru n
hrghs of seve n walks ,md
The umr11 e h.1cl .t prc111 c1~ht strt kcout' In hts lust
tou gh slltke zone but I h 1ve I&lt;J6 tmungs rn the maJors
to do .t better JOb c,ul rcr 111 the tu st-round ptck m the
the !!dille of Cd lllltl !.! thL: 2004 dr,tlt l~ad only 53
tone' Sov. e1~ Sli td It \\ '" w,ilks .tnt.l 77 stnkeouts
.t p1 ett y btl,u re Hl!Hng
Kazmtr one of Tampa
R 1ggd n 'i
R Rl -.;rngk 11 1 B.ty s three All Stars. gave
the tlmtl 111.1tlc If 2-0 hut up ttvc runs ,md e1ght hns

Rio hoops to hold
annual 300 raffle
RIO GRANDE - l he
Un1versuy of Rto Gr,mde
wt ll holcb lis anmt.tl 100
Clu b. Rattle drawrng on
Saturddy August 2 The rattle wdl be held m the Newt
Olrver Aren.t wrth begmnrng
tt" r m \mdW.e Qr...!_HIIt\g at-7.
pm
The 1affl~ ~~ uue uf tht:
maJor fundratsrng e\ents for
both the men's and women' s
basketball te&lt;tms Proceeds
from tillS event provtde both
programs the opportunrty to
trave l '• and partre1pate lll
Hawm1 dunng the upc01mng
2008-09 SCdSOn
The cost for a !Jcket to the
:lOO Club raffle ts $100 and
the gr,md prrze .lwdrd 1s
SIO.OOO
II you .tre mterestcd 111 partrclp.lll ng m the 300 Club ratlle contact Rro Grande head
rnen s basketball coach Ken
French .11 (740) 245-7294 or
b) e-marl .tl ktrench @rro edu
You m.ty .tlso contact Rm
Gr.tnde head women's basketball coach Dav1d Smalley
at (740) 245&gt;7491 or by erlMli at dsmalley@no edu
over SIX rnnmgs, d10ppmg
to 1-4 rn hts last seven stmt s
stnce Jurte II tollowrng a
stx ga me wmmng stre.tk
" It's been a gttat ftrst
h&lt;tlf," Kazmtr sard "There
are gm ng to be tunes lrke
tlu ' m a seaso n We're
gomg to go through ,, bump
01 a slow st.1~e but we hd\e
to be able to bounce back
We h&lt;tve to not dwell on
thi S "
Notes: T.tmp.t Bay 1s :l6
14 and 19-25 on the ro,td
Accordtng to Elms Sports
Bure.ur the lndtUns home
11 mntng stre.Jk over T.tmpa
Bay rs the longest current
one ol rts kmd mthe maJors
The lndtan s defeat~d th e
DetrOit T1gers 15 stratght tn
Clevel.rnd from 1-994 to
1997
M&lt;~rte 's homer was
hrs f1rst m lhf maJot s smce
Aprrl 4, 2007
Srzemore
has 23 homer&gt; ,md I S the
first lnchans player to lead
the AL rn th at c,ttegm y at
the All-Star break stnce Jrm
Thom e (26) rn 2001
Rays OF Carl Cr dll ford , 111
the worst hllless stteak of
h1 s c.treer (0-lor-25) drdn't
pl.ty
R&lt;~ ys DH Wrlly
Ayb.tr went 0 101 3 and ts m
a 1-l or-16 sktd

I

Let Favre~ next retirement be less temfitl

The Brewm ('i2 41) head
mtu the All-Star break 111
th11d pla~e NL Centra l. f1ve
from Page Bl
g,unes behmd Ch1cago and a
IMit-game behrnd St Lout s
The game was tJed at 2 111
sltlkC'
the
mnth when ptnch-httter
Dunn smd th.tl C\Cil
though the Reds h&lt;itl f.tcctl Craig Counsell hll d gameS,to.llhr ,l Ill the p.t&gt;t , II Jtd- wummg sacrt!rce fl y to help
the Brewers uvo1d hemg a
11 1 mu k~ h,tiiJng ,tg.un st
threc-gumc sweep to end the
llllll Ull )' C.l&lt;LCI
111 st hull ot the sen,on
" H ~ ' plllhuhl y one ol tile
1~111 Hull leu uft the bot·
most ~Clll'l'l~tll p11ehcrs tom of the nrnth wtth u stn·
you ' ll cvc1 l,tcc · Dunn glc nit Duvtd Wettthm (2·
smtl "Evcrytll lle yo~1 tuec S) M1kc Cumeron dropped
hun. you know whut yo u're down u bum rn front of' the
gomg Ill get ..
plut~ th,tt Weathers grubbed
Subuth1.1 tmp10ved to 4-0 und threw wtldly to first
m nrne !tarts agarnst Hull .tlertly took oft tor th1rd
Cmc mnall He beat them 6- and beat the thrQw Jaso n
0 on June 27 at Progressive Kendall was walked tntenFteld
ttonally

Francrsco
Cordero
replaced Weathers to face
Counsell who hll a fly ball
to rrght frelder Jay Bruce on
the fmt prtch 1-!Jlll tagged
up on the play and beat the
tl\row home
"CC brought the excttement. struck oUt the side in
th~ mnth tnmng," Hall satd.
"We wunted to go out and
g1vc him u win tn the ninth
lnnlna So we had the
excilement, we hud the
momentum It's a great way
to end the first half and,
hopefully, it continues on
Fnduy: ·
In h1s second stun s1nce
bemg traded from Cleveland
to Milwaukee. Subathm
pttched an etght-hlller, h1 s •
loullh complete game of the
•

•

•

~ter

CLASSIFIED

~

COunties Like
NoOne
Else Can!

In One Week With Us
classtfred@~~~a~:~,rrbunecam REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
~-.:._~~~y
AD N

a

Pirates
frpm PageBl
· Fwm the Plrates' pttchmg
pe!Specttve, 11 was lernble
The Cardmals scored 28
runs ,md h,td SO hots whtle
wrnmng two of three m the
serres - after bemg held to
two runs or fewer in SIX of
theu p1evtous seven They
could have swept thetr final
se rr es belore the All-Star
brc,tk but couldn't hold
le.tds ot '!- :l and I0-4 while
losmg 12- 11 m I 0 mntng s
s.uwd.ty mght desptle getling a se.tson-hrgh 22 hils
fhe Cdrdmals bullpen
dtdn I let that happen aga m,
even .titer Staller Joel
Pmeu o - prev10usly 4-0
ag.unst the Prrates - gave
up I0 hns and s1;; runs m 5
2-3 tnnmgs
Jason B,ty had a tymg
two tun srngle rn the f1fth,
g1vtn g htm seven RBis m
two g,1mes, but Ru ss
Spnnger
(2-0),
Kyle
McCiell.m
and
Ryan
Fr,lllklrn combmed for 3 1-3
scoreless mnrngs Sprmger
retned the only batter he
faced tor the Victory, and
McC le llan pnched two
shutout mmngs
fh e
mght
before,
season and 20tl1 of hts
career On Tuesday. he
pttched s1x sohd mnmgs to
beat the Rocktes 7-3
The Reds (46-50) lost
leadoff httter Jerry Hamton,
who had to be camed off the
field after strutnrng h1s nght
humstnng runmng out a
bunt single
He led ott the third inning
by bunttng toward third.
About u quarter ot' the way
there, he pulled up and
II mped ucross the bag. He
mude it to tlrst safely, then
fell over cllttching hi~ upper
rrg ht leg
Manager Dusty Baker,
Joey Vott o und tramer Mark
Mann earned htm off.
Hmrston· wrll have an MRI
111 tnt: mnau on Monday.

Sentinel

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_U_o_o-. ,-.-oo-.- . - -- - ::lhr
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nn 6 1986 Holley c-ark 14x70

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reasonable rates m Mason acre Rose ber-ry Ad PI
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7'0 3B5 761'_1~- - -2nd Job m flta ry construe Brand new Never hved 1n
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000
740
446
7029
pnor expenence and have
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cement
worked conststently for th e
steps Out butl dtngs 1nclud
past t 2 years 1nrury tree '"
ed $5 000 304 674 46B9
marttlme ndustry 304-675
2017
Brand new 3bed 2balh on
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All real e1tate adverlltlng ABLE 740 446 3570
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In thll new1p1per Is
p 1umb1ng Bathrooms No
Federa, ft.Jnds JU&amp;t rel! aJ
subject
to the
Job to Small Call 339 3442
Fair Houtmg Att OJ 1 8 ~r Land Owners No
which makes h tllog .,
' Q &lt;AI&gt;) n Q#IiRO Q
Will care for elderly 1 have
advertlu any
wm ·T ao
a
tra1mng w1ll work days or
praference llmlbttlct! 01
lmpro•ement9 Bank pt~
evenmgs 304 675 6727
discrimination bll~ on
&amp; B8d Cn dtl OK 2 3 4 and
race color religion •~
II\\\( 1\1
5 be~rooms ava lable !710
ramlllal 1tlllua or nat1onal
446
3384
ortgln Of any Intention lo
make any aueh
New 3 Bedroom home frorr.
pref&amp;rence Umlbttlon or
$214 36 per month Inc des
--.
discrimination
many upgrades deiiV
&amp;
Brand New Restaurant for
sal
up (740/385 2434
Lease AT 2 goOd locahon
This newapaper will not
Owner has other mterests
knowingly accept
l..&lt;m&amp;
advertltem1nt1 tor real
ACHEAGI
304
549
5696
call
Anytime
tslata which Is In
...--~~!"""-"'1
violation of the law Our
MOBILE HOME LOl FOR
•NOTICE•
readers are hereby
RENT 1031 Georges Creek
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
tnlormed that all
Rd 4411 111
1NG CO recommends
dwelling
I advertlnd In
this news...,,_
are
that you do busmess whh
.--r-11 va11Bble on an equal
people you know and
opportunity basea
NOT to send money
through the mall until you
HouSJ:S
have Investigated the
"
ron "ENr •
Foreclosure 4br 2ba only L----~iii!liiliiioo_.lr
IOo;ff;er:ln:g::;;:==~ ,$29 9001 Pnced to Sell I For I!!!
Listings 800 620 4946 e~ 199/mo 1 3 bed 21Jath Bank
MONEY
n 62
Aepo.! '50),., down 20 years
loAN ____:__
a~,. AF'R) for listings 8QO

1

YARDSALE-

Pr. PLEASANT
11----'-+

Feder.!

7-rq

~

10 BUY

www comics com

Ftve adorable lovmg Kinens
cute cuddly litter tra1ned 7
weeks old 505 Holloway St
Henderson 304 675 5391

~rl':
1 0~~-----,
HElP WAN11D

:~~IOI;sse~;;:n,t~h ~~k~~~
8

FEDERA~

S1 7 89 528 27/hr now hlf
lng For applicatiOn and free
governemenl JOb InfO call
American Assoc of Labor 1
9t3 599 8226 24fhrs emp
serv
Fresen1u s Med1cal Care
Dialysis services posit on for
reg1stered nurse 30 4Q
hours 1 yea r med surgery
experience preferred com
pet1t1ve wages great benem
package paid on the JOb
lra1nmg r86ume s requ1red
applications available at
Jackson Pike IJalllpohs
Ohio 45631 cell 740-441

roo

11300 Full Time Maintenance
Assistant needed $8 00 hr
Must have valid dr1vers
•liCense and transportatton to
and from wortc. Background
check Will bt run Call 740
446 010t tor Info

prr Security Officers must
be able to pass drug lest &amp;
background check Send
resume to www 1nloweare gonnagetem cot! or fax to
740 441 9545

i

rto

LABORER EARN AS YOU

sponsored COL training
The nght candidates WIH be
responsible goal seeking
md1v1duals w1th a team 9rl
entad approach Only sen
ous HARD WORKING lndt
viduals need apply Send
work history and day time
phone
number
to
TechniCIS.n Tra1nee PO Box
565 Marietta Ohio 45750
EOE
- - - - ---.,--LPN Dnl!'ld Loop p 1stance
Onves HeCI!C Enwooments
&amp; HIQh Gas Pnces Got Yoy
QQwnl Work
1n
Locally
a
Fam1ly
Atmosphere Where You Can
Feet
Good About Serv1ng Others
Applications Are Now Be1ng
Accepted For A Part Time
P
"' F·'l
Time LPN 2
OSSIUie
Ul 'rl
Eve nIngs
2 m
" 1dn1ghls
EnJO'V A C.r••f Worklnn
··~
W1th The Elderly In A large
Personatt.,. Ownecl Ueented
Home
Plaaaant

Now Hiring 20 FuiiTime

employee~ for openings

In our Gallipolis location I
Take Inbound customer
serv 1ce calls for
Fortune 100
1 dlCompames
Wlncau eng Cable
me
rn r

Tl

Coli

to schedule your

Interview
1-8881Mc-PAYU
Ext 232,
Apply online
hHp:l1obtlnfoclalon com
Ohio Valley Home Health
Inc hlrmg STNA CNA
Hom e Health Aides &amp;
Personal Care Atdes Full
Part Time &amp; Par Clem pos1
liOns available Apply at
1480
Jackson
Pike
Gallipolis or phone 441
1393 Competitive Wages
m11eage re mbursement and
other benefitS mcludmg
health Insurance
-------Partt1me merchitnd1ser help
wanted ~ to 2 days a week
morchanclls~ng magazines
in the followrng area
Ge.lllpolls Averag o pay IS
$9-SiO per hr If ln1erested
send us a postcard With
note or resume mcludmg
your phone number to the
News
Group
3755
Interchange Ad Columbus
OH 43204 or lax 614 351
5283 or calf 1-877-639· 7477
e~ct 117 and leave a mes
sage Please spe cify the
area you re calling for

**NOTICE**

Support Associates CNA &amp;
STNA MR/DD e~~:p pre
!erred Apply at 8204 Carte
Dnve Gall polls Mon Fn
E
84
ma 1resume 1o
rhamson@rescare com

Borrow Smart Contact
the OhiO DtviSIOO of
F1
1
1 II II ,,,
1nanc1a
ns 1u o.n s
0111ce ot Consumer

AT 35 Adult VIdeo &amp; Book
Store ne ed Midnight Clerk
lull or pi\rt 11me 304 937
4900

