<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4042" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/4042?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-18T12:06:23+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="13962">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/1be3835c40a1c026164d85f56af20e48.pdf</src>
      <authentication>6ad0e33e0063b504c044b34a5f23625f</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="14220">
                  <text>•
Pag~

86 • The Daily Sentinel

'

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

www .mydailysentinel.com

Rock stars.here, USA Hammon's Olympic journey set to begin
not partying like them
of like the guys from
HAINING. China
Aerosmith after they got old Becky Hammon imagined
and had kids. Their idea of this moment for a long, long
SHANGHAL China
fun isn't what most would time: .Playing in the
The ·swarm of photogra- expect from them.
Olympits, hitting the winphers quickly reached more . Asked what he planned to ning shot. climbing the
than a do~en . all for a can't- do on his day off, Michael medals podium.
miss chance to witness a real Redd said: "Sleep. talk to
She still might. Only her
superstar 'in action.
my wife. talk to my son, and vision now comes in a differOnly Dwight Howard just probably play dominoes ent shade.
Raised on the Prairie ,
wasn't doing anything super with Tayshaun Prince."
at aiL No dunks, no shot
If these guys sounded a11y schooled at Colorado State
blocks, .nothing requiring blander, they'd have to be and now starring for the San
even a hint of athletic abi li- re-nicknamed the San Antonio Silver Stars. she's
ty. ·
Antonio Spurs.
going to Beijing weal-ing the
After all, any couch potato. Some lucky fans got their Russian red.
can order a hamburger at .a wish Monday afternoon, ·"We alwavs used to watch
fast food joint.
when Chris Paul exited the the Olymp{cs as a family
But Howard's lunch with hotel to jump in a shuttle bus growing up," Hammon said
Chri&gt; Bosh in Macau was waiting outside. A group of in an exclusive interview
good enough for Chinese girls shrieked as if they were with The Associated Press.
fans starving' for a glimpse watching the leader of a boy "My dream was winning a
of the U.S. Olympic basket- band, one of them getting gold medal tor the United
ball . team, because they shou lder-blocked by an States."
·
aren't getting ·many chances. overzealous. security guard
"Now even though the
The Americans say they after coming too close.
dream changed a little bit.
took it easy in that gambling
Pan of the reason the it 's been kind of bigger than
town, and they're not exact- Americans haven't gone out I expected in a way because
ly living it up since arriving much is because they have this story has caught the
here, content to stay fresh all they need right where world by storm. I'm wonderbefore the Olympics. .
they are.
ing why this girl from ·South
"We really didn't do
Tlie resort in Macau, Dakota got caught up in this
much," Dwyane Wade said. where they stayed and worldwide story."
.
Hammon's odyssey began ·
"We're trying to adjust a lot played , was basically an
to the time difference and so extension of Las Vegas, in March when she wasn't i,n
a lot of us are resting, trying · where they trained before the 29-player pool picked to
to get our bodies right, get- coming to China. A large select the U.S. Olympic
ring a lot of massages. We selection of restaurants teain. So she chose another
went out on the town to guaranteed the players option.
check it out, but besides that wouldi1't have to eat any
The 31-year-old point
we didn:t do much."
food they weren't used to. guard plays tor a Russian
That
might
change The team dined one night club team during the winter
·Monday night. Coach Mike. was at Morton's steakhouse, and became a naturalized citKrzyzewski canceled prac- and the Fatburger (where izen there. Because she hadAP pholo
tice and gave the team the Howard and Bosh dined) in n't played for the United South Dakota native and Russia's guard Becky Hammon fights for a ball with us guard
day off. perhaps its last until the food court was a hit with States in any major FIB A- Cappie Pondexter, front.. during a basketball game between the us and Russia a.t the
international
the Olympics are over, members of the U.S. delega- ·. sanctioned
·
. events, she was allowed to Women's Diamond Ball Basketball tournament, a warm up for the Olympics, in Haining,
There's plenty of nightlife in tion. ·
Shanghai, quite a bit caterThe hotel.'s plaza in compete for Russia in the . China, Monday.
ing to Americans, and some Shanghai features ·a full Olympics. .
U.S. and won medals."
U.S. as late as possible,''
"I know it's still up for dis"
players said they might day's worth of menu choices
Fluent on the court,
If she can lead Russia to a Hammon said. "I have been cussion," she said. 'T.d love
check it out.
from back home: California Hammon admits she doesn 't gold medal ~shc potentially playing against those players to go watch even if we're not
Or they could opt to relax. Pizza Kitchen, where Wade, speak Russian well and like- will earn $200,000. Given a for 10 years. I think when the taking part in it. I hear its
The U.S. team just complet- Paul, and LeBron James ly won't improve much choice, she'd prefer not to ball goes up it's just going to pretty tremendous."
ed the difficult portion of its were part of a dinner party before Friday's. Olympic face the Americans along the be another basketball game.
Hammon had a long jourway. .
You just go out there and ney to even . get over and
exhibition schedule, playing after arriving . Saturday; opener.
consecutive
nights
in T0ny Roma's; Starbucksand
"Not very good ," she said,
"I think ' everyone wants to. compete and · enjoy the . compete with Russia. Her
Macau, hopping a commer- Haagen-Dazs. This is all laughing. "!need to learn the see the Russia-America nioment since it's not going WNBA season ended July
Cia! flight to Shanghai the part of USA Basketball's language. I'm working on it · matchup." Hammon ~aid. "If to happen again."
27. She was supposed to fly
following day, then fa,ing plan to keep the players as I've only been over th'ere for I have to play the United
When she decided to play out to Russia the next day,
Russia the next night. That comfortable · as possible , a year or two, and it' s a diffi- . States obviously I'm going for .Russia in March, the but she missed three concould have partly explained Even Bryant, an experi- cult language. I know a fe.w to go out there and compete Olympics seemed far, far nectiilg !lights and was
· an occasionally sluggish enced world traveler who's words, but I need to get a lot to win, but that's not what I away. Now with the games stranded in New York until
performance in an 89-68 lived in Europe and made more words. Most of the want. I know it's what every- set to begin this week, she's Tuesday.
victory over the Russians, multiple visits to Asia, said girls speak Engli~h so .it' s one else wants, but it's not starting to get re&lt;Jlly excited
From ·there she had one
easily the Americans' clos- before this trip he wanted to fine ."
what 1 want."
about competing.
practice with her new team
est game yet.
. stick with what he knew.
Although some critics say · Hammon and her Russian
"This is a once in a life- before heading to the FIB A
"I feel like an NBA sea·
"I had a bad experience in she shouldn't be allowed to teammates were blown out time opp6rtunity and I'm Diamond Ball tournament in
son," . Carmela Anthony the United States with some play for Russia - she does by the .USA 93-58 Monday really looking forward to it," · China.
said. "Three games in four damn cheesecake," he said, have the backing .of Maria mght in the FIBA Diamond Hammon said. "I'm glad I'm
Some of her new team- ·
not doing ·as many inter- mates were a bit hesitant.
nights."
, recalling a bout with. food Sharapova, by the way - Ball tournament.
The U.S. players are like poisoning after ordering Hammon said she thinks
Even though she was views now. Just being able to about having Hammon play
rock stars in China, where room service from a she's OK.
wearing a Russian. uniform, be here and play basketball. I with them. But after she
ihe NBA estimates 300 mil- Sacramento hotel ·in the
"If people really do have a Hammon had her eyes think it's been put off in the spent her winter playing for .a
lion people play basketbalL 2002 playoffs. "So if T'm hard time with it they should closed and her hand over her back of my mind for so long Russian club team they
Young fans, some dressed in scared of cheesecake, the take i.t up with the Olympic heart during "The Star• • ju;;t concentrating on what warmed up to the idea.
Kobe Bryant jerseys, have night before a game I'll committee or Fl BA. I'm Spangled Banner."
we've been doing in the
"Maria Stepanova came up
surrounded the front of the probably just st~ with the playing well within the rules, ."I think the pregame was, WNBA and now is the first to me and said I was initially
hotel where the Americans chicken and the steak."
and I think it's a little worse than anything," said time I've been able to be against !)aving .an American
l"'e staying for the last few
The Americans had one strange. It happens all the Hammon, who scored I 0 over here and enjoy the on our team but now that I
days, hopmg to spot any- final exhibition Tuesday time in the Olympics .. For points in the loss. "Once the experience." .
know you, you can play with
oody on the Dream Team.
against Australia, then it was people to gel maybe upset or ball went up it was just
One Olympic experience (Is any day," Hammon said.
(And, yes, . they are still off to Beijing. So if they . l)ent out of shape about me is another basl\etball game."
that Hammon may not get to
"To me that was like a
called that here. That were planning to find some strange, . because ,this is · If the United States and enjoy is marching in· the small bridge· that had been
"Redeem Team" moniker fun among their fans, time something the United States Russia . meet again in the opening ceremony. · With built. That's what the
may stick in the States. but was running out.
has done many times," she Olympics, it ·will be on a Russia set to'begin its pool Olympics is abo.ut. It' s a
\hey still carry the same
"We're going to try to get said. "There have been many much bigger stage with most play the next day against small microcosm of what the
nickname here that they had out a little bit," Wade said. foreign athletes that have likely a medal at stake. ·
Latvia, the team might not be goal should be on a grander
in 1992, when they deserved "We try to enjoy the experi- come and competed for ·the
"You want to meet the allowed to participate.
scale."
it, and 2004, when they did- ence wherever we go and
n't.)
.
hopefully .we can do that - ·
But they're rock stars sort and it not be too crazy."

