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•.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

••
'·

'til he hits water ·Red Sox

Phelps typical23-year-old
Bv PAUL NEWBERRY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

BEIJING - In some ways.
Michael Phelp&gt; is just your
typical 23-year-old.
l-Ie hates getting up early.
He wolfs down enormou s
amounts of pizza. He loves
texting with friends, listening·
to hip-hop on his iPod, or just
·cruising around in a pimpedout ride.
Then he dives in the water.
Nothing typical there.
. In capturing the 200-t]leter
butterOy and 800 frees tyle
relay wi th his fourth and fifth
world records in as many
races in the Beijing Games.
Phelps eclipsed a group
including Mark Spitz and
. : Carl Lewis to become the
wiimingest Olympian of all
time with II gold medals.
That leaves only one other
thing for Phelps to do before
he leaves China: win all eight
of his events to take down
Spitz's record of seven golds
at the 1972 Munich Games.
He's already avenged his only
two losses at Athens four
years ago. when he won six
go lds.
·
AP photo
''It might be once in a cen- United States' Michael. Phelps swims in a men's 200-meter butterfly heat during the swimming competitions in the
tury you see something like Nati,onal Aquatics Center at the Beijing 2008 Olympics in Beijing Monday.
thi s," teammate Aaron Peirsol
said. "He' s not just winning, · to come down when he needs is way past anything you have cleared his toughest hurdle Phelps,'' said Park, a gold
he's absolutely destroyiDg to come down." said Mark seen. He is incredible."
when the 400 free relay team. medalist himself in the 400
everything. It's awesome to Schubert , head coach of the
Away from the pool, Phelps anchored by Jason Lezak, free. "It is my honor to comwatch."
U.S. team.
is a creature of habit. He pulled off an astonishing pete with him."
To hear Phelps talk, you
Phelps didn't even know struggles to wake up in the comeback over the last 25
His performance is even
wouldn't know it. He's turned until earlier this year that he morning, and loves to take meters to beat the French by a more remarkable when one
a gathering of the world's could become the winningest naps in the middle of the fingertip. ·
considers the workload he
best swimmers into his own Olympian ever coming off of afternoon . He usually gets
No one was close to him in takes on at a meet such as
personal .meet. just him his six-gold performance in two massages a day and takes the 200 free, either. Phelps this: ·17 races covering more
against the clock, easily lug- 2004. It took him just four ice baths to help his body made a perfect dive off the than two miles, often agai nst
ging along the weight of his- days in Beijing to pull into'a recover from the grueling blocks and already had a clear swimmers who specialize in
tory.
tie with Spitz, Lewis, Soviet schedule. He feasts on gar- lead by the time his body one or two events. ·
When Phelps climbed out gymnast Larysa Latynina and gantuan amounts of pasta and perfectly suited for swimNothing spurs Phelps on
of the pool Tuesday ·after Finnish runner Paavo Nurmi . pizza between races.
ming with its long torso, large more than defeat. The fear of
'To be tied for .the most
"Lots of carbs," he said.
wingspan and big, flexible failure defines all the great
matching Spitz, Lewis &amp; Co.
with gold in the 200 freestyle, Olympic golds of all time,
When it's time to race, feet - re-emerged from the ones, from Michael Jordan to
he unzipped his skintight suit with those names, in Olympic there's no one better. Which water.
Tiger Woods, and there 's
Shortly after the first flip nothing different about this
and ambled over to chat with · history ... ," Phelps said, is why it's hard to imagine
his coach.
before pausing and letting out anyone · beating him in · tum, he already was a full guy.
"Well, you're tied," Bob a slight chuckle.
Beijing.
body length ahead. Phelps
ln the 200 free. he avenged
Bowman reminded him.
"The Olympics have been
" I don' t think Michael will steadily pulled away and his only individual loss at the
'That's pretty cool." Phelps around for so many years, let his guard down until the touched the wall in I minute, last Olympics. Phelps, only
replied.
that's a p,retty amazing last relay race," said his mom, 42.96 seconds, breaking the 19 then , finished third on that
Ho-hum.
accomplishment."
Debbie Phelps. "I don't think mark h~ set at last year's warm Greek evening behind
Phelps races to win, then · He 's sure not going to get he has a comfort zone at all world championships by Ian Thorpe and Pieter van den
moves on. He doesn't pause all worked up about it, until the whole .meet is over, nearly a full second.
.
Hoogenband in what was
to appreciate the moment. though. He'll . leave that to the whole Olympic Games.
By the time silver medalist quickly dubbed the "Race of
There'll be plenty of time for others.
He will . not let his guard Park Tae-hwan lunged for the the Centuiy." Four years later;
that later.
"If you're net involved in down because there's always end of the pool, Phelps was he' has no equaL
"It's his physical ability, it's 'the sport, I'm not sure you someone out thtre."
already looking at the score"I hate to lose," he said.
his ability to race, it's his abil · can fully appreciate it," said
Or not.
,
board.
"When !lose a race rike that,
ity to keep focused, to get Jack Bauerle, who coaches
Phelps dominated the 400
"I can copy him, but I don't it motivates me even more to
excited when he needs to and the U.S. women's team. "He individual
medley
and think I· could be as good as try to swim faster."