Affa rs BEFORE you. retl
nance your home or
BEW RE
obta1n a loan
A
of requests 1or any 1arge
advance payments of
fees or Insurance Call the
Otf1ca ol Consumer
Affa1rs tol l free at t 866
278 0003 to learn 11 the
mortgage broker
or
lender
IS
properly
1~eense d (Th 1s 1s a pUU!
"'lc
ser v ce ennouncemenl
1r om the Oh&lt;o Valley

s

, 10P;u;b:l's~h•:ng:C:o:m:p:•":Y:I~

o

===----;-;Tru ck
Dnver
needed
Henderson Wv based COL
Lteense &amp; 2 years expert
ence MVR reqwed Call
,:3_:.04_6;_7.,;5_7_434_____
wanted live In hOusekeeper
lady no smok 1ng or dr nk1ng
own transporlatron Call

i
l!e

PRo~ONAL
SFllVICFS

Busy Bee Cleamng Service
0111ce
&amp;
Homes
Profession ally
Cleaned
Reasonable rates Good
Quality
Honesty
References Nancy Icard
740.446 2262 Also Ask fof
Nanct at Michael &amp; Fnends
Mens &amp; Women s Hair your
wff1740 446 0698
-~----:-::-TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wml
1 888 582 3345

IH\11 .., 1\11

740 992 2460
:_::::;;;:::::..::.=:_
__-; 0::'::"-~~----,

ro

Ho~
Patrioti c FOOds Inc lOOking wv BOhr Underground
....-w S" r
for Roi.Jie Sales Managers M1ner Class startmg soon t.,--···~-'~iiii--'
Pa1d Traln1ng 304 674-8683 Whit Co Tra 1ntng 304 372
OK 304 812 0270
8346
2br W/D hook~ Bx10 out
ScHool
building 2 lots In Clifton
POST OFFICE NOW
h6nt~
$39 500 between I Oam·

Enwonment Caring Staff
HIRING
Pa1d Vacat1on Discounts
Avo Pay $20/hf or
Partial Patd Insurance
S57Kiyr 1ndudes
Available Discounted Rent
' Federal BenefitS OT
on Efficiency Apartment
Placed by adSource not
Available
Interested offered w/ USPS who hires
APOhcenls May App~ Dally ___I:..:B:c:66:c:-4..:::03:..:2:c:58_:.2::__
M Sun
1a 4
Ravens
wood
26164 (Acroes Walk·ln Interviews
}:\ltctue Brld~ Turn Right
Monday Friday
Ver y Last Busmess on
9 00 am 3 00 pm
Right North 68) Resume
242 Th1rd A\18
May Be Faxed To (304) 273
Gallipolis OH
9236 Reterence Required
Hiring AA Shifts!
Eo E
1-Bn-46!HI247 x2859

wv

ro
~==~=====~
f

ResCare Home ·care ts
accepting applications lor

The
Athens Me1gs
Educat 1ooal Serv1ce Center
has an ava table position tor
a Murt1ple
Disabilities
Teacher 1n Mergs County
Intervention Spec1altst cert1
1cat 1on 1s reqwed
atary
based on certl11cat1on and
expenence
Th 5 pos1tlon has Board
approved
benefits
Appllcatloos will be accept
ed until po s1llon IS filled
Send Lener of mteresl
resume and reference s to
John
0
Costanzo
Superintendent
Athens
Meigs Educat 1onal serv1ce
Center 320 1/2 E Main St
Pomeroy OA 45769 Equal
p p 0 r 1u n 1t y
Employer/Provider

L.-0:·---;;l'
r50

I

.rt

9pm 304 773 9192

-

Galllpofl• Career College :~.yr old House m H artford
(Caree rs Close To Horne)
t 900 sq ft 3 bedroom 2
4387
Call TodayiJ40 446
baths F..al m Kitchen..
1 8()0-214 0452
~
••.., vuU
-~
Dming Room I Den &amp; Family
.,_ gMI'"""•acar&amp;erc...
I
Accred tsd M8!11b! l Accradi!lnQ Room Level 01 A11 app 1
Coundl 101 lndooen&lt;lent Colle~&amp; au ces ~asher,
Dryer &amp;
•od Schoolii12H9
Wmdow dr~s.s mg mduded
$93 suu 304.-882 2494

I

t..--------

riO

Misc!LLAI'IrA~" .

Pet Cremations Call 740
446-:1745

f

i

:..J/

LEARN Start bulldmg for
Potnt Pleasant WV location your future NOW by jolmng
our professional team and
Wages based on expenence learn I he skills to become a
and benefits lnctudmg 40 t K
Heahh Insurance and Paid High Pressure Cleaning
Vacation are also available M.lnl.nanc' TECHNICIAN
Please apply In person For All positrons require e;.~tend
TRAVEL outs1de the
any more 1nfonnabon con .d
l'cl •eddy Lamberl @ 304 stale company provides
''
675 3930
lodg1ng transportation and
Per D1em We provide PAID
AHn local Company w1th tra1mng excellent BENE
FT &amp; PT pos1Uons 1n our FITS 401 (K) Retirement
Customer Serv1ce Dept No plan Layover &amp; Travel Pay
exp reqwed Permanent Pre employment
DRUG
poSIIIon Company training TEST IS reqwed Class A
provided Must be HS grad COL and Dnvers ltcense 1s a
uate FT PQS11•ron $585/Wk plus but not required
rap1 d ad""ncemenls
""
+ bene Qualified cand1dates may
I II s For an Inl.f vlew car l become ehg1ble for company
(740}446 7798
AVON• All Areas! To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears 304
675 1429
-------,-~--,CountryfSouthern
Rock
Band l oo~tng for Lead Gu1tar
player &amp; Bass player 740
645 t800

Regional Dump Drivers

A&amp;J Trucking ts seektng
qualified COL A drlwrs to
operale sem1dumps tor
reg onal routes We feature
e.11cellenl home lime health
and
dental
Insurance
401(k) vacahon bonus pay
and safety awards Qualified
Need someone to spray lor
applicants must be over 23
Polson Ivy around out
lm m of 1
yrs have a m1 n u
mobile home and yard 446 year of commerlca l dnvlng
7039
expenence &amp; clean MVA
Pnor exper ence With semi
d
d 011 Off' S help
umps an t
t
•
ful Contact Kent at 600
462 9365 or fill out apphca
~
tlon at www rjtruek1ng com
CE_O-::-E--:-:---.::---;-

Free to Indoor home only Ju{lk cars wlth or Without
!f) RatTerr er pup excellent titles 740 388 01384
w/ yuung ch1ldren and other
I \11'1 tJ', 'II \I
an1mals 38B B166
.., IIH II I ..,

--·

ro·~

©2008 by NEA, Inc
LPN/.AN posttlons available
for ped1atnc home health
care tn Vrn19n ruea Exp
w/ventltrach/g tube
pre
tarred Days PT!PAN 20 to
30 hrs per week Contact
Mtehele at PCNS aoo 518
2.273

Free K11tens 6 7 weeks old
740 992-4165

Appalachian Tire Products

•

I

~

+IAVFJ
A 1All..

An Excellent way to earn
md"ney The New Avon
Call Marilyn 304 882 2645

I

HOI11'1i

FOR SAil

r---....,---.,
A f

F1rewood already cut you
load 304-675 1645

Two 30 1nch White Bathroom
Vaniltes n good shape 304
675 1645

Mrlltlll

191"7 14x70 2 bedroom
and Improvements Call A1ck Middleport on land conuact Fuqua Tratler furn1shed &amp;
740 992 2910 01 740 274 $3 000 down plus S400 per Pellet Stove can oe seen on.-1
~.Mij
montn (740)416 1354
Bnghton Ad 304 675 3697

J

of everything Including Tools

___

I

All types of Home Aepa1rs L
3-0r_h,;
ouliisiii
e iiliii
orliii
sa•le_.l•n

112 German Sheppard 6
months old all shots &amp;
neutered 740 645 6909

Female Calico cat beautiful

\t~~

too

Found on SA 141, 8wk old
Stamese kttten Please call
740 645-8684 to den

r

'"~:;';,~:~

All reel estate advertlumenta are aubject to the Fednrel Fa r Houein'il Ad of 1968 Thla n
accepts only help wanted ada metllng EOE standards We will not knowingly accept ony ldvertlalr'lg In violation olthe lsw Will not be respon1illle
error• In an ad taken over the phone
are alway• conlldentlal

!r Yw

POSTAL JOBS

l

POUCIES Ohio Velley Publishing re..rvee the r1gf'lt to edit rejeet or cancel any ad at anv time Errors must be reported on the flrtt Clay ol
Trtbune-Sentlnal Reg later will be re1pon_.blt lot- no more then the cott of tht apace occupied by the error and o nl~ tha ftret lnaurtlon We
any toea or expense that reautta from tl\e publication or omtnton or an advertltament Correction will bt made In the lirst avalleble edition

1y colored litter trained to ~&amp;i:i]~ra;;;IIB;;;r~::-----,
good home only. 304 675
WANTID

ubJeot to lite Fedora

"I tweaked It a httle btl," deep
June
21 , Wllh
sa1d Hatrston who was also Cleveland agamst the Los
htt tn the elbow whtle he Angeles Dodgers
tned to bunt leadmg off the
Ba1ley left w1th a runner at
game. "I thmk I was more ftrst and 2- 1 lead m the
scared than anythmg My stxth. but the buflpen let h1m
hamstnng JUSt locked up on down Rehever Btll Bray
me really, really bad Maybe promptly walked Pnn~e
I'm not dnnktng enou~h Ftelder and then allowed a
water. I'm hoptng that wtll run-scormg double by Gabe
be it."
Kapler
Bailey, recalled from
Noles: A crowd of 42,108
Triple-A Loulsvtlle before wns the Brewers' fourth
the aame. matched up well consecutl ve sellout und 20th
with Sabathla eurly. He overall . Snbuthlu's homer
allowed two runs and five extended the Brewers nom~·
hits over ~ 2-3 Innings. dtd· run streuk to 13 ~umes...
n 't wulk a butter uncf struck Bailey wus 4· 7 wuh a 4.42
out four.
ERA tn 16 starts at
Batley's only mtstake was Lou1svtlle this year .. Last
a 0-2 pttch 111 the th1rd that season, the Brewers were
Sabathta hned over the wall 49-39 at the
break
m nght Sabathta also went Cmcmnall was 36-52

• All ads must be prepaid'

5 kittens 7 wks old Indoor
Huge Yard Sale
litter lramed 1 Manx 2 long
July 14th to 201h
haired W111 pay $10 towards Corner of At 2 &amp; Blame
spay or neuter 367 7574
lane GaU 1pol1s Ferry lo1s

Estat

:iL

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days PriCi r To
Publication
Sunday Display 1.00 -,;;;;;,,.
Thursday for Sundays 1

yyff

4 k1ttens some long hatred
yellow/white black tabby
740 992 2335

Real

Now you can hove borders and graphics
AI-'
added to your classified ads
(.
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SOc for small
$1.00 for large

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

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GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Djselay Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • lndude A Prl&lt;:e • Avoid A.bbrevl•tlons
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r

Or Fax~~~6!..:_75-~5~2~34~_ __:.·:__ ___

Oei:u/tirM

Dally In-Column: 1 00 p.m
Monday·Frlday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
sunday In-Column. 1.00 p m
For Sunday• Paper

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Items
To Help Get Response ...

&gt;

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

Offtee 11o~~

.

outtng
agamst ~ the
Cat dumls, gtvmg
fp.'e
hus and four runs m f1ve
mnrngs 111 hts second start
smce commg off the disabled list wah a sore elboW
He hds a 9 00 ERA m tour
start s agarnst them thts season
"They came out really
aggress rve lrom the start,"
Sdrd Snell, who has won
only once smce Apnl 12
That one pttch (to M1les)
teally got me I dtdn't realtze he had that much
powet '
Notes: Glaus, Duncan
and Mtle s all had three hlts
Accor dmg to the Elu)s
Sports
Bure.1u,
tire
Card111als hadn't had as
many h1ts as they dtd
Saturday and lost smce they
had 23111 a 19 15, 10-mnmg
defeat to the Reds on July 1, 1956
Cardmals rookie
LHP Jarme Garcm, who
made h1s maJor league
debut as a reliever Fnday, is
scheduled to start Sunday
vs San Otego Mde&amp;' five
RB)s were the most by a
Cardm.1ls pl~y~r th1s season Hrs career hogh IS spt
RBis, m 2004 agamst
Anzona
After the game,
the Prrates oplloned RHP
Romulo Sanchez to TnpleA l ndranapoils.

0

{[ribune

Webs1tes
www mydatlytrrpune com
www mydarlysentrnel com
www myda1lyregrster com

1\egi~ter
(740) 445=2342 (740) 992--2155 (304) 675-1333

To Place
C ¥1D
1 uTr dAd,

dvertisements

Cardmals relrevers gdve up
e1ght runs o;er the tmal
four rnnmlls
" It was Important we put
that game last no ght behrnd
us," La Russa s,ud ·We
came out and showed
everybody, look, you bedt
us lust n1ght and we ' re
gmng to try to beat you
today"
St Lours IS 53-43 at the
break. the NL's second best
re cord The Cardmals trm I
Ch1cago by 4 1/2 games rn
the NL Central
"It's good to go rnto the
bre,tk wnh a lot of guys
swmgt ng the bat well and
teeltng good," Mtles satd
The Prrates, SIX uame s
under .tt the break, ~unex ­
pected) y have one ot the
NL's best offenses, but the
pttchrng staff has been
much worse than expected
wnh a 5 13 ERA- more
than a run per game hogher
than St
Lou1 s' 4 08
Pmsburgh's bullpen gave
up 12 runs rn the senes
"We' ve kmd of been
hmpmg for about lO days
now,"
manager
John
Russell satd "The bullpen
has been overused Guys
are g" mg what they have
but they don't have a lot left
m the tank - and they' ve
been used a lot "
Snell had another rough