First place, A3

BY BRIAN MAHONEY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

}»helps almost.goes
unnoticed in Beijing
BEIJING
(AP)
Michael Phelps sneaked into
Beijing almost unnoticed.
He's unlikely to go out that
way.
The probable star of the
Beijing Olympics avoided
hundreds of fans, photogra, phers and re~orters Monday
by takmg a s1de door out to
a waamg bus wh1le . h1s
teammates pushed lugg.age ·
trolleys through. th~ amval
gate . at BelJmg s new
· Ter~unal 3, a. S,Pra.wlmg
addumn to the c!tY s aJrport.
Phelps, who s grown . a
mustache wh1le trammg m
Smgapore, . eventually was

~~~~~ ~e~nma ~~~dow s~a;

dozens of reporters and photographers. He ignored most
of the cameras, glancing in
their direction a few times as
he adjusted the fit of his
·
baseball cap.
One ypung Chinese girl
said she had waited five
hours hoping to •get an autograph. She .also carried an
envelope m her hand,
addressed in imperfect
English: "To Michael Phelps
you have to look ·at." Asked
why she wanted to see
Phelps, a friend standing

nearby answered for her.
"Because she thinks he's
handsome."
Phelps, who won six gold
medals four years ago in ·
Athens, is aiming ,to surpass
Mark Spitz's seven-gold
effort at the 1972 Munich
Games. Phelps will compete
in eight events in Beijing,
three of which are relays.
"I'm looking to do something different that the sport
has nev~r seen," Phelps said
a few days ago in Singapore.
At last year's world champion ships in Australia,
Phelps won seven events
and was denied the chance
for an eighth vict,~ry when a
teammate wa.s ~·squahfife~ .
from the prehmmanes o
relay. .the Amencans were
heav1ly favored to wm.
Dara Torres, the 41-yearold , self-described . "ol~
lady of the. U.S. team, was
one of the few sw1mmers to
speak in the rush to board
th~ b~s..
.. , .
It s fmally sunk. Ill, sa.d
Torres, who w!ll compete 111
her fifth Olympics. "I am
very excitedto be here. I just
want to get to the pool and
start swimming a little bit."

•

at
50 CENTS • Vol. 58 ' No.

foint fleasant l\egister

~be

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

'

kkelly@ mydailytribune.com
nfields@mydailyregister.com
hoeflich@ mydailysentinetcom
Limit your story to , .
· 500~750 words.

p hearing becomes divisive

• USA survives scare.
See PageBl

BY BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE - Last night's hearing on
landfill and wastewater draft permits currently being considered by the Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency in
relation to American Municipal PowerOhio's pulverized coal plant quickly
bec~me divisive when several local peo. pie m support of the plant inquired as to
· where the opponents of'the plant resided.
As the fim speaker approached the
microphone to give testimony, Dave
Spener, clerk treasurer for the Village of
Racine asked officials with the OEPA
to: "Ask them (all speakers) where
they're from ?" The OEPA officials said
they did nllt require an address but if
speakers wanted to give it, that was fine,
though the agency's function was officially to give everyone a chance to
speak on the draft permits.
Meigs County Commissioner Mick
Davenport, Rocksprings, spoke first
and reiterated his offic'e's "full support" for the power . plant. He

A large crowd
gathered last
night to hear
testimony both
for and against
the landfill and
wastewater draft
permits issued
by the Ohio
Environmental
Protection
Agency for
American
Municipal
Power-Ohio's
pulverized coal
pl~nt proposed
for Letart Falls.
Belh Sergent'photo.

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Anthony Scott, 45

then asked the audience members who
were in support of the plant to stand up
with several doing just that, causing
Da':enport to remark it appeared the
''overwhelming majority" was in favor
of the plant, despite what he considered erroneous reports that Meigs
County. was evenly divided about the
plant . He then pointed out he had letters of ·support for the project from
"practically" ever elected official in
the county who were elected ·. by a
majority of the people.
, ·
· Spencer. Racine,.then spoke otl'icially on the record saying he was "irritated" at those that presented themselves
as speaking from Meigs County.
"They don't act like people from
Meigs County when they show themselves at AMP's offices in Columbus."
Spencer added, referring to a recent
incident where protesters entered
AMP's corporate offices and refused to
leave, causing the Columbus Police
Department to make arrests.
· Please see AMP. AS ·

nesses .High-speed

Heavv

Internet
comes to
western
Meigs

BY BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE

POMEROY
An
onslaught of heavy rains
and severe thunderstorms
• Diles Schol:tJ'
.· •
brought some unwelcome
awarded toE
cleanup to a few businesses
·
in downtown Pomeroy yesgraduate. See ~e A3
terday morning.
• Holzer announces
STAFF REPORT
The rains caused some
NEWSCMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
July spfitlight employee. havoc with the ·gas line
replacement project currentSee Page A3
ATHENS - An Athens
. ly underway by Columbia·
• Family Medicine.
company
has done what big- .
Gas and contractors R&amp;R
ger
companies
have not by
See -Page AS
Pipeline. Contractors had
bridging the digital divide in
been working o~ Second
• Meigs County
rural
Meigs County.
'
Street, digging up a portion
4-H Club news.
High-speed
broadband
of the street to make a
Internet access is now avail·See Page A6
reconnection of the new line
able
to 800 re~idents in parts
but the rains washed that
of
Columbia, · Rutland,
work away . and into
Salem
and Scipio townships,
Weaving Stitches, accord·areas whose residents had no
ing to Max Drenner.
option but slow, dial-up conMax's wife Eloise 'who
nections or expensive, unre- .
runs Weaving Stitches, has
liable sattelite Internet conbeen in business in downnection
until now.
town for .several years and
lntelliwave
of Athens will
through several floods but
start deploying more wirethe heavy rains, coupled
less broadband coverage in
with nearby construction . .
Meigs
County in the comhas caused her business to
ing
months,
according to
recently flood three times ,
Marketing Director Ira Dye.
the latest :being yesterday
The new service is
.
.
Charlene
Hoelttchlpholo
morning .
expected
to raise property
Max said it was his under- Cin~y Klein, hired by Columbia Gas, helps with the cleanup of Weaving Stitches which
Delatts on·.Page A6
standing that workers from experienced its third flood in about six weeks due to a combination of heavy rains and values, .assist in academic
nearby construction on a gas line replacement project. The store has been cleaned and is pursuits and serve as an
Please see Flpodlng, AS open for business as usual.
engine of economic development, Dye said.
·
"Broadband improves the
productivity and profitability of businesses an'd institu2 SECTIONS .~ 12 PAGES
tions of all kinds in an endAnnie's ·Mailbox
less variety of ways."
. Dye , a Meigs County
Calendars
BY BRIAN J. REED
The game repeats every
native whose family has
BREED@ MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
four minutes, 221 times a
lived in western Meigs
Chissifieds
day,
every
day
of
the
week.
County for generations , ini- ·
:Comics
BS POMEROY - ' There's a Similar to a bingo game,
tiated the project. Dye wantnew game in town for Ohio Keno allows Ohio gamblers
ed to create a lasting rural
Editorials
A4 Lottery players , and retail- almost immediate results
developnient project that
from
their
numbers
,
be.
they
. A3 ers and · the governor hope
could not only provide
Movies
Keno will be a money- winners or losers .
high-speed Tnternet acce~s
As .maker for their businesses Sonny Gloeckner said the
to Meigs County, but oppor.Obituaries
game has been well
tunity as we)!.
and the state .
Sports
received
by
his
patrons,
B Section · Bun's Party Barn and
Dye worked for months on
and cited Tuesday as one of
the
project: scouting loca- I
A6
Sonny's
Cate,
bQth
in
Weather
the
better
lottery
sales
days
tions,
contacting community
Pomeroy. are ihe only two
he
has
expenenced.
He
establishments ' in Meigs ·
© 30o8 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
.· Brian J. Reed/pholo members, plotting maps, and
'
County to •offer the new expects the game's avail, · Sonny Gloeckner and his staff were busy Tuesday, selling researching the details.
"It is an extensive
game, which began operat- ability will also improve Keno tic.kets. The new Ohio Lottery game, played every four
his
retail
lunch
and
tavern
ing in bars, restaurants. and · business. · ·
minutes, is available at only two Meigs County lottery loca- endeavor to build a wireless
liquor stores statewide on
tions, Gloeckner's cafe and Bun's Party Barn. Here, Kenny network in a· rural area."
• Monday.
Please see Keno; AS
Rizer, Richard ''Tater" Dugan and Brad Wheeler try their luck.
Please see Internet, AS ·

WEimER

New Keno game hits two
Pomeroy retail locations
1

.

A QUOTE TODAY!

Smp by a local agents olllce and get a
Quote for a Cause between now and Auguat31st
Nationwide will donate $10 lor aach quota to the fight against cancer
H~ us reach our goal of donaUng $75,0001 ·

-·- '·-- - -

c

·
· e om
W\\\\,ntyda tl)st•nlmel.

·'

Please include a phone number
in your email•.
--

WI&lt;'• J)Nf'•.:"
L'J) 1.\'\' • ' \UGUS'I' 6 , .,
"
-OOo

t&lt;)

SPORTS

.INDEX

~be ~allipolisllailp ''Orrfhune,

Printed on tOO%
, Rt&gt;cycled Newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

'

�The Daily Sentinel

•

N

ORLD

PageA2

Community Calendar

Obama, McCain diverge
on solution for energy woes
saying they definitely plan
U.S .
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS
to vote.
President
With polls
showing
George W.
YOUNGSTOWN
increasin~ numbers of. vatDemocrat Barack Obama ers favon ng oil drilling off
Bush, lelt,
shakes hands blamed Republican energy the U.S. coast, Obama has
policies for some of the scrambled in recent days to
with his
South Korean nation 's economic woes add new elements to his
Tuesday as his· GOP rival overall long-term energy
counterpart
John McCai n advocated a policy of promoting fuelLee Myunglarge ex panston of nuclear efficient autos and developbak during
ing alternate energy sources.
power.
their meeting
Both
candidates
roamed
He dropped his total opposiat the presidential house the economically depressed tion to more oil drilling if a
Rust Belt touting their ener- limited , environmentally
in S~oul
gy plans as concerns about careful offshore plan would
Wednesday.
$4-a-gallon gasoline and help pass a long-tenn energy
AP photo
job losses have emerged as bill. He also reversed himthe presidential campaign's self to advocate release of
hottest issues.
oil from the nation's strateObama told an audience in gic reserve to help drive
Youngstown , Ohio, that the down gasoline prices in the
Bush energy policy, crafted in short-run.
large part by Vice President
When Obama emphasized
Dick Cheney, an ex-oilman, the key role of Cheney, the
tilted to provide tax breaks unpopular vice president, in
'
and favorable treatment for President Bush's energy
'
pa rty talks with' Nort h lender&gt; th is every time he them so they could be iden- Big Oil and that McCain policy, Republicans were
BY BEN FELLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRIT ER
Korea that tnclude the U.S. has met with him over the tified later. The National would expand oil industry tax quick to pomt out a contraand South Korea - is . nearly etght years of l11s Pol ice Agency s~ d they breaks by $4 billion.
diction in his criticism.
SEOU L. South Korea months away at least.·,, _, pres idency.
167
people
arrested
Obama has proposed an
"President Bush, he had
PrcSJCknt
Bush
s;ud
Bush once branded N01th
"You should not fea r reli- in volved in protests rn cen- excess profits rax on Big Oil an energy policy. He turned
Wedne sday that North Korea as part of an "ax is of gious peopl e in your soci- tral Seoul overnight , and to finance a '$1 ,000-per- to Dick Cheney and he said,
· K01~:t has much to do before ev il." along with prewar eties ... Bush said . describing deployed some 20,000 offi- family energy rebate to deal 'Cheney, go take care of
the U.S c:t n remove tt from Iraq and lrun. and spoke the message he defivets. cers to maintain order.
with high fuel costs.
this ,"' Obama said. "Cheney
the terro r hl itdlist. but det isl'e ly of North Korean then and now. "As a matter ·
"I don't lta ve anti-U.S .
Exxon-Mobil "makes in met with r;enewable-energy
ex pres"icd hope that lt :-1 pan - leader Kim Jong ll 's treat- of fact. rel ig ious people wi ll sentiment . I' m JUSt · anti- 30 seconds what the typical folks once ·and oil and gas
ah status as a membet ot the ment of hi s people and pur- make yo ur society a better Bush and anti-Lee Myung- Ohio worker makes in a ' (executives) 40 times.
":txts of cvt l" could some suit of nuclear weapons. place. You ought to wel - bak ." said Uhm Ki-woong, year," Obama said. "We McCain has taken a page out
day he a th tng of the past.
The president said it is st ill come people being able to 36. a busmessman who was need more jobs and eco- of the Cheney playbook."
. Pynngy.mg expects Bush "to be determined" whether ex press their minds. To the wearing a mask and hat tikc nomic development. Why
But Obama voted for a
to re move it from th e U S Pyongyang can come otT, ex tent that people aren't other demonstrators rn an don 't we focu s on clean 2005 energy bill backed by
ltst or lcrror-s ponsprin g anu lis teu some of what is able to uo that. people aren ' t apparent attempt to conceal · energy and reopening facto- Bush- that included billions
cotln !n es as :-.oon .t:-. next
able to worship freely is - . hts identity fro m authorities. ries and putting people back in subsidies for oil and natleft to do .
·weekend . as promised when
"The human rights abuses you know - I think " a
Lee . a pro -American to work? Nobody is benefit- ural gas production , a meathe No rth bl ew up its msiue the country stil l cx rst mts tlrke."
leader who soared into ing from jobs that are leav- sure Cheney played a maJor
nucle a1 re ac tor coolin g and persiSt. The North
Bush's South Korean vtstt offtce m February \'&lt;ith the ing the community," he said . role in develor.ing . McCain
·ro we r tn June. · But Bush , Korea leaucr has yet to full y provided a contrast. as he ntckname
"The
of
Outside Detroit, another opposed the btll on grounds
spedk ing at d n ew~ confer- vcn fy the ex tent to wluch was gree ted by du eltn g Bulldoze t·," has see n his
depressed Rust Belt city, it included billions in
ence wi th South Korenn he has had a highly cnncheu demonstrattons (&gt;y praye r- approva l ratings tumble McCain became the first unnecessary tax breaks for
Prestdent Lee Myung-bak. urantum program . There 's ful , fl ag-waving supporters after liftmg a ban on U.S. presidential candidate in the oil industry.
said North Koren must first st iII more steps to be done of the U.S .. presrdent and beef tmports des pite public recent memory to tour a
The Obama campaign has
Ugree tn intematmnal terms on the plutontum program ," rowdy protesters dou sed by fea rs about its safety. His nuclear plant. His energy said the Jllinois senator sup- •
fot ve r tfying tb dtsmant le- Bush satd. " In order to get poltce water cannons. Thts move deeply angered his proposals include building ported
the
legislation
ment efforts.
off the list, the axis of evil divtde re fl ected the U.S.- people, who saw it as an 45 nuclear power plants by · because it included huge
· "I don' t kno w whethet or list , the North I&lt; orean leader South Korean rela ttons htp , allempt to curry favor with 2030 to reduce the nation's investments in renewable
nnt th ey"rt;! goin g to g ive up . ts going to have to make which has endured volatile Was hin~t o n and took to the reliance on oil imports.
energy. And Obama aides
theu weapons." Bush s,ud. certai11 decisions."
moments thi s year.
streets ;ir protests that drew · "Sen. Obama has said that emphasized Tuesday that
"I really don 't know. I don ' t
Still , he sa id he hoped to
"! enJOY coming to a free attention worldwide . Lee expanding our nuclear Obama at the time had voted
think e tthet of us knows."
see all that' come to pass.
soc iety where people are later apologized, accepted power plants 'doesn 't make for an amendment to strip
Lee cal led North Korea "a
"My hope is that the axis ahl e to express their opm- chan ges in the beef policy sense for America.' He also the legislation of the tax
ve ry difficu lt opponent."
of evtl list no longe r extsts tons - and your country ts and sacked so me key says no to nuclear storage breaks for the oil and gas
But. he added: "I will be That's my hope for the sake a free soc iety," Bush told advisers.
and reprocessing. I couldn't industries. When the amendpattcllt and I will be consts- of peace . That's my hope Lee e.&gt;rlier when they met at
The White House has disagree more. I have pro- ment was defeated, he voted
tc nt. I have fmth we wrll be for the sake of our chil- the pre sidential mansion.
sought to put the protests posed a plan to build· addi- for the overall measure.
able to move to the venfica- dren~" Bush said.
As Bush arrived on over the beef issue in per- ttonal nuclear plants. That
McCain
spokesman
Bush opened a three- Tuesday evening. 30,000 peo- specti ve. with ·otTicials not- means new jobs, and that Tucker
llon prt&gt;ce". then to the
Bounds
said,
next step."
nation Asian tnp - his ple held an outdoor Christian mg that U.S. beef has begun means new energy. If we ' "Barack Obama is opposed
The North. which explod- ninth - that will take htm to prayer service to support him. appearing . again on the want to enable the technolo- to offshore drilling and is
cu a nuclear &lt;.levicc m 2006, Thailand later Wednesday, His motoncade sped by pock- South Korean market and is gies of tomorrow like plug- also opposed to admitting
ts bcltned by experts to and then on to China at the ·ets of people smiling and selling.
in electriCIPcars, we need that he voted for the same
hav e produced enough end of the week for the waving U.S. fl ags.
After the news conference, electricity to plug into ," corporate giveaways for Big
wenpons-g rade pluto~tUm Olympic Games in Beijing.
Later, an
estimated Bush, first lady Laura Bush McCain said at the Enrico Oil that he's campaigning
to make as many as I0 With widespread talk of 20,000 anti-Bush protesters and _thetr daughter, Barbara, Fermi Nuclear Plant.
against today." .
nucl ear bombs, and the China's repression of free- gathered downtown. Riot had tea wilh Lee and his
"Now, nuclear power
Continuing to criticize
U.S .
has
accused doms for its citizens leading police blasted them with wife. After lhat, lhey all went alone is not enough. McCain's energy program
Pyongyang of runnin g a· into its hostrng of the games, water .cannons as they tried to a small building on the · Drilling alone is not a,t an afternoon town hall at
second weapons program Bush pointedly called such to march onto the main mansion grounds where they enough. We need to do all Baldwin Wallace College in
based on uranium . Actual policies by the communist boulevard. Police warned were served lunch, which this and more. That is why I Berea, Ohio, Obama noted
destruction of weapons regime ''a mistake."
the crowd thai the Iiquid Korean officials said includ- am calling for an 'all of the that his energy policy had
the ultimate goal of the stxHe satd he tells Chinese containeu markers to tag ed U.S . beef.
above ' approach.'' Like won the support of oilman
Obama, McCain has multi- T. Boone Pickens.
billion-dollar, long-term
"T. Boone Pickens is
plans to reduce oil imports. about as conservative a guy
Responding to safety con- as there is. That's a serious
Program. It could be and take care of your per- tmmigration attorney, said cerns that have long stalled Rer.ublican. Oil man.
BY AMY TAXIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER
ex panded nationwide if sonalmatters," the ad reads. some of his clients might be the nuclear industry's Dnller. He says we can't
successful. .
" It is a way for you to plan interested
growth, McCain boasts that drill our way out of the
SANTA ANA, Calif. Agents were waiting to your' return home.''
"They don 't want their the Navy, in which he problem. I think' he knows
Wanted: 111egal immigrants speed peop le through the . When . ICE agents arrive children to go through the served a~ a fighter pilot, has more about it than John
with clean records who · process - which grants at a home to arrest a fugi- trauma of being arrested in safely operated nuclear McCain," Obama said ..
have tgnored court orders to parti cipants up to three rive, they oft en find rela" the morning," he said out- power plants in aircraft carPickens said Monday he
leave
the
country. months to getther r affairs in rives and fn ends who are in side ICE offices Tuesday.
riers and submarines with- was "strongly encouraged
Immi gration official s are order and provrdes the com- the U.S . tile gaily but
Some mayo sign up for the out an accident in 60 years. by Sen . Obama's speech on
standin g_ by to help yo u fort of knowing their homes haven't been ordered home. program to improve their
Yet recent events some- America's . energ~ future.
leave the country. No jail. won't be raided .
Those . people may get standing wit)! the govern- what undercut that message. Foreign oil is killing our
No joke.
ment in case they ever seek Last week, the Navy economy and putting our
But _by Tuesday afte_r- cleported too.
That invi tation drew hard- noon , only one person - 111
Robin Baker, who heads to return legally, Laguna announced that one of rts nation -at risk."
' Jy an} take rs Tue sday on the Phoeni x - took the offer, ICE's · detention
and said . The ad says surrender- nuclear-powered
subPickens has been on a $5~
:ftrst day of a new fede ral according to an ICE official removal operations in San ing to authorities will be marines, the USS Houston, million publicity tour to pro"self-deportatton" .program . who spoke on condition of Diego , said participants iri "noted by ICE as a factor in had leaked minimally mote his plan to erect wind
that offeted 457.000 eligible anonym rty because not all , the program get up to 90 your immigration records.'' radioactive water into har- turbines in the Midwest to
ille gal immtgrants the ·the · numbers ate in. days to put thetr affairs in
One anti-tllegal immigra- bors since March as the sub jlet)erate electricity, replacchance to turn themselves Officials in the other cities order, possibly longe r, after tion group welcomed the traveled around the Pacific . mg the 22 percent of U.S .
in. get theit affairs in order said they had no takers by turning them se lves in . effort.
Ira
Mehlman,
The two
candidates power produced from naturand leave the cou ntry v,ith- mid-afternoon.
They are asked to check in spokesman
.for
the sparre&lt;:! as an Associated al gas. The freed-up natural
'out bemg detai ned.
"Are . people actually with U.S. offi cials arter F,ederati on for American Press-Ipsos poll released gas then could be used for
The tepid tes ponse onl y doing tt? I really find it hard . leaving the co untry to let Immigration Reform, said Tuesday showed that so!iu transportation .
remfurced doubts about an to believe ," said Wendy authorities know they kept taxpayers
would save margins among _ women,
McCain also produced a
idea that has drawn critt- Chavez , 22, of Anaheim, their promise.
money tf even only a few minorities and young voters new TV ad that emphasized
ctsm and even ridicule from who took her mother for a
"We understand
the surrender because ICE have given Obama a 6-per- his independent streak to
_both sides of the immigra- citizenshrp test.
impact tt h a.~ on them when won 't have to look for them. centage-point lead over counter Obama's charges
·tron debate.
An ICE advertising cam- we knock on their doors
The ad campaign targets McCain. Obama is ahead 47 . that he's the same as Bush.
: "You wou ld ha ve to be pai gn betng
launched e,arly in the morning and ethni c media in the five percent to 4! percent among
"Washington's
broken.
:crazy - who wou ld want to Wednesday targets so-called take .them out of their cities, starting with the registered voters, the poll John McCain knows it. We're
: turn themselves in?" said immigration "fugitrves," homes ," he satd . ·'Tht s Prensa Hispana newspaper showed .
worse off than we were four
·Ange l MartineL, a construc- illegal immtgrants who got allows them to leave on m Phoenr x. In &lt;:: hicago, ICE
McCain led by 10 points years ago," says the ad. "He's
tion worke r who waited caught and ignored a therr own terms ."
planned ads in La Raza, the among whites and is even the original maverick."
.Tl!esd ay outst&lt;.l c ICE 's judge's order to . leave but
And fu gitives who aren't' cit y's largest Spanish-ian- with Obama among men,
It also tried to cast
-c ha rl otte . N.C .. off tee avoided other trouble wtth from Mex ico are lik ely to guage weekly, and on groups
with
whom McCain,
a
four-term
: whtl e hiS son vts iteu a the law.
get another beneftt: A one- Spanish- and Polish-Jan- Republicans traditionally do Arizona senator; as a change
.: fri end detaineu on tmmt gra- · Of the nation 's esttmated way plane, ticket home if guage raaio .
well in national elections. agent, a claim Obama has
12 mtllton ill ega l tmmi - they can' t afford the trip ,
: tton 'io latlons.
ICE officials hesitated to He has a 17-point lead with made for himself.
': " Nobody wants to go grant s, about 572,000 are just like immigrants arrest- predict turnout but Robert white men and was running
"Only McCain has taken
, back." satd Martinez , who fugttives , although about 20 ed in raids. For Mexicans Alfieri , supervisory depor- strongly amonll married on big tobac!co, dJ;Ug com. came to the U.S. tllcgall y 15 percent of them are ineligi- who are deported , ICE wi ll tations officer in Charlotte, men, rural restdents and panies, fought corruption in
,: years ago from Mexico bl e to participate because consider paying bus fare to had a message for critics : white evangelicals.
!Joth farties," the ad says.
·; City. "We mkcd everything they have cri mmal hi stories, the border.
"For anyo ne to say no one
Obama led by 13 points "He'! reform Wall Street,
.. to ge t here fo r H reason."
officials satd .
The program could also will do it . that's absolutely among w'omen, by 30 points battle Big Oil, make
~ The oiler from the U.S .
By turning themselves in, ease press ure on tmmigra- wrong."
among voters up to age 34, America prosper a~ain ."
: Immt gration and Customs immigrants can also avoid tion courts and detelllion
Assnciated Pres.\ writers and by 55 pomts among
It docs not mention areas
·Enforcement run s through spendmg weeks, months or centers, which have been Eileen
Sullivan
i!l blacks, Hispanics and other where McCain and Bush
: Aug. 22 111 S,tma Ana. San posSi bly years in detention. crowded by the Bush , Washington . Elliot Spagat in minorities, the poll shows. agree, like tax cuts, the Iraq
, Ot ego, Chicago, Phoe nix centers as their cases are ad mini stration's immigra- Sqn Diego , Sophia Tareen in He also is doing well' with war and free-market eco:: and Charlolle. N.C .. as part processed.
tion crackdown at homes , Chicago and Mitch Weiss ,in un,married men, moderates nomics, a point the Obama
:ot the agency's new
The program "gives you factories and· offices.
Charlotre. N.C.. contributed and city dwellers, and has a campaign highlighted in its
Schedul ed
Departure time to make arrangements
Juan Laguna, a Santa Ana to this report.
12-point lead among those response to the ad.

Public meetings

BY TOM RAUM

has work vernv

•

Wednesday, Aug. 6
. POMEROY - Salisbury
''fow~,s htp Trustees, 6· 30
•p.m., at the home ot
,Manllmg Roush.
'TU PPERS PLAINS
· Ea,tern Loca l Board of
.Education meets in spec ial
_ses ston , 6 p .m .. Eastern
L&gt;brary Conference Room .
Purpose i' to appro ve bids
for good s and se rvi ces.
take action on person nel.
' and any other busi ness that
." may co me befo te the
:boat d.
· CHESTER - Chestet
:Township Trustee' will
'meet 7 p.m. at the to"n hall.
. POMEROY
- Meigs
.County Boaru of Heal th.
regular meeting. 5 p.m ..
. Meigs County
Health
:'Department.
~
Thursday, Aug. 7
, SY RACUSE · - Sy tantSc
. Village Counci l, 7 p.m . at
. vtllage hall. '
. Monday, Aug. 11
ATHENS - Area 14
:·Youth Council mcettng. 9
:a m.. Athens DJFS tn
,Chauncey.

'

n'legal immigrants invited to turn themselves in

YT_ E

:The Daily Sentinel ·

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Clubs and
organizations

Page 1\-(
\Vednesday, August 6, 200 8

First place

992-5005 to RSVP.
Thursday, Aug. 14
CHESTER
Shauc
River Lodge 453, 7:30
p.m.
at
th e
hall .
Refreshments .

Church events
Thursday, Aug. 7
LANGSVILLE
Evange li st Gary Poll ard.
Mullins, W.Va. wi ll speak
and minister in mu ~ i c al 7
p.m.. through Satutday . at
House
of
Hea lm g
Mini stties, Langsville.
Friday, Aug. 8
MIDDL EPORT
Vacation Bi ble School. First
Pres byterian Church. 1645
N. Fmtrth Ave .. Miudleport .
Aug . 8 and 9. Hou rs. 6 to R
p.m. on Friday. 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. on Saturday. Theme
" Bench Part y - Surfin '
T hroug h the Sc riptures:·
For more inf ormation, ca ll
Terri Ftfe , 992 -2625. or
Carroll ' Ann Harper. 9'127172.
LONG BOTTOM
Submitted phot&lt;
Faith Full Gospel Church
se r,ice with The Billiters as The Middl eport Slamme rs took ftrst place in the peewee gt rls fa st pitch league tourname nt he ld at Tuppers Plains. Tearr.:
members are front, Tyra Boothe, Justine Smtih, Ktm Casct, Kelsey Hudson . Shawna Robtnson, Ttshea Boothe , secant
singe rs, 7 p.m.
row, Ol1v1a Cremeans, Alexts Schwab, Ariel Ellis .. Ltsa Wtse, Shelby McCourt , Tamera Mtller. Hannah Conley, and coach
es, Emily Fackler, John Cremeans. and Gandace Mtller.

Reunions

Sunday, Aug. ttl
RACINE
- Reumon for
"
Thursday, Aug. 7
descendant s of Cha rles and
RACINE
The Alma Snyd et. potluck · at
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
.Sonshme Circle will meet at noon. table service ptoviu- HOEFLICH
@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM
lhe church , 7 p.m . Tak e ed. Star Mill Patk.
· items being collected by the
GALLIPOLIS
Fry
POMEROY - The 2008
group - Edie Hubbard. rcumon at 1687 Jackson rectpt cnt oJ .. thc Dave Dile s
,Blondena Rainer, and Edna Pike. Gallipu!ts. Eat at I Scholars hi p is Morgan R.
Knopp will be hostesses.
Werry ot Chester wl10 gr.td.. POMEROY - Hemlock p.m.
POMEROY - The 84th wttecl thts ye ar I rom Eastern
.·Grunge, 7:30 p.m . at the Ha yes, Young, and Holiday H tgh ScllOOI.
·,hall. Members are to take School Reuni on, at the 01&lt;.1
Th e scholarshtp fun&lt;.l was
old · canning p rs and Ho!tday School Grounds on establi shed by Dave Dil es.
-devices.
Gilkey Ridge Road Pot luck auth or of e i ~h t hooks and
. TUPPERS PLAINS lunch , I p.m.
fotmer broadcaster for
,.VFW Post 9053 Auxiliat y, 7
RACINE - The Lmley ABC Spotts , more th :m a
p.m. at post home.
and Sarah Virginia Hart quarter centut y ago Dtle,.
~
Friday, Aug. 8
family reuni on, at the who no w re Side' in th e
. ROCKSPRINGS'. - Big Ametican
Legion hall in Athens area. b d nati ve of
~Bend Farm Antiques Club. Ra ci ne. Dinner. I p. m
eport.
graduated
Morgan Werry
•7:30 p .m.. Thompson - Take covered di sh and table Mtd&lt;.ll
from
Mtd&lt;.lleport
Hi
gh
Building
on serv1ce.
: Roush
School. attelllk&lt;.l Ohi o to work on foca l ne wspa:Rocksprings Fairgrounds.
Untvcrstt y.
He
th en pers before movmg on and
,
Tuesday, Aug. 12 .
ret urned to Metgs Count y into sporh broadcastin g.
POMEROY
- Metgs
. County
Chamber
of
Friday, Aug. 8
·commerce. busine"- mindSYRACUS E - Meigs
ed
lun cheo n,
noon,
Family
anu
·Pomeroy Libtary. speakers County
'."Tim anu Edie Kin g from Children First Council wtll
:Kmg Ace Hatdware di scuss host a Community Fun Day
.havmg an established bust- from noon unttl 4 p.m. at
BY KATHY MITCHELL
li ke conftontation. but I
. :ness in Meig s County. the London Pool Free food,
AND
MARCY
SuGAR
need tn get out. Can yo u
. Riversi de Golf Course. music , free sw imming and
hel p me'' - Had Enough
: Mason. W.Va . caters. cnll gn mes.
Dear Annie: I hmc been in Indiana
Dear India na: If yo u
man ted tn ·' Max.. I or 22
y' are re:tdv to wa lk out.
trul
yea rs Th ere · ~&gt; et e some
happy ti mes 111 th e heg lll- yo u shou ld s 1.~:c-k ~oun se lin g
, Th,e
nin g after ou r child ren (now ,mel a goo&lt;I ..lltorncy.
counsel~,,.
wi
ll
help
yo u
20 and 24) were horn . hu t
ch·ide whnt 10 &lt;.In and fin d
not manv sin ce.
Ma x i ~ very &lt;.:ontrolling· th ~.: c ou rd!.!C l t l do 11. and th ~?
GALLIPOLIS - Hol ze r
1
1
and treat s hts lamtly as 1a_w~c.r wt··II tc 11
Home Health Services
- t /\1:' ,. 1~\~ t';.
ObJeCtS. Our dlilurct.r uo n't pll)lt::d ymu s~..:
:announces its Jttl y spotlight
f. : ~,L ).
lik e h1111 . He docsn I have you arc concerned that ~ax
- c:employee .of the month .
any tne nus. He c mbarra s~ ­ will do somethm g drasttc to
. Natali e Gardner, RN . of
e' ,1 nd hu miltates me . We you_or the children. call the
·Holzer Home Car~,
have poor commumcatJ on Natt~lll:ll_ DotT)eSttc/' nl en:~
• Born
in
Gallipolts ,
bt:t' i.lli ~C when I \,_, i.lllt to get
Hotlme at 1-800-7)9-SAFE
Gardner graduated from
m
y potnt ,tc rnss. he ye ll' al ( 1 -H00-7 9 9 - 7 ~3 3 1cGallia Academy
Hi gh
me tu shut up .
-.school in 19 ~2. and Rto
Dear An me: Rece t~ ~l y.
I Jell out ul lnve a lonu two women 111 our ottace
Grande
Communtty
T
ttme ago. but stu ck atnu n ~l h:&gt;d Jhctr fll'sl batl tc s. wo
:Co ll ~ge 's Holzer School of
because I felt sorry for him . co-workers dec tdcd to
'.Nursin g in 1984 with ,her
I thou ght of leavin g thts throw a jOit.rt baby shower
'·assoctate degree 111 Nurs1ng.
unh appy marriage w h ~n my to celc? ta tc the ~rcw
She began her employ, ment at Holzer Medtcal
childten we re younge r. bu t I arn v,tls. 1 he mormn g ot the
·center .in 1986 as a regiswas afratd Max wou ld do sl1owcr. an e-m&lt;til was se nt
tered
nu rse
on
the
horrible to them to all tile \1 o men rn the
something
Natalie Gardner
'Hospttal's Four West Unit
because Ir e rs vinuicti,e. I ol'l tce. Je lling us v,hat our
'After stx months. she trans- the Intensive Care Untl at always bel ieved he m,tde "f.tir share" of the costs
Memorial the chtldt'l'll mtserablc as a wns . We were all ex pected
' f errcd to the Four East Unit O ' Bienness
•-where she was a staff nurse Hospttal in Athens .
wa}· to get back at me .
to chtp in to P·'Y tor the
Gardner res tdes in Vinton
- for 12 years. In September
I regret how my marn agc cake. pu nch and decora-· 1997, she began work for wrth her husband of 23 has affec ted my ktd ,. It tnm s. even though this was
Hol zer Home Care. where years , Bryan , and two sons. see ms my life has been a never &lt;.l tst·ussed before
-she continues to nurse Alex , and Enc. She enjoys waste for the past 30 years
Thi' l1as causcu some ten•today. Gardner is also a cer- being a 4-H leader, camp- and I wil l never kn ow true ' ron in the . oil tee. The
ing, and spendmg ttme wnh happiness. How do I find cllllnllllt IS not a bt~ deal, but
ll fted CPR instructor.
Prior to her employment her famtly.
the courage to lea'e thi s we ,tre upset about cthc pnnciWhen asked what she man who has never loveLl ple of scnd mg a btl I to people
·at HM C. Gardner was
'employed at Holl ywood likes best about workin g at .me? I uscu to pray he. u·find who 1\ Crerr't in vo lved 111 the
. Medtca I
Center
rn Holzer Home Car·e. Gardner a girlfnend, but apparently . plannmg . Most or us already
Hollywood. Fla. whete she· said , "I like being able to I'm the only moron wtllmg -.pent money on girts.
was an oncology nurse-. spend one-on-one time with to put up wnh him . I don 't
Is thi s proper eti quelle?
' 'Before her employment in my pat tents and my cowork·-'florida, she was n nu rse on ers are great to work wit h."
SPR ING VAl I FY

Diles Scholarship awarded to Eastern graduab~.

Youth events

I'

This vear more than ~0
Benu at:ea students applt ed
sch olarshtp '
for
the
Selection was made by the
Diles Scholarship comm ittee composed of Cath y
Crow. Chris Wolfe. ,md l,c·~
Powell. It can be useu to
atte nu any college fm any
cmecr chmce.
Wcrrv was one of thr
valedtct(mans
of her
Eastern graduat rng class
having rece tvt ng all As
durin g her fo ur yea rs of
htgh school. She wtll be
arten&lt;Jma
Olito
State
Unt vers ity thts fall where
she will begtn work on a
bachelor 's degree m bto logy or another area dcalmg
with the human body. Her

;:o"l " to become a doc tor
At Eastern she \1 as :
m ~ mb er ot the Nattonal
Honor Soctcty. a Un ite, •
St,Hes
Ac ht evemen ~
Ac.!tlcmy Nar tonal Awa11 ·
"inn et . .tn d a Reg ton.&gt;'
Schola t She played volle) ball : b,rskctball and track ,
pe tto rmed 111 plays . an_,,
-.ei ved on numerous com
mtttees. She " active at tlh
Cheskr United Method is! .
Ch urch. h.t ~ bee n 111 4-1!
sevetal y~ar s .. and partrc t·
p.tted 111 a va11e ty . of com mull tty sctv tce project s.
In letters or Ieference hct
tcuchers descn be her as. a11
cxcc pttonal student. co:11tc
nus. and res pectful. wtth "
stt ong v,ork ethtc.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Be prepared when taking drastic step_

:. Holzer announces July
spotlight employee

:
1

I1

UlOilOUH I li''.l

Birth announced

WWW SPRINGVALLEYCINEMA.COM
'
Box Otfiee Op~~ns @
6.30 PM FOR EVENING SHOWS Ill

: POMEROY - Lee ann and Co~ne liu s Rendell of
·Kingsb ury Road , Pomeroy. announce the brrth of a s'?n,
Brayto n Jermaine. Jul y 29 , at O' Bieness Memonal
Huspital, Athens.

To see more newsphotos
from our photographers go to
www.mydailysentinel.com
You can order reprints and
pnoto gifts of your fav.orite
photos there too.

7

446 4r)24 lli'4JACK'ill'lr1Kl
WED 8/6108 - THURS 8f7108

12:30 PM FOR
WED THRU SUN MATINEES
TUES. IS BARGAIN NIGHT
PINEAPPLE EXPRESS tR•

_
• FREE 2411 Ttchnical $uppor1
o !natant MP.,_,Agrng . kMIP your bu~ hst 1
• 10 e ma1l addresiM WJ!t1 Wetrna1'

• Custc.m Start Page news Wi!rtther &amp; more'

('f;;;:6X~~'!.!!!!D
Sign Up Onl ine! www loci!iiNet.com
Call Today &amp; SBIIe'

740·992 ·6260
R1 lo:.hlr&gt; lnll'rrwt /1.1 I

j•&lt;, •

SIN{' 1994

J: \0,3;.t~7~ 1Jll9 . 10

SISTERHOOC OF THE TRAVELING
PANTS 2 [PG!Jl
_____l :00. 3.:JS, 7_;_0Q_&amp;._9 :J 5______:______.
THE MUMMY: TOMB OF THE
ORA.GON EMPERIOR (PG13)
1,OQ, J;j 0, J

cOil.L9ciJI.._

STEP BROTHERS (A)
1:20, :!JJ!, 7.20 &amp; 9.,20 - -

THE DARK KNIGHT (PGt31
.J 2;5S, 3.40, 6.55 &amp; 9.40
$ PACE CHIMPS IG) 1·20 &amp; .J.;~Il
MA.MMA. MIA (PG1l)

t,ao. uo. z:all.Ls:ao_
HAJiCOCK iPG.m..L30..&amp;.9:30
NOW SHOWING MATINEES WED
THRU SUN

Since when did we ha ve to
pay ndmrsston to celebrate
the birth of a child '.' Perplexed
Dear Perplexed: Tl1e coworkers whq planned . the
shower should have asked If

youwishedtoparttctpateand
mtim11cd you ol the costs
hcfnrehand. Apparently. they
assum ed you wouiJ sec 1t a~
an "offtce shower" wtth
sh,rred ex penses. Stnce you
ha'.-e to continue workmg

with the~c . people. we suggest yo u pay the btll tf you
cnn alford it. and know bcttct
lnr next time.
Oear Annie: 1 rc.td the
Jetter from " Exas perated
Hu sband," who was married
to a hoardcr.
My nerghbor recently hau
the sn mc problem. Her husband had accumulated so
much stuff tha t. alter 25
vea rs ot marrwge, th ree ktds
:md many pleas to clean II up.
she was ready 10 \\·al k out.
Living with the mess was
ruinin g her health Jl e ne1er
took her seriously unttl she
deli vered the ulti mat um.
With the hel p of frienus
nnd neighbors , her husband
managed to clean up ht s
mess. We haul ed otf tons nf
junk . Luckil y. he ts not an

obscsStvc-contpllbll e pet
son. JUst clueless Wtth Ill '
eyes opened. l1e ts .
change u ntun w ho ptcks ur
after ht~nse l l. p~t' thlllf! '
away .md ha' lJL~tl dccumu .
lattn g thtng'-: Spou-.e" . n l
hoaruer'
J'(, , ·,JU ' '
· cant cal wa
1"D
'e wtt 1rCtt. :-f. a. r
r ar b a 1r orma:
"' ~ c
1
t 1~ 1HI~ ant1 '"·1-. .111 u 1c 1
nm y packt.&gt;t dill 1 not a c 1"s
sic obse ,s iH'-l'lli11J1llhll '
homclt:r. thi-. ''d" . t 1111 1.
~oluttun. ror othe' "· un lul
tumttch . t isn't so , impk
Ch,llr ging ca n tequire !hera
py ar1u ~omdimes mcd tca
tton . whtc h the ho.11dc· 1
ortcn tefusc' We l11lJ1C )OU '
friend apprectatc' h&lt;l\\ '"'
tu 11 ,.1te ~ he j.., _
Annie\ Mailbox is writ
ten by h"ai!J v Milclre/1 and
Marcy Suga-r, longtim e edi
tors 1~{ the .4un Lc111den
column. Please e- mail your
questions /o auuiewwil
· box@.-omcasl.nc/, or wnk
/o: A11nie'.1 Mailbox, P.O
Box /18190 , C/ri('{lgO, II
60611. To find out //WIT
about Amtie's Mailbox.
and read feature.~ by oll1er
Creator&gt; .Syndicate wrilen
and cartoonist., , vi.1·i1 t/1&lt;
Crea/on· Syndicate Wei•
page a/ www.creaton .com.

01Sra

1

Attention Low to Moderate
Income Households
The Meigs County Grants Office
will be taking applications for the
Downpayment Assistance/Rehab
Program
on

August 18 thru 22, 2008
from 9 am to 3 pm
If you have questions please call the

office at 992· 7908
From 9 am to 4 pm
Mon-Fri.

·

And ask for Jean Trussell or Eloida Stegall

�The Daily Sentinel

•

N

ORLD

PageA2

Community Calendar

Obama, McCain diverge
on solution for energy woes
saying they definitely plan
U.S .
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS
to vote.
President
With polls
showing
George W.
YOUNGSTOWN
increasin~ numbers of. vatDemocrat Barack Obama ers favon ng oil drilling off
Bush, lelt,
shakes hands blamed Republican energy the U.S. coast, Obama has
policies for some of the scrambled in recent days to
with his
South Korean nation 's economic woes add new elements to his
Tuesday as his· GOP rival overall long-term energy
counterpart
John McCai n advocated a policy of promoting fuelLee Myunglarge ex panston of nuclear efficient autos and developbak during
ing alternate energy sources.
power.
their meeting
Both
candidates
roamed
He dropped his total opposiat the presidential house the economically depressed tion to more oil drilling if a
Rust Belt touting their ener- limited , environmentally
in S~oul
gy plans as concerns about careful offshore plan would
Wednesday.
$4-a-gallon gasoline and help pass a long-tenn energy
AP photo
job losses have emerged as bill. He also reversed himthe presidential campaign's self to advocate release of
hottest issues.
oil from the nation's strateObama told an audience in gic reserve to help drive
Youngstown , Ohio, that the down gasoline prices in the
Bush energy policy, crafted in short-run.
large part by Vice President
When Obama emphasized
Dick Cheney, an ex-oilman, the key role of Cheney, the
tilted to provide tax breaks unpopular vice president, in
'
and favorable treatment for President Bush's energy
'
pa rty talks with' Nort h lender&gt; th is every time he them so they could be iden- Big Oil and that McCain policy, Republicans were
BY BEN FELLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRIT ER
Korea that tnclude the U.S. has met with him over the tified later. The National would expand oil industry tax quick to pomt out a contraand South Korea - is . nearly etght years of l11s Pol ice Agency s~ d they breaks by $4 billion.
diction in his criticism.
SEOU L. South Korea months away at least.·,, _, pres idency.
167
people
arrested
Obama has proposed an
"President Bush, he had
PrcSJCknt
Bush
s;ud
Bush once branded N01th
"You should not fea r reli- in volved in protests rn cen- excess profits rax on Big Oil an energy policy. He turned
Wedne sday that North Korea as part of an "ax is of gious peopl e in your soci- tral Seoul overnight , and to finance a '$1 ,000-per- to Dick Cheney and he said,
· K01~:t has much to do before ev il." along with prewar eties ... Bush said . describing deployed some 20,000 offi- family energy rebate to deal 'Cheney, go take care of
the U.S c:t n remove tt from Iraq and lrun. and spoke the message he defivets. cers to maintain order.
with high fuel costs.
this ,"' Obama said. "Cheney
the terro r hl itdlist. but det isl'e ly of North Korean then and now. "As a matter ·
"I don't lta ve anti-U.S .
Exxon-Mobil "makes in met with r;enewable-energy
ex pres"icd hope that lt :-1 pan - leader Kim Jong ll 's treat- of fact. rel ig ious people wi ll sentiment . I' m JUSt · anti- 30 seconds what the typical folks once ·and oil and gas
ah status as a membet ot the ment of hi s people and pur- make yo ur society a better Bush and anti-Lee Myung- Ohio worker makes in a ' (executives) 40 times.
":txts of cvt l" could some suit of nuclear weapons. place. You ought to wel - bak ." said Uhm Ki-woong, year," Obama said. "We McCain has taken a page out
day he a th tng of the past.
The president said it is st ill come people being able to 36. a busmessman who was need more jobs and eco- of the Cheney playbook."
. Pynngy.mg expects Bush "to be determined" whether ex press their minds. To the wearing a mask and hat tikc nomic development. Why
But Obama voted for a
to re move it from th e U S Pyongyang can come otT, ex tent that people aren't other demonstrators rn an don 't we focu s on clean 2005 energy bill backed by
ltst or lcrror-s ponsprin g anu lis teu some of what is able to uo that. people aren ' t apparent attempt to conceal · energy and reopening facto- Bush- that included billions
cotln !n es as :-.oon .t:-. next
able to worship freely is - . hts identity fro m authorities. ries and putting people back in subsidies for oil and natleft to do .
·weekend . as promised when
"The human rights abuses you know - I think " a
Lee . a pro -American to work? Nobody is benefit- ural gas production , a meathe No rth bl ew up its msiue the country stil l cx rst mts tlrke."
leader who soared into ing from jobs that are leav- sure Cheney played a maJor
nucle a1 re ac tor coolin g and persiSt. The North
Bush's South Korean vtstt offtce m February \'&lt;ith the ing the community," he said . role in develor.ing . McCain
·ro we r tn June. · But Bush , Korea leaucr has yet to full y provided a contrast. as he ntckname
"The
of
Outside Detroit, another opposed the btll on grounds
spedk ing at d n ew~ confer- vcn fy the ex tent to wluch was gree ted by du eltn g Bulldoze t·," has see n his
depressed Rust Belt city, it included billions in
ence wi th South Korenn he has had a highly cnncheu demonstrattons (&gt;y praye r- approva l ratings tumble McCain became the first unnecessary tax breaks for
Prestdent Lee Myung-bak. urantum program . There 's ful , fl ag-waving supporters after liftmg a ban on U.S. presidential candidate in the oil industry.
said North Koren must first st iII more steps to be done of the U.S .. presrdent and beef tmports des pite public recent memory to tour a
The Obama campaign has
Ugree tn intematmnal terms on the plutontum program ," rowdy protesters dou sed by fea rs about its safety. His nuclear plant. His energy said the Jllinois senator sup- •
fot ve r tfying tb dtsmant le- Bush satd. " In order to get poltce water cannons. Thts move deeply angered his proposals include building ported
the
legislation
ment efforts.
off the list, the axis of evil divtde re fl ected the U.S.- people, who saw it as an 45 nuclear power plants by · because it included huge
· "I don' t kno w whethet or list , the North I&lt; orean leader South Korean rela ttons htp , allempt to curry favor with 2030 to reduce the nation's investments in renewable
nnt th ey"rt;! goin g to g ive up . ts going to have to make which has endured volatile Was hin~t o n and took to the reliance on oil imports.
energy. And Obama aides
theu weapons." Bush s,ud. certai11 decisions."
moments thi s year.
streets ;ir protests that drew · "Sen. Obama has said that emphasized Tuesday that
"I really don 't know. I don ' t
Still , he sa id he hoped to
"! enJOY coming to a free attention worldwide . Lee expanding our nuclear Obama at the time had voted
think e tthet of us knows."
see all that' come to pass.
soc iety where people are later apologized, accepted power plants 'doesn 't make for an amendment to strip
Lee cal led North Korea "a
"My hope is that the axis ahl e to express their opm- chan ges in the beef policy sense for America.' He also the legislation of the tax
ve ry difficu lt opponent."
of evtl list no longe r extsts tons - and your country ts and sacked so me key says no to nuclear storage breaks for the oil and gas
But. he added: "I will be That's my hope for the sake a free soc iety," Bush told advisers.
and reprocessing. I couldn't industries. When the amendpattcllt and I will be consts- of peace . That's my hope Lee e.&gt;rlier when they met at
The White House has disagree more. I have pro- ment was defeated, he voted
tc nt. I have fmth we wrll be for the sake of our chil- the pre sidential mansion.
sought to put the protests posed a plan to build· addi- for the overall measure.
able to move to the venfica- dren~" Bush said.
As Bush arrived on over the beef issue in per- ttonal nuclear plants. That
McCain
spokesman
Bush opened a three- Tuesday evening. 30,000 peo- specti ve. with ·otTicials not- means new jobs, and that Tucker
llon prt&gt;ce". then to the
Bounds
said,
next step."
nation Asian tnp - his ple held an outdoor Christian mg that U.S. beef has begun means new energy. If we ' "Barack Obama is opposed
The North. which explod- ninth - that will take htm to prayer service to support him. appearing . again on the want to enable the technolo- to offshore drilling and is
