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                  <text>Page B6. • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

·' '

Wednesday; .Jnly 16, 200S

Retirement isn't easy for most athletes · 4 shoot 61s to share OhioArn lead

Senior Quarterly
inside today's Sentinel

BY RusTY MILLER ·

BY TIM DAHLBERG
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Brett Favre went on
national television to try
and explain something he
couldn't quite explain.
He' s got plenty of company, becau se when it comes
to retirement there aren't
many athletes who can figure out when it's really
over.
Sandy Koufax knew
because his arm told him
so. Jim Brown and Barry
Sanders got out while still
in their 'prime. too, for reasons that went beyond
football.
But for every Koufax.
Brown or Sa11,d&lt;,rs there's a
dozen Favres trying to hold
on even as their skills fade
and the inevitable · aging
process takes over. The
great Johnny Unitas wasn ' t
.immune when he tried to
stretch his career in San
Diego, and Michael Jordan
couldn't even make the
playoffs when he ended his
second retirement to play
two final seasons with the
Washington Wizards.
Muhammad Ali couldn't
escape punches that sadly
may have cost him more.
.than his reputation, and Joe
Namath couldn't escape
defenders as he tried to
play on creaky knees for
the Los Angeles Rams.
And who can forget a 42year-old Willie Mays stumbling and bumbling around
in the outfield in the 1973
Viorld Series for the New
York Mets .
They play becau~e they
still think they can play.
They play because the
money is good.
A lot of them ·play
because they just don 't
know how to quit.
"The easiest thing i.s to
become an athlete," former
heavy.weight
champion
George Foreman said. "But
how do you get out? The
sad thing about it is so few
have been successful in
doing that."
Foreman ended up being
one Of those, though it
helped that he had a second
career as a gril-l pitchman
that made him more than
he ever made in the ring .
But even he retired twice
and was iri the gym training
for yet another comeback
at age 55 , befpre his wife
squashed the idea.
Favre, of course, famously threatened retirement for
a few . years before tearfully
announcing in .March that
he wa·s done after 16 seasons with the Green Bay

Tour
fromPageBl
·will see some mo e bad
days coming in the next
years. But that's life. That's
bike riding." .
Schleck's Team CSC is
strong and has many assets
with which to challenge
Evans. The last day in the
Alps (Stage 17) finishes at
· the legendary Alpe d' Huez,
where Schleck won a stage
in 2006.
"Put it this way, we're not
going to let Frank Schleck
go in an early breakaway on
the stage to theAlpe d'Huez
the way he did that year,"

AP photo
In th is March 6. 2008, file photo, tears ·roll down the face
of Green Bay Packers quarterback Brett Favre as· he crjes
during a news conference announcing that he was ·officially
retiring from football , at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wis.
Brett Favre went on national television to try and explain
something he couldn't quite explain. He's got plenty of company,' because when it comes to ret1rement there aren't
many athletes who can figure out when it's really over.
Packers. Like many before beginning with the admishim he almost immediately sian that every athlete has
liad second thoug!ll s ~nrl to evenniallv make rhar hi ~
said Monday in a televised or her body is not what it
interview that the Packers was in younger years.
helped push him out the · "When you retire you're
basically saying to yourself
door.
"I am guilty of retiring that my body is no good
early and there is a reason anymore," he said. "That's
for that." Favre said.
something no one will
The Packers deny that, admit to. To look in the
saying they urged Favre to ,mirror and say you can't do
play and moved on only it anymore is so hard."
after
the
quarterback
There's more, of course,
remained
noncommittal in.cluding the fear of losing
mid they had to make a the sense of identity that
decision. The team found has been with most athletes
itself in the uncomfortable since they were playing
position of having to final- Little League baseball or
ly say no to . a sure Hall of :youth football. · Suddenly
Fame player, something the you're without the game
Mets nearly faced in 1973 that has defined you, and
before intermediaries final- without the camaraderie of
ly persuaded Mays to teammates
that
have
retire.
always been around.
"I can't -even mention the
And then there are the
word 'retire' to him," Met&gt; perks of being a star player,
chairman Donald Grant fr'om the adoring fans to,
yes, even the media.
said at the time.
"You don't understand
Money is almost always
a factor in players wanting · how it is when you've got a
to stay, and Favre had guy with pen and paper
about $25 million remain- turni~g the pages of hi s
ing oil his contract with the notebook over and over
Packers. But it goes again. filling them with
beyond that, Foreman said, what you have to say. And
· Evans said.
In addition, Evans must
keep an eye on another esc
rider, Carlos Sastre of
Spain. Like Schleck, Same
is a strong climber. He is
sixth overall, 1:28 behind
the Australian .
·
"They're really . going to
be a force to be reckoned
with, but they're not the
on ly ones," Evans said,
referring to the esc contenders. "I hope I can
resist."
Evans is no stranger to
dose finishes. He was second in last year's Tour, 23
seconds behind Spanish
winner Alberto Cont&lt;idor.
Levi Leipheimer was third,
31 seconds back, in the .
race's closest finish.

"Of ~:ourse, Cadcl is
scared - well, scared don ' t get me wrong,"
Schleck said. · "But, of
course, he must think about
it, and how he is going to
handle this." .
"Cadel was never an
aggressive rider," Schleck
·added. "If he's going to win
the Tour, it's going to be
because he's a good time
trialer. · But· that's good
enough, he's a big champion."
Among CSC riders, he
said it 's down to him and
Sastre in the title chase.
'.' We' re not good time trialers enough to just let
everything go," he said.
"We have to ride aggressive, that's obvious."

behind him there's another
one in line and then an
other one,'' Foreman said.
"And then you wake up the
next. morning and not even
your kids want to know
what you. have to say."
Indeed, Favre'·s attempt.ed unretirement filled a lot
of notehook s and ate up a
lot of air time . He 's suddenly hot again, though not
for anything he did on the
field. and on center stage
for yet another drama about
whether he ' ll have to be
dragged
kicking
and
screaming into retirement.
There are signs, though.
that this drama m~y be getting a bit old arouhd the
edges, too . An unscientific
newspaper poll found less
than half the fans in Green
Bay want Favre back as
their starting quarterback ,
and a rally in his support in
Milwaukee on · Monday
drew only about 30 people.
Foreman, who became
the oldest heavyweight
champion
when
he
knocked
out
Michael
Moore at age 45 in 1994,
had the same kind of trouble retiring for the second
time after losing .to
Shannon Briggs in 1997.
He hatched plans to fight
Larry Holmes in a battle of
old heavyweights in a fight
that never happened, and
was in the ring training for
another comeback four
years ago before his wife
put her foot dowh.
Foreman said he cried on
a few occasions after retiring because he missed the
big stage so much. It took
time, he said, to finally
ac~:ept the fact that that part
of his life was over.
He 's made himself rich
beyond belief selling grills
and is now involved with a
restaurant franchise. He's
happy at home watching
his children play sports,
and he's proud of the tomatoes he carefully cares for
in his garden outside
Houston.
Still, there's something
missing that he .oan never
replace.
.
·
" I've been successful
with a lot of business
things, but if I told you that
took the place of boxing
I'd be lying," he said. "The
thrill of a crowd roaring for
you after just winning a
boxing match, nothing
touches that. It has to be
the same for a guy dancing
in the end zone or throwing
touchdown passes .
"You can :t touch that
with a billion-dollar paycheck."

the Ohio Am at Springfield
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Country Club.
"I basically played with
FINDLAY - Golf used to one arm tied behind my
IJe Kevin Kornowa 's life. back last year," he said. "I
Now it's just a nice way to thought I had a chance last
spend a leisur~ly Saturday year; 1 know I have one this .
year - as long as I don't
or Sunday.
Komowa shares the lead blow any body parts off."
at 4-under 67 with college
Tracy is an 18-year-old
players Alex Martin, Ethan who recently graduated
Tracy and Kyle Cobb after from Hilliard Darby High
Tuesday's opening round of School and will attend
the I02nd Ohio ~mateur Arkansas this fall. He tin,golf
championship
at ished fifth in his only previous Ohio Am a year ago·.
Findlay Country Club.
Korrlowa was a confident
Asked what kind of player
ex-Unjversity of Toledo will end up winning on
Tracy
saicl.
player when he captured the Friday.
Ohio Am in 2002 at the "Someone that 's consistent,
.
·
Sylvania Country Cluh, ·
where he caddied as a kid.
that's hitting the f;urways,
"I was fight out of college hitting the greens and mak· and I won the top amateur ing a few putts. You can't
event in the state,'' said make that big score. You
Kornowa, now 28. ''You don't need to hit it that far.
can't go wrong there ."
It's not a long course, but
Back then, about all he you've got to hit it straight.
thought about was playing You hit the fairways and
golf. These days , when he you'll score well."
Cobb, a Strongsville
gets time away from his job
in the commercial lending native, will be a 21-year-old
division of a bank he prefers junior at Cleveland State
to hang around the house this fall. He 's playing in his
with wife Renee and their first Ohio Am.
I0-month-old
daughter,
"Whenever I go into any
Lindsey.
tournament, I want to win,"
Kornowa had not played he said. 'Tve been working
in the Ohio Am since 2004. pretty hard, so I know if I
· Golf has become a sporadic · play well I have a pretty.
hobl:&gt;y. something he enjoys gld!od shot at it. I just have to
when he has the time. It 's no .Pill everything together, like
longer an obsession.
I did today. "
Only 13 of the 147 players
"This year it worked out
with vacation," he said. "It's broke par. The average score
only a 45-minute drive from . was 76.837.
·
home. It 's not bad. l hadn't
Stephen Anderson, a forplayed for a few years. I JUSt mer Ohio State player now
couldn't get away from living in Hobe Sound, Fla.,
work. "
led the group at 2-under 69.
Now that he's playing. the Anderson won · the 1990
six-time club champion at Ohio Am at Sharon Club.
Highland Meadows
He was joined at 69 by
where Paula Creamer won Ohio State player Bo Hoag
the Jamie Farr Owens from Upper Arlington,
Cornmg Classic on Sunday Tiffin University's Bleu
IS showmg some of his George
from Lancaster,
old form.
.
Florida Southern's Matthew
Kornowa, who teed off on Stauch of Dublin and
the lOth hole, was 3-under Zanesville 's Kyle Coconis, a
when he reached the par-5 former Ohio State player
18th hole, but he encoun- who was second-team Alltered probl~ms. off. the . lee Big Ten this past season
when he h1t h1s dnve mto
·hH
the trees. He chipped out to a1ong WI 1 oag.
the fairway only 10 later hit
The field Will be cut to 60
his approach over the green. and Ues after 36 holes and to
Then he turned around 40 and lies after. 54.
.
and eagled hole 1-{Q.,, 1 to at
The . 1995 Ohio Am wm.
least make up for the dou- ner, Alan Fadel of Toledo,
ble.
shot a 73 . one shot better
two-tJm.e
w1r111er
The 21-year-old Martin is than
from Middletown and will Robert Gerwm II of
be a junior at Indiana Cincinnati and 1997 winner
Montooth
of
University this fall. He had a Andrew
bogey-free round . under Columbus. The 2003 chamideal conditions.
piOn, Steve Paramore of
Martin is a former Ohio Ashland, shot a 77.
Juniors champion who nearDayton' s Alec Tahy, at 13
I~ lost his right hand a year one ~f the youngest players
ago in a fireworks accident. ever 111 the tournament, shot
. Three days after the 'acci- a 75 while 14-year-old Chad
dent, wearing two gloves to Merzbacher of Dublin had a
cover the second-degree 78. Fonner Cincinnati Reds
burns on his hand. he tried third basen1an Chris Sabo
to play through the pain at also had a 75.

t

,...
0! $1 htid 0!'

..

~·

.

SPORTS ·
. • Cavs sign Gibson to
5-year deal. See Page 81

Pomeroy to advertise for paving bids
Bv BETH SERGENT

However, that is exl?ected
to change as tt wasd1scove~ed after the meetmg that
POMEROY - Pomeroy LIIIcoln Hill reqUires plan -.
Village Council voted to. mg berore a new coat. ot
advertise to accept bids on asphalt can be put down or
paving work, the majority the curbs will be hl&amp;her
of which will be funded by than _the streets. Council IS
the
State
Capital meeung m a special s~sImprovement
Program, Sion at ! p.m. Monday
als.o known as Issue II · mght to d1 scuss. how to pay
money, at this week's for th1s addliiOnal work
meeting.
not covered with grant
The project cost is money._
.
$199,000. The grant totals
An mcomplete hst of
$14 7,000, leaving the vii- st~eets which will be p~ved
lage share at · $52,000. With the funds, m addliion
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

to Lincoln Hill.. include
I S not limited to)
LIIIcoln Dnve , pan of
Martiii Street. Old Chester
Road, some of \he roads 111
Beech .Grove Cemetery
and m_ore.
.
,
Dunngthe meetmg a secand readi~g on an ·amendment to an ordmance to
rmse wages tn the water
department was read and
approved. Ordinance 721
will increase wages in the
water department for the
assistant supervisor and
laborers by $1 per hour.
(~ut

The amendment to ordi- the village earlier than .10
nance 721 also mcludes days prior to an election .
language which would The signs must be no larger ,
aUow a new emp_loyee to than 12 square feet and not
bnng pas1 expenence. at located 10 feet near a public
other public water utihlic.s right-of-way. Signs are also
to PomeroY. mst"::'d of start- prohibited from any vil lage
mg out at zero.
property, includino adjac-ent
. ~ouncil alsoapproved the 10 the walking path. A 11
second reading . o!1 an signs in the village mu'i be
amendment to an ordmance removed seven davs after an
concernmg how political
t'
•
1
signs are displayed in the e ~w~ .
Fl d Cl·l d
village. Ordinance 593 proCSI ent
oy.
e an
hibits political signs per- prese nted council Vdth "
· raining to a political race or petition res ident&gt;
h.td
issue from being erected in
Please see Paving. AS

Wolfe named
principal
at Southern
··~
li.'

'

.

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Charles E. Sayre, 91

INSIDE
• Family Medicine:
Infected tonsils can
stop fighting disease,
promote it instead.
See Page A2
• The Whisnants to
perform. See Page A2
• Johnson assumes
command of squadron.
See Page A3
• Ohio revamping higher
education plan system.
See Page AS
·• Gospel quartet
performs in Pomeroy
tonight. See Page A6
. • Chautauqua sets up
shop in Gallipolis City
Park. See Page A6

:

• Telephone:

1 PHfomiitllt

Police .
department
under fuel
conservation
guidelines

MIDDLEPORT -The
Middleport
Police
Department has adopted a
fuel-saving policy to help
address the increase in
gasoline costs.
Middleport and other vilDelalls on Page AS
lages are taking hard budgetary hits due to the rising
c.ost of fuel for police cruisers , street department
trucks and other villageowned vehicles. Mayor
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGFS
Michael Gerlach discussed
new police department
a
Annie's Mailbox
A:3 policy
for saving fuel at
this
week's
meeting of the
Calendars
A:3
·village council's finance
Classified&amp;
B2"4 committee:
Last month, Police Chief
Comi~
Bruce Swift issued instructions to officers in the
Editorials
A4 department,
outlining the
fuel conserimportance
of
Obituaries
As vation.
.
"Due to the high cost of
Places to go
A6
fuel, each officeds to try to
Sports
B Section conserve fuel whenever possible," Sw.ift said. He asked
Weather
As officers
to continue patrols
around
town, but asked
© 2008 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
them to "choose different
locations to sit and work
traffic enforcement, but still
.be visible to the public."

INDEX

Bs

4

,

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTC MYOAILYSENTINEL COM

RACINE- Kent Wolle. a
graduate of Southern ·High
School. has been hired hy the
Southern Local Board of
Education as principal for
grades live through eiglll at
Southern Element;try School.
Wolfe was hired during a
recent Board meeting on a ·
two-year contrad at a salary
of $65,000 a yea, with Iu-s~ .
·first official day being on
July 2K . The vote to hire
Wolfe was unanimous
among the Board members
present for the meeting.
Board member Ri chard flill
was absent,
Wolfe will join Southern
Elementary
School
Principal S~:ott Wolfe who
will be over kindergarten
through fourth grades. It·
was previously reported that
· Scott Wolfe was hired on a
212 dayft'hree year contract
at $65.000 a year. .
, Southern
Local
Superintendent Tony Deem
previously said Scott Wolfe
Beth SergenUphoto
will retain 80 percent of his
As the song goes, oh a clear day ''you can see forever ... and ever... and ever," but on a clear day on the Mason, W.Va. current responsibilities as
side of the Ohio River, you can catch a bird's eye·view of downtown Pomeroy. Yesterday was one of those clear days as administrative
&gt;JSsistant
the view reveals a blue sky, brown river, green hillside and the colors of Main Street.
which deals with obtaining
federal funding for title and
special education program s
as well as his new duties as
principal. All title one
teachers and their program s

Please see Wolfe, AS

Antique tractor
pulls a popular
pastime

BY BRIAN J. REED

2416 Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV

~ Fa.t~

OU~IIIMpe4

Printed on 100 %

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

PLEASANT VALLEY• HOSPITAL

Pltanhn t1JFII n

en
Rt't.')'drd NeM·sprint

.Address:

The Pleasant Valley Hospital Medical Office of
Carrie Lockhart Dillard, MD, a family practitioner,
has moved to a new location. Please note the new
address and telephone number change for personal
future reference.
Dr. Dillard and her dedicated staff are currently
'
accepting appointments at the new location.
.

•

•·

WEATHER

(304) 675-4500'

.._..._,__O.bil'•GI. . wrihe I'*

. Chester-Shade Days
activities .start Friday, A6

PltiM ... FueLAS

•

HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.

Charlene Hoefllchlphoto

Martha Brown of the Gallia County Extension Office jl,ldges the food project of Katlyn
Barber of Tuppers Plains, a first year member of the Lakeside Leaders. She prepared
cookies and fruit kabobs for her mini-meal magic project.

4-H Food judging results announced
STAFF REPORT

Tim Markworth , grand Randal Davis, Tyler Barber,
champion; Oliva Davis, honorable mentions.
reserve champion; and
Star Spangled Foods :
POMEROY - 4-H food Emily Sinclair and Katelyn Hannah Wolfe, grand chamjudging
results
were Chevalier, honorable men• pion ; Kristin Fick , reserve
annunced today by the toins.
champion, and Brooke
Meigs County Extension
You're the Chef: Brady Johnson , honorable menoffice. The results are as fol- Bissell, grand champion ; tion.
lows:
Savannah . Haley, reserve · Food and Fitness for Fun:
Pathways to Culinary champion, and Nichole Rebecca Chadwell, grand
Success: Melissa Snowden, Moodispaugh, honorable champion;
Mallory
grand champion.
mention.
Mcintyre, reserve champiI Spy in the Kitchen:
Meals
in
Minute s: on; Amber Davidson,' and
Makaya Trussell, grand Courtney · Burnem, grand Abigail Houser, honorable
champion; Halley Mausser, champion.
mentions.
reserve champion.
The·.Giobal gourn1et : Ryan
Fast Break for Breakfast:
Let's Bake Quick Breads: Davis, grand champion.
Abby Collins, grand chamCourtn7y Bauerbach, grand
The ,Outdoor Chef: Betsy pion; Garrett Ritchie.
champiOn; Sarah Turner, Wolfe, gra11d ~hampion; reserve champion, and ·
reserve champion.
Heaven Westfall , reserve Brooke Johnson, honorable
Yeast Breads on the Rise: champion; Shanda Welc~ , mention.
•
. NEWSIIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

•

POMEROY - Tractor
pulls have been going on
for decades - probabl y
almost from the day they
replaced horse-pulled farm
equipment - and thei r
popularity COJitinues to
thrive in Meigs County..
In fact the Big Bend
Antiques Club which was
formed in 1990 h~s been
sponsoring pull s at the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds
for many years and currently do five or six pulls a
year. They're June in
weight class ranging from
4,000 to 9,000 Oil the pull
track inside the race track
on the lower level of the
Meigs fairgrounds.
All of the pulls arc l'ree
for spectators and food is
provid~d at eu~: h one by the
Scipio Volunteer
Fire
Department. Dallas Weber
is president ·or the club and
other members on the committee
include
Rill
Burbridge, Tony Carnahan .
Jim Foreman, Ke vin .I ewell .
and Nick Dailey. Some of
the tractor pulls are afternoon events, others me held
in the evening .

Please see Tr1ctor, AS

�-

•

PageA2·

·coMMUNITY ·

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Family Medicine

Annual Rausch/Roush .reunion set for August

Infected tonsils can
stop fighting disease,
promote it instead

RJO GRANDE -The 12-member in the Student Union for URG/RGCC . unable to attend. Those with company
board of directors of the Roush (Rausch) will be open by I p.m: Reservations names with Roush/Rausch/Rouse
and Allied Families Association of must be made and paid for by July 21. name on them. such as hats, pens;
America Inc., has announced plans for
.Hi storians of the Roush family plan to -shirts, etc would be most welcome.
At the reunion, lapel pins (Rausch
conduct a genealogy workshop of
the 279th anniversary reunion. ,
It will be·held at the Universit y of Friday, Aug. I from I to 5 p.m. Anyone Cre st) are sold for $4. Proceeds go the
Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community interested in learning more about their sc holarship . fund. The Educatiori
College on Friday, Aug. I, and relationship to this family, bring your Committee will award a $1,000.00
'
Saturday, Aug. 2 The banquet will be . research and questions. Book Volume V scholarship during the weekend.
Check out the foHowing websites
Friday, Aug.!, beginning at 6:30p.m. will contain all new ·information about
· Activities on Saturday. Aug. ~ will the Roush family that settled in Gallia. for more information. They are
be begin at 9 a.m. with and followed Meigs and Mason counties shortly after www.vsitgallia.com, www.wvexplor'
by a group picture at about II a.m. The the Revolutionary War. All five brothers er.com, tourism@ masoncounty.org
picnic and business meeting wi ll fo l- were soldiers and patriots during thi'S and www.jacksonohio.org.
There are many burial sites of John
low. Banquet tickets are $ 18 for adults . important time of American history. The
and $6 for children 5-l 0, and no charge family, John Adam and Susannah Adam Rausch's children are found in
for children under 5 years old. Picnic Roush, originally from Germany. came Gallia and Meigs counties of Ohio and
tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for from Pennsylvania and settled in the Mason County. W.Va. Information on
these brothers ca·n be obtained at the
children 5-10 of age, and no chwge for Shenandoah Valley of Virginia.
children under 5 years old. Send reserThe annual auction proceeds help to workshop on Friday or are sold at the
vations and payment to Sheldon F. pay for the reunion expenses. If Gallia County Genealogical Society,
Roush, 117 Marshall Drive, Mount attending. bring items from your home 57 Court St.. Gallipolis. Ohio 4563 I.
For fur/her informarion, please call
Lebanon. Pa. 15228-17&amp;9. Tickeis will area or t)lings connected to the
be issued for the panquet and picnic Roush/Rausch/Rouse name. Bring Berrie Johnson Roush for Gallia Counrj•
upon arrival to the banquet.
these items early on Saturday, so that al (.740) 446-4274, and Gloria Roush for
If unable to attend this year, please others can see what items will be auc- Mason County, (304) 675-7198:
se nd $2 per person for dues and a letter tioned . Jack Roush of NSCAR fame
Plans have been made for rhe annuwill be sent to you about next year's usually donates signed items. Any al reunion for 2009 ro be held ai
reunion. Headquarters for the reunion items can be sent to Sheldon Roush if Branson,. Mo.

Question: The docror
sal'.\""' child need•· ro ha•·e·
hii· u)nsi/.•· , our. I didn 'r
rhink that 11 ·as done w11· more. Can 'r &gt;l'e jusf ll'ait
all(/ see 1! he ~t · i/1 outgro\\'
his jl'eque111 .\'Ire!' rhmats :'
If we ha•·e the tonsils uut, •
will 1her grml' hack:' And
dae., it me em he won't ~et
sick Wl\'11/llre '
Answer: u•fi&lt;illectomy,
having the tonsils surgically
removed. used to he one of
the most common childhood surgeri e~ in the United
States. It is sti ll done, but
much less often.
Let' me review a little of
the history of this procedure. Records show that
tonsillectomies were performed by ancient physicians before I00 AD. This
was done withmtt anesthesia and was very painful. .
With the developm~nt of
effective anesthesia. the
number of tonsillectomies
performed each year began
.to increase in the late
·1800's.
.
: The popul;1rity of this
:procedure really soared in
the first half of the 20th
Century as surgical and
anesthesia
procedures
evolved and improved. But
):hen afew decades ago, the
;guidelines were made more
.stringe nt, and the numbers
began to drop. We went
from several million of this
procedure still bein¥ performed eac h year Ill the
J 970's to about 600.000 by
the late 1990's. .
: The result of this change.
.is good for the patient in
that it means many fewer
unnecessary tonsilleCtomies
:are performec,J today than in
{he past. When you say ton:Sillectomy. I'm assuming
lhat' you are referring to the
:J;Onsils in the throat. For the
tecord, we have three sets of
tpnsils: Lingual tonsils,
which are comprised of
:lymphoid tissue on the back
)Jf the tongue; the pharyn:gea l ton'si ls. which are
located behind the nose and
the roof of the mouth and
are also called the adenoids;
and the palatine tonsils,
:which are the ones in the
~hroat.

: Tonsils produce l.ymp hocytes, special immune system cells that help ·your
body fijlht disease. When
the tonstls are healthy. they
perform this task admirably.
If the tonsils become·chronjcally diseased, however,
they don' t produce as many

·of these good ·'fighter cells"
that hdp promote healing.
Instead. the become a seed
bed for infection.
As in the past, chronic
infection is sti ll often a
good reason for havi ng a
tonsi llectomy.
Airway
obstruction is another reason·to take the tonsils out. If'
a person is hliVing three or
more tonsil infections per
year, that can be an indication for IOnsillectomy. especially if he or she is becoming more resistant to antibiotic treatmenl.
Some children will build
up t~eir immune systems
and overcome these· chronic
infections. But in many
other cases, the child is better off having the ton sil s
out. For instance. some
studies have shown that
kids with chronic tonsillitis
who have a tonsi llectomy
have about two fewer sore
throat infections per year
than kids who don't have
the tonsillectomy.
These kids miss les s
schoo l and report a better
quality of life. Also, children with sleep apnea and
airway obstruction due to
their tonsils often find this
operation brings complete
relief.
.
With modern surgical
techniq·ues, it's very uncommon for tonsils to grow
back. This did happen with
'i \
!I.~· .
ceria in older techniques that
left the base of the tonsil \'
-,·
intact.
If you are .not sure what
"'· . ~
you should do, return to the
specialist with a list of queslions. Then, if you arc still
not satisfied, get a second
opinion. Your primary c'are
physician can be a good
resource for you in making
this tough call.
Family Medicine® is a
weekly column, To submit
questio11s, write to Martha
A. Simpson, D.O., M.B.A.,
Ohio U11iversity College of
Osteopathic Medici11e, P.O.
Box JJO, Athens, Ohio
15701, or via e-mail to
readerquestions @familymedicine11ews.org. Medical
ill/ormation in this columll
is provided as an educationa/ service only. It does
not replace thejudgm!n.t of
your personal phySICIUII,
. who should be relied on to
diagnose and recommend
treatment for any medical
conditions. Past columns
are · available online at
www.jamilymedicine11ews.org.

•

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The Whisnants to perform .
: The Hill side Baptist Church will present an evening
.wuh The Whtsnants 6 p.m. Saturday. Concessions will
:be available. Special guests will be The Godsmen. The
:charge is $10 a person or $100 for a van or busload of
people.Children under 10 are admitted free. Take a
·
lawn chair.

A~· NrE' S MAILE OX
forgive him. You may not
have many more chances to
do this. so please find a way
Dear Annie: My father- to let go of the unpleasantin-law has lung cancer, anu Hess not onlv for his sake,
for bver six months I took but for yours and your hu sllim to all his doctor appoint- band's. Pick up the phone.
ments and treatments. Then Ask how he-\ feeling. Say
he called me, saying he no nothing about your disaplonger needed my help. that . pointment or his attitude.
he had someone else to do You'll feel better.
the driving and run the
Dear Annie: June would
errands. I found out later he have been my 50th ann iverwas mad at my husband owr sary. but my wonderful hus·~ome incident that had nothband passed away in
mg to do with me .
February. We had been
. I have had no contact with working on a special
hi}ll since. I don 't feel I Christmas card when he
should. be run!shed for became too ill to con tinue.
somethmg I didn t do. Last We were going to send
week, hts youngest daughter everyone on our list a l:Omcalled me, informing me bined picture of us in, our
~hat my. father-in-law now
wedding attire and us now.
thinks I hate him, so he hates We had so much fun finding
me, too. She asked that l the right photos &lt;tnd making
~ake amends since his cancopies. and needless to say.
cer has gotten worse and hi s my heart is broken that we
~ays seem numbered.
did not make it.
What am I supposed to
I have been sendinu
apologize for? I mi ght add than~-you cards to some ol·
that my father-in.!aw is our friends who were so
j!Xtremely imma~ure and kind to me during thi s awful
often acts like a spoiled brat time. and I've been includ. if he doesn't get hi s way. I ing the picture that we
.used to cook for my in-law s intended to. use in the
until my mother-in-law neg- Christmas card. My daugh~ttvely cpttqued my cookters-1n-law think I should
mg one tune too many. I no · not be doing that. They' say I
longer waste my time. I should send out the
have. an .extreme ly weak Christmas prd as originally
relallonshtp wnh my hus- planned, but, Annie. I just
band's siblings. Any sug- don't think I can do that. In
gestions would be helpful. fact . I don' t know tltat I'll
as I have lost total respect be able to send out any
for these people. -C.
. Christmas cards at all.
Dear C.: It sounds like
Are my daughters-in-law
ybu and your in-laws are a right'l Should I stop se nding
good match. You each take the picture with the thankoffense easi ly and hold you cards? I still have
to
write.
grudges. You don't have to · friends
apologize to your father-in- Heartbroken
law ·in order to " make
Dear
Heartbroken:
amends." You simply need Please continue to send the
10

RUTLAND Major
Brady G. Johnson of
Rutland assuined command
of the 91 P Civil Engineer
Squadron Air Force Reserve
at the Pittsburgh Air
Reserve Station. Pittsb urgh.
.,Pa. on June 8, 2008.
• In this capacity. he is
~esponsible for the Civil
Engineer Squadron which
consists of nearly I00 offi. cer and enli sted personnel.
Major Johnson i sa native
of Rutland. He graduated
from Ohio Valley Christian ·
School in 1989 and the U.S .
Air Fo,rce Academy in June Patterson AFB in Dayton.
of 19g4_ In 1999 he com- Ohio.
pleted Squadron Officer
li1 addition, he has been
School and in 2007 he com- deployed on TOYs to
pleted Air Command and ·England. Germany, Saudi
Staff College.
Arabia, Oman. Hungary. El
Major Johnson had two Savador, St. Lucia, United
tours on active duty. His Arab Emirates. Iraq and
first
assignment
was · numerous places in the'
Seymour-Johnson
AFB, United States.
NC. His second was with
Major Johnson's major
the 823' REDHORSE in award and decorations durHurlburt Field, Florida. In ing · service
include
January
200 l ,
Major Meritorious Servi&lt;.:e Medal,
Johnson joined the Air Air Force Commendation
· Force Reserve at Wright- Medal ,with two oak leaf

picture. Your friends will
cherish the memento, and
sending it obviously brings
you some comfort. If, when
Christmas comes arou nd,
you would like to send the
· picture to those who don't
yet have it. by all means do
so, but you should not feel
pressured. By anyone.
Deaf Annie: I can relate to
''Totall y Lost:: whd is losing
interest in his wife because
she's gained a great deal of
weight. After. having three
children and gaining more
than 100 · pounds during
those pregnancies. a thyroid
test showed that my metabolism was in the dirt. After
getting on medication·. my
chroni c depression disappeared, I was no longer tired.
and l was eager to do something &lt;lbout -lny weight. 'As
soon as '"Worried" takes his
wife to the doctor for a full
checkup. he needs to "ive
him self a swift kick in "the
rear for being such a jerk and
start being supportive of the
woman who has given him
the greatest gift he'll ever
receive: hi s children. Erin in Washington Slate
Dear Erin: Thank you for ·
putting things in perspective.
Annie 's Mailbox is writ- ·
leu by Kathy '.111itchell and
Marcy Sugar, ltmgtime editors of 'the 1).1111 Lauder.1
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmail, box@comcasr.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago,
6()6 JJ. To find out more
about Annie's Mttilbox,
and read features by other
Creator.1 Syndicate writer.1
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.crelllors.com.

n

clusters,
Army
Commendation
Medal,
Army Achievement Medal.
Kosovo . Campaign Medal ,
Campaign
Afghanistan
Medal and Iraqi Campaign
Medal.
Upon release from active
ditty in 2001, Johnson was a
pavement engineer with the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation . Currently,
he is employed with the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources
in
their
Abandoned Mine Lands
program.
Traveling to Pittsburgh for
the
Assumptign
of
Command ceremony June 8
were his wife, Major
Suzanne
Johnson; his
daughters Lmtra, Sarah and
Kathleen; his parents Larry .
and Gloria. Johnson, all of
Rutland: Martin, Tahnee,
Brady, Nick and Rose
Andrew of Pomeroy; Rick
and Ruth Ann Dean of
Waverly; and several friends
and mi litary officers from
Wri ght Patterson Air Force
Base of Dayton, Ohio.

through Friday. The theme
Sunday• .July 20
is Son World Adventure . CHESTER - Reun ion of
Park and there :viii be class- Llecemlems of Guy and tva
Friday, July IS
es
for children'kindergarten Singer. 12:30 p.m. Masonic
LETART FALLS
through
sixth grade .
Lod ge. Chester. Take covAnnual pudget meeting of
ered
dish.
Letart Town ship Trustees, 9
RACINE - Cozart family
a.m .. office building.
reun
ion. Racine American
Monday, July 21
Legion
hall. Potluck at noon.
. POMEROY - Pomeroy
.
Family and friends welcome.
Village Council, special
Thursday,
July
17
COOLVILLE
meeting, 7 p.m., municipal
POMEROY
The
Descendants
of Anhur and
building. discuss paving
runding
bid
packets. American Cancer Society Nelson Watson will have
Meigs County Advisory reu nion at noon at the home
finance. personnel matters.
Board meeting, noon, base- of Jim and Debbie Watson.
mcnt conference room at · 42455 Woods Rd .. Coolville .
·Pomeroy Library, new memSaturday. July 26
bers welcome, lunch providRACINE
Circle
Thursday, .July 17
ed, 992-6626 to RSVP.
reunion at the Carmel
TUPPERS PLAINS CHESTER- Shade River Church Fellowship Hall.
South Bethel Community. Lodge special meeting, 7 Gather at noon, potluck at
Church weekend revival. 7 . p.m. for purpose of confer- 12:30 p.m. take covered
p.m. through Saturday. Gene ring Entered Apprentice di sh and something for
Goodman
will
preach Degree on one candidate. whtte elephant -sale.
·
Thursday. with Jerry and Refreshments to follow.
Lisa Queen singing. David ._ Sunday..July 19
Barringer will speak Friday
POMEROY - Antique
and Tommy Scyoc will sing. tractor pull at the Meigs
Friday, July 18
On Saturday, Dave Dailey . Fair grounds, 6 p.m . Free
POMEROY
Bill
will speak and Debbie admission to spectators. Matlack will observe · his
Dailey and family will sing. Food provided by Scipio 92nd birthday on Jul y 18.
Volunteer .fire Department. Cards may be sent to him in
Saturday, .July 19
For more information call · care of George Dallas.
STIVERSVJLLE
Homecoming
at
the 742-3020 evenings.
29918 Rolling Rid~e Drive .
Tuesday, July 22
Stiversville Church at
Agoura Hills, Calif .. 91301 .
CHESTER
Past
Portland. gather at noon .
Tuesday, July 22
"Delivered" to sing. '!'Jicnic Councilors Club of DofA,
REEDSVILLE
with covered dish dinner· at Ravm ond M. ·Miller will
at 2 p.m.
RUTLAND
Perry ·6:30. meeting to follow at observe his 80th binhday on
Crusade beginning at I p.m. 7:30p.m.
July 22. He lives at 39857
Wednesday, July 23
both Saturday and Sunday,
Silver Ridge Rd .. Reedsville.
CHESTER
Shade
at the Rutland Civic Center.
River Lodge 453 appreciaMonday, July 21
tion
dinner at hall for local
STIVERSVILLE
Revival services with Bob citizen, 6 p.m . Being held in
and Sherry Villars of Spencer, appreciation of the individ - '
W.Va .. 7 p.m. July 21-26 with ual's contributions to the
services on Sund~y; July 20 community. Open dinner,
accepted.
and 27 to be held following donations
Reservations
not
required
.
S.unday school.
POMEROY - Vacation
Bible School at First
Southern Baptist Church,
41872 Pomeroy Pike, 6 to 9
Saturday, July 19
p.m. For more information
POMEROY- Glaze famcall Rachael Needs. 949- ily reunion will be held at the
1325.
home of Bill and Louise
TUPPERS PLAINS -- Radford. Potluck at noon, folFramo that newspaper
photo or print it on a
Vacation Bible School at lowed by games for the chilmug or mourw pad .
St. Paul United Methodist dren and music for the adults.
Church, 6-8:30 p.m. daily Relatives and friends invited.

Clubs and
OrganizatiOnS

Church events

Birthdays

Reunions

~bt l'lailp

O.vld H•rrte

111

Cowt--

~ . OH457el
Ptl : (7&lt;60) 112-.31158, Em. 15

, ..: (140) 112-2t67

mwmeem•l!!reetrf!ner """

~ ~~ •....,. DIIJr s-tJ..I •

•

~

Special advertising supplement found
July 30th only in the
•••o

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
~alltpolt~ iJBailp ~rtbune

''·'Nww.mydlnyaenttnel.com

~oint ~lea~ant l\egt~ter

,

'.

"-online~
·w-.mydll~une.com
. wwww.~tyreg~ater.com

... :,,

,.

In the Daily Sentinel
.•,

'•.

.'

A Special supplement to highlight babies,
Ages newborn to four years old.
r---~------------------,

I Baby's Name
I

l Age

·

•

..'

'.

1'
1 Simply send your baby's

I photllgraph along with the coupon
I

l Phone

I The Daily

.
·
I Address will not be published 1

Your Baby's
Age
.Parents Names Here

L----------------------~
Mail or deliver to:
BABIES! The Daily Sentinel
Box 729, ll1 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769

••'

Friday, .July 18

•

Sentinel
l11 Court Sl Pomeroy, OH

Deadline for submission,

•

This ·is a special sized supplement which will be
published Wednesd~ July 30. Do you know how maily
phone calls the A'rea 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 directQry and cards will be arranged by
category.

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 Thesday, July 22nd)

1 $10.00, and we'll do the rest.

1
I Address

·~·:

We will be glad to use the information on your business
card or we can create one for you.

1 tO' the left ~hyour payment of

l Parents

~

:kllliMI

.

Thl• PUbltJtion wnr

,-:&gt;F".i • .'·

s:.. n.

• Tric..., ....,....,.

BUSINESS
CARD
DIRECTORY

''Here's
Our
Card''
'

Baby Edition '08
to be published
Frid~y, July 25

&amp;t1iii..

~"'G AeJIM~MntatM

!

i#~i. ·~

2008

Public meetings

..

:t '.,..

· Thursday, July 17,

CommunitY Calendar

Not many more chances to forgive
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SliGAR

PageA3

BY THE BEND

Johnson assumes command of squadron

Tuesday,
..
. :.Atwn_tion .

The Daily Sentinel

•

�-

•

PageA2·

·coMMUNITY ·

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Family Medicine

Annual Rausch/Roush .reunion set for August

Infected tonsils can
stop fighting disease,
promote it instead

RJO GRANDE -The 12-member in the Student Union for URG/RGCC . unable to attend. Those with company
board of directors of the Roush (Rausch) will be open by I p.m: Reservations names with Roush/Rausch/Rouse
and Allied Families Association of must be made and paid for by July 21. name on them. such as hats, pens;
America Inc., has announced plans for
.Hi storians of the Roush family plan to -shirts, etc would be most welcome.
At the reunion, lapel pins (Rausch
conduct a genealogy workshop of
the 279th anniversary reunion. ,
It will be·held at the Universit y of Friday, Aug. I from I to 5 p.m. Anyone Cre st) are sold for $4. Proceeds go the
Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community interested in learning more about their sc holarship . fund. The Educatiori
College on Friday, Aug. I, and relationship to this family, bring your Committee will award a $1,000.00
'
Saturday, Aug. 2 The banquet will be . research and questions. Book Volume V scholarship during the weekend.
Check out the foHowing websites
Friday, Aug.!, beginning at 6:30p.m. will contain all new ·information about
· Activities on Saturday. Aug. ~ will the Roush family that settled in Gallia. for more information. They are
be begin at 9 a.m. with and followed Meigs and Mason counties shortly after www.vsitgallia.com, www.wvexplor'
by a group picture at about II a.m. The the Revolutionary War. All five brothers er.com, tourism@ masoncounty.org
picnic and business meeting wi ll fo l- were soldiers and patriots during thi'S and www.jacksonohio.org.
There are many burial sites of John
low. Banquet tickets are $ 18 for adults . important time of American history. The
and $6 for children 5-l 0, and no charge family, John Adam and Susannah Adam Rausch's children are found in
for children under 5 years old. Picnic Roush, originally from Germany. came Gallia and Meigs counties of Ohio and
tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for from Pennsylvania and settled in the Mason County. W.Va. Information on
these brothers ca·n be obtained at the
children 5-10 of age, and no chwge for Shenandoah Valley of Virginia.
children under 5 years old. Send reserThe annual auction proceeds help to workshop on Friday or are sold at the
vations and payment to Sheldon F. pay for the reunion expenses. If Gallia County Genealogical Society,
Roush, 117 Marshall Drive, Mount attending. bring items from your home 57 Court St.. Gallipolis. Ohio 4563 I.
For fur/her informarion, please call
Lebanon. Pa. 15228-17&amp;9. Tickeis will area or t)lings connected to the
be issued for the panquet and picnic Roush/Rausch/Rouse name. Bring Berrie Johnson Roush for Gallia Counrj•
upon arrival to the banquet.
these items early on Saturday, so that al (.740) 446-4274, and Gloria Roush for
If unable to attend this year, please others can see what items will be auc- Mason County, (304) 675-7198:
se nd $2 per person for dues and a letter tioned . Jack Roush of NSCAR fame
Plans have been made for rhe annuwill be sent to you about next year's usually donates signed items. Any al reunion for 2009 ro be held ai
reunion. Headquarters for the reunion items can be sent to Sheldon Roush if Branson,. Mo.

Question: The docror
sal'.\""' child need•· ro ha•·e·
hii· u)nsi/.•· , our. I didn 'r
rhink that 11 ·as done w11· more. Can 'r &gt;l'e jusf ll'ait
all(/ see 1! he ~t · i/1 outgro\\'
his jl'eque111 .\'Ire!' rhmats :'
If we ha•·e the tonsils uut, •
will 1her grml' hack:' And
dae., it me em he won't ~et
sick Wl\'11/llre '
Answer: u•fi&lt;illectomy,
having the tonsils surgically
removed. used to he one of
the most common childhood surgeri e~ in the United
States. It is sti ll done, but
much less often.
Let' me review a little of
the history of this procedure. Records show that
tonsillectomies were performed by ancient physicians before I00 AD. This
was done withmtt anesthesia and was very painful. .
With the developm~nt of
effective anesthesia. the
number of tonsillectomies
performed each year began
.to increase in the late
·1800's.
.
: The popul;1rity of this
:procedure really soared in
the first half of the 20th
Century as surgical and
anesthesia
procedures
evolved and improved. But
):hen afew decades ago, the
;guidelines were made more
.stringe nt, and the numbers
began to drop. We went
from several million of this
procedure still bein¥ performed eac h year Ill the
J 970's to about 600.000 by
the late 1990's. .
: The result of this change.
.is good for the patient in
that it means many fewer
unnecessary tonsilleCtomies
:are performec,J today than in
{he past. When you say ton:Sillectomy. I'm assuming
lhat' you are referring to the
:J;Onsils in the throat. For the
tecord, we have three sets of
tpnsils: Lingual tonsils,
which are comprised of
:lymphoid tissue on the back
)Jf the tongue; the pharyn:gea l ton'si ls. which are
located behind the nose and
the roof of the mouth and
are also called the adenoids;
and the palatine tonsils,
:which are the ones in the
~hroat.

: Tonsils produce l.ymp hocytes, special immune system cells that help ·your
body fijlht disease. When
the tonstls are healthy. they
perform this task admirably.
If the tonsils become·chronjcally diseased, however,
they don' t produce as many

·of these good ·'fighter cells"
that hdp promote healing.
Instead. the become a seed
bed for infection.
As in the past, chronic
infection is sti ll often a
good reason for havi ng a
tonsi llectomy.
Airway
obstruction is another reason·to take the tonsils out. If'
a person is hliVing three or
more tonsil infections per
year, that can be an indication for IOnsillectomy. especially if he or she is becoming more resistant to antibiotic treatmenl.
Some children will build
up t~eir immune systems
and overcome these· chronic
infections. But in many
other cases, the child is better off having the ton sil s
out. For instance. some
studies have shown that
kids with chronic tonsillitis
who have a tonsi llectomy
have about two fewer sore
throat infections per year
than kids who don't have
the tonsillectomy.
These kids miss les s
schoo l and report a better
quality of life. Also, children with sleep apnea and
airway obstruction due to
their tonsils often find this
operation brings complete
relief.
.
With modern surgical
techniq·ues, it's very uncommon for tonsils to grow
back. This did happen with
'i \
!I.~· .
ceria in older techniques that
left the base of the tonsil \'
-,·
intact.
If you are .not sure what
"'· . ~
you should do, return to the
specialist with a list of queslions. Then, if you arc still
not satisfied, get a second
opinion. Your primary c'are
physician can be a good
resource for you in making
this tough call.
Family Medicine® is a
weekly column, To submit
questio11s, write to Martha
A. Simpson, D.O., M.B.A.,
Ohio U11iversity College of
Osteopathic Medici11e, P.O.
Box JJO, Athens, Ohio
15701, or via e-mail to
readerquestions @familymedicine11ews.org. Medical
ill/ormation in this columll
is provided as an educationa/ service only. It does
not replace thejudgm!n.t of
your personal phySICIUII,
. who should be relied on to
diagnose and recommend
treatment for any medical
conditions. Past columns
are · available online at
www.jamilymedicine11ews.org.

•

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The Whisnants to perform .
: The Hill side Baptist Church will present an evening
.wuh The Whtsnants 6 p.m. Saturday. Concessions will
:be available. Special guests will be The Godsmen. The
:charge is $10 a person or $100 for a van or busload of
people.Children under 10 are admitted free. Take a
·
lawn chair.

A~· NrE' S MAILE OX
forgive him. You may not
have many more chances to
do this. so please find a way
Dear Annie: My father- to let go of the unpleasantin-law has lung cancer, anu Hess not onlv for his sake,
for bver six months I took but for yours and your hu sllim to all his doctor appoint- band's. Pick up the phone.
ments and treatments. Then Ask how he-\ feeling. Say
he called me, saying he no nothing about your disaplonger needed my help. that . pointment or his attitude.
he had someone else to do You'll feel better.
the driving and run the
Dear Annie: June would
errands. I found out later he have been my 50th ann iverwas mad at my husband owr sary. but my wonderful hus·~ome incident that had nothband passed away in
mg to do with me .
February. We had been
. I have had no contact with working on a special
hi}ll since. I don 't feel I Christmas card when he
should. be run!shed for became too ill to con tinue.
somethmg I didn t do. Last We were going to send
week, hts youngest daughter everyone on our list a l:Omcalled me, informing me bined picture of us in, our
~hat my. father-in-law now
wedding attire and us now.
thinks I hate him, so he hates We had so much fun finding
me, too. She asked that l the right photos &lt;tnd making
~ake amends since his cancopies. and needless to say.
cer has gotten worse and hi s my heart is broken that we
~ays seem numbered.
did not make it.
What am I supposed to
I have been sendinu
apologize for? I mi ght add than~-you cards to some ol·
that my father-in.!aw is our friends who were so
j!Xtremely imma~ure and kind to me during thi s awful
often acts like a spoiled brat time. and I've been includ. if he doesn't get hi s way. I ing the picture that we
.used to cook for my in-law s intended to. use in the
until my mother-in-law neg- Christmas card. My daugh~ttvely cpttqued my cookters-1n-law think I should
mg one tune too many. I no · not be doing that. They' say I
longer waste my time. I should send out the
have. an .extreme ly weak Christmas prd as originally
relallonshtp wnh my hus- planned, but, Annie. I just
band's siblings. Any sug- don't think I can do that. In
gestions would be helpful. fact . I don' t know tltat I'll
as I have lost total respect be able to send out any
for these people. -C.
. Christmas cards at all.
Dear C.: It sounds like
Are my daughters-in-law
ybu and your in-laws are a right'l Should I stop se nding
good match. You each take the picture with the thankoffense easi ly and hold you cards? I still have
to
write.
grudges. You don't have to · friends
apologize to your father-in- Heartbroken
law ·in order to " make
Dear
Heartbroken:
amends." You simply need Please continue to send the
10

RUTLAND Major
Brady G. Johnson of
Rutland assuined command
of the 91 P Civil Engineer
Squadron Air Force Reserve
at the Pittsburgh Air
Reserve Station. Pittsb urgh.
.,Pa. on June 8, 2008.
• In this capacity. he is
~esponsible for the Civil
Engineer Squadron which
consists of nearly I00 offi. cer and enli sted personnel.
Major Johnson i sa native
of Rutland. He graduated
from Ohio Valley Christian ·
School in 1989 and the U.S .
Air Fo,rce Academy in June Patterson AFB in Dayton.
of 19g4_ In 1999 he com- Ohio.
pleted Squadron Officer
li1 addition, he has been
School and in 2007 he com- deployed on TOYs to
pleted Air Command and ·England. Germany, Saudi
Staff College.
Arabia, Oman. Hungary. El
Major Johnson had two Savador, St. Lucia, United
tours on active duty. His Arab Emirates. Iraq and
first
assignment
was · numerous places in the'
Seymour-Johnson
AFB, United States.
NC. His second was with
Major Johnson's major
the 823' REDHORSE in award and decorations durHurlburt Field, Florida. In ing · service
include
January
200 l ,
Major Meritorious Servi&lt;.:e Medal,
Johnson joined the Air Air Force Commendation
· Force Reserve at Wright- Medal ,with two oak leaf

picture. Your friends will
cherish the memento, and
sending it obviously brings
you some comfort. If, when
Christmas comes arou nd,
you would like to send the
· picture to those who don't
yet have it. by all means do
so, but you should not feel
pressured. By anyone.
Deaf Annie: I can relate to
''Totall y Lost:: whd is losing
interest in his wife because
she's gained a great deal of
weight. After. having three
children and gaining more
than 100 · pounds during
those pregnancies. a thyroid
test showed that my metabolism was in the dirt. After
getting on medication·. my
chroni c depression disappeared, I was no longer tired.
and l was eager to do something &lt;lbout -lny weight. 'As
soon as '"Worried" takes his
wife to the doctor for a full
checkup. he needs to "ive
him self a swift kick in "the
rear for being such a jerk and
start being supportive of the
woman who has given him
the greatest gift he'll ever
receive: hi s children. Erin in Washington Slate
Dear Erin: Thank you for ·
putting things in perspective.
Annie 's Mailbox is writ- ·
leu by Kathy '.111itchell and
Marcy Sugar, ltmgtime editors of 'the 1).1111 Lauder.1
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmail, box@comcasr.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago,
6()6 JJ. To find out more
about Annie's Mttilbox,
and read features by other
Creator.1 Syndicate writer.1
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.crelllors.com.

n

clusters,
Army
Commendation
Medal,
Army Achievement Medal.
Kosovo . Campaign Medal ,
Campaign
Afghanistan
Medal and Iraqi Campaign
Medal.
Upon release from active
ditty in 2001, Johnson was a
pavement engineer with the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation . Currently,
he is employed with the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources
in
their
Abandoned Mine Lands
program.
Traveling to Pittsburgh for
the
Assumptign
of
Command ceremony June 8
were his wife, Major
Suzanne
Johnson; his
daughters Lmtra, Sarah and
Kathleen; his parents Larry .
and Gloria. Johnson, all of
Rutland: Martin, Tahnee,
Brady, Nick and Rose
Andrew of Pomeroy; Rick
and Ruth Ann Dean of
Waverly; and several friends
and mi litary officers from
Wri ght Patterson Air Force
Base of Dayton, Ohio.

through Friday. The theme
Sunday• .July 20
is Son World Adventure . CHESTER - Reun ion of
Park and there :viii be class- Llecemlems of Guy and tva
Friday, July IS
es
for children'kindergarten Singer. 12:30 p.m. Masonic
LETART FALLS
through
sixth grade .
Lod ge. Chester. Take covAnnual pudget meeting of
ered
dish.
Letart Town ship Trustees, 9
RACINE - Cozart family
a.m .. office building.
reun
ion. Racine American
Monday, July 21
Legion
hall. Potluck at noon.
. POMEROY - Pomeroy
.
Family and friends welcome.
Village Council, special
Thursday,
July
17
COOLVILLE
meeting, 7 p.m., municipal
POMEROY
The
Descendants
of Anhur and
building. discuss paving
runding
bid
packets. American Cancer Society Nelson Watson will have
Meigs County Advisory reu nion at noon at the home
finance. personnel matters.
Board meeting, noon, base- of Jim and Debbie Watson.
mcnt conference room at · 42455 Woods Rd .. Coolville .
·Pomeroy Library, new memSaturday. July 26
bers welcome, lunch providRACINE
Circle
Thursday, .July 17
ed, 992-6626 to RSVP.
reunion at the Carmel
TUPPERS PLAINS CHESTER- Shade River Church Fellowship Hall.
South Bethel Community. Lodge special meeting, 7 Gather at noon, potluck at
Church weekend revival. 7 . p.m. for purpose of confer- 12:30 p.m. take covered
p.m. through Saturday. Gene ring Entered Apprentice di sh and something for
Goodman
will
preach Degree on one candidate. whtte elephant -sale.
·
Thursday. with Jerry and Refreshments to follow.
Lisa Queen singing. David ._ Sunday..July 19
Barringer will speak Friday
POMEROY - Antique
and Tommy Scyoc will sing. tractor pull at the Meigs
Friday, July 18
On Saturday, Dave Dailey . Fair grounds, 6 p.m . Free
POMEROY
Bill
will speak and Debbie admission to spectators. Matlack will observe · his
Dailey and family will sing. Food provided by Scipio 92nd birthday on Jul y 18.
Volunteer .fire Department. Cards may be sent to him in
Saturday, .July 19
For more information call · care of George Dallas.
STIVERSVJLLE
Homecoming
at
the 742-3020 evenings.
29918 Rolling Rid~e Drive .
Tuesday, July 22
Stiversville Church at
Agoura Hills, Calif .. 91301 .
CHESTER
Past
Portland. gather at noon .
Tuesday, July 22
"Delivered" to sing. '!'Jicnic Councilors Club of DofA,
REEDSVILLE
with covered dish dinner· at Ravm ond M. ·Miller will
at 2 p.m.
RUTLAND
Perry ·6:30. meeting to follow at observe his 80th binhday on
Crusade beginning at I p.m. 7:30p.m.
July 22. He lives at 39857
Wednesday, July 23
both Saturday and Sunday,
Silver Ridge Rd .. Reedsville.
CHESTER
Shade
at the Rutland Civic Center.
River Lodge 453 appreciaMonday, July 21
tion
dinner at hall for local
STIVERSVILLE
Revival services with Bob citizen, 6 p.m . Being held in
and Sherry Villars of Spencer, appreciation of the individ - '
W.Va .. 7 p.m. July 21-26 with ual's contributions to the
services on Sund~y; July 20 community. Open dinner,
accepted.
and 27 to be held following donations
Reservations
not
required
.
S.unday school.
POMEROY - Vacation
Bible School at First
Southern Baptist Church,
41872 Pomeroy Pike, 6 to 9
Saturday, July 19
p.m. For more information
POMEROY- Glaze famcall Rachael Needs. 949- ily reunion will be held at the
1325.
home of Bill and Louise
TUPPERS PLAINS -- Radford. Potluck at noon, folFramo that newspaper
photo or print it on a
Vacation Bible School at lowed by games for the chilmug or mourw pad .
St. Paul United Methodist dren and music for the adults.
Church, 6-8:30 p.m. daily Relatives and friends invited.