Meigs County, OH

We Cove
Meigs, G8111a,
And M«11son

Dahlbe ,

•

Sabathia

{[rtbune - Sentinel - l\e

The te.tl s alone were wor'rewed wnh the ~a me reverth y ol " spot 111 the H~ll of
ence that prev10us ge neraF.tmc
'""" reserved for Batt
Brett F.tlle ' hed them,
StMr WJth good rea son .
dnd all of Wt ;ro nSJ n cned
too. 11 you look at the stats
.dong wtth htm The rest of
that Jeltne htm as one of the
tire country go t a btl tearytnp I0 quarterbacks ever
eyed, too and who could
and an eventual unammous
blame us
rg ;ore rnt o the H.111 of Fame
Hrs storybook nrn to the
They're not gomg to cut
Super Bowl may have come
hun nnw ellher wh1ch
up JU St short, but FaHe had better part of two decade s r111 ght get general manage1
gtvcn us one last gr~at sea- After fmally comtng to Ted Thompson a tew votes
son to remember And now, terms Wllh the1r hero' s deer hume[ t as NFL execulive
look in g more \ulnerable s1on to reure, they must of lhe )edl He s standmg
tll.Hl he had ever been on now confront the fac1 tha t tm11 whtt;h for now mean s
the f&gt;eld he announced he all those· years of cheenng Fav1e can erther return to
w.ts l111all y done after 16 Favre on apparently meant the P.tckers as ,m awfully·
seasons as the quanerback a lot more to them than If expens 1ve holder on extta
lor the Green Bay Packers dtd to h1m
pomts and fr eld goals Qr
It s over," Favre sa1d
How could they lhmk hope that the team sees fit
·As hard ,\s th at 1s for me to otherwise, when Favre 10 tt.tde htm
s.ty rt s over
wants the Packers to release
It 's hard 10 Jmagme Favre
It seems like 11 was JUst h1m so he can play for pia) rn g tor any orher te am ,
ve&gt;terd,ty, but rl wa, fu ut anothe1 team, perhaps even and equally hard to belteve
long months &lt;tgo One of the
hated
Mmne sota 1 ,1y teJ!l' \' ou!d be all that
the gre.ttest players ot hts V1kmgs
mtere&gt;ted 111 a 38-year-old
11111 e w.1s done, headmg
That the Packers have no who c.mt seem 10 make Lip
home to Ml sS tSslppl wnh plans to do so should help hrs mmd whether he wanls
nothmg lett to do but wnte boost the spmts of some m to plav or not Accordmg (o
h1s .tcceptance speech for Green Bay Thetr summers Tl
•
th
p k s
e
ac e(
Canton
are way too short as 11 ts ' wrnp son
And we be lteved h1m and there' s no pomt rummg wete eager to welcome
How couldn't we when the th1 s one enttrely by lettmg Favte b,rck when he began
hd vJng second thoughts
tears see med so genume, Favre get away so easily
the ernollons so raw?
Besides, payback can be .tbout illS •etlfement monti)s
How co uldn't we when tun Let Favre twiSt 111 the ago but F.tvre satd no
.
lm .t ge llt mststed JUSt a wmd tor a ~&gt;hile, wonderIf you belteve Thompson
month late1 thdt reports he mg rt h1s only optron rs to - and I II t.tke h1s word
w.ts shoppr ng Favre around return to the Packers as the agam st someone who seems
to oth er teams were false'
backup to Aaron Rodge 1s
stan ed too attentiOn- l]e
Srll y us
After all, he 's been play dtd e;e1ythmg but get on
We should have under- mg the game wnh the team ht s knee&gt; and ktss FavreJs
stood that old quarterback s and 1ts fan s for a lot longer Supet Bowl nng to make
Jon t s1mply qu11 unles s He vactllated last year hm1 happy before dectdn}g
someone torces them to We about retunung, and the the team had to move on
should have trgured out that }car before called a pre ss
Now the Packers and
after pl.tymg two years of conference 1n Tunrca F,tvt~ are on the verge Qf
cat and mouse w!th the Mrss, to talk about whether dtvmcm g, and already tt's
po~s~b~hty Of fCtlrCffiCfi!, he Wo ,.'d
uf
"y '""
- ; ,rg,uq fll
t'I~
1 ~ 11 becc nc u lilc,_,1 uffaJt Th~.F.tvre w,\sn' t done playmg told reporters who tra;e led team ts on the defensive,
games
there that he drdn' t kno\\ wi111e F.lV!e "u11 Lite v~rge
We should have known why they wasted a tnp of dest10ymg all the goodthat a player who has pro- because he had no news for will he built up 111 Green
v1ded so much drama on the them
Bay dunng hts many years
ft eltl mtght be the btggest
Cheesehedd Nation wall- leadtn g the Packe1s
drama queen m sports offtt ed untd Apnl th at year
Favre may play-agatn , b~t
The only consolation ts before Favre bestowed the II wdl never be the same
that 11 ~uuld have been g1ft ot another season upon The l.tlly t.tle story of a
,worse All we dod was them Asked what the team quartet back and the small
mvest a little emotiOnal • thought of h11n delaymg town he owned won't have
bondrng wtth Favre
prepardtJons !01 the ne xt a tatry tale endt ng
We cou ld l1ve m Green season that lon g, Favre
About the onl) thmg we
tl.t)
responded
can hope for IS thdt the next
The CJil zens there woke
"What are they gomg to trme he retrres, he'll spate
up Saturday mornmg wtth a do, cut mel"
us all the tears
gJUnt cJtywtde hangover
They weren' t, of course ,
.md d lot of quesuons they'd because there would have
T"" Dahlberg r$' a
p1obably like to ask the been rrotmg m the streets ot a/ spo1 Is t olumn/51
quarterback th ey've gtven Green Bay where Favre A Hocwred P1ess
theu allegmncc to tor the has, for the most part, been lwu at rdc,hlbe.•;~£-tp,,o,R

3 bed HUO Homesl only

$ 10 0001 tor hstlngs 800
620-4946911 ROI9

~,b-r--$3_7_5-tm"o-nl-h--3~b,

PRICE REDUCED $69 900 620 4946 ex R027
2712 lmcoln Ave 3br 1ba
With detached
garage
motJVated seller 304 675
6757 304 6t0 1313 01
AsSist 2 Sale J04.755 2980

MORU..E HOfdEii

S5001month
In Syracuse
deposit Hud App No Pets
)675 5332 wq,eke f'lds
1304
740 591 0265
•
2 bedroom house tor rent

·--FOtiiiiRrtiSiiAiLEioo-"

oo peLs 1740)992 5B58

14x70 2 bedroom 2 bath In
V.nton area must be moved
Good Cond $4500 740
S53-1 143 or 446 1648

2br 1n Pt Pleasant $465
month Homestead Rea ly
Broker Ncmcy 304 675 4024
or 304 675 0799

2BH 1BA gar lfl Ctty limitS
e.11pando 3 ne wly remodeled no pefs
br 1 5 bath great cond no smoktng $600/rent+sec
$5000 304 593 985 I
dep 740 446 7596
14&gt;~70

wf

8~20

16X80 3 Bedroom 2 Bath Jbr/2bth house w1 central
V&gt;nyl Sldmg Sh~ng le Root AC WID dishwasher n A10
$230 per month 740 385 Grande area Ret req Rent
+ dep 845 729 6092
9948

�•

\

P;:~ce 1:14 • The DaJ
JIIJKRENr

\IIIli II 1\lihl

AII\R1Mf:N'I1S

APAKI111FJ&lt;IS
t'OR RJ.Nr

lloliJfl;

Monday, J!.!!y ~4. 200B .

www.mydailysentinel.com

Sentinel

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r~~

EN'iiil•
. ...... .,,.-------, ~
..-...,;foiiORiii.iiRiii
AN'nQUI:-i

I

Monday, July 14, 2008
ALLEY OOP

FARM

'Ill MIYKJIICYCU:s'

EQuii'IIIEN'I'

·4-WiillliiiEE
iiiUiii:H!i i s_ _,

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

ACROSS

·

Phillip
Alder

L _ _ _ _ _ __ . EBY, INTEGRITY, K IEFER 2000 Kawas ak i W-650.
4br, 2bi. HUD! only $3!? A, artmen t avatlable now GraciDUI Living 1 and 2
Bedroom
Apts_
at
Village
--,
BUILT,
VALLEY 1,900 miles Electric starter.
month! Great t,ocationl (S% Ai ·erb€nd Apts. New Haven

down,

20yrs,

w· I

9"roAP R)

L•:nings aoo-62o- 4946 ex
T46't
: : - : - - - - - - - -Bri t.k house m Gallipolis,
3BR, 1 1/2 bath. no pets. no
smokino. $.650/renL 740

Now accepting appl1 c.a

1,0 ns for Hud -Subsldtzed
on Bedroom Apts. Utlll!ie·"
0
lOCI ded. Based Oil 3Q 1o Ol
adj sled •ncome. Call 30-t
available for
882 3 121
Sen r l nd Disabled peopl g.

446-9209
House in Gall1pol1s 3 bedroom , deck &amp; hot tub, 446-

3478 or 448-8731

!""" MOIII!E Ho.\11-:li
- ~'OR RENr

,.._____.,..,.J

CQN:

EN1ENTLV LOCATED &amp; AFFORDA8LE!

Manor and Riverside Apls. '" GIBB S ANTIQUES rn &amp;
Middleport. from $327 to Sat 10-5. Sun. t -7. or by
$592. 740-992-5064 Equal apiJI Also. restore fur• Hture.
Located on Tomado Ad off
Housing Opportunity.
At 33, Racine (Park
&amp; R•de) e~lt . 740.949-22 46
Middleport, Beech St , 2 br 540
MISCEU.ANEOt.!;
lurnished apartment. utililtes
Ml-liCIIANiliSE
paid, deposit &amp; re t erenc~ .
110 pets, (740)992·0165
Antlljue organ e:&lt;cellent.
condition $300.00 Complete
N. 3rd Ave.. Middleport . 2 br bed§pread and decor for
furnished apartmeni . r1u g11ls bedroom -$100 .00
pets, deposit 8 relerences Antique dresser and couch.

plications r.t;:,v./'' '"'ing Town ouse
apartments, (7 40)992·0 165
epted !Or mobile h0,...., andlo~m all houses FOR
otals in Poin t Plea sant, .qENT Call (74.0)44 t· t _
111
Nice clean 2 Bd. apl. , WID
fo, ·...1 llcn~o~~~ mlunnat1 o n .
11304 _675 _3423
hoq.tup,$350 o M. p(us utilities1$350 deP."Must have a
refchal" 293 South 2nd
Avej.-lidd.above
Shear
!~pecial!r!
lltuspns. calf John 740-992·
1 and 2 bedroom apart398i\pl 740-41 6·2415!1
ments, lurnl&amp;hed and Unfur · 2&amp;3B fl npts. $385 and up.
nlshed, and hO use~ in Cebtr ~ ~ Air. WID HookuP.
Pomeroy end Middleport. Teoan l oavs. elec tr ic. EHO Ta ra
Townhouse
security dePosit re~lred , .rio
Apartments, Very Spocious.
pets, 740-992-2218
Ellm View Apts. 2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
Bath, AduU Pool &amp; Baby
(304)882-301 7
1BR Apt , wro .. nookups,
Pool. Patio, Start $4251Mo.
11ti1ttl«e ·Tv ind wlrent,
No
Pets, Lea Se Plus
cloliJ18 hospitnl. Call 740· Frenchluwn Apartments,
339-0~ .
7?7 41h Ave, Gallipolis, is Securily Deposit ReqUired,
.___;:.....-'------ now nccepting ' applications (740)367-0547
2 Apls. lor ~ent beside fu 1 wa1hng list for 1 bedroom.
Domino's in"'P't. Pleasant
USDA Aural Development.
Twin Rivers Tower is accrp t304·8 12- 4350
Subsidize'd apailment for
ing applic ations tor wa11lng
2 bedroom apartment fo1 t:lderly al"ld handicapped list for Hud-Subsldizetl. 1-br
EqiJal
rent m Middleport. no pelb 740-446-4652.
apartment
for
the
t-inusing DpfJ?rtunity
(740)992-5858
ctd er tyldisatited . call 1)752t2 3rd Ava. 3. rooms and. Furn1!\hetJ Apt. 2nd Ave In 6679

r

AJ:;_I;;:;;~

I

rrree Rent

.

bath . furnished, no pet s Gallipolis upstairs, all utili·
Rent .. Dep. 740-441-024 5 t1~s paid, 1 br. no pets. 446-9523
2B A apt. CIA.

(740) 441·

0194

-···-------

• rooms and bath, range &amp;
frid9a fum Clean, off street
parking. $-100frent + dep &amp;
utilities. 441-0596
Beauttrul Apls. at Jackson
Esleltl. 52 Westwood
Duve, fro m $36 5 to $560
740·44&amp; 2568
Eqw,l
Housing Oppor tunity: 1'his
institut ion · IS an Equal
Opportunity Prov1der and
Eri).ployer.

- - -- - -- -

Gallla
Manor
Apar tm ents. 138
Buhl ·Morton Ad .
Gallipolis. 1s now
accePting applications lor
walling list for 1 bedroom
HUD. subsidized apmtment
for elderly and handicapped
740-446·4652.
-

- - -- - - Middleport N. 41h Ave 2

room eNiciem:y Apt. ul1lit1es
paid, no pets. dep 8 rei. .

74Q-992·0165.

·

Afeyou 65
.
ld
9
or.o. er. ·

SPECIAL

20FT Black 2007 Kawasaki Vulcan

GOOSENECK FLA1BED 500. $4.000. Call (740) 416$3999. VIEW OUR EN'riF\E •0134.
.
TRAILER INVENTORY AT
TRAILEA S.COM 740-446- Ne&gt;~i

JET

Stuck. Call Ron Evans. 1_ . Have you price~ a John
so0-537-9s 28 _
Deere lately? You II be surprisedl Check out our used
inventory
at
~SED

style

Sp01 ts ler

w/oxtras. Minor lender damage. Sha rp' $5500 446-

3825

AERATION MOTORS
Reparred, New &amp; ReUuilt In

Gra ting .

For

II~\'\ ..,1'1 1H:I \It11\

Drai ns,

10

PEl~
tlJK SALE

IN~ rRUM~ms

*Prompt

rs

mo. pd

741i' i&lt;JI -XI I4-l

CLAIMS

II Ill'

l&gt;~PT.

'.

111'.11~111

PIOUS!
I.

HOME-GROWN
CABBAGE

LET ME KISS YORE
FROG AN' SEE IF
HE 'LL TURN INTO
A

Hardwood Cabinetry And Furnltllrt
..........ttm-oekcablnotry.c:om

EW !! THAT'D
BE GROSS,

MARY BETH

!! .

PRINCE !!