cu a nuclear &lt;.levicc m 2006, Thailand later Wednesday, His motoncade sped by pock- South Korean market and is gies of tomorrow like plug- also opposed to admitting
ts bcltned by experts to and then on to China at the ·ets of people smiling and selling.
in electriCIPcars, we need that he voted for the same
hav e produced enough end of the week for the waving U.S. fl ags.
After the news conference, electricity to plug into ," corporate giveaways for Big
wenpons-g rade pluto~tUm Olympic Games in Beijing.
Later, an
estimated Bush, first lady Laura Bush McCain said at the Enrico Oil that he's campaigning
to make as many as I0 With widespread talk of 20,000 anti-Bush protesters and _thetr daughter, Barbara, Fermi Nuclear Plant.
against today." .
nucl ear bombs, and the China's repression of free- gathered downtown. Riot had tea wilh Lee and his
"Now, nuclear power
Continuing to criticize
U.S .
has
accused doms for its citizens leading police blasted them with wife. After lhat, lhey all went alone is not enough. McCain's energy program
Pyongyang of runnin g a· into its hostrng of the games, water .cannons as they tried to a small building on the · Drilling alone is not a,t an afternoon town hall at
second weapons program Bush pointedly called such to march onto the main mansion grounds where they enough. We need to do all Baldwin Wallace College in
based on uranium . Actual policies by the communist boulevard. Police warned were served lunch, which this and more. That is why I Berea, Ohio, Obama noted
destruction of weapons regime ''a mistake."
the crowd thai the Iiquid Korean officials said includ- am calling for an 'all of the that his energy policy had
the ultimate goal of the stxHe satd he tells Chinese containeu markers to tag ed U.S . beef.
above ' approach.'' Like won the support of oilman
Obama, McCain has multi- T. Boone Pickens.
billion-dollar, long-term
"T. Boone Pickens is
plans to reduce oil imports. about as conservative a guy
Responding to safety con- as there is. That's a serious
Program. It could be and take care of your per- tmmigration attorney, said cerns that have long stalled Rer.ublican. Oil man.
BY AMY TAXIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER
ex panded nationwide if sonalmatters," the ad reads. some of his clients might be the nuclear industry's Dnller. He says we can't
successful. .
" It is a way for you to plan interested
growth, McCain boasts that drill our way out of the
SANTA ANA, Calif. Agents were waiting to your' return home.''
"They don 't want their the Navy, in which he problem. I think' he knows
Wanted: 111egal immigrants speed peop le through the . When . ICE agents arrive children to go through the served a~ a fighter pilot, has more about it than John
with clean records who · process - which grants at a home to arrest a fugi- trauma of being arrested in safely operated nuclear McCain," Obama said ..
have tgnored court orders to parti cipants up to three rive, they oft en find rela" the morning," he said out- power plants in aircraft carPickens said Monday he
leave
the
country. months to getther r affairs in rives and fn ends who are in side ICE offices Tuesday.
riers and submarines with- was "strongly encouraged
Immi gration official s are order and provrdes the com- the U.S . tile gaily but
Some mayo sign up for the out an accident in 60 years. by Sen . Obama's speech on
standin g_ by to help yo u fort of knowing their homes haven't been ordered home. program to improve their
Yet recent events some- America's . energ~ future.
leave the country. No jail. won't be raided .
Those . people may get standing wit)! the govern- what undercut that message. Foreign oil is killing our
No joke.
ment in case they ever seek Last week, the Navy economy and putting our
But _by Tuesday afte_r- cleported too.
That invi tation drew hard- noon , only one person - 111
Robin Baker, who heads to return legally, Laguna announced that one of rts nation -at risk."
' Jy an} take rs Tue sday on the Phoeni x - took the offer, ICE's · detention
and said . The ad says surrender- nuclear-powered
subPickens has been on a $5~
:ftrst day of a new fede ral according to an ICE official removal operations in San ing to authorities will be marines, the USS Houston, million publicity tour to pro"self-deportatton" .program . who spoke on condition of Diego , said participants iri "noted by ICE as a factor in had leaked minimally mote his plan to erect wind
that offeted 457.000 eligible anonym rty because not all , the program get up to 90 your immigration records.'' radioactive water into har- turbines in the Midwest to
ille gal immtgrants the ·the · numbers ate in. days to put thetr affairs in
One anti-tllegal immigra- bors since March as the sub jlet)erate electricity, replacchance to turn themselves Officials in the other cities order, possibly longe r, after tion group welcomed the traveled around the Pacific . mg the 22 percent of U.S .
in. get theit affairs in order said they had no takers by turning them se lves in . effort.
Ira
Mehlman,
The two
candidates power produced from naturand leave the cou ntry v,ith- mid-afternoon.
They are asked to check in spokesman
.for
the sparre&lt;:! as an Associated al gas. The freed-up natural
'out bemg detai ned.
"Are . people actually with U.S. offi cials arter F,ederati on for American Press-Ipsos poll released gas then could be used for
The tepid tes ponse onl y doing tt? I really find it hard . leaving the co untry to let Immigration Reform, said Tuesday showed that so!iu transportation .
remfurced doubts about an to believe ," said Wendy authorities know they kept taxpayers
would save margins among _ women,
McCain also produced a
idea that has drawn critt- Chavez , 22, of Anaheim, their promise.
money tf even only a few minorities and young voters new TV ad that emphasized
ctsm and even ridicule from who took her mother for a
"We understand
the surrender because ICE have given Obama a 6-per- his independent streak to
_both sides of the immigra- citizenshrp test.
impact tt h a.~ on them when won 't have to look for them. centage-point lead over counter Obama's charges
·tron debate.
An ICE advertising cam- we knock on their doors
The ad campaign targets McCain. Obama is ahead 47 . that he's the same as Bush.
: "You wou ld ha ve to be pai gn betng
launched e,arly in the morning and ethni c media in the five percent to 4! percent among
"Washington's
broken.
:crazy - who wou ld want to Wednesday targets so-called take .them out of their cities, starting with the registered voters, the poll John McCain knows it. We're
: turn themselves in?" said immigration "fugitrves," homes ," he satd . ·'Tht s Prensa Hispana newspaper showed .
worse off than we were four
·Ange l MartineL, a construc- illegal immtgrants who got allows them to leave on m Phoenr x. In &lt;:: hicago, ICE
McCain led by 10 points years ago," says the ad. "He's
tion worke r who waited caught and ignored a therr own terms ."
planned ads in La Raza, the among whites and is even the original maverick."
.Tl!esd ay outst&lt;.l c ICE 's judge's order to . leave but
And fu gitives who aren't' cit y's largest Spanish-ian- with Obama among men,
It also tried to cast
-c ha rl otte . N.C .. off tee avoided other trouble wtth from Mex ico are lik ely to guage weekly, and on groups
with
whom McCain,
a
four-term
: whtl e hiS son vts iteu a the law.
get another beneftt: A one- Spanish- and Polish-Jan- Republicans traditionally do Arizona senator; as a change
.: fri end detaineu on tmmt gra- · Of the nation 's esttmated way plane, ticket home if guage raaio .
well in national elections. agent, a claim Obama has
12 mtllton ill ega l tmmi - they can' t afford the trip ,
: tton 'io latlons.
ICE officials hesitated to He has a 17-point lead with made for himself.
': " Nobody wants to go grant s, about 572,000 are just like immigrants arrest- predict turnout but Robert white men and was running
"Only McCain has taken
, back." satd Martinez , who fugttives , although about 20 ed in raids. For Mexicans Alfieri , supervisory depor- strongly amonll married on big tobac!co, dJ;Ug com. came to the U.S. tllcgall y 15 percent of them are ineligi- who are deported , ICE wi ll tations officer in Charlotte, men, rural restdents and panies, fought corruption in
,: years ago from Mexico bl e to participate because consider paying bus fare to had a message for critics : white evangelicals.
!Joth farties," the ad says.
·; City. "We mkcd everything they have cri mmal hi stories, the border.
"For anyo ne to say no one
Obama led by 13 points "He'! reform Wall Street,
.. to ge t here fo r H reason."
officials satd .
The program could also will do it . that's absolutely among w'omen, by 30 points battle Big Oil, make
~ The oiler from the U.S .
By turning themselves in, ease press ure on tmmigra- wrong."
among voters up to age 34, America prosper a~ain ."
: Immt gration and Customs immigrants can also avoid tion courts and detelllion
Assnciated Pres.\ writers and by 55 pomts among
It docs not mention areas
·Enforcement run s through spendmg weeks, months or centers, which have been Eileen
Sullivan
i!l blacks, Hispanics and other where McCain and Bush
: Aug. 22 111 S,tma Ana. San posSi bly years in detention. crowded by the Bush , Washington . Elliot Spagat in minorities, the poll shows. agree, like tax cuts, the Iraq
, Ot ego, Chicago, Phoe nix centers as their cases are ad mini stration's immigra- Sqn Diego , Sophia Tareen in He also is doing well' with war and free-market eco:: and Charlolle. N.C .. as part processed.
tion crackdown at homes , Chicago and Mitch Weiss ,in un,married men, moderates nomics, a point the Obama
:ot the agency's new
The program "gives you factories and· offices.
Charlotre. N.C.. contributed and city dwellers, and has a campaign highlighted in its
Schedul ed
Departure time to make arrangements
Juan Laguna, a Santa Ana to this report.
12-point lead among those response to the ad.

Public meetings

BY TOM RAUM

has work vernv

•

Wednesday, Aug. 6
. POMEROY - Salisbury
''fow~,s htp Trustees, 6· 30
•p.m., at the home ot
,Manllmg Roush.
'TU PPERS PLAINS
· Ea,tern Loca l Board of
.Education meets in spec ial
_ses ston , 6 p .m .. Eastern
L&gt;brary Conference Room .
Purpose i' to appro ve bids
for good s and se rvi ces.
take action on person nel.
' and any other busi ness that
." may co me befo te the
:boat d.
· CHESTER - Chestet
:Township Trustee' will
'meet 7 p.m. at the to"n hall.
. POMEROY
- Meigs
.County Boaru of Heal th.
regular meeting. 5 p.m ..
. Meigs County
Health
:'Department.
~
Thursday, Aug. 7
, SY RACUSE · - Sy tantSc
. Village Counci l, 7 p.m . at
. vtllage hall. '
. Monday, Aug. 11
ATHENS - Area 14
:·Youth Council mcettng. 9
:a m.. Athens DJFS tn
,Chauncey.

'

n'legal immigrants invited to turn themselves in

YT_ E

:The Daily Sentinel ·

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Clubs and
organizations

Page 1\-(
\Vednesday, August 6, 200 8

First place

992-5005 to RSVP.
Thursday, Aug. 14
CHESTER
Shauc
River Lodge 453, 7:30
p.m.
at
th e
hall .
Refreshments .

Church events
Thursday, Aug. 7
LANGSVILLE
Evange li st Gary Poll ard.
Mullins, W.Va. wi ll speak
and minister in mu ~ i c al 7
p.m.. through Satutday . at
House
of
Hea lm g
Mini stties, Langsville.
Friday, Aug. 8
MIDDL EPORT
Vacation Bi ble School. First
Pres byterian Church. 1645
N. Fmtrth Ave .. Miudleport .
Aug . 8 and 9. Hou rs. 6 to R
p.m. on Friday. 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. on Saturday. Theme
" Bench Part y - Surfin '
T hroug h the Sc riptures:·
For more inf ormation, ca ll
Terri Ftfe , 992 -2625. or
Carroll ' Ann Harper. 9'127172.
LONG BOTTOM
Submitted phot&lt;
Faith Full Gospel Church
se r,ice with The Billiters as The Middl eport Slamme rs took ftrst place in the peewee gt rls fa st pitch league tourname nt he ld at Tuppers Plains. Tearr.:
members are front, Tyra Boothe, Justine Smtih, Ktm Casct, Kelsey Hudson . Shawna Robtnson, Ttshea Boothe , secant
singe rs, 7 p.m.
row, Ol1v1a Cremeans, Alexts Schwab, Ariel Ellis .. Ltsa Wtse, Shelby McCourt , Tamera Mtller. Hannah Conley, and coach
es, Emily Fackler, John Cremeans. and Gandace Mtller.

Reunions

Sunday, Aug. ttl
RACINE
- Reumon for
"
Thursday, Aug. 7
descendant s of Cha rles and
RACINE
The Alma Snyd et. potluck · at
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
.Sonshme Circle will meet at noon. table service ptoviu- HOEFLICH
@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM
lhe church , 7 p.m . Tak e ed. Star Mill Patk.
· items being collected by the
GALLIPOLIS
Fry
POMEROY - The 2008
group - Edie Hubbard. rcumon at 1687 Jackson rectpt cnt oJ .. thc Dave Dile s
,Blondena Rainer, and Edna Pike. Gallipu!ts. Eat at I Scholars hi p is Morgan R.
Knopp will be hostesses.
Werry ot Chester wl10 gr.td.. POMEROY - Hemlock p.m.
POMEROY - The 84th wttecl thts ye ar I rom Eastern
.·Grunge, 7:30 p.m . at the Ha yes, Young, and Holiday H tgh ScllOOI.
·,hall. Members are to take School Reuni on, at the 01&lt;.1
Th e scholarshtp fun&lt;.l was
old · canning p rs and Ho!tday School Grounds on establi shed by Dave Dil es.
-devices.
Gilkey Ridge Road Pot luck auth or of e i ~h t hooks and
. TUPPERS PLAINS lunch , I p.m.
fotmer broadcaster for
,.VFW Post 9053 Auxiliat y, 7
RACINE - The Lmley ABC Spotts , more th :m a
p.m. at post home.
and Sarah Virginia Hart quarter centut y ago Dtle,.
~
Friday, Aug. 8
family reuni on, at the who no w re Side' in th e
. ROCKSPRINGS'. - Big Ametican
Legion hall in Athens area. b d nati ve of
~Bend Farm Antiques Club. Ra ci ne. Dinner. I p. m
eport.
graduated
Morgan Werry
•7:30 p .m.. Thompson - Take covered di sh and table Mtd&lt;.ll
from
Mtd&lt;.lleport
Hi
gh
Building
on serv1ce.
: Roush
School. attelllk&lt;.l Ohi o to work on foca l ne wspa:Rocksprings Fairgrounds.
Untvcrstt y.
He
th en pers before movmg on and
,
Tuesday, Aug. 12 .
ret urned to Metgs Count y into sporh broadcastin g.
POMEROY
- Metgs
. County
Chamber
of
Friday, Aug. 8
·commerce. busine"- mindSYRACUS E - Meigs
ed
lun cheo n,
noon,
Family
anu
·Pomeroy Libtary. speakers County
'."Tim anu Edie Kin g from Children First Council wtll
:Kmg Ace Hatdware di scuss host a Community Fun Day
.havmg an established bust- from noon unttl 4 p.m. at
BY KATHY MITCHELL
li ke conftontation. but I
. :ness in Meig s County. the London Pool Free food,
AND
MARCY
SuGAR
need tn get out. Can yo u
. Riversi de Golf Course. music , free sw imming and
hel p me'' - Had Enough
: Mason. W.Va . caters. cnll gn mes.
Dear Annie: I hmc been in Indiana
Dear India na: If yo u
man ted tn ·' Max.. I or 22
y' are re:tdv to wa lk out.
trul
yea rs Th ere · ~&gt; et e some
happy ti mes 111 th e heg lll- yo u shou ld s 1.~:c-k ~oun se lin g
, Th,e
nin g after ou r child ren (now ,mel a goo&lt;I ..lltorncy.
counsel~,,.
wi
ll
help
yo u
20 and 24) were horn . hu t
ch·ide whnt 10 &lt;.In and fin d
not manv sin ce.
Ma x i ~ very &lt;.:ontrolling· th ~.: c ou rd!.!C l t l do 11. and th ~?
GALLIPOLIS - Hol ze r
1
1
and treat s hts lamtly as 1a_w~c.r wt··II tc 11
Home Health Services
- t /\1:' ,. 1~\~ t';.
ObJeCtS. Our dlilurct.r uo n't pll)lt::d ymu s~..:
:announces its Jttl y spotlight
f. : ~,L ).
lik e h1111 . He docsn I have you arc concerned that ~ax
- c:employee .of the month .
any tne nus. He c mbarra s~ ­ will do somethm g drasttc to
. Natali e Gardner, RN . of
e' ,1 nd hu miltates me . We you_or the children. call the
·Holzer Home Car~,
have poor commumcatJ on Natt~lll:ll_ DotT)eSttc/' nl en:~
• Born
in
Gallipolts ,
bt:t' i.lli ~C when I \,_, i.lllt to get
Hotlme at 1-800-7)9-SAFE
Gardner graduated from
m
y potnt ,tc rnss. he ye ll' al ( 1 -H00-7 9 9 - 7 ~3 3 1cGallia Academy
Hi gh
me tu shut up .
-.school in 19 ~2. and Rto
Dear An me: Rece t~ ~l y.
I Jell out ul lnve a lonu two women 111 our ottace
Grande
Communtty
T
ttme ago. but stu ck atnu n ~l h:&gt;d Jhctr fll'sl batl tc s. wo
:Co ll ~ge 's Holzer School of
because I felt sorry for him . co-workers dec tdcd to
'.Nursin g in 1984 with ,her
I thou ght of leavin g thts throw a jOit.rt baby shower
'·assoctate degree 111 Nurs1ng.
unh appy marriage w h ~n my to celc? ta tc the ~rcw
She began her employ, ment at Holzer Medtcal
childten we re younge r. bu t I arn v,tls. 1 he mormn g ot the
·center .in 1986 as a regiswas afratd Max wou ld do sl1owcr. an e-m&lt;til was se nt
tered
nu rse
on
the
horrible to them to all tile \1 o men rn the
something
Natalie Gardner
'Hospttal's Four West Unit
because Ir e rs vinuicti,e. I ol'l tce. Je lling us v,hat our
'After stx months. she trans- the Intensive Care Untl at always bel ieved he m,tde "f.tir share" of the costs
Memorial the chtldt'l'll mtserablc as a wns . We were all ex pected
' f errcd to the Four East Unit O ' Bienness
•-where she was a staff nurse Hospttal in Athens .
wa}· to get back at me .
to chtp in to P·'Y tor the
Gardner res tdes in Vinton
- for 12 years. In September
I regret how my marn agc cake. pu nch and decora-· 1997, she began work for wrth her husband of 23 has affec ted my ktd ,. It tnm s. even though this was
Hol zer Home Care. where years , Bryan , and two sons. see ms my life has been a never &lt;.l tst·ussed before
-she continues to nurse Alex , and Enc. She enjoys waste for the past 30 years
Thi' l1as causcu some ten•today. Gardner is also a cer- being a 4-H leader, camp- and I wil l never kn ow true ' ron in the . oil tee. The
ing, and spendmg ttme wnh happiness. How do I find cllllnllllt IS not a bt~ deal, but
ll fted CPR instructor.
Prior to her employment her famtly.
the courage to lea'e thi s we ,tre upset about cthc pnnciWhen asked what she man who has never loveLl ple of scnd mg a btl I to people
·at HM C. Gardner was
'employed at Holl ywood likes best about workin g at .me? I uscu to pray he. u·find who 1\ Crerr't in vo lved 111 the
. Medtca I
Center
rn Holzer Home Car·e. Gardner a girlfnend, but apparently . plannmg . Most or us already
Hollywood. Fla. whete she· said , "I like being able to I'm the only moron wtllmg -.pent money on girts.
was an oncology nurse-. spend one-on-one time with to put up wnh him . I don 't
Is thi s proper eti quelle?
' 'Before her employment in my pat tents and my cowork·-'florida, she was n nu rse on ers are great to work wit h."
SPR ING VAl I FY

Diles Scholarship awarded to Eastern graduab~.

Youth events

I'

This vear more than ~0
Benu at:ea students applt ed
sch olarshtp '
for
the
Selection was made by the
Diles Scholarship comm ittee composed of Cath y
Crow. Chris Wolfe. ,md l,c·~
Powell. It can be useu to
atte nu any college fm any
cmecr chmce.
Wcrrv was one of thr
valedtct(mans
of her
Eastern graduat rng class
having rece tvt ng all As
durin g her fo ur yea rs of
htgh school. She wtll be
arten&lt;Jma
Olito
State
Unt vers ity thts fall where
she will begtn work on a
bachelor 's degree m bto logy or another area dcalmg
with the human body. Her

;:o"l " to become a doc tor
At Eastern she \1 as :
m ~ mb er ot the Nattonal
Honor Soctcty. a Un ite, •
St,Hes
Ac ht evemen ~
Ac.!tlcmy Nar tonal Awa11 ·
"inn et . .tn d a Reg ton.&gt;'
Schola t She played volle) ball : b,rskctball and track ,
pe tto rmed 111 plays . an_,,
-.ei ved on numerous com
mtttees. She " active at tlh
Cheskr United Method is! .
Ch urch. h.t ~ bee n 111 4-1!
sevetal y~ar s .. and partrc t·
p.tted 111 a va11e ty . of com mull tty sctv tce project s.
In letters or Ieference hct
tcuchers descn be her as. a11
cxcc pttonal student. co:11tc
nus. and res pectful. wtth "
stt ong v,ork ethtc.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Be prepared when taking drastic step_

:. Holzer announces July
spotlight employee

:
1

I1

UlOilOUH I li''.l

Birth announced

WWW SPRINGVALLEYCINEMA.COM
'
Box Otfiee Op~~ns @
6.30 PM FOR EVENING SHOWS Ill

: POMEROY - Lee ann and Co~ne liu s Rendell of
·Kingsb ury Road , Pomeroy. announce the brrth of a s'?n,
Brayto n Jermaine. Jul y 29 , at O' Bieness Memonal
Huspital, Athens.

To see more newsphotos
from our photographers go to
www.mydailysentinel.com
You can order reprints and
pnoto gifts of your fav.orite
photos there too.

7

446 4r)24 lli'4JACK'ill'lr1Kl
WED 8/6108 - THURS 8f7108

12:30 PM FOR
WED THRU SUN MATINEES
TUES. IS BARGAIN NIGHT
PINEAPPLE EXPRESS tR•

_
• FREE 2411 Ttchnical $uppor1
o !natant MP.,_,Agrng . kMIP your bu~ hst 1
• 10 e ma1l addresiM WJ!t1 Wetrna1'

• Custc.m Start Page news Wi!rtther &amp; more'

('f;;;:6X~~'!.!!!!D
Sign Up Onl ine! www loci!iiNet.com
Call Today &amp; SBIIe'

740·992 ·6260
R1 lo:.hlr&gt; lnll'rrwt /1.1 I

j•&lt;, •

SIN{' 1994

J: \0,3;.t~7~ 1Jll9 . 10

SISTERHOOC OF THE TRAVELING
PANTS 2 [PG!Jl
_____l :00. 3.:JS, 7_;_0Q_&amp;._9 :J 5______:______.
THE MUMMY: TOMB OF THE
ORA.GON EMPERIOR (PG13)
1,OQ, J;j 0, J

cOil.L9ciJI.._

STEP BROTHERS (A)
1:20, :!JJ!, 7.20 &amp; 9.,20 - -

THE DARK KNIGHT (PGt31
.J 2;5S, 3.40, 6.55 &amp; 9.40
$ PACE CHIMPS IG) 1·20 &amp; .J.;~Il
MA.MMA. MIA (PG1l)

t,ao. uo. z:all.Ls:ao_
HAJiCOCK iPG.m..L30..&amp;.9:30
NOW SHOWING MATINEES WED
THRU SUN

Since when did we ha ve to
pay ndmrsston to celebrate
the birth of a child '.' Perplexed
Dear Perplexed: Tl1e coworkers whq planned . the
shower should have asked If

youwishedtoparttctpateand
mtim11cd you ol the costs
hcfnrehand. Apparently. they
assum ed you wouiJ sec 1t a~
an "offtce shower" wtth
sh,rred ex penses. Stnce you
ha'.-e to continue workmg

with the~c . people. we suggest yo u pay the btll tf you
cnn alford it. and know bcttct
lnr next time.
Oear Annie: 1 rc.td the
Jetter from " Exas perated
Hu sband," who was married
to a hoardcr.
My nerghbor recently hau
the sn mc problem. Her husband had accumulated so
much stuff tha t. alter 25
vea rs ot marrwge, th ree ktds
:md many pleas to clean II up.
she was ready 10 \\·al k out.
Living with the mess was
ruinin g her health Jl e ne1er
took her seriously unttl she
deli vered the ulti mat um.
With the hel p of frienus
nnd neighbors , her husband
managed to clean up ht s
mess. We haul ed otf tons nf
junk . Luckil y. he ts not an

obscsStvc-contpllbll e pet
son. JUst clueless Wtth Ill '
eyes opened. l1e ts .
change u ntun w ho ptcks ur
after ht~nse l l. p~t' thlllf! '
away .md ha' lJL~tl dccumu .
lattn g thtng'-: Spou-.e" . n l
hoaruer'
J'(, , ·,JU ' '
· cant cal wa
1"D
'e wtt 1rCtt. :-f. a. r
r ar b a 1r orma:
"' ~ c
1
t 1~ 1HI~ ant1 '"·1-. .111 u 1c 1
nm y packt.&gt;t dill 1 not a c 1"s
sic obse ,s iH'-l'lli11J1llhll '
homclt:r. thi-. ''d" . t 1111 1.
~oluttun. ror othe' "· un lul
tumttch . t isn't so , impk
Ch,llr ging ca n tequire !hera
py ar1u ~omdimes mcd tca
tton . whtc h the ho.11dc· 1
ortcn tefusc' We l11lJ1C )OU '
friend apprectatc' h&lt;l\\ '"'
tu 11 ,.1te ~ he j.., _
Annie\ Mailbox is writ
ten by h"ai!J v Milclre/1 and
Marcy Suga-r, longtim e edi
tors 1~{ the .4un Lc111den
column. Please e- mail your
questions /o auuiewwil
· box@.-omcasl.nc/, or wnk
/o: A11nie'.1 Mailbox, P.O
Box /18190 , C/ri('{lgO, II
60611. To find out //WIT
about Amtie's Mailbox.
and read feature.~ by oll1er
Creator&gt; .Syndicate wrilen
and cartoonist., , vi.1·i1 t/1&lt;
Crea/on· Syndicate Wei•
page a/ www.creaton .com.

01Sra

1

Attention Low to Moderate
Income Households
The Meigs County Grants Office
will be taking applications for the
Downpayment Assistance/Rehab
Program
on

August 18 thru 22, 2008
from 9 am to 3 pm
If you have questions please call the

office at 992· 7908
From 9 am to 4 pm
Mon-Fri.

·

And ask for Jean Trussell or Eloida Stegall

�OPINION

.: The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Se1.1tinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
,. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
• free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
.. · of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
•· people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances ..
- The First Amendmimtto the U.S. Constitution
•

-

PageALt

'

' TODAY IN HISTORY

, T9day is Wednesday, Aug. 6, the 219th day of 2008.
: There are 147 days left in the year.
. Today's l:lighlight in Hi story:
• On Aug. 6. 1945. during World War II, the United States
. dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima. Japan, resulting in
an estimated 140,000 deaths in the first use of a nuclear
weapon in warfare.
On this date:
In 1806, the Hol y Roman Empire went out of existc· nce
as Emperor Francis 11 abdicated.
In 1890, convicted murderer William Kemmler became
-, the first person 10 be executed in the electric chair as he was
, put to death at Auburn State Prison in New Yqrk.
In 1926. Gertrude Ederle of New York became the tirst
· woman to swim the English Channel, arriving in
Kingsdown, England, from France in 14 1/2 hours.
In 1926. Warner Brothers premiered its Vitaphone sound' on-disc movie system in New York with a showing of "Don
~ Juan"· featuring music and sound effects.
In 1962. Jamaica became an independent dominion within the Briti sh Commonwealth.
In 1965 , President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the .Voting
Right s Act.
In 1978, Pope Paul VI died at Castel Gandolfo at age 80.
In 1997, Korean Air Flight 80 I crashed into a hillside a
. short distance from Guam hiternational Airport, killing 228
· of the 254 aboard the Boeing 747.
Ten years ago: Former White House intern Monica
:Lewinsky spent 8 1/2 hours testifying before a grand jury
about her relationship with President Clinton. The House
•-Government Reform and Oversight Committee voted to
. cite Attorney General Janet Reno for contempt of Congress
! for her refusal to turn over reports recommending that she
. seek an independent counsel to investigate campaign fund , raising . .
Five years ago: Actor Arnold Schwarzenegger used an
" appearance on NBC' s "The Tonight Show with Jay Lena"
to announce his successful bid to replace California Gov.
Gray Davis. The same day, Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante said
he was entering the recall race as welL Israel freed 334
·Palestinian prisoner.s in a bid to jump-start peace effortsbut the gesture fell flat among Palestinians. Record-break' ing heat, already blamed for three dozen deaths, continued
,. to torment Europe.
.• Today 's Birthdays: Adress-singer Abbey Lincoln is 78.
. .Jazz musician Charlie Haden is 71. Actor-director Peter
Bonerz is 70. Rock singer Pat MacDonald (Timbuk 3) is
, ~6. Movie writer-director M. Night Shyamalan is 38.
Actress Merrin Dungey is 37. Singer Geri Halliwell is 36.
,Singer-actor David Campbell is 35. Actress Vera Farmiga is
,)5. Actress Ever Carradine is 34. Actress Solei! Moon Frye
is 32 . Rock singer Travis McCoy (Gym Class Heroes) is
, '27. Rock musician Eric Roberts (Gym Class Heroes) is 24.
. Thought for Today: "An education isn't how much you
: have committed to memory, or even how much you know.
• It's being able [o differentiate between what you do know
..and what you don't." - Anatole France, French author
. ( 1844-1924).

Wednesday, August 6,

Birth control:·The new pollutant
You 've already heard
about the pregnant man. But
what about the she-man
fish? ''Intersex" freshwater
fish are all the rage. But
unlike the pregnant man,
these scaly androgynes dido 'task to take on the sexual
characteristics of both genders: humans are doing i.t to
them. (W here 's the freedom
to choose?!) And the reason
these fish are doubling up
could make hash of orthodoxies dating back to .the
sexual revolution.
Estr.ogen pollution from
contraceptive ~nd abortion
pills could be the culprit
behind
these
piscine
switcheroos. And thus the
two holiest of holies for the
left may be on a collision
course. It promises to be
quite the show.
Starting a few years ago,
in the Potomac River, malelargemouth bass started
popping up with eggs in
their sex organs. The.deformity usually makes reproduction impossible, ultimately hurting the fish population . Many scientists
believe the problem could
stem from hormones and
other pollutants flushed into
our· nation 's waterways
from
sewage-treatment'
plants.
In his book "The Really
Inconvenient Tnllhs: Seven
Environmental
Catastrophes Liberals Don't
Want You to Know About
- Because They Helped
Cause . Them" (Regnery,
2008), lain Murray writes:
''Why don't we have more
outcries about hormones.
and campaigns to save · the
·fish populations? Why
aren't environmentalists
lobbying on Capitol Hill to
keep these chemicals from
being dumped into our
rivers?" He answers his

Kathryn ·

Lopez

own question : " Maybe
because the source of these
chemicals is not some corporate polluter, but something a lillie more dear to
the Left: human birth-cone
trol pills , morning-after
pills, and abortion pills."
The contraceptive pill has
fundamentally
changed
American !if~. making sex
more casual. morals loose r,
husbands and wives more
distant. Its messed with
women's fertility. In short,
it has been a game-changer.
in some fundamental and
not-so-good· ways. And
because its introduction
came 40 years ago, at a time
when American culture was
enamored with Woodstock.
feminism and free love, prescient warnings and cautions - most notably from
Pope Paul VI in his encyclical "Humanae Vitae" itt the
summer of 1968 - · went
unheeded.
But we may soon have
reason to regret our embrace
of the little white pilL For
the first time, mainstream
culture and the left may be
forced to take a look at the
side effects of oral contraceptives. Never mind the
women, of course. !\levet'
mind the men and children
affected in various emotional and other ways. The fish!
Have mercy on the fi sh!
The turnaround won't
come, however, without
some whiplash. Ironically,
the environmental groups

T~EV
SAY THE WEST
CoiJLD ACTVAl.LY
DECIDE 'THIS

have long been on the same
page as the abortion-industry toot soldiers, embracing
anything that assuages fears
of overpopulation (no longer'
a worry. as Western countries, particularly in Europe.
face plummeting birth
rates). "The protection of
the quality of' our ettvironment is impossible in the
face of the present rate of
popt!lation growth.'' and
therefore. ''Laws. policies.
and attitudes that foster population growth or big families, or that restrict abortion
and contraception ... should
be abandoned; [and] comprehensive and reali stic
birth control programs
shoulJ be available to every
member of our society."
That 's not from Planned
Parenthood ; it's a Sierra
Club resolution from 1970.
Thi s is from Planned
Parenthood: "Prominent
women in the global .environmental movement
believe there are · strong
links between· the health of
the env.ironmenr, the ability
of women to engage and
lead their communities. and
their ability to exercise their
· reproductive
inherent
rights. Women have a stake
in a clean environment
because they are often the
main providers of food and
water, and their reproductive health can be adversely
affected by environmental
degradation."
But, Murray writes, " By
any standard typically used
b~ environmentalists, the
ptll is a pollutant. It does the
same thing, just worse, as
other chemicals they call'
pollutants ."
So what does .that mean
for us and the fish? Nothing
straight away, Murray tells
me. There 's more than pollution at stake here for the left,

2008 -

...

so, expect "outright denial :11
there being a problem.
obfuscation of ·the scienn·
when strong arguments ai.:
pre sented, attempts
(o
deflect attention onto much
rarer and less harmful ind u&gt;trial estrogen , and · . ad
hominem accusations, in tllis
case an allegation of rel,igious zealotryfbeing in the·
pay of the ·very well-funded
pro-life indu stry' I imagilk·.
The effort wi 11 be based &lt;in
making it unacceptable t&lt;•
bring up the· issue in polite
conversation. such that any one who does so will end up
stigmatized
(astonishin ~
how often the left resorts I&lt;'
shame. rather. than thinkinc
about guilt). Some radic,;l
Greens may actually be hon est enough to admit there'isa
problem . They will be marginalized by the environ men tal-i ndustrial-e ntertai ~ ­
ment complex (to paraphrase
. Fox Mulder)."
·
With the science out
there, Murray argues solv·
ing the probl em wouldn't l)c
out of the realm of possibU ity if we could all be adult
about it. "The EPA and FIXA
(ought) to have·_the courage
to do what their counterparts in the U.K. had the
. courage to do and label the
pill as the pollutant it is ."
Choice needs to be based
on information; it should
always be the result @f .
thoughtful
deliberation .
When you interfere with ·a
natural process , ther~ are
consequences, not all of
them good and you
should be mindful of them .
If's not just fish that end up
getting hurt.
( Kathl)'n Lopez is the edi . tor of National Revie11·
Online ( www.lu/liOlWI re view.com). She cart be conracred cir klope ~@ national ­
review.com. J

WoW!

fLECTION~

Wednesday, August 6,

Obituaries

OBA/vtA ·AND A&lt;;;K
HIM VHIY fiE: HATES

vs.

cow~oY~!

Local Briefs

Band concert set
. MIDDLEPORT ~ The Big Bend Community band will
· present a concert at 7 p.m. Friday in the American Legion ·
Park on the lot adjacent to the Middleport Post office, Mill
.Street. Those attending are asked to take lawn chairs. In the
. event of rain , the concert will be given at the Riverbend
"Arts Council headquarters.

Chicken benefit
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Volunteer Fire
Department will be having a chicken barbecue dinner be~in­
ning at 11 a.m. on Saturday to benefit firefighter Bill Fmk,
Whose home was damaged in the July fire on Coal Street.

Fun Day
SYRACUSE - Meigs County Family and Children First
Council will host a Community Fun Day from noon until 4
p.m. at the London Pool.
.Free food, music, free swimming and games are planned.
Agencies will -set up informational booths , and a bounce
house and water slide are planned .
All events are. free of charge.

Kindergarten orientation
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Elementary School will
hold kindergarten orientation at 6:30 and 7:45 p.m. on
Thursday. Families should have received letters informing
each family of orientation time.
.
Questions may be directed to the school office at 985-3304.

COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio dominates a magazine's
list of what it calls America's
fastest-dying cities.
• Forbes magazine named
'four Ohio cities on its list of
places that have weak pOJ?U·
_lation growth and sputtenng
local economies. Canton,
Cleveland, Dayton and
Youngstown are among the

WII..LPJT
NUCL-EAR PoW£R
PlMTS IN NA1laJAI.

.

fu~E.$TS!

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

-

Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stories is to

'l

in a story, call the newsroom at {740)

992·2156.

Membtr: The Associated Press and

••
••
••

Our main number Is
(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are:

•·•

!

l•

I
I

•I
I

I

lions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

By carrllr or molor route

News
EdRor: Charlene Hoeflich. E&lt;t. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, E)(t. 14
Reporter: 1;3eth Sergent. Ext. 13

I
I
I.

the Ohio Ne·wspaper Association.
Pot~tmallter: Send address correc-

Subscription Rates

•

••

0.
Published every aftEtmoon, Monday

th ro ugh Friday, 11 1· Court Street.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class
postage paid at Pomeroy.

be accurate. II you know of an error

•'·

(USPS 21.3-960)
Ohio Vallet Publishing

Ono month
One year
Dally

·'10.27
1

115.84

50'

Senior Citizen rates
One month
'10.27
One year
'103.90

&amp;bscribers shouk'i rem~ in advance
Outside Sates: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 direct to the Dajy Senhnel. No subscription by mail permined in areas
Outeldl Sllea: Brenda Davis, Ext 16
where home carrier service is availCtuaJCirc.: Judy ClarX, EKt. 1o
able.

Advertising

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, EKI. 12

E·maU :
news @mydaitysentinel .com
Web:
www.mydailysentinet .com

... ···-'

Mali Subacrlptlon
tnalde Melgo County
13 Weeks
'32.26
26 Weeks
'6~ . 20
52 Weeks
' t27.tt
Outolde Meigs County
13 Weeks
'53.55
26 Weeks
'107.10
52 Weeks
'2t4.21

-

10 listed.
The cities wete listed
alphabetically, not ranked.
The list shows that the
country's old manufacturing
backbone is in rougher
shape than ever and still
looking for something to
replace its smokestacks,
according to an article ih
Forbes' new issue. ·

lnternetfrom Page AI

LETTERS ,TO THE
EDITOR

•

Question: I'm · pregnant
with my first child, but I'm
not sure if I should breastfeed or use a bottle when my
son is born. Yes. we alreadv
know .the sex. My parenis
are amazed, but that's a different story! Couldyou tell
me the advantages and disadvantages of each feeding
method? Thanks.,

Anthony R "Tony" Scott ,
45, of Gallipolis, passed
away Sunday, Aug. 3, 2008 ,
· at his residence.
He was born April 15 ,
1963 , in Gallipolis, son of
Charles "Freddie" Scott of
Gallipolis, and Edwina Bell
of Middlepmt.
·Tony was raised and
Answer: Yes, I'll be glad
attended school in Meigs
to answer your tirriely quesCounty. He was a graduate
tion . It's timely because we
of Hocking Tech. He was a
are
now in the midst of
computer supervisor for
World Breastfeeding Week
AOL in Dublin for 15 years.
(WBW),
which runs from
· In addition to his parents,
Aug
.
1-7
.
The theme this
he is survived by his step'
year
is
"Mother
Support:
mother, Dinah Scott of Anthony R. 'Tony' Scott
Going for the Gold."
Gallipolis; a brother, Keith
Since the Olympics start
A. (Ruffina) Scott of Pensacola, Fla .; a nephew, Sean Scott;
right
after the end of World ·
a ~ieee, Shania Sco.tt ; and grandparents, Fred Scott of
Breastfeeding
Week, the
Mtddleport , Pearl Scott of Middleport, and Louise
organizers have adopted
Roberson of Pomeroy.
· He is also survived by several aunts, uncles and cousin~. this Olympic-themed slo· Services will be II a.m. Friday. Aug. 8, "008, in Paint gan. And, it's very appropriCreek Baptist Church in Gallipolis, with the Ro:v. Harry Scott ate because mothers need .
officiating. Burial will follow in the Pine Street Cemetery. the same level of support as
Friends may call at the Waugh- Halley-Wood Funeral Home Olympic athletes to reach
their just as important goaL
in Gallipolis from 5 to 8 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 7, 2008.
Before I tell vou a little
An online guest registry is available at www.waugh-halmore about the WBW theme.
ley-woOd.com.
let me give you the short
answer to your question:
There are many advantages
to breastfeeding both for
y_our baby and for you. For a

.. - - - - - - - - - . , - - - -- - -

•· Letter&gt;· to the edirr;r are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All lerters are subject to editing, musr be
-· signed, and include address and telephone number. No
: unsigned letters will he published. Letters should be in
. good tasre, addressing issues, nor personalities. Letter.&gt;of
: rhank.s to orgam ~ations and individuals will nor be accept~ ed for publication.
-

Breastfeeding good for the health of baby and mother

4 OhiO. cities on list of fastest-dying
JoHt-J MCCAIN

Getting away with shopping
I received a call from my
.credit card company the
other day telling me there
was some "unusual activity" on my account. Hmmm,
12 65-inch plasma TVs, 18
iPhones, 22 Xbox games,
900 gallons of diesel fuel,
several gold chains, $6,000
worth of NFL memorabilia
and a box of blueberry
bagels. Whoa! Blueberry
bagels'! Maybe that was the
" unusual activity" they
were talking about. That
must have been the tipoff.
. Anyone who knows me
knows I only eat plain
.
bagels .
Or was it the fact that all
!Iris stuff was bought .in a
city a thousand miles from
my home in a single ISminute period? All in the
same store? Even with a list
it would take me longer
than that. I've spent longer
than · is minutes buying cat
food ... and these guys are
getting plasma TVs? Have
you ever tried to put 900
gallons of diesel in a cart?
· Knowing me, I'd get it all in
one cart and then find out
one of the wheels was
square and have to put .it all
in another.
Could it be that in the 15
years I've had thai card I' ve
never charged more than a

-- -----· -·- ... - --,--- --- ··-.

Jim
Mullen

few hundred dollars on it
that tipped them off?
"Has your card been lost
or stolen?" they asked.
· "No, here it is, right in my
wallet, where it's sat unused
for the last two years.''
"Don't use it," they said,
"Until we send you a new
card.'' Fine, I wasn't using it
anyway, a couple days without it. wen 't hurt. It seems,
. however, they forgot to tell
the criminals not to use it.
Today they bought seven
laptops, 52 copies of
"Grand Theft Auto," a set of
tires for a car f do not own,
and several $20 purchas~s
from .the same gas station
seconds apart.
No, my identity hasn't
been stolen , this is simple.
old-fashioned, hi gh-tech
thievery. Besides, no one
wants my identity. I could
put it out with the trash and
no one would take it. They
\\•ant .someone with mare

•

money and more credit. The
good news is that 1 don 't
have to pay a dime for all
the stuff they bought , the
credit card company will
pass the loss along to their
cardholders by raising their
interest rates. So, maybe I
will have to pay a dime, but
so will you , so it all evens
out, right'?
What really sticks in my
craw (and don ' t ask me
what a craw is) is that crim:
inals have such an easy time
charging things when half
the time I can't buy things
with my own credit card
without some little hassle.
From "The machine can't
read your card, the tape
m\lst be .dirty," to "Type in
your zip ·code," to "Type in
your pin number," to
"Sorry, the computer must
be down today." Why isn't
the computer ever down
when the criminals want to
use it? Why is it that if I
tried to buy just one $6,000
. plasma TV with my own
cr,edit card, that 1 don 't
think they'd give it to me
without at least getting my
signature on the receipt .
Of course, my signature
on the receipt may as well
be a paw print. No one
cares. No one even looks at
it. For a few weeks I signed

everything with a big "X"
like 1 was a pirate signing
up to sail with Bluebeard.
Not one waiter, not one
waitress. not one store clerk
even looked at the receiJlt.
No one called me on it.
1 was in line at a drug
store a few days ago and the
cashier stopped the guy In
front of me and said, "You
didn' l sign .this card." 1-je
took it back, signed it and
handed it back to her and
she completed the sale. No
doubt, that broke every rul e
of credit card protocol and
somebody at Credit Card
Central will have a conniption fit reading about It.
"You should have confiscated that card, anybody could
have signed it! You should
be fired."
. Meanwhile, I cannot tell
you. how bored Credit Card
Central seemed to be about
the 12. missing plasma l:Vs
as if to say, "Oh, that! Don't
worry about it. it happens
all the time."
1' m ·afraid it does.
(Jim Mullen is the author
'!!'"It Takes a Vil/al!,e Idiot:
Complicating the Si1hp!t'
·Ufe" and "Baby's Firsr
Tattoo." You ca11 reach him
a
t
jim_mu//e/1 @myll'ay.com) .

Dye said. "lntelliwave uses
an innovative approach that
allows us to not only reach
many customers in rural terrain, but to do it effectively
over large coverage areas."
"At the same time, the
company minimizes the
visual obtrusiveness of their
equipment by incorporating
.it into existing structures,
.keeping the Southeast Ohio
landscape free from blinking lights."
' Since local school disiricts are placing some
homework online, families
. need to upgrade from dialup sreeds to broadband . .
Loca colleges are using
broadband as an avenue to
stay in contact with students
and for distance learning .
· Ohio
University's
· Blackboard system allows
'professors to place lectures
and other coUrse related
material online. These lee-

tures are often larger files
that require more bandwidth
than traditional dial-up will
allow.
"Broadband is a necessity
for students today," Dye
said. :'Modern Internet sites
are not designed for dial-up

connections."
This rural broadband proJeCt IS gettmg attention at
the state level as a "proofof-concept" for the Connect
Ohio Initiative.
"When I started working
on this project, what I wanted to do was to help close the
gap between the haves and
the have-nots and broadband
is that gap .closer."
"Its potential for economic impetus surpasses even
that of the Industrial
Revolution."
•

'

•

'

I

Information about the
new service is available at
www.intelliwave .com, or by
callirrg 592-0322.

KenOrromPageAI
Gloeckner said he, as a
business owner, hopes the
. new Ohio Lottery Keno
game will help keep some of
the area's gaming dollars in
the local community instead
of going across the Ohio
.River into West Vtrgmta.
Governor Ted Strickland

~'

The Daily Sentinel • Page As .

FAMILY MEDICINE .

Anthony R. 1'ony' Scott

CALL BARACK

L.VCKV

www.mydailysentinel.com

2008

pushed for the new Keno
as a way of addresstog a projected $733 million
state deficit next year. In
Michigan, where Keno was
introduced in 2003 , the
game has generated almost
a half-billion dollars a year
for the state.
~arne

. . COming 'lhursdly in the Sentinl!l.. ,

- ~. i~G. &amp;'~,,~,"

healthy mother, there are virtually no disadvantages .
Now. how do you, the new
mother-to-be. ''go for the
gold" and reach your goal of
raising a child who is healthy
bbth mentally and physically. In order for an athlete to
win a gold medal , he or she
needs to have a support network that includes family,
friends, community and professional trainers.
The same is true for the
mother who wants to "go for
the gold" and give her baby
the immense advantage that
breastfeeding offers.
A recent meta analysis, the
Cochrane Review, evaluated
34 trials from 14 different
c9uritries ard concluded all
forms of support both professional and lay when combined together significantly
extended the duration of
breastfeeding. This support
had an even greater impact
on .the length of time that a
mother would exclusively
breastfeed her child.
For a long time research
has been showing us the
many advantages of breastfeeding . These include a
decrease in· infant mortality,
fewer respiratory infections,

a better chance of normal
development. less diarrhea
and fewer childhood cancers.
As the breastfed child
develops. he or she will also
tend to exhibit higher IQ
scores. be less likely to be
obese. and have a reduced
risk of diabetes .
We've had evidence for
some time that being breastfed boosts a· baby's immune .
system . Now there's interes\ing research that's beginning to sh01v that these benefits carry over into adulthood. For instance. one
study has found that human
breast milk contains stems
cells. The resear~hers from
the University of Western
Australia have theorized that
breast milk may take over
from the placenta at birth
and that the "key markers" it ·
contains may -guide genetic
development into adulthood.
If you decide to breast feed
your little boy, you'll also
obtain many health benefits
yourself. These include a
reduced risk of breast and
ovarian cancer. and a lesser
likelihood of developing
Type II diabetes. And. you'll
regain your shape more
quickly as · breastfeeding

stimulates contractions that
help the uterus return to its
normal size.

Breastfeeding is also just
downright easier - no
messing with clean.ing and
preparing formulas and bottles. And', it's less expensive.
It seems to me that your
choice is clear. Unless
uhusual medical circumstances dictate otherwise,
you shou ld breastfeed your
son. Welcome to the joys of
motherhood!
Family_ Medicine® is a
weekly column. To submil
questions, write to Martha
A. Simpson, D.O., M.BA.,
Ohio •University College of
Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
Box 110, Athens, Ohio
45 70 I, or via e-mail to
readerque~·tions@family­

medicinenews.org. Medical
informatimr in this column
is provided as an educational service only. It does
not replace the judgment of
your personal physician,
who should be relied on to
diag11ose a11d recommend
treatme11/ for a11y medical
conditions . . Pa~·t columns
are available online at
w w w.familymedicinerrews.org.

Official: Fonner AG aide faces tax-related charges
WARREN (AP) ..::_ A top Warren Municipal Court
aide to former Ohio Attorney later ihis month. The allegaGeneral Marc Dann faces tions stem from work MTV
charges of not filing a tax Construction performed in
return and failing to withhold the city in 2006, Warren tax
tax charges at his northeast administrator Tom Gaffney
Ohio construction coml?any, said.
MTV Construction had
a Warren city official said.
Anthony Gutierrez, 50, is two permits for' work in
expected to appear in Warren from October 2006

through October 2007, city
records showed . It's unclear
how much Gutierrez owes,
Gaffney sa id .
Gutierrez was the central
tigure in a pair ·of sexual
harassment complaints by two
female employees of Dann 's
office that ultimately resulted
in Dann 's resignation in May.

He served as Dann 's general services chief and was
fired in May a tier an internal
investigation concluded he
violatecf the office's sexual
harassment policy. The investigation also uncovered aile-·
gations that Gutierrez ran his
construction business out of
the attorney general's office.

Flooding from Page AI
R&amp;R Pipeline were working yesterday morning but Max
outside the store's backdoor said Columbia Gas correct•recently after making the ed the problem , reimbursed
gas line reconnect. Workers his wife for losses and prowere unable to get any vided a person to help
asphalt to finish the job so cleanup inside the store.
they instead tried to make
"We've got no complaints
some kind of barriers to with Columbia Gas or R&amp;R