Baking and canning judging
results announced., A6

get RHP·
Paul Byrd
in trade
BOSTON (AP J
The
Boston Red Sox acquired
pitcher Paul Byrd from
Cleve land on Tuesday,
hopino to boost a rotation
hurt by an injury to Tim
Wakefield and the muggles
of Clay Bu chholz.
The Red Sox wi ll send
eith er a player to be named
or cash to the Indians.
The 37-year-old Byrd is
7-10 with a 4.53 ERA th is
season. But he has won all
fou r of hi s starts since the
All-S tar break with a 1. 24
ERA .
.
" It' s been a rol ler coaster
ride but · as far as me right
now, I'm extreme ly confi dent.'' Byrd said in a conference calL
Boston
oegan
play
Tuesday in second place in
the AL East, four games
behi nd Tampa Bay. The
Red ·sox were two games
ahead of the Chicago White
Sox in the wild-card race.
"You play for pressure.
You play to have all the ·
games count.'' Byrd said in .
Cleveland. ·.. Ever since l
was a littl e boy, I wanted to
be in the World Series. That
hasn't happened to me yet.
When I go to Boston, I feel
like there 's a legiti mate
chance fo r that to hitppen
this year."
He expressed surpri se but
said he was excited to join
the Red Sox.
'· I was shocked becau·se I
fi gured after l cleared
waivers a couple weeks ago
nobody wanted me." Byrd
·sa id . ·' It's go ing to take
some adju stments. I was
throwing my blue Indians
socks. in a box and a guy
said , ' They wear red socks
over there.'
·
" I just said, 'Oh , yeah. I
forgot. ...
Byrd is scheduled to start
Friday night at home
against Toronto. He pitched
his only eomplete game of
the season last Saturday
against the Blue Jays.

Middlepo~

so CENTS • Vol. 58, Nu. 25

PartotTh·

S

• Cavs acquire
Williams in 3-team
trade. See Page Bl

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - A contract
for the construction of a
new sewage system in the
amount of $223,930 in the
wooded area behind Meigs
High School has been
awarded to D.V. Weber of
Reedsvi lle.
The Meigs Local Board of
Education took action on the
contract at Tuesday night's
meeting. Construction is

•

Pecial Fall s
s
• ·
Ports
rrevtew E~:.:
·
"•••Oill .
,.

'0 BnuARIES
;·Page AS
· • Marie Ward, 74
• Lucy A. Wilfong, 80

INSIDE

ft..