LEMMEE GIT .lAMEY
SO HE CAN SEE IT

TOO!!
•
••

740.446.
2459 St. Rt 160 •

II

.

- ~~~~~
rr-

!'
['1•\L00\(.1~~ P"t&gt;O 't'OU 'r~VO!l.

!5&gt;

'="''"' f'OIZW,.._!l.t&gt; \0
f.. t-IIC.( ICE.t&gt;.

Racine, Ohio 740·247-2019

. TI-\E. D!l.\~1'.1'

\cOfH£ WI-\E.~ t
GEJ 1-\0r-\t.! ~'&gt;

Cell : 7411-416-5047

P"I:WT E.~E:.R'&lt; Til&lt;'£
t i'Ui IC.l tt-l Tf'€.
COFftE. ~'f., ~~
IT 1'1\QTEJ&gt; !

email:
Jrshadfrm@aol:com

=..,.---·-= =

740-247-2113

NOTICES

i&gt;unbap flUme' -i&gt;euttnel
P••••••••••• ' ••••••••••••••**•·~I

I
I
I

Address ______ _ _ __
------ - -- - - - -- City/State/lip

Phone__
Mall or drop off this coupon along
with a-copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publis hing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

··· ·-··· ·---------··-----·······1
'

NOTICE TO . CONTRACTORS
Sealed propoeala for
the Pomeroy Fire •
Department
Equipment,
Melge
County, Ohio as per
specifications In bid
packet
will
be
recolvod by the Meigs
c · ounty
Commissioner&amp; · at
their office at lhe
Courthouse ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
unlll 1:00 pm, July
24th and then at 1:15
pm at said office
openec:t and read
aloud lor the followIng:
Pomeroy
Fire
Department
Equipment
Specifications, and
bid lorms may be
sewred at the oHiee
of Meigs County
Commissioners ,
Courthouse ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 740·992·2895.
A deposit of o dollars
will be required for
each set of plans and
specHieatlons, cheek .
mode payable to: The
lull amount will be
returned within thirty
(30) days after receipt
ol bldo.
Each bid must be
accompanied
by
ellher a bid bond In
an amount of 100% of
the bid amount with a
surety satisfactory to
tbe aforesaid Meigs
County

Publir Nolitl'i In N''"P''(I!rs.~
Your Ri~hllo Kno• .DIIilfml_Righi to Your

Commissioners or by and read aloud.
certified
chock, Reourlaclng portions
cashiers check, or let- or all of CR 25
ier of credit upon a Pomenly Pike, CR 30
solvent bonk In lhe Foreot . Run, CR 39
amount of not less Hemlock Grove. CR55
lhan 10% of the bid Old SR346, CR 75
omounlln favor of tho HUand· lind CR 345
aforesaid
Meigs Sloryo Run. The englo u n t y neer's estlma1e tor
Commissioners. Bid 1hls
project
Is
Bonds
shall
be $571,066.00.
accompanied
by DOMESTIC
STEEL
Proof of Authority of USE REQUIREMENTS
lho official or agent AS SPECIFIED IN
signing the bond.
SECTION 153.011 OF
Bids shall be sealed THE REVISED CODE
and marked as Bid for APPLY TO THIS PROPomeroy Fire Dept JECT. COPIES OF
Equipment
and SECTION 153.011 OF
mailed or delivered THE REVISED CODE
to:
. CAN BE OBTAINED
Meigs
County FROM ANY OF THE
Commissioners
OFFICES OF THE
Courthouse
DEPARTMENT
OF
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
ADMINISTRATIVE
AHenllon of bidders SERVICES.
Is call ad to all of the . Bid documents may
requirements
con- be secur~d at the
talned In this bid ofllce ol The Meigs
packet, particularly to County
Eng ineer,
the Federal Labor 34110
Fairgrounds
Standards Provisions Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
and
Oavls-Bacon 45769; Phone Number
Wages, various lnsur- 740-992-2911 f!lr a
ance requirements, $10.00 nonrefundable
various equal oppor- fee.
lunlty provisions, and Each bid must .. be
lhe requirement for a aeeompanlad
by
payment bond and either a bid bond In
performance bond lor the amount ot 10% of
1110".&lt;. ,of lhe contact the bid amount wllh a
price. No bidder may surety oallsfacllon to
withdraw hla bid wllh- the aforesaid Meigs
In thlrly (30) days C o u n t y

e

after

ttte

actual date

of lhe opanlng thereof. The Meigs County
Com mIss I o no rs
reserve tho right Ia
reJect any or all bids.
Jim Sheels, President .
Meigs
County
Commissioners
(7)7, 14, 21
Public Notice
-------NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals lor
lho Meigs County
Paving
ProJect ·
ROUND22 will be
received by the Meigs
C o u n ) y
Commissioners
at
lhelr olflca at The
Meigs
County
Courthouse , Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 until 2:00 P.M.,
July 17, 2008, and
lhen , at 2:00 P.M. at
sold office opened

Kay. Yuu· lllind 1hc
latest 011 ¥1rend t:olors
coordinated for ynu
with ea.sy -tO-upply

tips. Ask me how y'ou
can gel the hotl est

looks of the seasonand alwuys be in
slyle!

Juanita Orueser
Mary Kuy
lndepemlent Rcnuty
Consullant ·
www.mar,·kay .~o•n mfjgn.il•ser

I~~:~~~:~~;~~·

'1

certified
cheek,
cashiers cheek, or letter of credit upon .._
solvent bank In the
amount of not less
than 10% of tho bid
amount In favor of the
aforesaid
Molgo
C o u n t y
Commissioners.
Bid bonds shall ba
- accompanied
by
Proof of Authority of
111o official or agenl
signing lho bond.
Bids shall be ...led
and marked as Bid for
: Meigs
County
Paving
Project·
Round 22 and mailed
or delivered to: Meigs
C o .u n 1 y
Commissioners. The
Meigs
County
Courthouse, Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
(6) 30 (7)_7, 14", 3tc

Close-Out Sale

10" hanging Baskets
$7.75
4" Geraniums .60¢
Bedding Plants
48 per fla1 $6 .00
Vcgcrablc plants
$2 ..10 per dozen
H rs M -F 7:30-5 00
Sat . H:)O- 4:30 Sun. 1,5
Ed's Greenhouses
Noble Summit Rd.
Middleport, OH
(Bc tw~~n

Bradbury &amp; Rutland)

740-992-7'160

JEFF
HE, 's_....__
-~

20 yea~ experience
in sewing

..

Dra'pes, Sheers, Rod
Pocket Dra~s ,
Swags. Vnlances.
Roman Shades and

More ...
Plus Pillow, Bedskirts
Table Covers &amp; Table
Runners

PEANUTS

CALL SANDY

Home:740-99l-Jl20
Cell:740-416-6144

WllAT 15 50 RARE AS A
DA'f IN JUNE. AND 't'OU
MISSED IT A6AIN?

'' Wl-lAT 15 50 RARE A5
· A DA't' IN JUNE?''

Ma..ley"a

Recycling
1141180

I

''

.......ltMI..........
...........12:11 ..

NYIIITIPPIICES.
~.;;..--------,

r

SOME KID JUST
TRIED TO START
AFIGHT WITH
lil OUTSIDE THE
CANDY STOI!E!

PSI CONSTRUCTION
RICK PRICE

_)

New Homes, Room Addillons, Remodeling,
Metal &amp; Shingle Roofs, Sldbig, Decks,
Hathroom Remodeling Licensed &amp; Insured
,vv

"IIHi•,l

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Wlndowa
• Roofing
·Decks
•Gsragn
• Pole Bulldlnga
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742-2332

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing. Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,

Remoclsling, Room
Additions

fOR YOU!!

(~ (

j

wu..
ss.,_
. __.

YOU?

I 'LL. PICK

UP

fHE st..AC.K

•

I

J

I

Local Contractor

mariner that will gel all the involved par·
lies believing they have received the best
·end ot the deal.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - What
makes you such a winner is that you'll
strive to do your best at whalever you put
your hand to. As a result. your achiellements will have far-reachi ng effects tor a
long time to come.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) - It will be
impossible for any companion to be
dispirited while In you r presence at thi s
time. You r optimism Is exceptionally con·
taglous. and 11 can make the most down·
in-ttle-moulh pers on smile again .
ARIES (March 21-April19) - A Si tuation
might open up at work that could allow
you to use your talents and skills In ways
or places other than your usual channels. II could help advance you to a high·
er position.
•
TAURUS {April 20·May 20) - Eve n

you usually like working on one

740·3.67-0536

For Remodeling and New House Bulldln1

GEMINI (May 21·Junt 20)- \l&gt;u could
be IIICiptlonally amart In the_handling of

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches apd Decks

MilE W.IUCQ. -~~
47239 Riebel Road , Long Bollom, OH

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-4 16· 1834

25+ yean experience Free EstiiPUJits

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

L._ _ _ _ _ _..;:lf:;;M-.;IIAA;.;,;.:t&gt;::...;1.;:•1.;:~~

mate

43 Fairy-lalo
word
44 Barbecue

·extras
45 Chow46 Doctrines
47 Wealthy,
lo Pablo
48 Rolaids
target ·

51 Sweat-talk

t..--+-+--

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty C~~t~wcryptograms are cr eal~ 110m Quolallons bit iamous peep:~ :ast and p•esent
Eact1 1ener 1n lht Cf)hfr SIS"ds rar a110tre1

Taoays clue: Yequars P

" EZ
LR

-

J AJEEOK I TNMLV , O ' EZZC

GMVF
AJE

EZ

E ·Z CKZS
VOGWOF

AFH

LR

SDEW

AJf

LF. 0

J N·DEENF

SJKE _FH
AFEEFv . ··

JTWAMVK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- ·we should learn lo live and love our neighbors as
ourselves for the sake ol peace and progress." · David McCallum

£'11. _;. Jl

_TKAT DAILY Q~1)
~
"(1 ~C.~ WORD
PUULIR iJ\l::l ~Qij ~}.
~
iJ GAM!
Edilod by ClAY I. POllAN - - -

r, f.f"

. ORIWLtango --~i:llrs of . lho

fovr scro mbled wcrd3 below ro iorm four simple words .

. ORGREH

By Bernice Bede Otol

In the year ahead, you will finally get the
chance to purnue an ambi tious objec tive
you've been harboring. Your chances for
success will be bener than ewpected . of
which ,you'll take lu ll aelvantage.
CAN CER. (June 2 1-July 22) -- If you feel
things have been a bit dull with regard to
your social life. this is an excellent time to
get out and circulate In a different kind of
venue where you ca n meet ne w people
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Although conditions in general look ralher favorable
for you, matters tha.t are materialistic or
flnanclat In nature will be a good place to
find success
"VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) -Your bust·
nesslike1qualities are apt to be much bet·
ler than usual right now, so if there is
something In this area that needs to be
. revised or reworked, take a secorid Shot
at ·it. You should be successful.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Follow your
Instincts and don't hesitate to operate at
full throttle \JIIIfh regard to your important
objectives or goats. Instea d of moving ·
with events. n:tove events · to fit your
agenda.
SCORPI O (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - You are
willing to work hard and l.onQ in order to
advance an Impor tant project. This is all
well and good, as long as your vision is
positive and pro~res sive . Think win.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - You

projecl at a lime, you have the ability to
handle several sltuallona simultaneously.
Don't heeltate to expand your agenda. If
need be.

Free Eatlmatea

39 Like
dishwater
41 Do Latin
homework
42 Tarzan 's

Tuesday, July 15,2008

thout;~h

740.367-D544

Call:

HAS
SOMETHING

WOULD~ DONE.

RJIUE

'

41 Place
for a pint
42 Feints
1 Auction
action
45 Dessert
4 Mild
wine
beverage
49 Gorilla .
7 Metro RRs 50 Jugs ·
10 Ms. Hagen. 52 Scholarly
of films
notation
11 Vary snug 53 Hotldoy
13 Puffin kin
cheer
14 House
54 ·No1 quiet
buzzer
55 Sprint rival .
15 Snerfs
56 Jr. naval
· master
officer
16 Call out
57 ,Half a pair
17 Nosegays 58 Instant lawn
19 Fire residue
12 Wedding
21 S&amp;L
DOWN
gown
offering
feature
22 By way of
1 Tan
18 Sensible
23 Long-tailed 2 .._ do
20 Eur. airline
animal ·
for now"
22 Feeling
26 Charming
3 The Banana 23 Geolo~ic
30 Advantage
Boat Song
formation
31 Family
lhyph.)
24 Valhalla
mem.
4 Prmcess
honcho
32 Sheep
topper
25 Not pretty
sound
5 Omelet
26 Telegram
33 - YOUS plait
baSe
27 Band
34 Before
6 Gleelul
member
35 Clark's
shout ·
28 - of honor
' " Daily
7 Apl•ov
29 Moderate
Planet"
8 Entice
31 Trucker's rig
coworker
9 The 35 Garage job
36 · Whenever
the limit!
37 Sock filler
39 Soft leather . t 1 Limerick
38 Norwe~lan
40 Kimono sash
starter
playwroght

KYS AH
J

r--------.
&lt; L " UT

your tlnanc;;lal or oommtrclal aftell'l at
lhlo 1knt, 10 tlrlvtl 10 opt,.lt tn '1hll
. arena It you can. Makl hay whllt rne aun
lhln• .

SOUP TO NUTZ

~-

T \4 E N I H

"Politeness," the etiqueue
ins.tructor lechued, "is the m1 of
chO&lt;Jsing between ones real-----:-"

r-..,...,...;-;..-;;,.;;-;,_.:.T-1 0

- PP INT NUMBERED
.6

Comple1c rho ~\uckl.• quotod
Cj filling 10 fflt miSSing WOrds
yo u develop from .steC No. 3 below~

lETtERS IN 5QUA.Rf5

9 IINS(RAMBlf
lETTE RS I
fOR ANSWER ·
.
SCRAMLETS ANSWERS 7111108

Thieve - Often - Milky - Jester - illS .FEET
Famous adage; ~The foolish man seeks happiness in the
distance; the wise man grows it under IllS FEET."

r- - - - - - ---:::'1 ·I_r-...;.______.,.• .-- - - - - - - - - , · Mw
might come up with a bright Idea about ·
to complete a maner that has sat
I RI;N /;WAY CUZ
BUT TW1\V GOOD, CUZ dormant for quite a while. Roll up yo ur
sleeves and get right on It
FIGHTING'S JJST ·
ME CAN
THE.TO!J~Y
ARLO.&amp; JANIS
C~PRICOAN {Dec. 22·Jan. 19) THE Klt-DA THING
JUST SJIUSH YOU IS ALSO Creative
thinking could hold the answer
THE FUTUIE liE.
IT OFF ~IS
ASIT OF A ior arbitrating a touchy sltuallon In a

110 'lQ ? ,,., ,,

CPII7-l0 S90 766h

J&amp;L
Construction

.~.THE

~

'1bur 'llll"lhii'IY: .

THE WINDOW
LADY

740-949-3027

Commlsaloneis or. by

Pass
Pass

Sometimes in a bridge deal you will have
two possible w·ays to make the contract.
Either line A will work, or line B will do
the Irick. if you will e~~.cuse the pun.
It you can try only one of them, usually
you should pick the mathematically
superior. When you can try both ." be
careful to tackle them in the correct
order.
You are in three no-trump. West leads a
fourth-highest heart two. What would b8.
your plan?
West's opening lead means the missing
hearls are dividing 4-4. So you will lose
only three heart tricks and can afford
one more loser. You have eight top tricks:
one spade, one heart, live diamonds
and one cl ub. And you have two chances
to get a ninth : You can try lor a winning
spade finesse. or you can lead a low · .
club toward durl1 my's queen, hoping to
fl nd West with the king. Which is correct?
Aijer you gel in with your heart ace. pl ay
a low club toward dummy's queen. Here,
that bri ngs h'ome the contract. But tf East
could capture dummy's club queen with

·A

1

PU

East
r ass

---:--T.:~~~·ii~~~;l-[j~~~-~--n"~·-·-~~~~ ··

Farm .Letart Falls

Then l~)ok lo Mary

North

· (spades).

Jim O'Brien

love
the latest
looks?

West

Pass 1 ..
Pass · 3.
P3ss Pass

available.
Note that if you start . with . the spade
finesse, you would go dowri here. East
wins with his king and the defenders
take their remaining heart tricks. And
when you play a dub toward the queen.
West will be winning with the setting
trick.
The general principle Is to try the suit
where you must lose one trick to estab·
lish one (here, clubs), and keep for later
the suit where you may gain an extra
~ trick without having to lose one

THE BORN LOSER

IGI,U,C

9-lZIIl

05 CBA 1000 RR.Iow miles.
$BODO obo. Call 304·8 12·
1068

Tti~Y ~ AY Tti~Y l&gt;ON'T 'OV~F
'i4GTS OF 60tl'~ AI'ID
roY, A~~
T~E-Y E:V~Jl

BARNEY

Concrete Removal and Replacement

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

South

Taste the correct
cherry first

CO.'.'. I H l 't Ill' '

Ollill-8 1-J

4 WHF.ELERS

'•

AGM~
INSU((AN(,~

GOMPANY

FRESH

A 7 5

Opening lead: • 2

140·992-5682

$3600, 740 992-6 159

.. J9 843

It
I NT

3N T

Rl' lctt.' nrL:.., Av;~ilahlc !
Call (iilry Stanil'y @'

ROGIR HYSEilS
GARIGI

2

K J 6 5

Dealer:· South
Vulnerable : Both

Stop &amp; Compare

St. II. 124 ............

· Sport , all options, low
mileage, Shar"p! , Asking

'

740-992-1m

Pkasc leave mess:~ 'C

I

~0

·•

~·Ex pl·r iclll'l'd

Insured

• 6

• 6 3
• A 10 4
t AJ t 083

* ln sut\~\ 1

David Lewis
740·992-6971

w

• 7 5 4

South

740-653-9657

28 Y~ars Experience

Ea.c;t
• K J 9·

• Q9 7 2

• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

Rates

. AI Types f)f '''
' Ctlnaete·Work 1&gt;c

Q 9 2

10 8 2

o4o K

·New Homes

Seamless Gutters
Roofing , Siding, Guiiers
Insured &amp; Bonded

and Quali ty

~' R t&gt; a sunabk

•

H&amp;H
Guttering

Work

ff\. II'H.O\'EI\IFNI'S

1ol

JD # 46 End Loader quic~
attach, Hydraulic Buc~et
$t ,JOO-neg. 304 _458 _18 17
leave message

1/ 1411

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal

HoME

TKtx.:KS
tjiOson u~s 1-'aut double cut- --oi~oiiOKiiiiSiiAil.tii:,_.,.,
away studio. $750. 740-245· '
0611
1995 Dodge Dakota Super

$6500. Call 367-7767

·*alUpoli' Dati!' ~ribune
tlotnt Jlea,ant ~e;i,ter
The Daily Sentinel
Subscriber's Name ---~---

25 Years LDCill bpcr encc

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondiliomd lifeti rno gum 675-2 169
antee. Local relerences fu t·
-200_2_F_ord_M
_u_s_ta-ny_ w_h-ite-, mst1 ed Established 1975.

$100 740-245-0611

Hours
7:00AM-8:00PM

Pomeroy Ohm

rrn:---:-:----,

. 96 Ford WindSiar 75,000
miles in good shape $2,500
or trade lor Truck of Equal
-"Value 304-675·1 645
8:&gt;:&gt; NeW Holland Round ~:"-::-:'"______:-'1
Baler $3500. 25~M- F Tractor «t Mmu~CYCI .~

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

'

992-6210

ca mt.Jing. Call Ron Sh{;lets at
740-4 41-5239'

Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp; l ~10
Atri'OS
AV Servrce al Carmrch&lt;Je l
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
fol)K S".E
Trailers 710-446·3825
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp; ·----~--,..1

Friday, 8am-4· 3Qpm Closed '
Th'ursday.
Satur(:lay
&amp; 1984 Chev Mon te Carlo and
1984 700 Honda Nighthawl&lt;
Sunday. (740)446-7300
call 304-674-0861 or 304·
Spanish 20 gauge double 674·0539
Uarrel $800, CZ 22 bolt
nction
$300,
Marlin 1996 Grand AM SE 4cyt
Glenfield 22 bolt action Great Condition $2.500 304·

• '&amp;&gt;\..;.;:::.il'a1~
;1~
~};~~ ..
\
.- ' ..,.iO'Jt30' . ·.

K

West .

MONTY

,o

wv 036725
V.C. YOUNG Ill

8. 3

.. Q.

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
7411-949-2217

0I •

FARM

when yo-q pay for a 6 or 12 ·
month subscription....,. on .your .
home delivered subscription!

· RoOm Additions &amp;
RemodeHng
• New Oer11ges
· Etoctrleat So"Pturriblng
· Rooting &amp; Gut1e111
· VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pallo and Porch Decks

L.,o...,;iiiiiiioiiii.iliiiiiiiii_.l

Home Grown sweet ·corri :J)
Vi\1\S
and vegg ies. Available July L.,o_..;F,;;'ORiiiiSiliAiiLF,;,:, _.,.,
10th at McKean Farm and '
William Ann Motel.
03 Kia Sedona. 6cyt. $8.500,
1 \lnl"l t'l'ltl..,
49,620 miles ca ll 304-6752550
.\ JI\1 ... 141("