Clubs and
OrganizatiOnS

Church events

Birthdays

Reunions

~bt l'lailp

O.vld H•rrte

111

Cowt--

~ . OH457el
Ptl : (7&lt;60) 112-.31158, Em. 15

, ..: (140) 112-2t67

mwmeem•l!!reetrf!ner """

~ ~~ •....,. DIIJr s-tJ..I •

•

~

Special advertising supplement found
July 30th only in the
•••o

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
~alltpolt~ iJBailp ~rtbune

''·'Nww.mydlnyaenttnel.com

~oint ~lea~ant l\egt~ter

,

'.

"-online~
·w-.mydll~une.com
. wwww.~tyreg~ater.com

... :,,

,.

In the Daily Sentinel
.•,

'•.

.'

A Special supplement to highlight babies,
Ages newborn to four years old.
r---~------------------,

I Baby's Name
I

l Age

·

•

..'

'.

1'
1 Simply send your baby's

I photllgraph along with the coupon
I

l Phone

I The Daily

.
·
I Address will not be published 1

Your Baby's
Age
.Parents Names Here

L----------------------~
Mail or deliver to:
BABIES! The Daily Sentinel
Box 729, ll1 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769

••'

Friday, .July 18

•

Sentinel
l11 Court Sl Pomeroy, OH

Deadline for submission,

•

This ·is a special sized supplement which will be
published Wednesd~ July 30. Do you know how maily
phone calls the A'rea 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 directQry and cards will be arranged by
category.

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 Thesday, July 22nd)

1 $10.00, and we'll do the rest.

1
I Address

·~·:

We will be glad to use the information on your business
card or we can create one for you.

1 tO' the left ~hyour payment of

l Parents

~

:kllliMI

.

Thl• PUbltJtion wnr

,-:&gt;F".i • .'·

s:.. n.

• Tric..., ....,....,.

BUSINESS
CARD
DIRECTORY

''Here's
Our
Card''
'

Baby Edition '08
to be published
Frid~y, July 25

&amp;t1iii..

~"'G AeJIM~MntatM

!

i#~i. ·~

2008

Public meetings

..

:t '.,..

· Thursday, July 17,

CommunitY Calendar

Not many more chances to forgive
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SliGAR

PageA3

BY THE BEND

Johnson assumes command of squadron

Tuesday,
..
. :.Atwn_tion .

The Daily Sentinel

•

�•

PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

ALL BUSINESS: Ta:xpayers on
BY RACHEL BECK
AP BIJS INESS WRI TER

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Nf·W) URK - We ~ n c· 11
II could h.tp(ll'll LI ln
lftou ~ h lhl'l S.lld II IIIHiid 11 I .... rill' . ~~l\ L llllllL'Ill
, ..,

Oh1o Valley Publishing Co.

ll \ 111 _;! Pl ll llh lll t.'\ .t g.1111 IP
h.lUI pll\ . ti L' LP ill p \lll t. "

Dan Goodrich
Publisher

lliiHiqU , li( L' I '\ Oil(

-

1\IIS IIIII\

lll O I! g_ ,t f_ l'

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Ed1tor

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lftCII sh,lf CS ,lfl&lt;f Lkhl ,fie
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lut llh 11111111.11 lund s ,lfld
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tllo\ll' k. td111 !2. those -;, HilL
f&lt; L' "t...'l \l'
Congress slrall make 110 /all' rt•spt•ctiiiJ! '"'
po~ul y ltl.l tld!.!L'd t.P mp. llth.'..,
l r l'.I,LII \ Sl't. l L't ~ u ' llt:11r'
establislrme11t of re/igio11, or prolrilliti11g t/11·
Yet A mt.lt t. . ttl t,n: p .t\ lt ..,
P.tuhnll s,ud 1he Trc.tsllll' ,,
free e.-.:ercise tltere~f; 11r abritf.l!ill.l! tltc f'rwfmu of .Ill' on the hnnk h,r .t tl ll' ' ' "dur ~ L'\ (ll'dllcd .nnlootlll
lil, tl ll)llld Ulldt: tllUIH.: Ull ll t
ll ~ llll Cou g iL'"" to c :-.. p.utd rh
speeclr, or of tire prt'.ls; tiY tire r(~tltt t!ftlte pt'll~ tkn
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pie praCt'abl}' to assemble, a11d 111 t'ctititlll t/11·
Gtll!errunmt jor a redress l!f'grit'"'"'et's.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Toduy" rhutsd&lt;Oy. July 17.1he \99th d.oy of 200H There
are 167 d,oys lell1n the ye.u
Today s Htghltghl 111 Hrstnry On July 17 11)% I \\'A
Arghl ~00 ,, Pat rs-bound Bocmg 747. exploded ,md u .oshed
off Long lsl.md, N Y, shortly .tlleo \c,ovmg John F Kcnrtcdv
Inlcrn&lt;Olton&lt;Ol A1rpmt. ktlltng .oil 110 people .rho.11 d
On lhts d.tle In I ~ 2 1. Sp.uncedcd Hondu to tlw l lnJicd
Stales
In 1841. the Bntrsh humo1 m.og.ozrne Punch w.os lu sl
published
In \918. Russra's Cz.tr Nllhol.JS II .md Ills t.omtly wcoc
executed by the Bolshevrks
In 1918. aVJ.ttor Dougl.ts Cm11g.m look nil from New
York, s.tymg he w,os hc.tded 1&lt;11 C.thloJ n1.1 he ended up 111
Ireland, supposedly by .ocudenl, e.ornmg the lll(kn.nnc
"Wrong Way Corngan "
In 1948, Southern Democi.ots opposed to 1\w oHlllllll.ttum
of PreSident Trum.m mel 111 Bllllllllgll.tlll AI,, tn ,. 11doo"
South Carulin.t Gov Strom Thu1mnnd
In 19~5, Dtsneyl.md opened lolhe publtc 111 An,ohl'IIIL C.i\rl
, In 196H, a coup 111lraq returned Ihe B.t.tth P,uty to 1""\ er .
f1ve years .titer 11 w.ts ousted
In 1975, an Apollo sp.tceshrp docked wllh ,, Snyuz sp.tcccran m orbll 111 the first superpower ltnkup of ols kmd
In 1981. Il-l people were kollcd when .1 po111 of w,o\kw.Jys
above the lohby ol the K.ms.rs City Hy.ott Regency Hotel
collapsed dunng ,, "lea dance "
One ye.tr .tgo Sen.rte DemocHtls t.oUtrched o111 &lt;111 -nrght
deb.ote on the lr.tq 11ar VA Secret.try Jun Nrcholson ,ohlllptly resigned mthe w.oke olch.orges of shoddy hc.rllh c.uc• lot
veterans lllfUred 111 the lr.oq w.1r A Bro~ztlt .lll pu sscngct (l'l
cr.tshed m S.oo P.tulo. BI.IZII. ktlltng ,i\1 I X7 people .tbll.rttl
ani:l 12 on the ground Atl.mla Falwns quart~! h.ll k Mll·h.td
V1ck was mdtcled by a leder.tl gr.md 1ury 111 Rllhmurlll V.o,
on charges related to compel Itt vc dogfighting t Yllk \,olet
adn1111ed bankrolling the doghghtmg operauon and hclpmg
to ktll srx to eoghl dogs. he was sentenced to 23 months m
pnson) The Dow Jones rndus111.tl .rver.ogc crossed 14.000
for the fust ttmc before endmg the J.oy .tl 13,91 g 22
Today's Birthdays TV personalit~ Art L1nkleucr " l)6
Comedian Phyllis Drller rs 91 The former preSillent of the
lnternaiJonal Olymprc Commtllec. Juan Antonro
Samaranch, IS H8 J.ozz srnger J11nmy Scott IS H3 Aclot
Donald Sutherland Is 73 Actress-smger Dt.oh.tnn C.rllu\1 "
73. Rock musrcran Spencer Davrs ts 66 Rock nlllstcr.on
Terry "Gee}:er" Butler (Black S.rbb.tlh) is SLJ Auress Luue
Arnaz IS 57 Acto1 D.ovrd H.tssclholl Js 56 IL'lc1 IS tun pwduccr M,uk Buonell (' SutVI\lll ·"The Apptl'ltltcc·) IS &lt;IX
Actress N.om:y G1\es ts 4H Srngcr Rcgrn.o Belle ts -1 'i Rud
mustcJ,Ifl Lou B.orlow rs 42 Hop-hop smgcr Guru (&lt;l.mg
Starr) IS 42 Colllemporary Chnsl!,ul srngcr Sus.on Ashton
IS 41 Actress Brlly Schram IS 40. Actor J.tsnn Cl.nkc '' l&lt;J
Smger JC (PM D.rwn) " 37 Rappel Sole' IS 15 Country
singer Luke Bryan IS 32 Actor Enc Wmler is 12
Thnughr for Tod.oy "Life h,JS taught me tho~t 11 1s not tor
our faults that we .tic disliked .md even h.tted, but lor our
qu.11ities" - Bernard Berenson, LHhu.mJ.m-Amcnc.m .ut
cntlc and .1uthor (I H6'i - 19'iLJ)

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
l.ette11 to tlw t•dt/(1/ an' 11 elmme l11n '"""'" lw /r •11
than 300 Hot&lt;/\ All /etten w e '"''J&lt;'lllo e&lt;htm~ mull !Jt
sigfled, ami mdude add1 e11 am/ telephml&lt;' IIU/1/hel No
llriSlgned /erren &gt;it// he tmbll\lwd Letten 1ilou/d h1' m
guud taHe, addn•\\1111/. 1\\UI' \, 1101 pet Wllahttr'' Lt•l/t'l 1 of
rhaflic.l to orgwu ~atwm and mdll'ldua/s lVIII 1101 h1• a(( epted for publtctlltml

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.

Publrshed every afternoon Monday
through Fri day 111 Court Stre et
.be accurate It you know of an error Pomeroy Ohio
Second·clas5
!n a story, call the newsroom at {740) posiEige pard at Pomeroy
992-2156
Member. The Associated Press and
the Ohio Newspape r Assooatron
Po1tm11ter S4J! nd address corr ec
Our main number Ia
lmns to The Darty Sentmel 111 Court
(740) 992-2156.
Stroot Pomeroy Ohio 45769

Our mam concern m all stones rs to

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Mill Subacriptlon
lnalde Melga County
13 Weaks
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127 11
Oulalde Meigs County
13 Weaks
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\1..111

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hook ~for

· Thursday, July 17,

'"''d tor 11 -

we don 1 know
ill\' SI/C OflhC111crc&gt;,"eJ lrCU
11 l111c '" 11!1.11 c·ould potentr.tlh 111ggl'r the l'qtuty pur d r.L' " ,Ifill ,II wh,ll pnu:.
Th.tl the goll'IIHHenl "
C\ Cil J111&gt;lll1 Sing , f h.IIIOUIIO
sh,uch uldc" slwuld r.11 se
"""c puhltc ue II dfcCirvely 111\',111' 1,1\p,I)'CI unll,us
11 1II he usc·d lo help
111\c'Sit&gt;ts 11\10 shouldn 't be

\\, 1)

ti1L' "''-' ullllll.llllt:s ,tre

' '' u ~. : tu1 ~ d .1s g.O\ CII1tnent' i'"""" ' d L'lllctpi!Ses lh ,ol
.li e llllltcd hv pubhc sh.ucih&gt; ldc·"
CIS\' s cx phutlv sl,ole thai
1111.: 11

SL'l lllttll.:s • .tre

"not

lll l'...

slt.u r.::" ol till' u 1111p. t
11 lll ' Llh:J •

Lll "'""'"''

'

• 91, of Pomeroy
POMEROY - Charles E 'Chock" Sayre.
passed away on Monday, Jul) 14, 2008 111 Memnlsl~nd, Fla
He was born March 21 , 1917 111 Pomeroy, son of the late
Charles and Bertha Sayre of Pomeroy Charles was a 1937
graduate ot Pomeroy Hrgh School, Member of the
Pomeroy Umted Method1 sl Church, he served wnh the Sea
[jee's in World War II. member ol the Pomeroy Amenca'n
Leg1on and a retired member of the Pomeroy Carpenters
Local 650 Charles and hi s w1fe had recently moved to
Memu. Island. Fla
Hers survived by hrs'w1fe ol 67 years, Clara (Erchu\ger)
Sayre, sons, Donald and Sandra Sayre , William "Btll"
Sayre, grandchildren, Trac1 Sayre, Terry Sayre, Tamm1
Stover, Jeff Sayre, Jessica Sayre, and Jaclyn Rocct , \0
great-grandchildren and two great-great grandchildren; SISters, Mary Rogers and Jean Serwe
He was preceded 111 death by h1s parents, son; Charles
"fntz" Sayre, brother. Robert Sayre
Seiv1ces Will be held on Saturday, July 19, 2008 at I p m
at the Anderson McDamel Funeral Home 111 Pomeroy Bunal
Will follow al the Rocksprings Cemetery VJsitaltOII wrll be
held from 6-8 p.m on Fnday, July 18, 2008 _at the funeral
home M1htary gravesrde services wrll be conducted
Online regr stry IS avarlable at w_ww andersonmcdamel com ·

sl,IIIUIIIg
But lhcse wmpames have
\cercu aii,IY from then
charleJed I111S'IOn .mu ptled
•m .tddtlion.ol nsk hy issunog
V,H'IOIIS loom &lt; of corporate
debt. now \ ,o\ued .tl .uouncl
$1 5tnllton
Joshuu R(•sn~:r. !lldlhl~lllg.

drrcc:lor of rcse.udl ltrm
Graho~m Fr shcr &amp; Co, s,ud
they mue.mngly used 1he1r
pqrllohos to specul,llc on
su&lt;.:h thmgs u:-; ,un.:r,alt leas1ng. m.uwf cu.:turet1 houstng.
onlcrcst-only morlgo~gcs and
othco sCLUIIItes
Lillie w.ts done to curb
tht&gt;Se llllestmcnts, even alter
,,L Ct )Uiltlng scandals ellrlicl
tlu s dcc:adc revealed weakness mlhcu mternal controls
Rosner s,ud much of th,ol h.od
to do IHth lheor powcrlu\\obbymg effort 111 W.tshinglon,
wh1c:h wooed pohllcian i('
from both p.u11es and usedthem to stymie the work ol
tis regulator, the Otlice ol
Fedet,d Housmg Enlcrpnse
Owrsrghr. '" OFHEO.
"No one 111 Washmgton h.os
w,mtcd to itx&gt;k .11 the underlymg rc.thly of both these
wmr,ulles:· Rosner satd
Sllll. both Fannre Mae
CEO D.mrel Mudd and
Freddre Mac CEO Richard
Syron remam on the JOb whrle taxp.oyers gel to p1ck
up the tab lor thiS mess in
more ways lh,m one
The Ame11c.m hnancwl
system loses credJhihty
wllh events like thos. Thut
could erode foreign investmenl. which then hullS the
doll ,tr .md boosts rn!l.tiiOII
It's h.trd 10 see much good.

Local Briefs
Cheerleader sign ups
RACINE - An y mcommg nrnth graders mterested m
hrgh school theerleadmg thrs se.1son al Southern, contact'
Cmtly Gmther at 84'!-\190

TB clinic visit
POMEROY - The Mergs TB Clime wt\1 be at Peoples
Bank m Pomeroy Irom I0 30 a m - 12 30 p m tod,ly St,tff
will return to the bank With test results at II a.m on July 21

Road closing
RUTLAND - County Road 8, Malloons Run Road. wrll
be closed for approxom.otely srx weeks beginnmg July 21 ,
for a bndge replacement proJeCt

Thursday ... Patch) dense
fog m the mornmg. Sunny
Htghs 111 the lowe1 90s
Light and vanabl e wmds
Thursday night... Mostly
clear Lows in the lower
60s
Northeast
wmd s
around 5 mph Becommg
east after m1dmght
Friday... Sunny . Hot w1th
htghs 111 the lower 90s
SouJh wmds around 5 mph.
Friday
night ... Partly
cloudy Lows 111 the mtd
60s. East wmds around 5
mph
Saturday
through

I REAli Z £ THAT
MANY FEEL OUR OBAmA

CoVERs OFFENSWE &amp;. TASTElESS. IT's GDTTA LOT OF
ATTENTioN AND NO, WEi
WON'T CoNS IDER PUfTJN6
YOU ON NEXT

WEEK's COVER .

Sunday
night ... Mostly
cloudy H1ghs 111 the upper
80s Lows 111 the rmd 60s
Monday and Monday
night ... Mostly cloudy A
chance of shov.ers and
thunderstorms. Highs m the
upper 80s Lows m the m1d
60s Chance of ram 40 percent
Tuesday
through
Wednesday .. , M os tl y
cloudy wrth a ch,mce of
showers and thunderstorms.
Hrghs 111 the upper 80s.
Lows in the lower 60s.
Chance of ram 30 percent

---------

.

-~- -----'---~-....:..:.__

___JL..__

AEP (NYSE)- 38.91
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 84.30
Aehland Inc. (NVSE) - 38.55
Big Lola (NVSE) - 29.42
Bob Evane (NASDAQ)- 27.25
BorgWarner (NVSE)- 38.81
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-81
Champion (NASDAQ) - 4.50
Charming Shope (NASDAQ) -

Religious squabbles generate 1nuch heat, little light _
People .tel oddly d111111g

lrmc~ nl polttr~.tluncell.tlll-

ty ben so. I vc been surpn,ed \,otdy to ltnd mysc\1
.rgrcerng wrt\1 the per emu.ol ly .ogg11evcd WJI!t.m1 A
Dorwhuc Fm Ihe unuuu.ned DotH&gt;huc ser ve·, '" pll stdcnt , t I U .md Lilli I contt.nvcoq ,fl rs l
ol..
lite
( ,ltltultc Le.tgue. ·• l.tymen ' "' !!·""'·1111&gt;11 de voted
In lhc duhrou' pocnHsc 111.11
11 '·"
"!!·"'"1 Rom.on
C.olhohc s " "mtllc vrrulcnl
,md mmc pcrv.tsrvc lh.m
ever before Ill Amcm;.on

htsto~y

He ' :tlw.tys nntelcvts!LHI,
.md he' .tlmnsl a\w;oys lun 011 '

Actuall y. overt teh ~ '"'"

ht •l.!olt)' IMs ht· utm(.~ so 1\11..:

he .limos! 'i"·unl 111
Ametll .tll Ir k 1 h.ll s 1101 In
s.ry lhe C.llhnh l· I e.ogul· 's
bJalld of pic -V.lltc.oll II
mor,o\ and theologrc,ol conscrvmrsm " rc gn.mt everywhere - p.ulrcul:ul) not
.unong C.tthohcs, Even so.
Donohue's recently IMd ·'
couple of re.ll humdmgers
In w.tx .opoplcc ll c .ohout
f'll st cam e S.tll y 01111111.
Ihe l.unou s lieut ~clown
hoslc ss .IIlLI fotlllllt ll'~ "lltl1&gt;r
'
nl Ihe W,~SIIIII g l t lll PostN c wswc·c ~ Web sue " On
l·,uth ' Qutnt!'s m.lln .tcl' In
legcnd.u y P'"' echtoo ' Ben
Bradlcc - the story uf thcrr
.tuultcmus LOurtsh1p " n;orr.tLcd Ill his book ''A Good
Life" - h.1s m.ode her u
W:tshtngtun socr.ol urbllcr
Aitendmg T11n Ru.'Scll 's
funenrl Mass . Qumn dcc1ded to reccrve communron ,
tl1 cn wrot e .t bout II
" Odd\ \ ' sill' I&lt;ptHicd, 'I
h.od ·' sl rghll y tl.ll"''•lled
sen s,oiiOII .t !J•'' t I '"''k 11
kr1owm g lh,otul some WH y 11
rcprcsenlcd Ihc hody .md
blood of Jesus ChnsL L.tst
·" tn

G
ene
Lyons

Wedllc, d,o) I was clctcJ mtned In t.oke tl lor Tim
tr.tnsttbst,mlratJon nntwnhst.mdmg I'm so gl.td 1 drd ·
H.ts "On Faith" 110 .odult
edrtors to mform Qumnth ,u
C.uholic communmn tsll 'l
1m spmluul tounsts' l'nt
once, Donohue got 1t 11 ght
"Just rc.tdln~ wh.ol S.dl y
Qtunn s,ud 1, enough to
[!tvc anv C' h11 stran. cspe t 1tcs, mute 1\1.1n
"·' II v c'.1110
1
'
1
1
a ·, 1g 11 y nause.urn g sens.t trnn '
Moreover, Qumn 's
statement not only reeks of
narcrssosm. 11 sltows ,1 prolound
drsr espect
too
C.ttholres .md the ~chefs
they hold dear"
Elsewhere , a hubbub
hrnke out al the Untverslly
of Ccnlr .ol f'lmtda UI'CI ,,
student who ,1bsconded
from M.1~s wllh .o cnn,ecr,lfed communlllll walc1. cllher
to cxhrbuu to hrs roommate
or protest stuclentlunds supportin g rclr grous org,um,rIIOIIS 011 ( ,ompus The young
man gave confhcllng expluna110ns to 1eporters Church
otfici.tls called hrs actiOns
d1 srupuve .md disrespectful
He, 111 turn. l:Qmplmned thm
a woman .mempted to wrestic the purlomed Eud~.~r1st
I rom h1s hand, .md dcm:ort·'- u
eel .o mcelllt[! wllh the htshOfli Cg.rrcllllg d nuch polll·y
on phys ll ,ill or~c
·rll·'•
I"'''
''
"ltc&gt;
'
'"
'
s • ~ t· ·
appeared 111 f.,c ,tl new '
accoums, ulong Wllh overheated rhelori c aho11t " hate

UllllCS ' Cer'l,unly "s.tcnle-ge, llt•uld .opply A week
\,oter .Iller ,r\lcgedly recc1vrn g um:onl1rmed death
lhtc.rts, lite 'tuuctlllelurned
lite co11sec t.tll'd w,ofer to
chlll ch t&gt;lftu.rls Ill ,, Z1ploc
h.o g beryhody rnvolvcd
Jllllllllscd In pr.ty fm eve1y hody l'l se
Tltc•rc lhts sonuwltrl hllle
LilLI' oug\11 to h.rye ended
Al .ts , the
conllovcrsy
l\ tuglu the eye of l'Z
Mvcrs , ,, UniVCISIIY of
Mfnnesol,t bmlogy pratessor well known as the pwp11ctn1 of " Pharyngula," ''
\vch slle m.11nly devoted to
e ~ pl ,umng and defend1ng
~ voluttotMry theory ag:nnst
ere.ttiOJllsl nonsense Al.os,
M ycrs d Iso t u1ns out to h c ,,
tlltitl ·"11 ,,tl1c"1 Inf urw ted
hY 11 cws .tccount s of 11e
1
Ho11d.t dd&gt;.tclc, he posted
.111 css.ty trtled "It 's a
Fr.tckm ' Cr.ocker"
Dc11nuncmg
"crazy
l'hllstr.m l.mo~t!ls" lilted
~ tth "D.trk ,;\gc superstJIIon
and malice lhreatemng to
krll .1 young man over a
"u,OLkct "MycJs asked readcrs lo suite me some wnseCf ,tled wmmumon IV .tiers "
'' \ II show you saen 1ege,
gl.tdl y.•md wrth much fanl.u e: · he vowed 'I won't be
tempted to hold (I he
Euch.mstl hostage , but
wrllm ste.td trealtl wllh profound
disrespect
.md
hemous cracker abuse, .til
photogr.tphed and presented
here on the Web"
111 short, the learned
Myers 111.1dc Qurnn luuk
lrkc •, s"holrr
&lt;&gt;I ,-,
,•
•
• 111IJMntti W rc lt gw •o, .md lite youn g
huJ\ 111 llo11d.t ,, thrlnmat
li e fl' " l'"'cd 111 dcl cnd rc,t"111dilL tl '" '" tell II 1ll' wor 1dvrcw hy llle,lfl' ,"1 :' fliVCnllc
l' "hlr ctl y ' lu111 rtm , 111 turn ,
J, IJicJ
lit e
C.uholrc

Lc.oguc's Donohue mto the
fi,Jy, no doubt prccosely aS
the professor unended
Donohue Issued a compar,IIIvely restrained sl.ttement c11lng the Umversity of Mmnesot.r's own "Code ·
ot Conduct" calhng upon
f,tcully and stall to he
"respectful. f.u1 and c 1v11''
111 their cleahngs wrlh nthers He .tsked lhe sdJOolto
ICillovc
.t
hnk
to
"l'h,oryngul&lt;i" from the um- ·
versuy Web Site and urgedCatholic League supporters
lo send e-ma1ls and len~rs
of protest lo Its president
Myers, a tenured assoc 1ale prolessor, said he'd
received several death
IIHe,us along with letters
I
IliS f mng.
·
lIem,mung
He
h
d
h
C
1
c aracten7e 1 e a11o1rc
Le.tguc •s cllorts as an
" tnqubJIJon" Well , boohoo-hoo Liberal Web sites
sprung reflexively Into.
action, generaung leiters in
Myers' delense. A typical
one called the prolessor a
"thoughtlul human being
under attack by a horde of
hypocntical, .mtr-intellectual lrt&gt;glodytc s tor merely
pomllll&lt;' out the ,obsurdlly of
"' ul supetslltlous
:o group
mrsuc.mts"
Hey, doe s th,rt guy know
some btg wurds 01 wh.u 1
Look , as 1 lmd 1r nccessary to remmd somebody
about once a month, threutcning people you don't like.'
IS a felony Poullmg out that
Myers IS actmg hke an adolescent Jerk, however, is not.
(Arkanm 1
DemocratGa ~ etr e r o1wmr11t Ge11e

Lvrm 1 11 a Natiollal
Ma gam re Award IVItlner
(/1/d 1 0 author oJ "The '
lfuntm ~ of tire P1evrdent"
(St Mwtm 'v Press, 2000).,.
y0 11 wn e-mml Lyons at
!&lt;CII elwmv2@sbcglobal net).

4,80
City Holding (NASDAQ) 38.76
Collins (NVSE) - 47.27
DuPont (NVSE)- 42.13
US Bank (NVSE) - 26.74
Gannett (NVSE)- 16.57
General Electric (NVSE) 27.68
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 36.18
JP Morgan (NVSE) - 35.94
Kroger (NVSE)- 28.98
L,lmlted Brands (NVSE)15.81
Norfolk Southern (NVSE) -

63.72
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·
DAQ)-25.10
BBT (NYSE)- 24.50
Peoplea (NASDAQI-19.62
Pepalco (NVSE) - 88.09
Premier (NASDAQ)- 8.70
Rockwell (NYSI!)- 42.73
Rocky Boola (NASDAQ) •
3.80
Royal Dutch Shell - 72.88
Seara Holding (NASDAQ)74.98
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 56.96
Wendy's (NVSE) - 24.29
Wea8anco (NVSE)- 17.28
Worthington (NVSE)- 17.59
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions lor July 18, 2008,
provoded by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac Mills
in Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441
and Lesley Marrero In Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC,

Ohio's higher education goals

COLUMBUS - OhiO IS
Here Is a look at some ot Ohio's higher education
embarkmg on an aggresstve
goals:
I0-year plan 10 mcrease
• Increase enrollment from 472,700 to 702,700 by
slate spendmg on hrgher
201'7
educatron, cut tUition costs
• Reach the nat1onal average 1n state spend1ng per
and mcrease enrollment at
student
pubhc colleges. somelhmg
• Make turtrori among lowest In nat1on
that has natrona! experts
' Regents, Strategic
SOURCE: Ohio Board of
both skcpucal and excited
Plan
lor
Higher
Education
2008-201•
"No state has put 11 all
together. so 11 will be mterestmg to see what Oh10 can an even greater stale comTo g1ve Ohoo a chance of
do," satd Jom Fmney, v1ce mr tment between now and success in reaching Its
president of the NatiOnal 2017.
goals, Democratic Gov Ted
Center for Public Polrcy and
"There are sort of com- Strickland and state lawHigher Educauon 111 San petmg goals here," said makers Will have to consisJose , C.olil
Tom Parker, mtenm presr- tently bump up taxpayer
The plan, announced at dent of the Institute f-or funding amrd competmg
the end of March by Oh1o Higher Educallon Po hey m pnonues such as Med1card,
Board
ol
Regents Washmgton He added that K-12 educatron, tax cuts
Chancellor Eric Fmgerhut , mcreasmg enrollment mall and infrastructure
seeks to mcrcase enrollment stales
IS
1mperallve
They began 111 2007 wtth
from 4 72,700 to 702.700 by ( because of the demands of a two-year tmuon freeze ,
2017 in the Umversity a more competJUvc global coupled with an addl110nal
System ol Oh10, wh1ch con- economy
$254 million m state spendsrsts of 13 public umvers11y
The current average mg for higher education
campuses, one medrcal col- IUltlOn and fee COSI per xear The state ts also lookmg to
lege, 24 regwnal branch to attend one of Oh1o's the colleges and umversr11es
campuses and 23 commum- mam umverslly campuses to use thetr dollars more
ty colleges
rs $8.520 In 2006, the aver- efficiently
II also 'ails for state age tuition m OhiO had
"Th1s has to be committed
spendrng per student to grown to be 50 percent to over a senes of budgets."
reach the national average more expensrve than the sa1d Republican House
by 2017 In 2006 Ohw · nallonal --average · The I 0- Speaker Jon Husted, who
ranked 39th in tbe nauon year-plan calls for 11 to be believes there w1ll be senwith stale spendmg per stu- among the lowest m the ous drscuss1on next year
dent about $3.800, wh1le nail on by 2017.
about exlendm~ the tmtron
the nauonal average was
Parually because slate freeze If Oh1o IS successful
about $4,900.
spendmg has been low and m consistently rrusmg state
For Ohro to reach thai tmUon h1gh, the slate IS m support. 1t would be gomg
natiOnal average at current the bottom Iter m the per- agamst a natrona! trend of
enrollment levels, 11 would centage ot restdents who what Parker calls pnvauzhave to spend about $420 have a bachelor's degree mg pubhc educatiOn million more To mamtam About a quarter of Ohio res- placmg more of a burden on
the nallonal a vcrage whtle idents held a bachelor's students to pay for thetr
also boostmg enrollment by degree m 2006, wh1ch schooling
nearly one-half will require ranked 37th m the nauon
Oh10 had been a symbol

Signed askmg the vrllage to
make road repairs on
Rutland and Martm Streets
and Lt berty Lane
Council approved the h1re
of two part-time pohce officers, David Wayne Wollard

and John Kulchar Tim
Sands, formerly a part time
pollee drspatcher was
bumped to full trme status
AI so discussed was a pollee
crmser wh1ch had been
wrecked when an ofhcer
was transporting a pnsoner.
Apparently a deer had
caused the accident.
The village' s budget tor
fiscal year 2009 was

lot was approved tor the
Mergs County Council on
Agrng's Bass Tournament
on Oct 5.
The Mayor's Report tor
June reported total fmes _
and lorlellures 111 the
amount ot $11 ,965, the
parktng meters look m
$2.056 53, trckels and permits took m $664 lor a total
of $2,724 43
kmdergarten arde posuron
for tpe 200~-0\l year. Jody
Noms ws tr.mslerred to the
third grade te.ochmg poSIlton pendmg findrn g a qualriled repl.tcement 111 accordance wrlh the Southern
Local
Educatron
AssocJallon agreement
The meeung adjourned
Into execuuve scss1on once
to dtscuss the purchase of
properly for purposes or the
sale of property at competitive b1ddmg.

spent $2,500 more m fuel for moved and have not been
the ftrst half of 2008 than 11 re-installed. Gerlach sa1d
d1d for the ftrsl half of last that was expected to be
year. Between January and completed sometime this
fromPageAl
June, 2007, the vtllage spent week.
In the meanllme, the VIl"Please turn the cars off $13,881 84 Between January
when s1ttmg at idle, if possi- and June, 2008, the bill was lage is paymg retail pnce
for gasoline at a Middleport
ble. Do not s1t at the offtce $16,455 79.
The
VIllage
buys
bulk
convemence store.
for extended penods of
fuel
for
all
VIllage
vehicles
Gerlach also reported that
time. Be out where the pubfrom
G&amp;M
Fuel
Co,
the
pohce department has
he can see you, but remember the h1gh cost of fuel IS a Pomeroy However, due to seen an mcrease m revenue
dram on the budget and we the demolition of the Park from fmes. The mayor's
need to try to conserve Street School earlter th1s 'report of fees and fines colmonth, the gas tanks the
when possoble "
Accordmg to F1scal Officer village uses to store its
Susan Baker, the village has bulk fuel supply were

lected 111 June was 111 excess
of $8,000 Gerlach sard that
rs a result ol mcreased
enforcement, because more
pollee officers are now on
the force
The vtllage has also been
successful m secunng payments on old fines through
the use of warrant blocks
Those
blocks pre1ent
renewal of dnver' s hcenses
and vehicle regrstrauon
until the fmes are pa1d

Wolfe
from Page AI
are currently located

m
grades K-4 where he Will
take over as pnnc1pal
Deem sard Scott's posaion
was not replaced but
"restructured" and his job
respon sJbJhtJes
were
reassessed A portion of
Scou's current admimstrauve dulles will then be

Fuel

wesl VIrginia Mining Training Program:
BOHours
Hillside Baptist Church
39728 Sr. 143
Pomeroy, Ohio 45679

from Page AI

•

approved lor a total $1 7
Clerk
million
which
Treasurer Kathy Hysell sa1d
was a "little lower" than
FY08's appropnanons
Council approved addluonal appropnanons ot
$8,000 Into the general
fund. II also transferred
$5,000 from the general to
the street fund.
The use of the parkmg

OAPSE agreement, Cmdy
g1 ven to Kent
In other news from the Gmther was hired on a
recent special board supplemental contract as
h1gh school cheerleadmg
meeting:
Jodi Cummins was hired advisor for the 2008-09
on a one year contract as season
The Board accepted the
evenmg custodran at the
elementary school wuh a res1gnat10n of Brenda
salary per ttie Ohw McGunre, second grade
AssocJallon of Public teacher, for rellrement purSchool Employees agree- poses, effective, Aug I, the
ment, Elizabeth Johnson res1gnauon of Rebecca
was hued as a computer Otto, second grade teacher,
aide at the elementary was accepted; Behnda Arms
school w11h a salary per the was transferred 10 the

Tractor
There · rs an entry lee for
those partiCipalmg II\ the
pulls who compete lor trophies m their respectrve
werght classes The members
are community mmded and
God's Net was the beneficrary of proceeds from a pUll m
May. The Me1gs County
Council on Aging's nutnuon
program, home delivered
meals, has also benefrted
from the pull proceeds
In June B1g Bend Antrque
AG Day featuring di splays
was held as an afternoon
feature wrth the regular
competrtion m the evenmg
Th1s Saturday competrllon
pullmg w1ll take pl,ace at 6
p m. at the fmrgrounds In
the event of ram 11 will be
held at 2 p m on Sunday.
The anllque tractor pull IS
always a feature of the Me1gs
County Fair and thts year
will be held at 6 p m on Aug
12 Another regular pull Is set ·
for Sept 20 followed by a
potluck wiener roast at the
track and the final one ISOct
18 at I p m. The group has 11s
own pulling sled, roller and

of the pnvauzat1 on trend
In the de,ade before the
tullron
fre eze,
tUition
mcreased by an average 9
percent a year Stale spendmg ljlgged dunng that flme
penod, rn wh1ch the economy v.as largel y stronge r
!hun rt IS now
''The
go vern or
and
General Assembly have
made 11 absolutely clear that
higher edu catron rs aud writ
remam a hrgh pnonty,"
Fmgerhul sard "We' ve al so
been clear that th.tt doesn't
mean 1t can 1ncrease m a
straight hnc every year of
course because the slate
economy will drctate the
resources .ovmlable"
Pubhc mstJtutwns rn
some st.ttes have made up
for an m'reasmg lack of
state support and mcre~sed
m-slate enrollment numbers
by placing a large1 burden
on out-of- state students
With htgher IUitiOn, Parker
satd Ohro, however, 1sn ' t
gomg this route because tt
hopes to anracl talent from
other slates Fmgerhut smd
That goal was part of the
re.oson the- state announced
l.ISl v.eek that rt was gomg
to treat allmrlitary veterans,·
no mailer where they live,
.ts "honorary Ohioans" and
enable them to pay 'm-stale
turtron But attractmg more
students places an addition,,, burden on th~ system
"Every ume you add
somethmg new lo the plate
that's JUSt g01n g to mean
you are gorng to have to
commll
more
state
resources to fund that strategy:· Husted smd

STEPHEN MAJORS

from Page AI

Local Stocks
o· - -

Bv

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Paving

Local Weather

~

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Ohio revamping higher education plan system

Chailes E. *Chocl&lt; Sayre

gdgc-bdL:kcJ ~CLUnlrc s out -

prqkLll'd unJer the w~t y ·

c.tpll,dl sm should 11ork
Thr s ~ nwrnmc' lll rcsnre
pl .rn .!I s:, Ihtm" uHo que'ltnll the kgtllllt.ll y of the

h"""'' ,;'"'"

I

lonn payments. Cull'l!nlly, the
l'l'lllp,llltes b,lVe aiJOU( $1 5
tnllion 111 gu.u,mteeu mon -

www.ltlydailysentinel.com

2008

Obituaries

mortgage rescue~

"· " kc·d '" 1he lull lmlh .md
' rcdn of the Ll S governme111
1 hu \ l'
'-LIPIIntltll g
till'
E11111tc ~loe .md 1 -r~ddtt ' " .111) .rgc·ncy BullhcJc lms
h.ulottt ol ~o \L'tnttH2 111 ~ ~ l.il p\,1) .I C~lllrdJ llllc Ill lx:c11 .1gH&gt;II oug pcrccpunn ol
-.pun ..; mc:d
etlll't prt ' t..' s
lllll hl lli,IIH..! fllld!ICC S \'~1\.' lll
,111 uupl1u t' gm crnmcnt
f .tl1111c' M.1c .rnd l!lddr c ,llld lllll'l U; lllllllle IO th; 'U Ill ~ ""' .tniL'c' 11 lmh lei the comM,fl' po1111 lo Wil.ll II 1111fd the tr LUI It: Ill lo1m d s ..,IJ.u~o&gt; i&gt;.mtcs 1.1kc: on llltllc 11sk .md
lt.tprcll tl thl') cull .tpscd, ,, ltold L' I -O\\ ned L omp.t!li L' ' ·
chc-,tply
Sl'eii.II IP 111.11 it ,IS p.tnll ~ ~· d f'.tulsun s.ttd Sund,IV ' Theil
Tht s shmtld hlm1 .ow.oy
111\l''-(01 ... Ill l l'U.: Il( \\l't..'~ ...
. . uppur t fo1 th l' huw.. IIJ~ lll.tl
Ihe· 111\lholu~\ of 11 h.lllhesc
A-. tlltiii!.~. H!L' Lil'f .urlt r.tll'' k\•1 Is fl.lltlllli,lfl) IIIIJlllll.tlll "'"''"''" ''' :rie · s,ud Bert
IM\t' 1\0,IIL&lt;LIItl' ... L' l0111p.t111L'\
' " Il l'""'~ tluougl1 lhc lUI - f:l ) .. tnrndependenl h.mkrng
lth m~m y li n.utu.d rn..,lttu - Il' lltiHHISIIH! ltlllt.' lllllll
11 lw 11111s l11s
tron ..; - hot\c..: ht t.' ll pl.t!!ltt. d h \
In ,oddtlll ;ll , Ihe Fed s,nd 11 Ill\ n I 11m 111 Akx.mJn.o, V,1
m .t,.., th ' h'-.'L' But I dntth.
~ I.IIW c·d lill' l l'dcr ,ol Rl'Sl'l \1'
· ~1d1cn Ihe (oS [ s get IIllO
,IJtd ltt.•dtftl .Il L' IL'ljlllll'd hy
ll.nrk ' '' N1 11 Yo1k .ltllhllllll l!nuhlc 1\w ~·ncrnmcnl
thl!ll gu\ cmmcrH tcg ul.Hor h •
lo lend lo the l\\l&gt; comp.i- """ '" 1hc11 rc ;llll' "
IMvc ,, lnhutc..:hd tusluon , llll's ' ,(wu\d such kudmg
I I} .o11d 'olhct b,mkmg
v.hrch lr.os hce11 dwmdlm~ .os p1ove nelc ss,u; .. The Fed cxpcrls '"Y th.tl W,rshmgton
the losses ptk' up
s,ud lhrs shottkl help 1\w pulrtlu.m s spent ve.rrs lookS1n~..:c tiH.~""-l' t.omp.llltC '
wmp.llltes' .ohthlv In · Jlll&gt;- Ill )! the othe1 w,t) wll~n
lund lllllll' th.m IW1Hhuds molc the - .t\ ,ul .tbilllv ol f .tnnrc M&lt;~e .md FredLhe
ul the home mortg.t~gl'-. hnllll' llHHt g .J g L u edtt- du1
M.11 IWte .tdlilll)! 11sk lo
rssucd 111 thrs t ountt y ,,, tht.• Ill !! ,J Jll'IIOd of "illl' SS Ill 1hc11 husrnc"t"
htoddcr 1~·11dtll!.! m.u\ct "·" fllt.tlllf,ol 111.11 kcls"
Both wm(l.llltt's were ered11td up . 11t:·u l OII. tJ" c'
Btl! thn-.t.• .llllHHIIll l'lllcnh .rkd hy Cn11gtess wllh the
Ulii\d IIIJl\'\c i\11' h !H I SI II ~ lll'tl' ''""1 un dct .ul Willie llllcnlron of hu vllt[! 111011ll hll h·t ,trtd d t.\ 11 .1 ' l'IIOLi s
1\ttil '~'n "·''" th.1t tl'Jills ~md ~ .rgcs 111&gt;111 to,mks .md o1he1
him' Ill !Itt• ,o\rc,od v b.tliL'Il'd llllld!IIOIIs Will 'pooiCLI th&lt;; "'' ~ "' ·''"'' .md then olk11ug
l'l0110ill V
rop.etftl'l tftl') '·"l'·'Y'' 11 c h.tll' tot,okt· Ins .1 ~u.u dlltt:c on homeowner 111 tiM I
lnghu rnl l.tttnll

- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Correction Policy

I

Thursday, July 17, '2oo8

The Daily Sentinel

Reader Services

-'

For Interview call Pastor James Acree Sr.
at 740-992-6768 or 740-992-7440
And leave your name and number and
he Will return your call
Dead line lor interviews 1s Saturday, July 19th
Schooltng starts on Monday, July 21st at
Hillside Bapttst Church

-

•

Submitted photo

There w111 be actron on the pull track at 6 p m. Saturday as ant1que tractors compete for
trophies The Big Bend Farm Antiques Club has been holding tractors pulls at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds smce 11 was organized rn 1990 •
public address system wh1ch
makes 11 pretty self-sufftcrent He sa1d the pull tees
have remamed the same for
years, and praised local bu sinesses for generous donalion s
Besides the regular pulls,
the Club has partiCipated m

shows, parades and games,
was mstrumental in startmg
and a part of the Town and
Country -Expo held several
years ago, and makes donations to the pedal tractor
g1ve-away at the fair
''The charter of the group
requrres members to edu-

cafe and entertam about
antique equipment, tarrmng
and old-lime country ways,"
said Weber, notmg that the
37 patd members always
welcome new members
"So bnng out that dusty old
tractor and come have fun
with us," he concluded
•'

IPEEIJWAY
STEWART, OH

C.."'•lulr IB, .,_.

.,.,. , _ t• rn•t $200 to Start
. . . ,. , I

, _, , , ,

$175 lo Start

•AMIA-•Pwt s...u •FIID4-Cylindotl•llnl4t'odgo•

.,.11

Twv Gl• C.rd dti,.,ngs for tile fa...

l!ldg ""',., ,,.,

July 25 Re.ular Racing (6 Classes)
Harvest 50 Dates Coming 5oonl

Locllted ~n AU..na r. Coolville
&lt;1 1 mil" out Co. Rd. 53 on SR 50
For Further lnformaUon C•ll
30&lt;1-539-4410 or Racedey 740-862-&lt;1111
Vltll www.tkytlntiDtldw•v,ntt

tor mort Info -

�•

PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

ALL BUSINESS: Ta:xpayers on
BY RACHEL BECK
AP BIJS INESS WRI TER

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Nf·W) URK - We ~ n c· 11
II could h.tp(ll'll LI ln
lftou ~ h lhl'l S.lld II IIIHiid 11 I .... rill' . ~~l\ L llllllL'Ill
, ..,

Oh1o Valley Publishing Co.

ll \ 111 _;! Pl ll llh lll t.'\ .t g.1111 IP
h.lUI pll\ . ti L' LP ill p \lll t. "

Dan Goodrich
Publisher

lliiHiqU , li( L' I '\ Oil(

-

1\IIS IIIII\

lll O I! g_ ,t f_ l'

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Ed1tor

uf

t h L f il L'

II!&gt;Ubkd

II '

f . Ul! li L'

t!ld llh

M.tc und I rcddt c' M.ll
II ' " pl.m 11 11h holes 111 11
It " .1 pl.111 tlut u Hll l'.., lnp

0 11

11 lll h.tc ~ $'i \ 11 !I hun of

nu•1 t!.! .l l!L' d~...· br

•\ i'.11furl

nl e llht: 1 Llllllp,t .olsn o,ollk ~ lnbal

"' llt&gt;ttld
tln.nlu.t I lll .t l "-t...·h ht.~L .lltse
lftCII sh,lf CS ,lfl&lt;f Lkhl ,fie
11 tckl)
hl'id h) pen" " "
lut llh 11111111.11 lund s ,lfld
ll ll l'••l

1111pm t.t nll\.

f oll.. t g tl

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, All th.ol SPUIIds It~~ .t d
\tt lllllg_ dl ~ llll lL' Ilt

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c' llll lll lll .t\l lllll hut 11 ' "" plrll t.' thl' ' ""' LlL' \ " liiiOLIIH.f1 11 ~

Suntl. t\ \

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l.tl l'

ur c111 s bv lhc Ll S lt i'.NIII
,Jf',,tpf,lfllh.tl Sfllllll sU\,Ill'S lkp.11111icnl .md lhe Feder.ol
tllo\ll' k. td111 !2. those -;, HilL
f&lt; L' "t...'l \l'
Congress slrall make 110 /all' rt•spt•ctiiiJ! '"'
po~ul y ltl.l tld!.!L'd t.P mp. llth.'..,
l r l'.I,LII \ Sl't. l L't ~ u ' llt:11r'
establislrme11t of re/igio11, or prolrilliti11g t/11·
Yet A mt.lt t. . ttl t,n: p .t\ lt ..,
P.tuhnll s,ud 1he Trc.tsllll' ,,
free e.-.:ercise tltere~f; 11r abritf.l!ill.l! tltc f'rwfmu of .Ill' on the hnnk h,r .t tl ll' ' ' "dur ~ L'\ (ll'dllcd .nnlootlll
lil, tl ll)llld Ulldt: tllUIH.: Ull ll t
ll ~ llll Cou g iL'"" to c :-.. p.utd rh
speeclr, or of tire prt'.ls; tiY tire r(~tltt t!ftlte pt'll~ tkn
u: 111 our l1n.m ~.. r . tl .,, ,
l lllrl'lll illlc of c· rcdtl 10 the

pie praCt'abl}' to assemble, a11d 111 t'ctititlll t/11·
Gtll!errunmt jor a redress l!f'grit'"'"'et's.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Toduy" rhutsd&lt;Oy. July 17.1he \99th d.oy of 200H There
are 167 d,oys lell1n the ye.u
Today s Htghltghl 111 Hrstnry On July 17 11)% I \\'A
Arghl ~00 ,, Pat rs-bound Bocmg 747. exploded ,md u .oshed
off Long lsl.md, N Y, shortly .tlleo \c,ovmg John F Kcnrtcdv
Inlcrn&lt;Olton&lt;Ol A1rpmt. ktlltng .oil 110 people .rho.11 d
On lhts d.tle In I ~ 2 1. Sp.uncedcd Hondu to tlw l lnJicd
Stales
In 1841. the Bntrsh humo1 m.og.ozrne Punch w.os lu sl
published
In \918. Russra's Cz.tr Nllhol.JS II .md Ills t.omtly wcoc
executed by the Bolshevrks
In 1918. aVJ.ttor Dougl.ts Cm11g.m look nil from New
York, s.tymg he w,os hc.tded 1&lt;11 C.thloJ n1.1 he ended up 111
Ireland, supposedly by .ocudenl, e.ornmg the lll(kn.nnc
"Wrong Way Corngan "
In 1948, Southern Democi.ots opposed to 1\w oHlllllll.ttum
of PreSident Trum.m mel 111 Bllllllllgll.tlll AI,, tn ,. 11doo"
South Carulin.t Gov Strom Thu1mnnd
In 19~5, Dtsneyl.md opened lolhe publtc 111 An,ohl'IIIL C.i\rl
, In 196H, a coup 111lraq returned Ihe B.t.tth P,uty to 1""\ er .
f1ve years .titer 11 w.ts ousted
In 1975, an Apollo sp.tceshrp docked wllh ,, Snyuz sp.tcccran m orbll 111 the first superpower ltnkup of ols kmd
In 1981. Il-l people were kollcd when .1 po111 of w,o\kw.Jys
above the lohby ol the K.ms.rs City Hy.ott Regency Hotel
collapsed dunng ,, "lea dance "
One ye.tr .tgo Sen.rte DemocHtls t.oUtrched o111 &lt;111 -nrght
deb.ote on the lr.tq 11ar VA Secret.try Jun Nrcholson ,ohlllptly resigned mthe w.oke olch.orges of shoddy hc.rllh c.uc• lot
veterans lllfUred 111 the lr.oq w.1r A Bro~ztlt .lll pu sscngct (l'l
cr.tshed m S.oo P.tulo. BI.IZII. ktlltng ,i\1 I X7 people .tbll.rttl
ani:l 12 on the ground Atl.mla Falwns quart~! h.ll k Mll·h.td
V1ck was mdtcled by a leder.tl gr.md 1ury 111 Rllhmurlll V.o,
on charges related to compel Itt vc dogfighting t Yllk \,olet
adn1111ed bankrolling the doghghtmg operauon and hclpmg
to ktll srx to eoghl dogs. he was sentenced to 23 months m
pnson) The Dow Jones rndus111.tl .rver.ogc crossed 14.000
for the fust ttmc before endmg the J.oy .tl 13,91 g 22
Today's Birthdays TV personalit~ Art L1nkleucr " l)6
Comedian Phyllis Drller rs 91 The former preSillent of the
lnternaiJonal Olymprc Commtllec. Juan Antonro
Samaranch, IS H8 J.ozz srnger J11nmy Scott IS H3 Aclot
Donald Sutherland Is 73 Actress-smger Dt.oh.tnn C.rllu\1 "
73. Rock musrcran Spencer Davrs ts 66 Rock nlllstcr.on
Terry "Gee}:er" Butler (Black S.rbb.tlh) is SLJ Auress Luue
Arnaz IS 57 Acto1 D.ovrd H.tssclholl Js 56 IL'lc1 IS tun pwduccr M,uk Buonell (' SutVI\lll ·"The Apptl'ltltcc·) IS &lt;IX
Actress N.om:y G1\es ts 4H Srngcr Rcgrn.o Belle ts -1 'i Rud
mustcJ,Ifl Lou B.orlow rs 42 Hop-hop smgcr Guru (&lt;l.mg
Starr) IS 42 Colllemporary Chnsl!,ul srngcr Sus.on Ashton
IS 41 Actress Brlly Schram IS 40. Actor J.tsnn Cl.nkc '' l&lt;J
Smger JC (PM D.rwn) " 37 Rappel Sole' IS 15 Country
singer Luke Bryan IS 32 Actor Enc Wmler is 12
Thnughr for Tod.oy "Life h,JS taught me tho~t 11 1s not tor
our faults that we .tic disliked .md even h.tted, but lor our
qu.11ities" - Bernard Berenson, LHhu.mJ.m-Amcnc.m .ut
cntlc and .1uthor (I H6'i - 19'iLJ)

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
l.ette11 to tlw t•dt/(1/ an' 11 elmme l11n '"""'" lw /r •11
than 300 Hot&lt;/\ All /etten w e '"''J&lt;'lllo e&lt;htm~ mull !Jt
sigfled, ami mdude add1 e11 am/ telephml&lt;' IIU/1/hel No
llriSlgned /erren &gt;it// he tmbll\lwd Letten 1ilou/d h1' m
guud taHe, addn•\\1111/. 1\\UI' \, 1101 pet Wllahttr'' Lt•l/t'l 1 of
rhaflic.l to orgwu ~atwm and mdll'ldua/s lVIII 1101 h1• a(( epted for publtctlltml

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.