Dr. John P~ M.D.
Cardiothoracic Surgeon
•

HOLZER ,
ADVERTISING DEADLINE· Thursday, AUGUST 14, 2008

~

5:00

Call Dave or Brenda at 992-2155
For More Information
'

mbe J.lailp.~entinel

.'

CARDIOVASCULAR
INS'Il'I'UTE

Go Onlire: wwwHolzerHeartcom

to .begin thi s fall, of Rio Grande, Buckley said. Larry Tucker spoke · about
according
to
William He further noted that the sys- the questions and concerns
Buckley. Meigs Local tem has capacity for expan- parent~ are bringi ng to him.
· superintendent. He said that sion should another build- There was also one parent at ·
· the old system which oper- ing, like a medical center, be the meeting to talk about the
ates with a lagoon wi II be ·constructed in that area.
scheduling which had been
abandoned once the new
With school starting in worked out and the school
system comes on line.
less than a week. and .after time starts and asked about
The new system will ser- the Boa,d had given a unan- possible changes once
vice Meigs High School. the imous vote approv ing the school starts.
Athletic Building, Meigs bus routes as submitled by
Buckley explained . that
School,
the Paul McElroy. transporta- once school is ,in session
Middle
Salisbury building where .tion director, . .and the and the buses get on the
administrative offices are authority for him to make road a better determination
located, and the University the changes, Board member can be made about ·sc hool

to sell

time start ing and ending. He
said perhaps instead of a 4
p.m. dismissal at the elementary school. it can be
eurlier. but that wi II depend
on the time it take' to pick
up students and get them
back to the school.
A report wa~ given on
federal and state ~rants
awarded to the d i stri~·t for
the 2008-09 school years.
They included · Title L

Please see {ontract. AS

steers
BY BRIAN

J; REED

BAEED@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

ROCKSPRINGS - "The
future of Meigs Co unty's
beef industry is in good
hands."
Dr. Tom Turner of The
Ohio State University praised
BY BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Meigs Co.unty's heel stock
and its young beef showmen
POMEROY -. Pomeroy
·at Tuesday's Junior Fair Beef
Chief of Police Mark E.
Show, held in the show arena
Proffitt reports the followat Rocksprings.
ing recent cases being
sai c
Meigs
Turner
investigated by his departCounty's beef projects we re
ment, includin ~ alleged
of the most consistent qualforgery, vandaiJsm, theft
ity he has seen Juring the
and traffic accidents.
2008 fa ir season. and said
Lalenya Hankla; address
the decision to place steers
and age unreported, allegedly
was a difficult one .
attempted to obtain prescrip"The second-place steers
ti&lt;;&gt;n m\!Qication with · a talse
1 have seen tonight arc the
prescription at .Swisfier &amp;
strongest I have seen the
Lohse Pharmacy and Fruth's
whole season," Turner said.
Pharmacy of Pomeroy. The
" You can go to bigger
prescription was allegedly for ·
cour.ties, whe re they show
Percocet. Sgt. Brandy King,
more cattle, bttt vou will
who is investigating the case,
not see the consiste ncy of
faxed information on the
· quality of cattle that we are
cases to the West Virginia
seei ng here."
State Police because the susJordan Parker will lead the
pect allegedly told the ph'!fsteer sale Saturday with a
macist at Swisher &amp; Lohse
1,350-pound steer judged
she'd !tad the prescription
grand champion.
Sam
previously filled at the
Collins tCK)k reserve champi- '
Mason, W.Va. Wal-Mart.
on, with a I ,254-pound Steer.
Hankla was later arrested
There were plenty of ribafter allegedly attempting to
bons for plenty of show men
pass another false prescripdurin g the market steer
tion at the Mason Wal-mart
show: Jordan Wood was
and jailed in West Virginia.
named grand champion
King is also investigating
showman, and Jonathan
a report of . vandalism al
Barrett was r~serve champiAuto Zone on West Main
on sho wman.
Street. Recently the Auto
Dairy Market Steers
Zone building. was hit by
Kelsey Holter was named
several BB 's, damaging the
grand champion dairy maroutside glass of the double
ket steer showman and her
pane window.
1.485
steer,
weighing
'Proffitt is investigating a
poimds,
was
judged
grand
Brian J. Reed/photo
case of theft reported by
champion.
Craig Jones, son of Brett and Betsy Jones, grooms his steer in the final moments just
Please see Reports. AS
before Tuesday night's Junior Fair Steer Show.
Please see Steers, A7