divert any water that might Pipeline with the way they've
run off into the store and handled it," Max said.
used cold patch mix.
Six weeks ago the .&gt;)orage
Unfortunately, the water still room flooded for the fi'rst
managed to get into the store time , the second flood came

on Friday and each time
Max said his wife has been
reimbursed for losses by
Columbia Gas. Yesterday
the water and mud made it
into the storage room and
sections of the store .
Mayor John Musser said
he was not aware of any
other businesses affected by
Tuesday's combination of
rains and the construction
work associated with the

gas
line . replacement .
Musser said so far the gas
company has been responsive to problems created by
the replacement project.
Heavy rains were also
reported to affect the office
of Cathv Crow ' on Second
Street
well as Swisher &amp;
Loh se
Pharmacy , but
cleanup was well under way
yesterday morning with
business going on as usual. ·

as

AMP from Page AI
· There were in fact, at least
two people from Meigs
County who spoke against the
plant and were Mary Beth
Lohse of Pomeroy .and Elisa
Young of Racine. Lohse questioned AMP needing such a
large landfill if they were
using Powerspan technology
which is meant to cut down
on landfill reductions. She
also questioned why the use
of Powerspan was not in
AMP's air permit . Young
spoke about no human health
studies being in the permits
and spoke about the threat of
global warming, specifically
hew it might destabilize the
Ohio ' River and affect localized flooding. Young and
l.Qhse were the only two local
opponents who spoke against ·
the plant before the deadline
for this article , a deadline
which carne before the meeting officially ended.
Natalie Fox,Athens, identified herself as being from the
Sierra Student Coalition and
said she was concerned aboui
carbon emissions. When Fox
made a statement refenring to
the other coal plants in Meigs
County, several in the crowd
responded with the fact that
there are no coal plants currently in Meigs County but in
surrounding counties. This
·exchange seemed to underline the tension between residents of Meigs County
who support the plant and
those who neither live in or

support the idea of another
coal-fired power plant going
online.
·
Nachy Kanfer, Columbus,
identified himself as being
from the Sierra Club and said
he understood the strong sentiments residents might have
about those outside the county taking an interest in opposing the plant but he asked the
audience to consider if the
bankers
financing
the
plant, consultants working on
the plant or a "single board
member" from AMP-Ohio
was from Meigs County.
·Kanfer abo spoke about
an inter-office email between
two OEPA staff members
on
. the
working
permits which was obtained
by the Sierra Club through a
public records request. In the
email, Kanfer said OEPA
stafter Mike Yandrich gave a
dissenting
viewpoint
about issuing the draft penni!
on wastewater and had a
problem finishin~ itljustifymg it in "good fruth." ·
Questioned ootside while
the meeting
continued,
Jolene Thompson of AMPOhio, said she had· not seen
the email but added the
OEPA no douot has hundreds of employees , all with
differing opinions but the
agency .ultimately did issue
the wastewater draft permit.
· Back inside the meeting
Tom Barnette who said he
was·born in Los Angeles but

attended church in the
Amesville area tossed out
EPA numbers· contained in
the agency's toxio waste
inventory for a comparison
between · counties
in
California and those in
Southeast Ohio . Two of severa! he used were lAs
Angeles County which he
said had 7.5 million pounds
of toxic waste inyentory
while Gallia County had 10
million pounds of toxic
waste inventory. There "!as
no data en Meigs County.
"Shame on Ohio!" He
said of the figures.
"If you don't like it, get
oui," someone called from'
the crowd.
Several ·members of local
trade unions once again
spoke in favor of the plant
with many members wishing
to work near their homes.
Carpenters Local 650 member Greg .Sheets, Pomeroy,
posed the question , if "we" ·
cant' build newer, cleaner
power plants and have to
rely on the older ones, "is
this what the environmentalists want?" Sheets went on
to say: "Let the -lawsuits end
and construction begin ."
Again questioned outside

the meeting , Thompson said
the notion that AMP-Ohio is
not committed to using the
Powerspan technology to
teduce landfil l and ultimately lower plant emissions
was "untrue ."
'' If
we
don't
do
Powerpson, we've got to ~o
back through the entire stting process ," Thompson
said. adding even though
the use of Powerspan ·isn't
in the plant's air permit, it is
a condition of the company·s certificate of public
need and environmental
compatibility issued by the
Ohio Power Siting Board.
"Why did no one mention the condition of the use
of Powerspan in the OPSB
report?" Thompson added.
As for the landfill's size
bei11g
questioned
if
Powerspan is used, Kent
Carson of AMP-Ohio said
the landfill permit would
allow the company to develop that permit in sections
called "cells" over time and
that landfill would be developed "as needed.' '
As for the overall project,
Thompson sa id: . "We'll
have a better idea if this is a
go or no go by faiL"

~an's Best Friend

Mid-Valley Christian School
In Middleport, OH
l«lw enroling for fie 2008 •2009 tltOO year.
b mpli~ stmls in Pr&amp;-Sdlool through tte 1Dtl grade.
Glades 11th &amp;12th will be aOJed tte2009-2010 thOO • .
limited.
C./I for a tour or an Information packet

Clas-"'

992-8249
Mid-Valley
has been educatin!iJ the mind &amp;
strengthening the sptrit of students
.

SINCE 1985.

• The smallest
lk&gt;\"' bf ~ •! \tot

~mort

f

.

thi!"g can ma~e :re ~~~gest orfierence.

.

\ n, ~ ..,~~~~ llllli\J!Titnl hl~&gt;~=-to~ i11.UXoUr5 Nl:rl"ld 'lrur ur joa ~ ~ , ®•
IIV!Irtl!1llt d•_,.ir. ntlitU :1 Sll a:!IT'II:JJt~l IC Wit~ )'(l ~'j ~ '(':l~/fl ...... l'fWMQ ~ .1\r;G ~ ~:g0.!«f"

~r!olmrcl ()IWQ" C'W . ~'!IP ~N~ ~ 0\9, fiOO

Call today for your free heating consultation.

594-6333 or
1-800-451-9806

' ------

�OPINION

.: The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Se1.1tinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
,. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
• free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
.. · of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
•· people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances ..
- The First Amendmimtto the U.S. Constitution
•

-

PageALt

'

' TODAY IN HISTORY

, T9day is Wednesday, Aug. 6, the 219th day of 2008.
: There are 147 days left in the year.
. Today's l:lighlight in Hi story:
• On Aug. 6. 1945. during World War II, the United States
. dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima. Japan, resulting in
an estimated 140,000 deaths in the first use of a nuclear
weapon in warfare.
On this date:
In 1806, the Hol y Roman Empire went out of existc· nce
as Emperor Francis 11 abdicated.
In 1890, convicted murderer William Kemmler became
-, the first person 10 be executed in the electric chair as he was
, put to death at Auburn State Prison in New Yqrk.
In 1926. Gertrude Ederle of New York became the tirst
· woman to swim the English Channel, arriving in
Kingsdown, England, from France in 14 1/2 hours.
In 1926. Warner Brothers premiered its Vitaphone sound' on-disc movie system in New York with a showing of "Don
~ Juan"· featuring music and sound effects.
In 1962. Jamaica became an independent dominion within the Briti sh Commonwealth.
In 1965 , President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the .Voting
Right s Act.
In 1978, Pope Paul VI died at Castel Gandolfo at age 80.
In 1997, Korean Air Flight 80 I crashed into a hillside a
. short distance from Guam hiternational Airport, killing 228
· of the 254 aboard the Boeing 747.
Ten years ago: Former White House intern Monica
:Lewinsky spent 8 1/2 hours testifying before a grand jury
about her relationship with President Clinton. The House
•-Government Reform and Oversight Committee voted to
. cite Attorney General Janet Reno for contempt of Congress
! for her refusal to turn over reports recommending that she
. seek an independent counsel to investigate campaign fund , raising . .
Five years ago: Actor Arnold Schwarzenegger used an
" appearance on NBC' s "The Tonight Show with Jay Lena"
to announce his successful bid to replace California Gov.
Gray Davis. The same day, Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante said
he was entering the recall race as welL Israel freed 334
·Palestinian prisoner.s in a bid to jump-start peace effortsbut the gesture fell flat among Palestinians. Record-break' ing heat, already blamed for three dozen deaths, continued
,. to torment Europe.
.• Today 's Birthdays: Adress-singer Abbey Lincoln is 78.
. .Jazz musician Charlie Haden is 71. Actor-director Peter
Bonerz is 70. Rock singer Pat MacDonald (Timbuk 3) is
, ~6. Movie writer-director M. Night Shyamalan is 38.
Actress Merrin Dungey is 37. Singer Geri Halliwell is 36.
,Singer-actor David Campbell is 35. Actress Vera Farmiga is
,)5. Actress Ever Carradine is 34. Actress Solei! Moon Frye
is 32 . Rock singer Travis McCoy (Gym Class Heroes) is
, '27. Rock musician Eric Roberts (Gym Class Heroes) is 24.
. Thought for Today: "An education isn't how much you
: have committed to memory, or even how much you know.
• It's being able [o differentiate between what you do know
..and what you don't." - Anatole France, French author
. ( 1844-1924).

Wednesday, August 6,

Birth control:·The new pollutant
You 've already heard
about the pregnant man. But
what about the she-man
fish? ''Intersex" freshwater
fish are all the rage. But
unlike the pregnant man,
these scaly androgynes dido 'task to take on the sexual
characteristics of both genders: humans are doing i.t to
them. (W here 's the freedom
to choose?!) And the reason
these fish are doubling up
could make hash of orthodoxies dating back to .the
sexual revolution.
Estr.ogen pollution from
contraceptive ~nd abortion
pills could be the culprit
behind
these
piscine
switcheroos. And thus the
two holiest of holies for the
left may be on a collision
course. It promises to be
quite the show.
Starting a few years ago,
in the Potomac River, malelargemouth bass started
popping up with eggs in
their sex organs. The.deformity usually makes reproduction impossible, ultimately hurting the fish population . Many scientists
believe the problem could
stem from hormones and
other pollutants flushed into
our· nation 's waterways
from
sewage-treatment'
plants.
In his book "The Really
Inconvenient Tnllhs: Seven
Environmental
Catastrophes Liberals Don't
Want You to Know About
- Because They Helped
Cause . Them" (Regnery,
2008), lain Murray writes:
''Why don't we have more
outcries about hormones.
and campaigns to save · the
·fish populations? Why
aren't environmentalists
lobbying on Capitol Hill to
keep these chemicals from
being dumped into our
rivers?" He answers his

Kathryn ·

Lopez

own question : " Maybe
because the source of these
chemicals is not some corporate polluter, but something a lillie more dear to
the Left: human birth-cone
trol pills , morning-after
pills, and abortion pills."
The contraceptive pill has
fundamentally
changed
American !if~. making sex
more casual. morals loose r,
husbands and wives more
distant. Its messed with
women's fertility. In short,
it has been a game-changer.
in some fundamental and
not-so-good· ways. And
because its introduction
came 40 years ago, at a time
when American culture was
enamored with Woodstock.
feminism and free love, prescient warnings and cautions - most notably from
Pope Paul VI in his encyclical "Humanae Vitae" itt the
summer of 1968 - · went
unheeded.
But we may soon have
reason to regret our embrace
of the little white pilL For
the first time, mainstream
culture and the left may be
forced to take a look at the
side effects of oral contraceptives. Never mind the
women, of course. !\levet'
mind the men and children
affected in various emotional and other ways. The fish!
Have mercy on the fi sh!
The turnaround won't
come, however, without
some whiplash. Ironically,
the environmental groups

T~EV
SAY THE WEST
CoiJLD ACTVAl.LY
DECIDE 'THIS

have long been on the same
page as the abortion-industry toot soldiers, embracing
anything that assuages fears
of overpopulation (no longer'
a worry. as Western countries, particularly in Europe.
face plummeting birth
rates). "The protection of
the quality of' our ettvironment is impossible in the
face of the present rate of
popt!lation growth.'' and
therefore. ''Laws. policies.
and attitudes that foster population growth or big families, or that restrict abortion
and contraception ... should
be abandoned; [and] comprehensive and reali stic
birth control programs
shoulJ be available to every
member of our society."
That 's not from Planned
Parenthood ; it's a Sierra
Club resolution from 1970.
Thi s is from Planned
Parenthood: "Prominent
women in the global .environmental movement
believe there are · strong
links between· the health of
the env.ironmenr, the ability
of women to engage and
lead their communities. and
their ability to exercise their
· reproductive
inherent
rights. Women have a stake
in a clean environment
because they are often the
main providers of food and
water, and their reproductive health can be adversely
affected by environmental
degradation."
But, Murray writes, " By
any standard typically used
b~ environmentalists, the
ptll is a pollutant. It does the
same thing, just worse, as
other chemicals they call'
pollutants ."
So what does .that mean
for us and the fish? Nothing
straight away, Murray tells
me. There 's more than pollution at stake here for the left,

2008 -

...

so, expect "outright denial :11
there being a problem.
obfuscation of ·the scienn·
when strong arguments ai.:
pre sented, attempts
(o
deflect attention onto much
rarer and less harmful ind u&gt;trial estrogen , and · . ad
hominem accusations, in tllis
case an allegation of rel,igious zealotryfbeing in the·
pay of the ·very well-funded
pro-life indu stry' I imagilk·.
The effort wi 11 be based &lt;in
making it unacceptable t&lt;•
bring up the· issue in polite
conversation. such that any one who does so will end up
stigmatized
(astonishin ~
how often the left resorts I&lt;'
shame. rather. than thinkinc
about guilt). Some radic,;l
Greens may actually be hon est enough to admit there'isa
problem . They will be marginalized by the environ men tal-i ndustrial-e ntertai ~ ­
ment complex (to paraphrase
. Fox Mulder)."
·
With the science out
there, Murray argues solv·
ing the probl em wouldn't l)c
out of the realm of possibU ity if we could all be adult
about it. "The EPA and FIXA
(ought) to have·_the courage
to do what their counterparts in the U.K. had the
. courage to do and label the
pill as the pollutant it is ."
Choice needs to be based
on information; it should
always be the result @f .
thoughtful
deliberation .
When you interfere with ·a
natural process , ther~ are
consequences, not all of
them good and you
should be mindful of them .
If's not just fish that end up
getting hurt.
( Kathl)'n Lopez is the edi . tor of National Revie11·
Online ( www.lu/liOlWI re view.com). She cart be conracred cir klope ~@ national ­
review.com. J

WoW!

fLECTION~

Wednesday, August 6,

Obituaries

OBA/vtA ·AND A&lt;;;K
HIM VHIY fiE: HATES

vs.

cow~oY~!

Local Briefs

Band concert set
. MIDDLEPORT ~ The Big Bend Community band will
· present a concert at 7 p.m. Friday in the American Legion ·
Park on the lot adjacent to the Middleport Post office, Mill
.Street. Those attending are asked to take lawn chairs. In the
. event of rain , the concert will be given at the Riverbend
"Arts Council headquarters.

Chicken benefit
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Volunteer Fire
Department will be having a chicken barbecue dinner be~in­
ning at 11 a.m. on Saturday to benefit firefighter Bill Fmk,
Whose home was damaged in the July fire on Coal Street.

Fun Day
SYRACUSE - Meigs County Family and Children First
Council will host a Community Fun Day from noon until 4
p.m. at the London Pool.
.Free food, music, free swimming and games are planned.
Agencies will -set up informational booths , and a bounce
house and water slide are planned .
All events are. free of charge.

Kindergarten orientation
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Elementary School will
hold kindergarten orientation at 6:30 and 7:45 p.m. on
Thursday. Families should have received letters informing
each family of orientation time.
.
Questions may be directed to the school office at 985-3304.

COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio dominates a magazine's
list of what it calls America's
fastest-dying cities.
• Forbes magazine named
'four Ohio cities on its list of
places that have weak pOJ?U·
_lation growth and sputtenng
local economies. Canton,
Cleveland, Dayton and
Youngstown are among the

WII..LPJT
NUCL-EAR PoW£R
PlMTS IN NA1laJAI.

.

fu~E.$TS!

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

-

Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stories is to

'l

in a story, call the newsroom at {740)

992·2156.

Membtr: The Associated Press and

••
••
••

Our main number Is
(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are:

•·•

!

l•

I
I

•I
I

I

lions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

By carrllr or molor route

News
EdRor: Charlene Hoeflich. E&lt;t. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, E)(t. 14
Reporter: 1;3eth Sergent. Ext. 13

I
I
I.

the Ohio Ne·wspaper Association.
Pot~tmallter: Send address correc-

Subscription Rates

•

••

0.
Published every aftEtmoon, Monday

th ro ugh Friday, 11 1· Court Street.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class
postage paid at Pomeroy.

be accurate. II you know of an error

•'·

(USPS 21.3-960)
Ohio Vallet Publishing

Ono month
One year
Dally

·'10.27
1

115.84

50'

Senior Citizen rates
One month
'10.27
One year
'103.90

&amp;bscribers shouk'i rem~ in advance
Outside Sates: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 direct to the Dajy Senhnel. No subscription by mail permined in areas
Outeldl Sllea: Brenda Davis, Ext 16
where home carrier service is availCtuaJCirc.: Judy ClarX, EKt. 1o
able.

Advertising

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, EKI. 12

E·maU :
news @mydaitysentinel .com
Web:
www.mydailysentinet .com

... ···-'

Mali Subacrlptlon
tnalde Melgo County
13 Weeks
'32.26
26 Weeks
'6~ . 20
52 Weeks
' t27.tt
Outolde Meigs County
13 Weeks
'53.55
26 Weeks
'107.10
52 Weeks
'2t4.21

-

10 listed.
The cities wete listed
alphabetically, not ranked.
The list shows that the
country's old manufacturing
backbone is in rougher
shape than ever and still
looking for something to
replace its smokestacks,
according to an article ih
Forbes' new issue. ·

lnternetfrom Page AI

LETTERS ,TO THE
EDITOR

•

Question: I'm · pregnant
with my first child, but I'm
not sure if I should breastfeed or use a bottle when my
son is born. Yes. we alreadv
know .the sex. My parenis
are amazed, but that's a different story! Couldyou tell
me the advantages and disadvantages of each feeding
method? Thanks.,

Anthony R "Tony" Scott ,
45, of Gallipolis, passed
away Sunday, Aug. 3, 2008 ,
· at his residence.
He was born April 15 ,
1963 , in Gallipolis, son of
Charles "Freddie" Scott of
Gallipolis, and Edwina Bell
of Middlepmt.
·Tony was raised and
Answer: Yes, I'll be glad
attended school in Meigs
to answer your tirriely quesCounty. He was a graduate
tion . It's timely because we
of Hocking Tech. He was a
are
now in the midst of
computer supervisor for
World Breastfeeding Week
AOL in Dublin for 15 years.
(WBW),
which runs from
· In addition to his parents,
Aug
.
1-7
.
The theme this
he is survived by his step'
year
is
"Mother
Support:
mother, Dinah Scott of Anthony R. 'Tony' Scott
Going for the Gold."
Gallipolis; a brother, Keith
Since the Olympics start
A. (Ruffina) Scott of Pensacola, Fla .; a nephew, Sean Scott;
right
after the end of World ·
a ~ieee, Shania Sco.tt ; and grandparents, Fred Scott of
Breastfeeding
Week, the
Mtddleport , Pearl Scott of Middleport, and Louise
organizers have adopted
Roberson of Pomeroy.
· He is also survived by several aunts, uncles and cousin~. this Olympic-themed slo· Services will be II a.m. Friday. Aug. 8, "008, in Paint gan. And, it's very appropriCreek Baptist Church in Gallipolis, with the Ro:v. Harry Scott ate because mothers need .
officiating. Burial will follow in the Pine Street Cemetery. the same level of support as
Friends may call at the Waugh- Halley-Wood Funeral Home Olympic athletes to reach
their just as important goaL
in Gallipolis from 5 to 8 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 7, 2008.
Before I tell vou a little
An online guest registry is available at www.waugh-halmore about the WBW theme.
ley-woOd.com.
let me give you the short
answer to your question:
There are many advantages
to breastfeeding both for
y_our baby and for you. For a

.. - - - - - - - - - . , - - - -- - -

•· Letter&gt;· to the edirr;r are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All lerters are subject to editing, musr be
-· signed, and include address and telephone number. No
: unsigned letters will he published. Letters should be in
. good tasre, addressing issues, nor personalities. Letter.&gt;of
: rhank.s to orgam ~ations and individuals will nor be accept~ ed for publication.
-

Breastfeeding good for the health of baby and mother

4 OhiO. cities on list of fastest-dying
JoHt-J MCCAIN

Getting away with shopping
I received a call from my
.credit card company the
other day telling me there
was some "unusual activity" on my account. Hmmm,
12 65-inch plasma TVs, 18
iPhones, 22 Xbox games,
900 gallons of diesel fuel,
several gold chains, $6,000
worth of NFL memorabilia
and a box of blueberry
bagels. Whoa! Blueberry
bagels'! Maybe that was the
" unusual activity" they
were talking about. That
must have been the tipoff.
. Anyone who knows me
knows I only eat plain
.
bagels .
Or was it the fact that all
!Iris stuff was bought .in a
city a thousand miles from
my home in a single ISminute period? All in the
same store? Even with a list
it would take me longer
than that. I've spent longer
than · is minutes buying cat
food ... and these guys are
getting plasma TVs? Have
you ever tried to put 900
gallons of diesel in a cart?
· Knowing me, I'd get it all in
one cart and then find out
one of the wheels was
square and have to put .it all
in another.
Could it be that in the 15
years I've had thai card I' ve
never charged more than a

-- -----· -·- ... - --,--- --- ··-.

Jim
Mullen

few hundred dollars on it
that tipped them off?
"Has your card been lost
or stolen?" they asked.
· "No, here it is, right in my
wallet, where it's sat unused
for the last two years.''
"Don't use it," they said,
"Until we send you a new
card.'' Fine, I wasn't using it
anyway, a couple days without it. wen 't hurt. It seems,
. however, they forgot to tell
the criminals not to use it.
Today they bought seven
laptops, 52 copies of
"Grand Theft Auto," a set of
tires for a car f do not own,
and several $20 purchas~s
from .the same gas station
seconds apart.
No, my identity hasn't
been stolen , this is simple.
old-fashioned, hi gh-tech
thievery. Besides, no one
wants my identity. I could
put it out with the trash and
no one would take it. They
\\•ant .someone with mare

•

money and more credit. The
good news is that 1 don 't
have to pay a dime for all
the stuff they bought , the
credit card company will
pass the loss along to their
cardholders by raising their
interest rates. So, maybe I
will have to pay a dime, but
so will you , so it all evens
out, right'?
What really sticks in my
craw (and don ' t ask me
what a craw is) is that crim:
inals have such an easy time
charging things when half
the time I can't buy things
with my own credit card
without some little hassle.
From "The machine can't
read your card, the tape
m\lst be .dirty," to "Type in
your zip ·code," to "Type in
your pin number," to
"Sorry, the computer must
be down today." Why isn't
the computer ever down
when the criminals want to
use it? Why is it that if I
tried to buy just one $6,000
. plasma TV with my own
cr,edit card, that 1 don 't
think they'd give it to me
without at least getting my
signature on the receipt .
Of course, my signature
on the receipt may as well
be a paw print. No one
cares. No one even looks at
it. For a few weeks I signed

everything with a big "X"
like 1 was a pirate signing
up to sail with Bluebeard.
Not one waiter, not one
waitress. not one store clerk
even looked at the receiJlt.
No one called me on it.
1 was in line at a drug
store a few days ago and the
cashier stopped the guy In
front of me and said, "You
didn' l sign .this card." 1-je
took it back, signed it and
handed it back to her and
she completed the sale. No
doubt, that broke every rul e
of credit card protocol and
somebody at Credit Card
Central will have a conniption fit reading about It.
"You should have confiscated that card, anybody could
have signed it! You should
be fired."
. Meanwhile, I cannot tell
you. how bored Credit Card
Central seemed to be about
the 12. missing plasma l:Vs
as if to say, "Oh, that! Don't
worry about it. it happens
all the time."
1' m ·afraid it does.
(Jim Mullen is the author
'!!'"It Takes a Vil/al!,e Idiot:
Complicating the Si1hp!t'
·Ufe" and "Baby's Firsr
Tattoo." You ca11 reach him
a
t
jim_mu//e/1 @myll'ay.com) .

Dye said. "lntelliwave uses
an innovative approach that
allows us to not only reach
many customers in rural terrain, but to do it effectively
over large coverage areas."
"At the same time, the
company minimizes the
visual obtrusiveness of their
equipment by incorporating
.it into existing structures,
.keeping the Southeast Ohio
landscape free from blinking lights."
' Since local school disiricts are placing some
homework online, families
. need to upgrade from dialup sreeds to broadband . .
Loca colleges are using
broadband as an avenue to
stay in contact with students
and for distance learning .
· Ohio
University's
· Blackboard system allows
'professors to place lectures
and other coUrse related
material online. These lee-

tures are often larger files
that require more bandwidth
than traditional dial-up will
allow.
"Broadband is a necessity
for students today," Dye
said. :'Modern Internet sites
are not designed for dial-up

connections."
This rural broadband proJeCt IS gettmg attention at
the state level as a "proofof-concept" for the Connect
Ohio Initiative.
"When I started working
on this project, what I wanted to do was to help close the
gap between the haves and
the have-nots and broadband
is that gap .closer."
"Its potential for economic impetus surpasses even
that of the Industrial
Revolution."
•

'

•

'

I

Information about the
new service is available at
www.intelliwave .com, or by
callirrg 592-0322.

KenOrromPageAI
Gloeckner said he, as a
business owner, hopes the
. new Ohio Lottery Keno
game will help keep some of
the area's gaming dollars in
the local community instead
of going across the Ohio
.River into West Vtrgmta.
Governor Ted Strickland

~'

The Daily Sentinel • Page As .

FAMILY MEDICINE .

Anthony R. 1'ony' Scott

CALL BARACK

L.VCKV

www.mydailysentinel.com

2008

pushed for the new Keno
as a way of addresstog a projected $733 million
state deficit next year. In
Michigan, where Keno was
introduced in 2003 , the
game has generated almost
a half-billion dollars a year
for the state.
~arne

. . COming 'lhursdly in the Sentinl!l.. ,

- ~. i~G. &amp;'~,,~,"

healthy mother, there are virtually no disadvantages .
Now. how do you, the new
mother-to-be. ''go for the
gold" and reach your goal of
raising a child who is healthy
bbth mentally and physically. In order for an athlete to
win a gold medal , he or she
needs to have a support network that includes family,
friends, community and professional trainers.
The same is true for the
mother who wants to "go for
the gold" and give her baby
the immense advantage that
breastfeeding offers.
A recent meta analysis, the
Cochrane Review, evaluated
34 trials from 14 different
c9uritries ard concluded all
forms of support both professional and lay when combined together significantly
extended the duration of
breastfeeding. This support
had an even greater impact
on .the length of time that a
mother would exclusively
breastfeed her child.
For a long time research
has been showing us the
many advantages of breastfeeding . These include a
decrease in· infant mortality,
fewer respiratory infections,

a better chance of normal
development. less diarrhea
and fewer childhood cancers.
As the breastfed child
develops. he or she will also
tend to exhibit higher IQ
scores. be less likely to be
obese. and have a reduced
risk of diabetes .
We've had evidence for
some time that being breastfed boosts a· baby's immune .
system . Now there's interes\ing research that's beginning to sh01v that these benefits carry over into adulthood. For instance. one
study has found that human
breast milk contains stems
cells. The resear~hers from
the University of Western
Australia have theorized that
breast milk may take over
from the placenta at birth
and that the "key markers" it ·
contains may -guide genetic
development into adulthood.
If you decide to breast feed
your little boy, you'll also
obtain many health benefits
yourself. These include a
reduced risk of breast and
ovarian cancer. and a lesser
likelihood of developing
Type II diabetes. And. you'll
regain your shape more
quickly as · breastfeeding

stimulates contractions that
help the uterus return to its
normal size.

Breastfeeding is also just
downright easier - no
messing with clean.ing and
preparing formulas and bottles. And', it's less expensive.
It seems to me that your
choice is clear. Unless
uhusual medical circumstances dictate otherwise,
you shou ld breastfeed your
son. Welcome to the joys of
motherhood!
Family_ Medicine® is a
weekly column. To submil
questions, write to Martha
A. Simpson, D.O., M.BA.,
Ohio •University College of
Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
Box 110, Athens, Ohio
45 70 I, or via e-mail to
readerque~·tions@family­

medicinenews.org. Medical
informatimr in this column
is provided as an educational service only. It does
not replace the judgment of
your personal physician,
who should be relied on to
diag11ose a11d recommend
treatme11/ for a11y medical
conditions . . Pa~·t columns
are available online at
w w w.familymedicinerrews.org.

Official: Fonner AG aide faces tax-related charges
WARREN (AP) ..::_ A top Warren Municipal Court
aide to former Ohio Attorney later ihis month. The allegaGeneral Marc Dann faces tions stem from work MTV
charges of not filing a tax Construction performed in
return and failing to withhold the city in 2006, Warren tax
tax charges at his northeast administrator Tom Gaffney
Ohio construction coml?any, said.
MTV Construction had
a Warren city official said.
Anthony Gutierrez, 50, is two permits for' work in
expected to appear in Warren from October 2006

through October 2007, city
records showed . It's unclear
how much Gutierrez owes,
Gaffney sa id .
Gutierrez was the central
tigure in a pair ·of sexual
harassment complaints by two
female employees of Dann 's
office that ultimately resulted
in Dann 's resignation in May.

He served as Dann 's general services chief and was
fired in May a tier an internal
investigation concluded he
violatecf the office's sexual
harassment policy. The investigation also uncovered aile-·
gations that Gutierrez ran his
construction business out of
the attorney general's office.

Flooding from Page AI
R&amp;R Pipeline were working yesterday morning but Max
outside the store's backdoor said Columbia Gas correct•recently after making the ed the problem , reimbursed
gas line reconnect. Workers his wife for losses and prowere unable to get any vided a person to help
asphalt to finish the job so cleanup inside the store.
they instead tried to make
"We've got no complaints
some kind of barriers to with Columbia Gas or R&amp;R
divert any water that might Pipeline with the way they've
run off into the store and handled it," Max said.
used cold patch mix.
Six weeks ago the .&gt;)orage
Unfortunately, the water still room flooded for the fi'rst
managed to get into the store time , the second flood came

on Friday and each time
Max said his wife has been
reimbursed for losses by
Columbia Gas. Yesterday
the water and mud made it
into the storage room and
sections of the store .
Mayor John Musser said
he was not aware of any
other businesses affected by
Tuesday's combination of
rains and the construction
work associated with the

gas
line . replacement .
Musser said so far the gas
company has been responsive to problems created by
the replacement project.
Heavy rains were also
reported to affect the office
of Cathv Crow ' on Second
Street
well as Swisher &amp;
Loh se
Pharmacy , but
cleanup was well under way
yesterday morning with
business going on as usual. ·

as

AMP from Page AI
· There were in fact, at least
two people from Meigs
County who spoke against the
plant and were Mary Beth
Lohse of Pomeroy .and Elisa
Young of Racine. Lohse questioned AMP needing such a
large landfill if they were
using Powerspan technology
which is meant to cut down
on landfill reductions. She
also questioned why the use
of Powerspan was not in
AMP's air permit . Young
spoke about no human health
studies being in the permits
and spoke about the threat of
global warming, specifically
hew it might destabilize the
Ohio ' River and affect localized flooding. Young and
l.Qhse were the only two local
opponents who spoke against ·
the plant before the deadline
for this article , a deadline
which carne before the meeting officially ended.
Natalie Fox,Athens, identified herself as being from the
Sierra Student Coalition and
said she was concerned aboui
carbon emissions. When Fox
made a statement refenring to
the other coal plants in Meigs
County, several in the crowd
responded with the fact that
there are no coal plants currently in Meigs County but in
surrounding counties. This
·exchange seemed to underline the tension between residents of Meigs County
who support the plant and
those who neither live in or

support the idea of another
coal-fired power plant going
online.
·
Nachy Kanfer, Columbus,
identified himself as being
from the Sierra Club and said
he understood the strong sentiments residents might have
about those outside the county taking an interest in opposing the plant but he asked the
audience to consider if the
bankers
financing
the
plant, consultants working on
the plant or a "single board
member" from AMP-Ohio
was from Meigs County.
·Kanfer abo spoke about
an inter-office email between
two OEPA staff members
on
. the
working
permits which was obtained
by the Sierra Club through a
public records request. In the
email, Kanfer said OEPA
stafter Mike Yandrich gave a
dissenting
viewpoint
about issuing the draft penni!
on wastewater and had a
problem finishin~ itljustifymg it in "good fruth." ·
Questioned ootside while
the meeting
continued,
Jolene Thompson of AMPOhio, said she had· not seen
the email but added the
OEPA no douot has hundreds of employees , all with
differing opinions but the
agency .ultimately did issue
the wastewater draft permit.
· Back inside the meeting
Tom Barnette who said he
was·born in Los Angeles but

attended church in the
Amesville area tossed out
EPA numbers· contained in
the agency's toxio waste
inventory for a comparison
between · counties
in
California and those in
Southeast Ohio . Two of severa! he used were lAs
Angeles County which he
said had 7.5 million pounds
of toxic waste inyentory
while Gallia County had 10
million pounds of toxic
waste inventory. There "!as
no data en Meigs County.
"Shame on Ohio!" He
said of the figures.
"If you don't like it, get
oui," someone called from'
the crowd.
Several ·members of local
trade unions once again
spoke in favor of the plant
with many members wishing
to work near their homes.
Carpenters Local 650 member Greg .Sheets, Pomeroy,
posed the question , if "we" ·
cant' build newer, cleaner
power plants and have to
rely on the older ones, "is
this what the environmentalists want?" Sheets went on
to say: "Let the -lawsuits end
and construction begin ."
Again questioned outside

the meeting , Thompson said
the notion that AMP-Ohio is
not committed to using the
Powerspan technology to
teduce landfil l and ultimately lower plant emissions
was "untrue ."
'' If
we
don't
do
Powerpson, we've got to ~o
back through the entire stting process ," Thompson
said. adding even though
the use of Powerspan ·isn't
in the plant's air permit, it is
a condition of the company·s certificate of public
need and environmental
compatibility issued by the
Ohio Power Siting Board.
"Why did no one mention the condition of the use
of Powerspan in the OPSB
report?" Thompson added.
As for the landfill's size
bei11g
questioned
if
Powerspan is used, Kent
Carson of AMP-Ohio said
the landfill permit would
allow the company to develop that permit in sections
called "cells" over time and
that landfill would be developed "as needed.' '
As for the overall project,
Thompson sa id: . "We'll
have a better idea if this is a
go or no go by faiL"

~an's Best Friend

Mid-Valley Christian School
In Middleport, OH
l«lw enroling for fie 2008 •2009 tltOO year.
b mpli~ stmls in Pr&amp;-Sdlool through tte 1Dtl grade.
Glades 11th &amp;12th will be aOJed tte2009-2010 thOO • .
limited.
C./I for a tour or an Information packet

Clas-"'

992-8249
Mid-Valley
has been educatin!iJ the mind &amp;
strengthening the sptrit of students
.

SINCE 1985.

• The smallest
lk&gt;\"' bf ~ •! \tot

~mort

f

.

thi!"g can ma~e :re ~~~gest orfierence.

.

\ n, ~ ..,~~~~ llllli\J!Titnl hl~&gt;~=-to~ i11.UXoUr5 Nl:rl"ld 'lrur ur joa ~ ~ , ®•
IIV!Irtl!1llt d•_,.ir. ntlitU :1 Sll a:!IT'II:JJt~l IC Wit~ )'(l ~'j ~ '(':l~/fl ...... l'fWMQ ~ .1\r;G ~ ~:g0.!«f"

~r!olmrcl ()IWQ" C'W . ~'!IP ~N~ ~ 0\9, fiOO

Call today for your free heating consultation.

594-6333 or
1-800-451-9806

' ------

�•

LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel ' ·

Today's Forecast
Toledo•
86&lt;) 165°

Youngstown•
83' I 61 '

Mansfield•

f

83° 163°
~''"7

*Columbus

83' 165'

~

83° I 67°

Cincinnati
• 85° 168°

~
Portsmouth• ~
~
85°168°

V/ ·'A

The 4 Fun 4-H Club met
on June 29 at Forked Run
Park with seven members
and three advisors attending. Ideas for a float and
judging times were discussed.
The next meeting will be
spent working on a float and
the fair booth.
Heidi · Willis , News
Reporter

Salem Center
Go-Getters

and posters were discussed .
Reports were given by
Matthew Frank on growing
a cat; Amanda Wolfe on art
projects; David Frank on
the proper use of a hammer.
The Frank fami!f· served
'refreshments.
·
Another meeting was held
on July 27 with five members, two guests and one
advisor present. Business
discussed was judging
results. plans for the fair
booth and review of key
dates for the fair.
Matthew Frank gave a
safety report on "Keeping
Your House Cat Safe."
Lindsa~ Wolfe gave a health
report m healthy eating.
The Frank family served
refreshments . The next
meeting will be a fall weiner roast with date to be
determined.

The Salem Center GoGetters 'met on July 7 with
23 members and eight
guests present. Pledges
were led by Brayden Kopec
and roll call was taken by
Weather Underground • AP
Dawn Kopec .
Final plans were made for
the fair booth. The advisor
made sure everyone was
ready for judging. The
·. Wednesday... Partly sunny 50s. West winds around 5 members broke off into
with a slight chance of show- mph.
groups and did demonstraThe meeting was called
ers andthunderstorms. Highs
Friday ...Partly
sunny. tions· for the parents.
to
order by President
in the mid 80s. Northwest Highs in the lower 80s.
Cloverbuds worked on a
Heaven
Wes tfall. The
winds .around 5 mph. Chance
Friday night through wind chime.
of·rain 20 percent. .
Sunday
night ... Partly
Recreation was playing pledge was -led by Tyler
Avis and the 4-H pledge by
Wednesday night ... Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper ping pong and tennis .
cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s . 50s. Highs around 80.
Megham Lambert, News Kaitlyn Hawk . Roll call
was taken with 22 memWest winds around 5 mph in
Monday ...Mostly sunny Reporter
bers, 5 advisors, and 13 visihe
evening ... Becoming with a chance of showers
itors attending. The secre· and thunderstorms. Highs in
light and variable.
tary's report was rad and
Thursday ...Mostly sunny the lower 80s. Chance of
approved. The treasurer's
with a slight chance of rain 30 percent.
The All Star 4- H Gang report was taken with
Monday night ...Mostly
showets and thunderstorms.
Highs in the lower 80s. cloudy with a chance ,of met on July 13 at the Frank $1845.02 in the treasury.
Under old . business judgNorthwest winds 5 to I0 showers and thunderstorms. residence with four members.
'three
guests
and
one
ing
dates and requirements
mph . Chance of rain 20 per- Lows in the lower ,60s.
advisor present. Judging were discussed. Members
cent. .
Chance of rain 30 percent.
1\tesday ...Partly ~unny. hints and reviewing books · were reminded of poultry
Thursday night .. .Mostly
cloudy. Lows in the upper Highs in the lower 80s.

Lakeside
Leader's
4-H Club

Local Weather

All Star Gang

Local Stocks

VVednesday,August6,2oo8

The American pledge was
led by Nicole Moodispaugh
and the 4-H pledge by .
Baylee Collins . Roll call
was taken with 26 members,
7 advisors. and 14 visitors
atlc,nding. The secretary's
report was read and
approved. The ·treasurer's
report was taken with
$ 1703.95 in the treasury.
Under old business Cindy
commented oli a job · well
done by all our members. Tshirts were passed out.
Booth-sefup was discussed .
Members worked on the
float and fair booth decoral ions prior to the meeting.
The members really liked
Zoombezi Bay Water Park.
All livestock members were
told they are to donate two
dozen cookies to the hospitality tent on Saturday
morning prior to the livestock sale .
Under new business thank
you notes to pas) buyers and
this year's buyers were discussed. Members and adults
were encouraged to form
teams for the mud volleyball tournament. Baylee
Collins. gave a health report
on "The 5 Top Ways to Stay ·
Healthy · During
the
Summer."
Refre shments
were
served by Jayne Collins and
Mike Moore. The next
meeting was set for October
5th at Forked Run State
Park, Campsite .#7 at 4 p.m.
with the Jones , Johnson,
and Powell families to serve
•••
The August 3 meeting · refreshments.
Becca
Chadwell,
was called to order by Vice
President Brooke Johnson. Secretarv

. and rabbil tag in at the fairgrounds. They were encouraged to participate in the
demonstration
contest.
Cloverbud show and tell
was discussed. T-shirts were
distributed. Plans for the
fair booth · and tlbat for the
parade were made. The trip
to Zoombezi Bay Waterpark
was finalized. Mock judging was completed.
Under . new business the
club prospective buyer letter was discussed and Cindy
will mail those out. Cindy
reminded member~ of their
past buyer 's plaque a·nd
- thank you for this year 's
buyer, Members and adults
were encouraged to organize a team for the Mud
Volleyball.
A health report was given
by Bayl ~e Collins and a
safety report by Abby
Collins.
Refreshments
were
served by Linda Ayres.
Robyn Hawk. and Laura
. Ross. The next meeting will
be our Mock Judging
August 3, 2008 at the
Powell residence where we
will finish tloat and fair
booth plans. Refreshments
will be served by Jayne
Collins, Sherri Hendrix , and
Mary Anne Moore .
Tyler Davis made a
motion to adjourn ·and it
was seconded by Mark
Gibbs . The was adjourned.
Becca
Chadwell.
Secretary

Republicans want Cuyahoga internal investigation
Bv M.R. KROPKO

promised to cooperate the
federal investigation, an
AEP {NYSE) - 39.99
. 72.94
internal probe is also needAkzo {NASDAQ) - 55.32
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
CLEVELAND - The ed to safeguard taxpayers'
Ashland Inc. {NYSE) - 40.52 {NASDAQ) - 22.1 0
Republican chai,rman in · interests in public contracts
Big Lots {NYSE)- 34.18
BBT {NYSE) - 30.94
Cuyahoga County on and projects .
.
Bob Evans {NASDAQ) Peoples {NASDAQ) - 19.66 Tuesday urged the county
A meeting of the county's
29.26
Pepsico {NYSE) - 68.52
to conduct an internal three
commissioners
ilc:irgWarner {NYSE) - 42.35 Premier {NASDAQ) - 9)4
inves~igation
to
determine
...
Thursday
may
)nvolve .a
Century Aluminum (NASRockwell (NYSE) - 45.75
whether
any
officials
aie
.
constructiOI\
ptoj~ct
for a
DAQ). - 49.67
Rocky Boots {NASDAQ) ·to
1m
proper
connew
justice
celifer'for
juvelinked
5.24
.
.
Champion (NASDAQ) - 4.46
duct.
"
...
·niles.
...
"'
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) Royal Dutch Shell - se.sot · •
Sears Holding {NASDAQ) The .request from Rob
Jones, a Democrat, was ·
-5.75
Frost came after federal
City Holding (NASDAQ) 91.56
agents last week raided the
45.94
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 60.34
Wendy's {NYSE) - 24.20
Collins (NYSE) ·- 51.17
offices and homes of
DuPont (NYSE) - 43.93
WesBanco (NYSE) - 24.41
Commissioner .
Jimmy
US Bank (NYSE) - 31.93
Worthington (NYSE) - 17.19 Dimora and his friend and
Gannett (NYSE)- 18.12
Dally stock reports are the 4 political
ally,
county
p.m. ET closing quotes of
General Electric {NYSE) Auditor Frank Russo, as
transactions lor Aug. 5,
29.25
part of a corruption probe.
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 2008, provided by Edward
Both
are ·Democrats who
39.92
Jones financial advisors
have
denied
wrongdoing.
dP Morgan (NYSE) - 41.89
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
Rob Frost said that
Kroger (NYSE) - 28.96
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Limited Brands {NYSE) Marrero ·In Point Pleasant at although Cuyahoga County
Commission
President
{304) 674-0174. Member
16.80
Peter Lawson Jones has
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) SIPC.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

away from his office
Tuesday and did not
respond to a message seeking his comm.ent.
"An internal revie.w is
needed immediately to
determine whether employees or vendors may need to
be suspended from s~r­
vice," Frost said in a prepared statement.
Last
week's
search
involved records related to

fundrai sing. travel and deal~
with contractors, according
to an inventory of· seized
items.
No one has been charged.
in the investigation. Dimora:
and Russo have returned to
their jobs.
·
Dimora is also the
Democratic chairman in the
county, where Republicans
have struggled to land any
elected position.

Rio Grande Meigs Center
.

',

Dr. John P~ M.D.
Cardiothoracic Surgeon

·.

Hotzer Cardiovascular Institute is pleased
•welcome Dr. John Perry to the region. A
highly-trained and experienced cardiothora&amp; "'
surgeon, Dr. Perry prides himself on his
personalized care. Dedicating himself and hi\
team to delivering the highest quality of care
possible is foremost as a goal. After ~!:!",!Rfeting
fellowships at Cleveland Clinic and S~~~~!,
'
University of New York, Dr. Perry prallticed
in the Canton, Ohio region befQre comillf
•r
to Gallipolis. In his short time h'.
already successfully completed ·n
open heart, valve replacement and thoradc
procedures. Patients, families and referring
physicians have been extremely satisfied with
their care.
~

Live Entertainmenr
~Live Radio Remotes
t Games
+Tours of the New Cenler

+Technology Demonstrations

+Free Food and Beverages
~

Meet 1vith Rio Grande Staff
~ Learn More About Available Programs &amp; Cla~ses

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Favre Cuture uncertain, Page B6
Rays rip Indians, Page B6

Meigs County 4~H Club news

· City/Region
High 1 Low tamps

4 J.'un 4-H Club

Dayton• !,
r· " )

PageA6

For more lnfonnatlon contllct:
Brent Patterson
(74~/

992-1880or

Rebecca Long
(800) 282·7201, ext 7236

Email: brentp@rio.edu or
rlong@rio.edu

Ul I ,I., II R \0\\: I \!'I "I \lh II R &lt; I. '"'-I" Ill I ,I\ \l &lt; ; t "I 2 ~

HOLZER

CARDIOVASCULAR
INS'I'I'I'u'I'E

· GoOnline: www.HolwHeart.com

VVednesda~August6,2008

Countdown
to Kickoff

DAYS

Olympic flame sets off on final relay .Skylin.e Speedway
BEIJING. (AP) - torch garnes.lt will be ctmied by a
bearers earned the Olym~1C d1vers~ ~roup. mcludmg
flameonthefinalrelayoflls .Chma s f1rS1 aslronaut · ~n
Ion~ and sometimes con- S)lace Yang L1we•. mov1e
tenuous
global
tour director Zhang YmJOu and
Wednesday, g~eeted by. rap- basketball superstar Yao
turous crowds 10 the Ch10ese Mmg.
ca~1t~l two days before II
"l"T ~ery happy to be
off1cmlly · launches the here, s~1d Yang before the
Summer ~ames.
. relay_ k1cked off from the
The arnval of the torch m• Forb1dden C.ty, home of
the capital marks one of t~e Chmese emperors smce the
concludmg steps m Chma s 15,~h century.
. .
seven years of preparations . That the torch 1s fmally
for the games that have cost ·~ Be•Jmg IS ~ rcahzatmn of
bilhons of_dollars, and one. a dream we~~ had t~r. a
wh1ch BelJmg hop~s w1ll hundred years. Yang smd.
ser~e as the country s sym- mmutes before h~ took up
bohc debut as a modern the flame as 1ts hrst torch...
bearer.
world power. .
Overseas. the torch relay
The torch w11l tour BelJmg
before ending up at Friday's was disrupted by protests or
opening ceremony for the conducted under extremely