Publrshed every afternoon Monday
through Fri day 111 Court Stre et
.be accurate It you know of an error Pomeroy Ohio
Second·clas5
!n a story, call the newsroom at {740) posiEige pard at Pomeroy
992-2156
Member. The Associated Press and
the Ohio Newspape r Assooatron
Po1tm11ter S4J! nd address corr ec
Our main number Ia
lmns to The Darty Sentmel 111 Court
(740) 992-2156.
Stroot Pomeroy Ohio 45769

Our mam concern m all stones rs to

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EdHor· Charlene Hoell1ch Ext 12

One year

Reporter· Bnan Reed E•l 14

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'1 o 27
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so·
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SlbscriJem should rem~ •n advance
direct to the Dally Sentinel No sub
scrlpt•on by man perm1tted m areas

Outolde !!alto Cave Harris Exl 15
Oul1olde !laloa· Brenda Dev1s E" 16 where home carrter service
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able

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Charlene Hoelllch Exl 12
E ~ mall

-:

news 0 myda1lysentlnel coru

www mydallysenllnel com

IS avatl·

Mill Subacriptlon
lnalde Melga County
13 Weaks
'32 26
26 Weeks
'64 20
52 Weeks
127 11
Oulalde Meigs County
13 Weaks
' 53 55
26 Weeks
' 107 tO
52 Weeks
'214 21

\1..111

dLjliL "

Olll

Llii !L ilt\

t ill' \.tlt1 1: til
.tlld ktd lt l

I \\ U

" om~

U liHp .!lll l '

.111d

hll\

.
hook ~for

· Thursday, July 17,

'"''d tor 11 -

we don 1 know
ill\' SI/C OflhC111crc&gt;,"eJ lrCU
11 l111c '" 11!1.11 c·ould potentr.tlh 111ggl'r the l'qtuty pur d r.L' " ,Ifill ,II wh,ll pnu:.
Th.tl the goll'IIHHenl "
C\ Cil J111&gt;lll1 Sing , f h.IIIOUIIO
sh,uch uldc" slwuld r.11 se
"""c puhltc ue II dfcCirvely 111\',111' 1,1\p,I)'CI unll,us
11 1II he usc·d lo help
111\c'Sit&gt;ts 11\10 shouldn 't be

\\, 1)

ti1L' "''-' ullllll.llllt:s ,tre

' '' u ~. : tu1 ~ d .1s g.O\ CII1tnent' i'"""" ' d L'lllctpi!Ses lh ,ol
.li e llllltcd hv pubhc sh.ucih&gt; ldc·"
CIS\' s cx phutlv sl,ole thai
1111.: 11

SL'l lllttll.:s • .tre

"not

lll l'...

slt.u r.::" ol till' u 1111p. t
11 lll ' Llh:J •

Lll "'""'"''

'

• 91, of Pomeroy
POMEROY - Charles E 'Chock" Sayre.
passed away on Monday, Jul) 14, 2008 111 Memnlsl~nd, Fla
He was born March 21 , 1917 111 Pomeroy, son of the late
Charles and Bertha Sayre of Pomeroy Charles was a 1937
graduate ot Pomeroy Hrgh School, Member of the
Pomeroy Umted Method1 sl Church, he served wnh the Sea
[jee's in World War II. member ol the Pomeroy Amenca'n
Leg1on and a retired member of the Pomeroy Carpenters
Local 650 Charles and hi s w1fe had recently moved to
Memu. Island. Fla
Hers survived by hrs'w1fe ol 67 years, Clara (Erchu\ger)
Sayre, sons, Donald and Sandra Sayre , William "Btll"
Sayre, grandchildren, Trac1 Sayre, Terry Sayre, Tamm1
Stover, Jeff Sayre, Jessica Sayre, and Jaclyn Rocct , \0
great-grandchildren and two great-great grandchildren; SISters, Mary Rogers and Jean Serwe
He was preceded 111 death by h1s parents, son; Charles
"fntz" Sayre, brother. Robert Sayre
Seiv1ces Will be held on Saturday, July 19, 2008 at I p m
at the Anderson McDamel Funeral Home 111 Pomeroy Bunal
Will follow al the Rocksprings Cemetery VJsitaltOII wrll be
held from 6-8 p.m on Fnday, July 18, 2008 _at the funeral
home M1htary gravesrde services wrll be conducted
Online regr stry IS avarlable at w_ww andersonmcdamel com ·

sl,IIIUIIIg
But lhcse wmpames have
\cercu aii,IY from then
charleJed I111S'IOn .mu ptled
•m .tddtlion.ol nsk hy issunog
V,H'IOIIS loom &lt; of corporate
debt. now \ ,o\ued .tl .uouncl
$1 5tnllton
Joshuu R(•sn~:r. !lldlhl~lllg.

drrcc:lor of rcse.udl ltrm
Graho~m Fr shcr &amp; Co, s,ud
they mue.mngly used 1he1r
pqrllohos to specul,llc on
su&lt;.:h thmgs u:-; ,un.:r,alt leas1ng. m.uwf cu.:turet1 houstng.
onlcrcst-only morlgo~gcs and
othco sCLUIIItes
Lillie w.ts done to curb
tht&gt;Se llllestmcnts, even alter
,,L Ct )Uiltlng scandals ellrlicl
tlu s dcc:adc revealed weakness mlhcu mternal controls
Rosner s,ud much of th,ol h.od
to do IHth lheor powcrlu\\obbymg effort 111 W.tshinglon,
wh1c:h wooed pohllcian i('
from both p.u11es and usedthem to stymie the work ol
tis regulator, the Otlice ol
Fedet,d Housmg Enlcrpnse
Owrsrghr. '" OFHEO.
"No one 111 Washmgton h.os
w,mtcd to itx&gt;k .11 the underlymg rc.thly of both these
wmr,ulles:· Rosner satd
Sllll. both Fannre Mae
CEO D.mrel Mudd and
Freddre Mac CEO Richard
Syron remam on the JOb whrle taxp.oyers gel to p1ck
up the tab lor thiS mess in
more ways lh,m one
The Ame11c.m hnancwl
system loses credJhihty
wllh events like thos. Thut
could erode foreign investmenl. which then hullS the
doll ,tr .md boosts rn!l.tiiOII
It's h.trd 10 see much good.

Local Briefs
Cheerleader sign ups
RACINE - An y mcommg nrnth graders mterested m
hrgh school theerleadmg thrs se.1son al Southern, contact'
Cmtly Gmther at 84'!-\190

TB clinic visit
POMEROY - The Mergs TB Clime wt\1 be at Peoples
Bank m Pomeroy Irom I0 30 a m - 12 30 p m tod,ly St,tff
will return to the bank With test results at II a.m on July 21

Road closing
RUTLAND - County Road 8, Malloons Run Road. wrll
be closed for approxom.otely srx weeks beginnmg July 21 ,
for a bndge replacement proJeCt

Thursday ... Patch) dense
fog m the mornmg. Sunny
Htghs 111 the lowe1 90s
Light and vanabl e wmds
Thursday night... Mostly
clear Lows in the lower
60s
Northeast
wmd s
around 5 mph Becommg
east after m1dmght
Friday... Sunny . Hot w1th
htghs 111 the lower 90s
SouJh wmds around 5 mph.
Friday
night ... Partly
cloudy Lows 111 the mtd
60s. East wmds around 5
mph
Saturday
through

I REAli Z £ THAT
MANY FEEL OUR OBAmA

CoVERs OFFENSWE &amp;. TASTElESS. IT's GDTTA LOT OF
ATTENTioN AND NO, WEi
WON'T CoNS IDER PUfTJN6
YOU ON NEXT

WEEK's COVER .

Sunday
night ... Mostly
cloudy H1ghs 111 the upper
80s Lows 111 the rmd 60s
Monday and Monday
night ... Mostly cloudy A
chance of shov.ers and
thunderstorms. Highs m the
upper 80s Lows m the m1d
60s Chance of ram 40 percent
Tuesday
through
Wednesday .. , M os tl y
cloudy wrth a ch,mce of
showers and thunderstorms.
Hrghs 111 the upper 80s.
Lows in the lower 60s.
Chance of ram 30 percent

---------

.

-~- -----'---~-....:..:.__

___JL..__

AEP (NYSE)- 38.91
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 84.30
Aehland Inc. (NVSE) - 38.55
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Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-81
Champion (NASDAQ) - 4.50
Charming Shope (NASDAQ) -

Religious squabbles generate 1nuch heat, little light _
People .tel oddly d111111g

lrmc~ nl polttr~.tluncell.tlll-

ty ben so. I vc been surpn,ed \,otdy to ltnd mysc\1
.rgrcerng wrt\1 the per emu.ol ly .ogg11evcd WJI!t.m1 A
Dorwhuc Fm Ihe unuuu.ned DotH&gt;huc ser ve·, '" pll stdcnt , t I U .md Lilli I contt.nvcoq ,fl rs l
ol..
lite
( ,ltltultc Le.tgue. ·• l.tymen ' "' !!·""'·1111&gt;11 de voted
In lhc duhrou' pocnHsc 111.11
11 '·"
"!!·"'"1 Rom.on
C.olhohc s " "mtllc vrrulcnl
,md mmc pcrv.tsrvc lh.m
ever before Ill Amcm;.on

htsto~y

He ' :tlw.tys nntelcvts!LHI,
.md he' .tlmnsl a\w;oys lun 011 '

Actuall y. overt teh ~ '"'"

ht •l.!olt)' IMs ht· utm(.~ so 1\11..:

he .limos! 'i"·unl 111
Ametll .tll Ir k 1 h.ll s 1101 In
s.ry lhe C.llhnh l· I e.ogul· 's
bJalld of pic -V.lltc.oll II
mor,o\ and theologrc,ol conscrvmrsm " rc gn.mt everywhere - p.ulrcul:ul) not
.unong C.tthohcs, Even so.
Donohue's recently IMd ·'
couple of re.ll humdmgers
In w.tx .opoplcc ll c .ohout
f'll st cam e S.tll y 01111111.
Ihe l.unou s lieut ~clown
hoslc ss .IIlLI fotlllllt ll'~ "lltl1&gt;r
'
nl Ihe W,~SIIIII g l t lll PostN c wswc·c ~ Web sue " On
l·,uth ' Qutnt!'s m.lln .tcl' In
legcnd.u y P'"' echtoo ' Ben
Bradlcc - the story uf thcrr
.tuultcmus LOurtsh1p " n;orr.tLcd Ill his book ''A Good
Life" - h.1s m.ode her u
W:tshtngtun socr.ol urbllcr
Aitendmg T11n Ru.'Scll 's
funenrl Mass . Qumn dcc1ded to reccrve communron ,
tl1 cn wrot e .t bout II
" Odd\ \ ' sill' I&lt;ptHicd, 'I
h.od ·' sl rghll y tl.ll"''•lled
sen s,oiiOII .t !J•'' t I '"''k 11
kr1owm g lh,otul some WH y 11
rcprcsenlcd Ihc hody .md
blood of Jesus ChnsL L.tst
·" tn

G
ene
Lyons

Wedllc, d,o) I was clctcJ mtned In t.oke tl lor Tim
tr.tnsttbst,mlratJon nntwnhst.mdmg I'm so gl.td 1 drd ·
H.ts "On Faith" 110 .odult
edrtors to mform Qumnth ,u
C.uholic communmn tsll 'l
1m spmluul tounsts' l'nt
once, Donohue got 1t 11 ght
"Just rc.tdln~ wh.ol S.dl y
Qtunn s,ud 1, enough to
[!tvc anv C' h11 stran. cspe t 1tcs, mute 1\1.1n
"·' II v c'.1110
1
'
1
1
a ·, 1g 11 y nause.urn g sens.t trnn '
Moreover, Qumn 's
statement not only reeks of
narcrssosm. 11 sltows ,1 prolound
drsr espect
too
C.ttholres .md the ~chefs
they hold dear"
Elsewhere , a hubbub
hrnke out al the Untverslly
of Ccnlr .ol f'lmtda UI'CI ,,
student who ,1bsconded
from M.1~s wllh .o cnn,ecr,lfed communlllll walc1. cllher
to cxhrbuu to hrs roommate
or protest stuclentlunds supportin g rclr grous org,um,rIIOIIS 011 ( ,ompus The young
man gave confhcllng expluna110ns to 1eporters Church
otfici.tls called hrs actiOns
d1 srupuve .md disrespectful
He, 111 turn. l:Qmplmned thm
a woman .mempted to wrestic the purlomed Eud~.~r1st
I rom h1s hand, .md dcm:ort·'- u
eel .o mcelllt[! wllh the htshOfli Cg.rrcllllg d nuch polll·y
on phys ll ,ill or~c
·rll·'•
I"'''
''
"ltc&gt;
'
'"
'
s • ~ t· ·
appeared 111 f.,c ,tl new '
accoums, ulong Wllh overheated rhelori c aho11t " hate

UllllCS ' Cer'l,unly "s.tcnle-ge, llt•uld .opply A week
\,oter .Iller ,r\lcgedly recc1vrn g um:onl1rmed death
lhtc.rts, lite 'tuuctlllelurned
lite co11sec t.tll'd w,ofer to
chlll ch t&gt;lftu.rls Ill ,, Z1ploc
h.o g beryhody rnvolvcd
Jllllllllscd In pr.ty fm eve1y hody l'l se
Tltc•rc lhts sonuwltrl hllle
LilLI' oug\11 to h.rye ended
Al .ts , the
conllovcrsy
l\ tuglu the eye of l'Z
Mvcrs , ,, UniVCISIIY of
Mfnnesol,t bmlogy pratessor well known as the pwp11ctn1 of " Pharyngula," ''
\vch slle m.11nly devoted to
e ~ pl ,umng and defend1ng
~ voluttotMry theory ag:nnst
ere.ttiOJllsl nonsense Al.os,
M ycrs d Iso t u1ns out to h c ,,
tlltitl ·"11 ,,tl1c"1 Inf urw ted
hY 11 cws .tccount s of 11e
1
Ho11d.t dd&gt;.tclc, he posted
.111 css.ty trtled "It 's a
Fr.tckm ' Cr.ocker"
Dc11nuncmg
"crazy
l'hllstr.m l.mo~t!ls" lilted
~ tth "D.trk ,;\gc superstJIIon
and malice lhreatemng to
krll .1 young man over a
"u,OLkct "MycJs asked readcrs lo suite me some wnseCf ,tled wmmumon IV .tiers "
'' \ II show you saen 1ege,
gl.tdl y.•md wrth much fanl.u e: · he vowed 'I won't be
tempted to hold (I he
Euch.mstl hostage , but
wrllm ste.td trealtl wllh profound
disrespect
.md
hemous cracker abuse, .til
photogr.tphed and presented
here on the Web"
111 short, the learned
Myers 111.1dc Qurnn luuk
lrkc •, s"holrr
&lt;&gt;I ,-,
,•
•
• 111IJMntti W rc lt gw •o, .md lite youn g
huJ\ 111 llo11d.t ,, thrlnmat
li e fl' " l'"'cd 111 dcl cnd rc,t"111dilL tl '" '" tell II 1ll' wor 1dvrcw hy llle,lfl' ,"1 :' fliVCnllc
l' "hlr ctl y ' lu111 rtm , 111 turn ,
J, IJicJ
lit e
C.uholrc

Lc.oguc's Donohue mto the
fi,Jy, no doubt prccosely aS
the professor unended
Donohue Issued a compar,IIIvely restrained sl.ttement c11lng the Umversity of Mmnesot.r's own "Code ·
ot Conduct" calhng upon
f,tcully and stall to he
"respectful. f.u1 and c 1v11''
111 their cleahngs wrlh nthers He .tsked lhe sdJOolto
ICillovc
.t
hnk
to
"l'h,oryngul&lt;i" from the um- ·
versuy Web Site and urgedCatholic League supporters
lo send e-ma1ls and len~rs
of protest lo Its president
Myers, a tenured assoc 1ale prolessor, said he'd
received several death
IIHe,us along with letters
I
IliS f mng.
·
lIem,mung
He
h
d
h
C
1
c aracten7e 1 e a11o1rc
Le.tguc •s cllorts as an
" tnqubJIJon" Well , boohoo-hoo Liberal Web sites
sprung reflexively Into.
action, generaung leiters in
Myers' delense. A typical
one called the prolessor a
"thoughtlul human being
under attack by a horde of
hypocntical, .mtr-intellectual lrt&gt;glodytc s tor merely
pomllll&lt;' out the ,obsurdlly of
"' ul supetslltlous
:o group
mrsuc.mts"
Hey, doe s th,rt guy know
some btg wurds 01 wh.u 1
Look , as 1 lmd 1r nccessary to remmd somebody
about once a month, threutcning people you don't like.'
IS a felony Poullmg out that
Myers IS actmg hke an adolescent Jerk, however, is not.
(Arkanm 1
DemocratGa ~ etr e r o1wmr11t Ge11e

Lvrm 1 11 a Natiollal
Ma gam re Award IVItlner
(/1/d 1 0 author oJ "The '
lfuntm ~ of tire P1evrdent"
(St Mwtm 'v Press, 2000).,.
y0 11 wn e-mml Lyons at
!&lt;CII elwmv2@sbcglobal net).

4,80
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General Electric (NVSE) 27.68
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 36.18
JP Morgan (NVSE) - 35.94
Kroger (NVSE)- 28.98
L,lmlted Brands (NVSE)15.81
Norfolk Southern (NVSE) -

63.72
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·
DAQ)-25.10
BBT (NYSE)- 24.50
Peoplea (NASDAQI-19.62
Pepalco (NVSE) - 88.09
Premier (NASDAQ)- 8.70
Rockwell (NYSI!)- 42.73
Rocky Boola (NASDAQ) •
3.80
Royal Dutch Shell - 72.88
Seara Holding (NASDAQ)74.98
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Wendy's (NVSE) - 24.29
Wea8anco (NVSE)- 17.28
Worthington (NVSE)- 17.59
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions lor July 18, 2008,
provoded by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac Mills
in Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441
and Lesley Marrero In Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC,

Ohio's higher education goals

COLUMBUS - OhiO IS
Here Is a look at some ot Ohio's higher education
embarkmg on an aggresstve
goals:
I0-year plan 10 mcrease
• Increase enrollment from 472,700 to 702,700 by
slate spendmg on hrgher
201'7
educatron, cut tUition costs
• Reach the nat1onal average 1n state spend1ng per
and mcrease enrollment at
student
pubhc colleges. somelhmg
• Make turtrori among lowest In nat1on
that has natrona! experts
' Regents, Strategic
SOURCE: Ohio Board of
both skcpucal and excited
Plan
lor
Higher
Education
2008-201•
"No state has put 11 all
together. so 11 will be mterestmg to see what Oh10 can an even greater stale comTo g1ve Ohoo a chance of
do," satd Jom Fmney, v1ce mr tment between now and success in reaching Its
president of the NatiOnal 2017.
goals, Democratic Gov Ted
Center for Public Polrcy and
"There are sort of com- Strickland and state lawHigher Educauon 111 San petmg goals here," said makers Will have to consisJose , C.olil
Tom Parker, mtenm presr- tently bump up taxpayer
The plan, announced at dent of the Institute f-or funding amrd competmg
the end of March by Oh1o Higher Educallon Po hey m pnonues such as Med1card,
Board
ol
Regents Washmgton He added that K-12 educatron, tax cuts
Chancellor Eric Fmgerhut , mcreasmg enrollment mall and infrastructure
seeks to mcrcase enrollment stales
IS
1mperallve
They began 111 2007 wtth
from 4 72,700 to 702.700 by ( because of the demands of a two-year tmuon freeze ,
2017 in the Umversity a more competJUvc global coupled with an addl110nal
System ol Oh10, wh1ch con- economy
$254 million m state spendsrsts of 13 public umvers11y
The current average mg for higher education
campuses, one medrcal col- IUltlOn and fee COSI per xear The state ts also lookmg to
lege, 24 regwnal branch to attend one of Oh1o's the colleges and umversr11es
campuses and 23 commum- mam umverslly campuses to use thetr dollars more
ty colleges
rs $8.520 In 2006, the aver- efficiently
II also 'ails for state age tuition m OhiO had
"Th1s has to be committed
spendrng per student to grown to be 50 percent to over a senes of budgets."
reach the national average more expensrve than the sa1d Republican House
by 2017 In 2006 Ohw · nallonal --average · The I 0- Speaker Jon Husted, who
ranked 39th in tbe nauon year-plan calls for 11 to be believes there w1ll be senwith stale spendmg per stu- among the lowest m the ous drscuss1on next year
dent about $3.800, wh1le nail on by 2017.
about exlendm~ the tmtron
the nauonal average was
Parually because slate freeze If Oh1o IS successful
about $4,900.
spendmg has been low and m consistently rrusmg state
For Ohro to reach thai tmUon h1gh, the slate IS m support. 1t would be gomg
natiOnal average at current the bottom Iter m the per- agamst a natrona! trend of
enrollment levels, 11 would centage ot restdents who what Parker calls pnvauzhave to spend about $420 have a bachelor's degree mg pubhc educatiOn million more To mamtam About a quarter of Ohio res- placmg more of a burden on
the nallonal a vcrage whtle idents held a bachelor's students to pay for thetr
also boostmg enrollment by degree m 2006, wh1ch schooling
nearly one-half will require ranked 37th m the nauon
Oh10 had been a symbol

Signed askmg the vrllage to
make road repairs on
Rutland and Martm Streets
and Lt berty Lane
Council approved the h1re
of two part-time pohce officers, David Wayne Wollard

and John Kulchar Tim
Sands, formerly a part time
pollee drspatcher was
bumped to full trme status
AI so discussed was a pollee
crmser wh1ch had been
wrecked when an ofhcer
was transporting a pnsoner.
Apparently a deer had
caused the accident.
The village' s budget tor
fiscal year 2009 was

lot was approved tor the
Mergs County Council on
Agrng's Bass Tournament
on Oct 5.
The Mayor's Report tor
June reported total fmes _
and lorlellures 111 the
amount ot $11 ,965, the
parktng meters look m
$2.056 53, trckels and permits took m $664 lor a total
of $2,724 43
kmdergarten arde posuron
for tpe 200~-0\l year. Jody
Noms ws tr.mslerred to the
third grade te.ochmg poSIlton pendmg findrn g a qualriled repl.tcement 111 accordance wrlh the Southern
Local
Educatron
AssocJallon agreement
The meeung adjourned
Into execuuve scss1on once
to dtscuss the purchase of
properly for purposes or the
sale of property at competitive b1ddmg.

spent $2,500 more m fuel for moved and have not been
the ftrst half of 2008 than 11 re-installed. Gerlach sa1d
d1d for the ftrsl half of last that was expected to be
year. Between January and completed sometime this
fromPageAl
June, 2007, the vtllage spent week.
In the meanllme, the VIl"Please turn the cars off $13,881 84 Between January
when s1ttmg at idle, if possi- and June, 2008, the bill was lage is paymg retail pnce
for gasoline at a Middleport
ble. Do not s1t at the offtce $16,455 79.
The
VIllage
buys
bulk
convemence store.
for extended penods of
fuel
for
all
VIllage
vehicles
Gerlach also reported that
time. Be out where the pubfrom
G&amp;M
Fuel
Co,
the
pohce department has
he can see you, but remember the h1gh cost of fuel IS a Pomeroy However, due to seen an mcrease m revenue
dram on the budget and we the demolition of the Park from fmes. The mayor's
need to try to conserve Street School earlter th1s 'report of fees and fines colmonth, the gas tanks the
when possoble "
Accordmg to F1scal Officer village uses to store its
Susan Baker, the village has bulk fuel supply were

lected 111 June was 111 excess
of $8,000 Gerlach sard that
rs a result ol mcreased
enforcement, because more
pollee officers are now on
the force
The vtllage has also been
successful m secunng payments on old fines through
the use of warrant blocks
Those
blocks pre1ent
renewal of dnver' s hcenses
and vehicle regrstrauon
until the fmes are pa1d

Wolfe
from Page AI
are currently located

m
grades K-4 where he Will
take over as pnnc1pal
Deem sard Scott's posaion
was not replaced but
"restructured" and his job
respon sJbJhtJes
were
reassessed A portion of
Scou's current admimstrauve dulles will then be

Fuel

wesl VIrginia Mining Training Program:
BOHours
Hillside Baptist Church
39728 Sr. 143
Pomeroy, Ohio 45679

from Page AI

•

approved lor a total $1 7
Clerk
million
which
Treasurer Kathy Hysell sa1d
was a "little lower" than
FY08's appropnanons
Council approved addluonal appropnanons ot
$8,000 Into the general
fund. II also transferred
$5,000 from the general to
the street fund.
The use of the parkmg

OAPSE agreement, Cmdy
g1 ven to Kent
In other news from the Gmther was hired on a
recent special board supplemental contract as
h1gh school cheerleadmg
meeting:
Jodi Cummins was hired advisor for the 2008-09
on a one year contract as season
The Board accepted the
evenmg custodran at the
elementary school wuh a res1gnat10n of Brenda
salary per ttie Ohw McGunre, second grade
AssocJallon of Public teacher, for rellrement purSchool Employees agree- poses, effective, Aug I, the
ment, Elizabeth Johnson res1gnauon of Rebecca
was hued as a computer Otto, second grade teacher,
aide at the elementary was accepted; Behnda Arms
school w11h a salary per the was transferred 10 the

Tractor
There · rs an entry lee for
those partiCipalmg II\ the
pulls who compete lor trophies m their respectrve
werght classes The members
are community mmded and
God's Net was the beneficrary of proceeds from a pUll m
May. The Me1gs County
Council on Aging's nutnuon
program, home delivered
meals, has also benefrted
from the pull proceeds
In June B1g Bend Antrque
AG Day featuring di splays
was held as an afternoon
feature wrth the regular
competrtion m the evenmg
Th1s Saturday competrllon
pullmg w1ll take pl,ace at 6
p m. at the fmrgrounds In
the event of ram 11 will be
held at 2 p m on Sunday.
The anllque tractor pull IS
always a feature of the Me1gs
County Fair and thts year
will be held at 6 p m on Aug
12 Another regular pull Is set ·
for Sept 20 followed by a
potluck wiener roast at the
track and the final one ISOct
18 at I p m. The group has 11s
own pulling sled, roller and

of the pnvauzat1 on trend
In the de,ade before the
tullron
fre eze,
tUition
mcreased by an average 9
percent a year Stale spendmg ljlgged dunng that flme
penod, rn wh1ch the economy v.as largel y stronge r
!hun rt IS now
''The
go vern or
and
General Assembly have
made 11 absolutely clear that
higher edu catron rs aud writ
remam a hrgh pnonty,"
Fmgerhul sard "We' ve al so
been clear that th.tt doesn't
mean 1t can 1ncrease m a
straight hnc every year of
course because the slate
economy will drctate the
resources .ovmlable"
Pubhc mstJtutwns rn
some st.ttes have made up
for an m'reasmg lack of
state support and mcre~sed
m-slate enrollment numbers
by placing a large1 burden
on out-of- state students
With htgher IUitiOn, Parker
satd Ohro, however, 1sn ' t
gomg this route because tt
hopes to anracl talent from
other slates Fmgerhut smd
That goal was part of the
re.oson the- state announced
l.ISl v.eek that rt was gomg
to treat allmrlitary veterans,·
no mailer where they live,
.ts "honorary Ohioans" and
enable them to pay 'm-stale
turtron But attractmg more
students places an addition,,, burden on th~ system
"Every ume you add
somethmg new lo the plate
that's JUSt g01n g to mean
you are gorng to have to
commll
more
state
resources to fund that strategy:· Husted smd

STEPHEN MAJORS

from Page AI

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ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

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The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Ohio revamping higher education plan system

Chailes E. *Chocl&lt; Sayre

gdgc-bdL:kcJ ~CLUnlrc s out -

prqkLll'd unJer the w~t y ·

c.tpll,dl sm should 11ork
Thr s ~ nwrnmc' lll rcsnre
pl .rn .!I s:, Ihtm" uHo que'ltnll the kgtllllt.ll y of the

h"""'' ,;'"'"

I

lonn payments. Cull'l!nlly, the
l'l'lllp,llltes b,lVe aiJOU( $1 5
tnllion 111 gu.u,mteeu mon -

www.ltlydailysentinel.com

2008

Obituaries

mortgage rescue~

"· " kc·d '" 1he lull lmlh .md
' rcdn of the Ll S governme111
1 hu \ l'
'-LIPIIntltll g
till'
E11111tc ~loe .md 1 -r~ddtt ' " .111) .rgc·ncy BullhcJc lms
h.ulottt ol ~o \L'tnttH2 111 ~ ~ l.il p\,1) .I C~lllrdJ llllc Ill lx:c11 .1gH&gt;II oug pcrccpunn ol
-.pun ..; mc:d
etlll't prt ' t..' s
lllll hl lli,IIH..! fllld!ICC S \'~1\.' lll
,111 uupl1u t' gm crnmcnt
f .tl1111c' M.1c .rnd l!lddr c ,llld lllll'l U; lllllllle IO th; 'U Ill ~ ""' .tniL'c' 11 lmh lei the comM,fl' po1111 lo Wil.ll II 1111fd the tr LUI It: Ill lo1m d s ..,IJ.u~o&gt; i&gt;.mtcs 1.1kc: on llltllc 11sk .md
lt.tprcll tl thl') cull .tpscd, ,, ltold L' I -O\\ ned L omp.t!li L' ' ·
chc-,tply
Sl'eii.II IP 111.11 it ,IS p.tnll ~ ~· d f'.tulsun s.ttd Sund,IV ' Theil
Tht s shmtld hlm1 .ow.oy
111\l''-(01 ... Ill l l'U.: Il( \\l't..'~ ...
. . uppur t fo1 th l' huw.. IIJ~ lll.tl
Ihe· 111\lholu~\ of 11 h.lllhesc
A-. tlltiii!.~. H!L' Lil'f .urlt r.tll'' k\•1 Is fl.lltlllli,lfl) IIIIJlllll.tlll "'"''"''" ''' :rie · s,ud Bert
IM\t' 1\0,IIL&lt;LIItl' ... L' l0111p.t111L'\
' " Il l'""'~ tluougl1 lhc lUI - f:l ) .. tnrndependenl h.mkrng
lth m~m y li n.utu.d rn..,lttu - Il' lltiHHISIIH! ltlllt.' lllllll
11 lw 11111s l11s
tron ..; - hot\c..: ht t.' ll pl.t!!ltt. d h \
In ,oddtlll ;ll , Ihe Fed s,nd 11 Ill\ n I 11m 111 Akx.mJn.o, V,1
m .t,.., th ' h'-.'L' But I dntth.
~ I.IIW c·d lill' l l'dcr ,ol Rl'Sl'l \1'
· ~1d1cn Ihe (oS [ s get IIllO
,IJtd ltt.•dtftl .Il L' IL'ljlllll'd hy
ll.nrk ' '' N1 11 Yo1k .ltllhllllll l!nuhlc 1\w ~·ncrnmcnl
thl!ll gu\ cmmcrH tcg ul.Hor h •
lo lend lo the l\\l&gt; comp.i- """ '" 1hc11 rc ;llll' "
IMvc ,, lnhutc..:hd tusluon , llll's ' ,(wu\d such kudmg
I I} .o11d 'olhct b,mkmg
v.hrch lr.os hce11 dwmdlm~ .os p1ove nelc ss,u; .. The Fed cxpcrls '"Y th.tl W,rshmgton
the losses ptk' up
s,ud lhrs shottkl help 1\w pulrtlu.m s spent ve.rrs lookS1n~..:c tiH.~""-l' t.omp.llltC '
wmp.llltes' .ohthlv In · Jlll&gt;- Ill )! the othe1 w,t) wll~n
lund lllllll' th.m IW1Hhuds molc the - .t\ ,ul .tbilllv ol f .tnnrc M&lt;~e .md FredLhe
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lnghu rnl l.tttnll

- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Correction Policy

I

Thursday, July 17, '2oo8

The Daily Sentinel

Reader Services

-'

For Interview call Pastor James Acree Sr.
at 740-992-6768 or 740-992-7440
And leave your name and number and
he Will return your call
Dead line lor interviews 1s Saturday, July 19th
Schooltng starts on Monday, July 21st at
Hillside Bapttst Church

-

•

Submitted photo

There w111 be actron on the pull track at 6 p m. Saturday as ant1que tractors compete for
trophies The Big Bend Farm Antiques Club has been holding tractors pulls at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds smce 11 was organized rn 1990 •
public address system wh1ch
makes 11 pretty self-sufftcrent He sa1d the pull tees
have remamed the same for
years, and praised local bu sinesses for generous donalion s
Besides the regular pulls,
the Club has partiCipated m

shows, parades and games,
was mstrumental in startmg
and a part of the Town and
Country -Expo held several
years ago, and makes donations to the pedal tractor
g1ve-away at the fair
''The charter of the group
requrres members to edu-

cafe and entertam about
antique equipment, tarrmng
and old-lime country ways,"
said Weber, notmg that the
37 patd members always
welcome new members
"So bnng out that dusty old
tractor and come have fun
with us," he concluded
•'

IPEEIJWAY
STEWART, OH

C.."'•lulr IB, .,_.

.,.,. , _ t• rn•t $200 to Start
. . . ,. , I

, _, , , ,

$175 lo Start

•AMIA-•Pwt s...u •FIID4-Cylindotl•llnl4t'odgo•

.,.11

Twv Gl• C.rd dti,.,ngs for tile fa...

l!ldg ""',., ,,.,

July 25 Re.ular Racing (6 Classes)
Harvest 50 Dates Coming 5oonl

Locllted ~n AU..na r. Coolville
&lt;1 1 mil" out Co. Rd. 53 on SR 50
For Further lnformaUon C•ll
30&lt;1-539-4410 or Racedey 740-862-&lt;1111
Vltll www.tkytlntiDtldw•v,ntt

tor mort Info -

�.

'

•
.,

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Oden ready to play, Page 82
Tracy leads Ohio Am,_Page B2

•

•
'

Page A6 ~ The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 17, 200~

www.mydailysentinel.com

--

Thursday, July 17, 2008
~-

SPORTS BRIEFS

Middleport Fall
Ball sign-ups
Sign-urs for Middleport
Fall Bal will be held for
boys and girls ages 6
through I5 on Friday, July
19, and Saturday, July 20,
from I p.m. until4 p.m. and
on Wednesday, July 23,
from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. afthe
Middleport ball fields.
For more information,
contact Dave at 590-0438 or
Tanya at 992"548 I.
Down East Boys

.

Gospel quartet performs
in Pomeroy tonight
POME~OY -· The ninth annual "Si nging on the River~
concert sponsored by the Suuth ~ rn 'Baptist Church of
Pomeroy will be presented at 7 p.m. today. July 17 in th~
Pomeroy Riverfront Amphitheater.
The concert will feature the n;Jtiollal recording arti sts .
Down East Boy and Mark Lanier. form~r baritone li•r Perfect
Heart and Poet Voices. A free wi ll nftcrin~ will he tak en.
The Down East Buys rcprc:sclll a rich t!·adittott that began
nearly two decades ago ;vhi k ,.",.,.' ing '"'"a kgac)' Southern
gospel whtch began nearly a cc111ury age&gt;. fhc ltrst gospel
quartet was organiz_ed in the earl\ I900s and has Cl•olved lo
encompass many varying musical groups . But kw IJ;tve stood
the test of time'to'coritinue the rich tradi tiDn began by James
D. Vaugh~n . T.h~ Down ·East Boys is one quanet which ha&amp;
stood that test of rime and continues to enjov success
·
They released their first national hit. "Beautiful Valley,'~
which peaked in the top fii•e on all the nat ional radio charts
and haven 't stopped since. They had enjoyed a string ot
popular releases over the past 18 years. includin g three Top
20 hits from their Mercy recording. The gt'oup 's brand new
recording, "The Cross Still Stot llds." has generated everi
more success for the popul:t r·qttal'let.
.
Making up the gruup w·~ Rtcky Garden, manager and
lead vocalist ; Stuart Cary, bass singer: Jason Runnels;
songwriter as well .as vocalist. ami Daryl Paschel. ,

Chautauqua sets up shop in Gallipolis City Park
· GALLIPOLIS
Wednesday night's presen- Saturday. Entertainmer!will legacies of those who helped
Audiences will encounter ter was Paxton J. Williams precede every program at shape our modem world.
history in its most c?rn- as noted African-American 6:45 p.m.: with the presenThe Bossard Memodal
pelling form through ftrst· sctenttst
George ters speakm~ at 7:30p.m.
Ltbrary wtll be hostmg
person historical portrayals Washington Carver. ..
In cas~ of mclement weath- youth. and ad~lt Workshops
as Ohio Chautauqua is
Remaining presenters are er, everung J?Crformances wtll to comctde wtth the event,
staged in the Gallipolis City George P. Dauler as st~el be at th~ Arie!Theatre. . · wuh youth program s at
Park this week.
magnate and phtlanthroptst
A mtxture of educatiOn 10:30 a.m. and adult proChautauqua, making its Andrew Carnegie, tonight; . and entertainment,. Ohio grams at 2:30p.m. each day.
second appearance in Dorothy Mains Prince as Chautauqua 2008 . focuses
All programs are free and
and · open to the public.
.
Gallipolis, orened Thesday educator and activist Mary on . "Inventors
with Michae A. Hughes as McLeod Bethune on Friday, .Innovators." In these proOhio Chautauqua 2008 is
Alexander Graham Bell, and Hank Fincken as inven- grams, scholars/presenters sponsored and presented by
inventor of the telephone. tor Thomas A. Edison on will explore · the lives and the Ohio Humanities Council.

Entertainment Briefs
· Performing Friday
HUNTINGTON,

W.Va.
Singer/s~ngwriter Bill Hawks of
Gallipolis will be performing Friday at
the Cajun Kitchen in Huntington.
He will be on from 8 p.m. until midnight. The Cajun Kitchen is moored on
the West Virginia side of the Ohio
River bank near the Proctorville/East
Huntington Bridge.
For information, call (740) 4411480.

Ice cream social

Benefit sing

. SALEM CENTER
Salem
Township Volunteer Fire Department'-s
30th annual ice cream social is
Saturday. Serving will be from 11 a.m.
to 4 p.m. The fire department is on Ohio
124 at Salem Center -in Meigs County.
The menu will consist of 12 flavors of
homemade ice cream, roast beef sandwiches, hot dogs, potato and macaroni
salad, baked beans, pies and more.
For information, call Linda
Montgomery at (740) 669-4245.

CHESHIRE- A benefit sing will be
held Saturday at 6 p.m. at the Gavin
Plant Employees' Recreation Hall for
Bonnie Phillips, who is battling cancer.
Entertainment will be furnished by
Forgiven 4, New City Singers,
Addison Quartet, Mark Coleman, Gino
Johnson, Randy Shafer and Carl Ward.
Refreshments will be served.
Donations will be accepted. Since this
is an outdoor event, those planning to
attend should bring a lawn chair.

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

.

MASON, W.Va. - Carl
Stone continues to lead the
Riverside Senior Mens Golf
League after 16 weeks of the
2008 season.
Stone has amassed a total
of 2 I1.5 points for the year
to lead Mick Winebrenner
with 200 points for the season. In third place is Paul
Somerville with 187.5
points followed by Jim
Gress (169). Bob Hill (166),

Whited (147).
Tuesday's
beautiful
weather brought another 80
players out to make 20
Name·
Pts.
12. Gary Minton
142.5
teams of four players. The
1. carl Stone
211.5
142.5
12~ Bub Stivers
.2. Mlck Winebrenner
200.0
14. Kenny Greene
139.5
total allowed 20 points for
3. Paut·somerville
187.5
15. Cecil Minton
139.0
the winners. The low score
4. Jim Gress
169.0
18. John Krawsczyn
135.0
of
60 was shot by the teams
5.BobHIII
17. Jaclc Fox
166.0
134.0
5. Curtis Grubb
18. Jerry Dean
160.5
132.5
of Jim Gress, Jerry Dean,
8. Haskel Jones
19. Bob Hysell
160.5
131 .5
Jack
Maloney and 'Don
8. Earl Johnson .
20. Donnie Fields
131.0
160.5
· 20. Ad&lt; Northup
9. Don Waldie
131 .0
150.0
Fields and Tom Nunnery,
22. Ralph Sayre
10, Ken Whne&lt;l
147.0
130.5
Phil Bunon, Bucky Dent and
23. Rusty Wood
11. 8ucky Dent
129.5 .
143.0
Bub Stivers.
Curtis Grubb (I 60.5), Johnson
( 150.5), Don
There was a four-way tie
Haske] Jones (160.5), E;trl Waldie (ISO) and Ken for third at 6 I between the

Riverside Senior Golf League
Standings'tlfter 16 w_eeks

Bill Lupkln

Bill Lupkin is Friday's
Rhythm on River guest
POMEROY - Bill Lupkin · and the Chicago Blues
Coalition will take the stage of the Pomeroy Riverfront
Amphitheater on Friday at 8 p.m. as this week's installment
of the Rhythm on the River series sponsored by the
Pomeroy Blues and Jazz Society and Coors Light.
You can expect to see ace harp player Bill Lupkin leading the Chicago Blues Coalition. through a personaL seasoned, and rousing af(irmation of th~ blues scene in
Chicago soll)e forty years ago.
Born and raised in Fort Wayne . Ind., Lupkin made his
move to Chicago at the end of the '60s when blu~;s w.as.still
mainly heard in the ghetto clubs on the south and west sides,
and most of the great names of the post-war era were active.
Lupkin wasted no time falling in with The Aces, former
backing band for Ltttle Walter and Jumor Wells. He then
began to rub shoulders with the lik~s of Jimmy Rogers,
. Howlin' Wolf, Muddy Waters, and Junior Wells.
. Lupkin did a Jot to define the place of the harmonica in
Chicago Blues. His fat-toned , vibrato-laden note bending
harmonica was finely honed through local work, touring
an&lt;! eventually recording.
·
In the Chicago blues harp club, Lupkin is said to have the
"chops, the tone, the attitude, and the dues paid in full for
real deal status."

teams of Carl Slone. Toad
Phalin. George Stewart and
Haske! Jones. the team uf
Mick Winebrenner. George
Miller. Larry Matthews and
Jack Fox. the team of
Charlie Hargrave s. Bob
Humphreys. Ed Wilson and
Don Waldie and the team of
Siebert Belcher. Jim Turley.
Earl John son and Ceci I
Minton.
The closest to the pin wi nners were Bill Yoho on the
ninth hole and John
Krawsczyn on hole No. 14.

Eagle SK Road
Race and Walk
TUPPERS PLAINS
The First Annual Eagle 5K
Road Race and Walk and I
Mile Fun Run will be held
Saturday, August 2, at the
St. Paul United Methodist
Church. The event is sponsored by the Eastern
Athletic Boosters and will
begin at 9 a.m.
The race will start and end
at the St. Paul United
Methodist Church and will
be run on the surrounding
streets and roads. The top
three overall male and
female finishers in both the
·5K road race and fun run
will receive awatds. '!:-shirts
will be given to the first I00
who register..
· Age groups will be divided into six groups: 14 years
old and under, 15-18,19-25,
26-35, 36-49, and 50 years
old and older.
Regi stratiol) will be 'held
beginning at 7:30 a.m. in
the parking Jot of the
Cheaper Place across the
road from Subway. Pre:registration fee is $12, and reg·
istration the day of the race
is $I 5. Checks should be
~de l;*lyable to lhe Eastern·
Atbiehc B09sters, and reg.
istration forms should .be
mailed to Josh Fogle, 2038
Campbe)l S!(eet, Coolville,
Ohio, 45723. ·
For questions ' or more
information; contact Josh
Fogle at 740'667-9730.

·Baseball gets it
right, and not ·
just for 1 night

·-

add him lu your pitching
staff, you're in great shape ."
Braun and the Brewers
will have to leap over wild
card-leading St. Louis ·to
reach the postseason, and
the surprising Cardinals
were 4 I/2 games back of
Central-leading Chicago.
Back again after decades
of heartache , Cubs fans are
hoping this is the year their
beloved team wins its first
World Series title since
1908. Chicago rolled to a
37-12 record at a rollicking
Wrigley Field in the first
half and acquired right-hander Rich Harden from
Oakland before the break.
"Nanies don 't win baseball .games for you, production doe s," manager Lou
Piniella ·said. "I'll tell you
this, we ' re going to have our
hands full the rest of the
summer. You look at the

The Boss appcareu to be
shedd ing a tear behind tllose
sungla sses, somethin g ·no
one ever thou ght the y
would see at Yankee
Stadium.
George
Steinbrenner getting soft in
his old age seemed almost
as alien as New York fan s
cheering for Jon at han
Papelbon to get out of a jam
in the eighth inning.
Most of them were'n't. of
course. even if il meant the
National League .getting the
home-field advantage in the
World Series. But t he way
the Yankees have been play ing this year. that didn 't
matter much anyway to the
crowd wearing pinstripe s.
What did matter was tha t
Yankee Stadium got :t fit·
ting midsea son t'arewell
from the nation 85 years
after it opened - and less
than a year before it is
replaced by a new $1 J bil lion palace next door.
The 49 Hall of Famers on ·
hand to celebrate what will
likely be the last major
event held there didn't look
bad, either, and hasebal I
. resisted getting too. ~ent i­
mental in a classy pregame
tribute to the stars of ycqerday. The lone was just right.
and even on televi sion it
was tou ching l.o watch
· Derek Jeter walk out and
shake hand s at shortstop
with Ernie Banks:
Actually, baseball 's been
doing a lot of things right
thi s year, argttably the first
time we can really believe
testing for steroids and
amphetamines is making a
difference. Home run s may
be down, but the players are
cleane r. things are more

Please see Half, B:Z

Please see Right, Bl

.

.
~~
ChiC,'iigo'cubs' Carlos Za;nbrano, of the .National League team, pitches during the the Major League Baseball All-Star Game
against ttie Am~rican League at Yankee Stadium In New York on Tuesday.
.

Cubs, Rays have big hopes for second half

NEW YORK (AP) - spot we're in (when the sea" New York hoping to get
Raise your hand if you had son staned)," said Longoria, injured right-handers Phil
this in your preseason 'picks. whose team was leading the Hughes and Chien-Ming
Evan Longoria and the East before closing the first Wang back in time for
·Rio basketball to Tampa Bay Rays are sand- half with a season-worst another run in the final seawiched between the AL seven-game skid. "We're in . son at Yankee Stadium.
host
SCramble East-leading 'BC)ston . Red a great position. We just "As well as we're going to
Sox and New York Yankees have to get back to what we pitch is how well our team is
RIO GRANDE -· Both and leading the wild-card were doing."
going to do," Red Sox capUniversity of Rio Grande race in- gasp!- mid-July.
Longoria and teammates tain Jason ·Varitek said.
Pitching, as always, i.1 a
men's and women's basket- The Chicago White Sox are Scott Kazmir and Dioner
ball programs are sponsor- · on top in the AL Centrdl, - Navarro were roundly booed .hot commodity.
ing a Golf Scramble to be •With the big-budget' Detroit hy the Yankee Stadium
The Milwaukee Brewers
held Sunday,' August 3, at Tigers
in third and crowd before the American and Chicago Cubs acted
the Frankl"in Valley Golf Cleveland languishing in League's 4-3, IS-inning win quickly to secure two of the
Club in Jackson . The shot- last.
Tuesday night, signaling the best arms on the trade margun start is at 8:30a.m.
Not one team is above previously irrelevant Rays ket, sett ing up a compelling
The event is a four-person .500 in the NL West, and the must be doing something finish in the suddenly strong
scramble. "A" Flight will St. Louis Cardinals and right.
NL Central. The Brewers
consist of a total team hand- Florida Marlins have mudPurged of the Devil, sent four prospects to the
icaP. of 75 or below, while died .the picture in the Tampa Bay is just a half- Jndians for left·hander CC
"B' flight will consist of a Central and East.
.game behind Boston and 5 Sabathia, se nding a jolt
Coming off the longest 112 ahead · of the .Yankees. through a franchise seeking
totalteam handicap of more
than 75.
·
All-Star · game in major The Rays also have the its first postseason berth
Deadline for entry for the league history, baseball is set prospects to acquire another since 1982 .
Golf Scramble is July 31.
up for a second half that also bat before the July 3 I non"I like our chances," slugTh~ cost is $40 per person could provide last weekend wai'oler trade deadline.
ger . Ryan Braun said .
for 300 club members and drama.
But the AL East nice could "Whenever you can get a Cy
$60 per person for those · "We would have taken the come down to the arms, with Young Award winner and
who are not 300 club members.
Tickets for the annual 300
club · raffle, to be held
Saturday August 2, are also
available for purchase. The
CLEVELAND (AP) - general manager Danny guard Delonte West, a
cost of the 300 club tickets The Cavaliers finally made a Ferry said.
restricted free agent, who
are $1 00 and the grand prize move this offseason. signing Aside from signing first- was
acquired in an I I-player
award is $10,000.
sharpshooter Daniel Gibson round draft pick J.J. Hickson deal at the trading deadline
: For reservations or more to a five-year contract last week, the Cavs have last season and showed
information contact Rio
.
been quiet this offseason. signs that he could be the
Grande · head men's basket- Wednesday.
Bringing back Gibson, a Ferry hasn't been active in traditional point guard the
ball Coach Ken French at restricted free agent, was free agency because the CavalierS have needed.
740-245-7294
or one of Cleveland's top prior- Cavaliers are over the salary
"We like what we saw
kfrench@rio.edu and head ities. Financial terms of the cap.
from
Delonte last year,"
Women 's basketb.all coach
ferry said the team has Ferry sai,d. "We think he and
David Smalley at 740-245- deal were not disclosed. ·
The
guard
averaged
a
been
talking to free agents the team will' benefit from
?491
or
e-mail
career-high
I
Q.4
points·
on
and
considering
trades.
having an offseason togethilsmalley@rio.edu.
er.
So hopefully, we can get
43 percent shooting last sea"We will continue to
son. He sprained his left explore every way we possi- moving forward with his
ankle in a Feb. 20 game at bly can to get better and give contract negotiation as
Indiana and missed 18 ourselves the best chance well."
CoNrAcrUs
The pressure on Ferry,
games.
and the best window to win
1·740· 446·2342 ext. 33
Gibson, a popular player a championship this year owner Dan Gilbert and
known by the nickname and to have sustainable suc- coach Mike Brown to win an
#
Fax- 1-74()-445·3008
"Boobie," had arthroscopic cess," Ferry said.
NBA title is mounting with
E.-mill- sporteOm)rdal!ysentlnel.com
surgery last month on the
The Cavaliers do have two superstar LeBron James elillwtiLSlall
ankle. He's already back to exceptions ($5.5 million gible for free agency followEric Randolph, SportaWrlter playing basketball and is midlevel and $1.8 million ing the 2010 season . That's
(740)446·2342 , ext 33
expected to be ready for biannual) to improve their two years away, but there's
&amp;randolph Omtdailysentinel.com
training camp.
talent. They had shown already rampant media spec"He's got a great smile on interest in Boston forward ulation about James leaving
Bryan Walters, Sports Wrltar
the court. He can shoot the James Posey, but he agreed for New York or elsewhere.
·(740)446-2342 , ext 33
bwallers0mydally1ribune.com
heck out of the ball and · to a four-year, $25 million and the talk isn't likely to
bring energy to our group contract with New Orleans subside.
Larry Crum, Sporta Wrltar
because
guys just Jove play- on Wednesday.
.
(740)446·2342, ext. 33
PleaH see Gibson, Bl
ing
with
hiin,"
Cavaliers
Ferry
also
must
dectde
on
Ierum 0 mydai lyragistlir.com

golf

Civil War battle site. rededication set at Portland
PORTLAND
of
Buffington
Island
At ll a.m., prior to the
At 2 p.m., there will be a
Rededication of the Civil Preservation Foundation.
noon rededicatton ceremo- guided tour of the battleWar monuments with newly
Parker ·said that the ny, the Ladies of the Grand field (caravan style) Jed by
refurbished plaques located Foundation committee is Army of the Republic &amp; Ed Sharp of the Ohio Civil
in the Buffington Island composed of representa- Sons of the Union Veterans War Trail Commission.
Park at Portland will take tives from several organiza- Of the Civil War will be Those interested in 1-1/2
place at noon Saturday.
tions and indi victuals from ha_ve a wreath laying cere- hour tour are to meet at the
Margaret Parker, president across Ohio and includes mony.
Portland
Civil
War
of the Meigs County residents of Meigs County.
A1 · I p.m., there will be a Museum, "wearing sturdy
Historical Society, said that Dr. William K. Laidlaw, lecture at the Portland shoes," said Sharp.
the occasion will not only be e~ecuti ve director of the Community Center by Dr.
All activities are · free and
a time of re-dedication of the Ohio Historical Society will James Ralna~e of Eastern open to the public. Lunch
monuments but a time of be introducing the new Kentucky Umversity. He is will be available for purintroducing the newly foll11ed · Board members of the ·"onsidered by many to be chase at the Portland
corporation that is sponsoring Preservation Foundation the nation's foremost .scholar Community
Center
the re-dedication, The Battle during the ceremony.
on Gen. John Hunt Morgan. throughout the day.