.C. - . h
•
10r
sc 00} opemng

,Ffh'zred," SUppOrt ln
· paCe
l .
1each'lflg StaJJ

'T'.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Detail• on Page A3

JkEX
.
:

www.mydailysentinel.cnm .

•

e~pected

M·ei~ Local ready

'
'

.... '

'

..

Holzer CardlovaS&lt;:ular Institute is pleased to
welcome Dr. john Perry to the region. A _
.
highly-trained and experien~ed cardiothoradc "'" ·
surgeon, Dr. Perry prides himself on his
· personalized caf1!. Dedicating hims~lf and hi\
team t9 delivering the highest quality of care
possible is foremost as a goal.After ~ompleting
fellowShips at Cleveland Clinic and State ·,
.. '
University of New York, Dr. Perry practiced
in the Canton, Ohio region before ·comi.iJF .
lo Gallipolis.ln his short time h~, .,
already successfully completltd ~·
open heart. valve repla~ement and thoracic '
procedures. Patients, families and referring
physicians have been extremely satisfied with
their care.

I

Pomeroy .Parker,
reports
forgery,
vandalism,
accidents

• Fair photography
winners announced.
See Page A6
• Open class dairy
re5ults posted.
~ See Page AS
. • Kiddie Day give-away.
• See Page A7

IS Yea~

--·.~! ':· · · .. ':

-

~.
fl

Meigs awards contract for new sewage system

SPORTS

• MEIGS • EASTERN • SOUftiERN

A.

Printed on tOO %
Rl'c_yciPd ~ewsprint

• Pomeroy, Ohio

THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2008

•

FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 2008

8e Sure To Be

Fair scenes, AS

.

2 Sl!cnONS- 16 PAGES

'

;Annie's Mailbox
'

~alendars

l;lassifieds
Comics
..Editorials
Movies.
Obituaries
Places to go
~ports

Weather

A3
A3

POMEROY - "As of
right now everyone is hired
that needs to be hired" said
William Buckley, Meigs
Local School District
superintendent, as he .spoke
about the opening of
schools next week.
The final hiring of teachers and other personnel took

place at the Tuesday night's
meeting of the Meigs Local
Board of Education.
New to the district this year
·will be a TAG (talented and
gifted program) in the Meigs
Middle School. Chris Saber
· was hired as the teacher. Also
hired at the meeting was
Jessica Ann Welker who will
handle the TAG program at

Open Horse Show brings in crowd

,

·';tt .·.

•
/.
••

•

'&lt;"·

Please see School, AS

Bs-6

B7

A4
As
As

Rio to offer power plant course;
informational meeting tonig~t
STAFF REPORT
NEWSC MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RIO GRANDE - The
A2 University
of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande
Community
College,
B Section ·

A:3

' 2008 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
©

in cooperation with American
Electnc Power (AEP), is now
·offering a new associate of
technical studies concentration in power plant mechanical mamtenance technolhgy.
The ATS is a two-year degree.
An info rmational meeting
is being held tonight so that

area residents ca n lear.n
more about the curriculum
and all of the job opportunities that will be avai Iable· to
its graduates.
·Tonight's meeting will be
held in the new Rio Grande
Meigs Center, w,hich is
located near Meigs High
School. Thi s meeting will
begin at 7 p.m. and contin·
Beth Sergentlphoto
ue until 8:30 p.m. All area
The
Small
Fry/Youth
Lead-In
at
the
Open
Horse Show is a
residents are invited to
crowd pleaser as the littlest cowboys and cowgirls take a
. Please see ' Coune, AS
spin around the show ring at the Meigs County Fair.