~~~i:~~ ·Discount*

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Sl9el Beams. Pipe Rebar Carmu::hae t Equipment. 740- 92 Terry Fleetwood 29tl ,
good cor,dition. Rea dy to go
Fur
Concrete.
Ang.te, 446-2412

Channel, Flat Bar, Steel

Hiil"s Self
Storage

YOUNG'S

1':74::3:-~---::-""1
8
C.V.IIlf'R._'i &amp;
Mun tK HO.ME."i

STEEL WWW . CAAEO -. Co M •

V~x:~:1;&gt;.HU:S

If so, you qualify for a

.

Yama ho Roadsta r
Molorcyc te .
(dressed)
1600cc. 8.000 miles $5,500
304-675-2793 of 304-593-

•
t

2000

400
TAAILEAS SALES &amp; SEA- :_ 1-,--,----,-VICE

07-l H3

• AQ754

CARGO/CONCESSION - - - - - - - -

WWW CARM ICHAE L· NiceiJ4 Harley883 CuStom.

NEW _AND

North

H 0 M E S T E A 0 E A (740)992-7396

$ 11]0.00

~l&lt;uns&amp;

~

.

EQUIPMENT TRAILERS. included. one With back res!.
CARGO
EXPRES S
&amp; windshield
$3,250,

V6, automatic, PW/PUPS, Call 24 Hrs. (7 40) 446cruise, 90,000 mite s.
90% Q870. Rogers Basement
• •
Bichon 2 males B montt"ls lire. tread, second owner. Woterproofing.
ok:J , Shitzu 1 male 8 morilhs $6000. 740-388-9673
r.:~--:01~-~
-Jr.·:~-..., old. Must sale. $100 each. - - - - - - - '-"••
"740.441·95 19
79 Corvette T-Top, 350
~~'\n: ·
engine, auto trans, verv
·--~~~OiiKoilbiiiiCNiiT-rl CKC Mlnature Pinscher 2 ciean. 70.400 miles. 740·
'
males. 4 mor1. old, . ears 388·0236
Appro11. 900 sq.fl. ideal for croppe d. tails docked, shots. - - - - - - - 98 Corvette ~ u e roadster.
office or retail business, . 740-388-8788
downtown Gallipolis, plenti· - - - - - - - - Black leath er &amp; top. Auto.
ful parking. 740-446-9209
Pug
puppies.
fawn , Beautiful, fun , last. 27 rnpg .
Registered, worm od &amp; up to $20.950. 740-446-7438
datcshols. V~ r y sweet&amp;loY- : : - , - - , - - - - - - Garage !or rent at the comer able Mason are&lt;t 443-350· Police Impounds! Cars from
of 2nd and Pine St. $75 per _
40;:1:-'- " " : ' : : - - - - - , $500! , Hondas , Chevys ,
mon1h 446-4425 or 446- li::70
Ml l~l tAI.
Jeeps, Fords. &amp; m01a! for ·
listings B00-6&lt;'0-4875 e" Vll35
3936

r-~~=================:-,

'

HORSE / LIVESTOCK Neet.ls new battery, otherTRAILERS, LOAD MAX wise. hke new Two saddles

TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE·
NECK
HITCHES.
CARMICHAEL
'EQUIPM EN T 1C A A M 1C J;1 A E l

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

�•

\

P;:~ce 1:14 • The DaJ
JIIJKRENr

\IIIli II 1\lihl

AII\R1Mf:N'I1S

APAKI111FJ&lt;IS
t'OR RJ.Nr

lloliJfl;

Monday, J!.!!y ~4. 200B .

www.mydailysentinel.com

Sentinel

r

r~~

EN'iiil•
. ...... .,,.-------, ~
..-...,;foiiORiii.iiRiii
AN'nQUI:-i

I

Monday, July 14, 2008
ALLEY OOP

FARM

'Ill MIYKJIICYCU:s'

EQuii'IIIEN'I'

·4-WiillliiiEE
iiiUiii:H!i i s_ _,

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

ACROSS

·

Phillip
Alder

L _ _ _ _ _ __ . EBY, INTEGRITY, K IEFER 2000 Kawas ak i W-650.
4br, 2bi. HUD! only $3!? A, artmen t avatlable now GraciDUI Living 1 and 2
Bedroom
Apts_
at
Village
--,
BUILT,
VALLEY 1,900 miles Electric starter.
month! Great t,ocationl (S% Ai ·erb€nd Apts. New Haven

down,

20yrs,

w· I

9"roAP R)

L•:nings aoo-62o- 4946 ex
T46't
: : - : - - - - - - - -Bri t.k house m Gallipolis,
3BR, 1 1/2 bath. no pets. no
smokino. $.650/renL 740

Now accepting appl1 c.a

1,0 ns for Hud -Subsldtzed
on Bedroom Apts. Utlll!ie·"
0
lOCI ded. Based Oil 3Q 1o Ol
adj sled •ncome. Call 30-t
available for
882 3 121
Sen r l nd Disabled peopl g.

446-9209
House in Gall1pol1s 3 bedroom , deck &amp; hot tub, 446-

3478 or 448-8731

!""" MOIII!E Ho.\11-:li
- ~'OR RENr

,.._____.,..,.J

CQN:

EN1ENTLV LOCATED &amp; AFFORDA8LE!

Manor and Riverside Apls. '" GIBB S ANTIQUES rn &amp;
Middleport. from $327 to Sat 10-5. Sun. t -7. or by
$592. 740-992-5064 Equal apiJI Also. restore fur• Hture.
Located on Tomado Ad off
Housing Opportunity.
At 33, Racine (Park
&amp; R•de) e~lt . 740.949-22 46
Middleport, Beech St , 2 br 540
MISCEU.ANEOt.!;
lurnished apartment. utililtes
Ml-liCIIANiliSE
paid, deposit &amp; re t erenc~ .
110 pets, (740)992·0165
Antlljue organ e:&lt;cellent.
condition $300.00 Complete
N. 3rd Ave.. Middleport . 2 br bed§pread and decor for
furnished apartmeni . r1u g11ls bedroom -$100 .00
pets, deposit 8 relerences Antique dresser and couch.

plications r.t;:,v./'' '"'ing Town ouse
apartments, (7 40)992·0 165
epted !Or mobile h0,...., andlo~m all houses FOR
otals in Poin t Plea sant, .qENT Call (74.0)44 t· t _
111
Nice clean 2 Bd. apl. , WID
fo, ·...1 llcn~o~~~ mlunnat1 o n .
11304 _675 _3423
hoq.tup,$350 o M. p(us utilities1$350 deP."Must have a
refchal" 293 South 2nd
Avej.-lidd.above
Shear
!~pecial!r!
lltuspns. calf John 740-992·
1 and 2 bedroom apart398i\pl 740-41 6·2415!1
ments, lurnl&amp;hed and Unfur · 2&amp;3B fl npts. $385 and up.
nlshed, and hO use~ in Cebtr ~ ~ Air. WID HookuP.
Pomeroy end Middleport. Teoan l oavs. elec tr ic. EHO Ta ra
Townhouse
security dePosit re~lred , .rio
Apartments, Very Spocious.
pets, 740-992-2218
Ellm View Apts. 2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
Bath, AduU Pool &amp; Baby
(304)882-301 7
1BR Apt , wro .. nookups,
Pool. Patio, Start $4251Mo.
11ti1ttl«e ·Tv ind wlrent,
No
Pets, Lea Se Plus
cloliJ18 hospitnl. Call 740· Frenchluwn Apartments,
339-0~ .
7?7 41h Ave, Gallipolis, is Securily Deposit ReqUired,
.___;:.....-'------ now nccepting ' applications (740)367-0547
2 Apls. lor ~ent beside fu 1 wa1hng list for 1 bedroom.
Domino's in"'P't. Pleasant
USDA Aural Development.
Twin Rivers Tower is accrp t304·8 12- 4350
Subsidize'd apailment for
ing applic ations tor wa11lng
2 bedroom apartment fo1 t:lderly al"ld handicapped list for Hud-Subsldizetl. 1-br
EqiJal
rent m Middleport. no pelb 740-446-4652.
apartment
for
the
t-inusing DpfJ?rtunity
(740)992-5858
ctd er tyldisatited . call 1)752t2 3rd Ava. 3. rooms and. Furn1!\hetJ Apt. 2nd Ave In 6679

r

AJ:;_I;;:;;~

I

rrree Rent

.

bath . furnished, no pet s Gallipolis upstairs, all utili·
Rent .. Dep. 740-441-024 5 t1~s paid, 1 br. no pets. 446-9523
2B A apt. CIA.