Stone continues to dominate Riverside Senior League

Cavs sign Gibson to 5-year deal

.

At Holzer .Clinic, You Can-Always Count on...

HOlZER
CLINIC
740-446-5381

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring:
www.holzerclinic.com

AP photo

In this May 12 file photo, Cleveland Cavaliers' Qaniel
Gibson (1) drives on Boston Celtics' Rajon Rondo during
Game 4 of the NBA basketball Eastern Conference semifi·
nals in Cleveland. Gibson signed to a multi-year co ntract by
the Cavaliers on Wednesday.

,,

�.

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•
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Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Oden ready to play, Page 82
Tracy leads Ohio Am,_Page B2

•

•
'

Page A6 ~ The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 17, 200~

www.mydailysentinel.com

--

Thursday, July 17, 2008
~-

SPORTS BRIEFS

Middleport Fall
Ball sign-ups
Sign-urs for Middleport
Fall Bal will be held for
boys and girls ages 6
through I5 on Friday, July
19, and Saturday, July 20,
from I p.m. until4 p.m. and
on Wednesday, July 23,
from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. afthe
Middleport ball fields.
For more information,
contact Dave at 590-0438 or
Tanya at 992"548 I.
Down East Boys

.

Gospel quartet performs
in Pomeroy tonight
POME~OY -· The ninth annual "Si nging on the River~
concert sponsored by the Suuth ~ rn 'Baptist Church of
Pomeroy will be presented at 7 p.m. today. July 17 in th~
Pomeroy Riverfront Amphitheater.
The concert will feature the n;Jtiollal recording arti sts .
Down East Boy and Mark Lanier. form~r baritone li•r Perfect
Heart and Poet Voices. A free wi ll nftcrin~ will he tak en.
The Down East Buys rcprc:sclll a rich t!·adittott that began
nearly two decades ago ;vhi k ,.",.,.' ing '"'"a kgac)' Southern
gospel whtch began nearly a cc111ury age&gt;. fhc ltrst gospel
quartet was organiz_ed in the earl\ I900s and has Cl•olved lo
encompass many varying musical groups . But kw IJ;tve stood
the test of time'to'coritinue the rich tradi tiDn began by James
D. Vaugh~n . T.h~ Down ·East Boys is one quanet which ha&amp;
stood that test of rime and continues to enjov success
·
They released their first national hit. "Beautiful Valley,'~
which peaked in the top fii•e on all the nat ional radio charts
and haven 't stopped since. They had enjoyed a string ot
popular releases over the past 18 years. includin g three Top
20 hits from their Mercy recording. The gt'oup 's brand new
recording, "The Cross Still Stot llds." has generated everi
more success for the popul:t r·qttal'let.
.
Making up the gruup w·~ Rtcky Garden, manager and
lead vocalist ; Stuart Cary, bass singer: Jason Runnels;
songwriter as well .as vocalist. ami Daryl Paschel. ,

Chautauqua sets up shop in Gallipolis City Park
· GALLIPOLIS
Wednesday night's presen- Saturday. Entertainmer!will legacies of those who helped
Audiences will encounter ter was Paxton J. Williams precede every program at shape our modem world.
history in its most c?rn- as noted African-American 6:45 p.m.: with the presenThe Bossard Memodal
pelling form through ftrst· sctenttst
George ters speakm~ at 7:30p.m.
Ltbrary wtll be hostmg
person historical portrayals Washington Carver. ..
In cas~ of mclement weath- youth. and ad~lt Workshops
as Ohio Chautauqua is
Remaining presenters are er, everung J?Crformances wtll to comctde wtth the event,
staged in the Gallipolis City George P. Dauler as st~el be at th~ Arie!Theatre. . · wuh youth program s at
Park this week.
magnate and phtlanthroptst
A mtxture of educatiOn 10:30 a.m. and adult proChautauqua, making its Andrew Carnegie, tonight; . and entertainment,. Ohio grams at 2:30p.m. each day.
second appearance in Dorothy Mains Prince as Chautauqua 2008 . focuses
All programs are free and
and · open to the public.
.
Gallipolis, orened Thesday educator and activist Mary on . "Inventors
with Michae A. Hughes as McLeod Bethune on Friday, .Innovators." In these proOhio Chautauqua 2008 is
Alexander Graham Bell, and Hank Fincken as inven- grams, scholars/presenters sponsored and presented by
inventor of the telephone. tor Thomas A. Edison on will explore · the lives and the Ohio Humanities Council.

Entertainment Briefs
· Performing Friday
HUNTINGTON,

W.Va.
Singer/s~ngwriter Bill Hawks of
Gallipolis will be performing Friday at
the Cajun Kitchen in Huntington.
He will be on from 8 p.m. until midnight. The Cajun Kitchen is moored on
the West Virginia side of the Ohio
River bank near the Proctorville/East
Huntington Bridge.
For information, call (740) 4411480.

Ice cream social

Benefit sing

. SALEM CENTER
Salem
Township Volunteer Fire Department'-s
30th annual ice cream social is
Saturday. Serving will be from 11 a.m.
to 4 p.m. The fire department is on Ohio
124 at Salem Center -in Meigs County.
The menu will consist of 12 flavors of
homemade ice cream, roast beef sandwiches, hot dogs, potato and macaroni
salad, baked beans, pies and more.
For information, call Linda
Montgomery at (740) 669-4245.

CHESHIRE- A benefit sing will be
held Saturday at 6 p.m. at the Gavin
Plant Employees' Recreation Hall for
Bonnie Phillips, who is battling cancer.
Entertainment will be furnished by
Forgiven 4, New City Singers,
Addison Quartet, Mark Coleman, Gino
Johnson, Randy Shafer and Carl Ward.
Refreshments will be served.
Donations will be accepted. Since this
is an outdoor event, those planning to
attend should bring a lawn chair.

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

.

MASON, W.Va. - Carl
Stone continues to lead the
Riverside Senior Mens Golf
League after 16 weeks of the
2008 season.
Stone has amassed a total
of 2 I1.5 points for the year
to lead Mick Winebrenner
with 200 points for the season. In third place is Paul
Somerville with 187.5
points followed by Jim
Gress (169). Bob Hill (166),

Whited (147).
Tuesday's
beautiful
weather brought another 80
players out to make 20
Name·
Pts.
12. Gary Minton
142.5
teams of four players. The
1. carl Stone
211.5
142.5
12~ Bub Stivers
.2. Mlck Winebrenner
200.0
14. Kenny Greene
139.5
total allowed 20 points for
3. Paut·somerville
187.5
15. Cecil Minton
139.0
the winners. The low score
4. Jim Gress
169.0
18. John Krawsczyn
135.0
of
60 was shot by the teams
5.BobHIII
17. Jaclc Fox
166.0
134.0
5. Curtis Grubb
18. Jerry Dean
160.5
132.5
of Jim Gress, Jerry Dean,
8. Haskel Jones
19. Bob Hysell
160.5
131 .5
Jack
Maloney and 'Don
8. Earl Johnson .
20. Donnie Fields
131.0
160.5
· 20. Ad&lt; Northup
9. Don Waldie
131 .0
150.0
Fields and Tom Nunnery,
22. Ralph Sayre
10, Ken Whne&lt;l
147.0
130.5
Phil Bunon, Bucky Dent and
23. Rusty Wood
11. 8ucky Dent
129.5 .
143.0
Bub Stivers.
Curtis Grubb (I 60.5), Johnson
( 150.5), Don
There was a four-way tie
Haske] Jones (160.5), E;trl Waldie (ISO) and Ken for third at 6 I between the

Riverside Senior Golf League
Standings'tlfter 16 w_eeks

Bill Lupkln

Bill Lupkin is Friday's
Rhythm on River guest
POMEROY - Bill Lupkin · and the Chicago Blues
Coalition will take the stage of the Pomeroy Riverfront
Amphitheater on Friday at 8 p.m. as this week's installment
of the Rhythm on the River series sponsored by the
Pomeroy Blues and Jazz Society and Coors Light.
You can expect to see ace harp player Bill Lupkin leading the Chicago Blues Coalition. through a personaL seasoned, and rousing af(irmation of th~ blues scene in
Chicago soll)e forty years ago.
Born and raised in Fort Wayne . Ind., Lupkin made his
move to Chicago at the end of the '60s when blu~;s w.as.still
mainly heard in the ghetto clubs on the south and west sides,
and most of the great names of the post-war era were active.
Lupkin wasted no time falling in with The Aces, former
backing band for Ltttle Walter and Jumor Wells. He then
began to rub shoulders with the lik~s of Jimmy Rogers,
. Howlin' Wolf, Muddy Waters, and Junior Wells.
. Lupkin did a Jot to define the place of the harmonica in
Chicago Blues. His fat-toned , vibrato-laden note bending
harmonica was finely honed through local work, touring
an&lt;! eventually recording.
·
In the Chicago blues harp club, Lupkin is said to have the
"chops, the tone, the attitude, and the dues paid in full for
real deal status."

teams of Carl Slone. Toad
Phalin. George Stewart and
Haske! Jones. the team uf
Mick Winebrenner. George
Miller. Larry Matthews and
Jack Fox. the team of
Charlie Hargrave s. Bob
Humphreys. Ed Wilson and
Don Waldie and the team of
Siebert Belcher. Jim Turley.
Earl John son and Ceci I
Minton.
The closest to the pin wi nners were Bill Yoho on the
ninth hole and John
Krawsczyn on hole No. 14.

Eagle SK Road
Race and Walk
TUPPERS PLAINS
The First Annual Eagle 5K
Road Race and Walk and I
Mile Fun Run will be held
Saturday, August 2, at the
St. Paul United Methodist
Church. The event is sponsored by the Eastern
Athletic Boosters and will
begin at 9 a.m.
The race will start and end
at the St. Paul United
Methodist Church and will
be run on the surrounding
streets and roads. The top
three overall male and
female finishers in both the
·5K road race and fun run
will receive awatds. '!:-shirts
will be given to the first I00
who register..
· Age groups will be divided into six groups: 14 years
old and under, 15-18,19-25,
26-35, 36-49, and 50 years
old and older.
Regi stratiol) will be 'held
beginning at 7:30 a.m. in
the parking Jot of the
Cheaper Place across the
road from Subway. Pre:registration fee is $12, and reg·
istration the day of the race
is $I 5. Checks should be
~de l;*lyable to lhe Eastern·
Atbiehc B09sters, and reg.
istration forms should .be
mailed to Josh Fogle, 2038
Campbe)l S!(eet, Coolville,
Ohio, 45723. ·
For questions ' or more
information; contact Josh
Fogle at 740'667-9730.

·Baseball gets it
right, and not ·
just for 1 night

·-

add him lu your pitching
staff, you're in great shape ."
Braun and the Brewers
will have to leap over wild
card-leading St. Louis ·to
reach the postseason, and
the surprising Cardinals
were 4 I/2 games back of
Central-leading Chicago.
Back again after decades
of heartache , Cubs fans are
hoping this is the year their
beloved team wins its first
World Series title since
1908. Chicago rolled to a
37-12 record at a rollicking
Wrigley Field in the first
half and acquired right-hander Rich Harden from
Oakland before the break.
"Nanies don 't win baseball .games for you, production doe s," manager Lou
Piniella ·said. "I'll tell you
this, we ' re going to have our
hands full the rest of the
summer. You look at the

The Boss appcareu to be
shedd ing a tear behind tllose
sungla sses, somethin g ·no
one ever thou ght the y
would see at Yankee
Stadium.
George
Steinbrenner getting soft in
his old age seemed almost
as alien as New York fan s
cheering for Jon at han
Papelbon to get out of a jam
in the eighth inning.
Most of them were'n't. of
course. even if il meant the
National League .getting the
home-field advantage in the
World Series. But t he way
the Yankees have been play ing this year. that didn 't
matter much anyway to the
crowd wearing pinstripe s.
What did matter was tha t
Yankee Stadium got :t fit·
ting midsea son t'arewell
from the nation 85 years
after it opened - and less
than a year before it is
replaced by a new $1 J bil lion palace next door.
The 49 Hall of Famers on ·
hand to celebrate what will
likely be the last major
event held there didn't look
bad, either, and hasebal I
. resisted getting too. ~ent i­
mental in a classy pregame
tribute to the stars of ycqerday. The lone was just right.
and even on televi sion it
was tou ching l.o watch
· Derek Jeter walk out and
shake hand s at shortstop
with Ernie Banks:
Actually, baseball 's been
doing a lot of things right
thi s year, argttably the first
time we can really believe
testing for steroids and
amphetamines is making a
difference. Home run s may
be down, but the players are
cleane r. things are more

Please see Half, B:Z

Please see Right, Bl

.

.
~~
ChiC,'iigo'cubs' Carlos Za;nbrano, of the .National League team, pitches during the the Major League Baseball All-Star Game
against ttie Am~rican League at Yankee Stadium In New York on Tuesday.
.

Cubs, Rays have big hopes for second half

NEW YORK (AP) - spot we're in (when the sea" New York hoping to get
Raise your hand if you had son staned)," said Longoria, injured right-handers Phil
this in your preseason 'picks. whose team was leading the Hughes and Chien-Ming
Evan Longoria and the East before closing the first Wang back in time for
·Rio basketball to Tampa Bay Rays are sand- half with a season-worst another run in the final seawiched between the AL seven-game skid. "We're in . son at Yankee Stadium.
host
SCramble East-leading 'BC)ston . Red a great position. We just "As well as we're going to
Sox and New York Yankees have to get back to what we pitch is how well our team is
RIO GRANDE -· Both and leading the wild-card were doing."
going to do," Red Sox capUniversity of Rio Grande race in- gasp!- mid-July.
Longoria and teammates tain Jason ·Varitek said.
Pitching, as always, i.1 a
men's and women's basket- The Chicago White Sox are Scott Kazmir and Dioner
ball programs are sponsor- · on top in the AL Centrdl, - Navarro were roundly booed .hot commodity.
ing a Golf Scramble to be •With the big-budget' Detroit hy the Yankee Stadium
The Milwaukee Brewers
held Sunday,' August 3, at Tigers
in third and crowd before the American and Chicago Cubs acted
the Frankl"in Valley Golf Cleveland languishing in League's 4-3, IS-inning win quickly to secure two of the
Club in Jackson . The shot- last.
Tuesday night, signaling the best arms on the trade margun start is at 8:30a.m.
Not one team is above previously irrelevant Rays ket, sett ing up a compelling
The event is a four-person .500 in the NL West, and the must be doing something finish in the suddenly strong
scramble. "A" Flight will St. Louis Cardinals and right.
NL Central. The Brewers
consist of a total team hand- Florida Marlins have mudPurged of the Devil, sent four prospects to the
icaP. of 75 or below, while died .the picture in the Tampa Bay is just a half- Jndians for left·hander CC
"B' flight will consist of a Central and East.
.game behind Boston and 5 Sabathia, se nding a jolt
Coming off the longest 112 ahead · of the .Yankees. through a franchise seeking
totalteam handicap of more
than 75.
·
All-Star · game in major The Rays also have the its first postseason berth
Deadline for entry for the league history, baseball is set prospects to acquire another since 1982 .
Golf Scramble is July 31.
up for a second half that also bat before the July 3 I non"I like our chances," slugTh~ cost is $40 per person could provide last weekend wai'oler trade deadline.
ger . Ryan Braun said .
for 300 club members and drama.
But the AL East nice could "Whenever you can get a Cy
$60 per person for those · "We would have taken the come down to the arms, with Young Award winner and
who are not 300 club members.
Tickets for the annual 300
club · raffle, to be held
Saturday August 2, are also
available for purchase. The
CLEVELAND (AP) - general manager Danny guard Delonte West, a
cost of the 300 club tickets The Cavaliers finally made a Ferry said.
restricted free agent, who
are $1 00 and the grand prize move this offseason. signing Aside from signing first- was
acquired in an I I-player
award is $10,000.
sharpshooter Daniel Gibson round draft pick J.J. Hickson deal at the trading deadline
: For reservations or more to a five-year contract last week, the Cavs have last season and showed
information contact Rio
.
been quiet this offseason. signs that he could be the
Grande · head men's basket- Wednesday.
Bringing back Gibson, a Ferry hasn't been active in traditional point guard the
ball Coach Ken French at restricted free agent, was free agency because the CavalierS have needed.
740-245-7294
or one of Cleveland's top prior- Cavaliers are over the salary
"We like what we saw
kfrench@rio.edu and head ities. Financial terms of the cap.
from
Delonte last year,"
Women 's basketb.all coach
ferry said the team has Ferry sai,d. "We think he and
David Smalley at 740-245- deal were not disclosed. ·
The
guard
averaged
a
been
talking to free agents the team will' benefit from
?491
or
e-mail
career-high
I
Q.4
points·
on
and
considering
trades.
having an offseason togethilsmalley@rio.edu.
er.
So hopefully, we can get
43 percent shooting last sea"We will continue to
son. He sprained his left explore every way we possi- moving forward with his
ankle in a Feb. 20 game at bly can to get better and give contract negotiation as
Indiana and missed 18 ourselves the best chance well."
CoNrAcrUs
The pressure on Ferry,
games.
and the best window to win
1·740· 446·2342 ext. 33
Gibson, a popular player a championship this year owner Dan Gilbert and
known by the nickname and to have sustainable suc- coach Mike Brown to win an
#
Fax- 1-74()-445·3008
"Boobie," had arthroscopic cess," Ferry said.
NBA title is mounting with
E.-mill- sporteOm)rdal!ysentlnel.com
surgery last month on the
The Cavaliers do have two superstar LeBron James elillwtiLSlall
ankle. He's already back to exceptions ($5.5 million gible for free agency followEric Randolph, SportaWrlter playing basketball and is midlevel and $1.8 million ing the 2010 season . That's
(740)446·2342 , ext 33
expected to be ready for biannual) to improve their two years away, but there's
&amp;randolph Omtdailysentinel.com
training camp.
talent. They had shown already rampant media spec"He's got a great smile on interest in Boston forward ulation about James leaving
Bryan Walters, Sports Wrltar
the court. He can shoot the James Posey, but he agreed for New York or elsewhere.
·(740)446-2342 , ext 33
bwallers0mydally1ribune.com
heck out of the ball and · to a four-year, $25 million and the talk isn't likely to
bring energy to our group contract with New Orleans subside.
Larry Crum, Sporta Wrltar
because
guys just Jove play- on Wednesday.
.
(740)446·2342, ext. 33
PleaH see Gibson, Bl
ing
with
hiin,"
Cavaliers
Ferry
also
must
dectde
on
Ierum 0 mydai lyragistlir.com

golf

Civil War battle site. rededication set at Portland
PORTLAND
of
Buffington
Island
At ll a.m., prior to the
At 2 p.m., there will be a
Rededication of the Civil Preservation Foundation.
noon rededicatton ceremo- guided tour of the battleWar monuments with newly
Parker ·said that the ny, the Ladies of the Grand field (caravan style) Jed by
refurbished plaques located Foundation committee is Army of the Republic &amp; Ed Sharp of the Ohio Civil
in the Buffington Island composed of representa- Sons of the Union Veterans War Trail Commission.
Park at Portland will take tives from several organiza- Of the Civil War will be Those interested in 1-1/2
place at noon Saturday.
tions and indi victuals from ha_ve a wreath laying cere- hour tour are to meet at the
Margaret Parker, president across Ohio and includes mony.
Portland
Civil
War
of the Meigs County residents of Meigs County.
A1 · I p.m., there will be a Museum, "wearing sturdy
Historical Society, said that Dr. William K. Laidlaw, lecture at the Portland shoes," said Sharp.
the occasion will not only be e~ecuti ve director of the Community Center by Dr.
All activities are · free and
a time of re-dedication of the Ohio Historical Society will James Ralna~e of Eastern open to the public. Lunch
monuments but a time of be introducing the new Kentucky Umversity. He is will be available for purintroducing the newly foll11ed · Board members of the ·"onsidered by many to be chase at the Portland
corporation that is sponsoring Preservation Foundation the nation's foremost .scholar Community
Center
the re-dedication, The Battle during the ceremony.
on Gen. John Hunt Morgan. throughout the day.

Stone continues to dominate Riverside Senior League

Cavs sign Gibson to 5-year deal

.

At Holzer .Clinic, You Can-Always Count on...

HOlZER
CLINIC
740-446-5381

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring:
www.holzerclinic.com

AP photo

In this May 12 file photo, Cleveland Cavaliers' Qaniel
Gibson (1) drives on Boston Celtics' Rajon Rondo during
Game 4 of the NBA basketball Eastern Conference semifi·
nals in Cleveland. Gibson signed to a multi-year co ntract by
the Cavaliers on Wednesday.

,,

�Thul'ldlly, July 17,2008
Page B2 •

The Dailv Sentinel

Oden eager to get going this fall
BY BETH HARRIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

st.tns but I'm ready '
He saod he expects to be
cle.ued to pl&lt;i} .ogaon m
LOS ANGELES ~ Greg September
Unt o! then Odcn" tak10g ,,
Oden os otchmg to get hos
delayed NBA career go10g sum mer sehoul boology class
but he's stoll foobodden from 'at Ohoo St,ne where he lett
any 5-on-5 ac to on un11l ,otter leadmg the Buckeyes to
September
the 2007 national totle game
The rook oe season ot the - ,, loss to Flond.t
fonner Ohoo State player was
'I'm sti ll classolied ,\s "
over before ot even staned treshman." the 7 footer s.ud,
v.hen he had nght knee gnnnong
surge ry last Septembe r
Bc·n1g b,K k on campus,
Recovery can t.tke sox thp ugh, "
a constant
months oo more, .ond the remmder that he c.m' t play
Ponland Traol Bl.ozers decod- basketball JUSt yet
'Those guys .ore pl.oyong
ed theor No I pock would sot
out the season
pock up games and the fresh'I' m still rehabbong but men arc com10g 10 goong.
I' m ready to play,' Oden told 'Oh Greg , I' ll beat you,'' he
The Assoc oated Pres s on s.ud 'I'm Joke. Just let me
Wednesday whole "' Los go one day '"
Angeles to attend the ESPY
Oden called hos rchabolotaAwards " I can work out I toon 'tough and long,'' but he
can loft , no 5-on-5. no 3-on-3 saod hos reamml!tes kept hom
That's where e\ erythmg os m the loop l.ostjeason
gomg, towards me be ong able · " It v.asn't Joke I cOLold even
to play when the season ge t down because I w,os

~acy's

Thursday, July 17, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

&gt;

Right
from Page Bl

always around the guys," he
saod I feel hke I'm pan ot
the team "
Havmg Sedttle lose"' ors
NBA lranc 1.ose to Oklahoma
Cory. Oden expects to see ·a
lot more people m Seattle
comong df)wn to Portland "
Oden plans to pursue a
degree dunng hos offseasons
He\ undecoded on a maJOI ,
but he wants to do somethm g
wtth food
"They don't ha\ e a cull
nary degoee at Ohoo St,ote. so
I ti guoe nut11toon and then try
to dQ somethmg wo th that.·
he saod "( Joke to cook , lloke
food"
Asked hos spccoalty 111 the
kotchen, Oden paused anP,
satd , "Hambuoger Helpeo ,md
tuna fosh "
Told that he should cook
from scratch, he replied " I
Joke the recopes. l can follow
a recope From what I hear, a
lot ol people c,on 't, so that's a
step up"

behev.oble and the game's
11n&lt;1ge has ompo o\ed dramatoc.olly
Ju st the fac t that 30 general m,11o.ogers have refused so
far to succumb to the tempt.ot oon of sognmg Burry
Bonds says somethmg about
the new state of the game In
ye,us past. someone would
have take n a ch,mce on the
bloated sl ugger, but even the
Y.onkees have been sman
enough to lay off
The .obsence of Bonds
osn't the only reason to celebrate the national pastome at
modseason As evodenced by
the youthful All-Star roster~.
there .ore some nsmg stars
and. ot you can t tmd anythong to Joke about Josh
Hamolton's Junkoe-to- superstar storv. how about the
quteter eievatlon of players
Joke Hanley Ramorez. Ryan
Braun and Russell Manon to
th e top echelon
Woth revenue shanng
domg the JOb 1t was
desogned to do, there's comthe tournament . Coco nos petitive races everywhere to
plans to turn pro ommedoate look forwmd to m the next
ly afterward on Fooday so he few months There are at
can play for pay on the least 18 teams that have
some clmm to bemg m conupcommg Ohoo Open
lndoana Umversoty 's Alex tent oon , and th at's not even
Manon of Moddletown shot a countong clubs Joke Toronto
72 and was at 139 Flond.t and Balttmore, whoch have
Southern 's Matthew Stauch los ong records but aren ' t
completely out of tt yet
had a 71 and was at 140

69 gives him 2-shot lead

FINDLAY Ohoo (A P) Holhard nan ve Et han Tracy
shot ,, 2-under 69 to take .1
two-stroke lead through 36
holes of the I02nd Ohoo
Amateur golf champoonshop
at Fondl.oy Country Club
Tracy, who woll pl ay at the
Unoversot) ol Arkansas thos
fall , fo llowed an openmg

oound of 67 and stood at 6und er
136
after
Wed nesday's second round
ot the 72-hole medal -play
tournament
In second place was former Ohoo State player Chad
Coconos ot Zanesvolle, who
had a second consecutive 69
and was at 138 If he woos

Down m Flonda, Tampa
Bay - yes T.1mpa Bay os battlmg tor the lead 10 the
Amencan League East
whole the Marhns have a
hneup that makes potchers
tremble when they thonk
about facmg ot The Twons
keep findong new ways to
won, the Togers are showmg
sogns of hfe, and the Mets
and Pholhes are finally neckand-neck
Those on contentoon show
no sogns of complacency •.
and the Yankees ha ve n' t
even staned any senous
dealing yet Just days after
the Brewers went out and
traded for CC Sabathoa, the
Cubs countered worh Ro ch
Harden. a trade that could
help propel the Lovable
Losers to theor forst World
Senes w1n on 100 years
On top of ot all, we got a
very entertaomng All Star
Game that dod nothmg to
dampen the enthusmsm for
the rest of the season, even
as tl stretched on, mmng
after mnmg, and all but the
doe-hards on Yankee Stadoum
had gotten on the No 4 tram
and headed for home
By that t1me the Amencan
League p1tchmg had worn
· penlously rhm , so thm that
Red Sox manager Terry
Francona was consodenng
takmg J D Drew up on hos
offer to p1tch It was eother
that, or bnng m Whlley Ford
for one last appearance , but
by then Wh1tey probably
was asleep
Thankfully, Drew never

~ribune

- Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED
'

had to potch or there m1 ght
have been more talk than
usual 111 October about how
the Natoonal League gdt the
home foeld advantage for
the World Senes The only
real downer now os that we
have to contemplate tpe possoboloty of the Fall Classoc
openmg 111 dreary Trop1cana
Foeld
The best thong about the
whole mght , though, was
that rh os game actually
me.ont somethmg Take Bud
Selog to task about the way
he's handled labor relations,
steooods and almost everythong else, but the deciSion
to a ward home- fiel d adv~n,­
tage m the World Senes to
the wmnmg league made rt
more th an JUSt an exhibition
That's why you saw the
AL All -S tars rushmg out
w1th hu gs and htgh foves for
Justm Morneau after he sh(l
home woth the wmnmg run
That's why Francona and
Togers
manager
Jom
Ley land embraced m glee m
the dugout
Asode from Papelbon and
the NL All-Stars, ot was a
happy no ght for almost
everyone Baseball celebrated ots past whole showmg off ots future, and managed to do ot well
Even th e Boss had to be
smohng about that

Gibson

90 games a year ago
" I won't say I'm sattsfoed
but I' m happy where we are
for now," manager Ozzte
Guollen saod ''I'd rather be
heoe 11ght now m thos posoto on th.on be m another posi-

Half

break
The Los Angeles Angel s'
s1x-game lead over the
Oakland Athletics m the AL
from Page Bl
West was the b1ggest lead m
baseball at break , but there
teams m our dovosoon and all
were close races m the NL
of them have wonnong tion ··
East and West - for very
records at home "
Guo lien 's team woll be dofferent reasons
Pmoella helped skipper the tested over the season's fonal
The
uneven
Cubs through fust half months , trymg to hold off Diamondbacks (47-48) were
lllJUroes to ace Carlos the plucky Twons and leadmg the slumpmg West,
Zambrano and All-Star out- Ttgers
followed by the medoocre
foe lder Alfonso Soroano,
Mmnesota to aded ace Dodgers
who could be back on Johan Santana m the offsea" I knew we were gomg to
Chtcago's potent lineup son but stayed on the race be inexpenenced , I knew we
soon
behond steady All-Stars Joe were gomg to tnals of bemg
" We're conf1dent, but Maueo and Justm Morneau , mconsosrent ," Los Angeles
we're not arrogant ," second whose production woll be second baseman Jeff Kent
baseman Mark DeRosa satd close I) v. atched as the saod "But [' m grateful that
"Just a bunch of guys hav mg Home Run Derby champ. Arizona's gomg through the
fun."
•
Justm Veolander and Detroot same thmg "
They' re also havong a lot are back on track after an
All the standmgs could be
of fun on the South sode of awful start , woth the ace thrown for a loop woth a bog
Chocago, where th~ Whole nght-handcr wmnong h1s trade or stgnmg Atlanta
Sox were m forst .tfter loson g last fove dec osoons before the slugger Mark Teoxeora could

In One Week With Us
E-mail
classofoed@mydaolytnbune com

devisees,

legatees,

executors, executrix·
as,

administrators,

admlnlstrstrlxes and
assignees and John

Doe,

Unknown

Spouse of Velma L
Taylor
and
If
deceased, all heirs,
devisees, legatees,

executors, executrix·
ea ,

administrators,

admlnlatratrlxes and
aaalgnaes

lddrssoeo

whose

are

unknown, will hereby

t1k1 notice that on
May
2,
2008,
Beneficial Ohio, tnc ,
flied Ito Complaint In
Foreclosure

and

Marehalllng of Llana
In the Common Pleao
Court of Melga
County, I00 E.
Second St. Pomeroy,
Ohio being Case No.
08 CV 079 against'
Velma L Taylor prayIng lor judgment In
the amount ol
$78,954 19 with Inter·
eroot
thereon
accorodlng to tho
tarmo of the note
!rom April 29 , 2008
until paid and for
foreclosure of sold
Mortgage DHd on
the
following
dHcrlbed 1111 eotatl,
or
which
uld
Dtfendantt, V.lmo L.
Taylor are tltt owntre
ol:

11 further dt1orlbtd
In Jllolntfl'o mortgogo
reaarclld
on
No'II!Mtr 21, 1003 In
look 1U 11111e H7 of
tilt
· Mortgogo
lltoord• of !ofolgt
Count~, Onto. Alto
known '" 37211 It,
lit. 1241 Mlddltport
OH417t0
1nd that Deftndant,

or be forever barred,

ol the quota Quotes

Public Notice

state-

Public Notice
appealed to the ERAC
by filing an appeal
within 30 days of
Issuance of the final
acllon.
ERAC
appeals, accompanied by a $70 filing
fee which th ecom-

ments of the direc-

mlsslon in It discre-

actions

Comments

or public meeting
requests

must

be

submitted within 30
days of notice of the
draft
action
"Proposed Actions

are

written

tor's Intent
respect to
Issuance,

with
the

denial ,

modification, revoca-

tion, or renewal of a
permit, license, or

tion may reduce If by
affidavit the appellant
demonstrates

amount of the fee
would cauae extreme
hardship, must be

variance
Written
comments
and
requests for a public

flied

meeting regarding a

Review

proposed act1on may

Commlaalon,

that upon failure of should be labeled be submitted within
said Defendants to ' Lawn Care Quote 30 days of notice of
payor to cause to be and mailed to the proposed action
Local An adJudication hearpaid said Judgment Southern
District, Ing may be held on a
within three days School
from Its randltlon that Treasurer a Office, proposed action If a
an Order or Sale be 920 Elm Street, hearing request or
ob(ectlon Is received
Issued to the Sheriff Racine, Ohio 45771.
of Meigs County, (7) 15, 16, 17,18
by the OEPA within
Ohio, to appraise,
30 days of loauance
Public Notice
of the proposed
advertise In the Dally
action Written com·
Sentinel and sell said
real aotate, that tho Public Notice
menta, requests lor
public meetings, and
premloea be aold free County Melga
and clear of all Tha following apptl· adjudication hearing
clalma, tlena and cations and/or veri· requests must be
Intern! of any of the fled complaints were sent to Hearing
Ohio
parties heroin, that received, and tho fol- Clark,
the proceed• from lowing dran. pro-- Environmental
final Protection Agency,
the ssta of 11ld prem- poaed, or
Box 1049,
laH bt applied to lhe actlona were lsaued, P 0
Ohio
The
Ohio Columbus,
Plaintiffs Judgmant by
and for auch other Environmental 43216 -1 049
Protection Agency (Telephone 614-644rellelto
which
Beneficial (OEPAI last week 21291 ' Final Actions
Ohio, Inc, Ia entitled,
"Actiona" Include the Are actions of the
Said Defendants are adoption, modlflca· director which are
directed to the tlon, or repeal of upon Issuance or a
CoJTiplalnt wherein orders (other than slated effective dale
notice under the fair emergency ordtrel, Pursuant to Ohio
Code
debt collection prac- the Issuance, denial, Revised
modification or revo- Section 3745 04, A
tice act Is given.
Said Defendants are cation of llcenaes, final action may be
required to anower permlla, leaH•. YBrl- appealed to the
within twenty-eight ancea, or certlflcltes, Environmental
Appaals
days after the publi- and the approval or Review
cation
Said disapproval ol plant Commlaslon (ERAC)
Dalendenta will taka and opeclllcatlont jFormerly know os
notice thet you are "Draft Actlone" are the Environmental
required to anowor written tlltomenta of Board of Revlewl by a
11td Complaint on or tht dhector cl pereon who wu a
beforo the Auguot !nvlronmenttl party to a proc:Mdlng
14th
Prottotlon ' t btfort tht director by
lnttnt filing an appeal with·
dey ol 2!101 or Judg· (Dirtctor't)
ment witt be rtn· with rtlptOI to the In 30 doyo of notice of
dered IOOollllngly.
loauanct, danlll, Ito. thl final action
ltntllolal Ohio, Inc of 1 permll, llotnM, Purouent to Ohio
l'lllntlfl,
Code
orctar, tto. lnte1'111N RtVIIId
lll(lhtn D. Mlloo pereone lillY IUDmh leotlon 3741.01, A
Attorney lor Plaintiff wrltttn
permH, ~f n1l Action luulng,
11 W. Monumont IIOtneo, order, ato atnytng, modltytno,
Avenue Dlyton, Ohio lntereattO peraane revoking, or renewing
may oubmll l!lrltton a ptrmlt, llotftll, or
41401
oommantt or rwqu11t v1rlonct whlc~ It not
~~ 11, ti,H, (713, tO,
• public meeting prlotded by 1 pro·
regarding
draft I)Oeed lOtion, moy be

that

payment of the full
with

Environmental

Appeals
309

South Fourth Street,
Room
222,
Columbus,
Ohio
43215 A copy of the
appeal must be
served

on

the dirac·

tor within 3 days after
filing the appeal with
the ERAC
Final approval of
Plans

and

Specifications
Racine VIllage PWS
P0 Box Box 399

3rd I VIne St
Racine, OH
Action
Date
07/07/2008
Facil i ty
Deacrlp ,tion Commu

nlty Water System
ldentltlcatlon
No
657502
This final action not
preceded by proposed action and Is
appealabJ&amp; to ERAC
Detail plans for
PWSID OH5300312
Plan No 657502
Ragardlng Southside
VIllage
Waterline
Replacements

read aloud for the fol·

lowing

Portland Communtty

Center
Electrical
Project
Specifications, and
bid torms may be
secured at the office
of Meigs County
Commissioners,

amount

will

be

NOTICE TO CON·
TRACTORS
Soled propoaala lor

the
Portlond
Community Center
Electrical ProJect,
Malga County, Ohio
11 par opaclflcallono
In Did packtt will be
11celved by tho Molgo
County
at

their office at the

Courthou11 ,

Pumoroy, Ohio 48788
until t .00 p m., Aug
71h, 2001 and than It
1.1S p m. at aald
olfloa opened and

Theodore T Reed, Ill,

returned within thirty Pomer.oy, Ohio; Kathy
(30) days after receipt M Reed, Pomeroy,
of bids
Ohio; Bruce J Reed,
Each bid must be Paris, Tennessee,
accompanied
by Rita J Reed, Paris,
either a bid bond In Tennessee, Paul M
an amount of 100% of Reed, Middleport,
the bid amount with a Ohio, Laurie F. Reed,
auraty aatlsfactory to Middleport, Ohio,
tho aloreaald Meigs Katie E.
Reed,
C o u n t y Mlddlapo1t, Ohio;
CommlssJonere or by • Krlotopher
M
certified
check, JOI\klna ,
cashiers check, or Itt· Goodlettsville,
tar of credit upon a Y•nneaaee, Tyler C
solvent bank In the Reed,
Paris,
amount of not less

Tennessee,

Robert

than 10% of the bids
amount In favor of the
aforesaid
Meigs
County

Tenneuee, Jordan

Commissioners Bid

Reed,

Darius
Pomeroy,

Reed,
Ohio ,

HOW I0 W§J~E 6[i ~
Su'Ccesfu Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

*POLICIES*
Ohio Valley
Publlohlng reserves
lhe rlghl to edll,

I

Public Notice
period will not enol
before twenty (201
days after publication, and may be
somewhat longer The

Division's

proce-

dures for processing

eported on the fire
of publication an
he Trlbune-Sonllnel
agister
will
b
eaponslble tor n

ora than the coat o

requirement•

con·

1nc1 r1qulre,1nta,

vartoua equ11 oppor·
tunlty prOvlotont, ena
the requlrtmtnt lor 1
payment bond lAd
parlarmanct bond tor
tOO'It. of thtl contraDt
prlca No bidder may
WlthdtiW hll Did WHh•
In thirty (301 dlyl

meeting

or

formal

hearing on the notice
If they are received In
writing by the OhJo
Dlvlalon on or before
the laat day of the
comment period

ny loll or expens

hat results

Bruce Reed, Paris,
Tenn••-· Intend to
apply to the Federal
Rtserve Board for
thereby control of
Farmers Bancah1r'11,

Inc , Pomeroy, Ohio.
Farmtra Bancaharea,
Inc , controla Farmera

Bank I Savlngt
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio. The Fedtrtl
ltellt'Vt ooneldtre •
number 01 lactore In
deciding whttlltr to
apprvve the ootlct.
YOU Ill lnvltU to
oubmlt commante In
writing on thlt notlat
to tht Onto Dlvitlon
ot
'lntnclal
IRitlhltiOnl, 'f1 I .
High It,, at tt " ''
ColumiiUt, OH 421! I•
1120. Tht oommant

a

Telephone &amp; Voice
Mall Syotem A copy
of the opeclflcetlono
may be obtalnad lrom
tho Molgo County
DJFS, Attn: Darrln
Cremeana, 175 Roat
Btrtet, Middleport,
OH 41110, until July
31( 2001. Propoaalo
wll Ill dut Oy 12:00

noon

on

Box number ads a

lways conlldenllal
Current

pplleo
All Real Estat
dvertlsemenls

ar

ubject to the Fedora
air Housing Act o

968

nowspape
ccepts only hal
anted ads

meetln

OE standants

ANNOUNCE:MI

~"I'S

Ir

9 wk

M

old

Sea l

Pt

DJFS reserves the
right to accept or
reject any or all bids
and/or any part thereof or accept the best
bid for the Intended

sement

Dally In-Column: 1 00 p.m
Monday-Friday for lnsert1on
In Nex.t Day ' s Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1 00 p m
For Sundays Paper

Due to decl n ng Health
Male net Matne Coon Cat
tabby &amp; wh te to good home
304 674 1021
Free kittens to good home
2M 3F long/short hatr van
attorr tn colors litter Ira ned

(740)441 1169

r

Lo.'J'AND

FOUNI&gt;

Found tn town (F) shepherd
m1x young very clsan dog
weanng a Olue col lar Call

In vtolatlo

Found on 411'1 Ave near
lnloCts1on (M) Full blooded
RatTemer docked tatl 339

3265 0&lt; 256 9372

725

Announcement... .
Antiques ..... .
Apartments for Rent . ....

030
530
440

Auction and Flea Market
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories

Auto Repair.
Autoa lor Sale
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
Building Supplies.......

Bualnesa and Buildings.

Bualnooe Opportunity
Buolnoll Trelnlng ..
Compero I Motor Homes
Camping Equlpmont..
Carda of Thank• •.••. .••

Chlld/Etdlrty Care .....
Etectrtcai/Refrlgeratlon
Equipment for Rent
Excavating...
Farm Equipment....

NOMA

Farms lor Rant ......

Farm1 for Silo ......
ForLeau
For Sale....
For Seta or Trade.
Frultl I VegatabiH
Fumlohed Rooma .. , ,, ....
General Houllng..
Glvoawav
Happy Ado .......
Hay &amp; Gratn . ...
HelpWanted...

WHAT
STYLE...

••

080
760

770
710
750
. .. 550
•.. 340

210
140
790
780
010

, 190
840
480
830
610
430

...... 330
490
585
590
510
450
850
0411
050
. . 6411
.110
810
310

Houoehold Goods..

510

Houaealor Rent....
In Memoriam
Insurance

410
020

Lawn a Garden Equipment
Ltvsstock. .........
Loot and Found..
, .•
: l.oto 1 Acreego... .............
Mlacallaneoul.... .......... .
Mlacellaneou• Merchandlee .•.• •...

... THE
NEWSPAPER
. HAS
SOMETHING
fOR YOU!!

130

860
630
060
350
170
540

Mobile Homo Repillr.... .
Mobile Homeo lor Rant.
• Mobile Homaolor Sale
Money to Loan
.....
Matorcyclea a 4 Wheeloro

,, 860
, .420
.. .320
220
. 740

Mualcallnatrumenta
' Peraonala ......... .......... .
Pete for S.la. ..... • • •. ......

570

005
, 560

Plumbing &amp; Hosting. .. .
.....820
Profeaelonel SarvlcH
...... 230
Rodlo, TV 1 'CB Roopalr , . .. .
..... 180
Reel Eotato Wanted.....
360
Sclloote lnotruc11on. .
.. 150
- , Plant I Ferttttzer.. .
. .650
Sltuotlano Wonted.......
120
S- for Rant ............ .. ...... .
.. 410
Sporting Goode
...... 520
SUY'e for Sale , ..
.. ... ,. ..... 720
Trucltllor Silo
............. 1...... 715
UphotatarY ....... . ... .
...... 870
v- For Bile . ..
730
Wonted to Buy
.
090
Wonted to Buy• Farm Supplloo
620
Wonted To Do.... .......
.
.. 160
Wonted to Rant ...,. ... , ........ . . ........ .470
Void Soli- O.ltlpollo. .. ........ ,,,.,,,,, 072
Yold Soli-Pomeroy/Middle...... . .......... 074
Void Sole-PI Pleaoent
......... 071

Auguat 1,

aoot Quelttona con·

cerntng tho tyattlll
may Ot dltocttd 10
Dtrrln CrlmeAnl,
t?40) 112·2 111 ..,
114, or Jane llnMI
C740) 112-2117 o•t

1oe.

Thl MtiQI County
I

All Display 12 Noon 2
Buslne•s D~ys Prior To

Publication
Sunday Display 1 00
Thur-sday for Sundays-P••po&gt;r

POLICIES Ohio Valley Pubilahlng re.arvea the rlghtlo edit rajecl or cancel any ad at any lime Errors muaiiMI reponed un the tint day ol publlcallon and lhfl
Trlbune-Sentlnet..Reglate!' will be reaponslble for no more than the cost otltle space occupied by I he error and only thellrat Insertion We shall ngt be liable for
MV loas or 11penae that ~nullt lrgm the pu~l~;ellgn or omla~Non of an advertleement Correction will be made In the !Ire! available edition Sox number .cle
are alwaya conlldenUal
Current rate card ~tppllee
All realealate advertl.amenta are eublect to the Fed eral Fair Houelng Act of 19fi8 Thla newep~~per
accepts only help wanted ads meetl~ EOE atantU~rds We wm not knowingly accept any advertising In violation ol the law Will not De responalble lor any
errors In an ad taken over tM phone

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

FotJND

10
kltncarlyle@!comcast

~t.llo.(,

1\'l'f'I;R
t\ELpS.

?

Huge Sale Great Stt.tft 7!17
7/ 19 1mtle out Morgan
Center Ad off 160 Home
intenor baby \ems

Multi fam1ly sale Sal July 19
from 9·3 at Johnsons Mobtle
Home park Lot 22 Womens
mens boys clothes books
glassware dressers
::___ _:__ _ _-::-_
Thursday 1711'1 &amp; Fr day
18th 9am 4pm 7169 StAt 7
S
Ga llt po~s
Movmg
everythrng must got
-y,-,d-'-Sa-le.:_I_ _ _:_P_a_
lll-oi_R_d_
539

••
•
1- 11

mu~
©2008 by NEA Inc
AVONI All Areas' To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears 304
675 1429
-------~

Billtng Ass stant Mu91 have
expenence wtth ICO 9 CPT
and Mad ca l Termmoiogy
Med tcal b itlng and cia ms
recovery a plus Send
resume to 400 East State
Streel Athens Oh 45701
------,---Careg1vers and CNAs need

Yard Sale 71 18&amp; 711.9 94
288 Adamsvtlle Ad krds
clothes toys toddler bed
htgh cha 1r strOllers &amp; m1sc

ad In Mason Cou nt y
Immediate opemng rn Leon
Bonuses and ncenttves
AB ODE Health Cares
Servtces Inc
304 586
Yard Sale
Frtday &amp; 9441 Toll free 1 866 327
Saturday Mens Womens &amp; 7262
Kids Clothes ~Baby Items - - - - - - - LaSalle C rcle off LeG a!"fda Country/Southern
Rock
Band looktng for Lead Guttar
4
YAROSAU·
player &amp; Bass player 740
PoMF.R0\~11Dot E 645 1800
~-------

Garage(llome sale)Fn Sat
9A M near Overbrook Ct
M
I
d
d
Antiques treadmill e;oc;er equt
p 1awnmower home{ drapes
etc)clothes&amp;more
Multt famtly garage sale Fn
July 1Bih Austtc H1Us
Syracuse clothes g1ri 3
mol6yrs
boy 3mo 1yr
Beante Bears 26...g•rls b1ke
household mtsc Items 9 4

Direct Ca re Staff needed n
the Potnt Pleasant WV area
to wo rk w th developmental
ly dtsabled mdtvtduals
AlJitsm Servtces Center
offers excellent bene! Is
competllt \18 wages and !lex
1ble hourS For more nfor
maiiOn please call !304)
525 8014
Or
VISII
www auttsmsery!cescen
l.it..2Ig. for details

AucnONAND
~ LIA

MARKY.t
FEDERAL

Craft Fatr Opemngs a&gt;Jatl
O S
able Deadline 8/29 at
POSTAL J 8
Lighthouse Assembly of $1789$2827/hr now hlf
God Craft Fa1r Dale tS 9113 tng For apphcallon and free
governement Job mfo call
446 928 , leave messa 8
American Assoc ot Labor 1
913 599•8226 24/h rs emp
W''"~D
\.!" •r.