heavy security since it left
Greece on March 24, turning
an event that should have
~mlt up excitement for the
games into something of a
public relations disaster for
the hosts.
. The protests have mosti,Y
been 10 response to Chma.s
crackdown m March on a_nt1government nots m T1bet
and to more general _concerns over human nght s
1ssucs n1'Chma._
.
The to.rch arnved back m
~he c?pllal l~te Tuesday.
after an emot1onal run m
S1chu~n provmce, the s1te ot
Chma s deadly_ May . 12
ea_rthquake wh1ch killed
almost 70,000 people and
left some 5 million homeless.

It was paraded Tuesday
through about eight miles of
the provincial capital of
Chengdu. Hours later. a
powerful aftershocK struck
~ther parts of Sichuan
province in western China
and nearby provinces, but it
was not felt in Chengdu.
The original route of the
torch in Chengdu was
altered, taking it through an
industrial part of the city
rather than a more historic
section that houses Tibetan
communities. apparently out
of concern that anti-government protests could mar the
ceremony. Deadly riots
a ainst the Bei'in overng
J g g

Please see USA. Bl

Please see Skyline, Bl

Flame, Bl

Meigs Alumni
flag football game

...,

AP photo

Kobe Bryant of USA men's basketball team for the Beijing 2008 Olympics, right, seeks to pass the ball as Australia's
Matthew Nielsen, left, defends during a match ·between USA and Australia as a warm-up for Olympics at the USA
Basketball International Challenge tournament in Shanghai Tuesday.

USA survives·toughest test,·beats Aussies by.ll
. SHANGHAI, China (AP)
- They couldn't shoot and
occasionally didn't defend.
Definitely a performance the
Americans
should
be
relieved. came before they
got to Beijing.
Undefeated, but no longer
unchallenged , the U.S.
Olympic . basketball team
wrapped up . its· exhibiti&lt;;m
schedule with its toughest
test, pulling away to beat
Australia 87-76 Tuesday

.

night.
The United States led by
only four points nearly
halfway through the third
quarter and was up by seven
midway through the fourth
agai nsl an Austral ian team
that was resting ft s best player, Milwaukee Bucks center
Andrew Bogut.
The U.S . players still feel
like gold medal favorites,
but they hardly looked like
gold medal locks during this

Fielder apologizes, homers
"as Brewers blast Reds 8-1

shaky outing.
"Nothing alarming for us.
It 's alarming when you
lose," Dwyane Wade said.
"We're still growing.
We 're still going to get better as each game goes on,
but I · think tonight we
learned something."
The Americans relieq on
an aggressive defensive
effort to overcome a horrendous night froin 3-point
range and the free throw

BY SCOTT WOLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

line, the same areas that
proved costly in their semifinal loss to Greece in the
world championships two
years ago.
Wade scored 22 points and
LeBron James had 16 for ihe
Americans. who finished 3of- 18 from behind the arc
and 20-of-33 (61 percent) at
the foul line.
The U.S. team won two

Please -

Fall s.ports passes
available at EHS

,

·

STEWART- On his way
to becoming the winningest
driver in the United States,
Chillicotbe driver Danny
Smith posted hi s 15th win
nationwide and 9th overall
at the historic Skyline
Speedway
_battleground
Friday night before another
enthusiastic crowd. Jason
Montgomery claimed the
late. model main after an
early battle with Tony
Roush , Shawn Jett claimed
the $1,000 to win Pure
Stock Invitational, Jeremy
Blake mastered the modifieds, Tommy Adkins took
the Four ·Cylinders, and
Ronnie Pickens returned to
victory lane in the MiniWedges.
In the Pure Stock
Invitational. Shawn Jell,
subbing for Brian Sliaffer,
bested a field of 28 cars to
come from 12th place to
win the $1,000 top prize.
One thing is for sure . The
Pure Stocks at Skyline
always put on a show and
with the addition of some
heavy-hitters Friday, that
race was no exception.
With an extra bag of cash
dangling from Billy Jarrell:s
pocket, the Pure Stock boys
gave it a little extra glitz and
glamour. It was a wild-west
of a shootout in the talented
pure stock main as locai
racing veteran Danny Talbot
took the early lead. Great
racing hi~hlighted the
action back m the pack with
continuous
mini-battles
among Danny Thomas.
Mitch Gillian, Darrin
Roush, and Ryan Wilson.
By virtue of his beautiful ·
Monte Carlo kicking into
high gear and Jett's . heavy
right foot .. the number 44
began to pick ~ff aga~~le of
cars m the m1d port1on of .
the race." Aided by a couple
yellows, Jell's charge
amplified until he was finally able to slip by Talbott for
the win. Mitch Gillian and
Darin Roush had hefty
advances ·into the top five,
as Talbott began to fade,
·possibly after losing his
four barrel linkage, yet able·
to hold ~m lo a strong second.
Rounding out the top ten
behind Jell were Talbott,
Danny Thomas, Gillian,
Roush , Wilson , George
Klintworth, Randy Bohan.
Shelly Powell. and Anthony
Maynard.
· Danny Smith's road to the
Knoxville Nationals this

SPORTS BRIEFS

- TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern High School season
.sports passes for the 200809 fall season are currently
on sale. Passes can be purchased in the main office at
EHS between 8 a.m. and
3:30p.m.
To purchase any of the
available non-student passes, you must be a resident of
Eastern · Local School
District.
An adult pass for the '08
fall sports season may be
purchased for $50. The pass
is good for junior high and
high school volleyball and
·
football games.
A student pass may be
purchased by Eastern students for $25 for the '08
junior higll and high school
volleyball and football seasons.
A senior pass may be purchased for the '08 fall sports
season. for $10. You must
have a Golden Buckeye
Card to purchase this pass.
The pass is good for junior
high and high school volleyball and football games.
An adult volleyball pass
may be purchased for $30
and is good for all fall junior
high and high school -,olleyball matches.
An adult football pass ·
may be purchased for $25 ·
and is good for all fall junior
high and high school football gan\es.
.
Athletic ticket. prices for
the 2008-09 school year for
high school and junior high
games will be $4 for adults
and $2 for studenls.

Stn1th15th ·
eam.s
•
Win of year

: ROCKSPRINGS A
flag football game , will be
held
on
Saturday,
September 13, in conjunction with Meigs Alumni
CINCINNATI (AP) - after Edwin Encarnacion
)Weekend. The game is open
Prince
Fielder made amends drove in a run with an
to • any graduate of Meigs
ijigh School that played by apolcigizi ng, then hit a infield single in the first
football · for the Marauders two-run homer Tuesday inning . It was a breaknight that helped the through performance for
for at leasl one year.
; The game will be played Milwaukee Brewers beat the Bush, who was 0-2 with a
jletween even year gradu- Cincinnati Reds 8-1 and 14.24 ERA in five previous
1\tes and odd year graduates quickly move beyond their starts at Great American
at Bob Roberts Field in ugly altercation' in the Ball Park. ·
Since lhey were lied with
Pomeroy. Start time will be dugout.
The
Brewers
were
on
their
the
Cubs for first place in
5p.m.
best behavior a day after ihe NL Central on July 26,
-: Those interested in play· Fielder
shoved · pitcher the Brewers have lost seven
lng should contact Matt Manny Parra in the dugout &lt;Jf 10. The victory on
Stewart of Fox's Pizza at during a series-opening loss. Tuesday left Milwaukee five
740-444-2537 as soon as Fielder apologized before games behind the Cubs, but
possible so jerseys may be the game on Tuesday, then still leading the NL wildordered.
helped Milwaukee's uptight card standings.
offense relax by hitting his
The Brewers' biggest
sixth homer in his last nine prob.lem has been their
games.
inability to get a clutch hit
CoNTACT US
Right-hander Dave Bush - only a .096 batting aver1·740-446-2342 ext. 33
(6-9) was among those who age with runners in scoring
pulled Fielder away from position .over the last 13
Fax- 1-740-446-3008
Parra
on Monday night, and games. They broke out
E-mail__; sports@mydallysentinel.com
ended up pinned underneath against Edinson Volq,JleZ
~rta Staff
the bulky first baseman and (13-5), an All-Star pitcher
· Bryan Walter~~, Sports Write( several teammates. One who hasn't done well since
(740) 446·2342, ext 33
night later; he was on top of his ap~arance at Yankee
bwalte~sOmydailytribuna.com
AP photo
Stadium.
·
his game.
.
Bush allowed only three
In four starts since the All- Milwaukee Brewers first baseman Prince Fielder (28) catches the throw as Cincinnati Reds'
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
Edwin Encarnacion dives safely to first in the first inning of a baseball game Tuesday in
hits in seven innings, retir"
(740) 448-2342, ext 33
Please
Reds,
Bl
lcrumOmydaltyreglster.com
.
Cincir)nati.
Jeff Keppinger scored on the hit. Umpire Jerry Layne watches at left.
ing 17 consecutive batters

- --·--·.

�•

LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel ' ·

Today's Forecast
Toledo•
86&lt;) 165°

Youngstown•
83' I 61 '

Mansfield•

f

83° 163°
~''"7

*Columbus

83' 165'

~

83° I 67°

Cincinnati
• 85° 168°

~
Portsmouth• ~
~
85°168°

V/ ·'A

The 4 Fun 4-H Club met
on June 29 at Forked Run
Park with seven members
and three advisors attending. Ideas for a float and
judging times were discussed.
The next meeting will be
spent working on a float and
the fair booth.
Heidi · Willis , News
Reporter

Salem Center
Go-Getters

and posters were discussed .
Reports were given by
Matthew Frank on growing
a cat; Amanda Wolfe on art
projects; David Frank on
the proper use of a hammer.
The Frank fami!f· served
'refreshments.
·
Another meeting was held
on July 27 with five members, two guests and one
advisor present. Business
discussed was judging
results. plans for the fair
booth and review of key
dates for the fair.
Matthew Frank gave a
safety report on "Keeping
Your House Cat Safe."
Lindsa~ Wolfe gave a health
report m healthy eating.
The Frank family served
refreshments . The next
meeting will be a fall weiner roast with date to be
determined.

The Salem Center GoGetters 'met on July 7 with
23 members and eight
guests present. Pledges
were led by Brayden Kopec
and roll call was taken by
Weather Underground • AP
Dawn Kopec .
Final plans were made for
the fair booth. The advisor
made sure everyone was
ready for judging. The
·. Wednesday... Partly sunny 50s. West winds around 5 members broke off into
with a slight chance of show- mph.
groups and did demonstraThe meeting was called
ers andthunderstorms. Highs
Friday ...Partly
sunny. tions· for the parents.
to
order by President
in the mid 80s. Northwest Highs in the lower 80s.
Cloverbuds worked on a
Heaven
Wes tfall. The
winds .around 5 mph. Chance
Friday night through wind chime.
of·rain 20 percent. .
Sunday
night ... Partly
Recreation was playing pledge was -led by Tyler
Avis and the 4-H pledge by
Wednesday night ... Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper ping pong and tennis .
cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s . 50s. Highs around 80.
Megham Lambert, News Kaitlyn Hawk . Roll call
was taken with 22 memWest winds around 5 mph in
Monday ...Mostly sunny Reporter
bers, 5 advisors, and 13 visihe
evening ... Becoming with a chance of showers
itors attending. The secre· and thunderstorms. Highs in
light and variable.
tary's report was rad and
Thursday ...Mostly sunny the lower 80s. Chance of
approved. The treasurer's
with a slight chance of rain 30 percent.
The All Star 4- H Gang report was taken with
Monday night ...Mostly
showets and thunderstorms.
Highs in the lower 80s. cloudy with a chance ,of met on July 13 at the Frank $1845.02 in the treasury.
Under old . business judgNorthwest winds 5 to I0 showers and thunderstorms. residence with four members.
'three
guests
and
one
ing
dates and requirements
mph . Chance of rain 20 per- Lows in the lower ,60s.
advisor present. Judging were discussed. Members
cent. .
Chance of rain 30 percent.
1\tesday ...Partly ~unny. hints and reviewing books · were reminded of poultry
Thursday night .. .Mostly
cloudy. Lows in the upper Highs in the lower 80s.

Lakeside
Leader's
4-H Club

Local Weather

All Star Gang

Local Stocks

VVednesday,August6,2oo8

The American pledge was
led by Nicole Moodispaugh
and the 4-H pledge by .
Baylee Collins . Roll call
was taken with 26 members,
7 advisors. and 14 visitors
atlc,nding. The secretary's
report was read and
approved. The ·treasurer's
report was taken with
$ 1703.95 in the treasury.
Under old business Cindy
commented oli a job · well
done by all our members. Tshirts were passed out.
Booth-sefup was discussed .
Members worked on the
float and fair booth decoral ions prior to the meeting.
The members really liked
Zoombezi Bay Water Park.
All livestock members were
told they are to donate two
dozen cookies to the hospitality tent on Saturday
morning prior to the livestock sale .
Under new business thank
you notes to pas) buyers and
this year's buyers were discussed. Members and adults
were encouraged to form
teams for the mud volleyball tournament. Baylee
Collins. gave a health report
on "The 5 Top Ways to Stay ·
Healthy · During
the
Summer."
Refre shments
were
served by Jayne Collins and
Mike Moore. The next
meeting was set for October
5th at Forked Run State
Park, Campsite .#7 at 4 p.m.
with the Jones , Johnson,
and Powell families to serve
•••
The August 3 meeting · refreshments.
Becca
Chadwell,
was called to order by Vice
President Brooke Johnson. Secretarv

. and rabbil tag in at the fairgrounds. They were encouraged to participate in the
demonstration
contest.
Cloverbud show and tell
was discussed. T-shirts were
distributed. Plans for the
fair booth · and tlbat for the
parade were made. The trip
to Zoombezi Bay Waterpark
was finalized. Mock judging was completed.
Under . new business the
club prospective buyer letter was discussed and Cindy
will mail those out. Cindy
reminded member~ of their
past buyer 's plaque a·nd
- thank you for this year 's
buyer, Members and adults
were encouraged to organize a team for the Mud
Volleyball.
A health report was given
by Bayl ~e Collins and a
safety report by Abby
Collins.
Refreshments
were
served by Linda Ayres.
Robyn Hawk. and Laura
. Ross. The next meeting will
be our Mock Judging
August 3, 2008 at the
Powell residence where we
will finish tloat and fair
booth plans. Refreshments
will be served by Jayne
Collins, Sherri Hendrix , and
Mary Anne Moore .
Tyler Davis made a
motion to adjourn ·and it
was seconded by Mark
Gibbs . The was adjourned.
Becca
Chadwell.
Secretary

Republicans want Cuyahoga internal investigation
Bv M.R. KROPKO

promised to cooperate the
federal investigation, an
AEP {NYSE) - 39.99
. 72.94
internal probe is also needAkzo {NASDAQ) - 55.32
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
CLEVELAND - The ed to safeguard taxpayers'
Ashland Inc. {NYSE) - 40.52 {NASDAQ) - 22.1 0
Republican chai,rman in · interests in public contracts
Big Lots {NYSE)- 34.18
BBT {NYSE) - 30.94
Cuyahoga County on and projects .
.
Bob Evans {NASDAQ) Peoples {NASDAQ) - 19.66 Tuesday urged the county
A meeting of the county's
29.26
Pepsico {NYSE) - 68.52
to conduct an internal three
commissioners
ilc:irgWarner {NYSE) - 42.35 Premier {NASDAQ) - 9)4
inves~igation
to
determine
...
Thursday
may
)nvolve .a
Century Aluminum (NASRockwell (NYSE) - 45.75
whether
any
officials
aie
.
constructiOI\
ptoj~ct
for a
DAQ). - 49.67
Rocky Boots {NASDAQ) ·to
1m
proper
connew
justice
celifer'for
juvelinked
5.24
.
.
Champion (NASDAQ) - 4.46
duct.
"
...
·niles.
...
"'
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) Royal Dutch Shell - se.sot · •
Sears Holding {NASDAQ) The .request from Rob
Jones, a Democrat, was ·
-5.75
Frost came after federal
City Holding (NASDAQ) 91.56
agents last week raided the
45.94
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 60.34
Wendy's {NYSE) - 24.20
Collins (NYSE) ·- 51.17
offices and homes of
DuPont (NYSE) - 43.93
WesBanco (NYSE) - 24.41
Commissioner .
Jimmy
US Bank (NYSE) - 31.93
Worthington (NYSE) - 17.19 Dimora and his friend and
Gannett (NYSE)- 18.12
Dally stock reports are the 4 political
ally,
county
p.m. ET closing quotes of
General Electric {NYSE) Auditor Frank Russo, as
transactions lor Aug. 5,
29.25
part of a corruption probe.
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 2008, provided by Edward
Both
are ·Democrats who
39.92
Jones financial advisors
have
denied
wrongdoing.
dP Morgan (NYSE) - 41.89
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
Rob Frost said that
Kroger (NYSE) - 28.96
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Limited Brands {NYSE) Marrero ·In Point Pleasant at although Cuyahoga County
Commission
President
{304) 674-0174. Member
16.80
Peter Lawson Jones has
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) SIPC.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

away from his office
Tuesday and did not
respond to a message seeking his comm.ent.
"An internal revie.w is
needed immediately to
determine whether employees or vendors may need to
be suspended from s~r­
vice," Frost said in a prepared statement.
Last
week's
search
involved records related to

fundrai sing. travel and deal~
with contractors, according
to an inventory of· seized
items.
No one has been charged.
in the investigation. Dimora:
and Russo have returned to
their jobs.
·
Dimora is also the
Democratic chairman in the
county, where Republicans
have struggled to land any
elected position.

Rio Grande Meigs Center
.

',

Dr. John P~ M.D.
Cardiothoracic Surgeon

·.

Hotzer Cardiovascular Institute is pleased
•welcome Dr. John Perry to the region. A
highly-trained and experienced cardiothora&amp; "'
surgeon, Dr. Perry prides himself on his
personalized care. Dedicating himself and hi\
team to delivering the highest quality of care
possible is foremost as a goal. After ~!:!",!Rfeting
fellowships at Cleveland Clinic and S~~~~!,
'
University of New York, Dr. Perry prallticed
in the Canton, Ohio region befQre comillf
•r
to Gallipolis. In his short time h'.
already successfully completed ·n
open heart, valve replacement and thoradc
procedures. Patients, families and referring
physicians have been extremely satisfied with
their care.
~

Live Entertainmenr
~Live Radio Remotes
t Games
+Tours of the New Cenler

+Technology Demonstrations

+Free Food and Beverages
~

Meet 1vith Rio Grande Staff
~ Learn More About Available Programs &amp; Cla~ses

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Favre Cuture uncertain, Page B6
Rays rip Indians, Page B6

Meigs County 4~H Club news

· City/Region
High 1 Low tamps

4 J.'un 4-H Club

Dayton• !,
r· " )

PageA6

For more lnfonnatlon contllct:
Brent Patterson
(74~/

992-1880or

Rebecca Long
(800) 282·7201, ext 7236

Email: brentp@rio.edu or
rlong@rio.edu

Ul I ,I., II R \0\\: I \!'I "I \lh II R &lt; I. '"'-I" Ill I ,I\ \l &lt; ; t "I 2 ~

HOLZER

CARDIOVASCULAR
INS'I'I'I'u'I'E

· GoOnline: www.HolwHeart.com

VVednesda~August6,2008

Countdown
to Kickoff

DAYS

Olympic flame sets off on final relay .Skylin.e Speedway
BEIJING. (AP) - torch garnes.lt will be ctmied by a
bearers earned the Olym~1C d1vers~ ~roup. mcludmg
flameonthefinalrelayoflls .Chma s f1rS1 aslronaut · ~n
Ion~ and sometimes con- S)lace Yang L1we•. mov1e
tenuous
global
tour director Zhang YmJOu and
Wednesday, g~eeted by. rap- basketball superstar Yao
turous crowds 10 the Ch10ese Mmg.
ca~1t~l two days before II
"l"T ~ery happy to be
off1cmlly · launches the here, s~1d Yang before the
Summer ~ames.
. relay_ k1cked off from the
The arnval of the torch m• Forb1dden C.ty, home of
the capital marks one of t~e Chmese emperors smce the
concludmg steps m Chma s 15,~h century.
. .
seven years of preparations . That the torch 1s fmally
for the games that have cost ·~ Be•Jmg IS ~ rcahzatmn of
bilhons of_dollars, and one. a dream we~~ had t~r. a
wh1ch BelJmg hop~s w1ll hundred years. Yang smd.
ser~e as the country s sym- mmutes before h~ took up
bohc debut as a modern the flame as 1ts hrst torch...
bearer.
world power. .
Overseas. the torch relay
The torch w11l tour BelJmg
before ending up at Friday's was disrupted by protests or
opening ceremony for the conducted under extremely

heavy security since it left
Greece on March 24, turning
an event that should have
~mlt up excitement for the
games into something of a
public relations disaster for
the hosts.
. The protests have mosti,Y
been 10 response to Chma.s
crackdown m March on a_nt1government nots m T1bet
and to more general _concerns over human nght s
1ssucs n1'Chma._
.
The to.rch arnved back m
~he c?pllal l~te Tuesday.
after an emot1onal run m
S1chu~n provmce, the s1te ot
Chma s deadly_ May . 12
ea_rthquake wh1ch killed
almost 70,000 people and
left some 5 million homeless.

It was paraded Tuesday
through about eight miles of
the provincial capital of
Chengdu. Hours later. a
powerful aftershocK struck
~ther parts of Sichuan
province in western China
and nearby provinces, but it
was not felt in Chengdu.
The original route of the
torch in Chengdu was
altered, taking it through an
industrial part of the city
rather than a more historic
section that houses Tibetan
communities. apparently out
of concern that anti-government protests could mar the
ceremony. Deadly riots
a ainst the Bei'in overng
J g g

Please see USA. Bl

Please see Skyline, Bl

Flame, Bl

Meigs Alumni
flag football game

...,

AP photo

Kobe Bryant of USA men's basketball team for the Beijing 2008 Olympics, right, seeks to pass the ball as Australia's
Matthew Nielsen, left, defends during a match ·between USA and Australia as a warm-up for Olympics at the USA
Basketball International Challenge tournament in Shanghai Tuesday.

USA survives·toughest test,·beats Aussies by.ll
. SHANGHAI, China (AP)
- They couldn't shoot and
occasionally didn't defend.
Definitely a performance the
Americans
should
be
relieved. came before they
got to Beijing.
Undefeated, but no longer
unchallenged , the U.S.
Olympic . basketball team
wrapped up . its· exhibiti&lt;;m
schedule with its toughest
test, pulling away to beat
Australia 87-76 Tuesday

.

night.
The United States led by
only four points nearly
halfway through the third
quarter and was up by seven
midway through the fourth
agai nsl an Austral ian team
that was resting ft s best player, Milwaukee Bucks center
Andrew Bogut.
The U.S . players still feel
like gold medal favorites,
but they hardly looked like
gold medal locks during this

Fielder apologizes, homers
"as Brewers blast Reds 8-1

shaky outing.
"Nothing alarming for us.
It 's alarming when you
lose," Dwyane Wade said.
"We're still growing.
We 're still going to get better as each game goes on,
but I · think tonight we
learned something."
The Americans relieq on
an aggressive defensive
effort to overcome a horrendous night froin 3-point
range and the free throw

BY SCOTT WOLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

line, the same areas that
proved costly in their semifinal loss to Greece in the
world championships two
years ago.
Wade scored 22 points and
LeBron James had 16 for ihe
Americans. who finished 3of- 18 from behind the arc
and 20-of-33 (61 percent) at
the foul line.
The U.S. team won two

Please -

Fall s.ports passes
available at EHS

,

·

STEWART- On his way
to becoming the winningest
driver in the United States,
Chillicotbe driver Danny
Smith posted hi s 15th win
nationwide and 9th overall
at the historic Skyline
Speedway
_battleground
Friday night before another
enthusiastic crowd. Jason
Montgomery claimed the
late. model main after an
early battle with Tony
Roush , Shawn Jett claimed
the $1,000 to win Pure
Stock Invitational, Jeremy
Blake mastered the modifieds, Tommy Adkins took
the Four ·Cylinders, and
Ronnie Pickens returned to
victory lane in the MiniWedges.
In the Pure Stock
Invitational. Shawn Jell,
subbing for Brian Sliaffer,
bested a field of 28 cars to
come from 12th place to
win the $1,000 top prize.
One thing is for sure . The
Pure Stocks at Skyline
always put on a show and
with the addition of some
heavy-hitters Friday, that
race was no exception.
With an extra bag of cash
dangling from Billy Jarrell:s
pocket, the Pure Stock boys
gave it a little extra glitz and
glamour. It was a wild-west
of a shootout in the talented
pure stock main as locai
racing veteran Danny Talbot
took the early lead. Great
racing hi~hlighted the
action back m the pack with
continuous
mini-battles
among Danny Thomas.
Mitch Gillian, Darrin
Roush, and Ryan Wilson.
By virtue of his beautiful ·
Monte Carlo kicking into
high gear and Jett's . heavy
right foot .. the number 44
began to pick ~ff aga~~le of
cars m the m1d port1on of .
the race." Aided by a couple
yellows, Jell's charge
amplified until he was finally able to slip by Talbott for
the win. Mitch Gillian and
Darin Roush had hefty
advances ·into the top five,
as Talbott began to fade,
·possibly after losing his
four barrel linkage, yet able·
to hold ~m lo a strong second.
Rounding out the top ten
behind Jell were Talbott,
Danny Thomas, Gillian,
Roush , Wilson , George
Klintworth, Randy Bohan.
Shelly Powell. and Anthony
Maynard.
· Danny Smith's road to the
Knoxville Nationals this

SPORTS BRIEFS

- TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern High School season
.sports passes for the 200809 fall season are currently
on sale. Passes can be purchased in the main office at
EHS between 8 a.m. and
3:30p.m.
To purchase any of the
available non-student passes, you must be a resident of
Eastern · Local School
District.
An adult pass for the '08
fall sports season may be
purchased for $50. The pass
is good for junior high and
high school volleyball and
·
football games.
A student pass may be
purchased by Eastern students for $25 for the '08
junior higll and high school
volleyball and football seasons.
A senior pass may be purchased for the '08 fall sports
season. for $10. You must
have a Golden Buckeye
Card to purchase this pass.
The pass is good for junior
high and high school volleyball and football games.
An adult volleyball pass
may be purchased for $30
and is good for all fall junior
high and high school -,olleyball matches.
An adult football pass ·
may be purchased for $25 ·
and is good for all fall junior
high and high school football gan\es.
.
Athletic ticket. prices for
the 2008-09 school year for
high school and junior high
games will be $4 for adults
and $2 for studenls.

Stn1th15th ·
eam.s
•
Win of year

: ROCKSPRINGS A
flag football game , will be
held
on
Saturday,
September 13, in conjunction with Meigs Alumni
CINCINNATI (AP) - after Edwin Encarnacion
)Weekend. The game is open
Prince
Fielder made amends drove in a run with an
to • any graduate of Meigs
ijigh School that played by apolcigizi ng, then hit a infield single in the first
football · for the Marauders two-run homer Tuesday inning . It was a breaknight that helped the through performance for
for at leasl one year.
; The game will be played Milwaukee Brewers beat the Bush, who was 0-2 with a
jletween even year gradu- Cincinnati Reds 8-1 and 14.24 ERA in five previous
1\tes and odd year graduates quickly move beyond their starts at Great American
at Bob Roberts Field in ugly altercation' in the Ball Park. ·
Since lhey were lied with
Pomeroy. Start time will be dugout.
The
Brewers
were
on
their
the
Cubs for first place in
5p.m.
best behavior a day after ihe NL Central on July 26,
-: Those interested in play· Fielder
shoved · pitcher the Brewers have lost seven
lng should contact Matt Manny Parra in the dugout &lt;Jf 10. The victory on
Stewart of Fox's Pizza at during a series-opening loss. Tuesday left Milwaukee five
740-444-2537 as soon as Fielder apologized before games behind the Cubs, but
possible so jerseys may be the game on Tuesday, then still leading the NL wildordered.
helped Milwaukee's uptight card standings.
offense relax by hitting his
The Brewers' biggest
sixth homer in his last nine prob.lem has been their
games.
inability to get a clutch hit
CoNTACT US
Right-hander Dave Bush - only a .096 batting aver1·740-446-2342 ext. 33
(6-9) was among those who age with runners in scoring
pulled Fielder away from position .over the last 13
Fax- 1-740-446-3008
Parra
on Monday night, and games. They broke out
E-mail__; sports@mydallysentinel.com
ended up pinned underneath against Edinson Volq,JleZ
~rta Staff
the bulky first baseman and (13-5), an All-Star pitcher
· Bryan Walter~~, Sports Write( several teammates. One who hasn't done well since
(740) 446·2342, ext 33
night later; he was on top of his ap~arance at Yankee
bwalte~sOmydailytribuna.com
AP photo
Stadium.
·
his game.
.
Bush allowed only three
In four starts since the All- Milwaukee Brewers first baseman Prince Fielder (28) catches the throw as Cincinnati Reds'
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
Edwin Encarnacion dives safely to first in the first inning of a baseball game Tuesday in
hits in seven innings, retir"
(740) 448-2342, ext 33
Please
Reds,
Bl
lcrumOmydaltyreglster.com
.
Cincir)nati.
Jeff Keppinger scored on the hit. Umpire Jerry Layne watches at left.
ing 17 consecutive batters

- --·--·.

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Skyline
from Page 81
)Car has h,·,·n 'l'"cklcd with
nine s•~ I111L' 11 " ' ' Fnday
ni~ht'.., "hP\\U0\\11 \\ta..., ~•
repea t ol ht..., \\11 1 I\~ o weeks
ago 111 a photn-lnll'.. h
"lJll~aker ovet J11nmy Nter.

nnly this time the \1'111 came
uvcr

another J11nmv ,-

IJillrn\ StlthlHl

·

• Sintlh luu,cd like' he had
· lhc wee well 111 lumL but
.lapped tr,IIIIL .111d d pCI\I\. 1l'lll1..'h a r~C

h\ Stin,on m,td~
qut te. a ~.tLC. .tl the t'JnJ..,h.
SmliiL ,1m1cd h1 a pa11· ot

lapped L·ar,, upc ned the
door for Sttn...,0n·, c.au . . e ~1:-.
StilhOJJ ~l'pl r~.:lln g 111

tilL·

.vetcr.lll \\ tlh Stllb.on ~._]o-.;c

:Jn 10\\ . Strn-.oll inc h~d clo'cr unti l he m,,Je a last J,qJ
b1J that came up1ust inches
'hon .11 tilL' 111111 h .t.s Sn111h
(ontinucd to l l!.!h ten the
reign" I U\\dllb
. ~.: h.t m p11 m.. , llt p.
·

J

n;.tlamal

Sttdli,..,L' , co mpleted a ball II&lt;' I 1u11 11 llh a soli d
AddJil

Flame
from Page 81
ment

hrok~

out tn the

capl-

lal or l l l'li!hhOIIIH.! Tihct in
March. "anu ' pro-Tibet
ac lll'!sts ha1e d!'1up1cd the
torch re lay over ... ea~

Th e ChL"rw.d u ... el!men t of

the to1L"I1 lci.•l' h~Li ul igina llv hcrn 'cheuul'ell fo r
m,J-- J unr hut wa~ postpo ned hcca use of the m.ts·Sivs M&lt;~ y 12 quake. wh ich
k1l led ,tlmost 70.000 peo .ple and left some 5 milhnn
:homeless Chengclu was
affected hy the qua ke but 11
d1d hC,IVICr d&lt;U11age tO
areas north ul the c tty.
Olympic
organ ize rs
,rescheduled tile torc:h 's run
·thwugh Sichuan to support
relief rlt&lt;)rts there . There
WCie IWO days of days Of
events th.Jt hcg&lt;~ n Monday.
A huge stage wa-. set up
at 1he Forbiduen Cit v's
Mer iclta n Ga te for lion
dance• s and &lt;&gt; the I traditional danc:e pe rtonn.mces.
Despit e the muggy heal.
thousand' of people lined
Chang An Avenue. which
run s tltrou~h the heart of
Beijing. tt~ chee r o n th e

-

www.mydailysentinel,com

thml place finish after u
~ttce - long hattie with Aaron
Hi!.!uins and veteran Dave
D1ckson. The tri o 11111shcd
111 thdt cmicJ, whi le anothc1
H' l cran Mark Imler con tin ueJ his outst,mding 2008
run 111 . , 1xth Rnundinf! out
the top te n we re Josh Da,is.
Edd1e Slone. l:lnan Benson.
and lt.~rd-charging lady
racer Brandy Bower Local
d•tve• Edd ie Miller made
illS debut in a spnnt car.
It appeared for a while
that' 11' would be Tony RDush
n1ght "' Skyline Speedway
as the ve rsatile racer tooleJ
RDnm e Bond's num ber ten
lo a heat race win and led
the earl y portion' of the Late
Model A-Ma1n. With a solid
mn. Rnush dominated early
and no one was wit hin a
hen's throw TheJl "'" the
rdt:C progrcs:-.eU Roush\
moum stdrted to lade.
By thi s tim ~ lonne r
~.:hamp .la:,on Montgome1 y
IMJ bec:ome possessed in
captur111 g
t 1rst
place .
Mon tgomery worked every
pan of the drying Skyline
torch hca rers..
" I' m just "' happy I·
co uld n' t sleep last nigh t.''
s.ud Liu Yu zhe n. a 54yea r-old re11 ree who was
one of the danc:ers. "It's
our torch and 1t's 111
BeiJing. It 's a chancc 'of a
hund(ed yea rs and it 's
finally here."
From the Forbidden Ci ty.
the torch was to pass landmurb such us the futun sli c
egg-s haped
National
Ce nter· fo r the Perfo rmmg
Art s
and
Tiananmen
Square. The expansive
squ are 1 ~ 1con ic for it s
symboli sm as the seat of
the communist govern ment. but also was th e
focus of pro-de mocrac y
demonstrations 111 1989
that were VIole ntly crushed
by secu nty forces.
The Iorch will end the
day's relay at the Templ e
of Heave n . in so uth
Beijing, where the emperor
went 10 perform sacrifices
for a good harvest The
Beijin g leg will involve
841 torchbearers over three
days and will also visit the
Great Wall at Badaling, il
site where prehistoric fossils of Peking Man were
d1scovered.

clay. until tinally he found a
1!roove Uown low tn launch
his Rocket Chassis to Vtclllrv
· Mo111gomcry took the top
'pot on lap 18. then a few
laps later ve teran Dan
Mornson sli pped by Roush
lor second. 1r RotJSh had
any disappo!ll tment. it wa..,
erased in the ldd I hat he wa.,
able lo hold off lwo heavy
· hillers in Harold Rcul1ldll.
Jr. an J "ND Fear" Chris
Garnes. i\ lot ,of great r.1cing
high lighted th e d~tion in the
pack where Dan Shngley .
he ld off K C. Burdett e,
FredLiic Carpenter. Corey
Con ley. and Jeff Wood
Wood charged from the
hack ot the pac:k alter ,, Bmam wm to fini sh te nth . ·
Jeremv Blake is not sltm
by any nieans. but in " r,tcc
of the t'lare vs. lhe Turtle.
Blake\ smoo th · last , cnnsis·
Ieney allows him 10 (neak
ri"hl into \ictorx l,mc.
Bfuke knows where" to run
,md despite the il&lt;ll d-crank111"
Hare-like charninn
C'&gt;'
b
c of '
former AMRA Ch;11np and
delending Flortda Nat1on.1l

USA
from Page 81
blowouts 111 Macau but
found th ings much more
difficult here, starling w1th
an 89-68 victory over
Russia on Sunday.
·'The last 1wo games the
ball has been sticking a ltttle
bit. so we ha'e to gel back
to looking like 1he first
game where everybody was
touching the ball and we
were playing like we
should," point guard Jason
Kidd said. "We're too talented of a team to lake
tough shots because there\
always gomg to be someone
open."
Patrick Mtll s and Chris
Ansley, who had a first-half
altercation with Wade, each
scored 13 points for
Australia.
"In the th1rd quaner the y
i&lt;nocked down so me big
shots and I think that gol
tftem back m the ball
game~· ·

Kobe Bryanl said .

"And for us, we have to
understand thai that's going
to happen frqm lime to lime
and 11's 1mponant. to keep
our poise, keep our compo-

ch.unpion
Louis Rookie
racer
Frank
Krmhansky, Blake was able Shamblin brought home his
to bring lm B-4 home w'vic- second lOp-five with a
tory lane.
·
founh. (allowed by Grumpy
Blake has been u winner Adkins, Bobby Collins,
Lauer,
George
1n the Street Stocks, Pure Chris
Stocks. and Modtfieds on Klintwonh , Nick Filch, and
mult iple occasions this sea- Donnie
Bartlett.
This
son. His craftin ess once writer's niece Raquel Wolfe
again put him in victory lane made her debut in a Fourahc;Ju of some of lhc besl Cylinder.
racers in the country. Ryan
Adkms dedicated his. win
l\1a; k. Dal Cun mngham, to former teacher and friend
Jell
Wood,
Mike Hilton Wolfe, Jr. who is batMcPherson, Gary D~lton, tling Cancer. Adkins joked
Jeremy Burwanger, Roy as the pair got a vic10ry lane
Roush. and Donnie Nethmg pholo, "He's also my driall engaged in f1erce battles, vi ng coach 1"
but ended up 111 that runnmg
, In another great battle ?f
01der beh ind 1-and-2 Blake the youngsters, Ronme
and K1us hansky al lhc fin- Pickens bested Kyle Bond
ISh
for the Mini-Wedge feature
In twelve tnes enher win. The hard-charging little
Tommy Adkms or Tim guys and gals put on a great
Ch1i.;topher has won in the show with thi s week
exc itmg four ey l111der class. · Pickens taking the wm
In Chap ter 12 of lhe epic ahead of Bond, Mr.
saga, Adkins came home the Consistency Zack Fox,
winner with Ch ristopher at Mariah
Miller,
Will
his hee ls 1n close tow. Holland, Sydney Statts, and
Baulcs th10ughout the pack Sarah Klintwonh.
made the mcmg illleresting · Racing conltnues each
w11 h Jefl Rankin ·anchormg and every Friday night a1
down thi rd with a great ruQ. Skyline Speedway.
su re .mel buckle down."
The U.S. team seemed in
control after al lowing one
ba,ket in the final 5 1/2
mmutes of the f1rst half to
open a 44-29 lead. But the
Americans left that defen·
Slve intens1 ty in the locker
room, allowing a number of ·
open 3-pomters and uncontested drives to the basket
"We came out lazy,"
Wade said.
The Australians outscored
the Americans 13-2 to open
the third quarter, pulling to
46-42 on David Barlow's
lay up with 6:52 remaining
in the pertod
,
"We just broke down. We
gambled a couple of t1mes
and al lowed them to make
the extra pass," James said.
"We can't have those types
of menial breakdowns
because these teams· c;tn
really shootlhe bull."
Michael Redd and Wade
had layups 10 open the scoring in the fourth, pushmg
the US. lead 10 69-55.
Australia scored nine of the
next II pmnts to pull within
seven with still half the
penod left , making the
upset seem possible. The
crowd even got behind the
.Australians, loudly booing a
call that overruled what

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

VVednesday,August6,2oo8

\J!ribune - Sentinel - l\e %ter

Reds

·CLASSIFIED

fromPage81
Star game, the right-hander
has allowed 19 runs - 15
of them earned - in 20 1-3
in nings. The
Brewers
extended his slide wiih one
clutch hit after another.
Corey Han, who was in a
4-for-23 sJump, hit a tworun triple off the wall in
center to get the Brewers
relaxed and rolling in the
first tnning. Han later added
a double and a sacrifice fly.
Slumping Jason Kendall
drove in a pair of runs with
a double and a single. Even
J.J. Hardy got a hit and
scored a run, snapping his
0-for-28 slump.
Ryan Braun, who was the
NL's player of the month for
July, had a double and a pair
of singles. Fielder's homer
in the eighth off Nick
Masse! -extended his hitting
streak to nine games.
Notes: Milwaukee is 5-6
against the Reds this season.

seemed to be .a potential quarter
hefore
the
three-point play for them on Amencans rallied to grab a
an offensive rebound
,.22- 19 lead . U.S. coach
The Americans got their 'Mike Krzyzewski started
runnmg game going agam, 1he second quarter with a
and Wade had some easy lineup of James, Bryant,
baskets as they pulled away Wade, Anthony and Deron
for their closest victory. Williams. Australia wasn't
The win over Russia was scared of that unit, with
the previoljs closest game Wade and Anstey jawing
for the Americans, who after Anstey fouled Wade
came in averaging 110.8 away the ball and the playpoints and shooting 64.2 ers got tangled when the
percent from the field.
U.S. guard got up.
Bryant scored 13 points
Australia cut it to 26-25
and Carmela Anthony had on David Andersen's basket
12 points and 10 rebounds with 5:36 remaining in the
for the United States, which half, then the small unit's
-faces host China on Sunday pressure defense set in and
made it hard for the
in its Olympic opener.
Bogut, the No. I pick in Australians to even take
the 2005 draft, wanted shots.
The Americans forced
more time to rest a sore
right ankle that has been eight turnovers in the peribothering him, but said he od led by James, who was
expects to be ready by the all over the coun coming up
opener against Croatia on with steals and blocks. He
Sunday._
.•
scored eight straight points
The Australians threw a to make it 37-25, then swatscare into defending gold ted a shot into the seats
medalist Argentina in an about a minute later.
earlier friendly, building a
Australia finally ended its
19-point lead · in the third drought when Mills went
quarter before losing 95-90. all the way for a layup with
They staned well in this I :51 to go, but t"e
game, with Mills fearlessly Americans came back with
driving to the basket and a steal by James leading to
helping Australia lead by his own bucket and were up
four a few times in the first 15 at lhe break.

Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
· Counties l-Ike

NoOne

IIOT 0 1

;ouPE

trr.l'' "
--n cour
6025 77
* D! ~
;ouPE

E-mail
olass1fled@mydailytn bune .com

m

Monday .thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
· ,

*POLICIES*
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reJect or cancel any
ad at any time .
t- Errors
Must
8
Reported on the firs
ay of publication an
tte Trlbune·Sentinel
Register
wlll
b
responsible for n
Dre than the cDst o
tte space occuple
y the error and onl
he. first insertion . W
hall not be liable fo
ny loss or eJt:pens
hat results from th
ubhcatlon or omls
ion of an advertise
ent. Corrections wll
e made In the firs
valtable edition.

'
-'

·,

.

l&gt; BoJt: number ads ar
lwa ys confidential.
»Current
pplles.

.'

&gt;All
Real
Eslat
dvertlsements ar
ubject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act o

1968
&gt;This
newspape
'Ccepts only hel
anted ads meetln
EOE standards.
)We will not knowing
y accepl any adver
isement in vlolatlo

r

Jll72

r

P -seo ·
c.ono

~c

CONVE r
I w/b lk

; well •

5S tN~

CONVE f&lt;

her. lo

.6!0!1A (•

:::ONVE R
~. $SSOO
:ONVER r
:!Other .

~c u1o•

_ _.::55 '

;QNVE R t
~.A U&lt;.) ,

199. '"') -·

:OIIIVER ,
Bl ·

S-499..:.

i

70

n

Y-\ ttll SALE
\',\RlJ SALF·

GALI .IPOI.J."t

Danville· Garage Sale on St
At 325 (Jude's) Thursday
Aug 7tt1 7am-7pm J Deem
ridtng tractor &amp; wagon , blow
up bouncer LongaOe rg er
purses &amp; morel

Frtt &amp; Sat , 8 30 ? 260
Syramore St , Mtddleport
819 8·12 Tons of great k1ds kids clothes &amp; shoes toys
clothes wom ens clo tt1es ,
baby nems, Longaberger
babybed, toys&amp;mlsCttems Okt s
Park on 'st reet and walk up , ; , ; . . . - - - , - , - - - ,

224 t st Ave Frt 8/8 8-4 &amp; Sat

CLASSIFIED INDEX
"' Announcement ... .....•....... .......•...•.....•....... ... 031)

Camping Equipment •.•••••••••••••. •• .•••• ------ ····-·780

tONVJ: R •

It, llht , I

-

ite.' $6TS.:I
JEOAH

J,,j 'nt;, I
;-ted. '$'&lt;•'

titleG P •

·~ w !.

p.w
vc.-t
•
!I!IH

REACH OVER
30,00() HOUSEHOl_JDS!
~be ~allipohs mail~ ~tibune

740-446·2342
www .mydailytribune.com

~oint ~leasant 3aegister

&lt;()(;l LUX

New cond, S20K or toke .
over pmt• 555 155:5§5$

?11111 I IIXliAY

Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
• For Lease ..................................................... 490

• For Sale ...................................................... 585

Trade ............: ....... ..................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... SBO
~ ~ Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450
1. General Haullng...........................................eso
. : Glveaway .•... ---·--···--···--···--····-···-···---·--··--·····-o4g
Happy Ads....................................... .. .. ........ 05
Hay &amp; Grain ..................................................64P
For Sale or

.~ Help Wanted ........................................ ......... 110
Home lmprovements ........................ ........... 810
•• Homes for Sale ............................ ........ .. ...... 310
•.. Household Goods ....................................... 510
:~ Houses lor Rent •..••... -- .. -·- ----- ·· -- ·· -·-............ 410
:~ In Memoriam-··--··-·-·-·--· ................................ 020
, Insurance ........................ ............................. 130
~ Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ....................... . 660
: , Livestock .•.••• , ............................................... 630
• Lost and Found .,,, .. , .................................... 060
~. Lots &amp; Acreage ... .................... ..................... 350

• , Mlscellaneous.............................................. 170
-~ Miscellaneous M~rchandlse ................. ,.•... 540
·, Mobile Home Repalr ....................................B60
'• Mobile Homes lor Rent.. ............................. 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ............................... 320
Money to Loan ................. ............................ 220
Motorc ycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ................. ......... .740

.. Muslc;lllnstruments ... ····· --------·····-·........... 57(1
Personals ..... -.-... --·..•............. ·--..... -. --· .........·. 005
Pets lot Sale ............... ................................ 560
Plumolng &amp; Heallng .................................... 820
.-~ Profuslonal Servlces .................. ,, ... .......... 230
Rodlo, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160
-.
•

Real Eatate Wanted .................. ................... 360
Schools lnstructlon ................. .................... 150

~

Situations Wanted ....................................... 12D
Space lor Rent ............................................. 46D
S pot1l ng Goods __ ...... ·--.,..... -.............. ---- ·--... 520

s'eed , Plant &amp; Fartlllzer .............................. 650

Tbe Dally Sentinel

304-675-1333
740-992-2155
www.mydailyregister.com www.mydailysentinelcom
f!¥ _ . c&lt;mv 'F..J'l\

:~ Cards ofThanks .......................................... 010
• Child/Elderly Care ...................................... 190
• Etectrlcai/Refrigatatlon............................... 840
Equipment for Rent. ................. ..... .............. 480
,. Extavatlng --····· .......... ........ ............... ........... 830
Farm Equlpment ... ,,,, ..•. ,,, ............................ 610
Farms for Rent ............................................. 430

•

UV'a for Sale .............................................. 720
.· STrucks
for Sole ............................................ 715
Upholstery ............. ...: .........-......................... 870
Vans For Sale ...............................................73D
"

•

Wanted
Wanted
Wanted
Wanted

to Buy ., .... ....................................... 09D
to Buy· Farm Supplies ................. 620
To Oo .............................................. 180
to Rent ............................................ 470

Yard Sale· Golllpolts ....................................072
: Yard Sate-Pometoy/Middte ......................... 074
,. Yard Sale-Pt. Ploaoant ................................ 076

•

T.....,.; t'"-fn•l

- -1---

Outside Sales ·
Representative

Aug 4th 9-?, St Rt'7
FOUND
Ftshtng Pole at Tuppers Plqtns (nea r BP sta
Krodel on Saturday 8/2/08 tton). namebrancl teenager
304-675-2773
&amp; young mt ss g1rls clothes

Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Any
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Registe·r or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

I

9

FOL'Nil

·• Business Opportunlty ................................. 210
Business Training ................. .................. .... 140

•

8 Sa t Aug

L..--~---_.J

~

110

10

I

BlSNK'iS •
OIJtlf)RTI JNirv

Wooden deck and out bulldtng Must take t&gt;oth and 3 famtly yd sate Yellowt&gt;ush
clean up.. 740-446-9490
Ad/Ptckens St ,Aug 8th from
9 00 -3 00 ,toys, ktds&amp;!Jeltte
larr AND
clothes.couch more Aacrnet

8 uilding Su pplles .. ·-·.- ---· .. --... -.. ···-- --· ..•.. ..•. ,. 550
Business and Bulldlngs ...••....•...•...•..•....•..• 340

CONVE'·

110

a

4x4's For Sale·--···-··········-·· --··· --·· --···-·· ---··· .. -725

COU P E

POLICIE S Ohto Valley Publtshrng resorvc15 tho ngh• to edt\ rejet:l. or t:lmt:el any ad atony \tme Et tors must be reported on th e lirst dav ol publn;atton oodlh•
Tnbune-SMttnei-Regrster wtll be nuponJtbte for no more than the coat ot the apace occupted by the &amp;rror and only the ltrst tnsertron We shall not be liable lor
&lt;~ny lou or upense that tesul ts from the publtcalton or O{nturon clan adverlt~emenl Correctron wttl be made m the rtrsl avJ1Io1ble edt! ton • Box roumber ed!
are always confident tal. • Cuuent rate card applies • All real eatate adverttaemenls sre subject to the Ft&lt;deral Fetr t1 ousmg Act ol\968 • This newspapet
accepts on ly h elp wanted ~ds meeting EOE st~ndlltds We wttl not ~nowlngly &amp;ccept any ad11ertl111ng rn lltOIAh On ol the law Wrlt not be responalble l or
errors tn an ad taken over the phone

2 male 1ndoot k11tens htter Oh t&gt;at&gt;yt Infant/Toddler
framed to good home 304- clothes, toys, cradle Tables
882-3980 New Haven Area decor, couches 152 Mctple
Dr Spnng Valley
6 weeks old m~:~ted pupptes,
2 female. 2 male 304 675 Wed &amp; Th ur 8·5, 2 mtl es out
5361
.
SR 2t8 up t1tll on right
Cloth es anUques 1 row
Commode &amp; Stnk Top m corn planter. tron skillets
good worktng order 304 corn st1eller &amp; wa lnut t1uller
675 5207
anttque trunk
benches
shelves, electrtc tools, old
Womens clothes stzes t 2tools, books, curtatns mtsc
14 already baKed up and
ready to go 15 North Th1rd 74
YARI&gt;Sc\I.E•
St Cheshtre Frtday Aug
Poi\n:aov/MmmJi

Sa le
At
Appliance
Warehouse 114 Chestnut
St
Henderson Mon -Frt
Furntlur e appliances Mtsc
Items

Wwn:u
TO BUI

Auto Repair ········--- ····-· -- -···--·· -········'·· ...... ..... 770

.:!:..Q.t, k

Thur s day for Sundays Paper

Rodney Communtly' Center
2 Female Coon Hounds Toys too ls baby clo tt1es,
304 675-1 B58
ptclures, tapes

·. Autos for Sale ................. ,. --···-··----·--·····-······710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ·········--···-·- --··--· ·· ·--750

.

Su nday Display : 1:00 p . m .

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