(740) 441·

0194

-···-------

• rooms and bath, range &amp;
frid9a fum Clean, off street
parking. $-100frent + dep &amp;
utilities. 441-0596
Beauttrul Apls. at Jackson
Esleltl. 52 Westwood
Duve, fro m $36 5 to $560
740·44&amp; 2568
Eqw,l
Housing Oppor tunity: 1'his
institut ion · IS an Equal
Opportunity Prov1der and
Eri).ployer.

- - -- - -- -

Gallla
Manor
Apar tm ents. 138
Buhl ·Morton Ad .
Gallipolis. 1s now
accePting applications lor
walling list for 1 bedroom
HUD. subsidized apmtment
for elderly and handicapped
740-446·4652.
-

- - -- - - Middleport N. 41h Ave 2

room eNiciem:y Apt. ul1lit1es
paid, no pets. dep 8 rei. .

74Q-992·0165.

·

Afeyou 65
.
ld
9
or.o. er. ·

SPECIAL

20FT Black 2007 Kawasaki Vulcan

GOOSENECK FLA1BED 500. $4.000. Call (740) 416$3999. VIEW OUR EN'riF\E •0134.
.
TRAILER INVENTORY AT
TRAILEA S.COM 740-446- Ne&gt;~i

JET

Stuck. Call Ron Evans. 1_ . Have you price~ a John
so0-537-9s 28 _
Deere lately? You II be surprisedl Check out our used
inventory
at
~SED

style

Sp01 ts ler

w/oxtras. Minor lender damage. Sha rp' $5500 446-

3825

AERATION MOTORS
Reparred, New &amp; ReUuilt In

Gra ting .

For

II~\'\ ..,1'1 1H:I \It11\

Drai ns,

10

PEl~
tlJK SALE

IN~ rRUM~ms

*Prompt

rs

mo. pd

741i' i&lt;JI -XI I4-l

CLAIMS

II Ill'

l&gt;~PT.

'.

111'.11~111

PIOUS!
I.

HOME-GROWN
CABBAGE

LET ME KISS YORE
FROG AN' SEE IF
HE 'LL TURN INTO
A

Hardwood Cabinetry And Furnltllrt
..........ttm-oekcablnotry.c:om

EW !! THAT'D
BE GROSS,

MARY BETH

!! .

PRINCE !!

LEMMEE GIT .lAMEY
SO HE CAN SEE IT

TOO!!
•
••

740.446.
2459 St. Rt 160 •

II

.

- ~~~~~
rr-

!'
['1•\L00\(.1~~ P"t&gt;O 't'OU 'r~VO!l.

!5&gt;

'="''"' f'OIZW,.._!l.t&gt; \0
f.. t-IIC.( ICE.t&gt;.

Racine, Ohio 740·247-2019

. TI-\E. D!l.\~1'.1'

\cOfH£ WI-\E.~ t
GEJ 1-\0r-\t.! ~'&gt;

Cell : 7411-416-5047

P"I:WT E.~E:.R'&lt; Til&lt;'£
t i'Ui IC.l tt-l Tf'€.
COFftE. ~'f., ~~
IT 1'1\QTEJ&gt; !

email:
Jrshadfrm@aol:com

=..,.---·-= =

740-247-2113

NOTICES

i&gt;unbap flUme' -i&gt;euttnel
P••••••••••• ' ••••••••••••••**•·~I

I
I
I

Address ______ _ _ __
------ - -- - - - -- City/State/lip

Phone__
Mall or drop off this coupon along
with a-copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publis hing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

··· ·-··· ·---------··-----·······1
'

NOTICE TO . CONTRACTORS
Sealed propoeala for
the Pomeroy Fire •
Department
Equipment,
Melge
County, Ohio as per
specifications In bid
packet
will
be
recolvod by the Meigs
c · ounty
Commissioner&amp; · at
their office at lhe
Courthouse ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
unlll 1:00 pm, July
24th and then at 1:15
pm at said office
openec:t and read
aloud lor the followIng:
Pomeroy
Fire
Department
Equipment
Specifications, and
bid lorms may be
sewred at the oHiee
of Meigs County
Commissioners ,
Courthouse ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 740·992·2895.
A deposit of o dollars
will be required for
each set of plans and
specHieatlons, cheek .
mode payable to: The
lull amount will be
returned within thirty
(30) days after receipt
ol bldo.
Each bid must be
accompanied
by
ellher a bid bond In
an amount of 100% of
the bid amount with a
surety satisfactory to
tbe aforesaid Meigs
County

Publir Nolitl'i In N''"P''(I!rs.~
Your Ri~hllo Kno• .DIIilfml_Righi to Your

Commissioners or by and read aloud.
certified
chock, Reourlaclng portions
cashiers check, or let- or all of CR 25
ier of credit upon a Pomenly Pike, CR 30
solvent bonk In lhe Foreot . Run, CR 39
amount of not less Hemlock Grove. CR55
lhan 10% of the bid Old SR346, CR 75
omounlln favor of tho HUand· lind CR 345
aforesaid
Meigs Sloryo Run. The englo u n t y neer's estlma1e tor
Commissioners. Bid 1hls
project
Is
Bonds
shall
be $571,066.00.
accompanied
by DOMESTIC
STEEL
Proof of Authority of USE REQUIREMENTS
lho official or agent AS SPECIFIED IN
signing the bond.
SECTION 153.011 OF
Bids shall be sealed THE REVISED CODE
and marked as Bid for APPLY TO THIS PROPomeroy Fire Dept JECT. COPIES OF
Equipment
and SECTION 153.011 OF
mailed or delivered THE REVISED CODE
to:
. CAN BE OBTAINED
Meigs
County FROM ANY OF THE
Commissioners
OFFICES OF THE
Courthouse
DEPARTMENT
OF
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
ADMINISTRATIVE
AHenllon of bidders SERVICES.
Is call ad to all of the . Bid documents may
requirements
con- be secur~d at the
talned In this bid ofllce ol The Meigs
packet, particularly to County
Eng ineer,
the Federal Labor 34110
Fairgrounds
Standards Provisions Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
and
Oavls-Bacon 45769; Phone Number
Wages, various lnsur- 740-992-2911 f!lr a
ance requirements, $10.00 nonrefundable
various equal oppor- fee.
lunlty provisions, and Each bid must .. be
lhe requirement for a aeeompanlad
by
payment bond and either a bid bond In
performance bond lor the amount ot 10% of
1110".&lt;. ,of lhe contact the bid amount wllh a
price. No bidder may surety oallsfacllon to
withdraw hla bid wllh- the aforesaid Meigs
In thlrly (30) days C o u n t y

e

after

ttte

actual date

of lhe opanlng thereof. The Meigs County
Com mIss I o no rs
reserve tho right Ia
reJect any or all bids.
Jim Sheels, President .
Meigs
County
Commissioners
(7)7, 14, 21
Public Notice
-------NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals lor
lho Meigs County
Paving
ProJect ·
ROUND22 will be
received by the Meigs
C o u n ) y
Commissioners
at
lhelr olflca at The
Meigs
County
Courthouse , Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 until 2:00 P.M.,
July 17, 2008, and
lhen , at 2:00 P.M. at
sold office opened

Kay. Yuu· lllind 1hc
latest 011 ¥1rend t:olors
coordinated for ynu
with ea.sy -tO-upply

tips. Ask me how y'ou
can gel the hotl est

looks of the seasonand alwuys be in
slyle!

Juanita Orueser
Mary Kuy
lndepemlent Rcnuty
Consullant ·
www.mar,·kay .~o•n mfjgn.il•ser

I~~:~~~:~~;~~·

'1

certified
cheek,
cashiers cheek, or letter of credit upon .._
solvent bank In the
amount of not less
than 10% of tho bid
amount In favor of the
aforesaid
Molgo
C o u n t y
Commissioners.
Bid bonds shall ba
- accompanied
by
Proof of Authority of
111o official or agenl
signing lho bond.
Bids shall be ...led
and marked as Bid for
: Meigs
County
Paving
Project·
Round 22 and mailed
or delivered to: Meigs
C o .u n 1 y
Commissioners. The
Meigs
County
Courthouse, Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
(6) 30 (7)_7, 14", 3tc

Close-Out Sale

10" hanging Baskets
$7.75
4" Geraniums .60¢
Bedding Plants
48 per fla1 $6 .00
Vcgcrablc plants
$2 ..10 per dozen
H rs M -F 7:30-5 00
Sat . H:)O- 4:30 Sun. 1,5
Ed's Greenhouses
Noble Summit Rd.
Middleport, OH
(Bc tw~~n

Bradbury &amp; Rutland)

740-992-7'160

JEFF
HE, 's_....__
-~

20 yea~ experience
in sewing

..

Dra'pes, Sheers, Rod
Pocket Dra~s ,
Swags. Vnlances.
Roman Shades and

More ...
Plus Pillow, Bedskirts
Table Covers &amp; Table
Runners

PEANUTS

CALL SANDY

Home:740-99l-Jl20
Cell:740-416-6144

WllAT 15 50 RARE AS A
DA'f IN JUNE. AND 't'OU
MISSED IT A6AIN?

'' Wl-lAT 15 50 RARE A5
· A DA't' IN JUNE?''

Ma..ley"a

Recycling
1141180

I

''

.......ltMI..........
...........12:11 ..

NYIIITIPPIICES.
~.;;..--------,

r

SOME KID JUST
TRIED TO START
AFIGHT WITH
lil OUTSIDE THE
CANDY STOI!E!

PSI CONSTRUCTION
RICK PRICE

_)

New Homes, Room Addillons, Remodeling,
Metal &amp; Shingle Roofs, Sldbig, Decks,
Hathroom Remodeling Licensed &amp; Insured
,vv

"IIHi•,l

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Wlndowa
• Roofing
·Decks
•Gsragn
• Pole Bulldlnga
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742-2332

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing. Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,

Remoclsling, Room
Additions

fOR YOU!!

(~ (

j

wu..
ss.,_
. __.

YOU?

I 'LL. PICK

UP

fHE st..AC.K

•

I

J

I

Local Contractor

mariner that will gel all the involved par·
lies believing they have received the best
·end ot the deal.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - What
makes you such a winner is that you'll
strive to do your best at whalever you put
your hand to. As a result. your achiellements will have far-reachi ng effects tor a
long time to come.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) - It will be
impossible for any companion to be
dispirited while In you r presence at thi s
time. You r optimism Is exceptionally con·
taglous. and 11 can make the most down·
in-ttle-moulh pers on smile again .
ARIES (March 21-April19) - A Si tuation
might open up at work that could allow
you to use your talents and skills In ways
or places other than your usual channels. II could help advance you to a high·
er position.
•
TAURUS {April 20·May 20) - Eve n

you usually like working on one

740·3.67-0536

For Remodeling and New House Bulldln1

GEMINI (May 21·Junt 20)- \l&gt;u could
be IIICiptlonally amart In the_handling of

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches apd Decks

MilE W.IUCQ. -~~
47239 Riebel Road , Long Bollom, OH

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-4 16· 1834

25+ yean experience Free EstiiPUJits

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

L._ _ _ _ _ _..;:lf:;;M-.;IIAA;.;,;.:t&gt;::...;1.;:•1.;:~~

mate

43 Fairy-lalo
word
44 Barbecue

·extras
45 Chow46 Doctrines
47 Wealthy,
lo Pablo
48 Rolaids
target ·

51 Sweat-talk

t..--+-+--

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty C~~t~wcryptograms are cr eal~ 110m Quolallons bit iamous peep:~ :ast and p•esent
Eact1 1ener 1n lht Cf)hfr SIS"ds rar a110tre1

Taoays clue: Yequars P

" EZ
LR

-

J AJEEOK I TNMLV , O ' EZZC

GMVF
AJE

EZ

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VOGWOF

AFH

LR

SDEW

AJf

LF. 0

J N·DEENF

SJKE _FH
AFEEFv . ··

JTWAMVK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- ·we should learn lo live and love our neighbors as
ourselves for the sake ol peace and progress." · David McCallum

£'11. _;. Jl

_TKAT DAILY Q~1)
~
"(1 ~C.~ WORD
PUULIR iJ\l::l ~Qij ~}.
~
iJ GAM!
Edilod by ClAY I. POllAN - - -

r, f.f"

. ORIWLtango --~i:llrs of . lho

fovr scro mbled wcrd3 below ro iorm four simple words .

. ORGREH

By Bernice Bede Otol

In the year ahead, you will finally get the
chance to purnue an ambi tious objec tive
you've been harboring. Your chances for
success will be bener than ewpected . of
which ,you'll take lu ll aelvantage.
CAN CER. (June 2 1-July 22) -- If you feel
things have been a bit dull with regard to
your social life. this is an excellent time to
get out and circulate In a different kind of
venue where you ca n meet ne w people
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Although conditions in general look ralher favorable
for you, matters tha.t are materialistic or
flnanclat In nature will be a good place to
find success
"VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) -Your bust·
nesslike1qualities are apt to be much bet·
ler than usual right now, so if there is
something In this area that needs to be
. revised or reworked, take a secorid Shot
at ·it. You should be successful.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Follow your
Instincts and don't hesitate to operate at
full throttle \JIIIfh regard to your important
objectives or goats. Instea d of moving ·
with events. n:tove events · to fit your
agenda.
SCORPI O (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - You are
willing to work hard and l.onQ in order to
advance an Impor tant project. This is all
well and good, as long as your vision is
positive and pro~res sive . Think win.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - You

projecl at a lime, you have the ability to
handle several sltuallona simultaneously.
Don't heeltate to expand your agenda. If
need be.

Free Eatlmatea

39 Like
dishwater
41 Do Latin
homework
42 Tarzan 's

Tuesday, July 15,2008

thout;~h

740.367-D544

Call:

HAS
SOMETHING

WOULD~ DONE.

RJIUE

'

41 Place
for a pint
42 Feints
1 Auction
action
45 Dessert
4 Mild
wine
beverage
49 Gorilla .
7 Metro RRs 50 Jugs ·
10 Ms. Hagen. 52 Scholarly
of films
notation
11 Vary snug 53 Hotldoy
13 Puffin kin
cheer
14 House
54 ·No1 quiet
buzzer
55 Sprint rival .
15 Snerfs
56 Jr. naval
· master
officer
16 Call out
57 ,Half a pair
17 Nosegays 58 Instant lawn
19 Fire residue
12 Wedding
21 S&amp;L
DOWN
gown
offering
feature
22 By way of
1 Tan
18 Sensible
23 Long-tailed 2 .._ do
20 Eur. airline
animal ·
for now"
22 Feeling
26 Charming
3 The Banana 23 Geolo~ic
30 Advantage
Boat Song
formation
31 Family
lhyph.)
24 Valhalla
mem.
4 Prmcess
honcho
32 Sheep
topper
25 Not pretty
sound
5 Omelet
26 Telegram
33 - YOUS plait
baSe
27 Band
34 Before
6 Gleelul
member
35 Clark's
shout ·
28 - of honor
' " Daily
7 Apl•ov
29 Moderate
Planet"
8 Entice
31 Trucker's rig
coworker
9 The 35 Garage job
36 · Whenever
the limit!
37 Sock filler
39 Soft leather . t 1 Limerick
38 Norwe~lan
40 Kimono sash
starter
playwroght

KYS AH
J

r--------.
&lt; L " UT

your tlnanc;;lal or oommtrclal aftell'l at
lhlo 1knt, 10 tlrlvtl 10 opt,.lt tn '1hll
. arena It you can. Makl hay whllt rne aun
lhln• .

SOUP TO NUTZ

~-

T \4 E N I H

"Politeness," the etiqueue
ins.tructor lechued, "is the m1 of
chO&lt;Jsing between ones real-----:-"

r-..,...,...;-;..-;;,.;;-;,_.:.T-1 0

- PP INT NUMBERED
.6

Comple1c rho ~\uckl.• quotod
Cj filling 10 fflt miSSing WOrds
yo u develop from .steC No. 3 below~

lETtERS IN 5QUA.Rf5

9 IINS(RAMBlf
lETTE RS I
fOR ANSWER ·
.
SCRAMLETS ANSWERS 7111108

Thieve - Often - Milky - Jester - illS .FEET
Famous adage; ~The foolish man seeks happiness in the
distance; the wise man grows it under IllS FEET."

r- - - - - - ---:::'1 ·I_r-...;.______.,.• .-- - - - - - - - - , · Mw
might come up with a bright Idea about ·
to complete a maner that has sat
I RI;N /;WAY CUZ
BUT TW1\V GOOD, CUZ dormant for quite a while. Roll up yo ur
sleeves and get right on It
FIGHTING'S JJST ·
ME CAN
THE.TO!J~Y
ARLO.&amp; JANIS
C~PRICOAN {Dec. 22·Jan. 19) THE Klt-DA THING
JUST SJIUSH YOU IS ALSO Creative
thinking could hold the answer
THE FUTUIE liE.
IT OFF ~IS
ASIT OF A ior arbitrating a touchy sltuallon In a

110 'lQ ? ,,., ,,

CPII7-l0 S90 766h

J&amp;L
Construction

.~.THE

~

'1bur 'llll"lhii'IY: .

THE WINDOW
LADY

740-949-3027

Commlsaloneis or. by

Pass
Pass

Sometimes in a bridge deal you will have
two possible w·ays to make the contract.
Either line A will work, or line B will do
the Irick. if you will e~~.cuse the pun.
It you can try only one of them, usually
you should pick the mathematically
superior. When you can try both ." be
careful to tackle them in the correct
order.
You are in three no-trump. West leads a
fourth-highest heart two. What would b8.
your plan?
West's opening lead means the missing
hearls are dividing 4-4. So you will lose
only three heart tricks and can afford
one more loser. You have eight top tricks:
one spade, one heart, live diamonds
and one cl ub. And you have two chances
to get a ninth : You can try lor a winning
spade finesse. or you can lead a low · .
club toward durl1 my's queen, hoping to
fl nd West with the king. Which is correct?
Aijer you gel in with your heart ace. pl ay
a low club toward dummy's queen. Here,
that bri ngs h'ome the contract. But tf East
could capture dummy's club queen with

·A

1

PU

East
r ass

---:--T.:~~~·ii~~~;l-[j~~~-~--n"~·-·-~~~~ ··

Farm .Letart Falls

Then l~)ok lo Mary

North

· (spades).

Jim O'Brien

love
the latest
looks?

West

Pass 1 ..
Pass · 3.
P3ss Pass

available.
Note that if you start . with . the spade
finesse, you would go dowri here. East
wins with his king and the defenders
take their remaining heart tricks. And
when you play a dub toward the queen.
West will be winning with the setting
trick.
The general principle Is to try the suit
where you must lose one trick to estab·
lish one (here, clubs), and keep for later
the suit where you may gain an extra
~ trick without having to lose one

THE BORN LOSER

IGI,U,C

9-lZIIl

05 CBA 1000 RR.Iow miles.
$BODO obo. Call 304·8 12·
1068

Tti~Y ~ AY Tti~Y l&gt;ON'T 'OV~F
'i4GTS OF 60tl'~ AI'ID
roY, A~~
T~E-Y E:V~Jl

BARNEY

Concrete Removal and Replacement

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

South

Taste the correct
cherry first

CO.'.'. I H l 't Ill' '

Ollill-8 1-J

4 WHF.ELERS

'•

AGM~
INSU((AN(,~

GOMPANY

FRESH

A 7 5

Opening lead: • 2

140·992-5682

$3600, 740 992-6 159

.. J9 843

It
I NT

3N T

Rl' lctt.' nrL:.., Av;~ilahlc !
Call (iilry Stanil'y @'

ROGIR HYSEilS
GARIGI

2

K J 6 5

Dealer:· South
Vulnerable : Both

Stop &amp; Compare

St. II. 124 ............

· Sport , all options, low
mileage, Shar"p! , Asking

'

740-992-1m

Pkasc leave mess:~ 'C

I

~0

·•

~·Ex pl·r iclll'l'd

Insured

• 6

• 6 3
• A 10 4
t AJ t 083

* ln sut\~\ 1

David Lewis
740·992-6971

w

• 7 5 4

South

740-653-9657

28 Y~ars Experience

Ea.c;t
• K J 9·

• Q9 7 2

• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

Rates

. AI Types f)f '''
' Ctlnaete·Work 1&gt;c

Q 9 2

10 8 2

o4o K

·New Homes

Seamless Gutters
Roofing , Siding, Guiiers
Insured &amp; Bonded

and Quali ty

~' R t&gt; a sunabk

•

H&amp;H
Guttering

Work

ff\. II'H.O\'EI\IFNI'S

1ol

JD # 46 End Loader quic~
attach, Hydraulic Buc~et
$t ,JOO-neg. 304 _458 _18 17
leave message

1/ 1411

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal

HoME

TKtx.:KS
tjiOson u~s 1-'aut double cut- --oi~oiiOKiiiiSiiAil.tii:,_.,.,
away studio. $750. 740-245· '
0611
1995 Dodge Dakota Super

$6500. Call 367-7767

·*alUpoli' Dati!' ~ribune
tlotnt Jlea,ant ~e;i,ter
The Daily Sentinel
Subscriber's Name ---~---

25 Years LDCill bpcr encc

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondiliomd lifeti rno gum 675-2 169
antee. Local relerences fu t·
-200_2_F_ord_M
_u_s_ta-ny_ w_h-ite-, mst1 ed Established 1975.

$100 740-245-0611

Hours
7:00AM-8:00PM

Pomeroy Ohm

rrn:---:-:----,

. 96 Ford WindSiar 75,000
miles in good shape $2,500
or trade lor Truck of Equal
-"Value 304-675·1 645
8:&gt;:&gt; NeW Holland Round ~:"-::-:'"______:-'1
Baler $3500. 25~M- F Tractor «t Mmu~CYCI .~

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

'

992-6210

ca mt.Jing. Call Ron Sh{;lets at
740-4 41-5239'

Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp; l ~10
Atri'OS
AV Servrce al Carmrch&lt;Je l
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
fol)K S".E
Trailers 710-446·3825
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp; ·----~--,..1

Friday, 8am-4· 3Qpm Closed '
Th'ursday.
Satur(:lay
&amp; 1984 Chev Mon te Carlo and
1984 700 Honda Nighthawl&lt;
Sunday. (740)446-7300
call 304-674-0861 or 304·
Spanish 20 gauge double 674·0539
Uarrel $800, CZ 22 bolt
nction
$300,
Marlin 1996 Grand AM SE 4cyt
Glenfield 22 bolt action Great Condition $2.500 304·

• '&amp;&gt;\..;.;:::.il'a1~
;1~
~};~~ ..
\
.- ' ..,.iO'Jt30' . ·.

K

West .

MONTY

,o

wv 036725
V.C. YOUNG Ill

8. 3

.. Q.

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
7411-949-2217

0I •

FARM

when yo-q pay for a 6 or 12 ·
month subscription....,. on .your .
home delivered subscription!

· RoOm Additions &amp;
RemodeHng
• New Oer11ges
· Etoctrleat So"Pturriblng
· Rooting &amp; Gut1e111
· VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pallo and Porch Decks

L.,o...,;iiiiiiioiiii.iliiiiiiiii_.l

Home Grown sweet ·corri :J)
Vi\1\S
and vegg ies. Available July L.,o_..;F,;;'ORiiiiSiliAiiLF,;,:, _.,.,
10th at McKean Farm and '
William Ann Motel.
03 Kia Sedona. 6cyt. $8.500,
1 \lnl"l t'l'ltl..,
49,620 miles ca ll 304-6752550
.\ JI\1 ... 141("