"-------..1
10 BUY

-,
Absolute Top Dollar
sll
ver/gold
co1ns
any
10KJ14K/18K gold jewelry
denlal gold pre 1935 US
currency prooflmmt sets
dramonds MTS Com Shop
151 2nd Avenue Gallipolis.
446 2842
Junk cars w1th or wtlhoul
tttles 740 388 0884

serv

www com1cs com
LABORER EARN AS YOU
LEA.RN Start bu lldmg for
your future NOW by JOrnmg
our profess anal team and
learn the sktlts to become a
H1gh Pressure Cleamng
Maintenance TECHNICIAN
All postltons requ1re extend
ed TRAVEL outstde the
state company provtdes
todgtng transportatiOn and
Per 01em We prov1de PAID
tra1nmg excellent BENE
FITS 401 (K) r Aettrement
plan Layover &amp; Travel Pay
Pre employment
DRUG
TEST s requrred Class A.
CDLandOnversllcense lsa
plus bu t not requtred
Ouahfrad candidates may
bscome ehg1ble for company
sponsored COL tramrng
The nght candidates wtll be
resp onsrbl a goal saekmg
tnd1vlduals wtth a team on
snted approach Only sen
ous HARD WORKING tndl
v1duals need apply sehd
work hrstory and day ttme
phone
number
to
Tschntctart Jratnee P.O Bo;oc;
565 Manetta OhiO 45750
EOE

$500 SIGN ON Bonus!
Travel, tra\lel
Traveltlt
SeekJng 5 sharp guys Of
g~rls 10 join our young mind-

ed, hlp-hop '"""'"'"'' bluoIBan environment Travel to
CA FL HI and olh&lt;ll US
CttiBSI X-Gen Y·Gen. Musk:
lovers Skataboardar wal

come Ja,n 1 886-361 1526
An E,cellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Martlyn 304 882 2645

Prr Securtty Offtcers must
be able to pass drug test &amp;
background check Send
resume to www tnfoweare
gonnagetem com or (fix to
740 441 9645

The
Athens Metgs
EducatiOnal Servtce Cente r
has an anttc•pated opemng
for a Talented and G1fled
teacher to serve th e
Southern
&amp;
Eastern
Elementary Schools m
Me gs County tor the 2008
2009
School
Year
Appltcants must hold a valid
cerlll•catelhcense wtth a
Talented and Gtfted vahda
tton (or be wtlhng to work
toward appropnate llcen
su re) Thts IS a 9 month
posttron
w Ill
Board
approved benof1ts Salary
w111 be based on quallltca
!to ns
and
a;oc; perlence
Subm•t lener of mterest
resume and references to
Jol'1n
0
Costanzo
Supenntenden t
At~ en~
MBigs Educaltonal Ser11tce
Cenler 320 112 E Man 51
Pomeroy
Ohto 45769
Appltcahon
must
be
receiVeO by Fnday July 25
12 00 pm The AM ESC IS an
Equal
Opportunity
Employer/Provtder

P a r t t rm e Watk·ln Interviews
Housekeep 1ng/L au ndr y
Monday Fnday
Overbrook Center rs accepl
900 am .100pm
rng appl catt ons for part trme
242 Th rd Aile
Housekeeptngtlaundry post
Galltpohs OH
t•ons all shtfts Please stop
Htnng All ShtftSI
by for an appltcatton at 333
1-"877-463-6247 x2659
Page St
M1ddlepor1 Oh
OBC
IS
an
Equal
Opportumty Employer and a Wa nted Watt Staff person
Parhctpant of the Drug Free no e)(penence necessary
we wtll !ram Fnendty wtth a
Workplace Program
team player attitude ts
PatrtOt c Foods Inc lookrng mandatory Apply tn person
for Route Sales Managers at the Holiday Inn Front desk
LPN/AN poslttons ava lable Patd Trarn•ng 304 674 8683
n GaJi tpOitS No pllone calls
for ped1atric home health or 304 812 0270
please
care n Vmton area E)(p
w/venVtrachfg tube
pre Position 0Dening
50
&amp;.1100LS
!erred Days PT/PAN 20 to TASC of Southeast Oh1o _
l~IRLX.110N
so hrs per week Contact (TSOJ a pnvate not tor prof Lw-oiiiiiitiiiiiitiiiiiiior
Mtchele at PCNS 800 518 11 substance abu se agency Galli poll&amp; career College
2273
ISseeking a parlttme cllmcal '(Careers Close To Home)
records clerk to work tn the Call ToOayl 740 446 4367
Nanny needed Someone to Galha
County
oHtce
~ 800 214 0452
watcll ktds run errands Ouahftcations 1nclude Bas te ~ ga hpol acereeorco l59e edtJ
cook clean and mise house olltce and clencal sktlls mtn Accredited Member Accr&amp;dft ng
hold chores Pay depends •mum ol one year of e~ pert Cowd to tndependell1 Colegfl6
7 ':;:.'_ __ ,
on e;oc;perience Please call ence In a cler callmedtcal ~
""'i!P""";;:"
~':.'o::2;;:
4469357 evenings or 740 records setttng Assooates
925 3169 days
degree tn Appled Bustness
MISCW.AI"\FOUS
~------- or related held preferred .
Need someone to help expertence wtlh cltntcal
around house and fa rm records Pleas&amp; submtt Pet Cremaltons Call 740

r

MONE\
IOLOAN

Borrow Smart Contact
the Oh o D1Vrs10n Qf
F nanc•al
lnstrt ulton s
Off•ce
of Consumer
Affa~rs BEFORE you ref•
nance your home or
oblatn a loan BEWARE
of requ ests for any large
advance payments of
fees or 1nsurance Call the
Ottrce ot Consumer
Alta1rs toll tree at 1 866
278 0003 1o leam tf the
mortgage
broker or
lender
IS
properly
ltcensed (Th s ts a public
servtce announcement
from the Ohto Valley
Publlslltng Company)

i

r

I

rro

I'ROH':iSIONAL

St:.RVJl't-N

Busy Bee Cleamng SerVICe
Offtce
&amp;
Homes
Professto Je lly
Cleaned
Reasonable rates Good
Quality
Honesty
References Nancy icard
740-446 2262 Also Ask for
Nanct at Michael &amp; Frrends
Mens &amp; Women s Hatr your
way 740 446 0698

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless Wa Wlnl
I 686 582 3345

IH \ll"ol\11

10

HOMI:S
IOKSAI£

2vr old House 1n H~rtfnrd
1 900 sq ft 3 bedroom, 2
bath s F.al tn Kitchen
Dmmg Room Dt:n &amp; Famd~

lnromlrH J Cir&lt;;\llrnrr

Sf'·v,n·

ln'&gt;plr&lt;thon Nelwork
,,;•

I •'

O''

925 3169 days
-------Naed someone to spray lor
Po1son Ivy around out
mOI:lrle home and yard 446
7039
- - - - - -- -

'll'

NOW to bcgi11 the
;rpphc;rlron process 1
1 AA!I 461 7298 e)(! 1\121
lllll 'Qbo; lniOCIO,IQn COin
Part lime merchandtser llelp Now Hiring 20 Full Time
wanted 1 to 2 days a week employee~ for openlngl
merchand1s1ng magaztnes in our Gallipolis location!
m the foliowtng area
CialilpQI!i A'terag_e_ PllY IS
Take mbound customer
$9-$10 per hr ij Interested
sel'\l•ce calla for
send ua a postcard with
Fortune 100 CompanieS
note or resume Including
lndudtng
your phone number to the
.Time
Warner
Cable
News
Group
3755
Interchange Ad Columbus
Cllll to echedule rour
OH 43204 or fa, 6t4 351
lnlel~lew
5283 or call1.fJ77 63974n
t
.aaa-tMC-Po\YU
ext 117 and leave a mes
Elll 2321
sage Please specify the
Apply
onlme
area you re caWtng tor '
http:fljoba lnfoclalon com

Gall1pohs Ohio 45631 or fa;oc;
to7404412970oremail to
ftscal @ovbh org Deadlme
for subm•sston IS July 25
2008 TSO •S an equal
opportunity employer that
otters excellent compeltttve
salanes and beneltts

POST OFFICE

NOW

HIRING

Avg Pay $20/hr or
$57Kiyr tncludes
Federal Benetrts OT
Placed by adSource not
oHered w/ USPS who hires
I 866-403 2582

Durham

@

(7401992 3437

Looking tor pert t1me

- - - - , - - - - - 2nd job,

mllnary

'lt'()f1(

con~ruc­

AesCare Home Care ts tion security food han
accepting apphcatfons tor dltnglcooking iandlellllng
Support Associaloo CNA &amp; priDr experience and haw
STNA MRIDD exp pre worked oonal81enlly 1o&lt; 11tt
fem1&lt;1 Apply at 8204 Carle pool 12 )'0111 ~ 11oo on
DriYo Clallip&lt;;ll. Men Frl maritime 1n00s1ry 304~7!18--C
Email resume to
2017
rhanieonOrescare com
WV BOhr Underground
Miner Class. 11erting soon
Whtt Co Trammg 304 372
8346

Home
Maintenance
Carpant~
Plumbing, Bathroom• No
Job ro Small Call 339 3442

Superior

Fair Houeing Act at 1968
which makes IIIHegal to
advertise •ny
preterent:e limitation or
dlar;rlmlnatlon bated on
race color religion. sex
familial alatua or national
origin or any Intention 10
make any auch
preference limitation or
dlacrlmln111on
Thlt newtpaper will not
knowingly accept
~dvertlset;nents ror real
estate wh ich I&amp; In
vl ollltlon of the law Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwelllnga advertlted In
this mtwepaper are
available on an ~~I
opportunity baHa

Foreclosure 4br 2ba only
$29 900' Pnced to Sell' For
Ltsltngs 800 620 4946 ex

T462
PRICE REDUCED $69 900
2712 Ltncoln Ave 3br tba
w th detacheel
garage
mot vated seller 304 675
6757 304 610 131 3 or
Ass rst 2 Sale 304 755 2980
Very nrce 4br 2 be home on
t&lt;tneon Or In Galllpolts Ntce
Outte ne tghbort1ood on dead
end street Large 2 car
garage and ltntshed base
men! 740 256 1109

03 Clayton T4x52 2BA
IBA E;oc;c Cond S11 ,)()()
Must be moved !740}446
3816 oo(740)645 6196 cell
141170 w/ 81120 expando 3
br 1 5 bath great cond

$5000 304 593 6851
16X60 3 Bedroom 2 Bath
V nyl Stdlng Sh1ngle Roof
$230 per month 740 385

9948
-----,---:,-

$&lt;;5 000 1304)675 6628

· - - - - - - · 2br 2 batll w/ wh rlpooltubs
Decks room additions stor large LA on 3 acres mil
age bu ldtngs garages $80 000 740.446 7029
fl oortng stdmg windows
rooltng all types new con
struct•on small excavating
demolltton etc No job to big
or small we can do II all
Over 15 years experience
Low pncmg hrgh quality
workmanship
Free
Est•matest
Gall
Matt
or 740 444 1308

In lhll newspaper 11
subject to the Federal

3 bed HUO Homes' only 2006 Redman 14x65 1n as
$10 0001 for listings 800 new cond1t1on on rented 101
£20..494 6 ex R0 19
tn Apple Grove WV 304
576 2000
3br 2ba Sectronal on 6
acre Roseberry Ad Pt 2008 3 bedroom 2 bath sec
Pleasant w/ washer dryer llonal home $279 per month
dishwasher&amp; refrtgerator 740 385 7671

reo

Servtce Reps

All reel estate edvertlalng

2 2006 t6x80 Clayton 3 Bed
2 Bath 2000 16x70
FleelwoOO 2 Bed 2 Balh
Room Level lot All apph· 1999 Fortune 3 Bed 2 Batll
ances Washer Dryer &amp;
Wmdow dressm!! mcluded Daytime 740 38S.QOOO Of
740 388 8513 Evenlng740$93 500 304 882 249 4
388·8017 or 740 245 9213

4 bedroom 2 1/2 bath log
hOme 34286 New Crew
Rd Pomeroy IQ pole bUild
446 37 45
1ng &amp; out budd tng on 6 acres
Hours are flextble Pay resume and cover Jette( vta ~ii~;;:;:..':'!':',..,_--, wfpond !816)668 0758
dependsone;oc;penence Call ma l to Amy f.4 See Fiscal
WM1'ED
446 9357 e&gt;Jentngs or 740 Manager PO BoJC 88 _
To Do
Brand new Never ltved rn

C1ll

I \11'111\\ll"-l
"t H\ II I ...,

Ollro Valley Home Health
Inc hmng STNA CNA
Home Health A1des &amp;
Personal Care Atdes Full
Part Ttm e &amp; Per Dram post
hons avariable Apply at
1480
Jackson
Ptke
Gallipolis or phone 441
1393 Compeltllve Wages
m leage reimbursement and
other bene! ts tncfudmg
healfh l,nsurance

Ho~

•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends
that you do bus ness wtth
people you know and
NOT to send money
through the matt un111 you
have tnvest gated the
otfenng

EOE

0

B•g yard sale July 18 19 20
piciUres lamps clocks
clothes kmck knacks btrds
199
Hemlock
Ad
Evergreen

oo

IURSAU

Regional Dump Drillers
R&amp;J Truckmg tS seek ng
quah!red CDL A dr vers to
operate semr dumps lor
regtonal routes Ws teature
excellent home ltme health
and
dental
rnsurance
401{k) vacation bonus pay
and safety awards Qualified
applicants must be over 23
yrs have a mtntmum of 1
year of co mmencal dr Vlng
expenence &amp; clean MVA
Pnor expenence w th sem
dumps and roll oHs s help
lui Contact Kent at 000
462 9365 or I II out apphca
1on at www rJtrucktng com

IN SlA&lt;*

Y&lt;\RD SALE·
GAIIIPOUS

11\\'\(1\1

HttrWANIW

net

YAKD S \l.t

Everyday e)(CE!Rt Sunday 9
? New merchandtse dmty

4x4'a For Sale..

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ods
{p~
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for Iorge

• All ads must be prepaid"

Free
2~x4"x6
fencmg
w/steel posts appx ltlty feet Indoor Sale July 17 18 19
from 9am 4pm at 218 3rd
(740)992 5275
Ave Ant que fu rn lure col
Part Black Lab puppy very Icc! ble terns dtshes books
lov ng Please call 740 645 kntck knacks ptctures cook
ware
linens
ch•ldrens
2732
clolhes

CLASSIFIED INDEX

(7117' 24, 31

frllday

LOSIMD

Anhque upnght Ptano &amp; an
older Relngerator 304 675 4867 St AI 850 12pm to
1571
July 1419

the taw

purpose

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Djsplay Ads

~~~::;::~

S1amese ktden Indoor home
only Call (740)441 1100 (Ill
evenmgs or (740)645 8£84 ~T.l

&gt;We will nol knowing
y accept any adve

Public Notice

lJ~arltirM

• FOUND Enghsh Red Coon
Hound on Old AI 35
I Mtchael S Stewart w II not 7/1512008 Female 304 675
be responstble for any 1186
Debtls other than my own - - - - - - - 7/14/06
Lost Glasses somewhere
between Texas Rd on the
___
GIVEAWAY
• way tnto town 446 7020

446 4059

-

•
I

th

made In the firo
liable edhlon

Public Notice

for

1•\11•'\l"'i

'\(

Home Improvements
Home a for Sale...

poaala

Pomeroy, Ohio, and

from

ubllcatlon or omls
ion of an advertl
ant. CorracUons wll

(7) 17

of the aharea and

Permission to retain

talned In thlt bid
pocket, particularly to
tht Ftdoral Labor
Stondlllll Provlelona
and
DaviJ·I•con
Wagtt, variOUI tnaur·

requnt for a public

27 73 percent or more

ered to

Courthouoe
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Attantlon of blddoro
Ia called to 111 of tht

comments and any

NLI•utt;.;;

• Include Phone Number And Addren When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

r'--..---.,JIrro

flrst lnse&lt;llon W
hall not be liable lo

John

Reardon, Supervisor,
at ~6141 728-8400 The
Ohio Olvlalon of
Financial Institutions
will consider your

RA

• StArt Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Desc:rlptlon • Inc:lude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

ha

menta on the notice,

contact

V

---

he space occuple
y the error and onl

com ~

your

NOTICE TO VEN·
DORS
"TELEPHONE
&amp;
VOICE MAIL SYSTEM"
FOR THE MEIGS
COUNTY DEPART·
MEN'{ OF JOB I
FAMILY SERVICES
The Meigs County
Department of Job &amp;
Family
Servlcea
(Meigs County DJFS)
will be accepting pro--

Paris,

Tonne11ee, and Ben
Reed, Middleport,
Ohio, Paul Reed,
Middleport, Ohio,
Theordore Reed, Ill,

County

11.1bmlt

\\\()\

r

or cancel any
ad at any time
Errors Must B

Juatln Reed, Paris,

Bonds shalt be
accompanied
b~
Proof of Authority of
the official or agent
signing the bond
Bids shalt be uated
and marked as Bid
for Portland commu·
nlty Center Electrical
and mailed or deltv·
Commissioner•

Public Notice

Public Notice
after the actual date
of the opening thereof The Metgs County
Commissioners
reserve the right to
reject any or all bids.
Jim Sheets, PlliSident
Meigs
County

Pl

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

be on the move agam 1f the
onJury-nddled Braves fall off
the pace, and Toronto nghthander A J Burnett could be
attracllve for a team desperate Iy seekmg another stanerSan Otego could deal 350game wmner Greg Maddux
and left-hander Randy Wolf
And stoll out there on the
free-agent market mdocted
home run kong Barry Bonds
Woth most of the teams
stoll on the race for a postseason spot, teams could have
trouble deci&lt;'long whether
they ' re buyers or sellers
ahead of the deadline. It
could lead to another surpnsmg postseason, too
"There osn 't that much of a
doffe1ence between the top
five teams m our league ~
the teams on the bottom,"
Ptmella sa1d, "Any team can
beat you "

applications may be
Commissioners
found
at Ohio
(7) 17,24
Revised •
Code
Courthouse,
Section 1t 15.06 and
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Section 1301 :Ot-06 of
Public Notice
Phone 740·992·
the
Ohio
2895 A deposit of 0 NOnCE OF CHANGE Administrative Code
dollars will be IN CONTROL OF A To obtain a copy of
required lor each set BANK
HOLDING the Ohio Division's
of plans and apeclfl· COMPANY
procedures, Ot' If you
cations, check made
The Reed Family need more lnforma·
payable to-. The full Control
Group tlon about how to

Meigs

171 17

Commlealon~re

Public Notice

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

'fYprd Ads

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
NOTICE OF PUBLI- Velma L Taylor, and If
deceased, all heirs,
Public Notice
CATION
Local
IN THE COMMON devisees, legatees, Southern
PLEAS COURT OF executors, ex:acutrix- School District 920
MEIGS
COUNTY, es, administrators, Elm Street, Racine,
OHIO Meigs County administrators and Ohio 45771 Is accept·
lng quotes for lawn
Clerk of Courts
assignees and John
P.O. Box 151 100 E Doe,
Unknown care services for the
Spouse of Velma L District
2nd St
Taylor,
and
If Specifications can be
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Beneficial Ohio, Inc. deceased, all heirs, oblalned by calling
vs Velma L Taylor et devisees, legatees, the superintendant's
al Case No. 08 CV 079 executors, executrix· ofllce at 740·949·
Velma L Taylor, es, administrators, 26 t 1 Quotas will be
whose last known administrators and opened at noon on
address ts 37295 St assignees
be Monday, July 28th,
Rt 124 Middleport OH required to sat up any 2008. The board
45760,
and
If Interest they may reserves the right to
deceased, an heirs, have In said premises reject any or any part

Webso)es
www mydaolytrobune com
www mydallysentone l com
www mydaolyregoster com

To Place
\!Crihune
Sentinel
l\egister
Your Ad, (7 40) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax To 446-3008
Or Fax To (740) 992·2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

T11n Dahlbng 1s a natwn
a/ spom colwmust for The
AHocwted Press Wnte to
fum at rdahlbergap org

--

Meigs County, OH

Galli a
County
OH

reject

some pre ss ure off J am'es
Gobson has foiled that role at
tomes but not consistently
" I feel Joke as ttme goes
from Page Bl
on I'll contonue to 1mpro&gt;e
By re sogmng Gobson, the and my role woll contonue to
Cavaliers brought back theor oncrease and dev e lop ,"
most conso stent outsode Gobson saod
Gtbson mossed the tonal
shootmg threat They're
also ahead of where they two games of Cleveland's
were last year when restnct- playoff sen es aga onst
ed free age nts Sasha Boston woth a separated
Pavlovic and Anderson shoulder Gobson, whose
VareJaO held out all summer sconng was key to the
Cavaliers won o;er Detroot
before res1gnmg
Gobson was hfth on the on the Eastern Conference
NBA last season on 1 pomt finals to reach theor first
shootmg at 44 percent He NBA fmals m 2007, says
was named MVP of the All
mossong Game 7 of the
Star
Rookoe/Sophomore Boston senes sto ll h a unts
game on New Orleans when, h1m
he made a record II 3"I've had a lot of s leeppomters.
less noghts JUSt wondenng
The Cavaliers are m need where I could have helped
of a second scorer to take the team ," Gobson satd

www.mydailysentinel.com

2BR 1 bath total electnc
on rented lot cah stay

$3500 446 3617
81 Schult 14x70 2 bf large
bath woodburner slove
relngerator w/d 10x20 sun
porch wfcomptete setup
exce•ent shape tnstde &amp; out
(h as to
be
moved)

(740)992 5181

�Thul'ldlly, July 17,2008
Page B2 •

The Dailv Sentinel

Oden eager to get going this fall
BY BETH HARRIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

st.tns but I'm ready '
He saod he expects to be
cle.ued to pl&lt;i} .ogaon m
LOS ANGELES ~ Greg September
Unt o! then Odcn" tak10g ,,
Oden os otchmg to get hos
delayed NBA career go10g sum mer sehoul boology class
but he's stoll foobodden from 'at Ohoo St,ne where he lett
any 5-on-5 ac to on un11l ,otter leadmg the Buckeyes to
September
the 2007 national totle game
The rook oe season ot the - ,, loss to Flond.t
fonner Ohoo State player was
'I'm sti ll classolied ,\s "
over before ot even staned treshman." the 7 footer s.ud,
v.hen he had nght knee gnnnong
surge ry last Septembe r
Bc·n1g b,K k on campus,
Recovery can t.tke sox thp ugh, "
a constant
months oo more, .ond the remmder that he c.m' t play
Ponland Traol Bl.ozers decod- basketball JUSt yet
'Those guys .ore pl.oyong
ed theor No I pock would sot
out the season
pock up games and the fresh'I' m still rehabbong but men arc com10g 10 goong.
I' m ready to play,' Oden told 'Oh Greg , I' ll beat you,'' he
The Assoc oated Pres s on s.ud 'I'm Joke. Just let me
Wednesday whole "' Los go one day '"
Angeles to attend the ESPY
Oden called hos rchabolotaAwards " I can work out I toon 'tough and long,'' but he
can loft , no 5-on-5. no 3-on-3 saod hos reamml!tes kept hom
That's where e\ erythmg os m the loop l.ostjeason
gomg, towards me be ong able · " It v.asn't Joke I cOLold even
to play when the season ge t down because I w,os

~acy's

Thursday, July 17, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

&gt;

Right
from Page Bl

always around the guys," he
saod I feel hke I'm pan ot
the team "
Havmg Sedttle lose"' ors
NBA lranc 1.ose to Oklahoma
Cory. Oden expects to see ·a
lot more people m Seattle
comong df)wn to Portland "
Oden plans to pursue a
degree dunng hos offseasons
He\ undecoded on a maJOI ,
but he wants to do somethm g
wtth food
"They don't ha\ e a cull
nary degoee at Ohoo St,ote. so
I ti guoe nut11toon and then try
to dQ somethmg wo th that.·
he saod "( Joke to cook , lloke
food"
Asked hos spccoalty 111 the
kotchen, Oden paused anP,
satd , "Hambuoger Helpeo ,md
tuna fosh "
Told that he should cook
from scratch, he replied " I
Joke the recopes. l can follow
a recope From what I hear, a
lot ol people c,on 't, so that's a
step up"

behev.oble and the game's
11n&lt;1ge has ompo o\ed dramatoc.olly
Ju st the fac t that 30 general m,11o.ogers have refused so
far to succumb to the tempt.ot oon of sognmg Burry
Bonds says somethmg about
the new state of the game In
ye,us past. someone would
have take n a ch,mce on the
bloated sl ugger, but even the
Y.onkees have been sman
enough to lay off
The .obsence of Bonds
osn't the only reason to celebrate the national pastome at
modseason As evodenced by
the youthful All-Star roster~.
there .ore some nsmg stars
and. ot you can t tmd anythong to Joke about Josh
Hamolton's Junkoe-to- superstar storv. how about the
quteter eievatlon of players
Joke Hanley Ramorez. Ryan
Braun and Russell Manon to
th e top echelon
Woth revenue shanng
domg the JOb 1t was
desogned to do, there's comthe tournament . Coco nos petitive races everywhere to
plans to turn pro ommedoate look forwmd to m the next
ly afterward on Fooday so he few months There are at
can play for pay on the least 18 teams that have
some clmm to bemg m conupcommg Ohoo Open
lndoana Umversoty 's Alex tent oon , and th at's not even
Manon of Moddletown shot a countong clubs Joke Toronto
72 and was at 139 Flond.t and Balttmore, whoch have
Southern 's Matthew Stauch los ong records but aren ' t
completely out of tt yet
had a 71 and was at 140

69 gives him 2-shot lead

FINDLAY Ohoo (A P) Holhard nan ve Et han Tracy
shot ,, 2-under 69 to take .1
two-stroke lead through 36
holes of the I02nd Ohoo
Amateur golf champoonshop
at Fondl.oy Country Club
Tracy, who woll pl ay at the
Unoversot) ol Arkansas thos
fall , fo llowed an openmg

oound of 67 and stood at 6und er
136
after
Wed nesday's second round
ot the 72-hole medal -play
tournament
In second place was former Ohoo State player Chad
Coconos ot Zanesvolle, who
had a second consecutive 69
and was at 138 If he woos

Down m Flonda, Tampa
Bay - yes T.1mpa Bay os battlmg tor the lead 10 the
Amencan League East
whole the Marhns have a
hneup that makes potchers
tremble when they thonk
about facmg ot The Twons
keep findong new ways to
won, the Togers are showmg
sogns of hfe, and the Mets
and Pholhes are finally neckand-neck
Those on contentoon show
no sogns of complacency •.
and the Yankees ha ve n' t
even staned any senous
dealing yet Just days after
the Brewers went out and
traded for CC Sabathoa, the
Cubs countered worh Ro ch
Harden. a trade that could
help propel the Lovable
Losers to theor forst World
Senes w1n on 100 years
On top of ot all, we got a
very entertaomng All Star
Game that dod nothmg to
dampen the enthusmsm for
the rest of the season, even
as tl stretched on, mmng
after mnmg, and all but the
doe-hards on Yankee Stadoum
had gotten on the No 4 tram
and headed for home
By that t1me the Amencan
League p1tchmg had worn
· penlously rhm , so thm that
Red Sox manager Terry
Francona was consodenng
takmg J D Drew up on hos
offer to p1tch It was eother
that, or bnng m Whlley Ford
for one last appearance , but
by then Wh1tey probably
was asleep
Thankfully, Drew never

~ribune

- Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED
'

had to potch or there m1 ght
have been more talk than
usual 111 October about how
the Natoonal League gdt the
home foeld advantage for
the World Senes The only
real downer now os that we
have to contemplate tpe possoboloty of the Fall Classoc
openmg 111 dreary Trop1cana
Foeld
The best thong about the
whole mght , though, was
that rh os game actually
me.ont somethmg Take Bud
Selog to task about the way
he's handled labor relations,
steooods and almost everythong else, but the deciSion
to a ward home- fiel d adv~n,­
tage m the World Senes to
the wmnmg league made rt
more th an JUSt an exhibition
That's why you saw the
AL All -S tars rushmg out
w1th hu gs and htgh foves for
Justm Morneau after he sh(l
home woth the wmnmg run
That's why Francona and
Togers
manager
Jom
Ley land embraced m glee m
the dugout
Asode from Papelbon and
the NL All-Stars, ot was a
happy no ght for almost
everyone Baseball celebrated ots past whole showmg off ots future, and managed to do ot well
Even th e Boss had to be
smohng about that

Gibson

90 games a year ago
" I won't say I'm sattsfoed
but I' m happy where we are
for now," manager Ozzte
Guollen saod ''I'd rather be
heoe 11ght now m thos posoto on th.on be m another posi-

Half

break
The Los Angeles Angel s'
s1x-game lead over the
Oakland Athletics m the AL
from Page Bl
West was the b1ggest lead m
baseball at break , but there
teams m our dovosoon and all
were close races m the NL
of them have wonnong tion ··
East and West - for very
records at home "
Guo lien 's team woll be dofferent reasons
Pmoella helped skipper the tested over the season's fonal
The
uneven
Cubs through fust half months , trymg to hold off Diamondbacks (47-48) were
lllJUroes to ace Carlos the plucky Twons and leadmg the slumpmg West,
Zambrano and All-Star out- Ttgers
followed by the medoocre
foe lder Alfonso Soroano,
Mmnesota to aded ace Dodgers
who could be back on Johan Santana m the offsea" I knew we were gomg to
Chtcago's potent lineup son but stayed on the race be inexpenenced , I knew we
soon
behond steady All-Stars Joe were gomg to tnals of bemg
" We're conf1dent, but Maueo and Justm Morneau , mconsosrent ," Los Angeles
we're not arrogant ," second whose production woll be second baseman Jeff Kent
baseman Mark DeRosa satd close I) v. atched as the saod "But [' m grateful that
"Just a bunch of guys hav mg Home Run Derby champ. Arizona's gomg through the
fun."
•
Justm Veolander and Detroot same thmg "
They' re also havong a lot are back on track after an
All the standmgs could be
of fun on the South sode of awful start , woth the ace thrown for a loop woth a bog
Chocago, where th~ Whole nght-handcr wmnong h1s trade or stgnmg Atlanta
Sox were m forst .tfter loson g last fove dec osoons before the slugger Mark Teoxeora could

In One Week With Us
E-mail
classofoed@mydaolytnbune com

devisees,

legatees,

executors, executrix·
as,

administrators,

admlnlstrstrlxes and
assignees and John

Doe,

Unknown

Spouse of Velma L
Taylor
and
If
deceased, all heirs,
devisees, legatees,

executors, executrix·
ea ,

administrators,

admlnlatratrlxes and
aaalgnaes

lddrssoeo

whose

are

unknown, will hereby

t1k1 notice that on
May
2,
2008,
Beneficial Ohio, tnc ,
flied Ito Complaint In
Foreclosure

and

Marehalllng of Llana
In the Common Pleao
Court of Melga
County, I00 E.
Second St. Pomeroy,
Ohio being Case No.
08 CV 079 against'
Velma L Taylor prayIng lor judgment In
the amount ol
$78,954 19 with Inter·
eroot
thereon
accorodlng to tho
tarmo of the note
!rom April 29 , 2008
until paid and for
foreclosure of sold
Mortgage DHd on
the
following
dHcrlbed 1111 eotatl,
or
which
uld
Dtfendantt, V.lmo L.
Taylor are tltt owntre
ol:

11 further dt1orlbtd
In Jllolntfl'o mortgogo
reaarclld
on
No'II!Mtr 21, 1003 In
look 1U 11111e H7 of
tilt
· Mortgogo
lltoord• of !ofolgt
Count~, Onto. Alto
known '" 37211 It,
lit. 1241 Mlddltport
OH417t0
1nd that Deftndant,

or be forever barred,

ol the quota Quotes

Public Notice

state-

Public Notice
appealed to the ERAC
by filing an appeal
within 30 days of
Issuance of the final
acllon.
ERAC
appeals, accompanied by a $70 filing
fee which th ecom-

ments of the direc-

mlsslon in It discre-

actions

Comments

or public meeting
requests

must

be

submitted within 30
days of notice of the
draft
action
"Proposed Actions

are

written

tor's Intent
respect to
Issuance,

with
the

denial ,

modification, revoca-

tion, or renewal of a
permit, license, or

tion may reduce If by
affidavit the appellant
demonstrates

amount of the fee
would cauae extreme
hardship, must be

variance
Written
comments
and
requests for a public

flied

meeting regarding a

Review

proposed act1on may

Commlaalon,

that upon failure of should be labeled be submitted within
said Defendants to ' Lawn Care Quote 30 days of notice of
payor to cause to be and mailed to the proposed action
Local An adJudication hearpaid said Judgment Southern
District, Ing may be held on a
within three days School
from Its randltlon that Treasurer a Office, proposed action If a
an Order or Sale be 920 Elm Street, hearing request or
ob(ectlon Is received
Issued to the Sheriff Racine, Ohio 45771.
of Meigs County, (7) 15, 16, 17,18
by the OEPA within
Ohio, to appraise,
30 days of loauance
Public Notice
of the proposed
advertise In the Dally
action Written com·
Sentinel and sell said
real aotate, that tho Public Notice
menta, requests lor
public meetings, and
premloea be aold free County Melga
and clear of all Tha following apptl· adjudication hearing
clalma, tlena and cations and/or veri· requests must be
Intern! of any of the fled complaints were sent to Hearing
Ohio
parties heroin, that received, and tho fol- Clark,
the proceed• from lowing dran. pro-- Environmental
final Protection Agency,
the ssta of 11ld prem- poaed, or
Box 1049,
laH bt applied to lhe actlona were lsaued, P 0
Ohio
The
Ohio Columbus,
Plaintiffs Judgmant by
and for auch other Environmental 43216 -1 049
Protection Agency (Telephone 614-644rellelto
which
Beneficial (OEPAI last week 21291 ' Final Actions
Ohio, Inc, Ia entitled,
"Actiona" Include the Are actions of the
Said Defendants are adoption, modlflca· director which are
directed to the tlon, or repeal of upon Issuance or a
CoJTiplalnt wherein orders (other than slated effective dale
notice under the fair emergency ordtrel, Pursuant to Ohio
Code
debt collection prac- the Issuance, denial, Revised
modification or revo- Section 3745 04, A
tice act Is given.
Said Defendants are cation of llcenaes, final action may be
required to anower permlla, leaH•. YBrl- appealed to the
within twenty-eight ancea, or certlflcltes, Environmental
Appaals
days after the publi- and the approval or Review
cation
Said disapproval ol plant Commlaslon (ERAC)
Dalendenta will taka and opeclllcatlont jFormerly know os
notice thet you are "Draft Actlone" are the Environmental
required to anowor written tlltomenta of Board of Revlewl by a
11td Complaint on or tht dhector cl pereon who wu a
beforo the Auguot !nvlronmenttl party to a proc:Mdlng
14th
Prottotlon ' t btfort tht director by
lnttnt filing an appeal with·
dey ol 2!101 or Judg· (Dirtctor't)
ment witt be rtn· with rtlptOI to the In 30 doyo of notice of
dered IOOollllngly.
loauanct, danlll, Ito. thl final action
ltntllolal Ohio, Inc of 1 permll, llotnM, Purouent to Ohio
l'lllntlfl,
Code
orctar, tto. lnte1'111N RtVIIId
lll(lhtn D. Mlloo pereone lillY IUDmh leotlon 3741.01, A
Attorney lor Plaintiff wrltttn
permH, ~f n1l Action luulng,
11 W. Monumont IIOtneo, order, ato atnytng, modltytno,
Avenue Dlyton, Ohio lntereattO peraane revoking, or renewing
may oubmll l!lrltton a ptrmlt, llotftll, or
41401
oommantt or rwqu11t v1rlonct whlc~ It not
~~ 11, ti,H, (713, tO,
• public meeting prlotded by 1 pro·
regarding
draft I)Oeed lOtion, moy be

that

payment of the full
with

Environmental

Appeals
309

South Fourth Street,
Room
222,
Columbus,
Ohio
43215 A copy of the
appeal must be
served

on

the dirac·

tor within 3 days after
filing the appeal with
the ERAC
Final approval of
Plans

and

Specifications
Racine VIllage PWS
P0 Box Box 399

3rd I VIne St
Racine, OH
Action
Date
07/07/2008
Facil i ty
Deacrlp ,tion Commu

nlty Water System
ldentltlcatlon
No
657502
This final action not
preceded by proposed action and Is
appealabJ&amp; to ERAC
Detail plans for
PWSID OH5300312
Plan No 657502
Ragardlng Southside
VIllage
Waterline
Replacements

read aloud for the fol·

lowing

Portland Communtty

Center
Electrical
Project
Specifications, and
bid torms may be
secured at the office
of Meigs County
Commissioners,

amount

will

be

NOTICE TO CON·
TRACTORS
Soled propoaala lor

the
Portlond
Community Center
Electrical ProJect,
Malga County, Ohio
11 par opaclflcallono
In Did packtt will be
11celved by tho Molgo
County
at

their office at the

Courthou11 ,

Pumoroy, Ohio 48788
until t .00 p m., Aug
71h, 2001 and than It
1.1S p m. at aald
olfloa opened and

Theodore T Reed, Ill,

returned within thirty Pomer.oy, Ohio; Kathy
(30) days after receipt M Reed, Pomeroy,
of bids
Ohio; Bruce J Reed,
Each bid must be Paris, Tennessee,
accompanied
by Rita J Reed, Paris,
either a bid bond In Tennessee, Paul M
an amount of 100% of Reed, Middleport,
the bid amount with a Ohio, Laurie F. Reed,
auraty aatlsfactory to Middleport, Ohio,
tho aloreaald Meigs Katie E.
Reed,
C o u n t y Mlddlapo1t, Ohio;
CommlssJonere or by • Krlotopher
M
certified
check, JOI\klna ,
cashiers check, or Itt· Goodlettsville,
tar of credit upon a Y•nneaaee, Tyler C
solvent bank In the Reed,
Paris,
amount of not less

Tennessee,

Robert

than 10% of the bids
amount In favor of the
aforesaid
Meigs
County

Tenneuee, Jordan

Commissioners Bid

Reed,

Darius
Pomeroy,

Reed,
Ohio ,

HOW I0 W§J~E 6[i ~
Su'Ccesfu Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

*POLICIES*
Ohio Valley
Publlohlng reserves
lhe rlghl to edll,

I

Public Notice
period will not enol
before twenty (201
days after publication, and may be
somewhat longer The

Division's

proce-

dures for processing

eported on the fire
of publication an
he Trlbune-Sonllnel
agister
will
b
eaponslble tor n

ora than the coat o

requirement•

con·

1nc1 r1qulre,1nta,

vartoua equ11 oppor·
tunlty prOvlotont, ena
the requlrtmtnt lor 1
payment bond lAd
parlarmanct bond tor
tOO'It. of thtl contraDt
prlca No bidder may
WlthdtiW hll Did WHh•
In thirty (301 dlyl

meeting

or

formal

hearing on the notice
If they are received In
writing by the OhJo
Dlvlalon on or before
the laat day of the
comment period

ny loll or expens

hat results

Bruce Reed, Paris,
Tenn••-· Intend to
apply to the Federal
Rtserve Board for
thereby control of
Farmers Bancah1r'11,

Inc , Pomeroy, Ohio.
Farmtra Bancaharea,
Inc , controla Farmera

Bank I Savlngt
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio. The Fedtrtl
ltellt'Vt ooneldtre •
number 01 lactore In
deciding whttlltr to
apprvve the ootlct.
YOU Ill lnvltU to
oubmlt commante In
writing on thlt notlat
to tht Onto Dlvitlon
ot
'lntnclal
IRitlhltiOnl, 'f1 I .
High It,, at tt " ''
ColumiiUt, OH 421! I•
1120. Tht oommant

a

Telephone &amp; Voice
Mall Syotem A copy
of the opeclflcetlono
may be obtalnad lrom
tho Molgo County
DJFS, Attn: Darrln
Cremeana, 175 Roat
Btrtet, Middleport,
OH 41110, until July
31( 2001. Propoaalo
wll Ill dut Oy 12:00

noon

on

Box number ads a

lways conlldenllal
Current

pplleo
All Real Estat
dvertlsemenls

ar

ubject to the Fedora
air Housing Act o

968

nowspape
ccepts only hal
anted ads

meetln

OE standants

ANNOUNCE:MI

~"I'S

Ir

9 wk

M

old

Sea l

Pt

DJFS reserves the
right to accept or
reject any or all bids
and/or any part thereof or accept the best
bid for the Intended

sement

Dally In-Column: 1 00 p.m
Monday-Friday for lnsert1on
In Nex.t Day ' s Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1 00 p m
For Sundays Paper

Due to decl n ng Health
Male net Matne Coon Cat
tabby &amp; wh te to good home
304 674 1021
Free kittens to good home
2M 3F long/short hatr van
attorr tn colors litter Ira ned

(740)441 1169

r

Lo.'J'AND

FOUNI&gt;

Found tn town (F) shepherd
m1x young very clsan dog
weanng a Olue col lar Call

In vtolatlo

Found on 411'1 Ave near
lnloCts1on (M) Full blooded
RatTemer docked tatl 339

3265 0&lt; 256 9372

725

Announcement... .
Antiques ..... .
Apartments for Rent . ....

030
530
440

Auction and Flea Market
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories

Auto Repair.
Autoa lor Sale
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
Building Supplies.......

Bualnesa and Buildings.

Bualnooe Opportunity
Buolnoll Trelnlng ..
Compero I Motor Homes
Camping Equlpmont..
Carda of Thank• •.••. .••

Chlld/Etdlrty Care .....
Etectrtcai/Refrlgeratlon
Equipment for Rent
Excavating...
Farm Equipment....

NOMA

Farms lor Rant ......

Farm1 for Silo ......
ForLeau
For Sale....
For Seta or Trade.
Frultl I VegatabiH
Fumlohed Rooma .. , ,, ....
General Houllng..
Glvoawav
Happy Ado .......
Hay &amp; Gratn . ...
HelpWanted...

WHAT
STYLE...

••

080
760

770
710
750
. .. 550
•.. 340

210
140
790
780
010

, 190
840
480
830
610
430

...... 330
490
585
590
510
450
850
0411
050
. . 6411
.110
810
310

Houoehold Goods..

510

Houaealor Rent....
In Memoriam
Insurance

410
020

Lawn a Garden Equipment
Ltvsstock. .........
Loot and Found..
, .•
: l.oto 1 Acreego... .............
Mlacallaneoul.... .......... .
Mlacellaneou• Merchandlee .•.• •...

... THE
NEWSPAPER
. HAS
SOMETHING
fOR YOU!!

130

860
630
060
350
170
540

Mobile Homo Repillr.... .
Mobile Homeo lor Rant.
• Mobile Homaolor Sale
Money to Loan
.....
Matorcyclea a 4 Wheeloro

,, 860
, .420
.. .320
220
. 740

Mualcallnatrumenta
' Peraonala ......... .......... .
Pete for S.la. ..... • • •. ......

570

005
, 560

Plumbing &amp; Hosting. .. .
.....820
Profeaelonel SarvlcH
...... 230
Rodlo, TV 1 'CB Roopalr , . .. .
..... 180
Reel Eotato Wanted.....
360
Sclloote lnotruc11on. .
.. 150
- , Plant I Ferttttzer.. .
. .650
Sltuotlano Wonted.......
120
S- for Rant ............ .. ...... .
.. 410
Sporting Goode
...... 520
SUY'e for Sale , ..
.. ... ,. ..... 720
Trucltllor Silo
............. 1...... 715
UphotatarY ....... . ... .
...... 870
v- For Bile . ..
730
Wonted to Buy
.
090
Wonted to Buy• Farm Supplloo
620
Wonted To Do.... .......
.
.. 160
Wonted to Rant ...,. ... , ........ . . ........ .470
Void Soli- O.ltlpollo. .. ........ ,,,.,,,,, 072
Yold Soli-Pomeroy/Middle...... . .......... 074
Void Sole-PI Pleaoent
......... 071

Auguat 1,

aoot Quelttona con·

cerntng tho tyattlll
may Ot dltocttd 10
Dtrrln CrlmeAnl,
t?40) 112·2 111 ..,
114, or Jane llnMI
C740) 112-2117 o•t

1oe.

Thl MtiQI County
I

All Display 12 Noon 2
Buslne•s D~ys Prior To

Publication
Sunday Display 1 00
Thur-sday for Sundays-P••po&gt;r

POLICIES Ohio Valley Pubilahlng re.arvea the rlghtlo edit rajecl or cancel any ad at any lime Errors muaiiMI reponed un the tint day ol publlcallon and lhfl
Trlbune-Sentlnet..Reglate!' will be reaponslble for no more than the cost otltle space occupied by I he error and only thellrat Insertion We shall ngt be liable for
MV loas or 11penae that ~nullt lrgm the pu~l~;ellgn or omla~Non of an advertleement Correction will be made In the !Ire! available edition Sox number .cle
are alwaya conlldenUal
Current rate card ~tppllee
All realealate advertl.amenta are eublect to the Fed eral Fair Houelng Act of 19fi8 Thla newep~~per
accepts only help wanted ads meetl~ EOE atantU~rds We wm not knowingly accept any advertising In violation ol the law Will not De responalble lor any
errors In an ad taken over tM phone

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

FotJND

10
kltncarlyle@!comcast

~t.llo.(,

1\'l'f'I;R
t\ELpS.

?

Huge Sale Great Stt.tft 7!17
7/ 19 1mtle out Morgan
Center Ad off 160 Home
intenor baby \ems

Multi fam1ly sale Sal July 19
from 9·3 at Johnsons Mobtle
Home park Lot 22 Womens
mens boys clothes books
glassware dressers
::___ _:__ _ _-::-_
Thursday 1711'1 &amp; Fr day
18th 9am 4pm 7169 StAt 7
S
Ga llt po~s
Movmg
everythrng must got
-y,-,d-'-Sa-le.:_I_ _ _:_P_a_
lll-oi_R_d_
539

••
•
1- 11

mu~
©2008 by NEA Inc
AVONI All Areas' To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears 304
675 1429
-------~

Billtng Ass stant Mu91 have
expenence wtth ICO 9 CPT
and Mad ca l Termmoiogy
Med tcal b itlng and cia ms
recovery a plus Send
resume to 400 East State
Streel Athens Oh 45701
------,---Careg1vers and CNAs need

Yard Sale 71 18&amp; 711.9 94
288 Adamsvtlle Ad krds
clothes toys toddler bed
htgh cha 1r strOllers &amp; m1sc

ad In Mason Cou nt y
Immediate opemng rn Leon
Bonuses and ncenttves
AB ODE Health Cares
Servtces Inc
304 586
Yard Sale
Frtday &amp; 9441 Toll free 1 866 327
Saturday Mens Womens &amp; 7262
Kids Clothes ~Baby Items - - - - - - - LaSalle C rcle off LeG a!"fda Country/Southern
Rock
Band looktng for Lead Guttar
4
YAROSAU·
player &amp; Bass player 740
PoMF.R0\~11Dot E 645 1800
~-------

Garage(llome sale)Fn Sat
9A M near Overbrook Ct
M
I
d
d
Antiques treadmill e;oc;er equt
p 1awnmower home{ drapes
etc)clothes&amp;more
Multt famtly garage sale Fn
July 1Bih Austtc H1Us
Syracuse clothes g1ri 3
mol6yrs
boy 3mo 1yr
Beante Bears 26...g•rls b1ke
household mtsc Items 9 4

Direct Ca re Staff needed n
the Potnt Pleasant WV area
to wo rk w th developmental
ly dtsabled mdtvtduals
AlJitsm Servtces Center
offers excellent bene! Is
competllt \18 wages and !lex
1ble hourS For more nfor
maiiOn please call !304)
525 8014
Or
VISII
www auttsmsery!cescen
l.it..2Ig. for details

AucnONAND
~ LIA

MARKY.t
FEDERAL

Craft Fatr Opemngs a&gt;Jatl
O S
able Deadline 8/29 at
POSTAL J 8
Lighthouse Assembly of $1789$2827/hr now hlf
God Craft Fa1r Dale tS 9113 tng For apphcallon and free
governement Job mfo call
446 928 , leave messa 8
American Assoc ot Labor 1
913 599•8226 24/h rs emp
W''"~D
\.!" •r.

"-------..1
10 BUY

-,
Absolute Top Dollar
sll
ver/gold
co1ns
any
10KJ14K/18K gold jewelry
denlal gold pre 1935 US
currency prooflmmt sets
dramonds MTS Com Shop
151 2nd Avenue Gallipolis.
446 2842
Junk cars w1th or wtlhoul
tttles 740 388 0884

serv

www com1cs com
LABORER EARN AS YOU
LEA.RN Start bu lldmg for
your future NOW by JOrnmg
our profess anal team and
learn the sktlts to become a
H1gh Pressure Cleamng
Maintenance TECHNICIAN
All postltons requ1re extend
ed TRAVEL outstde the
state company provtdes
todgtng transportatiOn and
Per 01em We prov1de PAID
tra1nmg excellent BENE
FITS 401 (K) r Aettrement
plan Layover &amp; Travel Pay
Pre employment
DRUG
TEST s requrred Class A.
CDLandOnversllcense lsa
plus bu t not requtred
Ouahfrad candidates may
bscome ehg1ble for company
sponsored COL tramrng
The nght candidates wtll be
resp onsrbl a goal saekmg
tnd1vlduals wtth a team on
snted approach Only sen
ous HARD WORKING tndl
v1duals need apply sehd
work hrstory and day ttme
phone
number
to
Tschntctart Jratnee P.O Bo;oc;
565 Manetta OhiO 45750
EOE

$500 SIGN ON Bonus!
Travel, tra\lel
Traveltlt
SeekJng 5 sharp guys Of
g~rls 10 join our young mind-

ed, hlp-hop '"""'"'"'' bluoIBan environment Travel to
CA FL HI and olh&lt;ll US
CttiBSI X-Gen Y·Gen. Musk:
lovers Skataboardar wal

come Ja,n 1 886-361 1526
An E,cellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Martlyn 304 882 2645

Prr Securtty Offtcers must
be able to pass drug test &amp;
background check Send
resume to www tnfoweare
gonnagetem com or (fix to
740 441 9645

The
Athens Metgs
EducatiOnal Servtce Cente r
has an anttc•pated opemng
for a Talented and G1fled
teacher to serve th e
Southern
&amp;
Eastern
Elementary Schools m
Me gs County tor the 2008
2009
School
Year
Appltcants must hold a valid
cerlll•catelhcense wtth a
Talented and Gtfted vahda
tton (or be wtlhng to work
toward appropnate llcen
su re) Thts IS a 9 month
posttron
w Ill
Board
approved benof1ts Salary
w111 be based on quallltca
!to ns
and
a;oc; perlence
Subm•t lener of mterest
resume and references to
Jol'1n
0
Costanzo
Supenntenden t
At~ en~
MBigs Educaltonal Ser11tce
Cenler 320 112 E Man 51
Pomeroy
Ohto 45769
Appltcahon
must
be
receiVeO by Fnday July 25
12 00 pm The AM ESC IS an
Equal
Opportunity
Employer/Provtder

P a r t t rm e Watk·ln Interviews
Housekeep 1ng/L au ndr y
Monday Fnday
Overbrook Center rs accepl
900 am .100pm
rng appl catt ons for part trme
242 Th rd Aile
Housekeeptngtlaundry post
Galltpohs OH
t•ons all shtfts Please stop
Htnng All ShtftSI
by for an appltcatton at 333
1-"877-463-6247 x2659
Page St
M1ddlepor1 Oh
OBC
IS
an
Equal
Opportumty Employer and a Wa nted Watt Staff person
Parhctpant of the Drug Free no e)(penence necessary
we wtll !ram Fnendty wtth a
Workplace Program
team player attitude ts
PatrtOt c Foods Inc lookrng mandatory Apply tn person
for Route Sales Managers at the Holiday Inn Front desk
LPN/AN poslttons ava lable Patd Trarn•ng 304 674 8683
n GaJi tpOitS No pllone calls
for ped1atric home health or 304 812 0270
please
care n Vmton area E)(p
w/venVtrachfg tube
pre Position 0Dening
50
&amp;.1100LS
!erred Days PT/PAN 20 to TASC of Southeast Oh1o _
l~IRLX.110N
so hrs per week Contact (TSOJ a pnvate not tor prof Lw-oiiiiiitiiiiiitiiiiiiior
Mtchele at PCNS 800 518 11 substance abu se agency Galli poll&amp; career College
2273
ISseeking a parlttme cllmcal '(Careers Close To Home)
records clerk to work tn the Call ToOayl 740 446 4367
Nanny needed Someone to Galha
County
oHtce
~ 800 214 0452
watcll ktds run errands Ouahftcations 1nclude Bas te ~ ga hpol acereeorco l59e edtJ
cook clean and mise house olltce and clencal sktlls mtn Accredited Member Accr&amp;dft ng
hold chores Pay depends •mum ol one year of e~ pert Cowd to tndependell1 Colegfl6
7 ':;:.'_ __ ,
on e;oc;perience Please call ence In a cler callmedtcal ~
""'i!P""";;:"
~':.'o::2;;:
4469357 evenings or 740 records setttng Assooates
925 3169 days
degree tn Appled Bustness
MISCW.AI"\FOUS
~------- or related held preferred .
Need someone to help expertence wtlh cltntcal
around house and fa rm records Pleas&amp; submtt Pet Cremaltons Call 740

r

MONE\
IOLOAN

Borrow Smart Contact
the Oh o D1Vrs10n Qf
F nanc•al
lnstrt ulton s
Off•ce
of Consumer
Affa~rs BEFORE you ref•
nance your home or
oblatn a loan BEWARE
of requ ests for any large
advance payments of
fees or 1nsurance Call the
Ottrce ot Consumer
Alta1rs toll tree at 1 866
278 0003 1o leam tf the
mortgage
broker or
lender
IS
properly
ltcensed (Th s ts a public
servtce announcement
from the Ohto Valley
Publlslltng Company)

i

r

I

rro

I'ROH':iSIONAL

St:.RVJl't-N

Busy Bee Cleamng SerVICe
Offtce
&amp;
Homes
Professto Je lly
Cleaned
Reasonable rates Good
Quality
Honesty
References Nancy icard
740-446 2262 Also Ask for
Nanct at Michael &amp; Frrends
Mens &amp; Women s Hatr your
way 740 446 0698

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless Wa Wlnl
I 686 582 3345

IH \ll"ol\11

10

HOMI:S
IOKSAI£

2vr old House 1n H~rtfnrd
1 900 sq ft 3 bedroom, 2
bath s F.al tn Kitchen
Dmmg Room Dt:n &amp; Famd~

lnromlrH J Cir&lt;;\llrnrr

Sf'·v,n·

ln'&gt;plr&lt;thon Nelwork
,,;•

I •'

O''

925 3169 days
-------Naed someone to spray lor
Po1son Ivy around out
mOI:lrle home and yard 446
7039
- - - - - -- -

'll'

NOW to bcgi11 the
;rpphc;rlron process 1
1 AA!I 461 7298 e)(! 1\121
lllll 'Qbo; lniOCIO,IQn COin
Part lime merchandtser llelp Now Hiring 20 Full Time
wanted 1 to 2 days a week employee~ for openlngl
merchand1s1ng magaztnes in our Gallipolis location!
m the foliowtng area
CialilpQI!i A'terag_e_ PllY IS
Take mbound customer
$9-$10 per hr ij Interested
sel'\l•ce calla for
send ua a postcard with
Fortune 100 CompanieS
note or resume Including
lndudtng
your phone number to the
.Time
Warner
Cable
News
Group
3755
Interchange Ad Columbus
Cllll to echedule rour
OH 43204 or fa, 6t4 351
lnlel~lew
5283 or call1.fJ77 63974n
t
.aaa-tMC-Po\YU
ext 117 and leave a mes
Elll 2321
sage Please specify the
Apply
onlme
area you re caWtng tor '
http:fljoba lnfoclalon com

Gall1pohs Ohio 45631 or fa;oc;
to7404412970oremail to
ftscal @ovbh org Deadlme
for subm•sston IS July 25
2008 TSO •S an equal
opportunity employer that
otters excellent compeltttve
salanes and beneltts

POST OFFICE

NOW

HIRING

Avg Pay $20/hr or
$57Kiyr tncludes
Federal Benetrts OT
Placed by adSource not
oHered w/ USPS who hires
I 866-403 2582

Durham

@

(7401992 3437

Looking tor pert t1me

- - - - , - - - - - 2nd job,

mllnary

'lt'()f1(

con~ruc­

AesCare Home Care ts tion security food han
accepting apphcatfons tor dltnglcooking iandlellllng
Support Associaloo CNA &amp; priDr experience and haw
STNA MRIDD exp pre worked oonal81enlly 1o&lt; 11tt
fem1&lt;1 Apply at 8204 Carle pool 12 )'0111 ~ 11oo on
DriYo Clallip&lt;;ll. Men Frl maritime 1n00s1ry 304~7!18--C
Email resume to
2017
rhanieonOrescare com
WV BOhr Underground
Miner Class. 11erting soon
Whtt Co Trammg 304 372
8346

Home
Maintenance
Carpant~
Plumbing, Bathroom• No
Job ro Small Call 339 3442

Superior

Fair Houeing Act at 1968
which makes IIIHegal to
advertise •ny
preterent:e limitation or
dlar;rlmlnatlon bated on
race color religion. sex
familial alatua or national
origin or any Intention 10
make any auch
preference limitation or
dlacrlmln111on
Thlt newtpaper will not
knowingly accept
~dvertlset;nents ror real
estate wh ich I&amp; In
vl ollltlon of the law Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwelllnga advertlted In
this mtwepaper are
available on an ~~I
opportunity baHa

Foreclosure 4br 2ba only
$29 900' Pnced to Sell' For
Ltsltngs 800 620 4946 ex

T462
PRICE REDUCED $69 900
2712 Ltncoln Ave 3br tba
w th detacheel
garage
mot vated seller 304 675
6757 304 610 131 3 or
Ass rst 2 Sale 304 755 2980
Very nrce 4br 2 be home on
t&lt;tneon Or In Galllpolts Ntce
Outte ne tghbort1ood on dead
end street Large 2 car
garage and ltntshed base
men! 740 256 1109

03 Clayton T4x52 2BA
IBA E;oc;c Cond S11 ,)()()
Must be moved !740}446
3816 oo(740)645 6196 cell
141170 w/ 81120 expando 3
br 1 5 bath great cond

$5000 304 593 6851
16X60 3 Bedroom 2 Bath
V nyl Stdlng Sh1ngle Roof
$230 per month 740 385

9948
-----,---:,-

$&lt;;5 000 1304)675 6628

· - - - - - - · 2br 2 batll w/ wh rlpooltubs
Decks room additions stor large LA on 3 acres mil
age bu ldtngs garages $80 000 740.446 7029
fl oortng stdmg windows
rooltng all types new con
struct•on small excavating
demolltton etc No job to big
or small we can do II all
Over 15 years experience
Low pncmg hrgh quality
workmanship
Free
Est•matest
Gall
Matt
or 740 444 1308

In lhll newspaper 11
subject to the Federal

3 bed HUO Homes' only 2006 Redman 14x65 1n as
$10 0001 for listings 800 new cond1t1on on rented 101
£20..494 6 ex R0 19
tn Apple Grove WV 304
576 2000
3br 2ba Sectronal on 6
acre Roseberry Ad Pt 2008 3 bedroom 2 bath sec
Pleasant w/ washer dryer llonal home $279 per month
dishwasher&amp; refrtgerator 740 385 7671

reo

Servtce Reps

All reel estate edvertlalng

2 2006 t6x80 Clayton 3 Bed
2 Bath 2000 16x70
FleelwoOO 2 Bed 2 Balh
Room Level lot All apph· 1999 Fortune 3 Bed 2 Batll
ances Washer Dryer &amp;
Wmdow dressm!! mcluded Daytime 740 38S.QOOO Of
740 388 8513 Evenlng740$93 500 304 882 249 4
388·8017 or 740 245 9213

4 bedroom 2 1/2 bath log
hOme 34286 New Crew
Rd Pomeroy IQ pole bUild
446 37 45
1ng &amp; out budd tng on 6 acres
Hours are flextble Pay resume and cover Jette( vta ~ii~;;:;:..':'!':',..,_--, wfpond !816)668 0758
dependsone;oc;penence Call ma l to Amy f.4 See Fiscal
WM1'ED
446 9357 e&gt;Jentngs or 740 Manager PO BoJC 88 _
To Do
Brand new Never ltved rn

C1ll

I \11'111\\ll"-l
"t H\ II I ...,

Ollro Valley Home Health
Inc hmng STNA CNA
Home Health A1des &amp;
Personal Care Atdes Full
Part Ttm e &amp; Per Dram post
hons avariable Apply at
1480
Jackson
Ptke
Gallipolis or phone 441
1393 Compeltllve Wages
m leage reimbursement and
other bene! ts tncfudmg
healfh l,nsurance

Ho~

•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends
that you do bus ness wtth
people you know and
NOT to send money
through the matt un111 you
have tnvest gated the
otfenng

EOE

0

B•g yard sale July 18 19 20
piciUres lamps clocks
clothes kmck knacks btrds
199
Hemlock
Ad
Evergreen

oo

IURSAU

Regional Dump Drillers
R&amp;J Truckmg tS seek ng
quah!red CDL A dr vers to
operate semr dumps lor
regtonal routes Ws teature
excellent home ltme health
and
dental
rnsurance
401{k) vacation bonus pay
and safety awards Qualified
applicants must be over 23
yrs have a mtntmum of 1
year of co mmencal dr Vlng
expenence &amp; clean MVA
Pnor expenence w th sem
dumps and roll oHs s help
lui Contact Kent at 000
462 9365 or I II out apphca
1on at www rJtrucktng com

IN SlA&lt;*

Y&lt;\RD SALE·
GAIIIPOUS

11\\'\(1\1

HttrWANIW

net

YAKD S \l.t

Everyday e)(CE!Rt Sunday 9
? New merchandtse dmty

4x4'a For Sale..

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ods
{p~
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for Iorge

• All ads must be prepaid"

Free
2~x4"x6
fencmg
w/steel posts appx ltlty feet Indoor Sale July 17 18 19
from 9am 4pm at 218 3rd
(740)992 5275
Ave Ant que fu rn lure col
Part Black Lab puppy very Icc! ble terns dtshes books
lov ng Please call 740 645 kntck knacks ptctures cook
ware
linens
ch•ldrens
2732
clolhes

CLASSIFIED INDEX

(7117' 24, 31

frllday

LOSIMD

Anhque upnght Ptano &amp; an
older Relngerator 304 675 4867 St AI 850 12pm to
1571
July 1419

the taw

purpose

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Djsplay Ads