.,

r

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

ROCKSPRING S - This
week's Open Horse Show at
the Meigs County Fair
brought in the crowds and
riders competing for prize
money.
The equestrian comtmtnity
in Meigs County showed up
in full force for tile show
sponsored by American
Electric
Power's
Mountaineer Plant. Sc.otl·s
Quarter Horse Farm, Quat1er
Heaven Farm and the Meigs
County Agricultural Society.
· Results for the show were
as follows:
Open Showmanship. Ali
Davis, first place followed
by Nancy · Vanco. Eri n
Dunn. Ashley Savage.
LeDeana Sinclair. Youth
Western Pleasure, Karra
Conrad, first place, fo llowed by Ali Davis, Sara
Schenkelberg.
Kayla·
Conli n. Open Walk Trot,
Beverly Dellinger, first
place. fo llowed bv Autumn
Vanaman, Whitney Karr,
Baylie Holter. Al i Davis .
Open Western I Engli sh
Pleasure . Whitney Karr,
first place , followed by Ali
Please see Horse show. AS

�,
'

Family Medicine
Page A2 ·The Daily Sentinel

.

Thursday, Aug. 14
Sponsored by Ridenour Tv. Appliance

Gallipolis .. Boardw alk''·&gt;
Cou ld it be thund e r"'
Actuall v. it\ the sound elf
· The Thu.ndert ones.
Come hear it' t(&gt;r ymu·self.
as the French Colony Chorus
.. Under
tile
presents
Boardwal k' ' on Saturday at 8
p.m. at the Ariel Themre on ·
Second Ave nue in Gallipolis.
Featured guests for the .
show
w iII
be
The

and Gas Service
Senior Citizens Day
Noon- Flower Show Judging , Thompson Roush
· .
Building
2 p.m. - 4-H Demonstrations. Hill Stage ·
4 p.m. - Kiddie Tractor Pull , Small Arena
5 p.m. - 4-H Style ~evue , " Dew Zone" Hill Stage
6 p.m. - Truck and Tractor Pull, Pull Tra~~ .
6 p.m • .:.. Barbershop Quartet. "Dew Zone H1ll
Stage
.
7:30p.m. - Rocky Mountain Bluegrass, "Dew
Zone" Hill Stage

Thunde rtones , men 's . bar-

bershop

Huntin~ton

..

Friday, Aug. IS
Sponsored by Home National Bank
Submitted photo
The Thundertones Barbershop Ha rmony Society Chapter of the Huntington Tri-State Area
will be featured performers at "Under the Boardwalk," a 1950s-'60s beach s how being presented by the French Colony Chorus at th e Ariel Theatre in Gallipolis this Saturday at 8 p.m.

care professiomils. fi nancia l Thundertones chorus · hosts
planners, mechanics, rea l- . a 9111 patriotic tribute to the
tors, and a real barber 1 The first responders and mili tary
Thundertone s · ·director is effort of the Sept. II . 200 I .
Steve Patrick .
disaster. The ladies of
American art form.
Their music styles include French Colony Chorus have
While most of the runes from the I XOOs to cur- joi ned .th e men in this tribThundertones have had lit - rently popular songs. spiri- . utc the past several years in
tle forma l musi c edLlcation. tual and patriotic numbers. Huntingtorl .
they love to perform four and the group loves to
Prior to the guest appearpart barbershop sty le num- enterta in wi th a dash of ance Of The Thundertones
bers. They range from low- humor. They participate in on Satu rd ay , the French
. vo iced basses to hi gh- BHS com petition s. stage Colony Cho ru s wi ll enterpitched tenors. and the mid- seve ral shows eac h year. tain with 'a nostalgic perfordle part baritones. who sup- provide Singing Valentines. mance of so ngs of the 1950s
port the leads si nging the and even hold Singing Car and ' 60s in a beach side setmelody in most songs. The · Washes. where patrons are tin g . As Gallipolis area
_men range from high-school serenaded while their vehi- chaoter of Sweet Adeli nes
students to retirees, and cl es are polished .
International. the lad ies will
Eac h
year.
The conclude the show with a
incl ude s'tlesmen. health-