~~~t~h~e~lo~w~~~~~
d:nv:•------------, ~76' . . .PJ;\.~.~.·.s.
·,_I.E.-__.
~
Pt.EASN&lt;I

tDt•

00 CON -.
lli ~ /1? ) ' u

Sunday In - Column: 1 : 00 p.m .
Friday For Sundavs Paper

• All ads must be prepaid'

YARil SAL•GAt.I.IPOl L~

Frt Aug

Auction and Flea Market ........... .... .............. D80
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ......... ·--·- --·---·····-760

1.33$&lt; .&gt;

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Pnor To
Publication

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your.classified ads
-""'
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SO¢ for small
$ LOO for large

kttn ca rlyle@co m cast. n e l

Gl\·f:-IWA\ ·

Apartments for Rent ••..•.•••••...••• ····· -- ···-·-··-- 440

~r. -ll l:&lt;.

jl.

rate ear

\ \ \ 01 :vI \\1-'\j IS

iJ;.

Display Ads

.. Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Inc:lude Complete
Oescrlpth&gt;n • Include A Price • A11old Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Need ~ed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Daily In - Column: 1 : 00 p.m.
Monday -F riday for In ser tion
In Next Day 's P a per

·'

Anllques .... ................................. .................. 530

COUP E

Websites :
www.myda1lytribune com
www.myda1lysentinel .com
www.myda1lyreg1ste r.com

OearltirM

Word Ads

V IP

e n.

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUB AD NOW ONLINE

To Place
.UCribune
Sentinel
. l\egtster
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304} 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 446·3008
or Fax To (740) 992·2157
'
Or Fax To (304) 675·5234
--~~~--------------_,

•

REACH 3 COUNTIES

Galli a

£1seCan!
!

ONVERTIBLE·

llOT Onl.v
_ _:.555-55 ~- &lt;

Meigs County, OH

we cove

I

.I

:):) :)• :o;):) :o;)•:):):):)

ONVERTU
IIOT O nl.
__ 5~ !: l
OUP E

www.mydailysentinel.com

Absolute Top Dollar
Stl·
ver/gold
cotns
any
10KI14KI18K gold tewelry
dental gold, pre 1935 US
currency proof/mtn t sets.
dtamon ds. MTS· Com Shop,
t 51 2nd Avenue , Gallrpolls
446-2842
• Jwnk cars paytng $50-$300
If no answer, leave a message 740-388·0011
Tools &amp; etc mect1- power
toots carpenter tool s lawn &amp;
garden kn1tes &amp; watches,
Jewelry Buy trade or sell
hOme 386- 1515 or cell 2080320
Tools &amp; etc mech- power
tools carpen ter tools lawn B.
garden knttes &amp; watches,
jewelry. Buy trade or sell
home 388·1515 or cell 208-

~

bA~

www eomr cs com
110

'Ht u

© 2008 by
110

Admmtstrattve
Profess tonal
Immediately Available
CPA ltrm IS seektng a htgh·
ly-qualtfted, well spoken
admtnrslraltve profesSional
Oualiltcattons that must t&gt;e
mel tnclude
Professton&lt;t l apper1rance
both in dress and groomtng
proper use of grammar
tntermedtate ~nowledge of
M1crosolt Olhce tnclud1ng
Excel, Word , Outlook
Above·average compu ter
at&gt;thty and typrng Sktlls
Strong at&gt;t ltty to take tnt!laltve to complete tasks and
pnorrlrze and organrze to-do
ltsts Pttor e)(per1ence and
bookkeeprng kno~'&gt;&lt;le'dge 1s
a plus
Please send re sume wttll
salary requ1rements to
Chapman &amp; Butns CPAs
LLC
64 State Sueet
GallipOliS, OH 45531
If called tor an 1ntervtew,
please be prepared to take
a small test on the above
1tems and tlems tn your
resume .

m

\II \ I

"i l f{\ IC I· S

-------An Excellent way to earn
money Tlte New Avon
Call Manlyn 304-882 2645
AVON' All Areast To Buy or
Setl. Slltrley Spears 304675-1429

Gashter with 2 years expe·
nence 111 cashtertng Must
be trtendly and courteous
Apply 1n person at Thomas
It
Center
t76
Do
McCormi ck Rd Gall1polts

, . , , . . . . - - - - - - , Ce rt1fte d
Automottve
110
HEI.P\VAN1lJ)
TechntCJan and Certtf1ed
Dtesal Mechan1c 740-3896547

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts , wood
1tems.To $460/wk Materrats
prov1ded. Free Information
pkg 24Hr 801-426-4649
Regional
Dump
and
Pneumatic Tanker Onver~
A&amp;J Trucking Company m
Marietta, OH Is searct'!ing lor
qUaltlted, CDL-A drtvers lor
reg10nal dump and pneumatic tanker positions
Qualified applicants must be
at least 23yrs. have a mmtmum of 1 years of safe corn'merctal drivtng axpe~1ence in
a truck, HazMat certllicalton
clean MVR and good stabtll·
ty We offer compe1tt1ve beneftts plus ,:401 (k) and vaca:
11on pay Contact Kent Bt
800--'62-936510 apply or go
to www rJtr~Cklng com EOE

IIEI.P WWilll

RESP ITE
PROVIDERS
NEEDED beco'Tle stale
l1censed by anendtng tratn ·
111gs tteld on Saturdays
Earn SJO S45 a day for the
care ot a chtld trvtng +n your
home Homes are needed rn
,your eounly Call Oasts toll
free
1-877 325-1558.
Tra1n1ng v1tll beg1n August +n
Albany

BENNIG AN 'S now htf tng
Rvenrng cooks setvers host
and ma rnte nance Apply
Want to buy Junk Cars, call wtiH1n no phone c&lt;Jils
740-388-0684
please

I \11'1

110 '

FOSTER PARENTS AND

0320

Wanted lo Buy or Lease
Hunttng property m Me1gs or
surroundmg cou nt1e s 304'612- t593

H FI.a • W\~11-:n

\\'\'ilt:ll

Inc .

Domino's
Ptz7a
Now
Looktng to Hue Drtvors. In
Pmnt Pleasant Eleanor.
Gallipolis &amp; Pomeroy Apply
m Porson
Experienced Auto Body
Repairman I Frame rack
~ 740-992-2316
El(pertenced Tanker Dr1ver
w/Hazmat
endorsement
140-388-a547

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
517 89-$28 271hr, now t1tr1ng For appltcatton and free·
governement JOb mfo. call
Amertcan Assoc of l 1bOr 1913-599-8226 24/hrs Pli p
serv

iiiC::JnjoCision

lnfoCrston
o

Opportunity
$8.50/hour

Take Inbound customer
servtce calls tor Fortune
t 00 Compantes lncludrng
Time Warner Cable
• S8 50/hour FT
Prvtous expemnce With
customer servtco a plus
· Pa1d Tratntng Onstte
· He altt1 8e nel1t s

Call to scedule an
interview

Onto Valley Home Health;
1·888-IMC·PAYU
Inc hrrmg Home Health
Ext. 2311
A1des STNA CNA CHHA,
t1ttp .lfjobs.infoc tston. com PCA may apply at 1480
Ja ckson Ptke, Gathpolts,
Olttce
seektng Qhro or phOne 740-441Law
A ece ptt on t st / Ass 1s t ant 1393
for
more
info
Pteast:~ send Resume to Compe11t1ve wages, mtleage
CLA 13 cto Porn! Pleasant retmbursement and oenefits
Aegtster 200 Marn St Pt tnctudrng health tnsurance &amp;
Ple Asant. WV 25550
much more

Ohto Valley Put&gt;ltshtng wtth
otftces tn Pomeroy.
Galltpohs and Pt Pleasant
ts accepttng resumes tor a
'tull ttme outs1de sales
represenlaltve Applicants
must be organtzed,
creattve and able to
manage an established
accou nt Its! whtle ca lltng
on new customers
Candtdates must be
dtsctpltned selt-motwated
and a team player that
understands the
rmportance ol developtng
strong, mutually bene fiCial
bus1ness relattonshtps wtlh
our custome'rs Sales
e~pertence and reliable
transportalt on necessary
II YOJ-1 can sen and you
want to work full lime I
would ltke to hear !rom

yo"
Please send resume
cover letter and three
references to
Gall1po1ts_Datly Tnbune
Attn· Mall Rodgers

WANTED P&lt;Jrl ttme pos1
!tons avatlable to asstst mdt viduals wrtt1 mental retardatton at a group home 1n
B1dwell 35 hrs 1 lp·B 30a
Th.'F , Sat 7p-9a Sun Htgh
School dtplomatGED. valtd
Drtvers l1cense and tnree
years good dr1v1ng eKpenence requrred $7 75/hr Preemp loymint Drug Tesltng
Send resume to Buc't&lt;.eye
Communt ly Setvtces PO
Box 604 Jack son
OH
45640 or ema1l to bcycc
serv @yahoo com Deadline
for applicants
8/ 11 108
Equal
Opportun tl}'
Employer
WV BOhr
U11derground
Mtner Class s\arltng soon
Whti·Co-Tratntng 304·372
8346

150

Snuxn~"i
biS'I Rllf1'10~

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers CloSe To Hom e~
CaiiTodayt 740 446 4367
I -800-214·0452
v.ww g~lltpol sc aree• cDII~., edu
,l ccrcdtle&lt;l Mo T ber Accte&lt;.ltltng
Counol lor lndopendGnt Colleges
and Schools 12748

PO Box 469

•NOTICh
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommends
thai you do bust~ess wtlh
people you kn6w and
NOT to send money
through the rnatt until ~ ou
have mvesltgated the
olfenng

Mo~EI

Ill UJ.\N

l

Borrow Smart Contact
the Ohro Dtvtston ot 1
Frnanctal
lnstttutton s
Ofltce
of
Consumer
Atlatrs BEFORE yoll relt· i
nance ) Our home c• 1:
obtatn a loan BEWAAE J,
ol requests lor•any latgP\·
ndvancc pa)·ments c'
lees or tnsumnce Calllh t.&gt; '
Offrce ol
ConsumPr
Alfeurs toll free at 1· 666
278 0003 ro learn 11 tt1r 1
mortgage
broker
01
tender
tS
properl1
licensed (Th.r s rs a put&gt;l,
servrce announcement !
from the Oh10 Vaile·~l !
Publist1tng ComoanvJ
1j

!

Upcomtng Certthed NurSIRQ
As.'&gt;tstant Class Must have
a htgh sct1ool dtploma or
230
)I l."iSI(I'o;.\1
GED to apply Applrcatrons
StK\
\ (~.....
may be p1cked up at Lakrn
Hosp 1tal.
Monday
thru
TURNED DOWN ON
Frtday,
8am·4pm
Overbrook Aet1abilt1alton Applrcattons musl be turned SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
Center ts now accept1ng tn no later than 08115/0B at
No Fee Unl~ ss. We Wt n(
applications lor a fllll ltme COB EOE
1·888·582·3345
Matnlenam::e Asstslant Thts
i~I·
\II·S' I\11170
w1ll be a short term position
Mus, have eKpertence m
310
llmn:s
general matnlenonce 1nclud·
SAtE
tng carpentry, plumbmg. Kot Goldfish reduced p11ce
:.;.::~~:;,._.;
electrical, telephone and on pond plants Also get
Bulavtlle
Ptke
cable 1nstallatton, pa1nttng, your Kat ponds tested 446· 274
GalhpOIIS - Move 111 read\
grounds work, evaluation 1578 or 645-1361
3BA. I bath ranch CIA Qcl
and 1nspect1on of emer·
gency equtpment, ttem Pet Cremattons Call 740· heat VA/FHA approvec
assembly, and botler system ~44;,;6:.;·3~7.;.45~~---­ appratsed at S85,000 asl\1n•
$78 500 Call 740·446·73JS
operatron Contact Charla
00
8 row n · M c G u 1 r e
\V\\HU
3 bed HUD Honest on!
Adm1nt strato1 w1th questtons
To l)o
St0000' for ltstmgs 80J
at (7 40)g92-6472 Oualthed
6(0 4946 e~ R0 19
mow·
candtdates may apply at 333 D&amp;R Lawn Care
Page Street Middleport Ot1 mg, weed eattng hl3dge 3BR t 112 bill full !Ja ~r
lrtmmlng, Spnng &amp; Fall 111ent 1n grOund pool (need.
45760 EOE
cleanup Day 740·853-1702 1\ork) 1 car Qi::ll 111ce net(JI'
Oorhood close to tow1
POST OFFICE NOW
Asktng $60,000 {prtbe negL
HIRING
haOle) i4D 645 1796 leavt
Avg Pay $20fhr or
message
$57Kiyr tncludes
Galltpolts. OH 45631
or ematl to
mrodger! i mydatlytrtbune com
All repl1es wtll be kept tn
stnct conltdence

PHt

1..,....nm

r;

~
!210

Fed Ben OT
Placed by ad Source not
USPS who htres
t- 866·403-2562
AesCare Home Care IS
acceptrng appl1cattons lor
Support Assoctates. CNA &amp;
STNA MR1DD eKp preferred Apply at 8204 Carta
Drrve, Gallipolts, Mon Fn.
8·4
Ematl resume to
rharnson@rescare com
Sates Assoctates wtth at
least 2 years experience 1n
lumber and hardware
sates Must be sell motivated Apply In person at
Thom as Do II Center, t 76
MeCorm1ck Ad, Gallipolis

MT, MLT-Valley Dtagnosttc 11"'-"!!"~-~--,
Lab has an tmmed1ate openSportswriter
ing for day shtll. No swtng
The Ohto Valley
shtlt Resume to PO Bo~
Pubilst11ng Co
The Athens tv1elgs ESC has
a posttton opentng as Part33 Gallipolis Oh 45631
ts seeking a mot 1vated
Time Asststant for Specrat
people·Ortented ttldtvtd
Must t&gt;e 16 and able to work
Educalton tor the 2006-2009
ual to 1111 a vacancy in
evenings and .. weekends
Sc hool Year tn tervenlton
tt1e
news
department
Mus t have good people
Spectalist m Early Chtldt1ood
as a sportswn ter. The
sktlls The JOb conststs ol
Education degree reqUired
successful candtdate wtll
runntng tottery machine and
Must have excellent organ+·
cover high school athlet
regtster as welt as assum1ng
zattonal and computer sktlls
res tn the area tor the
accountabthty lor cash and
to be able to mamtarn Illes
datly ed+fton oi the news·
merchandtse Also stoclong
and do data entry Salary w1ll
paper, as well as ass1st
and cleantng are requnec:l
be based on cmdenttals and
wtth the productton of
24-t1ours
pet
week
ewPenence Please submtt a
Mtntmum, wage Apply rn
sports pages EJt:cellenl
letter oftnterest and resume
person at Country Carry-Out
wrtling and Engltsh
to John 0
Costanzo
t834 SR 7 N No pt1one
sk1lls photography sktlls
Superintendent , Athens ·
calls wtll be accep ted
and knowledge of desk·
.Meigs ESC 507 Rtchland
: : - - - - - - - , - , - - • top publ1shtng are
Avenue, Swte # 108 Atttens
Part trme clerk at the Mason
sought The posttton tS
Oh
45701
Application
Ctfy and New Haven PubliC
iull·ttme 40 hOurs a
Oeadltne August 11 2006
L1brar1eS Must ha've basiC
week 'l.tlh benehts
3 30pm The AM ESC IS an
computer sk1tls. abth ty to
equal
opportumty
lnte1ested parties can
work w•th tt1e publtc asstslEmployer/Provider
send resumes to Kevtn
lng w1th Story Hour as neecl·
kelly Managmg Edtlor,
ed
Appllcaltons can Oe
Ohro Valley Publlshtng
Wanted Pa11Ttme Bartender
ptcked up at the Mason
Co 825 Thtrd AYe.
Weekends Only Amencan
County Mason Ctly aod
Galltpohs Oh+o 45631 ,
Legton Post t4o . New
New Haven PubliC Ltbranes
or kkelly@mydadytnHaven, WV For +nlormatt on
ApplicatiOns must be sut&gt;bune com
can 304·662-3101 afler 4pm
mtlted by Augu.!il 15th 2008

Ill ~"':"

0J'P01Ul ~ In
tn

orne n er1ors or on

E~~~~--__J

PRICE REDUCED 569 900
27 I 2 Ltncoln Ave 3br 1ba
wrth detat;hed
garagP
mottva!ed setter 304 -675
6757
304 -6 10· 131 3 c
ASSISt 2 Sale 304 -755· 298(

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Skyline
from Page 81
)Car has h,·,·n 'l'"cklcd with
nine s•~ I111L' 11 " ' ' Fnday
ni~ht'.., "hP\\U0\\11 \\ta..., ~•
repea t ol ht..., \\11 1 I\~ o weeks
ago 111 a photn-lnll'.. h
"lJll~aker ovet J11nmy Nter.

nnly this time the \1'111 came
uvcr

another J11nmv ,-

IJillrn\ StlthlHl

·

• Sintlh luu,cd like' he had
· lhc wee well 111 lumL but
.lapped tr,IIIIL .111d d pCI\I\. 1l'lll1..'h a r~C

h\ Stin,on m,td~
qut te. a ~.tLC. .tl the t'JnJ..,h.
SmliiL ,1m1cd h1 a pa11· ot

lapped L·ar,, upc ned the
door for Sttn...,0n·, c.au . . e ~1:-.
StilhOJJ ~l'pl r~.:lln g 111

tilL·

.vetcr.lll \\ tlh Stllb.on ~._]o-.;c

:Jn 10\\ . Strn-.oll inc h~d clo'cr unti l he m,,Je a last J,qJ
b1J that came up1ust inches
'hon .11 tilL' 111111 h .t.s Sn111h
(ontinucd to l l!.!h ten the
reign" I U\\dllb
. ~.: h.t m p11 m.. , llt p.
·

J

n;.tlamal

Sttdli,..,L' , co mpleted a ball II&lt;' I 1u11 11 llh a soli d
AddJil

Flame
from Page 81
ment

hrok~

out tn the

capl-

lal or l l l'li!hhOIIIH.! Tihct in
March. "anu ' pro-Tibet
ac lll'!sts ha1e d!'1up1cd the
torch re lay over ... ea~

Th e ChL"rw.d u ... el!men t of

the to1L"I1 lci.•l' h~Li ul igina llv hcrn 'cheuul'ell fo r
m,J-- J unr hut wa~ postpo ned hcca use of the m.ts·Sivs M&lt;~ y 12 quake. wh ich
k1l led ,tlmost 70.000 peo .ple and left some 5 milhnn
:homeless Chengclu was
affected hy the qua ke but 11
d1d hC,IVICr d&lt;U11age tO
areas north ul the c tty.
Olympic
organ ize rs
,rescheduled tile torc:h 's run
·thwugh Sichuan to support
relief rlt&lt;)rts there . There
WCie IWO days of days Of
events th.Jt hcg&lt;~ n Monday.
A huge stage wa-. set up
at 1he Forbiduen Cit v's
Mer iclta n Ga te for lion
dance• s and &lt;&gt; the I traditional danc:e pe rtonn.mces.
Despit e the muggy heal.
thousand' of people lined
Chang An Avenue. which
run s tltrou~h the heart of
Beijing. tt~ chee r o n th e

-

www.mydailysentinel,com

thml place finish after u
~ttce - long hattie with Aaron
Hi!.!uins and veteran Dave
D1ckson. The tri o 11111shcd
111 thdt cmicJ, whi le anothc1
H' l cran Mark Imler con tin ueJ his outst,mding 2008
run 111 . , 1xth Rnundinf! out
the top te n we re Josh Da,is.
Edd1e Slone. l:lnan Benson.
and lt.~rd-charging lady
racer Brandy Bower Local
d•tve• Edd ie Miller made
illS debut in a spnnt car.
It appeared for a while
that' 11' would be Tony RDush
n1ght "' Skyline Speedway
as the ve rsatile racer tooleJ
RDnm e Bond's num ber ten
lo a heat race win and led
the earl y portion' of the Late
Model A-Ma1n. With a solid
mn. Rnush dominated early
and no one was wit hin a
hen's throw TheJl "'" the
rdt:C progrcs:-.eU Roush\
moum stdrted to lade.
By thi s tim ~ lonne r
~.:hamp .la:,on Montgome1 y
IMJ bec:ome possessed in
captur111 g
t 1rst
place .
Mon tgomery worked every
pan of the drying Skyline
torch hca rers..
" I' m just "' happy I·
co uld n' t sleep last nigh t.''
s.ud Liu Yu zhe n. a 54yea r-old re11 ree who was
one of the danc:ers. "It's
our torch and 1t's 111
BeiJing. It 's a chancc 'of a
hund(ed yea rs and it 's
finally here."
From the Forbidden Ci ty.
the torch was to pass landmurb such us the futun sli c
egg-s haped
National
Ce nter· fo r the Perfo rmmg
Art s
and
Tiananmen
Square. The expansive
squ are 1 ~ 1con ic for it s
symboli sm as the seat of
the communist govern ment. but also was th e
focus of pro-de mocrac y
demonstrations 111 1989
that were VIole ntly crushed
by secu nty forces.
The Iorch will end the
day's relay at the Templ e
of Heave n . in so uth
Beijing, where the emperor
went 10 perform sacrifices
for a good harvest The
Beijin g leg will involve
841 torchbearers over three
days and will also visit the
Great Wall at Badaling, il
site where prehistoric fossils of Peking Man were
d1scovered.

clay. until tinally he found a
1!roove Uown low tn launch
his Rocket Chassis to Vtclllrv
· Mo111gomcry took the top
'pot on lap 18. then a few
laps later ve teran Dan
Mornson sli pped by Roush
lor second. 1r RotJSh had
any disappo!ll tment. it wa..,
erased in the ldd I hat he wa.,
able lo hold off lwo heavy
· hillers in Harold Rcul1ldll.
Jr. an J "ND Fear" Chris
Garnes. i\ lot ,of great r.1cing
high lighted th e d~tion in the
pack where Dan Shngley .
he ld off K C. Burdett e,
FredLiic Carpenter. Corey
Con ley. and Jeff Wood
Wood charged from the
hack ot the pac:k alter ,, Bmam wm to fini sh te nth . ·
Jeremv Blake is not sltm
by any nieans. but in " r,tcc
of the t'lare vs. lhe Turtle.
Blake\ smoo th · last , cnnsis·
Ieney allows him 10 (neak
ri"hl into \ictorx l,mc.
Bfuke knows where" to run
,md despite the il&lt;ll d-crank111"
Hare-like charninn
C'&gt;'
b
c of '
former AMRA Ch;11np and
delending Flortda Nat1on.1l

USA
from Page 81
blowouts 111 Macau but
found th ings much more
difficult here, starling w1th
an 89-68 victory over
Russia on Sunday.
·'The last 1wo games the
ball has been sticking a ltttle
bit. so we ha'e to gel back
to looking like 1he first
game where everybody was
touching the ball and we
were playing like we
should," point guard Jason
Kidd said. "We're too talented of a team to lake
tough shots because there\
always gomg to be someone
open."
Patrick Mtll s and Chris
Ansley, who had a first-half
altercation with Wade, each
scored 13 points for
Australia.
"In the th1rd quaner the y
i&lt;nocked down so me big
shots and I think that gol
tftem back m the ball
game~· ·

Kobe Bryanl said .

"And for us, we have to
understand thai that's going
to happen frqm lime to lime
and 11's 1mponant. to keep
our poise, keep our compo-

ch.unpion
Louis Rookie
racer
Frank
Krmhansky, Blake was able Shamblin brought home his
to bring lm B-4 home w'vic- second lOp-five with a
tory lane.
·
founh. (allowed by Grumpy
Blake has been u winner Adkins, Bobby Collins,
Lauer,
George
1n the Street Stocks, Pure Chris
Stocks. and Modtfieds on Klintwonh , Nick Filch, and
mult iple occasions this sea- Donnie
Bartlett.
This
son. His craftin ess once writer's niece Raquel Wolfe
again put him in victory lane made her debut in a Fourahc;Ju of some of lhc besl Cylinder.
racers in the country. Ryan
Adkms dedicated his. win
l\1a; k. Dal Cun mngham, to former teacher and friend
Jell
Wood,
Mike Hilton Wolfe, Jr. who is batMcPherson, Gary D~lton, tling Cancer. Adkins joked
Jeremy Burwanger, Roy as the pair got a vic10ry lane
Roush. and Donnie Nethmg pholo, "He's also my driall engaged in f1erce battles, vi ng coach 1"
but ended up 111 that runnmg
, In another great battle ?f
01der beh ind 1-and-2 Blake the youngsters, Ronme
and K1us hansky al lhc fin- Pickens bested Kyle Bond
ISh
for the Mini-Wedge feature
In twelve tnes enher win. The hard-charging little
Tommy Adkms or Tim guys and gals put on a great
Ch1i.;topher has won in the show with thi s week
exc itmg four ey l111der class. · Pickens taking the wm
In Chap ter 12 of lhe epic ahead of Bond, Mr.
saga, Adkins came home the Consistency Zack Fox,
winner with Ch ristopher at Mariah
Miller,
Will
his hee ls 1n close tow. Holland, Sydney Statts, and
Baulcs th10ughout the pack Sarah Klintwonh.
made the mcmg illleresting · Racing conltnues each
w11 h Jefl Rankin ·anchormg and every Friday night a1
down thi rd with a great ruQ. Skyline Speedway.
su re .mel buckle down."
The U.S. team seemed in
control after al lowing one
ba,ket in the final 5 1/2
mmutes of the f1rst half to
open a 44-29 lead. But the
Americans left that defen·
Slve intens1 ty in the locker
room, allowing a number of ·
open 3-pomters and uncontested drives to the basket
"We came out lazy,"
Wade said.
The Australians outscored
the Americans 13-2 to open
the third quarter, pulling to
46-42 on David Barlow's
lay up with 6:52 remaining
in the pertod
,
"We just broke down. We
gambled a couple of t1mes
and al lowed them to make
the extra pass," James said.
"We can't have those types
of menial breakdowns
because these teams· c;tn
really shootlhe bull."
Michael Redd and Wade
had layups 10 open the scoring in the fourth, pushmg
the US. lead 10 69-55.
Australia scored nine of the
next II pmnts to pull within
seven with still half the
penod left , making the
upset seem possible. The
crowd even got behind the
.Australians, loudly booing a
call that overruled what

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

VVednesday,August6,2oo8

\J!ribune - Sentinel - l\e %ter

Reds

·CLASSIFIED

fromPage81
Star game, the right-hander
has allowed 19 runs - 15
of them earned - in 20 1-3
in nings. The
Brewers
extended his slide wiih one
clutch hit after another.
Corey Han, who was in a
4-for-23 sJump, hit a tworun triple off the wall in
center to get the Brewers
relaxed and rolling in the
first tnning. Han later added
a double and a sacrifice fly.
Slumping Jason Kendall
drove in a pair of runs with
a double and a single. Even
J.J. Hardy got a hit and
scored a run, snapping his
0-for-28 slump.
Ryan Braun, who was the
NL's player of the month for
July, had a double and a pair
of singles. Fielder's homer
in the eighth off Nick
Masse! -extended his hitting
streak to nine games.
Notes: Milwaukee is 5-6
against the Reds this season.

seemed to be .a potential quarter
hefore
the
three-point play for them on Amencans rallied to grab a
an offensive rebound
,.22- 19 lead . U.S. coach
The Americans got their 'Mike Krzyzewski started
runnmg game going agam, 1he second quarter with a
and Wade had some easy lineup of James, Bryant,
baskets as they pulled away Wade, Anthony and Deron
for their closest victory. Williams. Australia wasn't
The win over Russia was scared of that unit, with
the previoljs closest game Wade and Anstey jawing
for the Americans, who after Anstey fouled Wade
came in averaging 110.8 away the ball and the playpoints and shooting 64.2 ers got tangled when the
percent from the field.
U.S. guard got up.
Bryant scored 13 points
Australia cut it to 26-25
and Carmela Anthony had on David Andersen's basket
12 points and 10 rebounds with 5:36 remaining in the
for the United States, which half, then the small unit's
-faces host China on Sunday pressure defense set in and
made it hard for the
in its Olympic opener.
Bogut, the No. I pick in Australians to even take
the 2005 draft, wanted shots.
The Americans forced
more time to rest a sore
right ankle that has been eight turnovers in the peribothering him, but said he od led by James, who was
expects to be ready by the all over the coun coming up
opener against Croatia on with steals and blocks. He
Sunday._
.•
scored eight straight points
The Australians threw a to make it 37-25, then swatscare into defending gold ted a shot into the seats
medalist Argentina in an about a minute later.
earlier friendly, building a
Australia finally ended its
19-point lead · in the third drought when Mills went
quarter before losing 95-90. all the way for a layup with
They staned well in this I :51 to go, but t"e
game, with Mills fearlessly Americans came back with
driving to the basket and a steal by James leading to
helping Australia lead by his own bucket and were up
four a few times in the first 15 at lhe break.

Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
· Counties l-Ike

NoOne

IIOT 0 1

;ouPE

trr.l'' "
--n cour
6025 77
* D! ~
;ouPE

E-mail
olass1fled@mydailytn bune .com

m

Monday .thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
· ,

*POLICIES*
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reJect or cancel any
ad at any time .
t- Errors
Must
8
Reported on the firs
ay of publication an
tte Trlbune·Sentinel
Register
wlll
b
responsible for n
Dre than the cDst o
tte space occuple
y the error and onl
he. first insertion . W
hall not be liable fo
ny loss or eJt:pens
hat results from th
ubhcatlon or omls
ion of an advertise
ent. Corrections wll
e made In the firs
valtable edition.

'
-'

·,

.

l&gt; BoJt: number ads ar
lwa ys confidential.
»Current
pplles.

.'

&gt;All
Real
Eslat
dvertlsements ar
ubject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act o

1968
&gt;This
newspape
'Ccepts only hel
anted ads meetln
EOE standards.
)We will not knowing
y accepl any adver
isement in vlolatlo

r

Jll72

r

P -seo ·
c.ono

~c

CONVE r
I w/b lk

; well •

5S tN~

CONVE f&lt;

her. lo

.6!0!1A (•

:::ONVE R
~. $SSOO
:ONVER r
:!Other .

~c u1o•

_ _.::55 '

;QNVE R t
~.A U&lt;.) ,

199. '"') -·

:OIIIVER ,
Bl ·

S-499..:.

i

70

n

Y-\ ttll SALE
\',\RlJ SALF·

GALI .IPOI.J."t

Danville· Garage Sale on St
At 325 (Jude's) Thursday
Aug 7tt1 7am-7pm J Deem
ridtng tractor &amp; wagon , blow
up bouncer LongaOe rg er
purses &amp; morel

Frtt &amp; Sat , 8 30 ? 260
Syramore St , Mtddleport
819 8·12 Tons of great k1ds kids clothes &amp; shoes toys
clothes wom ens clo tt1es ,
baby nems, Longaberger
babybed, toys&amp;mlsCttems Okt s
Park on 'st reet and walk up , ; , ; . . . - - - , - , - - - ,

224 t st Ave Frt 8/8 8-4 &amp; Sat

CLASSIFIED INDEX
"' Announcement ... .....•....... .......•...•.....•....... ... 031)

Camping Equipment •.•••••••••••••. •• .•••• ------ ····-·780

tONVJ: R •

It, llht , I

-

ite.' $6TS.:I
JEOAH

J,,j 'nt;, I
;-ted. '$'&lt;•'

titleG P •

·~ w !.

p.w
vc.-t
•
!I!IH

REACH OVER
30,00() HOUSEHOl_JDS!
~be ~allipohs mail~ ~tibune

740-446·2342
www .mydailytribune.com

~oint ~leasant 3aegister

&lt;()(;l LUX

New cond, S20K or toke .
over pmt• 555 155:5§5$

?11111 I IIXliAY

Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
• For Lease ..................................................... 490

• For Sale ...................................................... 585

Trade ............: ....... ..................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... SBO
~ ~ Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450
1. General Haullng...........................................eso
. : Glveaway .•... ---·--···--···--···--····-···-···---·--··--·····-o4g
Happy Ads....................................... .. .. ........ 05
Hay &amp; Grain ..................................................64P
For Sale or

.~ Help Wanted ........................................ ......... 110
Home lmprovements ........................ ........... 810
•• Homes for Sale ............................ ........ .. ...... 310
•.. Household Goods ....................................... 510
:~ Houses lor Rent •..••... -- .. -·- ----- ·· -- ·· -·-............ 410
:~ In Memoriam-··--··-·-·-·--· ................................ 020
, Insurance ........................ ............................. 130
~ Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ....................... . 660
: , Livestock .•.••• , ............................................... 630
• Lost and Found .,,, .. , .................................... 060
~. Lots &amp; Acreage ... .................... ..................... 350

• , Mlscellaneous.............................................. 170
-~ Miscellaneous M~rchandlse ................. ,.•... 540
·, Mobile Home Repalr ....................................B60
'• Mobile Homes lor Rent.. ............................. 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ............................... 320
Money to Loan ................. ............................ 220
Motorc ycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ................. ......... .740

.. Muslc;lllnstruments ... ····· --------·····-·........... 57(1
Personals ..... -.-... --·..•............. ·--..... -. --· .........·. 005
Pets lot Sale ............... ................................ 560
Plumolng &amp; Heallng .................................... 820
.-~ Profuslonal Servlces .................. ,, ... .......... 230
Rodlo, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160
-.
•

Real Eatate Wanted .................. ................... 360
Schools lnstructlon ................. .................... 150

~

Situations Wanted ....................................... 12D
Space lor Rent ............................................. 46D
S pot1l ng Goods __ ...... ·--.,..... -.............. ---- ·--... 520

s'eed , Plant &amp; Fartlllzer .............................. 650

Tbe Dally Sentinel

304-675-1333
740-992-2155
www.mydailyregister.com www.mydailysentinelcom
f!¥ _ . c&lt;mv 'F..J'l\

:~ Cards ofThanks .......................................... 010
• Child/Elderly Care ...................................... 190
• Etectrlcai/Refrigatatlon............................... 840
Equipment for Rent. ................. ..... .............. 480
,. Extavatlng --····· .......... ........ ............... ........... 830
Farm Equlpment ... ,,,, ..•. ,,, ............................ 610
Farms for Rent ............................................. 430

•

UV'a for Sale .............................................. 720
.· STrucks
for Sole ............................................ 715
Upholstery ............. ...: .........-......................... 870
Vans For Sale ...............................................73D
"

•

Wanted
Wanted
Wanted
Wanted

to Buy ., .... ....................................... 09D
to Buy· Farm Supplies ................. 620
To Oo .............................................. 180
to Rent ............................................ 470

Yard Sale· Golllpolts ....................................072
: Yard Sate-Pometoy/Middte ......................... 074
,. Yard Sale-Pt. Ploaoant ................................ 076

•

T.....,.; t'"-fn•l

- -1---

Outside Sales ·
Representative

Aug 4th 9-?, St Rt'7
FOUND
Ftshtng Pole at Tuppers Plqtns (nea r BP sta
Krodel on Saturday 8/2/08 tton). namebrancl teenager
304-675-2773
&amp; young mt ss g1rls clothes

Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Any
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Registe·r or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

I

9

FOL'Nil

·• Business Opportunlty ................................. 210
Business Training ................. .................. .... 140

•

8 Sa t Aug

L..--~---_.J

~

110

10

I

BlSNK'iS •
OIJtlf)RTI JNirv

Wooden deck and out bulldtng Must take t&gt;oth and 3 famtly yd sate Yellowt&gt;ush
clean up.. 740-446-9490
Ad/Ptckens St ,Aug 8th from
9 00 -3 00 ,toys, ktds&amp;!Jeltte
larr AND
clothes.couch more Aacrnet

8 uilding Su pplles .. ·-·.- ---· .. --... -.. ···-- --· ..•.. ..•. ,. 550
Business and Bulldlngs ...••....•...•...•..•....•..• 340

CONVE'·

110

a

4x4's For Sale·--···-··········-·· --··· --·· --···-·· ---··· .. -725

COU P E

POLICIE S Ohto Valley Publtshrng resorvc15 tho ngh• to edt\ rejet:l. or t:lmt:el any ad atony \tme Et tors must be reported on th e lirst dav ol publn;atton oodlh•
Tnbune-SMttnei-Regrster wtll be nuponJtbte for no more than the coat ot the apace occupted by the &amp;rror and only the ltrst tnsertron We shall not be liable lor
&lt;~ny lou or upense that tesul ts from the publtcalton or O{nturon clan adverlt~emenl Correctron wttl be made m the rtrsl avJ1Io1ble edt! ton • Box roumber ed!
are always confident tal. • Cuuent rate card applies • All real eatate adverttaemenls sre subject to the Ft&lt;deral Fetr t1 ousmg Act ol\968 • This newspapet
accepts on ly h elp wanted ~ds meeting EOE st~ndlltds We wttl not ~nowlngly &amp;ccept any ad11ertl111ng rn lltOIAh On ol the law Wrlt not be responalble l or
errors tn an ad taken over the phone

2 male 1ndoot k11tens htter Oh t&gt;at&gt;yt Infant/Toddler
framed to good home 304- clothes, toys, cradle Tables
882-3980 New Haven Area decor, couches 152 Mctple
Dr Spnng Valley
6 weeks old m~:~ted pupptes,
2 female. 2 male 304 675 Wed &amp; Th ur 8·5, 2 mtl es out
5361
.
SR 2t8 up t1tll on right
Cloth es anUques 1 row
Commode &amp; Stnk Top m corn planter. tron skillets
good worktng order 304 corn st1eller &amp; wa lnut t1uller
675 5207
anttque trunk
benches
shelves, electrtc tools, old
Womens clothes stzes t 2tools, books, curtatns mtsc
14 already baKed up and
ready to go 15 North Th1rd 74
YARI&gt;Sc\I.E•
St Cheshtre Frtday Aug
Poi\n:aov/MmmJi

Sa le
At
Appliance
Warehouse 114 Chestnut
St
Henderson Mon -Frt
Furntlur e appliances Mtsc
Items

Wwn:u
TO BUI

Auto Repair ········--- ····-· -- -···--·· -········'·· ...... ..... 770

.:!:..Q.t, k

Thur s day for Sundays Paper

Rodney Communtly' Center
2 Female Coon Hounds Toys too ls baby clo tt1es,
304 675-1 B58
ptclures, tapes

·. Autos for Sale ................. ,. --···-··----·--·····-······710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ·········--···-·- --··--· ·· ·--750

.