~~~::;::~

S1amese ktden Indoor home
only Call (740)441 1100 (Ill
evenmgs or (740)645 8£84 ~T.l

&gt;We will nol knowing
y accept any adve

Public Notice

lJ~arltirM

• FOUND Enghsh Red Coon
Hound on Old AI 35
I Mtchael S Stewart w II not 7/1512008 Female 304 675
be responstble for any 1186
Debtls other than my own - - - - - - - 7/14/06
Lost Glasses somewhere
between Texas Rd on the
___
GIVEAWAY
• way tnto town 446 7020

446 4059

-

•
I

th

made In the firo
liable edhlon

Public Notice

for

1•\11•'\l"'i

'\(

Home Improvements
Home a for Sale...

poaala

Pomeroy, Ohio, and

from

ubllcatlon or omls
ion of an advertl
ant. CorracUons wll

(7) 17

of the aharea and

Permission to retain

talned In thlt bid
pocket, particularly to
tht Ftdoral Labor
Stondlllll Provlelona
and
DaviJ·I•con
Wagtt, variOUI tnaur·

requnt for a public

27 73 percent or more

ered to

Courthouoe
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Attantlon of blddoro
Ia called to 111 of tht

comments and any

NLI•utt;.;;

• Include Phone Number And Addren When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

r'--..---.,JIrro

flrst lnse&lt;llon W
hall not be liable lo

John

Reardon, Supervisor,
at ~6141 728-8400 The
Ohio Olvlalon of
Financial Institutions
will consider your

RA

• StArt Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Desc:rlptlon • Inc:lude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

ha

menta on the notice,

contact

V

---

he space occuple
y the error and onl

com ~

your

NOTICE TO VEN·
DORS
"TELEPHONE
&amp;
VOICE MAIL SYSTEM"
FOR THE MEIGS
COUNTY DEPART·
MEN'{ OF JOB I
FAMILY SERVICES
The Meigs County
Department of Job &amp;
Family
Servlcea
(Meigs County DJFS)
will be accepting pro--

Paris,

Tonne11ee, and Ben
Reed, Middleport,
Ohio, Paul Reed,
Middleport, Ohio,
Theordore Reed, Ill,

County

11.1bmlt

\\\()\

r

or cancel any
ad at any time
Errors Must B

Juatln Reed, Paris,

Bonds shalt be
accompanied
b~
Proof of Authority of
the official or agent
signing the bond
Bids shalt be uated
and marked as Bid
for Portland commu·
nlty Center Electrical
and mailed or deltv·
Commissioner•

Public Notice

Public Notice
after the actual date
of the opening thereof The Metgs County
Commissioners
reserve the right to
reject any or all bids.
Jim Sheets, PlliSident
Meigs
County

Pl

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

be on the move agam 1f the
onJury-nddled Braves fall off
the pace, and Toronto nghthander A J Burnett could be
attracllve for a team desperate Iy seekmg another stanerSan Otego could deal 350game wmner Greg Maddux
and left-hander Randy Wolf
And stoll out there on the
free-agent market mdocted
home run kong Barry Bonds
Woth most of the teams
stoll on the race for a postseason spot, teams could have
trouble deci&lt;'long whether
they ' re buyers or sellers
ahead of the deadline. It
could lead to another surpnsmg postseason, too
"There osn 't that much of a
doffe1ence between the top
five teams m our league ~
the teams on the bottom,"
Ptmella sa1d, "Any team can
beat you "

applications may be
Commissioners
found
at Ohio
(7) 17,24
Revised •
Code
Courthouse,
Section 1t 15.06 and
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Section 1301 :Ot-06 of
Public Notice
Phone 740·992·
the
Ohio
2895 A deposit of 0 NOnCE OF CHANGE Administrative Code
dollars will be IN CONTROL OF A To obtain a copy of
required lor each set BANK
HOLDING the Ohio Division's
of plans and apeclfl· COMPANY
procedures, Ot' If you
cations, check made
The Reed Family need more lnforma·
payable to-. The full Control
Group tlon about how to

Meigs

171 17

Commlealon~re

Public Notice

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

'fYprd Ads

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
NOTICE OF PUBLI- Velma L Taylor, and If
deceased, all heirs,
Public Notice
CATION
Local
IN THE COMMON devisees, legatees, Southern
PLEAS COURT OF executors, ex:acutrix- School District 920
MEIGS
COUNTY, es, administrators, Elm Street, Racine,
OHIO Meigs County administrators and Ohio 45771 Is accept·
lng quotes for lawn
Clerk of Courts
assignees and John
P.O. Box 151 100 E Doe,
Unknown care services for the
Spouse of Velma L District
2nd St
Taylor,
and
If Specifications can be
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Beneficial Ohio, Inc. deceased, all heirs, oblalned by calling
vs Velma L Taylor et devisees, legatees, the superintendant's
al Case No. 08 CV 079 executors, executrix· ofllce at 740·949·
Velma L Taylor, es, administrators, 26 t 1 Quotas will be
whose last known administrators and opened at noon on
address ts 37295 St assignees
be Monday, July 28th,
Rt 124 Middleport OH required to sat up any 2008. The board
45760,
and
If Interest they may reserves the right to
deceased, an heirs, have In said premises reject any or any part

Webso)es
www mydaolytrobune com
www mydallysentone l com
www mydaolyregoster com

To Place
\!Crihune
Sentinel
l\egister
Your Ad, (7 40) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax To 446-3008
Or Fax To (740) 992·2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

T11n Dahlbng 1s a natwn
a/ spom colwmust for The
AHocwted Press Wnte to
fum at rdahlbergap org

--

Meigs County, OH

Galli a
County
OH

reject

some pre ss ure off J am'es
Gobson has foiled that role at
tomes but not consistently
" I feel Joke as ttme goes
from Page Bl
on I'll contonue to 1mpro&gt;e
By re sogmng Gobson, the and my role woll contonue to
Cavaliers brought back theor oncrease and dev e lop ,"
most conso stent outsode Gobson saod
Gtbson mossed the tonal
shootmg threat They're
also ahead of where they two games of Cleveland's
were last year when restnct- playoff sen es aga onst
ed free age nts Sasha Boston woth a separated
Pavlovic and Anderson shoulder Gobson, whose
VareJaO held out all summer sconng was key to the
Cavaliers won o;er Detroot
before res1gnmg
Gobson was hfth on the on the Eastern Conference
NBA last season on 1 pomt finals to reach theor first
shootmg at 44 percent He NBA fmals m 2007, says
was named MVP of the All
mossong Game 7 of the
Star
Rookoe/Sophomore Boston senes sto ll h a unts
game on New Orleans when, h1m
he made a record II 3"I've had a lot of s leeppomters.
less noghts JUSt wondenng
The Cavaliers are m need where I could have helped
of a second scorer to take the team ," Gobson satd

www.mydailysentinel.com

2BR 1 bath total electnc
on rented lot cah stay

$3500 446 3617
81 Schult 14x70 2 bf large
bath woodburner slove
relngerator w/d 10x20 sun
porch wfcomptete setup
exce•ent shape tnstde &amp; out
(h as to
be
moved)

(740)992 5181

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

t ~~~ 1r~.,__

'S_,I

AII\Jm\
•••
QK_JIDn_IFNI
__

Brand new 3bed 2bath on
2BA apt. CIA..
+ - hatf acre in Pt. Pleasant 0194

r

SPACE

tURRINr

It

l't:l'

Federal Funds just released
for Lar.d Ow11ers. No closir&gt;g cost and ZERO DOWN•
Will
do
Land
Improvements Bankruptcy

&amp; Bad Credit OK. 2. 3. 4 and

stainless $1600 . Winchester colo r~ (740)44 6 2432 or
Model- 94 Antlered Game (740)794· 1950
New 3 Bedroom homes from
$450. Model • Y417 $450,
$214.36 per month. Includes
Model· 94-4 10 $47 5 44 1J· CKC Mrnature Prnschsr 2
many upgrades, delivery &amp;
~
48:;1:;.
6------, mates, 4 mon old. ears
set-up. (740)385·2434
cropped, tails dockE-d, shots.
Beautiful Apts. at Jackson
AN"Ilf}t "E'I
740·388 B7aa

446·3384

''

---,---,---,-- i

Lw------.,.1

Lms&amp;

Eatates. 52 Wes1woocl
Drrve , trom S365 to $560.
Equal GIBBS ANTIQUES Frr 8
740 _446 .2568 _
Sat. 10·5. Sun. 1·7 or by
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT. 1031 Georges Creek Housing Opporlunity. 'Thrs appt. Also. restore furtlilure
in strtution is , an EQual Located on Tornado Ad . oft
Ad.4~n1tt
Opportunity Provider and
Rt..33. Racine (Park ,
·
I{ I '\I \I ..,
Employer
&amp; Aide ) exit 74Q-949·2246

AC.liEACE

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· 540 ML'OJJ. \NIO[IS
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
MtlKIIANIJISI·:
Townhouse
apartments,
FORREN"r
anct/or small houses FOR
02 l&lt;.awasaki Mule model
RENT Call (740)441-1111
3000. ex.ce tlen t condition,
199/mo! 3 bed. 2 bath. Bank
for app~ ca tion ~ i_nlormation
320 hrs on it. $6200 645Repo t (5% down, 20 years.
5402
"
8'% A.PA) tor listrngs 800·
620-4946 ex. A027
Antique orQan excellent.
1 br $375/monlh .
rn
conditron $300.00 Complete
Syracuse. · Deposit, Hud
bedspread and decor . tor
Appm'ed.
No
Pets. 2&amp;38R apts. $385 and up,
girl s bedroom $100 .00
(304)675·5332 weekends Cebtral Air. W/0 HookUp. Antique dresser and couch.
Tenant pays electric. EHO $!00.00
740·591.()265
441 . 9972 .

HULStS

Free Rent
Special!!!

- - - - - - -. •
Ellm View Apts.
JET
AERATION MOTORS.
7
3
04
8
8
2
3
0
1
::-(_ ,...
_ _ _-_ _ _ _ Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
FurniShed Apl. 2nd Ave in Stock. Ca ll Ron Evans. 1·
Gallipolis upstairs, all utili· aoo-537-952 8.
tres paid, t br. no pets. 446· ·

2 ' bedroom house for rent
no pets. (740)992 -5858

_1

2bc ;n Pt. Pleasanl. $465
month. Homestead Realty
Broker Nancy 304·675·4024
.:.o'.:30
c:.4_·.:..67c:.5_:·0,..
79:..:9__:_ _

Grbson Les Paul double cut·
away sludro $750. 740-245·
0111 1

l

~UK ROO

Shear
Illusions, call John 740-992.,------c-~ 3967 or 7 40·4~ 6-2 415!!
Clean 2 brf1ba in Ma.son:
brlt ba in New Haven. both Spacious second-floor apt.
furnished &amp; utilities ·pd. overlooking Gallipolis Ci ty
Construction workers wel- Park and river. L.R . den ,
large kitchen-dining area
come.
with all new appliances &amp;
74Ht6-6622.
cupboards. 3B R. laundry
Ooub)jlwide Jbr, 2 ba, WID, area. 2 112 baths. $900 per
stovellridge provided. Hud month . Call 446-4425, or
ok,6 month lease. $575/rent 446-2325
$575 dep, you pay utilities.
1720::: 1/2 Chatham Ave, Tara
Townhouse
Gallipolis 740-645-1646
Apartments. Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms. CIA, 1 1/2
APARThlENfS
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
FORREI'lf
Pool. Patio, Start $425/Mo.
No Pels. · Lease Plus
I and 2 bedroom apart· Security Deposit Required.
ments, furnished and unlur· (740)367 ·0547.
nlshed, and houses in ::-----:--c--=--..,--Pomeroy and Middleport. Twin Rivers Tower is acc;;ept security deposlt required, no lng applications lor waiting
pets. 740·992·2218.
· li st for Hud-subsidited , 1·br
apart ment
lor
the
1BR Apt. WID hookups. elderly/disabled. call 675·
satellite TV incl. w/rent . . 6679
ck&gt;se to hospital. Call 740·
339·0362
•

2

Yamaha Ro adstar
Motorcycle
(dressed)
1600cc. 8.000 miles $5.500
304·675 ·2793 of 304·593, 4001

fo~\RM

port . exteml ca tJ all
options. low miteoge. $3600. 500. S4.000. Ca ll (740) 4 16-

L"

&lt;1)1 111'1\IEN I"
· - - - - - - " (740)992·6159
SUVs
EBY . INTEGRITY. 1\IEFEA [720
BUILT.
VALLE Y
RIR S.\1.1:
H O R SE / LI VES T OCK
TRAILER S.

LOAD

MA X

·0 134

1999
Jeep
Gr ~:~nde
Cherokee Lflrl!do 4.0. 4:d ,
hea~y tow pa ckage. gotrt
20m1Jg .
ex . con, Hi5K.
$6.000.
l7 40)99z.7599
tease no Sunda call s.

30

MmuR HoMI:'

VANS
FoR S.\1.1-.

AV Servi c!O! at Carmrchael
Trailers 740-446·3825
03 Kia Sedona . 6cyl. $8.500.
:-.1 It\ U I:-.
49.620 miles ca ll 304-6752550,
~::-::~....;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

10

1996

Plymou th

HOI\IE

IMPIIOVI:Mt:NI~
Grand . . . .iioiiiiiiliiiioiiioiiiir

Voyaye1. Mrnor body dam·
age 1o 1he ceac dc;,ecs s;de
Equipped w/7 passenger
seating . VCR . TV 6·disc CD
changer &amp; 2 stereos Books
for $3, 100 wan.ting $2,500 rJ
interested r.a ll 304-939·
0204 No an swer leave rnessage

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
· Room Additions &amp;

Remodellng
• New Garages

• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
·Vinyl Siding &amp; Palnll,ng
·Patio and Porch Decks
wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohro
25 Vear~ Local E• ;}etu:.'•lce

i

downtown Gallipolis, plellli·
lui parking. 7~0-446 - 9209

·c§alltpolislhdlp
Only a few seats left! .
August 19-21,2008
Harrah's Resort

$229/Double
$250/Single
Includes airfare and hotel

For reservations,
call
PVH Community
Relations

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal.

:~- pn•mpt

;tnd Qttality

1\'nr~

·.

South
• A 10 4..,.

140-992-1671

Hours
7:00AM-8:00PM

1/14/1 mo pd

• 9 6 4
tK10 5432
. "' 7

Stop &amp; Compare
. . . . . . . .~

Dealer: East

Vulnerable: Neither

Guttering
seamless Gutters
Roofing, Stding , GuHers
Insured&amp; Bonded

· FRANK &amp; EARNEST
•

•

(0\lHIII
CONS!I(l)( I i l l \

Concrete Removal

and Replacement

All Types Of

Hardwood Cablneiry And FurnHure
www.tlm...........,kcablaetry;-

BARNEY
WHAT'S TH'
HURRY,
LOWEEZY 7

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
WV0421112 Free Estimates

OOPS--SORRY, I SHOULDA
WARNED YA I'D BE WASHIN'
MY RE'D BLANKET T'DAY !!

,,

.

Pau·l Rowe

~

Vt.E. I)U.FE.~TE:f(. 61-.\1 E.
1'1\f:. TWO BOX -&gt;"-'" ~-""'

Cell: 740-416·5047
email: ·

lrshadfrm@aol.com

f

1'10 WI-.'(! l'tll r-IOT
:; ITT I t:IG 01'1. A BOX
f\LL I'I\Gf\1!

Jim .O'Brien
Farm Lelarl Fails

740-247·2113
love
the latest
looks? ·

Then look to 1\-'lary
Kay. Ynu"ll find the
lal~.slllll - trcnd

colors

coord inatcJ for you

with e:.t.sy-to-app!y
lip~ . Ask nrt• IHlW yo u
l'tlll g"L·t thl' !JUtll'Sl
Jookli 01" the .SC&lt;I ..,Oil ·
and al w: n s hi: in

stvlc!

·

lndq1endenl Deuuly
Consultant
ww"· .mar~· ku~·.l·om/j~~:ru~~St•r

7411-949-.11127
.\\ ·\ I! \' I·

'·-:.

Closc·OUI Sale
J()" hanging

Baskets

$7.75
c~ ·· Geraniums· .6Uit
Bedding Phmt~.
48 per fim $6 .1.10
Vegetable plant:-.
$2.50 per dozen
Hrs M-F 7:30 · S:UU
Sat. 8:JO • 4:JO Sun. 1-5

Advertise ··
in this
space
for
'·

in this
space
for

$96
per
month

Noble Summir Rd .

per
month

Middlcpon. OH
tHernn·u Br.Wbury &amp; Rurla111\)

.·

7411-982. . .·

'"
....

'f'ES,
BUT I
T&gt;IINK
IT'S

LOST
INTEREST

36

Yesterday I mentioned that when you·
have an unbalanced' hand and a suit-fit
with partner. do not worry much about
point-count. You wilt win more tricks than
two balanced hands with the same com·
bined point-count would produce in no·
trump .
First: With rteither side vulnerable, East
opens one spade. What would you,'
South, do?
Second: "SUppose you pass. West raises
to two spades, your paftner makes a
takeout double promising length ir'l the
three unbid suits. and the opener pass·
es What would you do now?
TJlird: You reach fiVe diamonds. West
lt{Jds the spade king. How would you
plan the play?
On the lirst round an aggressive player
would bid three diamonds, a weak jump
overcall, bu1 that is cra2;y with such a
poor suit. Pass is sane.
On the next round, though, since ·your
hand has great offensive potential with
the known good diamond fit. .you must
jump to lour or five diamonds. (Four -and·
a-half diamonds feels per1ect!) YOu must
not bid three diamonds. which would
promise nothing.
·
In live diamonds, you have only 10
tricks: one spade. one hearl. six diamonds and two spade ruffs on lhe
board. Your 11th trick will have to be the
club ~ing .. But given West's lead. which
reVealed five high-card points, East must
have the ace. Hope that he has at most
lhree clubs.
Win with your spade ace, draw two
rouncls of trumps, and du.ck a ~;Pund of
clubs. After East wins with his jack and
shifts to ' the heart king, win with
dur11.my's ace. -ruff a club in your hand,
trump a spade on the boarcl, and ruff
another club. When the ace appears,
you can claim.

37

38
39

42

by Luis Campos
Celebrity Crpher cryptograms are created 1rom QIA)ta~ons 'Jollamous people past and Pl~ ~r«
Each lett&amp;! •n the crph11 stands 1onw10ther

Today"s clue: Mequals I

" RNGVG'U

UD

JISN

XGBR, RD

DSNMGHG , RNGVG_'U UD

RICK PRICE

New Homes, Room Additions, Remodeling,
Metal &amp; Shingle Roofs, Siding, Decks,
Bathroom Remodeling Licensed &amp; Insured
wv ~0 104 '&gt;1 Ceii740 -S 90 -.'Gbli

J&amp;L
Construction
• Vinyl Siding

7.l0·992·0/J(l

AT TIMES I FEEL LIKE
THE FOLKS IN POWE~
HAVE NO REAL GIIASP
OF OUR COUNTRY'S

.,.,.,

PI10BLEMS.AND 01..11
ONLY HOPE TO FIX
.THINGS 15 TO SOMEHOW ·
W~ESTLE OUR COUNTRY
AWAY FROM THEM.

.,"

CORNER STONE ..
CONSTRUCTION ·'·''

UD J I SN

740-367-0536

Barns • Pario's, Porches and Decks

MilE W. MUCIM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Road , Long.Bouom , OH

,.

...

--...:)

GARFIElD
~RRI,&gt;.

17AY f~REE, ANP YOU 5TI ~~
I-IAVEN'f MOVED. AREN'T
...OU AFRAIP OF [..OSINC:.
MO~r..e TONE'?

5fUP117
QOESTION

•

.,..
'

'

·-·

RNGVG'U

NDUK'R

TGGK WOKG. " • UMKAGV TXI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "I never know whall think about somethingunlll l
read what I've written on it. " · William Faulkner

®~ Re:lrrani;:d" lett en d rl-e

low

fOtJr s~rc mb!ed wo.-ds beto /orr.1 fo.ur simp!o w o~ 6 .

By Bemlc• B.cle Oaol
Extra responsibilities could be heaped
on you In !Me year ahead, but you'll be up
to the tasks . TMe few tough ones will be
character builders that wilt produce worthy rewards In the future.
CANCER {J t.ine 21-Juty 22) - tf you are
too demanding about having your own
way, il will arouse the same ultimatum
from those who have to deaf with you. A
3
deadlock is likely In lh.ese relationships,
and no one will win .
LEO (July 23·Aug . 22)- Usually you are -'
a gracious person who aims to be atfaWe
to all you encounter. At this lime, howEi'v·
er, these noble characteristics are likely
to be absent unless there is something .In
Anmed
said, "Humor
it for you :
VIRGO {Aug . 23·Sept. 22) - Even
r-------_,is like aneedle and thrMd. \\I"hen
though you are Inclined t.o do !Mings your
r:-1used properly i1 can pa1ch up.........."
way, it Is best to abide by the will of the
majority. Don't be the only person in the ·
3
Compl~te _fhe chv~k le qvoled
group who Is marching to a different
by frlhng rn rh~ omsing word~
drummer
YOV
develop
from step No. 3 below.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Beware of
. complicating things and making whatevPRINT NUMBERED
I I 3
s 6
er you .hope to accomplish althia time far
lETTERS IN SQUARES
m!Jre difficult tt1an It actUally has to be.
When in doubt, seek oul the path of leaat
uNSCRAMBlE
1
resistanCe.
FOi I.NSW(I
.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22) - Avoid
discussions about politics, religion ar
·sCRAMLETS ANSWERS 7116/08
principles b&amp;cause these are all hot·bul·
ton topics that could lead to volatile
Nalal-Doubt
THE BACK
debates. -Be especially mindful II you
encounter someone who holds strong
Philosopher to class, "h1the book of
the
are
views.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) not in THE BACK."
Unless you've se nlad· all of your old
financial obligations , don't take on any
new ones, especially a large lOan. It
could be the one !Mat finally boxes you In
so tight you can't breath.
.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -You'll
have no troub"le with those who are In ·
accord wtth your way ot doing things, but
It will be another story II you have to deal
with someonO who opposes everything
you say or do. Steer clear.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)- You're a
free spirit, and this is likely lo be one of
those days when you're not apt to work
well under presiure. Make sure that you
don't pile more on yourself tMan you can
.comfortably handle.
PISCES (Feb. 20·Marct:' 20) - Be particularly e&amp;reful not 10 get involved with
indtviduala who&amp;a standard&amp; do not,
measure up to yours. Bener yet. avoid
them altogether, be your own person and
seek ou1 compatible companions.
ARIES (March 21 ·Aprll 19) - It will be
your fault if you allow an old, unresolved
family issue to rear l.ts ugly head once
again In lhe house~d Don't do any·
thing to bring vp hoatllrties and caus9
unhappiness.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)- You won 't
be tolerant ot others lelllng you how to
think, how to act or what to do, so don't
do the same to anyone elae. Be you! own
paraon, and live and tet live . .
~EMINI (May 21 -Jun- 20)- Your male· • ·
rtat oratlflcallon could be a bit stronger
than usual and cause You to jud~e pao·
pie not on their sociability and congenial·
lty but·ort how muoh they have and what

comic once

C)

.$

f)

mms

-Beckon-

SOUP TO NUTZ

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month
·'

"

·'

RNOR

SDKRVGXX

thtV can do for you.

740-985-4141
Cell : 740-416-1834
25+ years experitnce Free estimates

.

JDVG

RD WD ,

ARLO &amp; JANIS

j

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
.,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing, ~
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room ·.··
Additions
·
Local Contractor
, 740-367-0544
Free Eatlmatea
.

AND BY WRESTLE~OU
MEliN CAGE MI\TCH1

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole

·-------------------------------·

JISN

lite,

COW and BOY

PSI CONSTRUCTION

Cnll: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

I

handiwOrk

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Lichen·

For ~emodeling and Ne_
w House Building

I
Mail or drop off this coupon along
I
with
a
copy
of
your
photo
ID
to
1
I
.,
: Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631 :
'

Pass

47 Orient
48 Air duel
49 Joule
fraction
51 Rover's doc
52 Paris
season .
54 Navaho

f--r,-.,I_V.rl:...;.A_v,.

•m

~====-=::::::::::::=:

I

Obi.

-

PEANUTS .

PAYIIUIP PRICES Jill

·Decks
·Garages
· Pole Buildings
, Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

Phone_________________~.-"---

2•

23 Elec. unll
24 "Misery"
bloomer
co-star
4 1865 jiolder 25 Swing
5 - oul
locale
. (relax/
28 Quick look
6 trave er's 29 Ego
slop
31 Rummy
7 Cabinel part
or lag
8 Gael
32 Blushing
33 Dell
republic
9 Mine yields
neighbor
10 Cleveland
37 Mongrel
NBAer ·
40 Does
11 Me\•• oul
laceworlt
12 Leaf veins 41 Be lovesick
17 Slrike caller 42 Ear cleaner
20 Zoo heavy(hjph.)
weights
43 Sky baar
21 Mollusk
44 Fixes
22 ~·s rMir
a squeak
gel

3 Spring

I I I I'

'

IIIUniiii:OO •1H..m

·Roofing

City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ __ _ __

Pass

area on a
page .
ZOnked out
Joyous
oulbursts
Brosnan
TV role
Jules Verno
captain
AmiJl?
or F1del
Fasl-lood
chain
River mouth
"- Vadls?"

I Perturb
2 Micltlblologj

Pe\R GH

503 Mllll• IIMI..rt.l145lll

Windows

Address _ _ _ __ _ _ __ __

32

34

35

Fridaly, July 18, 2008

Manlav'a .
Recycling

• Replacement

I
I

a bunny

27 Small barlts
30 Unprinted

East

W~!e,

BIG N:ATE

•

$64

Ed's Greenhouses

• • llllllv-MIIII:Him-6:11

Advertise

graphics
19 Brightred
color
23 Not delay
26 Emulate

~Astrc-

7411-992-7960

J1innitn &lt;:ruescr
Mury _Kny

~rtbune

Subscriber's Name ______ __

Racine, Ohio .740-247·2019
Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;

1.

18 Lo--

North

Add points for
good distribution
••

7411 -59 1-XIJ44

28 Years Experience

feature

46 Gutter

5 Blockbuller
locale
rental
50 Hoi dish
10 More wary
holder
12 53 Pencil and
55 Very smell
13 Flowering
landmasses
ehrub
56 While
14 Shrug off . 57 Glue down
15 Aloe- . 58 Tiny lnse&lt;l
16 Bolher's
need
DOWN

West

Opening lead: • K

Concrete Work

1 Topple

South

"

Call fiary St;mlcy @•

HQME·GROWN
CABBAGE

East
• J 9 863
9 K Q 10
• 7 •
.. A Q J

• J
olol09 5 42

740-653-i¥357

•

Any Questions call
675-5737

MONTY

1" Rr:;t:-.u nabk Rate:-.
*ln :-m-:d
"" E' p~.: ri·r.: tll.:nl
RL"kr\." 11&lt;..:1.'' J\~·;ti la hk!

P-----------~---------•-••-•--••I

WV State Farm Museum
Attention: Fair Campers

4 K "8 6 3

West
• K Q 52
" J 5 3

•
r-------, r':=:::;;:;:;;;;=::::
H&amp;H

(304) 675-4340, ext. 1492

We will let our Board of
Directors in on July 29th,
Campers with completed
40 hrs volunteer time in on
July 30th &amp; all other campers
in on July 31st

Sizes 5'x10'
tb 10'x30'

I .

FRESH

-'otnt tlle,al(ant 1\e,gtiSter
The Daify Sentinel
&amp;unba!' lEt melt -~enttnel

Atlantic .C'ity

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

7411-949-2217

07-IHlll

• 7
¥ A872
t A Q 9 8

CiiSTIIC'nll •..~• New Homes

n• •

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

Approx. 900 sq.ft. ·ideal tor
office or retail business,

BISSEll

9"12S8L

SPACE

~'OR RENT

Nortb

740..992-5682
lie g

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home
delivered subscription!
•

.2 Apls, tor Rent beside
Domino's In Pt. Pleasant Cl!::--~-· _,--,

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

45 Jacket
.

w.,,,...,.

IOIUT

ROGER HYSEll$
GIRAGE

Senior Discount*

e

Hil l's Self
Storage

BASEMENT
r-:::::::-:::::::::1'~-.
WATERPROOFING
Unconditronal lilelime guarant ee. Loc3t relmenccs ftrr·
nlshed. Es1ab lished 1975 _ St. Rt.124 Pamen1. 01
Call 24 Hrs. (7 40) 44 6.
0870. Rogers Basement
6Mf
Waterproofing.

If so, you qualify for ·a

NEA Crossword Puzzle'
ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

I I \\"IS
Nice 04 Harley a83 Custom.
New
style
Sportster
wle~tra s. Minor fender damage. Sharp! $5500. 4467438
~~""!":'---::--,
C \1\fl't:K.'\ &amp;

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

•

l'l l.'a\1,.' ktt \1.! lllCSSa£C

•

r

2 bedroom apartment lor
rent in M iddl~por t, no pets,
{?40J992·5B5a
·
""- -'--cd-Ave-.- -,-m_s_a-nd
21 2 3
3 00
bath, furni shed. no pels.
Rent+ Dep. 740 _441 _0245

2000

Are you 65 .
or older?

NO Ave.Mi·kt. above

PETS. 740 _388 _8547

304·81 2· 4350

'

www.mydailysentlnel.com

BRIDGE

1740)992-0165

Nice Glean 2 Bd. apt., WfD
hookup,$350 a M. plus utili·
14x70 !railer lor rE!nt 367- ties.$350 dep.'Must have a
7762
referral" 293 South 2nd

2BA in Bidwell area.

$20,'-JSO 740 -446·7 '1 38

,\II\ '-"Ill~
1995 Oodg'e Dakota Slrper.
· r;m
Black ?007 Kawasa ki Vulc;m
10F;;;;;,;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ S

Have yo u ·pri ced . a John
Deere IIJiely? You "ll bo sur·
prisedr Check out our used
inventory
at
WW W. C A A E 0 C0 M
Carmichael Equrpm ent. 740·
446-241 2

I

- - -- - - - ....
1986 Honda 1100 Shadow.
M1n1 . Condrtion, All original.
$3400 1740)379-2768

s.,,y

T~ursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Middleport, Beech St.. 2 br.
Sunday (740)446-7 300
furnished apartment, utilities
paid, deposit &amp; reterences,
Spanish 20 gaug.e double
no pets. (740)992-0 165
barrel 5800. CZ 22 boll
House In Gallipolis, 3 bed·
$300,
Marlin
room, deck &amp; hot tub. 446_ N. 3rd Ave., Middleport, 2 br. acti on
furnished apartment, no Glenfield 22 boll action
3478 or 446' 8731
pets. deposit &amp; references, $tOO. 740·245-0611

MOBILE HO'&lt;IIS

L.,_.,.;I"OIIiiiiliSiiiAiiLEiii", _ r
•
1995 GMC Jimri1y. 4 _3
Engine , $1?00. (740 )388 .
0341

Poli(.;e lrnpoundsl Cars from
-v .-m-aha_ A
_c_ous- tl_c_
Gu;_ tar $SOO'. Hondas Chevvs.
rtrodel FG4 10A. wl hard Jeeps. Fortis. &amp; more! lor
listings BOO ti&lt;'0-4876 e~ .V4 35
shell case $300 740·6.:'15·
fl5
5410
TKI (. "1\.'t '
llNI
I \K\1 Sl 1'1'1.11 .'

2BA recently remodeled, 9523
- - - - - -- gas heat. C/A, fridge/ range,
Motorola flip phone (cost
Furnished Apt in Point · $20) 450 minute card ~ cost
Dryer hookup. $550/rent +
Pleasant upstairs, all utilities $80) wilt selllor'$65 or1tca r
clep. 446-4555 after 5prn.
paid. i br, Lease $4 50/m charger (740)444·502 1
2BR. 1BA, gar in city limits. plus $450 deposit. Very
newly remodeled . no pets. clean No Pets Call after 5pm NEW AND USED STEEL
no smoking. $600/rent+sec. 304·675-7499
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
dep. 740·446-7596
For · Concrete.
Angl e,
- ' - - - - -- - - Gracious Living. 1 and. 2 ChanneL Flat Bar, Steel
4br, 2ba, HUO! only $317 Bedroom Apts . at Village Grating
·For
Drain s.
month! Great Location! (5% Manor and Riverside Apts. in Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
down , 20yrs, 8°{, APR) Middleport , from $327 to
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
listings 800-620-4946 ex. · $592. 740-992-5064. Equal Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
T461
Housing Opportunity.
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Brick house .in Gallipolis.
· 3BA. 1 1/2 bath, no pet s, no
smoking. $650/rent. 740·
446-9209

ro

79 Corvette T-Top, 350
Pug
puppie s,
lawn , engine . au to trans.
Registered. v,:ormEJd 8 1rp to
;:;~ 2000 Kaw asaki W-650.
dat e shots Very sweet &amp; lov· clean 70.400 rni !C5
1.900 miles. ElecHic starter
able Mason area 443-350- 388-0236
Needs Mw baMery, other'
4011
wrse. like nflvt. Two saddles
~
rncllrdefl:one with back rest
70
9!l
Corvet1e
blue
roadster
l\lrsu ·~\1 .
$3.250.
Black leather &amp; lop AutO wuidshre ld.
II\IST1tl 1J\IENTS
BN nlliful , fun la!; l p nrpg 1740)992·7396

EQUIPMENT TRAIL ERS
CARGO
EXPRESS
8
H O M ESTE*DER
CAR GO / CONCESS ION
TRA ILERS B•W GOOSE·
NECK
HITCHES
CA RMICHAEL
EOUIPMENT I C ARMICHA EL
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA·
VICE . SPECIAL
20FT
GOOSENECK
FLATBEO
$3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE
TRAILER INVENTORY AT
WWW .C ARMI C HAEL ·
TRAILERS.COM 740-4 46
3825

fi2il

4 Wnt:tl.EH.~

(740) 441 - Garage tor rent at the corner 4

r

· 5 bedrooms ava•lable. 740-

Thursday, July 17, 2008
ALLEY COP

MatllRC\'lU:si

4J

Lmsn K."~

mRSAU.

AKC
ENGLISH Bantum chrckens, varrous OS COR 1000 AA. k&gt;w mrles.
ot 2nd and Pine St $75 per SPRIN GER SPANIEL MALE breeds tno $7 bPecral con· $8000 obo. Call 304-8 t 2·
- - - - - -- mon th 446 44 25 or 44 6· PUPPIES $300 304· 273· siderahon
to
4 Her's. 1068
Apartment available now 3936
4:..177
(740)99:!·5275
Aiverbend Apls New Haven
WV Now accepting appltea AKC German' Shepherd
'Ill{( II \\111"1
lions tor Hud-Subs•dil.ed. r· ;~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ pups. top bloodlme. lurge Goats. young to adult :SJO 10
05 HO Sportster Touring
one Bedroom Apts Ulililles
SPON'nN(;
breed. both par en ts 011 Site S60 each. 740-64 5 -54 02
Seat
forward
controls.
mcluded Based on 30°·o of
Go~
$400 ear:h 304-6 / 5-5724
Screamrng Eagle rnutllers.
adJuSted •ncome. Call 304 $7500. 7&lt;0·645·2567
CKC Chihuahua Pups.
882 -3121
available tor
Colt Python·· custom a·· Ready 7-1 9·08 4 dilferent
AlJIQ;
Se~t or and Disabled people.

OWNER FINANCE AVAIL·
ABLE . 740.«6·3570

i

Thur$day, July 17, 2008

www.myda~lysentinel .com

'

,,

'

answers

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

t ~~~ 1r~.,__

'S_,I

AII\Jm\
•••
QK_JIDn_IFNI
__

Brand new 3bed 2bath on
2BA apt. CIA..
+ - hatf acre in Pt. Pleasant 0194

r

SPACE

tURRINr

It

l't:l'

Federal Funds just released
for Lar.d Ow11ers. No closir&gt;g cost and ZERO DOWN•
Will
do
Land
Improvements Bankruptcy

&amp; Bad Credit OK. 2. 3. 4 and

stainless $1600 . Winchester colo r~ (740)44 6 2432 or
Model- 94 Antlered Game (740)794· 1950
New 3 Bedroom homes from
$450. Model • Y417 $450,
$214.36 per month. Includes
Model· 94-4 10 $47 5 44 1J· CKC Mrnature Prnschsr 2
many upgrades, delivery &amp;
~
48:;1:;.
6------, mates, 4 mon old. ears
set-up. (740)385·2434
cropped, tails dockE-d, shots.
Beautiful Apts. at Jackson
AN"Ilf}t "E'I
740·388 B7aa

446·3384

''

---,---,---,-- i

Lw------.,.1

Lms&amp;

Eatates. 52 Wes1woocl
Drrve , trom S365 to $560.
Equal GIBBS ANTIQUES Frr 8
740 _446 .2568 _
Sat. 10·5. Sun. 1·7 or by
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT. 1031 Georges Creek Housing Opporlunity. 'Thrs appt. Also. restore furtlilure
in strtution is , an EQual Located on Tornado Ad . oft
Ad.4~n1tt
Opportunity Provider and
Rt..33. Racine (Park ,
·
I{ I '\I \I ..,
Employer
&amp; Aide ) exit 74Q-949·2246

AC.liEACE

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· 540 ML'OJJ. \NIO[IS
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
MtlKIIANIJISI·:
Townhouse
apartments,
FORREN"r
anct/or small houses FOR
02 l&lt;.awasaki Mule model
RENT Call (740)441-1111
3000. ex.ce tlen t condition,
199/mo! 3 bed. 2 bath. Bank
for app~ ca tion ~ i_nlormation
320 hrs on it. $6200 645Repo t (5% down, 20 years.
5402
"
8'% A.PA) tor listrngs 800·
620-4946 ex. A027
Antique orQan excellent.
1 br $375/monlh .
rn
conditron $300.00 Complete
Syracuse. · Deposit, Hud
bedspread and decor . tor
Appm'ed.
No
Pets. 2&amp;38R apts. $385 and up,
girl s bedroom $100 .00
(304)675·5332 weekends Cebtral Air. W/0 HookUp. Antique dresser and couch.
Tenant pays electric. EHO $!00.00
740·591.()265
441 . 9972 .

HULStS

Free Rent
Special!!!

- - - - - - -. •
Ellm View Apts.
JET
AERATION MOTORS.
7
3
04
8
8
2
3
0
1
::-(_ ,...
_ _ _-_ _ _ _ Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
FurniShed Apl. 2nd Ave in Stock. Ca ll Ron Evans. 1·
Gallipolis upstairs, all utili· aoo-537-952 8.
tres paid, t br. no pets. 446· ·

2 ' bedroom house for rent
no pets. (740)992 -5858

_1

2bc ;n Pt. Pleasanl. $465
month. Homestead Realty
Broker Nancy 304·675·4024
.:.o'.:30
c:.4_·.:..67c:.5_:·0,..
79:..:9__:_ _

Grbson Les Paul double cut·
away sludro $750. 740-245·
0111 1

l

~UK ROO

Shear
Illusions, call John 740-992.,------c-~ 3967 or 7 40·4~ 6-2 415!!
Clean 2 brf1ba in Ma.son:
brlt ba in New Haven. both Spacious second-floor apt.
furnished &amp; utilities ·pd. overlooking Gallipolis Ci ty
Construction workers wel- Park and river. L.R . den ,
large kitchen-dining area
come.
with all new appliances &amp;
74Ht6-6622.
cupboards. 3B R. laundry
Ooub)jlwide Jbr, 2 ba, WID, area. 2 112 baths. $900 per
stovellridge provided. Hud month . Call 446-4425, or
ok,6 month lease. $575/rent 446-2325
$575 dep, you pay utilities.
1720::: 1/2 Chatham Ave, Tara
Townhouse
Gallipolis 740-645-1646
Apartments. Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms. CIA, 1 1/2
APARThlENfS
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
FORREI'lf
Pool. Patio, Start $425/Mo.
No Pels. · Lease Plus
I and 2 bedroom apart· Security Deposit Required.
ments, furnished and unlur· (740)367 ·0547.
nlshed, and houses in ::-----:--c--=--..,--Pomeroy and Middleport. Twin Rivers Tower is acc;;ept security deposlt required, no lng applications lor waiting
pets. 740·992·2218.
· li st for Hud-subsidited , 1·br
apart ment
lor
the
1BR Apt. WID hookups. elderly/disabled. call 675·
satellite TV incl. w/rent . . 6679
ck&gt;se to hospital. Call 740·
339·0362
•

2

Yamaha Ro adstar
Motorcycle
(dressed)
1600cc. 8.000 miles $5.500
304·675 ·2793 of 304·593, 4001

fo~\RM

port . exteml ca tJ all
options. low miteoge. $3600. 500. S4.000. Ca ll (740) 4 16-

L"

&lt;1)1 111'1\IEN I"
· - - - - - - " (740)992·6159
SUVs
EBY . INTEGRITY. 1\IEFEA [720
BUILT.
VALLE Y
RIR S.\1.1:
H O R SE / LI VES T OCK
TRAILER S.

LOAD

MA X

·0 134

1999
Jeep
Gr ~:~nde
Cherokee Lflrl!do 4.0. 4:d ,
hea~y tow pa ckage. gotrt
20m1Jg .
ex . con, Hi5K.
$6.000.
l7 40)99z.7599
tease no Sunda call s.

30

MmuR HoMI:'

VANS
FoR S.\1.1-.

AV Servi c!O! at Carmrchael
Trailers 740-446·3825
03 Kia Sedona . 6cyl. $8.500.
:-.1 It\ U I:-.
49.620 miles ca ll 304-6752550,
~::-::~....;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

10

1996

Plymou th

HOI\IE

IMPIIOVI:Mt:NI~
Grand . . . .iioiiiiiiliiiioiiioiiiir

Voyaye1. Mrnor body dam·
age 1o 1he ceac dc;,ecs s;de
Equipped w/7 passenger
seating . VCR . TV 6·disc CD
changer &amp; 2 stereos Books
for $3, 100 wan.ting $2,500 rJ
interested r.a ll 304-939·
0204 No an swer leave rnessage

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
· Room Additions &amp;

Remodellng
• New Garages

• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
·Vinyl Siding &amp; Palnll,ng
·Patio and Porch Decks
wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohro
25 Vear~ Local E• ;}etu:.'•lce

i

downtown Gallipolis, plellli·
lui parking. 7~0-446 - 9209

·c§alltpolislhdlp
Only a few seats left! .
August 19-21,2008
Harrah's Resort

$229/Double
$250/Single
Includes airfare and hotel

For reservations,
call
PVH Community
Relations

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal.

:~- pn•mpt

;tnd Qttality

1\'nr~

·.

South
• A 10 4..,.

140-992-1671

Hours
7:00AM-8:00PM

1/14/1 mo pd

• 9 6 4
tK10 5432
. "' 7

Stop &amp; Compare
. . . . . . . .~

Dealer: East

Vulnerable: Neither

Guttering
seamless Gutters
Roofing, Stding , GuHers
Insured&amp; Bonded

· FRANK &amp; EARNEST
•

•

(0\lHIII
CONS!I(l)( I i l l \

Concrete Removal

and Replacement

All Types Of

Hardwood Cablneiry And FurnHure
www.tlm...........,kcablaetry;-

BARNEY
WHAT'S TH'
HURRY,
LOWEEZY 7

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
WV0421112 Free Estimates

OOPS--SORRY, I SHOULDA
WARNED YA I'D BE WASHIN'
MY RE'D BLANKET T'DAY !!

,,

.

Pau·l Rowe

~

Vt.E. I)U.FE.~TE:f(. 61-.\1 E.
1'1\f:. TWO BOX -&gt;"-'" ~-""'

Cell: 740-416·5047
email: ·

lrshadfrm@aol.com

f

1'10 WI-.'(! l'tll r-IOT
:; ITT I t:IG 01'1. A BOX
f\LL I'I\Gf\1!

Jim .O'Brien
Farm Lelarl Fails

740-247·2113
love
the latest
looks? ·

Then look to 1\-'lary
Kay. Ynu"ll find the
lal~.slllll - trcnd

colors

coord inatcJ for you

with e:.t.sy-to-app!y
lip~ . Ask nrt• IHlW yo u
l'tlll g"L·t thl' !JUtll'Sl
Jookli 01" the .SC&lt;I ..,Oil ·
and al w: n s hi: in

stvlc!

·

lndq1endenl Deuuly
Consultant
ww"· .mar~· ku~·.l·om/j~~:ru~~St•r

7411-949-.11127
.\\ ·\ I! \' I·

'·-:.

Closc·OUI Sale
J()" hanging

Baskets

$7.75
c~ ·· Geraniums· .6Uit
Bedding Phmt~.
48 per fim $6 .1.10
Vegetable plant:-.
$2.50 per dozen
Hrs M-F 7:30 · S:UU
Sat. 8:JO • 4:JO Sun. 1-5

Advertise ··
in this
space
for
'·

in this
space
for

$96
per
month

Noble Summir Rd .

per
month

Middlcpon. OH
tHernn·u Br.Wbury &amp; Rurla111\)

.·

7411-982. . .·

'"
....

'f'ES,
BUT I
T&gt;IINK
IT'S

LOST
INTEREST

36

Yesterday I mentioned that when you·
have an unbalanced' hand and a suit-fit
with partner. do not worry much about
point-count. You wilt win more tricks than
two balanced hands with the same com·
bined point-count would produce in no·
trump .
First: With rteither side vulnerable, East
opens one spade. What would you,'
South, do?
Second: "SUppose you pass. West raises
to two spades, your paftner makes a
takeout double promising length ir'l the
three unbid suits. and the opener pass·
es What would you do now?
TJlird: You reach fiVe diamonds. West
lt{Jds the spade king. How would you
plan the play?
On the lirst round an aggressive player
would bid three diamonds, a weak jump
overcall, bu1 that is cra2;y with such a
poor suit. Pass is sane.
On the next round, though, since ·your
hand has great offensive potential with
the known good diamond fit. .you must
jump to lour or five diamonds. (Four -and·
a-half diamonds feels per1ect!) YOu must
not bid three diamonds. which would
promise nothing.
·
In live diamonds, you have only 10
tricks: one spade. one hearl. six diamonds and two spade ruffs on lhe
board. Your 11th trick will have to be the
club ~ing .. But given West's lead. which
reVealed five high-card points, East must
have the ace. Hope that he has at most
lhree clubs.
Win with your spade ace, draw two
rouncls of trumps, and du.ck a ~;Pund of
clubs. After East wins with his jack and
shifts to ' the heart king, win with
dur11.my's ace. -ruff a club in your hand,
trump a spade on the boarcl, and ruff
another club. When the ace appears,
you can claim.

37

38
39

42

by Luis Campos
Celebrity Crpher cryptograms are created 1rom QIA)ta~ons 'Jollamous people past and Pl~ ~r«
Each lett&amp;! •n the crph11 stands 1onw10ther

Today"s clue: Mequals I

" RNGVG'U

UD

JISN

XGBR, RD

DSNMGHG , RNGVG_'U UD

RICK PRICE

New Homes, Room Additions, Remodeling,
Metal &amp; Shingle Roofs, Siding, Decks,
Bathroom Remodeling Licensed &amp; Insured
wv ~0 104 '&gt;1 Ceii740 -S 90 -.'Gbli

J&amp;L
Construction
• Vinyl Siding

7.l0·992·0/J(l

AT TIMES I FEEL LIKE
THE FOLKS IN POWE~
HAVE NO REAL GIIASP
OF OUR COUNTRY'S

.,.,.,

PI10BLEMS.AND 01..11
ONLY HOPE TO FIX
.THINGS 15 TO SOMEHOW ·
W~ESTLE OUR COUNTRY
AWAY FROM THEM.