~~~i:~~ ·Discount*

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Sl9el Beams. Pipe Rebar Carmu::hae t Equipment. 740- 92 Terry Fleetwood 29tl ,
good cor,dition. Rea dy to go
Fur
Concrete.
Ang.te, 446-2412

Channel, Flat Bar, Steel

Hiil"s Self
Storage

YOUNG'S

1':74::3:-~---::-""1
8
C.V.IIlf'R._'i &amp;
Mun tK HO.ME."i

STEEL WWW . CAAEO -. Co M •

V~x:~:1;&gt;.HU:S

If so, you qualify for a

.

Yama ho Roadsta r
Molorcyc te .
(dressed)
1600cc. 8.000 miles $5,500
304-675-2793 of 304-593-

•
t

2000

400
TAAILEAS SALES &amp; SEA- :_ 1-,--,----,-VICE

07-l H3

• AQ754

CARGO/CONCESSION - - - - - - - -

WWW CARM ICHAE L· NiceiJ4 Harley883 CuStom.

NEW _AND

North

H 0 M E S T E A 0 E A (740)992-7396

$ 11]0.00

~l&lt;uns&amp;

~

.

EQUIPMENT TRAILERS. included. one With back res!.
CARGO
EXPRES S
&amp; windshield
$3,250,

V6, automatic, PW/PUPS, Call 24 Hrs. (7 40) 446cruise, 90,000 mite s.
90% Q870. Rogers Basement
• •
Bichon 2 males B montt"ls lire. tread, second owner. Woterproofing.
ok:J , Shitzu 1 male 8 morilhs $6000. 740-388-9673
r.:~--:01~-~
-Jr.·:~-..., old. Must sale. $100 each. - - - - - - - '-"••
"740.441·95 19
79 Corvette T-Top, 350
~~'\n: ·
engine, auto trans, verv
·--~~~OiiKoilbiiiiCNiiT-rl CKC Mlnature Pinscher 2 ciean. 70.400 miles. 740·
'
males. 4 mor1. old, . ears 388·0236
Appro11. 900 sq.fl. ideal for croppe d. tails docked, shots. - - - - - - - 98 Corvette ~ u e roadster.
office or retail business, . 740-388-8788
downtown Gallipolis, plenti· - - - - - - - - Black leath er &amp; top. Auto.
ful parking. 740-446-9209
Pug
puppies.
fawn , Beautiful, fun , last. 27 rnpg .
Registered, worm od &amp; up to $20.950. 740-446-7438
datcshols. V~ r y sweet&amp;loY- : : - , - - , - - - - - - Garage !or rent at the comer able Mason are&lt;t 443-350· Police Impounds! Cars from
of 2nd and Pine St. $75 per _
40;:1:-'- " " : ' : : - - - - - , $500! , Hondas , Chevys ,
mon1h 446-4425 or 446- li::70
Ml l~l tAI.
Jeeps, Fords. &amp; m01a! for ·
listings B00-6&lt;'0-4875 e" Vll35
3936

r-~~=================:-,

'

HORSE / LIVESTOCK Neet.ls new battery, otherTRAILERS, LOAD MAX wise. hke new Two saddles

TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE·
NECK
HITCHES.
CARMICHAEL
'EQUIPM EN T 1C A A M 1C J;1 A E l

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

�Page B6 • The Daily Sent:ir\el

wWw .mydailysentinel.com

Moriday, JuiJ: 14,2008

Packers say it'§ tilne to .move on I
BY CHRIS JENKINS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

''

GREEN BAY. Wis.
The Packers aren't about 10
let Brett Favre become a
free agent. And while he's
now free 10 return 10 Green
Bay for another . season,
!here's no guarantee he'll be
lhe Packers' starting quarlerback if he does.
In an interview with The
Associated Press Saturday,
Packers general manager
Ted Thompson and coach
Mike McCarlhy said they
don't plan to grant Favre Ihe
release he is seeking from
his contract and are commilted to Aaron Rodgers as
their starter.
" We've communicated
thai to Breit, that we have
since moved . forward ...
Thompson said Salurday. in
his firs! public comments
since Favre requested to be
released this week. "At the
same time. WC Ve never said
that there couldn ' t be some
role that he might play here.
But l would understand hi s
poinl that he would wanl to
play."
And if Favre wanled to
play for Ihe Packers, he had
the chance when he told
them a few weeks after his
tearful goodbye news conterence !hat he was having
second thoughts. With
Thompson and McCarthy
preparing to board a privale
plane to fly to Mississippi
and seal the deal on a comeback, all Favre had to do
was say yes.
He didn't.
1

"'T'Pd
., ,J ..
,., ., ',,' '"''""l"d
B"'ll
....
...
""")
..... ;j...
II..

back," McCarthy said, "We
alwav11. want t:&gt; d Brett back"
A message left by the AP
with Favre's agent, Bus
Cook, was nul immediately
returned.
Favre, who Jed the
Packers to a Super Bowl
Iitle after the I996 season ,
held a tearful news conference to announce hi s retirement Marc h 6. Favre has
made high drama out of his
waffling over retirement in
the past. several offs.easons,
but il seemed to be for real
this time.
Until Favre told Packers
offensive line coach James
Campen a few weeks later
that he was having second
thoughts. Campen is a
friend of Favre's, who