Su nday Display : 1:00 p . m .

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

~~~t~h~e~lo~w~~~~~
d:nv:•------------, ~76' . . .PJ;\.~.~.·.s.
·,_I.E.-__.
~
Pt.EASN&lt;I

tDt•

00 CON -.
lli ~ /1? ) ' u

Sunday In - Column: 1 : 00 p.m .
Friday For Sundavs Paper

• All ads must be prepaid'

YARil SAL•GAt.I.IPOl L~

Frt Aug

Auction and Flea Market ........... .... .............. D80
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ......... ·--·- --·---·····-760

1.33$&lt; .&gt;

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Pnor To
Publication

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your.classified ads
-""'
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SO¢ for small
$ LOO for large

kttn ca rlyle@co m cast. n e l

Gl\·f:-IWA\ ·

Apartments for Rent ••..•.•••••...••• ····· -- ···-·-··-- 440

~r. -ll l:&lt;.

jl.

rate ear

\ \ \ 01 :vI \\1-'\j IS

iJ;.

Display Ads

.. Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Inc:lude Complete
Oescrlpth&gt;n • Include A Price • A11old Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Need ~ed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Daily In - Column: 1 : 00 p.m.
Monday -F riday for In ser tion
In Next Day 's P a per

·'

Anllques .... ................................. .................. 530

COUP E

Websites :
www.myda1lytribune com
www.myda1lysentinel .com
www.myda1lyreg1ste r.com

OearltirM

Word Ads

V IP

e n.

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUB AD NOW ONLINE

To Place
.UCribune
Sentinel
. l\egtster
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304} 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 446·3008
or Fax To (740) 992·2157
'
Or Fax To (304) 675·5234
--~~~--------------_,

•

REACH 3 COUNTIES

Galli a

£1seCan!
!

ONVERTIBLE·

llOT Onl.v
_ _:.555-55 ~- &lt;

Meigs County, OH

we cove

I

.I

:):) :)• :o;):) :o;)•:):):):)

ONVERTU
IIOT O nl.
__ 5~ !: l
OUP E

www.mydailysentinel.com

Absolute Top Dollar
Stl·
ver/gold
cotns
any
10KI14KI18K gold tewelry
dental gold, pre 1935 US
currency proof/mtn t sets.
dtamon ds. MTS· Com Shop,
t 51 2nd Avenue , Gallrpolls
446-2842
• Jwnk cars paytng $50-$300
If no answer, leave a message 740-388·0011
Tools &amp; etc mect1- power
toots carpenter tool s lawn &amp;
garden kn1tes &amp; watches,
Jewelry Buy trade or sell
hOme 386- 1515 or cell 2080320
Tools &amp; etc mech- power
tools carpen ter tools lawn B.
garden knttes &amp; watches,
jewelry. Buy trade or sell
home 388·1515 or cell 208-

~

bA~

www eomr cs com
110

'Ht u

© 2008 by
110

Admmtstrattve
Profess tonal
Immediately Available
CPA ltrm IS seektng a htgh·
ly-qualtfted, well spoken
admtnrslraltve profesSional
Oualiltcattons that must t&gt;e
mel tnclude
Professton&lt;t l apper1rance
both in dress and groomtng
proper use of grammar
tntermedtate ~nowledge of
M1crosolt Olhce tnclud1ng
Excel, Word , Outlook
Above·average compu ter
at&gt;thty and typrng Sktlls
Strong at&gt;t ltty to take tnt!laltve to complete tasks and
pnorrlrze and organrze to-do
ltsts Pttor e)(per1ence and
bookkeeprng kno~'&gt;&lt;le'dge 1s
a plus
Please send re sume wttll
salary requ1rements to
Chapman &amp; Butns CPAs
LLC
64 State Sueet
GallipOliS, OH 45531
If called tor an 1ntervtew,
please be prepared to take
a small test on the above
1tems and tlems tn your
resume .

m

\II \ I

"i l f{\ IC I· S

-------An Excellent way to earn
money Tlte New Avon
Call Manlyn 304-882 2645
AVON' All Areast To Buy or
Setl. Slltrley Spears 304675-1429

Gashter with 2 years expe·
nence 111 cashtertng Must
be trtendly and courteous
Apply 1n person at Thomas
It
Center
t76
Do
McCormi ck Rd Gall1polts

, . , , . . . . - - - - - - , Ce rt1fte d
Automottve
110
HEI.P\VAN1lJ)
TechntCJan and Certtf1ed
Dtesal Mechan1c 740-3896547

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts , wood
1tems.To $460/wk Materrats
prov1ded. Free Information
pkg 24Hr 801-426-4649
Regional
Dump
and
Pneumatic Tanker Onver~
A&amp;J Trucking Company m
Marietta, OH Is searct'!ing lor
qUaltlted, CDL-A drtvers lor
reg10nal dump and pneumatic tanker positions
Qualified applicants must be
at least 23yrs. have a mmtmum of 1 years of safe corn'merctal drivtng axpe~1ence in
a truck, HazMat certllicalton
clean MVR and good stabtll·
ty We offer compe1tt1ve beneftts plus ,:401 (k) and vaca:
11on pay Contact Kent Bt
800--'62-936510 apply or go
to www rJtr~Cklng com EOE

IIEI.P WWilll

RESP ITE
PROVIDERS
NEEDED beco'Tle stale
l1censed by anendtng tratn ·
111gs tteld on Saturdays
Earn SJO S45 a day for the
care ot a chtld trvtng +n your
home Homes are needed rn
,your eounly Call Oasts toll
free
1-877 325-1558.
Tra1n1ng v1tll beg1n August +n
Albany

BENNIG AN 'S now htf tng
Rvenrng cooks setvers host
and ma rnte nance Apply
Want to buy Junk Cars, call wtiH1n no phone c&lt;Jils
740-388-0684
please

I \11'1

110 '

FOSTER PARENTS AND

0320

Wanted lo Buy or Lease
Hunttng property m Me1gs or
surroundmg cou nt1e s 304'612- t593

H FI.a • W\~11-:n

\\'\'ilt:ll

Inc .

Domino's
Ptz7a
Now
Looktng to Hue Drtvors. In
Pmnt Pleasant Eleanor.
Gallipolis &amp; Pomeroy Apply
m Porson
Experienced Auto Body
Repairman I Frame rack
~ 740-992-2316
El(pertenced Tanker Dr1ver
w/Hazmat
endorsement
140-388-a547

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
517 89-$28 271hr, now t1tr1ng For appltcatton and free·
governement JOb mfo. call
Amertcan Assoc of l 1bOr 1913-599-8226 24/hrs Pli p
serv

iiiC::JnjoCision

lnfoCrston
o

Opportunity
$8.50/hour

Take Inbound customer
servtce calls tor Fortune
t 00 Compantes lncludrng
Time Warner Cable
• S8 50/hour FT
Prvtous expemnce With
customer servtco a plus
· Pa1d Tratntng Onstte
· He altt1 8e nel1t s

Call to scedule an
interview

Onto Valley Home Health;
1·888-IMC·PAYU
Inc hrrmg Home Health
Ext. 2311
A1des STNA CNA CHHA,
t1ttp .lfjobs.infoc tston. com PCA may apply at 1480
Ja ckson Ptke, Gathpolts,
Olttce
seektng Qhro or phOne 740-441Law
A ece ptt on t st / Ass 1s t ant 1393
for
more
info
Pteast:~ send Resume to Compe11t1ve wages, mtleage
CLA 13 cto Porn! Pleasant retmbursement and oenefits
Aegtster 200 Marn St Pt tnctudrng health tnsurance &amp;
Ple Asant. WV 25550
much more

Ohto Valley Put&gt;ltshtng wtth
otftces tn Pomeroy.
Galltpohs and Pt Pleasant
ts accepttng resumes tor a
'tull ttme outs1de sales
represenlaltve Applicants
must be organtzed,
creattve and able to
manage an established
accou nt Its! whtle ca lltng
on new customers
Candtdates must be
dtsctpltned selt-motwated
and a team player that
understands the
rmportance ol developtng
strong, mutually bene fiCial
bus1ness relattonshtps wtlh
our custome'rs Sales
e~pertence and reliable
transportalt on necessary
II YOJ-1 can sen and you
want to work full lime I
would ltke to hear !rom

yo"
Please send resume
cover letter and three
references to
Gall1po1ts_Datly Tnbune
Attn· Mall Rodgers

WANTED P&lt;Jrl ttme pos1
!tons avatlable to asstst mdt viduals wrtt1 mental retardatton at a group home 1n
B1dwell 35 hrs 1 lp·B 30a
Th.'F , Sat 7p-9a Sun Htgh
School dtplomatGED. valtd
Drtvers l1cense and tnree
years good dr1v1ng eKpenence requrred $7 75/hr Preemp loymint Drug Tesltng
Send resume to Buc't&lt;.eye
Communt ly Setvtces PO
Box 604 Jack son
OH
45640 or ema1l to bcycc
serv @yahoo com Deadline
for applicants
8/ 11 108
Equal
Opportun tl}'
Employer
WV BOhr
U11derground
Mtner Class s\arltng soon
Whti·Co-Tratntng 304·372
8346

150

Snuxn~"i
biS'I Rllf1'10~

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers CloSe To Hom e~
CaiiTodayt 740 446 4367
I -800-214·0452
v.ww g~lltpol sc aree• cDII~., edu
,l ccrcdtle&lt;l Mo T ber Accte&lt;.ltltng
Counol lor lndopendGnt Colleges
and Schools 12748

PO Box 469

•NOTICh
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommends
thai you do bust~ess wtlh
people you kn6w and
NOT to send money
through the rnatt until ~ ou
have mvesltgated the
olfenng

Mo~EI

Ill UJ.\N

l

Borrow Smart Contact
the Ohro Dtvtston ot 1
Frnanctal
lnstttutton s
Ofltce
of
Consumer
Atlatrs BEFORE yoll relt· i
nance ) Our home c• 1:
obtatn a loan BEWAAE J,
ol requests lor•any latgP\·
ndvancc pa)·ments c'
lees or tnsumnce Calllh t.&gt; '
Offrce ol
ConsumPr
Alfeurs toll free at 1· 666
278 0003 ro learn 11 tt1r 1
mortgage
broker
01
tender
tS
properl1
licensed (Th.r s rs a put&gt;l,
servrce announcement !
from the Oh10 Vaile·~l !
Publist1tng ComoanvJ
1j

!

Upcomtng Certthed NurSIRQ
As.'&gt;tstant Class Must have
a htgh sct1ool dtploma or
230
)I l."iSI(I'o;.\1
GED to apply Applrcatrons
StK\
\ (~.....
may be p1cked up at Lakrn
Hosp 1tal.
Monday
thru
TURNED DOWN ON
Frtday,
8am·4pm
Overbrook Aet1abilt1alton Applrcattons musl be turned SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
Center ts now accept1ng tn no later than 08115/0B at
No Fee Unl~ ss. We Wt n(
applications lor a fllll ltme COB EOE
1·888·582·3345
Matnlenam::e Asstslant Thts
i~I·
\II·S' I\11170
w1ll be a short term position
Mus, have eKpertence m
310
llmn:s
general matnlenonce 1nclud·
SAtE
tng carpentry, plumbmg. Kot Goldfish reduced p11ce
:.;.::~~:;,._.;
electrical, telephone and on pond plants Also get
Bulavtlle
Ptke
cable 1nstallatton, pa1nttng, your Kat ponds tested 446· 274
GalhpOIIS - Move 111 read\
grounds work, evaluation 1578 or 645-1361
3BA. I bath ranch CIA Qcl
and 1nspect1on of emer·
gency equtpment, ttem Pet Cremattons Call 740· heat VA/FHA approvec
assembly, and botler system ~44;,;6:.;·3~7.;.45~~---­ appratsed at S85,000 asl\1n•
$78 500 Call 740·446·73JS
operatron Contact Charla
00
8 row n · M c G u 1 r e
\V\\HU
3 bed HUD Honest on!
Adm1nt strato1 w1th questtons
To l)o
St0000' for ltstmgs 80J
at (7 40)g92-6472 Oualthed
6(0 4946 e~ R0 19
mow·
candtdates may apply at 333 D&amp;R Lawn Care
Page Street Middleport Ot1 mg, weed eattng hl3dge 3BR t 112 bill full !Ja ~r
lrtmmlng, Spnng &amp; Fall 111ent 1n grOund pool (need.
45760 EOE
cleanup Day 740·853-1702 1\ork) 1 car Qi::ll 111ce net(JI'
Oorhood close to tow1
POST OFFICE NOW
Asktng $60,000 {prtbe negL
HIRING
haOle) i4D 645 1796 leavt
Avg Pay $20fhr or
message
$57Kiyr tncludes
Galltpolts. OH 45631
or ematl to
mrodger! i mydatlytrtbune com
All repl1es wtll be kept tn
stnct conltdence

PHt

1..,....nm

r;

~
!210

Fed Ben OT
Placed by ad Source not
USPS who htres
t- 866·403-2562
AesCare Home Care IS
acceptrng appl1cattons lor
Support Assoctates. CNA &amp;
STNA MR1DD eKp preferred Apply at 8204 Carta
Drrve, Gallipolts, Mon Fn.
8·4
Ematl resume to
rharnson@rescare com
Sates Assoctates wtth at
least 2 years experience 1n
lumber and hardware
sates Must be sell motivated Apply In person at
Thom as Do II Center, t 76
MeCorm1ck Ad, Gallipolis

MT, MLT-Valley Dtagnosttc 11"'-"!!"~-~--,
Lab has an tmmed1ate openSportswriter
ing for day shtll. No swtng
The Ohto Valley
shtlt Resume to PO Bo~
Pubilst11ng Co
The Athens tv1elgs ESC has
a posttton opentng as Part33 Gallipolis Oh 45631
ts seeking a mot 1vated
Time Asststant for Specrat
people·Ortented ttldtvtd
Must t&gt;e 16 and able to work
Educalton tor the 2006-2009
ual to 1111 a vacancy in
evenings and .. weekends
Sc hool Year tn tervenlton
tt1e
news
department
Mus t have good people
Spectalist m Early Chtldt1ood
as a sportswn ter. The
sktlls The JOb conststs ol
Education degree reqUired
successful candtdate wtll
runntng tottery machine and
Must have excellent organ+·
cover high school athlet
regtster as welt as assum1ng
zattonal and computer sktlls
res tn the area tor the
accountabthty lor cash and
to be able to mamtarn Illes
datly ed+fton oi the news·
merchandtse Also stoclong
and do data entry Salary w1ll
paper, as well as ass1st
and cleantng are requnec:l
be based on cmdenttals and
wtth the productton of
24-t1ours
pet
week
ewPenence Please submtt a
Mtntmum, wage Apply rn
sports pages EJt:cellenl
letter oftnterest and resume
person at Country Carry-Out
wrtling and Engltsh
to John 0
Costanzo
t834 SR 7 N No pt1one
sk1lls photography sktlls
Superintendent , Athens ·
calls wtll be accep ted
and knowledge of desk·
.Meigs ESC 507 Rtchland
: : - - - - - - - , - , - - • top publ1shtng are
Avenue, Swte # 108 Atttens
Part trme clerk at the Mason
sought The posttton tS
Oh
45701
Application
Ctfy and New Haven PubliC
iull·ttme 40 hOurs a
Oeadltne August 11 2006
L1brar1eS Must ha've basiC
week 'l.tlh benehts
3 30pm The AM ESC IS an
computer sk1tls. abth ty to
equal
opportumty
lnte1ested parties can
work w•th tt1e publtc asstslEmployer/Provider
send resumes to Kevtn
lng w1th Story Hour as neecl·
kelly Managmg Edtlor,
ed
Appllcaltons can Oe
Ohro Valley Publlshtng
Wanted Pa11Ttme Bartender
ptcked up at the Mason
Co 825 Thtrd AYe.
Weekends Only Amencan
County Mason Ctly aod
Galltpohs Oh+o 45631 ,
Legton Post t4o . New
New Haven PubliC Ltbranes
or kkelly@mydadytnHaven, WV For +nlormatt on
ApplicatiOns must be sut&gt;bune com
can 304·662-3101 afler 4pm
mtlted by Augu.!il 15th 2008

Ill ~"':"

0J'P01Ul ~ In
tn

orne n er1ors or on

E~~~~--__J

PRICE REDUCED 569 900
27 I 2 Ltncoln Ave 3br 1ba
wrth detat;hed
garagP
mottva!ed setter 304 -675
6757
304 -6 10· 131 3 c
ASSISt 2 Sale 304 -755· 298(

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailys'entinel.com

· Wednesday, August 6, 2008

VVednesda~August6, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

. The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

·ALLEY OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder
All real

est~te

ad'lenlslng

In th is newspaper is
subject to the Federal

Hl\1\1'

i

Ftlr Houtlng Act ot 1961
which makes it illegal to
• ad11erti" "any
prelerenee, limitation or
discrimination based on
race, color, rell9lon, ae•

ramllia lstatua Of national
origin , or any intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or

YOUNG'S
$238/mo! 3 bed. 2 balh ,
Bank Repo! (S"o down, 20
years, 8"b APR) lor list1ngs
800·620·4946 ex. R027

West 5284
(Westie)
Highland errier. 3 mos old , ----------------

'

2003 Dodge Ram 1500 4A4 .
shots utd . $400 . Call lor
Hem1 , $8200 ObO. 256·1233
roore info. 339-2 201
&lt;OJ J\1(ffilRlYO~:!J
MtsiCAL

p10

discrimination."

lx'ffi!n IExrs

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements tor real
n tat9 which Is in
vi~ation 1Jf the law. Our
readers ;.re hereby
intormed that all
dwemnge advertised In
this newspaper are
avellable on an equal
opportunity bases.

Piano-WurHuer Spinel. lovely soond &amp; appearance has
been 1n 1 family $300 cell
304-532-1882 or 304-3724855

4WHEEIJ-:HS

2005
883
Sport~ter
Windshield . crash bars. sad·
dlebags.
Low mileage
$6000
740-416·3078.

Hill's Self
Storage

Remodeling
New Garages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Guhers
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio and Porch Decks

wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-62 15
PomNoy Oh1o
25 'fear~ Lu . JI E~p!'rll'

1u~

Racine, Ohio

45771
740-949-2217

Sizes 5'x10'

to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00AM-8:00PM

F'RliTS &amp;
V.:r;nAIII.FS

2006

Ear Corn lor Sale' 740-992- 4x4 ATV Borpbardia like
new, standard and au to
shift. double seat. 400 miles,
wench and rear grater blade.
S4000. Call740-339-2239 or
645·4621

• New Homes
• Garages
·Complete ·
Remodeling

RIGERHY$UlS
GIIIIGE

10

$1.11.124 PIIIIIIJ. II

740·992·5682
11119·6M·f
9-12SIL

Then louk In 1\tarv

Kay. You ·11 lind the
la1c~1 on -tre nd colors

•

Concrete Removal

and Replacerhent

All Types Of
Concrete Work

28 Ye.~rs Expe rience

-David Lewis
740-992·6971
Insured
wvo•2112 Froe Estimates
r

Mary Kay
Independent Ueauly
Consullanl
w" w.nuarykw y.cuna/j~;rut"su

7411-949-3027

Have

a

&amp; Removal ~

WWW . CAREO . COM

aiea rugs (I) 12x14 and 11)
5x7. Call at1er 6om, 4461423
For Sale as is: 1986 Miller
Modular ClassroOm. Sealed
bids accepted in Treasure's
Office ulllil 12:00 noon on
Wedllesday August 13
Hill s
Cateer
Buckeye
Center, Rio Grande. Ohio.
740·245-5334 .

(MPROVI-:\IENTS

I H \ \"'l'i II( I\ 110\

10

AliitlS

Lars&amp;
Abu:AGE

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steal Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Com:rete,
Angle,
Channe l, Flat B;u, Sleet
Orating
For
Drain s.
Driveways &amp; Walkway s. L&amp; L
Scrap Metal s Open Monday,
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Frjday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Tt-.ursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

3 acres for Sale on Sandhill

Rd $25,000. 304 895-3929
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT. 1031 Georges C ree~
• Rd , 441-1t11

Are you. 65

1971 Chevy Nova 350/350
Runs and loo~s great. 740245·01 25
-------------,-1997 Jeep Cherokee sPort,
only $2,000! Won't la st. For
listing s 800-620-4876 eJI
V457
~amaro

T-Top,
"'Si lver/blac ~. runs great, new
STEEL ARCH BUILDINGS: !1res &amp; bra~es. leather interi25x34 and 30~~:30 .
or &amp; sports tires. wall main·
save thousands on can - tained, body in great shape.
celled orders! Will sell for , Call 44 6:224 2
bala nce owed.
Police Imp ounds! Cars from
·oon'l Delay -.
$500!,
Hondas. Chevys ,
Call today for
Jeeps. Fords, &amp; m01 e1 lor
HUGE savings!
listings 800-620 -4876 a ~ V435
866·352·0469

or older?·
If so, you qualify for a

1999

FIND A JOB OR A NEW CAREER
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS .

Senior Discount*
when you pay for a 6 or 12
.month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

2) 33 hrs: 6a-10p • Satis'un
3) 31 hrs: llp-9a • Th/Wffh
Must have high school diploma or GED,
valid driver's license, three }'ears good
driving experience and adequate
automobile Insurance. $8.011/hr. Send.
resume to: Buckeye Commu•ity .
Services, P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH'
45640. Deadline fur applicanls: 8/12108.
Pre·employmenl drug testing:

-~alltpoUG Batl!' i!trtbune ·
- ~oint ~lea:6ant l\egi6ter
The Daily Sentinel
i&gt;unba~ ~tme' -&amp;enttnel

•

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I
I

I .

: City/State/Zip -----~---1

'I
I

I

I

' I

I

I

I
I

Phone'-~--~---------

I
I

Mall or drop off thla coupon along
with a copy ol your photo ID to
1
r Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

1
I

I

·-----~---····-············----··

9:00pm

Mason County Fair
At. 62 North Poinl Pleasant, WV

304-675-5463

7 Explode
(2 wds,}

B Nol fetling
state

10 Mag.
staffers

12

Animal

50 Grande or

meaa.

Japan Is
Bravo
28 Twologeitler 51 ~ootng
30 Snake eyes
c:luCit
31 PBS Iunder 52 lnlereat

well

9 Firsl U.S.

37 Clean one's

Madeline - 11 Nanny's
41 Bride's tiHe
vehicle

42 Sgls.

26 Evening
27 Where

amt.

desk
39 Kind

fat

ol pine

naturalist John Ray, who died in
1705, said, "Let him ma~e use of instinct

who·cannot make use of re ason."

74U-59 1-81J.l4

That is so true at lhe bridge tab le. We
tend to do things on instinct. We have
seen a play before, so we m¥e it now,
even ~ we could wor~ out that it is wrong

l!

when

are East. Defending against foor

hearts, Westleqthe spade ace, under

Go bEEP,
JAMEY !!

www.tbnbercrt:ek.eabirurcry.eom

on delense? To take a ruff. Any

t(me you can stop declarer from winning
a trick by rutting,, il is probably best to do
so - but not always.
You

: Hardwood Cabinetry And Furniture ,

which you droPif,e nine. starting an
echo ~high-low) with your doubleton.

740.446.9200

West cashes the spade king, everyone
following, then plays a third spade. How

2459 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis
F
MAT

would you defend?
West made a weak jump· overcall , show• ing a decent sill-card suit and 5-10 high·
card points.
·

CeleOOty C1tt1er CfYDIQ9rams a1e c1ea1tK1 flom qoolat1ons oy tamous people oast and oreten~.
Eao:h letter, the opl'le1 stan~s lor anotner

20 I'Hfl IK~"'"
Senior Citlnn

a

C/ou,.,~

Dltc:ount

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Racine, Ohio 740·247·2019

I'""00 YOU i:fALIZE 't'OO COUU&gt; "'
&amp;.1~

Owners:
Jon Van Meter .&amp;
Paul Rowe

LOTOF~

PD~-~ 'lEAl-\? t&gt;l\&gt;'{0\.) EIJE~
CO~SI CU.

IF YOU 00\'I'HELL

Cell: 740-416·5047
email:
jrshadlrm@aol.coRi

11-\EWf\Cl!£
W.Un\?

"'

l /1'\\61-\TBE Il-l .
/1\0'1!.£. TROJBL£
OOTELL
WI\OL£
Tl~lJHJ,!

0

: BIG NATE

Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources .
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 255SO
(304) 675-4340
O.r lax:
304·675-6975. or apply on-line at
www.pvalley.org

Help Wanted

n'\

20 year$ experience
in .~ewmg

Dmpcs, Shee-rs. Rod
Pocket Drapes,
S1.1.·ug~ . V;t l ancc~.

Romun SlwJcs

AFilAIO
CAN'T
1'!.151&lt;. IT.

·Guttering

r

Seamless Gu tters
Roofing, Siding , GutterS

80'(.

fiOLDING A
PAINT 8R.U:&gt;H
FOR COUNTLESS
HOUR!&gt; COULD

INfo THAT
MY MUSE
WILL SOON
REAWAKEN

DO MA.JOfl.

DAHA6E TO
~'(

Insured &amp; Bonded '
740-653-9657

DIGITS'

and

MorL' ...

Plus Pillow. Bcdskirt s
Tahlc Co1:ers &amp; Table
Runnl·rs
&lt;:ALL SANOY

Hom£:740-.,..2-3220
c,u,7411-41~-6144

Manley's
Recycling ·

I I-lAVE A DEDICATED ,
MECHAJIIIC .. l-IE'S ALWAV5
ON THE J09..

503 Mill St. • Mlddleaen. 0145180
140-992-3894

IIIII MIIIIIIIV-friiiiY 9:0111111-5:18
SIIIII'IIIY 9:01 . .12:00 1m

.'
'

•m

PAYIIIG TOP PRICES FOR
,.
MEDICAL ASSISTANTS
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting applicaniS for two· part-time
Medical Assistants. One position is for our
f am ily Practice office in Pt. Pleasant.
Previous medical office experience or
hospital related experience preferred.

Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
1520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550
(104) 675-4340
Or lax:
304·675·6975, or apply on-line at
www.pvalley.org

PUBLIC NOTICE
wllhdraw tho above
NOTICE' Is hereby collaloral prior to sale.
given that on Saturday, Further, The Farmers
Augus19; 2008 at 10:00 Bank and Savings
a.m ., a public sale will Company reaerves the
be hold al 211 W right to rojacl any or all
_Second St., Pomeroy, bids submiHod.
Ohio. The Farmers Tho above described
Bank and Savings collaleral will be sold
Company Is selling for "as Is-where is", wiUi
cash In hand or certi- no · expressed
or
fied check lhe follow· Implied
warranty
lng eollalaral:'
given.
.
200l Dodge Stratus For further lnforma483AG52H91E123283 llon, or for an appoint·
Tho Farmers Bank and ment to in'apect c·o llat- .
Savings
Company, aral, prior to sale data
Pomeroy,
Ohio, contact Cyndle or Ken
reaarvao the right lo at 992·2136.
bid at thlo sola,_and 10 (8) 6 , 7, 8

of spades. But it is usually right to stop
declarer from getting an easy discard on
a winner. Here, though , if you ruff
dummy's spade queen, it will cost' your
natural trump ·Irick. Instead, discard .
Then declarer. unless he is looking
through lhe backs of the cards, will lose

G

Help Wanted

PHARMACIST
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a per diem
Pharmacist. B.S. Pharmacy, or Ph.d
Pharmacy from accredited college or
university. WV State P~armacist Licensure.
Two
years
pharmacist
experience
preferred. Hospital experience pr~ferred.

Since West promised six spades in the
Didding, you know that South is also out

four tricks: two spades, one hean and
one diamond.

PSI CONSTRUCTION

IrS TOO BIID C£~AIN
COWS CAN'TPARTAKE
IN THIS COOLNESS.

THIS CALLS FO~ A
SIPPY·SIP OF MY NICE
COOLWIONA...

Construction
• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing

• Decks
• Gar'ages • Polo Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II .
742·2332

Roofing,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows, ,.
Electric, Plumbing;'
Drywall.
Remodeling, _Roon;J
Additions
Local Contnictor :·

740·367·0544.
Free Estimates :

740·367·0536 •

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Addilions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Sidipg • Rooting • Pole

Call:

DARYLE SINGLETARY
Thursday, Aug. 7th

Garage

contents

English

For Remodeling and New House Building :

r

Pass

feature ,

would pass and Collect 300. (Note that
three no-trump is hopeleSS', as long as
West duc~ s the first round of spades.)

Subscriber's Name _________
Addr~ss

Pass
Pass

34 Hippie
greeting
35 ~egal rep
36 In- (as
found}
38 Feeble
40 Actress ·

44 Sonnet

CELEBRITY CIPHER

AA/EOE

P••••••••••••••••••••~•••••••~-1
I
1
I
I
I

24
Pass

A natural instinct
that is dangerous

*Rcnsonablc Rarc s '
*Insured
·'I
*Ex pcrictlred
R&lt;..'h:n.' tKC~ A\·aiiahk 1
•
Call Gary Stan ley @):

•.

WANTED

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

33 Bob Hope

5 Jaekel
6

of Scola
43 Embers

stanza
45 Exhauolad
formatton 47 Nonaenee
21 11 th·grade
poel
.
exam
48 Come down
22 Mo. bill
:hard
24 Keystone - 49 Currant

4 Tennvson
poem

.habitat
32 Malone
of "Cheers"

apart,
as plans
(2 wds.)
18 Congenial
20 Geolo~ic

Complete Tree Care

Help Wanted

I) 36 hrs: 3-llp • M-Th; 3-IOp Fri

3 Ouick
flashes

26 Pat on

41 Queen

16 Fallen

stand~n

Who knows what Soulh should do when

Help Wanted

PART-TIME positions available to assist
individuals with mental retardation in
Middleport:

Pass

I9

2 Slandish

on this deal.
What is one of the most common desires

AA/EOE
Help Wanted

Pass

1 Cruise port

two spades comes bac~ 10 him? A take·
out double is possible: probably North

Help Wanted

Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In 07 Bu ick Lucern e CXS,
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1• loaded. low mlles $26,000.
339-06;)5
800-537-9528.

1•

\Vurk

fUR SALE

JET
· AERATION MOTORS

East

'

DOWN

Service

BASEMENT

r

North

Opening lead: • A

IMurK • Fr.. btl mat..
141H4 1-131 7

WATERPROOFING
Carmichael Equipment. 740·
UnaondiliOnal lifelime guar446-2412
antee. Local references l ur·
ltw&amp;
ni shed. Establisl'1ed 1975 .
GRAIN
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870. Rogers Basement
Square bales, first and sec· Waterprooling
ono cutting orchard grass
mix. 4~~:5 rolls inside. 740·
446-2075
•

West

.f •

Qual ity :~

Johnson's Tree

John ~~-....,l~lo·~-IE_
" __

Deere lately? You'll -be sur·
prised! Check out our used
inventory
at

Brand ~ew 3bed 2bath on
+ -hair acre in Pt. Pleasa nt.
OWNER FINANCE AVAIL·
ABLE . 740·446·3570

r

you priced

' ') .

29 Dolphin

North

temporarily
54 Serving
of lamb
55 Fireplace
tool
5&amp; Rendtzvous

covering

sponsor
South

·and a l way~ he in
stvle!

JaiaDita Grueser

18 Go-ahead
19 Refs'
cousins
23 Onion

• J,

Vulnerable: North-So uth

Stanley Tree-&gt;
Trimming ~

Please leave messa

16 Gellaller
17 Tangy

25 Gnal or
ani

Dea le~

* Prompt and

15 Revise

South
• 6 5
9AI 09864

.. AKQ

Stop &amp; Compare

with ca~y-t o-app l y

Iori

6 4 3

740-992.

lips. A~k me how you
can get the honest
looks of l he sca~on ­

It\ II I

• .9 3
• J 7 3 2
t A 8 5
.. J 9 7 6

.. 10 4 3

coorc.lin:lll'd fnr ymr

~oil

6 AK8742

••5

14 Ringlike
Islands

flavor

East

1114,1 mo pd

I I II IS
((),(1{111
l o,-, I I(L l I [0\,

8 52

West

-.

love
the latest
looks?

I \N\1 ~oil 1'1'1 II '
,'\.II\ I 'IO&lt; 1\
Foreclosure 4br. 2ba, only
$29,900! Priced to Sell• For
listin9s 800-620-4946 ex
T462

•

Kawasa~1

Ninta EX250·F. 11 50 m1tes , li~e new.
740·245·5789 or 645-6505

10

• K Q.
t K Q· 10 9 7

29670 Bashan Road

Room Additions &amp;

' f-' ,

7603.

·
:
•
:

CARPENTER
SERVICE

oa-06-oa

Anaw ... to Prnlout Puzzle

1 Fluid rock 49 More
6 Put up Wilh
bohemian
11 Column
52 Kind
12 Soolhed
of pancake
13 Curie
53 ~Ole
discovery

North .
• QJ

46 Melodnoma
48 MuH

Barns • Pati o's, Porches and Decks

MilE W. MARCUM, OWNER
, 472J9Ri ehcl RmKl. Lung Bo110rn. OH

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416-1834

25+ _~ears experiem.:.- Free EMimate.~

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

I D\.J1t\o...)l:tl'D
11\IHK I'D

R'I:MEM!!ER
A1\\IN6
. LIK~

TIIAT

-~-~---- ------------------------------~·----

AstroGraph
'lllur 'lllrihdoy:

Thur•day, Aug. 7. 2008
By Bernice Bede O.al
A new you could be emerging in the year
ahead who will be a pretty tough cookie,
making It possible to rec~ive rewards
and recognition in some of the same
areas you were previously taken for
6
granted.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Ahhough condihons in general are quite favorable , the
. best possibilities tor making a big splash
is through commercial and financial
involvements. Spend quality lime in
·
these venues.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - View life
earnestly, but don't take rlla!!ers or
events so seriously that you lose your
sense of humo r., A good balance
between the two will hold you In good
·,
stead lor achieving success.
liBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) -Even if you
go out of your. WB'f to do someone a
favor, don't make it such a big deal that
the person ends up ~ling he or she is
obllgaled to you In some manner. Let it
be known there are no strings attached.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - A friend
who Is presenlly on lhe ouls with your
peer group needs some reassufi!.nce
thal .he or she isn't standing alone. LeJ
your pal know that you're not taking
sides.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- 0ec. 21) Although you may not realize it. you havs
greater Infernal forUtude than you
believe. Should you feel lhreatened or
challenged. your backbone wijl stiffen in
order to 'make a strong stance.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Usually It isn't wise to otter unsolicited
advice, but if you believe a close friehd
could prolll from one·of your past e)(pertem:es, share the lessons you've learned.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) · - If an
arrangement Is having a negative effect
upon you'r finances and/or reputation,
don't hesllate to make the necessary'
changes. Pro!ect your ll')terasts firs! and
foremost.
·
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20 ).-- ThEi probabilities for achieving success will be
considerably heightened because you're
not afraid to han dle difficult situations.
even If they are personally distastefuL
ARIES (March 2 1-Aprll 19) - Ffl ltoW
workers will see many good reasonS to
attu ne their performar;~ces to yours . The
efficiency with which you pertorm your
tasks will make them sit up and take
notice.
TAURUS (Aprii20·May 20)- Something
you haven't been able to achieve on your
own can be accomplished by partnering
with a. competent ally. Don't hesitate to
do .so because It will benetn both.
GEMINI (MBy 2 1-June 20) - Allhough '
an assignment might not be to your lik·
Jng, .you'll step up to the plate and take
on whatever Is fhrown at you. By meeting
your duties head-on, they won't seem
tough at an.
CANCER (June 21-.July 22) - Small
amount• have • way or adding up when
.an 11 eald and done, aG.bll satlafled wl1h
multiPI• tmall galnl lnltlld ofctrylng tc
ma~ on• big killing.

by Luis Campos
Today 's clue: Wequals P
" EJNXDUR~NW
~NR

VNOSR. "

IHMX

NR

• IHJU

ALX

JXWLJCRX

IHMX · VNA~HTA

NR

GOJHD

CORVXJ.

" NE

BHTIU

ALX KTXRANHO?"

OHT
• INIO

AHPINO
PRE~IOUS SOLUTION - "NO/Iller political party is clean when il comeslo
tactics that divide our people: • Forme r Georgia ·Governor Roy Barnes

~~~:t:~' S©~~lA-~t-~s·
r.lltt&lt;l ir! ClAT I. POLlAN
Ofour

ll:eorrangt

WOlD
GlMI ·

lfners of the

scrambled word1 be·
low tp form four simple words.

I
l

HIDARS

IIII1
2

I
·

ME R A C

Sign in community charity

~

L.L-L-.I-..1..-' ~ . ofticc, "Service to Olhers Is lbe
Renl You Pay for Your Room

DEBHAE

t-.,..,,...,,..a..,l'"l...,.--T1 1

.
1

.
1

Icf~o:~-~~;;· : •h• chuck[• quorood
.

.by

you

~ r;:~;.~uMSERto I' .!'

filling in tho mlulng wor~

develop from stttl) No. J below.

I' I' I' I' I' Is I' I
III IIIIIII
0"

SCRAMIHS A,'iSWI·IlS !!.\iOn
PAGODA - REBUS - - HOVEL· CF.RI'AL - AI..GEBR,\
Grarnps to graduale., "When you 1hink you would

back lo yoUI youth. think of ALGEBRA ."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

like to go

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailys'entinel.com

· Wednesday, August 6, 2008

VVednesda~August6, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

. The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

·ALLEY OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder
All real

est~te

ad'lenlslng

In th is newspaper is
subject to the Federal

Hl\1\1'

i

Ftlr Houtlng Act ot 1961
which makes it illegal to
• ad11erti" "any
prelerenee, limitation or
discrimination based on
race, color, rell9lon, ae•

ramllia lstatua Of national
origin , or any intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or

YOUNG'S
$238/mo! 3 bed. 2 balh ,
Bank Repo! (S"o down, 20
years, 8"b APR) lor list1ngs
800·620·4946 ex. R027

West 5284
(Westie)
Highland errier. 3 mos old , ----------------

'

2003 Dodge Ram 1500 4A4 .
shots utd . $400 . Call lor
Hem1 , $8200 ObO. 256·1233
roore info. 339-2 201
&lt;OJ J\1(ffilRlYO~:!J
MtsiCAL

p10

discrimination."

lx'ffi!n IExrs

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements tor real
n tat9 which Is in
vi~ation 1Jf the law. Our
readers ;.re hereby
intormed that all
dwemnge advertised In
this newspaper are
avellable on an equal
opportunity bases.