.,"

CORNER STONE ..
CONSTRUCTION ·'·''

UD J I SN

740-367-0536

Barns • Pario's, Porches and Decks

MilE W. MUCIM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Road , Long.Bouom , OH

,.

...

--...:)

GARFIElD
~RRI,&gt;.

17AY f~REE, ANP YOU 5TI ~~
I-IAVEN'f MOVED. AREN'T
...OU AFRAIP OF [..OSINC:.
MO~r..e TONE'?

5fUP117
QOESTION

•

.,..
'

'

·-·

RNGVG'U

NDUK'R

TGGK WOKG. " • UMKAGV TXI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "I never know whall think about somethingunlll l
read what I've written on it. " · William Faulkner

®~ Re:lrrani;:d" lett en d rl-e

low

fOtJr s~rc mb!ed wo.-ds beto /orr.1 fo.ur simp!o w o~ 6 .

By Bemlc• B.cle Oaol
Extra responsibilities could be heaped
on you In !Me year ahead, but you'll be up
to the tasks . TMe few tough ones will be
character builders that wilt produce worthy rewards In the future.
CANCER {J t.ine 21-Juty 22) - tf you are
too demanding about having your own
way, il will arouse the same ultimatum
from those who have to deaf with you. A
3
deadlock is likely In lh.ese relationships,
and no one will win .
LEO (July 23·Aug . 22)- Usually you are -'
a gracious person who aims to be atfaWe
to all you encounter. At this lime, howEi'v·
er, these noble characteristics are likely
to be absent unless there is something .In
Anmed
said, "Humor
it for you :
VIRGO {Aug . 23·Sept. 22) - Even
r-------_,is like aneedle and thrMd. \\I"hen
though you are Inclined t.o do !Mings your
r:-1used properly i1 can pa1ch up.........."
way, it Is best to abide by the will of the
majority. Don't be the only person in the ·
3
Compl~te _fhe chv~k le qvoled
group who Is marching to a different
by frlhng rn rh~ omsing word~
drummer
YOV
develop
from step No. 3 below.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Beware of
. complicating things and making whatevPRINT NUMBERED
I I 3
s 6
er you .hope to accomplish althia time far
lETTERS IN SQUARES
m!Jre difficult tt1an It actUally has to be.
When in doubt, seek oul the path of leaat
uNSCRAMBlE
1
resistanCe.
FOi I.NSW(I
.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22) - Avoid
discussions about politics, religion ar
·sCRAMLETS ANSWERS 7116/08
principles b&amp;cause these are all hot·bul·
ton topics that could lead to volatile
Nalal-Doubt
THE BACK
debates. -Be especially mindful II you
encounter someone who holds strong
Philosopher to class, "h1the book of
the
are
views.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) not in THE BACK."
Unless you've se nlad· all of your old
financial obligations , don't take on any
new ones, especially a large lOan. It
could be the one !Mat finally boxes you In
so tight you can't breath.
.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -You'll
have no troub"le with those who are In ·
accord wtth your way ot doing things, but
It will be another story II you have to deal
with someonO who opposes everything
you say or do. Steer clear.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)- You're a
free spirit, and this is likely lo be one of
those days when you're not apt to work
well under presiure. Make sure that you
don't pile more on yourself tMan you can
.comfortably handle.
PISCES (Feb. 20·Marct:' 20) - Be particularly e&amp;reful not 10 get involved with
indtviduala who&amp;a standard&amp; do not,
measure up to yours. Bener yet. avoid
them altogether, be your own person and
seek ou1 compatible companions.
ARIES (March 21 ·Aprll 19) - It will be
your fault if you allow an old, unresolved
family issue to rear l.ts ugly head once
again In lhe house~d Don't do any·
thing to bring vp hoatllrties and caus9
unhappiness.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)- You won 't
be tolerant ot others lelllng you how to
think, how to act or what to do, so don't
do the same to anyone elae. Be you! own
paraon, and live and tet live . .
~EMINI (May 21 -Jun- 20)- Your male· • ·
rtat oratlflcallon could be a bit stronger
than usual and cause You to jud~e pao·
pie not on their sociability and congenial·
lty but·ort how muoh they have and what

comic once

C)

.$

f)

mms

-Beckon-

SOUP TO NUTZ

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month
·'

"

·'

RNOR

SDKRVGXX

thtV can do for you.

740-985-4141
Cell : 740-416-1834
25+ years experitnce Free estimates

.

JDVG

RD WD ,

ARLO &amp; JANIS

j

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
.,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing, ~
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room ·.··
Additions
·
Local Contractor
, 740-367-0544
Free Eatlmatea
.

AND BY WRESTLE~OU
MEliN CAGE MI\TCH1

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole

·-------------------------------·

JISN

lite,

COW and BOY

PSI CONSTRUCTION

Cnll: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

I

handiwOrk

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Lichen·

For ~emodeling and Ne_
w House Building

I
Mail or drop off this coupon along
I
with
a
copy
of
your
photo
ID
to
1
I
.,
: Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631 :
'

Pass

47 Orient
48 Air duel
49 Joule
fraction
51 Rover's doc
52 Paris
season .
54 Navaho

f--r,-.,I_V.rl:...;.A_v,.

•m

~====-=::::::::::::=:

I

Obi.

-

PEANUTS .

PAYIIUIP PRICES Jill

·Decks
·Garages
· Pole Buildings
, Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

Phone_________________~.-"---

2•

23 Elec. unll
24 "Misery"
bloomer
co-star
4 1865 jiolder 25 Swing
5 - oul
locale
. (relax/
28 Quick look
6 trave er's 29 Ego
slop
31 Rummy
7 Cabinel part
or lag
8 Gael
32 Blushing
33 Dell
republic
9 Mine yields
neighbor
10 Cleveland
37 Mongrel
NBAer ·
40 Does
11 Me\•• oul
laceworlt
12 Leaf veins 41 Be lovesick
17 Slrike caller 42 Ear cleaner
20 Zoo heavy(hjph.)
weights
43 Sky baar
21 Mollusk
44 Fixes
22 ~·s rMir
a squeak
gel

3 Spring

I I I I'

'

IIIUniiii:OO •1H..m

·Roofing

City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ __ _ __

Pass

area on a
page .
ZOnked out
Joyous
oulbursts
Brosnan
TV role
Jules Verno
captain
AmiJl?
or F1del
Fasl-lood
chain
River mouth
"- Vadls?"

I Perturb
2 Micltlblologj

Pe\R GH

503 Mllll• IIMI..rt.l145lll

Windows

Address _ _ _ __ _ _ __ __

32

34

35

Fridaly, July 18, 2008

Manlav'a .
Recycling

• Replacement

I
I

a bunny

27 Small barlts
30 Unprinted

East

W~!e,

BIG N:ATE

•

$64

Ed's Greenhouses

• • llllllv-MIIII:Him-6:11

Advertise

graphics
19 Brightred
color
23 Not delay
26 Emulate

~Astrc-

7411-992-7960

J1innitn &lt;:ruescr
Mury _Kny

~rtbune

Subscriber's Name ______ __

Racine, Ohio .740-247·2019
Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;

1.

18 Lo--

North

Add points for
good distribution
••

7411 -59 1-XIJ44

28 Years Experience

feature

46 Gutter

5 Blockbuller
locale
rental
50 Hoi dish
10 More wary
holder
12 53 Pencil and
55 Very smell
13 Flowering
landmasses
ehrub
56 While
14 Shrug off . 57 Glue down
15 Aloe- . 58 Tiny lnse&lt;l
16 Bolher's
need
DOWN

West

Opening lead: • K

Concrete Work

1 Topple

South

"

Call fiary St;mlcy @•

HQME·GROWN
CABBAGE

East
• J 9 863
9 K Q 10
• 7 •
.. A Q J

• J
olol09 5 42

740-653-i¥357

•

Any Questions call
675-5737

MONTY

1" Rr:;t:-.u nabk Rate:-.
*ln :-m-:d
"" E' p~.: ri·r.: tll.:nl
RL"kr\." 11&lt;..:1.'' J\~·;ti la hk!

P-----------~---------•-••-•--••I

WV State Farm Museum
Attention: Fair Campers

4 K "8 6 3

West
• K Q 52
" J 5 3

•
r-------, r':=:::;;:;:;;;;=::::
H&amp;H

(304) 675-4340, ext. 1492

We will let our Board of
Directors in on July 29th,
Campers with completed
40 hrs volunteer time in on
July 30th &amp; all other campers
in on July 31st

Sizes 5'x10'
tb 10'x30'

I .

FRESH

-'otnt tlle,al(ant 1\e,gtiSter
The Daify Sentinel
&amp;unba!' lEt melt -~enttnel

Atlantic .C'ity

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

7411-949-2217

07-IHlll

• 7
¥ A872
t A Q 9 8

CiiSTIIC'nll •..~• New Homes

n• •

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

Approx. 900 sq.ft. ·ideal tor
office or retail business,

BISSEll

9"12S8L

SPACE

~'OR RENT

Nortb

740..992-5682
lie g

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home
delivered subscription!
•

.2 Apls, tor Rent beside
Domino's In Pt. Pleasant Cl!::--~-· _,--,

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

45 Jacket
.

w.,,,...,.

IOIUT

ROGER HYSEll$
GIRAGE

Senior Discount*

e

Hil l's Self
Storage

BASEMENT
r-:::::::-:::::::::1'~-.
WATERPROOFING
Unconditronal lilelime guarant ee. Loc3t relmenccs ftrr·
nlshed. Es1ab lished 1975 _ St. Rt.124 Pamen1. 01
Call 24 Hrs. (7 40) 44 6.
0870. Rogers Basement
6Mf
Waterproofing.

If so, you qualify for ·a

NEA Crossword Puzzle'
ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

I I \\"IS
Nice 04 Harley a83 Custom.
New
style
Sportster
wle~tra s. Minor fender damage. Sharp! $5500. 4467438
~~""!":'---::--,
C \1\fl't:K.'\ &amp;

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

•

l'l l.'a\1,.' ktt \1.! lllCSSa£C

•

r

2 bedroom apartment lor
rent in M iddl~por t, no pets,
{?40J992·5B5a
·
""- -'--cd-Ave-.- -,-m_s_a-nd
21 2 3
3 00
bath, furni shed. no pels.
Rent+ Dep. 740 _441 _0245

2000

Are you 65 .
or older?

NO Ave.Mi·kt. above

PETS. 740 _388 _8547

304·81 2· 4350

'

www.mydailysentlnel.com

BRIDGE

1740)992-0165

Nice Glean 2 Bd. apt., WfD
hookup,$350 a M. plus utili·
14x70 !railer lor rE!nt 367- ties.$350 dep.'Must have a
7762
referral" 293 South 2nd

2BA in Bidwell area.

$20,'-JSO 740 -446·7 '1 38

,\II\ '-"Ill~
1995 Oodg'e Dakota Slrper.
· r;m
Black ?007 Kawasa ki Vulc;m
10F;;;;;,;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ S

Have yo u ·pri ced . a John
Deere IIJiely? You "ll bo sur·
prisedr Check out our used
inventory
at
WW W. C A A E 0 C0 M
Carmichael Equrpm ent. 740·
446-241 2

I

- - -- - - - ....
1986 Honda 1100 Shadow.
M1n1 . Condrtion, All original.
$3400 1740)379-2768

s.,,y

T~ursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Middleport, Beech St.. 2 br.
Sunday (740)446-7 300
furnished apartment, utilities
paid, deposit &amp; reterences,
Spanish 20 gaug.e double
no pets. (740)992-0 165
barrel 5800. CZ 22 boll
House In Gallipolis, 3 bed·
$300,
Marlin
room, deck &amp; hot tub. 446_ N. 3rd Ave., Middleport, 2 br. acti on
furnished apartment, no Glenfield 22 boll action
3478 or 446' 8731
pets. deposit &amp; references, $tOO. 740·245-0611

MOBILE HO'&lt;IIS

L.,_.,.;I"OIIiiiiliSiiiAiiLEiii", _ r
•
1995 GMC Jimri1y. 4 _3
Engine , $1?00. (740 )388 .
0341

Poli(.;e lrnpoundsl Cars from
-v .-m-aha_ A
_c_ous- tl_c_
Gu;_ tar $SOO'. Hondas Chevvs.
rtrodel FG4 10A. wl hard Jeeps. Fortis. &amp; more! lor
listings BOO ti&lt;'0-4876 e~ .V4 35
shell case $300 740·6.:'15·
fl5
5410
TKI (. "1\.'t '
llNI
I \K\1 Sl 1'1'1.11 .'

2BA recently remodeled, 9523
- - - - - -- gas heat. C/A, fridge/ range,
Motorola flip phone (cost
Furnished Apt in Point · $20) 450 minute card ~ cost
Dryer hookup. $550/rent +
Pleasant upstairs, all utilities $80) wilt selllor'$65 or1tca r
clep. 446-4555 after 5prn.
paid. i br, Lease $4 50/m charger (740)444·502 1
2BR. 1BA, gar in city limits. plus $450 deposit. Very
newly remodeled . no pets. clean No Pets Call after 5pm NEW AND USED STEEL
no smoking. $600/rent+sec. 304·675-7499
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
dep. 740·446-7596
For · Concrete.
Angl e,
- ' - - - - -- - - Gracious Living. 1 and. 2 ChanneL Flat Bar, Steel
4br, 2ba, HUO! only $317 Bedroom Apts . at Village Grating
·For
Drain s.
month! Great Location! (5% Manor and Riverside Apts. in Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
down , 20yrs, 8°{, APR) Middleport , from $327 to
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
listings 800-620-4946 ex. · $592. 740-992-5064. Equal Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
T461
Housing Opportunity.
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Brick house .in Gallipolis.
· 3BA. 1 1/2 bath, no pet s, no
smoking. $650/rent. 740·
446-9209

ro

79 Corvette T-Top, 350
Pug
puppie s,
lawn , engine . au to trans.
Registered. v,:ormEJd 8 1rp to
;:;~ 2000 Kaw asaki W-650.
dat e shots Very sweet &amp; lov· clean 70.400 rni !C5
1.900 miles. ElecHic starter
able Mason area 443-350- 388-0236
Needs Mw baMery, other'
4011
wrse. like nflvt. Two saddles
~
rncllrdefl:one with back rest
70
9!l
Corvet1e
blue
roadster
l\lrsu ·~\1 .
$3.250.
Black leather &amp; lop AutO wuidshre ld.
II\IST1tl 1J\IENTS
BN nlliful , fun la!; l p nrpg 1740)992·7396

EQUIPMENT TRAIL ERS
CARGO
EXPRESS
8
H O M ESTE*DER
CAR GO / CONCESS ION
TRA ILERS B•W GOOSE·
NECK
HITCHES
CA RMICHAEL
EOUIPMENT I C ARMICHA EL
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA·
VICE . SPECIAL
20FT
GOOSENECK
FLATBEO
$3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE
TRAILER INVENTORY AT
WWW .C ARMI C HAEL ·
TRAILERS.COM 740-4 46
3825

fi2il

4 Wnt:tl.EH.~

(740) 441 - Garage tor rent at the corner 4

r

· 5 bedrooms ava•lable. 740-

Thursday, July 17, 2008
ALLEY COP

MatllRC\'lU:si

4J

Lmsn K."~

mRSAU.

AKC
ENGLISH Bantum chrckens, varrous OS COR 1000 AA. k&gt;w mrles.
ot 2nd and Pine St $75 per SPRIN GER SPANIEL MALE breeds tno $7 bPecral con· $8000 obo. Call 304-8 t 2·
- - - - - -- mon th 446 44 25 or 44 6· PUPPIES $300 304· 273· siderahon
to
4 Her's. 1068
Apartment available now 3936
4:..177
(740)99:!·5275
Aiverbend Apls New Haven
WV Now accepting appltea AKC German' Shepherd
'Ill{( II \\111"1
lions tor Hud-Subs•dil.ed. r· ;~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ pups. top bloodlme. lurge Goats. young to adult :SJO 10
05 HO Sportster Touring
one Bedroom Apts Ulililles
SPON'nN(;
breed. both par en ts 011 Site S60 each. 740-64 5 -54 02
Seat
forward
controls.
mcluded Based on 30°·o of
Go~
$400 ear:h 304-6 / 5-5724
Screamrng Eagle rnutllers.
adJuSted •ncome. Call 304 $7500. 7&lt;0·645·2567
CKC Chihuahua Pups.
882 -3121
available tor
Colt Python·· custom a·· Ready 7-1 9·08 4 dilferent
AlJIQ;
Se~t or and Disabled people.

OWNER FINANCE AVAIL·
ABLE . 740.«6·3570

i

Thur$day, July 17, 2008

www.myda~lysentinel .com

'

,,

'

answers

�..
',

Page AB6- The Daily Sentinel

Thursda y, July 17 , 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

'
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Great Home St\lle Breakfast &amp; Dinner ·
(Baked Steak. Roast Beet.
fried Chicken and much moreJ

Hoiiies, Hot or Cold. made to order.
Great Hoe Does &amp; Hambureers.
Fresh hand diPPed ice cream treats and
milkshakes.

'

.

· · i;·rcn H·imlfr!.'!

LOIS
. BUMGARDNER .

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·Buns \loted Finaltst lor Best Wtnos
·
•
Monday Mommy llondoy'o

ChiGk Out Out
"NEW~

Dining Room &amp; ·
. l.arger Patio .
Scenic Rl ~erview
' Dining

(Dine In On~) ·

•

Weanasdoy :'Pu~~ Nigh1

IUUII You Con Eat

•

(KkiiS I IInder Eat free)

•

ThurlOIY' Blind DnwComhole Tournament
Fr&lt;il&gt;, 1/l Price Stnrt l!om4-6pm
S!mday: 010 FahtoniO Sunday's
.S1.00 Dog1 ~up-llltt.lf ond
IUIF.-p1Dft-

r·

Gallipolis Ferry, WV

(304) 576-2220

1.ila &gt;Atu•diY of the

Mont~:

Happy How

Mon.·Frl. 4-7Pfll
. Great Selection Of
Premium Wine &amp; Beer

Brttg your

Ttlm Comhote Tountl!\111\1

Open from II am ti118 pm (Thesday- Sunday)
Closed Monday • ·
Next to tbe Robert C. Byrd Locks &amp; Dam on Rt. 2

1--·-· "··· ' ..

'

Food &amp; Dril1k Specifltlor Sp«ill llomo
Tuesd•y Pilthen I Wln&lt;jl
.40eWings
labll Bkte Pitch ora $650 with Wing order

EJ£51 ~tr tt)Y~f$
C&lt;JII anead tor !JI".:k ~~ ., r~ur l. 1 J~ • ·dP

636 East t.taln Street
Pomeroy, "oH

992-6121

Comtng In Sopl!mbei .
Cldlomer AppreciationSpec illl

-...-...

Slamlay IIUCktyeTIItgtlillg II Bun,' s .

(;1111. lin••thtl£1)r Pnrkwn~
Mldc:tl~pgrt ,

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. 14(1&lt;1)9l·!l48

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30.\ Wll~l M~tln St.
M(]Arthur. OH
7411·!%·9349

Dine In or-Drive Thru
- ·- - -•
~uy one Fish &amp;Chips
•

,.
,
22S W Main, PonH·twl
992-5-l.\2

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Get One Free!

II

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Must Present Coupon
ToMcC/ures

.

Exp. 7123108

•

•
•
•

r---------------,

1 Tliert' " IS'' Suc:h A Thing As A
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Free /.unch!
I
/~'nter /len-' For A
I
I

I

$30 Gift Certificate

I / /1 One Of J'hcse (1rea t Rc .,talmllll~
/)rawin~ Each ~-~cek!
'
.
Name: _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __

I1 Phone#·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
I
Mail to: Free Lunch
G allipolis Daily Tribune
.
L __ ~u~...H'II.IiP.IIIis..t:~tL4~.L. __

$ .

4.99
Lunoh Buffet

1t:OO AM - 3:30 PM

Mon. -Sat
"'o..,P"m"N:..-;7=oAYS

AWiiii'l

M •m•Ttlurll.; l lo••• ... no-111 ' "'l'llt
tr•.· '-t.· ll , ijO &lt;hi· ! " W• ~tl
:o&lt;ut..bol' t \ l 1l'IO .-*'·"'100 l'ft

----------

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to Our .'1-fany
£'U \'(Of11f'1~

/0} ('IU'\

11 r,tl l/if•Ofi\

2208 Jackson Ave.
Point Ple asant,WV .

304·6 7 5·5427
AU major credit cards accepted

'•

1/

',,'

�..
',

Page AB6- The Daily Sentinel

Thursda y, July 17 , 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

'
~:t"-~v
~~~&gt;;;:.:~.,.:::~
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.
, r ..

,,.

~·

UIV ,t\ 1 . ' ' ,

(·

Great Home St\lle Breakfast &amp; Dinner ·
(Baked Steak. Roast Beet.
fried Chicken and much moreJ

Hoiiies, Hot or Cold. made to order.
Great Hoe Does &amp; Hambureers.
Fresh hand diPPed ice cream treats and
milkshakes.

'

.

· · i;·rcn H·imlfr!.'!

LOIS
. BUMGARDNER .

'

t®u ~T~!'~ !m'r~:~
,.

'

J",

1

·Buns \loted Finaltst lor Best Wtnos
·
•
Monday Mommy llondoy'o

ChiGk Out Out
"NEW~

Dining Room &amp; ·
. l.arger Patio .
Scenic Rl ~erview
' Dining

(Dine In On~) ·

•

Weanasdoy :'Pu~~ Nigh1

IUUII You Con Eat

•

(KkiiS I IInder Eat free)

•

ThurlOIY' Blind DnwComhole Tournament
Fr&lt;il&gt;, 1/l Price Stnrt l!om4-6pm
S!mday: 010 FahtoniO Sunday's
.S1.00 Dog1 ~up-llltt.lf ond
IUIF.-p1Dft-

r·

Gallipolis Ferry, WV

(304) 576-2220

1.ila &gt;Atu•diY of the

Mont~:

Happy How

Mon.·Frl. 4-7Pfll
. Great Selection Of
Premium Wine &amp; Beer

Brttg your

Ttlm Comhote Tountl!\111\1

Open from II am ti118 pm (Thesday- Sunday)
Closed Monday • ·
Next to tbe Robert C. Byrd Locks &amp; Dam on Rt. 2

1--·-· "··· ' ..

'

Food &amp; Dril1k Specifltlor Sp«ill llomo
Tuesd•y Pilthen I Wln&lt;jl
.40eWings
labll Bkte Pitch ora $650 with Wing order

EJ£51 ~tr tt)Y~f$
C&lt;JII anead tor !JI".:k ~~ ., r~ur l. 1 J~ • ·dP

636 East t.taln Street
Pomeroy, "oH

992-6121

Comtng In Sopl!mbei .
Cldlomer AppreciationSpec illl

-...-...

Slamlay IIUCktyeTIItgtlillg II Bun,' s .

(;1111. lin••thtl£1)r Pnrkwn~
Mldc:tl~pgrt ,

on

. 14(1&lt;1)9l·!l48

·

30.\ Wll~l M~tln St.
M(]Arthur. OH
7411·!%·9349

Dine In or-Drive Thru
- ·- - -•
~uy one Fish &amp;Chips
•

,.
,
22S W Main, PonH·twl
992-5-l.\2

~

-

II

Get One Free!

II

,.
,.

Must Present Coupon
ToMcC/ures

.

Exp. 7123108

•

•
•
•

r---------------,

1 Tliert' " IS'' Suc:h A Thing As A
I
Free /.unch!
I
/~'nter /len-' For A
I
I

I

$30 Gift Certificate

I / /1 One Of J'hcse (1rea t Rc .,talmllll~
/)rawin~ Each ~-~cek!
'
.
Name: _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __

I1 Phone#·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
I
Mail to: Free Lunch
G allipolis Daily Tribune
.
L __ ~u~...H'II.IiP.IIIis..t:~tL4~.L. __

$ .

4.99
Lunoh Buffet

1t:OO AM - 3:30 PM

Mon. -Sat
"'o..,P"m"N:..-;7=oAYS

AWiiii'l

M •m•Ttlurll.; l lo••• ... no-111 ' "'l'llt
tr•.· '-t.· ll , ijO &lt;hi· ! " W• ~tl
:o&lt;ut..bol' t \ l 1l'IO .-*'·"'100 l'ft

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to Our .'1-fany
£'U \'(Of11f'1~

/0} ('IU'\

11 r,tl l/if•Ofi\

2208 Jackson Ave.
Point Ple asant,WV .

304·6 7 5·5427
AU major credit cards accepted

'•

1/

',,'

�Senior Quarterly

Page 2 •

Thursday, July 17,2008

Thursday, July 11, 2oos

.

Senior Quarterly

.

·Page 3

Ohio Valley Home Health keeping area residents healthier

Shawnee State University was recognized as a sponsor of the Eld.er Abuse Conference and two ofSSU;s health sciences professors Ch · r R b
Submitted photos
sor of occupational therapy, and Maggie Selby, senior instructor of nursing, received awards from the Area Agency on Aging District 7. R~~e~n~n t~ er,h a~so~ate
profe~0
receJved the Community Serv1ce Award for Sen1or Home Inspection Program, and both Raber and Selby, seen in the photo at right received 'the p e
aha ofvethat ~e '
•
ar ners ip o e .ear
Award for their work In educatmg students on elder abuse and elder care issues.

i

~~~

~·/~{· , -:,~t
....)1;~,...

(ja[[ia County Counci[ on Jl.ging
Tlllnks lor tile sunen iA 1111 lliSSIIII.111111 tnv.

.

The Services llstetllllln 1n mlllbleto tor se1111'S.

Please contact us nwe can be of assistance.

Home Care Services

Adult Day Services

Personal Care
Nutrition
Homemaking
Errands
Medical Appointment Escort

Hours
9:30am-2:30pm
Monday-Friday

•

Contact: Marcella Taylor

4,

l;

&gt;:]· · •·''i-.~I
;-,\.]_.-- :·,..

1

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,.·· )-,

-~""'.'!-, ~.L ~)o,(1

·;•:; We Are Not Just A Family Fu~eral Homel
&lt;:.:
We Are A Mason County Family Owned
&lt;(~i~
Funeral Home Dedicated To Providing
_.;~;
. Compassionate, Caring Service
To Your Family!

Clean Safe Environments
Acti vities
Contact: Danette Hardyman
740-446-7000

Home Delivered Meals

· Transportation Services

Serving AII Townships of
Gallia County
Frozen Meals For Weekends
Hot Meals Mon-fri

·Non 'Emergency Medical
Shopping
Senior Center luncn Program .
Senior Center Activities

Senior Center Meals

Available Mon-Fri
8:00am-4:00pm

a pre-programmed set of limits for
their individual vital sign readings . If
those limits are broken, an alert
appears on the computer screen. This
allows the clinician to quickly priori'tize which patients require immediate
attention.
With this system clinicians can
detect and address even the slightest
abnormalities before they become
serious , preventing emergency roorn
visits and hospitalizations.According
to The National Council on Patient
Information and Education, half of all
medications are taken incorrectly
each year and that mistakes account
for 10 percent of all hospitalizations
and 25 percent of nursing home
admissions. Because of these statistics, OVHH has implemented the use
of the . Honeywell MedPartner
Medication Reminder to alert their
patients when it's time to take their
medications . · Voice prompts and
green LED lights help patients select
the right medication and the proper
dosage, while voice prompts and red
blinking LED lights warn patients
when the wrong medication is selected. A record is generated with each

selection, and reports can be sent
back to OVHH.
Another way OVHH is keeping their
patients healthier is our CertifiedWowid Care Nurse. Barb Ahels RN,
has completed the Wound Care
Education Institute course to become a
certified wound care specialist. Barb's
role as a wound care nurse is to treat
complicated or non-healing wounds
and/or ulcers.
OVHH also provides the following
services to the community: Skilled
Nursing RN/LPN, Telemetry at Home,
IV Therapy, Pediatric · Nursing, 24/7
Nurse on Caii,Physical Therapy, Home
Health Aides: Personal Care and
Homemaking Passport Services and
Medicaid Programs: Core, Waiver and ·
Private Duty Nursing
Payment
Sources for OVHH are: Medicare,
Medicaid, Private Insurance, Veteran's
Assistance, Ohio and West Virginia
Workman's Compensation and Black
Lung Benefits.
For more information on our services or to .find out about leasinR a
MedPartner medication reminder, call
Ohio Valley /;lome Health Inc .. (866)
441-1393.
.

_.,,yA

• Offering Skilled and Intermediate Level of Nursing Care

. :,.:::
. ~· ;:-

·Rehabilitation: Physical Therapy, Occupational Therapy,

·~·~

Speech Therapy, Respiratory Therpay including Ventilator Care

:' .;
...,:•_

• Certified by Medicare and Medicaid, Work.e rs Compensation

'

.

...

·,

·'

.

Approved, Accept Private Insurance

• Sp~ious Dining Room
• Two Private Courtyards
• Resident Friendly Design
• In-House Beauty/Barber Shop
• • Expectional Activity Program
· • Dental and Medical Exam Suite
•
• Large Flat Screen TV's in Resident Lounges • Indoor Smoke Room
• In-Room Cable and Phone Available
'

(t}/rtJ~1i61itiJ@/t
~tiJDJ6il(i.i1t~Jfiflg;1Jit t~1f/J{lfftlf

..
.

/.

wcatty ~wned and Operated by pauld, Donna &amp; Brad Deal

David Deal Director/Licensee In Charge
,

Contact: Dedidre Longworth
740-446-7000

patients a greater sense of oontrol over
their own care since they actively participate in it every day and . can see
how they are doing based' on the daily
readings."
·
Every day, in just three minutes, the
Honeywell
HomMed
Health
Monitoring System collects a variety
of vital signs such as heart rate, blood
pressure, oxygen saturation, body
weight and temperature. The system
can also gather subjective health information, which further assists .in evaluating the patient's condition.The manitor can be programmed to ask up to 10
"yes"J "no" questions in II languages.
Question sets can be tailored specifi•cally for each patient based on his or
her diagnosis.
·
For example, a patient with high
blood pressure might be asked, "Are
you experiencing any dizziness
today?" Different equipment, such as a
Blood Glucose . Monitor and/or an
ECG unit, may be linked to the system
so the patient's readings are monitored
by the .clinicians. The 'data are transmitted via a telephone line or digital
wireless technology for review by
clinicians at OVHH. Each patient has

,!/.:1//' rll/-'/ .'r/_;1'/

•

740-446-7000

]2:00pm Mon-Fri
Con tact: Tina Crews
740-446-7000

.&gt;

/

..

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Valley Home
Health has several unique ways they
are serving their patients in our community. Tele111onitoring, medicati,on
reminder systems and a certified
wou'nd care nurse are just three of the
ways OVHH is keeping their patients
healthier.
Through the use of new, in-home
telemonitoring technology,_ patients
served by Ohio Valley Home Health
Inc., patients can receive a· check-up
every . day in the comfort of their
homes.
OVHH
has
installed
Honeywell
HomMed(r)
Health
Monitoring Systems in the homes of
selected patients. Using this new telemonitoring technology,OVHH is now
able to check on their vital signs every
day. Within minutes, patients' readings
are transmitted to the Clinicians at
OVHH and, if the slightest abnormality is noticed, action can be taken to
address the problem.
"We're committed to quality patient
outcomes and feel this early intervention system helps us deliver the highest level of care possible," says Don
Corbin, owner of Ohio Valley Home
Health Inc . "The monitor gives

1401 Kanawha Street

/

.....

Charlie Huber, Director. Tom Wilson l!r sam ferrell Associates

Point Pleasant,

wv

•

• ·• ;&lt;!

675-6000

/'"1-7;1
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''5t Cefe6t:ation of£ ife"
333 Page Street • Middleport, OH (740) 992-6472
www.overbrookrehabilitationcenter.com

�Senior Quarterly

Page 2 •

Thursday, July 17,2008

Thursday, July 11, 2oos

.

Senior Quarterly

.

·Page 3

Ohio Valley Home Health keeping area residents healthier

Shawnee State University was recognized as a sponsor of the Eld.er Abuse Conference and two ofSSU;s health sciences professors Ch · r R b
Submitted photos
sor of occupational therapy, and Maggie Selby, senior instructor of nursing, received awards from the Area Agency on Aging District 7. R~~e~n~n t~ er,h a~so~ate
profe~0
receJved the Community Serv1ce Award for Sen1or Home Inspection Program, and both Raber and Selby, seen in the photo at right received 'the p e
aha ofvethat ~e '
•
ar ners ip o e .ear
Award for their work In educatmg students on elder abuse and elder care issues.