McCarthy said has been getting 1exts from Cook.
miscast as an official inter- Sensing rising tension,
mediary between Favre and Thompson and McCarthy
lhe team in some media agreed lo a conference call
reports .
with Favre and Cook on
After several lelephone Tuesday.
discussions with Favre Jed
Only then, McCarthy
them to believe he · wanted said, did Favre say he was
to return, Thompson and I00 percent committed to
McCarthy were preparing to playing. McCarthy said he
go to Mississippi ·when doesn 't question Favre 's
favre suddenly called· commitmenl to foolball, but
McCarthy.
said Favre often brought up
'·He said he apprecialed lhe issue himself.
"The way. he plays the
all the planning · we were
going 10 do," McCarthy ..game illuslrates 1he guy is
said. "But he fell thai al this committed,'' McCarthy said.
point, he ·had reached a "(But) those are his woros.
poinl of c losure, to usc hiS That was always hrs f10a l
words, and he was going to hurdle that he said he had to
stick with hi s inilial deci- get over."
sion."
The hurdle was appareniEven after Favre \ near- ly clearep weeks b'efore the
comeback
in
March , star! of !raining camp.
McCarthy anJ Thumps&lt;:&gt;n
"Was il convincing 0 I'd
said they regularly commu- ' ~ay yes." McCarlhy ~a id .
n icat~d
with
Favre. But that was the f1rst ttmc,
Thompson even wenl 10 Ju ly 8, thai I' d ever heard
Mississippi to visil Favre in him say (he was eommiiMay, and didn'l gel lhe ted). And he contrnually,
sense Favre was having from (June) 2 I 10 July 8,
seriou's thoughts about play- told James Campen lhat he
ing again as the two had was. not goi ng. to play. So
lunch on his back porch .
that s a prett}: rmportanl
" He mentioned several piece of the puzzle ."
things where you could 1ell
Cook then sent . the
!here 's always indecisive- Packers a letter off1c1ally
ness," Thompson said. asking for Favre· to be
"He's wonderino if he made released , "h1ch would
lhe righl decision. I lhink allow him to sign wilh any
that's normal. " ·
NFL leam .
But the tone changed draWith Favre not being
matically in June , when alTered a defined role wilh
Camp'en sa id he wa.s gellin g the Packers rf he relurns at
worried
aboul
Favre. this point, and the team not
McCarthy said he had a inc·lined to release Favre so
phone conversation wilh he could sign with a diviFavre on June 20. and lhe sian rival, a trade may be
quarterback sent a clear the besl resolution.
1i1cs&gt;age: ''Give me my heiTho mpson and McCarthy
met or give me my re lease." declined to dis.cuss that posP P.n 'h"n
" .... ;~ ,,"' l· Ullllj',
~o..;J;, •. dll
~-ct . 'TtiiU
'I--.-,-,p·u-11 •:ar'u
.....,'/...,,.
, ,..., ,, !l,•r('l,.,h"
, ' Z..., cu" 'J ''"''"'
~
when he asked Favre if he he had not received any
was ready to make a I00 inquiries from other learns
percent commitment to as of Sa1urday morning.
football - an issue Favre
Where does that leave the
had brought up in his rclire- Packers and their beloved
ment news conference - · three-time MVP?
the answer sti ll was no.
In a pretty big mess.
"That always seemed to
"Quite frankly, it's a little
be the one thing thai he had gut-wrenching as an organ ito come to grips with," zation to go through it, and
McCarthy said.
certainly for Mike and
Next came a lexl message myself," Thompson said.
exchange
.
between "This stuff hurts a lot of
Thompson and Favre on people . I mean, it hurts. I'm
July 4. At the lime, not talking about physically
Thompson didn' l lhink it hurting, bul the sensitivity.
was a big deal that he wrote We undersland where the
Favre batk sayi ng he was fans are coming from. This
traveling and asked if they is ·a · hot-button issue that
could talk Monday.
surpasses anything I've ever
But then Thompson began gone through. "
J

Chn•·u.s to open
for Chautauqua
program, As

Philadelphia
Soul's Brent
Holmes
stretches
over for a
touchdown
despite the
efforts of
Cleveland
Gladiators'
Brandon
Hefl in during an Arena
Football
League playoff game in
Philadelphia
on Saturday.

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;; o (') 1\iTS • \'ol. :; H. No . :1

AP photo

SPORTS

·D'Orazio leads Soul to 1st Arena Bowl
PHILADE!JPHIA (AP)- a back up to veteran Tony out their playoff run, comMatt D'Orazio had himself Graziani, but when Graziaiii ing intu lht: game wi~h · i 6
a good week.
went down with an injury louchdowns jusl one !IllerThe quarlerback · engi- after week three, D'Orazio ception in two games .
"We gol beat, il'; that
neered a last second j?.ame- took over and Jed the team
winning drive, won the to I 2 wins as a starter, simple," Philyaw said.
Arena
League's
Most including the playoffs. He "They came· to play on both
Valuable Player award, and · threw 72 touchdowns passes sides of the ball."
capped it off by throwing with j4s1 four interceptions.
The only thing lhat was
"I feel bad for Tony as an more impressive than the
eight touchdown passes to
lead the Philadelphia Soul · athlete, but Matt stepped up Soul's postseason-franchise
to its first ever appearance .and just won games." record 70 points was the
in the Arena Bowl with a Philadelphia head coach stellar play of the defense,
70-35
win over the Bret Munsey said.
which stopped Ckveland's
Robert Redd's I 6-y,ard offense an ama1ing five
Cleveland Gladiators on
Saturday.
scoring catch cui· the Soul's thnes.
As a learn. we just had too
The Soul will play San leaf! to 45-28 early in the
Jose in Arena Bowl XXII in lhird , but Mike Brown's many
lapse&gt;
1oday,"
New Orleans on July 27.
highlight-reel kick return Cleveland head coach Mike·
D'Orazio completed 17 of during which he hurdled Wilpot 'said. ·'You have to
25 passes for 184 yards. over kicker Jason Ball on give their defense credit."
Larry Brackin s and Brent his way to the end zone
Redd was
Philyaw·,
Holmes each caught three gave Philadelphia a 52-28 . favorite target. finishing
. lead and they never looked with I I recepti ons for I 52
touchdown passes. .
''I'm really fortunate, it&gt; bnck.
yards and two scores.
not about me though, I'm
D'Orazio fou nd Arena
Philyaw's I7-yarn )Duel)"
just happy to be pan of this League offensive player of down pass to Oti s· Amey al.
organizalion,"
D ' Orazio the year Chris Jackson lwice 6:28 in the firsl made it 7-7.
said.
in Ihe end zone and Wes but Ihe Soul scored 28 of the
Within the last year, . Ours added a rushing touch- next 42 poiniS and Jed 35-2 I
P'Orazio had back surgery, down.
at the half.
Raymond Philyaw was
Brackins Jed Philnctelphia
and was cast off and finally
released by Chica,go after shaky for Cleveland, going with seven catches for 92
taking them to the Arena 25-for-49 for 303 yards with yards 10 go alon g with his
Bowl two seasons ago.
four touchdowns and two three scores.
D'Orazio was brought on inlerceptions .
.Marlion Jackson ran for a
,board by Philadelphia
Philyaw had' been .stellar · touchdown
for
the
before .the season to serve as for the Gladiators through- Gladiators.·

••

•

• Hamilton hits record 28
HAs in first round.
~Page!H

TUESDAY , JU!:'Y t5, 2008

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Middleport
Council
approves August
water rate mke
1

BY BRIAN

Page AS

""" ·'")dailyS&lt;·ntincl.cum

Civil War site remembered and rededicated
POMEROY
Rededication of the Civil
War monuments with newly
refurbished plaques located
in the Buffington Island
Park at Portland will take
place at noon Saturday.
Margaret Parker, president of the Meigs County
Hislorical Society. said that
the occasion will not only
ne a time of re-dedication of
the monuments bul a time
of introducing the newly
formed corporation that is
sponsoring the re-dedication,
The
Battle
of

0B!'l'UARIES

'

J.

o1

.

Buffinglon
Isl and
Preservation Foundation:
Parker said thm the
Foundation committee is
composed of representatives from several organizations and individuals from
across Ohio and includes
residents of Meigs County.
· Dr. William K. Laidlaw,
e·xeculive director of the
Ohio Historical Socie1y will
be . introducing the new
Board members of lhe
Prese rvatio'n Foundation
during the ceremony.
At I I a.m. prior to the
· noon rededication ceremony
the Ladies of the Grand
Army of the Republic &amp;

Sons of the · Union Veterans
of the Civi l Ww will be have
a wreath laying ceremony.
At I p.m. there will be a
lecture at the Portland
Communily Center by Dr.
James Ramage of Eastern
Kentucky University. He is
considered by many to be
lhe nation's foremost scholar on General John Hunl.
. Morgan.
Ramag~.::\ writi ngs on the
"Baltic of Buffington
Island: Turning Poinl in
John Hunt Morgan 's Great
Raid," descr ibes the event
as one of lhe three mosl
prominent news stories in
July I 863. The three were

the Battle of Geuysburg, the
caplure of Vicks burg, and
Morgan's Indiana-Ohio raid
thai was broken up at
Buffington Island.
.
In his written commenlary on lhe even·l, he talks
about exlensive newspaper
coverage to "satisfy the
public appetite for details of
lhe raid and battle ." He said
the New York Times
declared that Morgan's caplure was "of great value 10
the Union cause," while the
Richmond Examiner lauded
the raid as a "most extraordinary military achieve,
ment'' and the Richmond
Dispatch called Morgan 's

capture a ''distressing blow
to , the
Confederacy··
because of the pride of I he
Southern people.•
At 2 p.m. there will be a
guided tou r of the hank.rield (caravan style J bl b)
Ed Sharp of th e Ohi u Ci1il
War Trail Comn1i"ion.
Those interested in 1-1/2
)lOur tour are {(1 mecl al the
Ponland
Ci,·il
Wtlr
Museum, ··wearing sturdy
shoes," said Sharp.
All acliyities are free and
open to the public' . Lunch
will be avai lable for purchase al lhe Porllantl
CommuniiV
Cente r
throughoul.the day.

Archery team honored

.

REED

BR'EEO@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

• Betty Friend, 83
• Eleanor Leonard, 72
• Allan Lundell, 50
. • Granville Parsons, 80

INSIDE

KUBOTA
...
THE
POWER
.
TO.GET THE JOB DONE I
.

• Obama tells NAACP
b.lacks must take
responsibility.
See Page A3
: • Activists: Officials
• illegally destroyed
. ballots. See Page A6

·MIDDLEPORT
Middleport residenls will
pay more for water service
beginning next month.
At Monday evening's regular meeting, Middleport
Village Council approved
an increase in water rates
for. all residents, based on a
mandate from · the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Faymon Roberts, who oversees the water system and
other public works services,
said the increase will aver. age $3 per month. Sewer
rates will go up proportionately, as well. Sewer rates
are billed at I 50 percent of
water usage, according to
Fiscal Officer Susan Baker.
The increase was first
introduced last night, and
passed as an emergency
measure. It will go into
effect with the August
billing cycle.
Council Member Jean
Craig, who served on the
Board of Public Affairs
prior to joining council, said .

Please iee Rate, As
0

Charlene Hoefllch/pholo

Investigation
continues into
·weekend fire

WEATHER

BY BRIAN

In recognition of the Meigs Elementary archery team which won the 2008 National Championship, Pomeroy Village
Council recognized the youths ·tor their accomplishment and presented certificates of outstanding achievement to the
members Monday night. Present for the recognition were froJ)l the left, front, Dalton Bush, Devon BuH1ngton , Brooke
Reynolds, Matthew Smallwood, Brayden Kopec, ·receiving his certificate from Pomeroy Mayor John Musser, and back,
Trenton Prater, Collin Neutzling, Selena Reynolds, and Britany Durst, with Bill Prater, coach. Members of the team unable
to attend included Josh Gilkey, Alden Tackett , Austin Life, Zack Stobart, Christian Spaun, Sariah Brinker, Paige Phillips.._
Cody Robinson, Gage Gilkey, Richard Newland, Tyler Quails, Miranda Manley, Derek Hill, Jarret Durst, and Taylor Rowe. ·

J..REED

BAEEO@MVDAILYSENTINELCOM

.

AP photo

People show their support to bring back Green Bay Packers quarterback Brett Favre outside Lam beau Reid .in Green ·Bay, Wis., on Sunday. The rally was organized by brothers
Adam and Erick Rolfson, and they plan another on Monday night in suburban Milwaukee
and every Sunday thereafter at Lambeau Field until Favre is back.

Details on Page A8

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MIDDLEPORT- Police
and fire departments and the
Ohio Fire Marshall continue
to investigate a weekend
fire that destroyed one
building and damaged three
in
downto,wn
others
Middleport.
The Middleport Fire
Department responded to
222 1/2 Norlh Third Ave.
early Saturday morning, and
found four working fires in
four buildings.
Fire Chief Larry Byer
said the tire is believed to
have started in a building
owned by Ed Baer, and it
was a total loss when firefighters arrived on the
scene.
"All efforts were ~oncen- ·
traled on buildings owned
by Wayne Neff, Bill Fink,
and Ray Andrews," Byer
said.
Fire departments from
Pomeroy,
Rutland,
Syracuse, and Mason,
W.Va. were called for assistance in fighting the fire,
which was brought under
control just before 2 a.m.
Departments left the scene
shortly before 5 a.m.

Please see Fire, AS

•

0.

Chester-Shade Days
get underway Friday
BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM

CHESTER - The annual observance of Chester-Shade
Days which features 'a variety of activities including the
naming of Ohio's Harmonica Champion, gets underway
Friday with a community picnic and concludes on Sunday
with a gospel sing. .
·
,
The kick-off picni9 will be held at 6:30 p.m. and those
attending are asked to take a covered dish and a lawn chair.
Enterlainment will be by the Jereyville Pickers. a siring
band .
On the Commons all day Saturday will be a variety nf
displays and demonslralions, along wi.th game,, kid' a&lt;:livilies including face painting along wuh several land wndors.
..
On Saturday there will be a pretty baby contest at I0 : I5
a.m. followed by a pel show. At I0:30a.m. pie contest will
take place on the Chester Commons . and a story on how
Aunt Rodie saved the Union by Dixie Sayre in the
Courthouse.
_
The animal parade will line up at the old Chc,ler
Ele111entary School at 10:45 a.m. and· move out at II a.m.
At noon the judging to select Meigs County's lincst. 1he
oldest male and female there, will take place under Ihe tent,
at I p.ni. there will be a dulcimer concert !here at 3 p.m. a
Charlene Hoetllch/photo
harmonica concert will be held, and al 4 p.m. ·the pies wil l
The Saturday night Civil War ball is always a highlight of be auctioned off.
Chester-Shade Days drawing people from across the area .
Meanwhile on the Commons. the corn hole tournament
Here for last year's ball a.s they strolling across the Chester for kids under I 2 with prizes will gel underway. while
Commons toward the dance lent are Kevin Harris of anolher one for those over I wi ll h gin at 1 p.m .
Parma, Samantha Ryan of Columbus , and Ermal Shimp ol
Please see Days, AS
Cambridge .
,
.

.

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