Piano-WurHuer Spinel. lovely soond &amp; appearance has
been 1n 1 family $300 cell
304-532-1882 or 304-3724855

4WHEEIJ-:HS

2005
883
Sport~ter
Windshield . crash bars. sad·
dlebags.
Low mileage
$6000
740-416·3078.

Hill's Self
Storage

Remodeling
New Garages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Guhers
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio and Porch Decks

wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-62 15
PomNoy Oh1o
25 'fear~ Lu . JI E~p!'rll'

1u~

Racine, Ohio

45771
740-949-2217

Sizes 5'x10'

to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00AM-8:00PM

F'RliTS &amp;
V.:r;nAIII.FS

2006

Ear Corn lor Sale' 740-992- 4x4 ATV Borpbardia like
new, standard and au to
shift. double seat. 400 miles,
wench and rear grater blade.
S4000. Call740-339-2239 or
645·4621

• New Homes
• Garages
·Complete ·
Remodeling

RIGERHY$UlS
GIIIIGE

10

$1.11.124 PIIIIIIJ. II

740·992·5682
11119·6M·f
9-12SIL

Then louk In 1\tarv

Kay. You ·11 lind the
la1c~1 on -tre nd colors

•

Concrete Removal

and Replacerhent

All Types Of
Concrete Work

28 Ye.~rs Expe rience

-David Lewis
740-992·6971
Insured
wvo•2112 Froe Estimates
r

Mary Kay
Independent Ueauly
Consullanl
w" w.nuarykw y.cuna/j~;rut"su

7411-949-3027

Have

a

&amp; Removal ~

WWW . CAREO . COM

aiea rugs (I) 12x14 and 11)
5x7. Call at1er 6om, 4461423
For Sale as is: 1986 Miller
Modular ClassroOm. Sealed
bids accepted in Treasure's
Office ulllil 12:00 noon on
Wedllesday August 13
Hill s
Cateer
Buckeye
Center, Rio Grande. Ohio.
740·245-5334 .

(MPROVI-:\IENTS

I H \ \"'l'i II( I\ 110\

10

AliitlS

Lars&amp;
Abu:AGE

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steal Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Com:rete,
Angle,
Channe l, Flat B;u, Sleet
Orating
For
Drain s.
Driveways &amp; Walkway s. L&amp; L
Scrap Metal s Open Monday,
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Frjday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Tt-.ursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

3 acres for Sale on Sandhill

Rd $25,000. 304 895-3929
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT. 1031 Georges C ree~
• Rd , 441-1t11

Are you. 65

1971 Chevy Nova 350/350
Runs and loo~s great. 740245·01 25
-------------,-1997 Jeep Cherokee sPort,
only $2,000! Won't la st. For
listing s 800-620-4876 eJI
V457
~amaro

T-Top,
"'Si lver/blac ~. runs great, new
STEEL ARCH BUILDINGS: !1res &amp; bra~es. leather interi25x34 and 30~~:30 .
or &amp; sports tires. wall main·
save thousands on can - tained, body in great shape.
celled orders! Will sell for , Call 44 6:224 2
bala nce owed.
Police Imp ounds! Cars from
·oon'l Delay -.
$500!,
Hondas. Chevys ,
Call today for
Jeeps. Fords, &amp; m01 e1 lor
HUGE savings!
listings 800-620 -4876 a ~ V435
866·352·0469

or older?·
If so, you qualify for a

1999

FIND A JOB OR A NEW CAREER
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS .

Senior Discount*
when you pay for a 6 or 12
.month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

2) 33 hrs: 6a-10p • Satis'un
3) 31 hrs: llp-9a • Th/Wffh
Must have high school diploma or GED,
valid driver's license, three }'ears good
driving experience and adequate
automobile Insurance. $8.011/hr. Send.
resume to: Buckeye Commu•ity .
Services, P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH'
45640. Deadline fur applicanls: 8/12108.
Pre·employmenl drug testing:

-~alltpoUG Batl!' i!trtbune ·
- ~oint ~lea:6ant l\egi6ter
The Daily Sentinel
i&gt;unba~ ~tme' -&amp;enttnel

•

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I
I

I .

: City/State/Zip -----~---1

'I
I

I

I

' I

I

I

I
I

Phone'-~--~---------

I
I

Mall or drop off thla coupon along
with a copy ol your photo ID to
1
r Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

1
I

I

·-----~---····-············----··

9:00pm

Mason County Fair
At. 62 North Poinl Pleasant, WV

304-675-5463

7 Explode
(2 wds,}

B Nol fetling
state

10 Mag.
staffers

12

Animal

50 Grande or

meaa.

Japan Is
Bravo
28 Twologeitler 51 ~ootng
30 Snake eyes
c:luCit
31 PBS Iunder 52 lnlereat

well

9 Firsl U.S.

37 Clean one's

Madeline - 11 Nanny's
41 Bride's tiHe
vehicle

42 Sgls.

26 Evening
27 Where

amt.

desk
39 Kind

fat

ol pine

naturalist John Ray, who died in
1705, said, "Let him ma~e use of instinct

who·cannot make use of re ason."

74U-59 1-81J.l4

That is so true at lhe bridge tab le. We
tend to do things on instinct. We have
seen a play before, so we m¥e it now,
even ~ we could wor~ out that it is wrong

l!

when

are East. Defending against foor

hearts, Westleqthe spade ace, under

Go bEEP,
JAMEY !!

www.tbnbercrt:ek.eabirurcry.eom

on delense? To take a ruff. Any

t(me you can stop declarer from winning
a trick by rutting,, il is probably best to do
so - but not always.
You

: Hardwood Cabinetry And Furniture ,

which you droPif,e nine. starting an
echo ~high-low) with your doubleton.

740.446.9200

West cashes the spade king, everyone
following, then plays a third spade. How

2459 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis
F
MAT

would you defend?
West made a weak jump· overcall , show• ing a decent sill-card suit and 5-10 high·
card points.
·

CeleOOty C1tt1er CfYDIQ9rams a1e c1ea1tK1 flom qoolat1ons oy tamous people oast and oreten~.
Eao:h letter, the opl'le1 stan~s lor anotner

20 I'Hfl IK~"'"
Senior Citlnn

a

C/ou,.,~

Dltc:ount

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Racine, Ohio 740·247·2019

I'""00 YOU i:fALIZE 't'OO COUU&gt; "'
&amp;.1~

Owners:
Jon Van Meter .&amp;
Paul Rowe

LOTOF~

PD~-~ 'lEAl-\? t&gt;l\&gt;'{0\.) EIJE~
CO~SI CU.

IF YOU 00\'I'HELL

Cell: 740-416·5047
email:
jrshadlrm@aol.coRi

11-\EWf\Cl!£
W.Un\?

"'

l /1'\\61-\TBE Il-l .
/1\0'1!.£. TROJBL£
OOTELL
WI\OL£
Tl~lJHJ,!

0

: BIG NATE

Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources .
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 255SO
(304) 675-4340
O.r lax:
304·675-6975. or apply on-line at
www.pvalley.org

Help Wanted

n'\

20 year$ experience
in .~ewmg

Dmpcs, Shee-rs. Rod
Pocket Drapes,
S1.1.·ug~ . V;t l ancc~.

Romun SlwJcs

AFilAIO
CAN'T
1'!.151&lt;. IT.

·Guttering

r

Seamless Gu tters
Roofing, Siding , GutterS

80'(.

fiOLDING A
PAINT 8R.U:&gt;H
FOR COUNTLESS
HOUR!&gt; COULD

INfo THAT
MY MUSE
WILL SOON
REAWAKEN

DO MA.JOfl.

DAHA6E TO
~'(

Insured &amp; Bonded '
740-653-9657

DIGITS'

and

MorL' ...

Plus Pillow. Bcdskirt s
Tahlc Co1:ers &amp; Table
Runnl·rs
&lt;:ALL SANOY

Hom£:740-.,..2-3220
c,u,7411-41~-6144

Manley's
Recycling ·

I I-lAVE A DEDICATED ,
MECHAJIIIC .. l-IE'S ALWAV5
ON THE J09..

503 Mill St. • Mlddleaen. 0145180
140-992-3894

IIIII MIIIIIIIV-friiiiY 9:0111111-5:18
SIIIII'IIIY 9:01 . .12:00 1m

.'
'

•m

PAYIIIG TOP PRICES FOR
,.
MEDICAL ASSISTANTS
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting applicaniS for two· part-time
Medical Assistants. One position is for our
f am ily Practice office in Pt. Pleasant.
Previous medical office experience or
hospital related experience preferred.

Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
1520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550
(104) 675-4340
Or lax:
304·675·6975, or apply on-line at
www.pvalley.org

PUBLIC NOTICE
wllhdraw tho above
NOTICE' Is hereby collaloral prior to sale.
given that on Saturday, Further, The Farmers
Augus19; 2008 at 10:00 Bank and Savings
a.m ., a public sale will Company reaerves the
be hold al 211 W right to rojacl any or all
_Second St., Pomeroy, bids submiHod.
Ohio. The Farmers Tho above described
Bank and Savings collaleral will be sold
Company Is selling for "as Is-where is", wiUi
cash In hand or certi- no · expressed
or
fied check lhe follow· Implied
warranty
lng eollalaral:'
given.
.
200l Dodge Stratus For further lnforma483AG52H91E123283 llon, or for an appoint·
Tho Farmers Bank and ment to in'apect c·o llat- .
Savings
Company, aral, prior to sale data
Pomeroy,
Ohio, contact Cyndle or Ken
reaarvao the right lo at 992·2136.
bid at thlo sola,_and 10 (8) 6 , 7, 8

of spades. But it is usually right to stop
declarer from getting an easy discard on
a winner. Here, though , if you ruff
dummy's spade queen, it will cost' your
natural trump ·Irick. Instead, discard .
Then declarer. unless he is looking
through lhe backs of the cards, will lose

G

Help Wanted

PHARMACIST
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a per diem
Pharmacist. B.S. Pharmacy, or Ph.d
Pharmacy from accredited college or
university. WV State P~armacist Licensure.
Two
years
pharmacist
experience
preferred. Hospital experience pr~ferred.

Since West promised six spades in the
Didding, you know that South is also out

four tricks: two spades, one hean and
one diamond.

PSI CONSTRUCTION

IrS TOO BIID C£~AIN
COWS CAN'TPARTAKE
IN THIS COOLNESS.

THIS CALLS FO~ A
SIPPY·SIP OF MY NICE
COOLWIONA...

Construction
• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing

• Decks
• Gar'ages • Polo Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II .
742·2332

Roofing,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows, ,.
Electric, Plumbing;'
Drywall.
Remodeling, _Roon;J
Additions
Local Contnictor :·

740·367·0544.
Free Estimates :

740·367·0536 •

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Addilions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Sidipg • Rooting • Pole

Call:

DARYLE SINGLETARY
Thursday, Aug. 7th

Garage

contents

English

For Remodeling and New House Building :

r

Pass

feature ,

would pass and Collect 300. (Note that
three no-trump is hopeleSS', as long as
West duc~ s the first round of spades.)

Subscriber's Name _________
Addr~ss

Pass
Pass

34 Hippie
greeting
35 ~egal rep
36 In- (as
found}
38 Feeble
40 Actress ·

44 Sonnet

CELEBRITY CIPHER

AA/EOE

P••••••••••••••••••••~•••••••~-1
I
1
I
I
I

24
Pass

A natural instinct
that is dangerous

*Rcnsonablc Rarc s '
*Insured
·'I
*Ex pcrictlred
R&lt;..'h:n.' tKC~ A\·aiiahk 1
•
Call Gary Stan ley @):

•.

WANTED

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

33 Bob Hope

5 Jaekel
6

of Scola
43 Embers

stanza
45 Exhauolad
formatton 47 Nonaenee
21 11 th·grade
poel
.
exam
48 Come down
22 Mo. bill
:hard
24 Keystone - 49 Currant

4 Tennvson
poem

.habitat
32 Malone
of "Cheers"

apart,
as plans
(2 wds.)
18 Congenial
20 Geolo~ic

Complete Tree Care

Help Wanted

I) 36 hrs: 3-llp • M-Th; 3-IOp Fri

3 Ouick
flashes

26 Pat on

41 Queen

16 Fallen

stand~n

Who knows what Soulh should do when

Help Wanted

PART-TIME positions available to assist
individuals with mental retardation in
Middleport:

Pass

I9

2 Slandish

on this deal.
What is one of the most common desires

AA/EOE
Help Wanted

Pass

1 Cruise port

two spades comes bac~ 10 him? A take·
out double is possible: probably North

Help Wanted

Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In 07 Bu ick Lucern e CXS,
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1• loaded. low mlles $26,000.
339-06;)5
800-537-9528.

1•

\Vurk

fUR SALE

JET
· AERATION MOTORS

East

'

DOWN

Service

BASEMENT

r

North

Opening lead: • A

IMurK • Fr.. btl mat..
141H4 1-131 7

WATERPROOFING
Carmichael Equipment. 740·
UnaondiliOnal lifelime guar446-2412
antee. Local references l ur·
ltw&amp;
ni shed. Establisl'1ed 1975 .
GRAIN
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870. Rogers Basement
Square bales, first and sec· Waterprooling
ono cutting orchard grass
mix. 4~~:5 rolls inside. 740·
446-2075
•

West

.f •

Qual ity :~

Johnson's Tree

John ~~-....,l~lo·~-IE_
" __

Deere lately? You'll -be sur·
prised! Check out our used
inventory
at

Brand ~ew 3bed 2bath on
+ -hair acre in Pt. Pleasa nt.
OWNER FINANCE AVAIL·
ABLE . 740·446·3570

r

you priced

' ') .

29 Dolphin

North

temporarily
54 Serving
of lamb
55 Fireplace
tool
5&amp; Rendtzvous

covering

sponsor
South

·and a l way~ he in
stvle!

JaiaDita Grueser

18 Go-ahead
19 Refs'
cousins
23 Onion

• J,

Vulnerable: North-So uth

Stanley Tree-&gt;
Trimming ~

Please leave messa

16 Gellaller
17 Tangy

25 Gnal or
ani

Dea le~

* Prompt and

15 Revise

South
• 6 5
9AI 09864

.. AKQ

Stop &amp; Compare

with ca~y-t o-app l y

Iori

6 4 3

740-992.

lips. A~k me how you
can get the honest
looks of l he sca~on ­

It\ II I

• .9 3
• J 7 3 2
t A 8 5
.. J 9 7 6

.. 10 4 3

coorc.lin:lll'd fnr ymr

~oil

6 AK8742

••5

14 Ringlike
Islands

flavor

East

1114,1 mo pd

I I II IS
((),(1{111
l o,-, I I(L l I [0\,

8 52

West

-.

love
the latest
looks?

I \N\1 ~oil 1'1'1 II '
,'\.II\ I 'IO&lt; 1\
Foreclosure 4br. 2ba, only
$29,900! Priced to Sell• For
listin9s 800-620-4946 ex
T462

•

Kawasa~1

Ninta EX250·F. 11 50 m1tes , li~e new.
740·245·5789 or 645-6505

10

• K Q.
t K Q· 10 9 7

29670 Bashan Road

Room Additions &amp;

' f-' ,

7603.

·
:
•
:

CARPENTER
SERVICE

oa-06-oa

Anaw ... to Prnlout Puzzle

1 Fluid rock 49 More
6 Put up Wilh
bohemian
11 Column
52 Kind
12 Soolhed
of pancake
13 Curie
53 ~Ole
discovery

North .
• QJ

46 Melodnoma
48 MuH

Barns • Pati o's, Porches and Decks

MilE W. MARCUM, OWNER
, 472J9Ri ehcl RmKl. Lung Bo110rn. OH

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416-1834

25+ _~ears experiem.:.- Free EMimate.~

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

I D\.J1t\o...)l:tl'D
11\IHK I'D

R'I:MEM!!ER
A1\\IN6
. LIK~

TIIAT

-~-~---- ------------------------------~·----

AstroGraph
'lllur 'lllrihdoy:

Thur•day, Aug. 7. 2008
By Bernice Bede O.al
A new you could be emerging in the year
ahead who will be a pretty tough cookie,
making It possible to rec~ive rewards
and recognition in some of the same
areas you were previously taken for
6
granted.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Ahhough condihons in general are quite favorable , the
. best possibilities tor making a big splash
is through commercial and financial
involvements. Spend quality lime in
·
these venues.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - View life
earnestly, but don't take rlla!!ers or
events so seriously that you lose your
sense of humo r., A good balance
between the two will hold you In good
·,
stead lor achieving success.
liBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) -Even if you
go out of your. WB'f to do someone a
favor, don't make it such a big deal that
the person ends up ~ling he or she is
obllgaled to you In some manner. Let it
be known there are no strings attached.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - A friend
who Is presenlly on lhe ouls with your
peer group needs some reassufi!.nce
thal .he or she isn't standing alone. LeJ
your pal know that you're not taking
sides.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- 0ec. 21) Although you may not realize it. you havs
greater Infernal forUtude than you
believe. Should you feel lhreatened or
challenged. your backbone wijl stiffen in
order to 'make a strong stance.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Usually It isn't wise to otter unsolicited
advice, but if you believe a close friehd
could prolll from one·of your past e)(pertem:es, share the lessons you've learned.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) · - If an
arrangement Is having a negative effect
upon you'r finances and/or reputation,
don't hesllate to make the necessary'
changes. Pro!ect your ll')terasts firs! and
foremost.
·
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20 ).-- ThEi probabilities for achieving success will be
considerably heightened because you're
not afraid to han dle difficult situations.
even If they are personally distastefuL
ARIES (March 2 1-Aprll 19) - Ffl ltoW
workers will see many good reasonS to
attu ne their performar;~ces to yours . The
efficiency with which you pertorm your
tasks will make them sit up and take
notice.
TAURUS (Aprii20·May 20)- Something
you haven't been able to achieve on your
own can be accomplished by partnering
with a. competent ally. Don't hesitate to
do .so because It will benetn both.
GEMINI (MBy 2 1-June 20) - Allhough '
an assignment might not be to your lik·
Jng, .you'll step up to the plate and take
on whatever Is fhrown at you. By meeting
your duties head-on, they won't seem
tough at an.
CANCER (June 21-.July 22) - Small
amount• have • way or adding up when
.an 11 eald and done, aG.bll satlafled wl1h
multiPI• tmall galnl lnltlld ofctrylng tc
ma~ on• big killing.

by Luis Campos
Today 's clue: Wequals P
" EJNXDUR~NW
~NR

VNOSR. "

IHMX

NR

• IHJU

ALX

JXWLJCRX

IHMX · VNA~HTA

NR

GOJHD

CORVXJ.

" NE

BHTIU

ALX KTXRANHO?"

OHT
• INIO

AHPINO
PRE~IOUS SOLUTION - "NO/Iller political party is clean when il comeslo
tactics that divide our people: • Forme r Georgia ·Governor Roy Barnes

~~~:t:~' S©~~lA-~t-~s·
r.lltt&lt;l ir! ClAT I. POLlAN
Ofour

ll:eorrangt

WOlD
GlMI ·

lfners of the

scrambled word1 be·
low tp form four simple words.

I
l

HIDARS

IIII1
2

I
·

ME R A C

Sign in community charity

~

L.L-L-.I-..1..-' ~ . ofticc, "Service to Olhers Is lbe
Renl You Pay for Your Room

DEBHAE

t-.,..,,...,,..a..,l'"l...,.--T1 1

.
1

.
1

Icf~o:~-~~;;· : •h• chuck[• quorood
.

.by

you

~ r;:~;.~uMSERto I' .!'

filling in tho mlulng wor~

develop from stttl) No. J below.

I' I' I' I' I' Is I' I
III IIIIIII
0"

SCRAMIHS A,'iSWI·IlS !!.\iOn
PAGODA - REBUS - - HOVEL· CF.RI'AL - AI..GEBR,\
Grarnps to graduale., "When you 1hink you would

back lo yoUI youth. think of ALGEBRA ."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

like to go

�•
Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

VVednesday,August6,2oo8

I

Favre leaves Lambeau
away from the tield where
"That was a very good
the rest of his teammates question
for
him,"
were assembling for drills.
McCarthy said. "He's in a
GREEN BAY. Wis.
Favre emerged from the tough spot right now."
The bond between Brett stadium's loading dock exit
McCarthy also didn't
,Favre and the Green Bay at 2:34 p.m. EDT Tuesday, seem convinced that Favre
Packers appears lo be bro- hugging Packers senior was thinking clearly about
ken beyond repair.
security advisor Jerry Parins,. his future.
Packers coach Mike before gettmg m his SUV
"He has a lot going
McCarthy said Tuesday and drivjng away. Shortly through his head, and I think
evening that after approxi- after, an SUV driven by he's emotional," McCarthy
mately six hours of what he Packers general manager said. "And just talking to
called "brutally honest" con- Ted Thompson left th.e gate him, he 's in a tough spot."
versations with Favre over heading in the same direcSo, of course, are
the pas!' two days, ·the three- tion.
McCarthy and Thompson.
time MVP just isn't in the
"We're at a stalemate," Correctly or not, they might
right mind-set to be part of Favre told ESPN Tuesday end up being seen by fans as
the team.
. morning. "Mike and I both the men who drove Favre
Even with the chance to agreed last night that me our of Green Bay.
win his starting job back being out there is a distrac- · "That's not a good feeling,
potentially on the · table, tion and will continue to be a but I don't vi~w it that way."
McCarthy smd Favre could- d1stracuon. We all know the McCarthy sa1d.
n't seem to get past emotion- reason I' m here is because
However, Favre has seen a
al wounds that were opened the commissioner reinstated sharp decline in his favoraas tensions mtJunted in me so we have a lot of things bility
among
many
recent weeks.
to figure out. It's simple and Wisconsinites, a new survey
"The football team's mov- complicated , both at the shows. Only 47 percent had
ing forward, " McCarthy same time ."
a favorable view of Favre,
said. "The train has left the
McCarthy said Favre was while 34 percent had an
\ ..
station. whatever analogy excused from practice · unfavorable view. The suryou want. He needs to JUmp Tuesday, adding that he vey of 600 people. likely to
on the train and let's .go. Or, wouldn't have practiced vote in the November presi~
·if we can't get past things with the team anyway dential election was conthat have happenc.d, I have because of an abdominal · ducted Sunday and Monday
AP photo
to keep the train moving. "
strain found in his physical by the Wisconsin Policy
Tampa
Bay
Rays'
Carlos
Pena.
left.
and
Evan
Longoria
celebrate
after
scoring
on
a
two-run;
Monday. Research Institute. It has a ·
McCarthy sa1d he and examination
single
by
Dioner
Navarro
off
Cleveland
Indians
pitcher
Fausto
Carmona
during
fourth-inning
Favre made ·plans to sp~ak McCarthy did not say margin of error of plus or
·
later Tuesday evemng, but whether Favre would be minus 4 percent. In a survey a baseball game Tuesday in St. Petersburg, Fla.
McCarthy didn't seem to fined if he stayed away from last December, 73 percent of
allow for the possibility that camp starting Wednesday.
the people in Wisconsin had
anything significant wol!ld
Favre told ESPN he does- a favorable view of Favre
change.
.
n 't have a problem with and 7 percent had an unfaA trade could be commg competing with Rodgers for vorable view.
next, w1th Tampa Bay re- the starting job, and can
Rodgers,
meanwhile,
emerging as a potential. des- "tru ly understand" why stuck to his mantra of 'not
tmatwn after seem mgly McCarthy would make worrying about things he
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. second ,onsecutive game.
Shin-Sao Chao put the
being eliminated from con- Rodgers the starter. But can't control.
(AP) - Evan Longoria,
Jhonny Peralta hit a two- Indians ahead 1-0 with an
"[ just know we were out Dioner Navarro and Cliff
sideration in recent weeks. . Favre also said a competirun
homer in the third to put RBI single in the first. The
Packers officials have tion "probably isn't going to at practice today, · and he Floyd homered to help the
Cleveland
ah~ad 3-1. He has Rays tied it at I in the bottom
beheved throughout the past work' and that "the problem wasn't there, and I'm the AL East-leading Tampa aay
homers and 26 RBls over · half on Carlos Pena's sacrimonth that Favre's pFefer- is that there's been a lot of starter," Rodgers said. "So Rays beat the Cleveland six
his last 25 games.
fice fly.
ence is to pia~ for the dama~e done and I can't for- that's wh,ere we're going Indians 8-4 on tuesday
Tampa
Bay
responded
Cleveland loaded the bases
Mmneso.ta . Y1kmgs~ but get it.'
· nght now.'
.
night
with three runs in the fourth. with two outs in the sixth;
Favre could reconsider a
Did Favre not feel wanted
Speaking to .reporters after
Longoria's two-run drive Navarro stopped an 0-for-14 but failed to score. Rays outtrade to Tampa Bay - or or welcome enough by the · Tuesday's practice, Rodgers in Tampa Bay's four-run sev-.
elsewhere - if Green Bay Packers?
. stood just a few feet away enth was his 22nd of the sea- slide with a two-out, two-run fielder BJ. Upton caught
holds tirm in its commit"That's part of the issue from a locker with a son, setting a team record for single, and scored ·on Gabe pinch-hitter Ben Francisco's
ment not to tr~de h1m to a with him, quite frankly," "FAVRE" nameplate above a rookie. Longoria hit two Gross' triple to give the Rays drive near the center-field
fence to end the inning.
d1vision nval. The -Green McCarthy said. "And li sten- it, stocked with shoulder- long drives that landed in a 4-3 lead.
an
Notes: Jonuy Gomes held
Grady
Sizemore
had
Bay . Press-Gazette reported ing to him talk about that, pads and other equipment. It foul territory then took a
o~ 1ts Web s1te Tu~sday you respect his opinion. And hadn 't been used and pitch before connecting RBI single in the eighth for the Rays' previous record for
Cleveland, which had won homer by a rookie, hitting 2\
mght that Favre was w1lhng · frankly, I told him, I said, now might never be.
·against Rafael Betancourt.
the first five games in the · in 2005 . ... The bat used by
to play for the Buccaneers.
' I' ll take responsibility
Cornerback
Charles
Longoria's drive made it season series against Tampa Indians C Kelly Shoppach
wouldn't because I have a voice in the Woodson had a hard time 6-3, and Floyd and Navarro
McCarthy
.
during his major league
address .trade talks, but did bu.ilding.' I never thought he imagining the Packers trad- added back-to-back shots Bay.
Indians
right-hander
record-tying five extra~base
~ay a _quick resolution to the truly was going to play. I ing such an iconic player.
later in the inning .
Fausto
Carmona
(5-4)
lasted
hit
game on July, 30 against
sttuat1on tS tmportant to the thought he was emottonally
"Everything went kind of
won
Edwin
Jackson
(8-7)
just
four
innings
in
his
third
Detroit
has been sent to the
rest of his players .
driven for other reasons."
· sour a few weeks or a month his third consecUtive start,
"Absolutely," McCarthy
McCarthy said Favre was back, but you never felt like giving up three runs and start since returning from a Hall of Fame .... Tampa Bay
left hip strain. He allowed recalled SS Ben Zobrist from
said .. "The players, they "very convincing" in their it would get to the point or t~
hits
in
5
2-3
innings.
seven
four
runs and three, hits, Triple-A
Durham
and
want 1t resolved . Even talk conversations about his the talks of him actually
Left
fielder
Carl
Crawford
five
and
struck
out
opuoned
Gomes
to
its
top
walked
io Brett about it - he feels desire to play Monday night .being traded," Woodson
left
hamstring)
and
(sore
four.
farm club .... Indians 3B
bad about it. It's time for and Tuesday. But McCarthy said. "I felt once he stepped
shortstop
Jason
.
Bartlett
Carmona
has
'
g
iven
up
17
Andy Marte stppped an 0~hem to talk about some- still seemed to have reserva- back in here, he would be
(right
index
finger)
were
oUJ
runs
over
12
2-3
innings
in
for-20
skid with an eighthbody else."
tions about Favre's commit- the quarterback. Him not
of
the
Rays
lineup
for
the
his
last
three
outings.
inning
double.
Favre left Lambeau Field ment to preparation.
being here today, I guess
just before Packers practice · Would Favre continue to management has a different
:ruesday afternoon, taking a stay at Lambeau late at night route. So at that point, we've
nght tum out of the stad1- to study tilm, a major factor got to go out and do our
lim 's back gate and headmg in his success last season?
job."
GEORGETOWN,
Ky. California showed up at the tice on Wednesday morning.
.
.
(AP) - Linebacker Keith team's training facility on The Bengals had projected
Rivers ended his contract Tuesday night and signed the him as a starter for the reguholdout with the Cincinnati deal. Terms of the deal lar season, but dropped him
Bengals late Tuesday night, weren't disclosed.
on the depth chart because
ending
an
impasse
that
made
·
The
signing
leaves
he mi~sed so much time.
BY TOM WITHERS
"I couldn't help but would consider reworking
ASSOCIATED PRESS
him
to
miss
nine
days
of
Jacksonville
defensive
end
Rivers was the ninth overnotice," Cribbs said with a . Cribbs' deal this soon.
training
camp.
Derrick
Harvey,
taken
eighth
all
pick in the draft. The
smile. ''I was happy for him. 'They've already given him
Rivers was one of only overall, as the ' final first- Bengals are hoping that he
BEREA - Pro B.owler He deserved every bit of it. the extension through 2012
· helps tix their problems on
Joshua Cribbs has made an He's a great talent and it's and they have other players two first-round draft picks round holdout.
Rivers was expected to defense, which have dragged
unexpected return at the good to see another returner who are a high priority to still unsigned. The linebacker from . Southern join the Bengals for a prac- theni down for years.
Cleveland Browns.
get his eay."
.
sign.
'
.
Cribbs, one of the NFL's
Cribbs said he doesn't
Schaffer would not compremier special ·teams play- ment specitically on Cribbs' regret signing the long-term
~rs who took back two kick- demands or negotiations.
deal so early in hi s career.
offs and a punt for touch"We have no .public siate"I regret a lot of things,
downs last season, said ment at this time," Schaffer but
playing
for
the
Tuesday that his agent has said. "Everyone is opti- Cleveland Browns, .I don't
asked the club to restructure mistic and it's Josh's ~oal to regret that," he said. "I love
the six-year contract exten- win a Super Bowl w1th the playing here. I'm just happy
sion he signed during the Brown,s this year."
to be out here. Anything that ·
2006 season.
Cribbs said he doesn't . goes on off the field I'm
That might be asking a lot want to be a distraction to sure my agent will handle,
~ince Cribbs, considered the the Browns, who have high and I'm sure the Browns
AFC's top return man, still expectations after going 10- will put me in a better situahas five years remaining on 6 last season and barely tion so we can win football
the deal, which is worth missing the playoffs. He ~s games."
around $6 million. ·
letting Schaffer handle talk&amp;
Cribbs said he would not
Following
practice, with the Browns' front be bitter if the Browns
Cribbs said his agent, Peter office while he prepares fpr decided not to tear up his
Schaffer, has approac hed the upcoming season.
old deal.
the Browns about a new
"He 's talking to the
"I'm blessed to be where I
.contract. Cribbs recently Browns' management every am now," he said. "Look
switched agents after being day and something w.ill har.- where I started out, having
by Andre pen," he said. "If it don t, nothing. I came in and· got a
represented
Colona.
I'll still be out here playing $5,000 signing bonus and I
Last season. the 25-year- football for the Browns, I was blessed to have that.
.old Cribbs, who was signed know that." ·
I'm too blessed to be
by the Browns as an
It's unlikely the Browns stressed."
undrafted free agent out of
Kent State in 2005, was the
only player to lead his team .
· in kickoff return yards, punt
return yards and · special
teams tackles . His I ,809
yards on kick returns set a
pn the river
Remembering ~
franchise record and were
on this special day!
SCRAPB@@ K ST@RE
the second most in league
history.
Love,
102 W. Main • Pomeroy, OH • 992-3919
The breakout season
YourFamUy
Mon. 10-7, Tu•-Frl. 10-5, Sat 9-5
earned him a trip to. Hawaii;
•
Closed
Sunday
where he joked' with
Chicago's Devin Hester
Mall tO: Gralldparents Day
about who is the best returner.
f1lii1Il1l
Hester recently signed a • •
do
reponed four-year, $40 mil- :
on the river
ANY ONE REGULAR :
111 Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio
lion contract, a deal that • SCRAPBOOK &amp;TORE
PRICED ITEM
didn't go unnoticed by •
992·2155
: fllu•tt&gt;rountcouponJ
Cribbs.
ExplrtJ J/111101 '

Holzer honors
employee of
the month, A3 ·

BY CHRIS JENKINS

· ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

.

'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.

50 CENTS • Vol. 58, No. 20

• Weeks, Brewers pound
Bv BRIAN J. REED
.
BREEDIIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Cincinnati. See Page Bl ·
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
should consider the fate of
the village's deteriorating
swimming pool right away,
Mayor Micha~l Gerlach
said, and act swiftly on its
decision.
"We have nothing to gain
by putting off a 'decision,"
.Gerlach said Wednesday.
"While we have stepped off
to other projects, a decision

200fc, OFF

*
*
*•
* :
---- --·- - - - - -

'

The Daily Sentinel

' -- -

··, ··

.

should be made right away, mer. swimniing season.
and acted upon. "
While council cited the lack
Gerlach invited members of operating funds for its
of the public to tour the rea son 10 keep th e pool
closed pool late last month. closed. the cost of making
and "a few " did just that, he immediate repairs necessary
said. Most agreed that the to open it was also a factor.
pool was in bad condition,
Since
that
time.
Gerlach said, although some Recreation
Committee
said the village should con- Chairman Jean Craig and
sider repairing it.
Gerlach , in particular, have
The pool's condition has encouraged awareness of
been a concern of vi llage the pool's deteriorating concouncil .since the decision dition, although no counci l
was niade early this year to member has suggested
keep it closed for this sum- · repairs be considered.

. the

Ohio
OBTIUARIES
Along the lazy Ohio,
Wednesday is as good a
day as any to'spend some
time on -or in - the
water. Kimberly Durst of
Jackson County, W.Va .,
about to jump from the
rope swing, and some of
her young friends were
hanging out under .the
shady trees on. the "sandbar'' just downriver from the
Racine Locks and Dam .
Others were bearing up to
the sun with fishing poles
on the river at the Phillip
Sporn Plant in Mason
County, W.Va.

Pa'geAS
• Wanda Ruth Halley
• Betty Sue Perry

INSIDE

Brian J. Reed/photos

.

WH . (;. Mil). D~:i CAIW

.·
fi •lt CNil•dhrdii1'J\,, 1\u
G.-I ~r\•t n -~i,, (·,i,· flo,~

H®LJE~

M"l~ ·~~.:-~I ~ I ~~ ,. ~ H

• Pediatric Fund
·-donation. See Page AJ
• Church plans clothing
and school supply
give-away. See ~age A3

WEATHER

step back and say ·n~w
what. "'
Gerlach
sa1d.
"Council needs to determi}lC
what is going to happen ."
"For most residents who
support re-opening the pool
in the future. it's a nostagha
thing." Gerlach said after
his ow11 first inspection of
the pool. There have been
references to the pool ' s
being the oldest aboveground public pool operating in the U.S .. but Gerlach
·
Please see Pool, AS

Racine annexation
a dead issue?
BY BE"J:H SERGENT
BSEJ:!GENT@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM...

· RACINE- "As far as I'm concerned, it 's done," Mayor L Scott
Hill told residents of Sunon·
Township who'd gat hered at Racine
Village Council's recem m~eting to
inquire on the staltl s of the village's
annexation proposal.
"Le t ~s drop it...it's over. for .
aw!Yile," Council President lk e
Spencer said of the proposaL
The residems who might be
affected by the annexation wanted
council to give them a yes or no
answer on whether or not the proposal would be pursued any further but were told the decision
was tabled .
''We don't want to scrap everythi ng (maps, papenvor~) we've
already went through but it's basically a dead issue ," Councilman
Tom Reed said.
Councilman Jim Harmon said it
was his understanding at the last
meeting that council had decided. to
go door to door to explain the proposal to all affected, explammg the
pros and cons of being annexed to *'
. get a more accurate reading of the
numbers to either more forward or
drop the pursuit. Harm on said
going door to door . was wha ;
should've been done 1n the hrst
place. Councilmen Spencer and
Jason Shain said they were unaer
"the i'mpression going door to door
was not detinite and was only discussed as an option.
.
One of the residents of Sutton
Township said: "We're just ~o~­
cerned about our property... th1 s IS
. supposed to be our decision."
Hill maintained the ultimate decision has always been up to the
property owners affected via an
official vote but there had been no
vote on the issue by those owners and even if · council went door
to door. that still would not account
for an official tally.
By tabling the annexation decis ion~ the proposal could be reintroduced at a later date but Hill said to
those gathered at the meeting at this
point that was not like ly to happen.
Please see Annexation, AS

Street Vigilantes' Meigs schools offer free breakfasts for all
take on speeding

~Vine

Details on Page A5

better in their school work guidelines. Meigs County
and are also likely to stay school s are among the 46.3
healthier in later years when percent of Ohio schoo·Js
POMEROY - Buying they start the day with a which offer free breakfasts
new clothes and gathering nutritious breakfast, the to all students.
up school supplies probably report shows.
. Meigs Local
tops the list of priorities for
Statistics ' also indicate .
breakfast program
·stuqents about now as they that there is a marked correMarilyn Meier. food se rprepar~ for the opening of J~ition between eating in the vice supervi,or in the
schools in Meigs County on morning and better perfor- Meigs
Local
Sc:hool
Aug. 20. ·
mance in such areas as test District. describes the
But eating a good break- results, recall and verbal breakfast program as 11 1s
fast now as a way of prepar- skills, even aucndance.
carried out in the district's
ing to learn once school
Efforts in many school elementary. middle and
starts . probably never even districts to facilitate learn- high schools.
makes the list. That, howev- ing has resulted in offering
It can be assumed that
er. is what the Ohio Academy free breakfasts to every very similar program s are
of Fami ly Physicians recom- ch1ld. In Me1gs County It carried out in the other two
mends as a way to give stu- happens in all · three school school districts since nutridents an early start toward districts - Eastern , Me1gs tiona! criteria is set by the
being prepared to Jearn once and Southern.
federal government which
school is in session.
Nutritious breakfast foods funds the program . .
Children who begin their are avmlable to a! I students
In Meigs. Local when studay with· a healthy hreakfast when they amve for classes . . dents get off the buse' they
are happier in school and The program IS camed out are directed to the cafeteria
more attentive than children with feder?l fundmg- and all in an effort to ·encourage
·
·
.
who skip breakfast, accord- the breakfast foods served
are
required
to
meet
healthy
Pleese
SH
Breakfast,
AS
ing to a study. They perform
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX

SERGENT
BSERGENTIIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
·BY BETH

2 SECI10NS- 12 PAGES

'

Annie's Mailbox
A3
:Calendars
A3
:Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
B6
Places to go
B Section
Sports
Weather
As

-@ ooo8 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

,

.,

:

Gerlach said yesterday
the deterioration of the
. pool' s Sl~e l and concrete
infrastructure concerns him
most. although he identified
other unsafe condit ions at
the pool. too. lllcludmg
un sec ured handrails and.
steps mto the ,pool, · a~d the
p()or state ot. the pool Itself.
"ln my nund .. the pool 1s
not. m.. a cond1t1on .to ?.pen
aga.m, Gerlach sa1d. Btu
1Cpd1rs are probabl~ poss.1:
ble 11 fundmg 1s available .
'·Either way, we need to

Along

Cribbs asks Browns to redo contract

*

THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2008

.
www.mydaiJyscntinel.~om

Middleport mayor: Pool decision .should be swift

SPORTS

Longoria hits 22nd homer in:
Rays' victory over Cleveland·

Bengals sign 1st-round pick Rivers ·

French Colony
·Chorus plans 'Under
the Boardlvalk,' B6

, RACINE -, A group of
ladies in Racine may have a
sense of humor about their
nickname, the "Vine Street
Vigilantes," but they take
speeders on their street seriously and recently registered
a complaint with Racine
Village
Council against
Marshal Cunis Jones.
ladies, Ruth
The ·
Johnson, Mary· Huddleston,
Becky Mallory and Kay
Warden said their complaint
with Jones, who was not at
the meeting to defend himself, was that he'd let what
they felt was an obvious
speeder off with only a warning and allegedly made a disrespectful comment about
the ladies on the street
'

'·

•

who have been pushing for
more patrols in the area and
speed bumps. The ·comment
the ladies heard Jones
allegedly make was not actually heard by the. four ladies
in attendance at the meeting,
but througl) someone who
was allegedly in the vehicle
who was pulled over, according to the ladies.
The alleged remark contained no profanities and the
ladies relay.ed it to council as
follows: "I pulled you over
because I have to make it
look good to the old women
on the top of the hill.''
Johnson laughed and said
"she was an old woman on
the hill" but she had more of
a pwblem with Jones
allegedly letting someone
Pleeae -

Speedlnc, AS

..

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="546">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9997">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="14222">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="14221">
              <text>August 6, 2008</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="15">
      <name>scott</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