i

~~~

~·/~{· , -:,~t
....)1;~,...

(ja[[ia County Counci[ on Jl.ging
Tlllnks lor tile sunen iA 1111 lliSSIIII.111111 tnv.

.

The Services llstetllllln 1n mlllbleto tor se1111'S.

Please contact us nwe can be of assistance.

Home Care Services

Adult Day Services

Personal Care
Nutrition
Homemaking
Errands
Medical Appointment Escort

Hours
9:30am-2:30pm
Monday-Friday

•

Contact: Marcella Taylor

4,

l;

&gt;:]· · •·''i-.~I
;-,\.]_.-- :·,..

1

;--,1..-,:/'-J ·j
:L·Jt ,.

•~

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~~-i.~··-~· .. ,, ~~

! / , ( ...

,.·· )-,

-~""'.'!-, ~.L ~)o,(1

·;•:; We Are Not Just A Family Fu~eral Homel
&lt;:.:
We Are A Mason County Family Owned
&lt;(~i~
Funeral Home Dedicated To Providing
_.;~;
. Compassionate, Caring Service
To Your Family!

Clean Safe Environments
Acti vities
Contact: Danette Hardyman
740-446-7000

Home Delivered Meals

· Transportation Services

Serving AII Townships of
Gallia County
Frozen Meals For Weekends
Hot Meals Mon-fri

·Non 'Emergency Medical
Shopping
Senior Center luncn Program .
Senior Center Activities

Senior Center Meals

Available Mon-Fri
8:00am-4:00pm

a pre-programmed set of limits for
their individual vital sign readings . If
those limits are broken, an alert
appears on the computer screen. This
allows the clinician to quickly priori'tize which patients require immediate
attention.
With this system clinicians can
detect and address even the slightest
abnormalities before they become
serious , preventing emergency roorn
visits and hospitalizations.According
to The National Council on Patient
Information and Education, half of all
medications are taken incorrectly
each year and that mistakes account
for 10 percent of all hospitalizations
and 25 percent of nursing home
admissions. Because of these statistics, OVHH has implemented the use
of the . Honeywell MedPartner
Medication Reminder to alert their
patients when it's time to take their
medications . · Voice prompts and
green LED lights help patients select
the right medication and the proper
dosage, while voice prompts and red
blinking LED lights warn patients
when the wrong medication is selected. A record is generated with each

selection, and reports can be sent
back to OVHH.
Another way OVHH is keeping their
patients healthier is our CertifiedWowid Care Nurse. Barb Ahels RN,
has completed the Wound Care
Education Institute course to become a
certified wound care specialist. Barb's
role as a wound care nurse is to treat
complicated or non-healing wounds
and/or ulcers.
OVHH also provides the following
services to the community: Skilled
Nursing RN/LPN, Telemetry at Home,
IV Therapy, Pediatric · Nursing, 24/7
Nurse on Caii,Physical Therapy, Home
Health Aides: Personal Care and
Homemaking Passport Services and
Medicaid Programs: Core, Waiver and ·
Private Duty Nursing
Payment
Sources for OVHH are: Medicare,
Medicaid, Private Insurance, Veteran's
Assistance, Ohio and West Virginia
Workman's Compensation and Black
Lung Benefits.
For more information on our services or to .find out about leasinR a
MedPartner medication reminder, call
Ohio Valley /;lome Health Inc .. (866)
441-1393.
.

_.,,yA

• Offering Skilled and Intermediate Level of Nursing Care

. :,.:::
. ~· ;:-

·Rehabilitation: Physical Therapy, Occupational Therapy,

·~·~

Speech Therapy, Respiratory Therpay including Ventilator Care

:' .;
...,:•_

• Certified by Medicare and Medicaid, Work.e rs Compensation

'

.

...

·,

·'

.

Approved, Accept Private Insurance

• Sp~ious Dining Room
• Two Private Courtyards
• Resident Friendly Design
• In-House Beauty/Barber Shop
• • Expectional Activity Program
· • Dental and Medical Exam Suite
•
• Large Flat Screen TV's in Resident Lounges • Indoor Smoke Room
• In-Room Cable and Phone Available
'

(t}/rtJ~1i61itiJ@/t
~tiJDJ6il(i.i1t~Jfiflg;1Jit t~1f/J{lfftlf

..
.

/.

wcatty ~wned and Operated by pauld, Donna &amp; Brad Deal

David Deal Director/Licensee In Charge
,

Contact: Dedidre Longworth
740-446-7000

patients a greater sense of oontrol over
their own care since they actively participate in it every day and . can see
how they are doing based' on the daily
readings."
·
Every day, in just three minutes, the
Honeywell
HomMed
Health
Monitoring System collects a variety
of vital signs such as heart rate, blood
pressure, oxygen saturation, body
weight and temperature. The system
can also gather subjective health information, which further assists .in evaluating the patient's condition.The manitor can be programmed to ask up to 10
"yes"J "no" questions in II languages.
Question sets can be tailored specifi•cally for each patient based on his or
her diagnosis.
·
For example, a patient with high
blood pressure might be asked, "Are
you experiencing any dizziness
today?" Different equipment, such as a
Blood Glucose . Monitor and/or an
ECG unit, may be linked to the system
so the patient's readings are monitored
by the .clinicians. The 'data are transmitted via a telephone line or digital
wireless technology for review by
clinicians at OVHH. Each patient has

,!/.:1//' rll/-'/ .'r/_;1'/

•

740-446-7000

]2:00pm Mon-Fri
Con tact: Tina Crews
740-446-7000

.&gt;

/

..

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Valley Home
Health has several unique ways they
are serving their patients in our community. Tele111onitoring, medicati,on
reminder systems and a certified
wou'nd care nurse are just three of the
ways OVHH is keeping their patients
healthier.
Through the use of new, in-home
telemonitoring technology,_ patients
served by Ohio Valley Home Health
Inc., patients can receive a· check-up
every . day in the comfort of their
homes.
OVHH
has
installed
Honeywell
HomMed(r)
Health
Monitoring Systems in the homes of
selected patients. Using this new telemonitoring technology,OVHH is now
able to check on their vital signs every
day. Within minutes, patients' readings
are transmitted to the Clinicians at
OVHH and, if the slightest abnormality is noticed, action can be taken to
address the problem.
"We're committed to quality patient
outcomes and feel this early intervention system helps us deliver the highest level of care possible," says Don
Corbin, owner of Ohio Valley Home
Health Inc . "The monitor gives

1401 Kanawha Street

/

.....

Charlie Huber, Director. Tom Wilson l!r sam ferrell Associates

Point Pleasant,

wv

•

• ·• ;&lt;!

675-6000

/'"1-7;1
,·&gt;I1·;?·1 •.:1. '·'i l ~1-. ~.-,· . ~· .,,f '·~· -:~·
-/'!r:.'·"r;....yt
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I

''5t Cefe6t:ation of£ ife"
333 Page Street • Middleport, OH (740) 992-6472
www.overbrookrehabilitationcenter.com

�Senior Quarterly

Page 4 •

Thursday, July 17, 2()_08

Senior Quarterly

Thursday, July 17,2008

'

Assessing financial goals still important after retirement
BY ISAAC MILLS

from savstill need some growth-oriented whether your "dream" lifestyle is real1·' n g s ,
investments, such as stocks . A quali- ly what you expected.
Throughout your working years, you retirement
· fied financial professional can hdp . • Consider part-time work.
you choose those stocks that meet your
• Don't close the door . to work just
save' ·and invest so that you can create plans and
individual risk tolerance and that fit because you're formally "retired." If
a comfortable lifestyle in retirement. investAfter you ' re retired , though, you still men t s ,
Isaac
within your diversified portfolio. Also , you enjoyed what you did in the work. need to assess your financial goals if you could
Mills
when you sell stocks, especially thos.e ing world, consider doing it on a part. · you're going td maintain that lifestyle. e a s i I y
with a substantial gain, you could time basis, or as a consultant. You'll be
To keep your retirement plans on stay in the
change your tax situation. So, before doing something you like, while you
you sell, consult with your tax advisor, bring in income that can help preserve
track , you can take &lt;1 number of steps. same tax
in addition to your investment profes-·· your retirement funds. Be aware, ho'.YHere are a few of the most important bracket. ones:
or even move up. That's why it's sional.
ever, that your earned income could
• Determine your income level.
important to preserve your tax• Don't rush into an expens.ive new affect the amount of Social Security
• Before you retired, you knew the deferred accounts - such as your lifestyle. .
that you receive. _
,
source of your income - your pay- 'IRAs and your 40 I (k) - as long as
• Many people have big plans for
By making the right financial and
retirement. They'll buy a recreational investment moves, you can achieve .
checks. But in retirement, you may possible.
have multiple sources of income - . Try to withdraw as little as you can vehicle (RV) and travel ar~und the the freedom you need to make your
investments, Social Security, pensions frtjm these vehicles, especially during country. Or they'll buy a condomini- retirement years rewarding and
and retirement plans, such as your your early retirement years. Look urn by a golf course and hit the links enjoyable. So, think carefully about
40 I (k). Once you know how much instead to other sources of income, every day. Or they11 purchase a home what you need to do - and then do
money you have carping in, you' II including Social Security, personal by the lake and stay there six months it.
know how much you can afford to savjngs, tax-exempt municipal bonds, of the year. .
A happy retirement is waiting.
withdraw, so that you won't run the and, if you have one, a traditional penTJ!ere's nothing wrong wi\h any of
risk of outliving your resources.
s1on.
. these goals, but they can be dauntingly
(Isaac Mills is a financial advisor
• Protect tax-deferred vehicles.
• Don't sell all your stocks.
expensive. Before you plunge into a with Edward Jones In'vestments,
• Many people think that they'll
• Today's healthier lifestyles have costly new lifestyle, try it out first. 990A Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
automatically enter a lower tax brack- enabled many people to live two or Instead of buying an RV or a condo or phone 740-441-9441. Edward Jones
et when they retire. But that's not the three decades in retirement. That's a a cottage, rent one. You'll be under no has serving individual investors since
case . If you have significant income lot of years to pay for -'- so you may long-term obligation, ~nd you 'II learn 1871, member SIPC.)

e

• Page 5

•••

That's What Sets Holzer

ClbJlc Apart

· The braad new Ambulatory Surgery Center
at Bober CHDic is staffed by highly trained
S1UJCOU, Surgical '(echniclau, N111'1es,
Allathalol.,.ut., ud Aaatheala Providen.
They haft yean of aperleace and are aperta
Ia their relpecdTe ftelcla.· Bober CHDJ.c
oft'e:ta the latat Ia mqlcallnaond~ and
p1'01'Itla acepdoaai1111Jlcal care.

'

You Can Always Count on

HOLZER
CLINIC

w ww.1tol•erdlalc.c:o~~~.

Medical Excellence.
·Local Caring:
740·.446.5242

�Senior Quarterly

Page 4 •

Thursday, July 17, 2()_08

Senior Quarterly

Thursday, July 17,2008

'

Assessing financial goals still important after retirement
BY ISAAC MILLS

from savstill need some growth-oriented whether your "dream" lifestyle is real1·' n g s ,
investments, such as stocks . A quali- ly what you expected.
Throughout your working years, you retirement
· fied financial professional can hdp . • Consider part-time work.
you choose those stocks that meet your
• Don't close the door . to work just
save' ·and invest so that you can create plans and
individual risk tolerance and that fit because you're formally "retired." If
a comfortable lifestyle in retirement. investAfter you ' re retired , though, you still men t s ,
Isaac
within your diversified portfolio. Also , you enjoyed what you did in the work. need to assess your financial goals if you could
Mills
when you sell stocks, especially thos.e ing world, consider doing it on a part. · you're going td maintain that lifestyle. e a s i I y
with a substantial gain, you could time basis, or as a consultant. You'll be
To keep your retirement plans on stay in the
change your tax situation. So, before doing something you like, while you
you sell, consult with your tax advisor, bring in income that can help preserve
track , you can take &lt;1 number of steps. same tax
in addition to your investment profes-·· your retirement funds. Be aware, ho'.YHere are a few of the most important bracket. ones:
or even move up. That's why it's sional.
ever, that your earned income could
• Determine your income level.
important to preserve your tax• Don't rush into an expens.ive new affect the amount of Social Security
• Before you retired, you knew the deferred accounts - such as your lifestyle. .
that you receive. _
,
source of your income - your pay- 'IRAs and your 40 I (k) - as long as
• Many people have big plans for
By making the right financial and
retirement. They'll buy a recreational investment moves, you can achieve .
checks. But in retirement, you may possible.
have multiple sources of income - . Try to withdraw as little as you can vehicle (RV) and travel ar~und the the freedom you need to make your
investments, Social Security, pensions frtjm these vehicles, especially during country. Or they'll buy a condomini- retirement years rewarding and
and retirement plans, such as your your early retirement years. Look urn by a golf course and hit the links enjoyable. So, think carefully about
40 I (k). Once you know how much instead to other sources of income, every day. Or they11 purchase a home what you need to do - and then do
money you have carping in, you' II including Social Security, personal by the lake and stay there six months it.
know how much you can afford to savjngs, tax-exempt municipal bonds, of the year. .
A happy retirement is waiting.
withdraw, so that you won't run the and, if you have one, a traditional penTJ!ere's nothing wrong wi\h any of
risk of outliving your resources.
s1on.
. these goals, but they can be dauntingly
(Isaac Mills is a financial advisor
• Protect tax-deferred vehicles.
• Don't sell all your stocks.
expensive. Before you plunge into a with Edward Jones In'vestments,
• Many people think that they'll
• Today's healthier lifestyles have costly new lifestyle, try it out first. 990A Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
automatically enter a lower tax brack- enabled many people to live two or Instead of buying an RV or a condo or phone 740-441-9441. Edward Jones
et when they retire. But that's not the three decades in retirement. That's a a cottage, rent one. You'll be under no has serving individual investors since
case . If you have significant income lot of years to pay for -'- so you may long-term obligation, ~nd you 'II learn 1871, member SIPC.)

e

• Page 5

•••

That's What Sets Holzer

ClbJlc Apart

· The braad new Ambulatory Surgery Center
at Bober CHDic is staffed by highly trained
S1UJCOU, Surgical '(echniclau, N111'1es,
Allathalol.,.ut., ud Aaatheala Providen.
They haft yean of aperleace and are aperta
Ia their relpecdTe ftelcla.· Bober CHDJ.c
oft'e:ta the latat Ia mqlcallnaond~ and
p1'01'Itla acepdoaai1111Jlcal care.

'

You Can Always Count on

HOLZER
CLINIC

w ww.1tol•erdlalc.c:o~~~.

Medical Excellence.
·Local Caring:
740·.446.5242

�.

Senior Quarterly

Page6·

Thursday,Julyt7,2008

AARP report cites misperceptionS about Baby Boomers
BY LEANNE ITALIE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Baby Boomers are self-centered and
technology-challenged . They ' re affluent and .retiring early.
Not necessarily so, according to a
new report from the AARP that disputes some prevailing myths about the
swelled ranks of the generation born
between 1946 and 1964.
More life events occur for people
between ages 50 and 65 than at any
other time, accdrding to the March
report , which said the typical boomer
experiences an average of two major
shifts a year in career, family, finances
or health . Of 17 .040 boomers surveyed
by written questionnaire, ! I million
had recently bought homes , 5 million
retired and 7 million started new jobs .

"The point we 're trying to convey is that include financial transactions ,
this is a group you can't easily stereo- gaming, and downloading music or
type," said Howard Byck, a strategic . movies , while 17 million own MP3
alliances planner for the American players and 29 million own digital
Association of Retired Persons. "The video recorders such as Tivo.
myt~s are really . perpetuated by the
~Myth: Boomers are wealthy. Reality:
medm an.d by busme~ses,: mostly from They're the wealthiest generation in history, but only 9 percent are truly afflua marketmg perspect_Ive. . ·
The survey, .conducted
1
.n
2006
by
.
F
.d ·r·
en t , w1'th pre- tax ·mcomes of $150 ,000
the researc h ftrm oca 1yst, 1 enti 1es
'f
k'
d $!()() 000
other boomer " myths":
or m~re I. wor m.g an
,
?r
• Myth: Boomers are the "Me ~on: If ~et1re~ . Wh1l~ they have $2 tnlGeneration ." Reality: 70 percent feel a hon m discretionary mcome, 25 percent
"responsibility to make the world a bettet'place," and 57 percent try to buy from
corvpanies that "give back to their communities." Twenty-four percent recently
volunteered for a charitable cause.
• Myth: Boomers can 't handle technology. Reality: 82 pert:ent said they
use the Internet , with online activities

MTS@oins·

151 2nd Avenue· Gallipolis, OH • 740-446-2842
Over 30 Years Experience

have no savings accounts or investments apart from their homes, and nearly 4 in 10 have no life insurance.
• JV1yth: Boomers are retiring early.
Reality: Only II percent plan to stop
working when they reach retirement
age, with 13 million already working
· in what they consider a second career.

On the Net

American Association (~I' . Retired
Persons: http://ww»'.aarp.org/

..

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OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

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lwmecare j(Jr 16 years
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long as possible.

Top10

• Page 7

inreti

2. Plan ror a long retirement.
though , that diversification , by itself.
Many of the withdrawals fro111 yo ur
You could spend two, or 'even three, cannot guarantee a profit or protect retirement accounts will be considered
decades
in retirement. Keep this type against a loss in a declining market.)
taxable income . To manage your 1\tx
Like everyone, you hope for a com5. Prepare ror the unexpected.
situation effectively. consult with a lax
fortable retirement. That 's why you of longevity in mind when you create
Unexpected financial issues relating advisor
should put money away in your investment strategies for your retireto your family or health can crop up
9. Define your legacy.
40 I(k), IRA and any other retirement ment.
Work with a qualified legal advisor
plan available to you. But once you 3. Don't spend too much in your during your retirement years. To preearly
retirement
years.
pare
for
them,
make
sure
you
have
set
to
make sure your estate plans and the
reach retirement, which financial and
Obviously, you don't want to outlive· aside adequate "cash" reserves in easi- appropriate documents and arrangeinvestment strategies should you folments - beneficiaries, will. living
low to help yourself enjoy the lifestyle your resources. During the first few ly accessible accounts .
years of your retirement , .don't . go
6. Don't "reach" for high yields.
trust, power of attorney; etc. - arc up
you've envisioned?
overboard on spending. Also, try to - To boost your cash flow, you might to .date. ·
·determine
how much you can reason- think about investing in high-y ield
10. Get a "financial checkup" each
Consider these ''top 10" tips:
. ably afford to withdraw from your bonds or in stocks that promise abnor- ·year.
financial assets.
··
. ·
,nially high dividends. Try to resist this
Consu lt with your financial. advisor
I. Map out your goals.
4. Don't rorget about inflation.
" temptation .- you can find other, more . at least once a year to make sure your
You' II find it helpful to write down
If you spend 25 years in retirement, prudent investment strategies ' for investment strategies are still on track ·
your goals for retirement - travel,
As you near retirement, or ifyou 've
volunteer, pursue hobbies, etc. Then, prices could more than double , assum- adding to your income during your
just · retired, put these suggestions to
fist those factors that can affect your ing a three percent annual inflation rate . retirement years.
7. P~otect - and insure - your work.lt will take some time - but it's
ability to ac.hieve those goals. These To make sure you stay ahead of inflaworth the effort..
factors include your income sources lion , you'll probably·need at least some health.
Health-care "costs are a major con(Lesley Marrero is a financial advi(such as your 401(k), IRA , Social .growth-oriented investments, such as
stocks.
Of
course,
stock
prices
will
cern
for
retirees.
Take
steps,
such
as
sor
wth Edward limes Investments,
Security and savings accounts) and
your expenses (such as mortgage, util- always fluctuate so it's possible to lose exercising and maintaining a healthy 806-B Viand St., Point Pleasant,
ities, food and travel). Once you have money, but by investing in quality diet, to keep yourself in ~ood shape. At W.Va., phone 304-674-0174. Edward
all this information on paper, you're stocks, and making them a part of a the same time, strive to maintain ade- ]ones has been serving the need.1· of
individual investors since 1871, memon your way toward creating a "blue- diversified portfolio, you may be able to quate health insurance .
help
combat
inflation
.
(Keep
in
mind,
8.
Get
help
with
your
taxes.
her SIPf:.)
print" for your retirement.

WE FILL PRESCRIPTIONS
AND DO THE ·B ILLING
FOR
. THE· FOLLOWING:
. .
'

Senior·Quarterly

Thursday, July 17,2008

'

.

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Script
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VltalStim® Therapy. You are what matters most.

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www.ex.tendicare.con1

..

�.

Senior Quarterly

Page6·

Thursday,Julyt7,2008

AARP report cites misperceptionS about Baby Boomers
BY LEANNE ITALIE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Baby Boomers are self-centered and
technology-challenged . They ' re affluent and .retiring early.
Not necessarily so, according to a
new report from the AARP that disputes some prevailing myths about the
swelled ranks of the generation born
between 1946 and 1964.
More life events occur for people
between ages 50 and 65 than at any
other time, accdrding to the March
report , which said the typical boomer
experiences an average of two major
shifts a year in career, family, finances
or health . Of 17 .040 boomers surveyed
by written questionnaire, ! I million
had recently bought homes , 5 million
retired and 7 million started new jobs .

"The point we 're trying to convey is that include financial transactions ,
this is a group you can't easily stereo- gaming, and downloading music or
type," said Howard Byck, a strategic . movies , while 17 million own MP3
alliances planner for the American players and 29 million own digital
Association of Retired Persons. "The video recorders such as Tivo.
myt~s are really . perpetuated by the
~Myth: Boomers are wealthy. Reality:
medm an.d by busme~ses,: mostly from They're the wealthiest generation in history, but only 9 percent are truly afflua marketmg perspect_Ive. . ·
The survey, .conducted
1
.n
2006
by
.
F
.d ·r·
en t , w1'th pre- tax ·mcomes of $150 ,000
the researc h ftrm oca 1yst, 1 enti 1es
'f
k'
d $!()() 000
other boomer " myths":
or m~re I. wor m.g an
,
?r
• Myth: Boomers are the "Me ~on: If ~et1re~ . Wh1l~ they have $2 tnlGeneration ." Reality: 70 percent feel a hon m discretionary mcome, 25 percent
"responsibility to make the world a bettet'place," and 57 percent try to buy from
corvpanies that "give back to their communities." Twenty-four percent recently
volunteered for a charitable cause.
• Myth: Boomers can 't handle technology. Reality: 82 pert:ent said they
use the Internet , with online activities

MTS@oins·

151 2nd Avenue· Gallipolis, OH • 740-446-2842
Over 30 Years Experience

have no savings accounts or investments apart from their homes, and nearly 4 in 10 have no life insurance.
• JV1yth: Boomers are retiring early.
Reality: Only II percent plan to stop
working when they reach retirement
age, with 13 million already working
· in what they consider a second career.

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American Association (~I' . Retired
Persons: http://ww»'.aarp.org/

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• Page 7

inreti

2. Plan ror a long retirement.
though , that diversification , by itself.
Many of the withdrawals fro111 yo ur
You could spend two, or 'even three, cannot guarantee a profit or protect retirement accounts will be considered
decades
in retirement. Keep this type against a loss in a declining market.)
taxable income . To manage your 1\tx
Like everyone, you hope for a com5. Prepare ror the unexpected.
situation effectively. consult with a lax
fortable retirement. That 's why you of longevity in mind when you create
Unexpected financial issues relating advisor
should put money away in your investment strategies for your retireto your family or health can crop up
9. Define your legacy.
40 I(k), IRA and any other retirement ment.
Work with a qualified legal advisor
plan available to you. But once you 3. Don't spend too much in your during your retirement years. To preearly
retirement
years.
pare
for
them,
make
sure
you
have
set
to
make sure your estate plans and the
reach retirement, which financial and
Obviously, you don't want to outlive· aside adequate "cash" reserves in easi- appropriate documents and arrangeinvestment strategies should you folments - beneficiaries, will. living
low to help yourself enjoy the lifestyle your resources. During the first few ly accessible accounts .
years of your retirement , .don't . go
6. Don't "reach" for high yields.
trust, power of attorney; etc. - arc up
you've envisioned?
overboard on spending. Also, try to - To boost your cash flow, you might to .date. ·
·determine
how much you can reason- think about investing in high-y ield
10. Get a "financial checkup" each
Consider these ''top 10" tips:
. ably afford to withdraw from your bonds or in stocks that promise abnor- ·year.
financial assets.
··
. ·
,nially high dividends. Try to resist this
Consu lt with your financial. advisor
I. Map out your goals.
4. Don't rorget about inflation.
" temptation .- you can find other, more . at least once a year to make sure your
You' II find it helpful to write down
If you spend 25 years in retirement, prudent investment strategies ' for investment strategies are still on track ·
your goals for retirement - travel,
As you near retirement, or ifyou 've
volunteer, pursue hobbies, etc. Then, prices could more than double , assum- adding to your income during your
just · retired, put these suggestions to
fist those factors that can affect your ing a three percent annual inflation rate . retirement years.
7. P~otect - and insure - your work.lt will take some time - but it's
ability to ac.hieve those goals. These To make sure you stay ahead of inflaworth the effort..
factors include your income sources lion , you'll probably·need at least some health.
Health-care "costs are a major con(Lesley Marrero is a financial advi(such as your 401(k), IRA , Social .growth-oriented investments, such as
stocks.
Of
course,
stock
prices
will
cern
for
retirees.
Take
steps,
such
as
sor
wth Edward limes Investments,
Security and savings accounts) and
your expenses (such as mortgage, util- always fluctuate so it's possible to lose exercising and maintaining a healthy 806-B Viand St., Point Pleasant,
ities, food and travel). Once you have money, but by investing in quality diet, to keep yourself in ~ood shape. At W.Va., phone 304-674-0174. Edward
all this information on paper, you're stocks, and making them a part of a the same time, strive to maintain ade- ]ones has been serving the need.1· of
individual investors since 1871, memon your way toward creating a "blue- diversified portfolio, you may be able to quate health insurance .
help
combat
inflation
.
(Keep
in
mind,
8.
Get
help
with
your
taxes.
her SIPf:.)
print" for your retirement.

WE FILL PRESCRIPTIONS
AND DO THE ·B ILLING
FOR
. THE· FOLLOWING:
. .
'

Senior·Quarterly

Thursday, July 17,2008

'

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�"

Senior Quarterly

Page 8 •

Thursday, July 17,2008

dav care can giVe careg·
BY MELISSA KOSSLER DUTTON
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

When Dick Lundgren realized that caring for his wife
was taking a toll on hi s own
health , he turned to adult day
care .
Lundgren, who lives south
of Seattle , found a program
that catered to patients with
Alzheimer's disease and made
arrangements for hi s wife,
Dorothee, to go there two days
a week.
The break was good for both
· of them , said Lundgren,
whose wife was diagnosed
with the progressive brain disease seven · years ago. He
recently placed her in a group
home that provides round-theclock care to six residents.
"I firmly believe, looking
back, that (day care) gave me
a chaqce to keep my wife
home a year longer," the 61year-old said .

.

Finding the right adult day based on income.
care center can offer respite to
Deciding what works best
caregivers while offering their for your family requires doing
charges a chance to socialize some homework, said Elinor
and take part in supervised Ginzler of the AARP, . the
activities. Facilities vary from senior advocacy group.
those that focus on medical
• First, decide whether the
care to those that are' mostly older person needs a healthrecreational, ufft:ring games, based program staffed with
gardening or craft~.
medical professionals . Even a
There are about 3,500 more
recreational center
providers across the country,' should have a nurse or doctor
according to industry experts, on staff. Patients with
who say the number grows Alzlieimer's, Parkinson's or
· annually . In recent. years, other chronic health condichurches, nursing homes and tions probably require a center
national franchises have that focuses on care.
opened day care centers.
• The AARP or local Area
Medicaid or private insur- Agency on Aging should have
ance occasionally will pay for a list of providers. Only about
the care, which can range in 6 percent of adult day-care
price from $3.1 a day to $130 a ... centers are accredited, but
day. The average cost is about most are inspected by state
$61 a day, according to the agencies,
said
Peter
American Association . of Notarstefano of the American
Homes and Services for the Association of Homes and
Aging, in Washington. Many Services for the Aging.
facilities offer a sliding scale Practices and policies vary by

~

' .··

-

SIEMENS

''Pure''

state, but the inspection
records should be avail;~ble for
review, Ginzler said .
• Visit the facility to 'meet
the staff and ask about its
trammg policies , experts
advise. Watch the interactions
between staff and clients, the
· quality of. the programs, and
the cleanliness of eating areas
and bathrooms.
"See how engaged people
are," said Donna Schempp, a
program director at the Family
Caregiver Alliance in San
Francisco. ·
"Are they sitting around in
wheelchairs and being ignored
or are people trying to engage
them 'in different kinds of
activities?"
The workers should seem
interested in their elderly
charges and treat them kindly,
said Lundgren , a board mernber of Washington Elder Care,
a group working to create a
local day health program

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Senior Quarterly

a

geared to dementia patients .
"h's always the people and
their attitude and their commitment to their work ," he
said.
• Ask to see a schedule of
activities. If possible , come
back for an unscheduled visit
during an activity your loved
one
. , might enjoy, and. see how
1t s run.
Mealtime also is a good time
to visit and see how workers
treat
c1 ients,
said
Notarstefano . .
• Look for a center that satisfies the caregiver's needs as
well as the loved one. Most
centers serve lunch, but many
provide other services, includ- .
ing transportation or medical
screenings. Some may offer
bathing services and transportation to doctor's appointments.
• Find out whether the center
takes field trips, uses volun-

..

Whether your health care·needs
req11ire nursing services, rehabilitation or
home maki.tlg.services....... .
'

.

Long Term Care I Home ·Cor~
Division

is here for you.

Pie•se see Bre•k. 15

..

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- - G A.L LIPOLIS--

CENTER .

740 441-9633

1122 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis
Call (740) 441-1971 or (800) 434-4194
Be yourself with
Siemens Pure!

• FREE Hearing Test
• Discowit expires 8/1/08

• Pure Individuality- come in 12 colors
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• Pure Natural Soun~ - background noise control,
feedback canceling ana sound smoothing
Ask about the remote control and rechargeable options!

• Page 9

.org

�"

Senior Quarterly

Page 8 •

Thursday, July 17,2008

dav care can giVe careg·
BY MELISSA KOSSLER DUTTON
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

When Dick Lundgren realized that caring for his wife
was taking a toll on hi s own
health , he turned to adult day
care .
Lundgren, who lives south
of Seattle , found a program
that catered to patients with
Alzheimer's disease and made
arrangements for hi s wife,
Dorothee, to go there two days
a week.
The break was good for both
· of them , said Lundgren,
whose wife was diagnosed
with the progressive brain disease seven · years ago. He
recently placed her in a group
home that provides round-theclock care to six residents.
"I firmly believe, looking
back, that (day care) gave me
a chaqce to keep my wife
home a year longer," the 61year-old said .

.

Finding the right adult day based on income.
care center can offer respite to
Deciding what works best
caregivers while offering their for your family requires doing
charges a chance to socialize some homework, said Elinor
and take part in supervised Ginzler of the AARP, . the
activities. Facilities vary from senior advocacy group.
those that focus on medical
• First, decide whether the
care to those that are' mostly older person needs a healthrecreational, ufft:ring games, based program staffed with
gardening or craft~.
medical professionals . Even a
There are about 3,500 more
recreational center
providers across the country,' should have a nurse or doctor
according to industry experts, on staff. Patients with
who say the number grows Alzlieimer's, Parkinson's or
· annually . In recent. years, other chronic health condichurches, nursing homes and tions probably require a center
national franchises have that focuses on care.
opened day care centers.
• The AARP or local Area
Medicaid or private insur- Agency on Aging should have
ance occasionally will pay for a list of providers. Only about
the care, which can range in 6 percent of adult day-care
price from $3.1 a day to $130 a ... centers are accredited, but
day. The average cost is about most are inspected by state
$61 a day, according to the agencies,
said
Peter
American Association . of Notarstefano of the American
Homes and Services for the Association of Homes and
Aging, in Washington. Many Services for the Aging.
facilities offer a sliding scale Practices and policies vary by

~

' .··

-

SIEMENS

''Pure''

state, but the inspection
records should be avail;~ble for
review, Ginzler said .
• Visit the facility to 'meet
the staff and ask about its
trammg policies , experts
advise. Watch the interactions
between staff and clients, the
· quality of. the programs, and
the cleanliness of eating areas
and bathrooms.
"See how engaged people
are," said Donna Schempp, a
program director at the Family
Caregiver Alliance in San
Francisco. ·
"Are they sitting around in
wheelchairs and being ignored
or are people trying to engage
them 'in different kinds of
activities?"
The workers should seem
interested in their elderly
charges and treat them kindly,
said Lundgren , a board mernber of Washington Elder Care,
a group working to create a
local day health program

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Senior Quarterly

a

geared to dementia patients .
"h's always the people and
their attitude and their commitment to their work ," he
said.
• Ask to see a schedule of
activities. If possible , come
back for an unscheduled visit
during an activity your loved
one
. , might enjoy, and. see how
1t s run.
Mealtime also is a good time
to visit and see how workers
treat
c1 ients,
said
Notarstefano . .
• Look for a center that satisfies the caregiver's needs as
well as the loved one. Most
centers serve lunch, but many
provide other services, includ- .
ing transportation or medical
screenings. Some may offer
bathing services and transportation to doctor's appointments.
• Find out whether the center
takes field trips, uses volun-

..

Whether your health care·needs
req11ire nursing services, rehabilitation or
home maki.tlg.services....... .
'

.

Long Term Care I Home ·Cor~
Division

is here for you.

Pie•se see Bre•k. 15

..

~'ADVANCED HEARING

- - G A.L LIPOLIS--

CENTER .

740 441-9633

1122 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis
Call (740) 441-1971 or (800) 434-4194
Be yourself with
Siemens Pure!

• FREE Hearing Test
• Discowit expires 8/1/08

• Pure Individuality- come in 12 colors
··Pure Power - able to meet the nee(Js of the most
demanding user
• Pure Natural Soun~ - background noise control,
feedback canceling ana sound smoothing
Ask about the remote control and rechargeable options!

• Page 9

.org

�•

Senior,Quarterly

Page 10 •

Senior Quarterly

Thursday, July 17,2008

• Page 11

..

GAs, .FOOD PRICES PINCH ELDERLY MEAL PROGRAMS

· Bv P.J. DICKERSCHEID

prices over the past year, Oat
ASSOCIATEDPRESSWRITER
or reduced government funding, and an ailing economy
that yields fewer donat.ions.
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
Ruth M. Jones doesn't know
"All of that is generatmg a lot
what she'd do without hot of anxiety/ ' said Bob Anderson ,
meals delivered daily to her associate director of the
home.
The . 81-year-old Metropolitan Area Agency on
Charlesto.n widow can't w~k Aging in Minneapolis-St. Paul.
or drive smce a car wreck mne
Across the country, nearly
years ago left her stricken by · 60 percent of the estimated
arthritis .
5,000 programs that belong to
Meals
on
Wheels
. "A lot of times I can't even the
get into the kitchen," said Association of America have
Jones, who relies on her Social lost volunteers who can't
Security check to cover the afford gas, said Enid A.
soaring costs of food and util- Borden, president and CEO of
ities.
tqe program that has been proThose same costs. are viding meals to Americans in
squeezing
the
estimated need since 1954.
20,000 senior nutrition proNearly half the programs
grams across the country that have eliminated routes or conserve Jones and millions of solidated meal .servic~s , Some
elderly and frail Americans .
38· percent have sw1tched to
While most needs are still delivering frozen rather than
being met, advocates from hot meals, w_hile about 30 p&lt;:rCalifornia to New York worry . cent are cutting personal VISits
that seniors will go hungry. from five days a week to one.
"We're in a crisis and .it's
They blame a nearly 20 percent increase in fuel and food just getting worse and worse,"

sa1d Borden, who IS urgmg
Congress to increase money
for senior nutrition .programs
by at lea~t IOpercent. .
:
. Two pendmg . bills don t
come close to that amount,
said Peggy Ingraham, the
association's se~ior vic~ president for publl~ pol.1cy. A
House subcommittee .1s consideting a 6.5 perce.nt mcrease
for senior nutrition progra!lls
for the fiscal ·y~ar that begms
Oct. I, while a Senate subcommittee is considering a 5.7
percent increase. The federal
earmark for the current fiscal
year is $758 million..
.
. Cuts are alr~ady '.nev1tab~e
m ~ew York &lt;:;1ty, s~1d Marc1a
Stem, executive d1rector of
Citymeals on Wheels, whe~e
meetings are under ~ay th1s
week to work out details s~ch
as who will no longer rece1ve
m~als.
.
. ,
. w~. ~ave no ~hmce, she
smd. Its like trymg to take a
size 10 foot and putting it into
a size 7 shoe."

. In Califorma , sen;or programs fa~e a propose~ 10 pe.rcent cut m state fundmg, sa1d
~onna A.n?erson •. adult serv1ces diVISIOn ch1ef for San
. Joaqu.m ~ounty Department
of Agmg m Stockton.
In West Virginia, where
a~&gt;?ut 1.5 percent of th~ populat10n 1s o~er 6~ an~ more
than .two-thirds live m r.ural
area~. lawmak~r~ last we~k
provided an additional $1 million to help county agencies
pay ~or fo~d and gas. . . .
Without 1t, the ~est V1rg.mm
Bureau of Semor Serv1ces
would have had to cut 113,000 .
m.eals and make I 00,000 few~r
tnps. to and from doctors .
appomtments, the pharmacy
and . other plac~s ~emors need
to .g? to r~mam mdependent,
o!flclals sa1d. The bure~u prov1ded .8~8,000 round tnps an.d
2.~ m1!hon meals last y~ar.
. We re. the on!y - ~~ansportatlon the.y ve got , sa1d Sandra
K. Vanm , the agency's comm1ss1oner.

. In South Ctrohna, lawmakers a~ded $2.9 mdhon to next
yea.r s budget for a homedell~ered meal~ program,
spanng 5.•400 of mor~ than
29,000 c! 1ents from bemg cut
off, sa1d Frank Adams,
spokesman for Lt. Gov. Andre ·
Bau~r, who ove~sees the
states Office on Agmg. ·...
Preparing meals and VISitmg
the doctor are especially difficult for 91-year-old Mary
Elliott of Charleston since she
returned from the hospital last
fall.
"I couldn't do nothing when
1 came home," said Elliott,
who has lived alone since her
husband died 15 years ago.
Her sons live·in New York and
Cleveland. The retired caterer
has a fairly new stove, but ,hasn't
learned how to use it. She said
she doesn't trust herself to ride
the bus because she might faiL
And while her appetit« isn't
always what it should be she
'
. Please see Programs, 15

SQ-e ·exercises that. help titfteSs·,

.balance for active ·grandparents .
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

These at-home preven_tive exercises. ~an give you more ~tabil~~ at t~e
playground. Do them wzth a spouse or m a gym when poss1ble; Its eas1er
to keep. up the ,_outine if you do it with others.
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�•

Senior,Quarterly

Page 10 •

Senior Quarterly

Thursday, July 17,2008

• Page 11

..

GAs, .FOOD PRICES PINCH ELDERLY MEAL PROGRAMS

· Bv P.J. DICKERSCHEID

prices over the past year, Oat
ASSOCIATEDPRESSWRITER
or reduced government funding, and an ailing economy
that yields fewer donat.ions.
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
Ruth M. Jones doesn't know
"All of that is generatmg a lot
what she'd do without hot of anxiety/ ' said Bob Anderson ,
meals delivered daily to her associate director of the
home.
The . 81-year-old Metropolitan Area Agency on
Charlesto.n widow can't w~k Aging in Minneapolis-St. Paul.
or drive smce a car wreck mne
Across the country, nearly
years ago left her stricken by · 60 percent of the estimated
arthritis .
5,000 programs that belong to
Meals
on
Wheels
. "A lot of times I can't even the
get into the kitchen," said Association of America have
Jones, who relies on her Social lost volunteers who can't
Security check to cover the afford gas, said Enid A.
soaring costs of food and util- Borden, president and CEO of
ities.
tqe program that has been proThose same costs. are viding meals to Americans in
squeezing
the
estimated need since 1954.
20,000 senior nutrition proNearly half the programs
grams across the country that have eliminated routes or conserve Jones and millions of solidated meal .servic~s , Some
elderly and frail Americans .
38· percent have sw1tched to
While most needs are still delivering frozen rather than
being met, advocates from hot meals, w_hile about 30 p&lt;:rCalifornia to New York worry . cent are cutting personal VISits
that seniors will go hungry. from five days a week to one.
"We're in a crisis and .it's
They blame a nearly 20 percent increase in fuel and food just getting worse and worse,"

sa1d Borden, who IS urgmg
Congress to increase money
for senior nutrition .programs
by at lea~t IOpercent. .
:
. Two pendmg . bills don t
come close to that amount,
said Peggy Ingraham, the
association's se~ior vic~ president for publl~ pol.1cy. A
House subcommittee .1s consideting a 6.5 perce.nt mcrease
for senior nutrition progra!lls
for the fiscal ·y~ar that begms
Oct. I, while a Senate subcommittee is considering a 5.7
percent increase. The federal
earmark for the current fiscal
year is $758 million..
.
. Cuts are alr~ady '.nev1tab~e
m ~ew York &lt;:;1ty, s~1d Marc1a
Stem, executive d1rector of
Citymeals on Wheels, whe~e
meetings are under ~ay th1s
week to work out details s~ch
as who will no longer rece1ve
m~als.
.
. ,
. w~. ~ave no ~hmce, she
smd. Its like trymg to take a
size 10 foot and putting it into
a size 7 shoe."

. In Califorma , sen;or programs fa~e a propose~ 10 pe.rcent cut m state fundmg, sa1d
~onna A.n?erson •. adult serv1ces diVISIOn ch1ef for San
. Joaqu.m ~ounty Department
of Agmg m Stockton.
In West Virginia, where
a~&gt;?ut 1.5 percent of th~ populat10n 1s o~er 6~ an~ more
than .two-thirds live m r.ural
area~. lawmak~r~ last we~k
provided an additional $1 million to help county agencies
pay ~or fo~d and gas. . . .
Without 1t, the ~est V1rg.mm
Bureau of Semor Serv1ces
would have had to cut 113,000 .
m.eals and make I 00,000 few~r
tnps. to and from doctors .
appomtments, the pharmacy
and . other plac~s ~emors need
to .g? to r~mam mdependent,
o!flclals sa1d. The bure~u prov1ded .8~8,000 round tnps an.d
2.~ m1!hon meals last y~ar.
. We re. the on!y - ~~ansportatlon the.y ve got , sa1d Sandra
K. Vanm , the agency's comm1ss1oner.

. In South Ctrohna, lawmakers a~ded $2.9 mdhon to next
yea.r s budget for a homedell~ered meal~ program,
spanng 5.•400 of mor~ than
29,000 c! 1ents from bemg cut
off, sa1d Frank Adams,
spokesman for Lt. Gov. Andre ·
Bau~r, who ove~sees the
states Office on Agmg. ·...
Preparing meals and VISitmg
the doctor are especially difficult for 91-year-old Mary
Elliott of Charleston since she
returned from the hospital last
fall.
"I couldn't do nothing when
1 came home," said Elliott,
who has lived alone since her
husband died 15 years ago.
Her sons live·in New York and
Cleveland. The retired caterer
has a fairly new stove, but ,hasn't
learned how to use it. She said
she doesn't trust herself to ride
the bus because she might faiL
And while her appetit« isn't
always what it should be she
'
. Please see Programs, 15

SQ-e ·exercises that. help titfteSs·,

.balance for active ·grandparents .
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

These at-home preven_tive exercises. ~an give you more ~tabil~~ at t~e
playground. Do them wzth a spouse or m a gym when poss1ble; Its eas1er
to keep. up the ,_outine if you do it with others.
··

\...

·Our Guaranteed Price lnftation-Proof Plan

.•

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a very simple method mat allows you to Pre-Arrange I he funeral
service of your choice . Funding. tOQ. is available and you can choose from single or
monthly payment plans.

· Ualf S9nats
Bend legs at knees and hips, lower tor~o until upper legs a~e parallel to ·
the ground, then return to standing. Add resistance by holding phone books
or tomato cans. Benefits: flexes Achilles tendon, strengthens calv~s and
rear, requires bal'ance, an·d develops tru~k muscles including obliques:
· abdominals and lower back.
.

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•

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304-675-4384

Stand with feet slightly ·apart, arms at your side, palms facing in. Raise
arrns to head level, hold , and lower. Add resistance with cans of vegetables.
'
Benefits: Strengthens shoulder girdle , trunk, quad, rear.

Rich&lt;~rd

·source: Dr. Roberl Schoene, professor at the University of CaliforniaSail Diego School of Medicine.

Ohio Vallev Hollie -Health
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How to meet
funeral costs in the

D. (;rt-cn

Direct c lr/ Li cc n ~ec - in -C hargc

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392 Silver Bridge Plaza.,; Gallipolis, OH • 740-446-3808

�'

Senior Quarterly

Page 12 •

'

Thursday, July 17,2008

Why wait to· experience the gift of better hearing?
The staff at Holzer Cli~ic's Hearing Aid
Center are ·licensed audiologist ·
. providing the following services: .

• Com.prehensive Audiologic
Testing
·
• Latest technology in hearing aid~ (Conventional, programmable
and digital)
·
• Hearing aid repair (any brand)
• Hearing aid batteries.
• Hearing protection
• Assistive Listening Devices

Thursday,July 17,2008

Senior Quarterly

. , • Page 13

AAA7 announces winners
in art show, essay contest
RIO GRANDE - Area
Agency on Aging Di strict 7
Inc . announces the winners
from Gallia County in the 26th
annual Senior Art Show and
Essay/Poetry Contest held at
the Esther Allen . Greer
Museum and Gallery on the
campus of the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College . during
May 19-30; 2008.
The Senior Art Show · and
Essay/Poetry Contest are open
to any Ohio resident, age 55
years or older. Artwork is
classed amateur or professional and divided according to
media, category and theme .
Essays and poetry are categorized respectively according to
· the author's county. of residence.
Over 160 iut entries by 70
amateur artists and 'two professionals hung on the walls of
the gallery displaying senior

artistic talent. Senior essayists/poets expressed their ereative literary abilities with , 50
entries also displayed at the
show. Also on display were
_the photos entered-in the 2008
. Area Agency on Aging .
District Inc . "Aging Well,
Liv.ing Well" Photo eontest.
Special thanks to Freda
Lowery of Jackson County for
permitting her artwork from the
2097 Art Show to ·be featured
on the promotional materials
for the 2008 Senior Exhibit.
Gallia County winners in
.
Submitted photo
the Senior Art Show are:
Aline Clarke w,onftrst place in Galli a County participants and visitors in the 2008 Senior Art Show and Essay Contest sponsored by
Mixed Media-Floral with the Area Agency on Aging District 7 Inc.; are from left, Mary Withee, Eleanor Fadeley, Aline Clarke,
''Tropical Flowers," placed third CC'lrol Robinson, Clara Day' and Jan Stapleton; back row, Debra Greene, Darrell Day, AAA 7 Executive
in Oii:Seascape with "Light Director Pamela K. Matura, AAA7 Board of Trustees Past President Jane Ann Burns, Pat Parsons,
Mist" and earned a People's . Sally Roberts and Danette Hardyman.
Choice ribbon in Oil-Seascape ..
,
with "An Ocean Waves."
Sc~ ~.at and plac~d ~ec- and earned a People's Choice and ' placed third in Oil-Still
Ann Day placed second and ond m Oil-Seascape With By ribbon with "The Woodsman," Life with "Maize and Indian
placed third in Oil-Landscape Pottery."
earned a people's Choice rib- ·the Sea Shore."
Please see Winners. 14
bon in Oil-Animals with
Carol Robinson placed third with "Relics from the Past"

•
·HOLZER
CLINIC

'

EVERY.
,SENIOR
55YEIRS
I

•

·· To schedule an appointment call or for more information:

I

;

t

Athens
740-589-3100 .

Gallipolis
(Main Clinic)
740-446-5135

Jackson
740-395-8801
I

••

.'

'

.

Route 62 North of Point Pleasant (Camp Conley)
Mon. • Fri. 3:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Saturday 10:00 a.m. to 3:00p.m.
Other Times Availab•e By Appointment

CALL: 675·6573 or 674·1 J79
..

--~-----·-~·---~---~-

,4,~.

e,p,.,...a,-'1ltwteti ~ ot·.. EASTMAN'S FOODLANDS
•.Gallipolis
• TWin Rivers
. ~ Ohio Valley • Buckeye
.

�'

Senior Quarterly

Page 12 •

'

Thursday, July 17,2008

Why wait to· experience the gift of better hearing?
The staff at Holzer Cli~ic's Hearing Aid
Center are ·licensed audiologist ·
. providing the following services: .

• Com.prehensive Audiologic
Testing
·
• Latest technology in hearing aid~ (Conventional, programmable
and digital)
·
• Hearing aid repair (any brand)
• Hearing aid batteries.
• Hearing protection
• Assistive Listening Devices

Thursday,July 17,2008

Senior Quarterly

. , • Page 13

AAA7 announces winners
in art show, essay contest
RIO GRANDE - Area
Agency on Aging Di strict 7
Inc . announces the winners
from Gallia County in the 26th
annual Senior Art Show and
Essay/Poetry Contest held at
the Esther Allen . Greer
Museum and Gallery on the
campus of the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College . during
May 19-30; 2008.
The Senior Art Show · and
Essay/Poetry Contest are open
to any Ohio resident, age 55
years or older. Artwork is
classed amateur or professional and divided according to
media, category and theme .
Essays and poetry are categorized respectively according to
· the author's county. of residence.
Over 160 iut entries by 70
amateur artists and 'two professionals hung on the walls of
the gallery displaying senior

artistic talent. Senior essayists/poets expressed their ereative literary abilities with , 50
entries also displayed at the
show. Also on display were
_the photos entered-in the 2008
. Area Agency on Aging .
District Inc . "Aging Well,
Liv.ing Well" Photo eontest.
Special thanks to Freda
Lowery of Jackson County for
permitting her artwork from the
2097 Art Show to ·be featured
on the promotional materials
for the 2008 Senior Exhibit.
Gallia County winners in
.
Submitted photo
the Senior Art Show are:
Aline Clarke w,onftrst place in Galli a County participants and visitors in the 2008 Senior Art Show and Essay Contest sponsored by
Mixed Media-Floral with the Area Agency on Aging District 7 Inc.; are from left, Mary Withee, Eleanor Fadeley, Aline Clarke,
''Tropical Flowers," placed third CC'lrol Robinson, Clara Day' and Jan Stapleton; back row, Debra Greene, Darrell Day, AAA 7 Executive
in Oii:Seascape with "Light Director Pamela K. Matura, AAA7 Board of Trustees Past President Jane Ann Burns, Pat Parsons,
Mist" and earned a People's . Sally Roberts and Danette Hardyman.
Choice ribbon in Oil-Seascape ..
,
with "An Ocean Waves."
Sc~ ~.at and plac~d ~ec- and earned a People's Choice and ' placed third in Oil-Still
Ann Day placed second and ond m Oil-Seascape With By ribbon with "The Woodsman," Life with "Maize and Indian
placed third in Oil-Landscape Pottery."
earned a people's Choice rib- ·the Sea Shore."
Please see Winners. 14
bon in Oil-Animals with
Carol Robinson placed third with "Relics from the Past"

•
·HOLZER
CLINIC

'

EVERY.
,SENIOR
55YEIRS
I

•

·· To schedule an appointment call or for more information:

I

;

t

Athens
740-589-3100 .

Gallipolis
(Main Clinic)
740-446-5135

Jackson
740-395-8801
I

••

.'

'

.

Route 62 North of Point Pleasant (Camp Conley)
Mon. • Fri. 3:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Saturday 10:00 a.m. to 3:00p.m.
Other Times Availab•e By Appointment

CALL: 675·6573 or 674·1 J79
..

--~-----·-~·---~---~-

,4,~.

e,p,.,...a,-'1ltwteti ~ ot·.. EASTMAN'S FOODLANDS
•.Gallipolis
• TWin Rivers
. ~ Ohio Valley • Buckeye
.

�·Senior·Quarterly

Page 14 • ·

Thursday, July 17' 2008

Wl•nners

Cross Stitch-Other with
"Country Bloomers."
Pat Parsons won first place
from Page 13
in Photography-Other with
"My Doll Collection," and
Clara Day won first place won
first
place
in
and earned a People 's Choice . Photography-Floral . with
ribbon in Oil-Still Life with "Spider Plant Bloom."
·~Autumn's Bounty," won first
Sandra L.H. Lane ·won · first
place in Mixed Media-Still place in Oil-Seascape with
Life with "Ap~che .c raft~," "Sea Waves," placed second
and placed ftfth tn Otl- and earned a People's Choice
Landscape · with
"Kerr ribbon in Oil-Birds with
Monument."
.
.
"Ducki' placed fourth in OilHelen M. Belvtll~ won ftrst Landscape with "Winter
place m Cross Stttch-Poem Scene." ·
with "~hen I A~. an ?ld
Sally . Roberts won . first
~oman a~d wo~ ftr~t pl~ce place and the Victor Potts
· m Cross Stttch-Sttll Ltfe wtth Award for "Best of Show" in
"Willowware."
Oil-Landscape with "Schooi's
· Sublilltted photo
Ele~nor Fadeley won _first Out" and won first place ·in
People's
Choice
ribbon
winners
include;
from
left,
AAA7
Board
of
Trustees
past
President
Jane Ann
place.t.n Co~nted Cross ~.tttch- Oil-Birds with ''King Roho."
Portratts wtth "ABC 's . and .
Burns, Aline Clarke, Clara Day, Joan Exline, Carol Robinson, AAA7 Executive Director Pamela K.
won first place in Counted
Please see Winners, 15
Matura, Brenda Daulton and Jan·stapleton, who accepted ribbons for Ann pay and Sandra L.H. Lane.

~wt!fil~~Niti!lt£~..

Cusl:t&gt;nl de.d gned &amp; lette,..d
for your loved ones. Many sanaples on Display
446-6352 .
After hours and ror appt.
Cnll Lloyd Donner 446-4999
or David Tawney 446-1615

"A Perpetual Care Cemerary"
Remove the Flowers In Vases During The Mowing Season.
Located on SL RL 62 N of PL Pleasant, we bave been serving the area since 1959.
For information on lots, memorials and memorial restoration,
CALL
Lynn S. Durst •. 304-675-2465 or K!!vin Durst • 675-5415

Berkline
Chair

~~i~~

Electric Motor Quietly Provides
Smooth Transition From Recline
To Standing Position.

.

Reg. $809.00

$649
. .00

~

~~,J~

t

Kelsey M.
Henry, D.C.

..

r-===--~~
BEND AREA.
CHIROPRACTIC
CENTER

9{eea Ca.sli tif{Payiay?

•casa• ..

No Hassle, No Credit Check

OHIO VALLEY CHECK
CASHING &amp; LOAN
216 Upper River Rd. Gallipolis, Ohio
112 Mile south of the Sliver Bridge

446-2404

'

Most Insurances Accepted Including
·
Medicare and Medicaid
&amp; Caresource

304-773-5773

204 W. 2nd Sti'Ht

Pomeroy, Ohio

992..()461
Lice'* CC700077.000 and 0011
uc.... Cl 750041 OQO,end 001

Winners

• Page 15

Programs from Page 10

fromPage.14
Gallia County winners in ·
the Senior Essay/Poetry
Contest are:
·
Mary L Burger won frrst
place in essay in Gall ia
County with an essay titled
"Rebecca's Adventure" and
won frrst . place in poetry in
Gallia County with . a poem
titled "I Remember."
Joan Unroe placed second
in P&lt;)etry in Gallia County
with a poem titled "Old
Glory."
'
The results of the photos
Submitted photo
· submitted to the Older From left are AAA 7 Executive Director Pamela K. Matura, Victor
Americans
Photography Potts Award winner Sally Roberts, and AAA 7 Board of Trustees
Past Presid~nt Jane Ann Burns
Contest are:
First place - Juanita
Second place - Rushie District 7 luc. appreciates the
Martin with a photo of Joe McAllister with a photo of volunteers of the RSVP 11/'
Martin and."Betsy."
Savannah Brooke Hurd and Jackson County, the Senior
First place - Mary L. Ken McAllister.
Centers thmllf.{hout the ten
Burger with .a photo of Ruby
Third place - Kristina counties and all of the other
Holley and Vernon Holley. · Paterson Cartwright with
volunteers who helped make
First place - Pat Parsons pl'l6to of Jean Kent and th e Senior Art Show and
with a photo of Lorraine Theresa Stout.
Essay/Poetry ·contest JHI.I'St Howell and "Rosie·."
The Area Agency on Aging ble.

said having meals delivered to
her door is a blessing.
It's people like her who
worry retired firefighter Malt
Jackson. He travels 50 miles
every day as he distributes 93
meals to some of the most

vulnerable residents of West
Virginia's capital city.
"Sometimes I'm the only
person these people see,"
Jackson said. "Without this
food program , a lot of people
would suffer immensely."

Break from Pages
leers or invites in children for wet pants or a wet dress."
special programs, said Ginzler.
• Find out what type of train"Adult day centers should ing the center requires 'tor
encourage and promote opportu- employees and whether it pronities to engage in the world vides ongoing training. Centers
around them," she said. 'That should continue to train staff for
should include bringing the world · the duration of their employ- ·
in and going out into the world." ment, Ginzler said.
• Find out whether the stall· will
• Many centers will help
help participant~ use the restroom, families introduce the idea of
&lt;md how they h&lt;mdle episodes or day care to tliei r loved ones.
i1ic'ontinenc~. suggested Nora Director~ often suggest stressGibson. executi ve director of in g the opportunities for
Elderl-lealth No1thwcst, in St.:att le. soc iali za tion and orga~d
"Many older adults net.:d activities. Muny will invit~
assistance or reminders to go to the p6tential partit.:ipu'nt in fm
the bathroom:· she sa id. "You . a mea l or activity. Others
don't want anyone to have tht.: encourage senior~ to try out
humiliation of goi ng home in the facility for a week or two .

'

Your Solution For Arthritis Pain!
.
10650S, 2nd Street, Mason, WV

Senior Quarterly

a

OH

352 THIRD AVENUE •

Thursday, July 17,2008

RETIREMENT IS NO TIME

TO STOP PREPARING

FOR RETIREMENT.

Over 50 Year.r:~
of Reliable. . .S..,ei·t-'t~~e

You've spent years saving and investing for the day \Vhen you can put
work behind you and enjoy the things you love. But the only thing that
shouJd change on that day is your strategy.
At Edward Jones, we can create a ~ trategy to· hlep ensure the money
vou've saved will be-there for you throughout your retirement. So you
~ay look forward to a· steady, 'stable income for years to come.

To find out why it· makes sense to talk with your
Edward Jones financial advisor about your
retirement savings, call today.

Issac N. Mills

Lesley C. Marrero

990-A Second Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631
740-441-9441

806-B Viand St.
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
304-674-0174
www.edwardjones.com Membe.r SIPC
PONTIAC..'

'ftlook y.,. Dhlu I Wul flrtlnlo For · - - · Uo IInce IIMI

•

�·Senior·Quarterly

Page 14 • ·

Thursday, July 17' 2008

Wl•nners

Cross Stitch-Other with
"Country Bloomers."
Pat Parsons won first place
from Page 13
in Photography-Other with
"My Doll Collection," and
Clara Day won first place won
first
place
in
and earned a People 's Choice . Photography-Floral . with
ribbon in Oil-Still Life with "Spider Plant Bloom."
·~Autumn's Bounty," won first
Sandra L.H. Lane ·won · first
place in Mixed Media-Still place in Oil-Seascape with
Life with "Ap~che .c raft~," "Sea Waves," placed second
and placed ftfth tn Otl- and earned a People's Choice
Landscape · with
"Kerr ribbon in Oil-Birds with
Monument."
.
.
"Ducki' placed fourth in OilHelen M. Belvtll~ won ftrst Landscape with "Winter
place m Cross Stttch-Poem Scene." ·
with "~hen I A~. an ?ld
Sally . Roberts won . first
~oman a~d wo~ ftr~t pl~ce place and the Victor Potts
· m Cross Stttch-Sttll Ltfe wtth Award for "Best of Show" in
"Willowware."
Oil-Landscape with "Schooi's
· Sublilltted photo
Ele~nor Fadeley won _first Out" and won first place ·in
People's
Choice
ribbon
winners
include;
from
left,
AAA7
Board
of
Trustees
past
President
Jane Ann
place.t.n Co~nted Cross ~.tttch- Oil-Birds with ''King Roho."
Portratts wtth "ABC 's . and .
Burns, Aline Clarke, Clara Day, Joan Exline, Carol Robinson, AAA7 Executive Director Pamela K.
won first place in Counted
Please see Winners, 15
Matura, Brenda Daulton and Jan·stapleton, who accepted ribbons for Ann pay and Sandra L.H. Lane.

~wt!fil~~Niti!lt£~..

Cusl:t&gt;nl de.d gned &amp; lette,..d
for your loved ones. Many sanaples on Display
446-6352 .
After hours and ror appt.
Cnll Lloyd Donner 446-4999
or David Tawney 446-1615

"A Perpetual Care Cemerary"
Remove the Flowers In Vases During The Mowing Season.
Located on SL RL 62 N of PL Pleasant, we bave been serving the area since 1959.
For information on lots, memorials and memorial restoration,
CALL
Lynn S. Durst •. 304-675-2465 or K!!vin Durst • 675-5415

Berkline
Chair

~~i~~

Electric Motor Quietly Provides
Smooth Transition From Recline
To Standing Position.

.

Reg. $809.00

$649
. .00

~

~~,J~

t

Kelsey M.
Henry, D.C.

..

r-===--~~
BEND AREA.
CHIROPRACTIC
CENTER

9{eea Ca.sli tif{Payiay?

•casa• ..

No Hassle, No Credit Check

OHIO VALLEY CHECK
CASHING &amp; LOAN
216 Upper River Rd. Gallipolis, Ohio
112 Mile south of the Sliver Bridge

446-2404

'

Most Insurances Accepted Including
·
Medicare and Medicaid
&amp; Caresource

304-773-5773

204 W. 2nd Sti'Ht

Pomeroy, Ohio

992..()461
Lice'* CC700077.000 and 0011
uc.... Cl 750041 OQO,end 001

Winners

• Page 15

Programs from Page 10

fromPage.14
Gallia County winners in ·
the Senior Essay/Poetry
Contest are:
·
Mary L Burger won frrst
place in essay in Gall ia
County with an essay titled
"Rebecca's Adventure" and
won frrst . place in poetry in
Gallia County with . a poem
titled "I Remember."
Joan Unroe placed second
in P&lt;)etry in Gallia County
with a poem titled "Old
Glory."
'
The results of the photos
Submitted photo
· submitted to the Older From left are AAA 7 Executive Director Pamela K. Matura, Victor
Americans
Photography Potts Award winner Sally Roberts, and AAA 7 Board of Trustees
Past Presid~nt Jane Ann Burns
Contest are:
First place - Juanita
Second place - Rushie District 7 luc. appreciates the
Martin with a photo of Joe McAllister with a photo of volunteers of the RSVP 11/'
Martin and."Betsy."
Savannah Brooke Hurd and Jackson County, the Senior
First place - Mary L. Ken McAllister.
Centers thmllf.{hout the ten
Burger with .a photo of Ruby
Third place - Kristina counties and all of the other
Holley and Vernon Holley. · Paterson Cartwright with
volunteers who helped make
First place - Pat Parsons pl'l6to of Jean Kent and th e Senior Art Show and
with a photo of Lorraine Theresa Stout.
Essay/Poetry ·contest JHI.I'St Howell and "Rosie·."
The Area Agency on Aging ble.

said having meals delivered to
her door is a blessing.
It's people like her who
worry retired firefighter Malt
Jackson. He travels 50 miles
every day as he distributes 93
meals to some of the most

vulnerable residents of West
Virginia's capital city.
"Sometimes I'm the only
person these people see,"
Jackson said. "Without this
food program , a lot of people
would suffer immensely."

Break from Pages
leers or invites in children for wet pants or a wet dress."
special programs, said Ginzler.
• Find out what type of train"Adult day centers should ing the center requires 'tor
encourage and promote opportu- employees and whether it pronities to engage in the world vides ongoing training. Centers
around them," she said. 'That should continue to train staff for
should include bringing the world · the duration of their employ- ·
in and going out into the world." ment, Ginzler said.
• Find out whether the stall· will
• Many centers will help
help participant~ use the restroom, families introduce the idea of
&lt;md how they h&lt;mdle episodes or day care to tliei r loved ones.
i1ic'ontinenc~. suggested Nora Director~ often suggest stressGibson. executi ve director of in g the opportunities for
Elderl-lealth No1thwcst, in St.:att le. soc iali za tion and orga~d
"Many older adults net.:d activities. Muny will invit~
assistance or reminders to go to the p6tential partit.:ipu'nt in fm
the bathroom:· she sa id. "You . a mea l or activity. Others
don't want anyone to have tht.: encourage senior~ to try out
humiliation of goi ng home in the facility for a week or two .

'

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304-674-0174
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Printed on

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o CENTS • Vol. ;)K, No.()

FRIDAY, JULY tH, 20oH

• Mediate in 3-way
tie for the lead
at British Open.

BY BRIAN

J.

enue as a result.
Commissioner
Mick
Davenport said a fiscal budget for next year has been
submitted
to
County
Auditor Mary Byer-Hill ,
estimating an general fund
operating
budget · of
$3,990,000. Submitting the
tiscal budget each July is
the tirst step in planning for
the next calendar year's
operating funds.
'This is not set in stone,"
Davenport said. "As the
year progresses, we will be

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY Meigs
. County Commissioners have
begun the process of planning a' 2009 general fund
budget, and said Thursday il
is expected to be about the
same as tl:Iis year's. ·
That is good news, commissioners said, because
some counties are experiencing indirect effects of a
tough economy a~d they
are . seeing a drop in rev-

SeePageBI

'

"~)!:.'

Bv ·BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES

COLUMBUS - As of
yesterday, there had been no
· decision concerning an
appeal of Gatling Ohio's
mining permit filed by Elisa
Young of Racine on behalf
of herself and the group she
founded, Meigs Citizens
Action Now.
The .appeal was filed in
June with the Ohio

·P ageA3

• Martha Loschiavo, 82

INSIDE
• Sunday events at
· Chester-Shade laays.· .·

Senior Quarterly

..,..."~ A~.
\'.lm~&lt;.nt., R
~.:i~~~~~~a;
Resources

-~"'ftge n~·~.,.,·

• Miscellaneous
4-H
.,
judging completed.
See Page i\3

• Pope says
- wond's resources
: being squandered.
·See Page A6

WEATHER

Details on Page A2

•

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PLEASANT
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INDEX
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a SllCJ'JONS )
.

16 P~GES

Annie's Mailbox
&lt;i:ale&amp;Ia.rs

Glassifieds
f3omics
Editorials
l\aith • Values
Movies

A2:

A2
Bs-6
87
A•

.....

As
-7
A3
B3

Obituaries
Sports

Weather

.

able to · more closely deter· mine what our costs are
going to be. what we have
and what we will need for
the next year."
Davenport said the commissioners began this year
with an original appropriation of $3.8 million, and is
. now operating on a $3.9
million revenue projection.
"We should have a much
better figure in October, and
that's when we will begin
meeting with oftice holders
and determining our 2009

No decision
on attempt
to stop
coal mine

Page 16 •

·

100 %
Newsprint

tl&gt;

www.mydaily~enti~ei.cuQJ '

Commissioners begin planning '09 budget

.SPORTS

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Rec~· cled

A3

B Section

A2

@aooBOhloV.UeyPubtlshJnaCo.

"

,

Commission with Young
and MCAN
as
the
appellant against
John
H. Husted, chief of Ohio's
Division
of
Mineral
Resources Management. A
hearing about the matter
was held on July 3 in front
of the chairman of the reclamation commission who
will actually make the dedsion. Once that chp,jrman
rules, if either party is
unhappy with the decision,
that decision can be taken
·back to the reclamation
commission's seven-member board for review, and
after that if parties are still
unhappy, that decision can
be appealed to the court of
appeals in either Franklin
County or possibly in Meigs
County, according to Linda
Csterman of the office of
ODNR's ReclaRlation Com
mission.
.However, even though the
appeal has been filed and a.
hearing has been held,
Osterman said at this time
Gatling can continue with
its construction of the new
mining facility for which it
was granted its permit back
in May.
Reasons for the appeal are
worded to include, but are
not limited to: "Inadequate
responses to community
concerns and ·objections to
the application that were
raised during the infonnal
conference,
insufficient
cumulative
hydrologic
impact assessment, stream
buffer zone violations, lack:
of consideration in the perfonnance security. bond for
unplanned subsidence, gas
·\vell damage, feasibility of
reclamation plans and ade.quacy of the perfonnance
bond in light of rising transportatio.n and m~terials cost,
no emergencx notification or
evacuation system, destruction' of scenic byway, compromise of water protection
zone, cultural and nptural
resources, damage to roads,
lack: of safety measilre to
protect the community, and
overall erosion of community' and quality of life,"
. In the appeal, Young further requests the commission vistt and view both the
Yellowbush mining site and
an active Qatling mine in
West Virginia though no
Please ll4ie Colli mine, AJ

.

tremendously better. hut we
are holdin g ste;rdy. especially in liglit of what other
counties nearby are experiencing."
During Thursday 's weekly meeting, commissioners:
• Approved payment of
bills in the amount of
$340,964.64.
• Approved I he re-appointment of Fenton Taylor to lhe
Gallia-Jackson -Meigs Board
of Alcohol. Drug Addiction
and Mental Heallh Services
Board.

.

/

.

l
.

Charlene Hoelllch/photo

A "Shoes for Kids" program is under way by the 'Meigs Cooperative Parish. Nancy Thoene, left, of the Parish staff, provides a decorated box for Edna Weber, Farmers Bank employee, to place in the lobby for shoe donations. Another box
is being placed at the Tuppers Plains Branch.
··

·begins

'

'

was then decided that something need- place from 2 to 4 p.m. on Aug. 19.
ed to be done to be sure all kids have
Meanwhile, People's Bank is cur- ·
shoes to keep their feet warm on cold rently collecling coats for kids, a prowinter days.
. gram sponsored there for many
This week the Parish placed a box years. Contributions can be left anyfor children's shoes in the Farmers time. The coats arc distributed
Bank lobby at Pomeroy and another through the school and at God's NET ·
box at the Tuppers Plains branch of by Peoples Bank which has as ils
Farmers Bank.
goal that all children. have a good
Shoes collected between now and winter coat.
Aug. 19 will be distributed by God's
Contributions of school supplies are
NET when the children come in to also being collected at God 's NET and
pick up school supplies. That will take can be left lhere artytime.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - A new program is
being carried out by the Meigs
Cooperative Parish. It's called "Shoes
for Kids."
Last year personnel at God's NET
began noticing that when the children
came in to get coats collected there ·
and through a "Coats for Kids" .program carried out by Peoples Bank, that
many were also in need of shoes. It

..

Stratton visits
Ohio Supreme
Court Justice
Evelyn Stratton
visited Meigs
County Thursday
on a campaign
swing through
Southam Ohio.
Stratton visited
supporters at the
Pomeroy Library.
She ls pictured
with County
Commissioner
Jim Sheets, far
' right, and other
· supporters.
Stratton is seeking her third term
on Ohio's high
court.

'

·Marauder Alumni Band ready to organize
STAFF REPORT

~EW!IiO,t.1VOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - . wlth the
Meigs High School Alumni
Association reunion set for
Sept. 12-13, plans are curn;ntly being made by Toney
Dinge.ss for performances by
the Marauder Alumni Band.
"All y.ou former Meigs
High School Band members, it's time once again to
feel the rhythm of the drums

Biker Sunday
welcomes the
'imperfect'
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT @MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLA)NS Just as Jesus accepted the
"sinful wo&gt;nan" washing his
feet with her tears In Luke.
Bethel Worship invites the
sinful and the imperfect to
worship toge ther at its
annual Biker Sunday event.
The free event starts at
8:45 a.m.. Sunday. July 27
with free coffee and doughnuts at the church. followed
by a gathering of bikers and
a special worship service at
10 a.m. fe aturing music,
drama wilh guest speaker
Brian J. Reed/photo
Pastor Ron Bapl iste. After
the nondenominational ser.
vioe concludes. a short bike
run will lead all to a free,
home-cooked potluck pic"
nic lunch at the Syracuse
and move to the music,"
Pra~tice , although not
Community
Center.. Once' al
said Dingess who directs required, will be on Monday.
1he
community
center, there
the band. The annual Meigs · Sept. 8 from 6:30 to 8 p.m.
will
also
be
biker
games,
Marauder Alumni Band will in the Meigs High School
prizes, T-sh1rts for sale and
take the field for half-lime band room, said Dingess. An dozefiS
cuslom bikes on .
festivities , on Friday, Sept. additional rehearsal will take . view.' of
The service in
12, during the 2008 Me.igs place at 5:30p.m. at ·the ~ta­ Tuppers Plains and events
,Htgh School homecomm~ dium on homecoming night in Syracuse are all free and
'game. The combmed alum- to accommodate out-of- open to the public.
ni and current high schoel town alumni
Guest speaker BaptiHe is
ban.d will be featured in th~
Over . 100
former. an ex-convict, biker and
Metgs Htgh School Alumm Marauder Band members pastor of his own· church.
parade on Saturday, Sept.
13 at I p.m.
Ple81o IH Band, AJ
Pl..u IH Sund1y, A,j

'

'

calendar year budget;"
Davenport said.
Commissioner Jim Sheets
said other counties are look-.
ing at reductions in revenue
for next year, many because
of decreases in sales tax revenue. Meigs County has
seen a steady increase in revenue from its one-percent
sales tax. Commissioners
believe that may be because
local residents are shopping
locally more due to the
increase in gasoline costs.
"We are not doing

.~

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