presentati on of their competition numbers which successfu lly placed them during tile five-s tate Region
Fom con test the past spring.
Both cho ru ses will fea ture ·
members sing ing in barbershop quartets .
Limited reserved tickets
are available for a catered
afterglow pany to be at the
nearby Elks' Cl ub . Tickets
for the show will be avai lable
from French Colony Chorus
members and at the Ariel box
office up to show time .

For more information,
con tact Be•• Alberchinski at
(740 ) 446-2476 'or Suzy
Parker at (740) 992 :5555.

Annual Atlatl Contest this weekend .
ALBANY - The Ohio
Arlatl Association and the

is illegal to · hunt with in
Ohio. It is believed th at
Vietnam
Vett:rans
o f some areas of the world.
America Chapter 100 wi ll New · Zealand , Austrailia
hold th eir ni nth annual ai1d Alaska, may have never
Atlatl Con test in Albany stopped using the atlatl.
this Saturday and Sunday at
The
World
Atlatl
the Albany · Riding C lub Association has created a
(fairgrounds) at the co rn er standard ized contest · in
of state routes 68 1 and 32.
which people all over the
The atlatl is an anc ient world can compete in the
hunting system 'claimed to be same contest . and their
over 30.000 years old. It was scores can be compared.
replaced by the bow about The Internation al Standard
5,000 years ao. The atlatl is a Accuracy Con test (!SAC).
fexible stick , about 2 feet consists of 10 throws, five
long, that is used to propel 6 at 15 meters and five itt 20
foot or longer spears with meters. This would have
.great speed and .accuracy. been the effective hunting
The atlatl was used almost range in ancient times.
everywhere in the world.
In Albany, there will be
Today. the a't latl is still ' instructions, demonstrations
used all over the world but and state con tests all day,
mainl y for sport ·and recre- but World Atlatl Association
ation. It is used for hunting rules mandate .th at a comin some states but currently petitor can only throw one

ISAC a day. On Saturd ay,
the world com petition will
begin at 2 p.m . and · on
S unday they will start
aro und II a.m. There will
also be Internati onal Atlatl
Society competitions and
Ohio Atlatl Association
contests both days.
Many
world
ranked
atlatlist live in Pennsylvania,
Ohio and Indiana. The 2007
international
rankings
included many southern
Ohio competitors. Mike
Glenn of Lucasville fin ished
fifth in the world, while
Mamerto Tindongan of
Albany finished II th . Other
local men that were world
ranked
include
Ray
Strischek of Athens. who
was 14th and Rick Shephard
of Hilliard, who fin ished
30th . In the women's div ision, Margie Tachok of

Entertainment Briefs
the Rio Gra nde Flyers.

· For ,inforJmilion. comacr
Bill Cm·per ar (740) 286-

drawings will be held both
nights. Seating is limited . so
bring a law n chair. Camping
is avai lable . The si ng will go
on, rain or shine.

RIO GRANDE - The
20th annual Radio Co ntro l 2915.
Fly-in will be held at the
For infonnastion , coli
Bob Eva ns Farm this
(740) 37Y-264 7.
Saturday and Sunday, each
GALLIPOLIS
The
day from 9 a.m. unti15 p.m.
There is free parking and 19th annual Gall ia County
admission to the gathering Gospel Sing will be. 'held
~et
of radio controlled aircraft Friday and Saturday. Aug.
enthusiasts. who wi i'l dis- 22 and 23 at th e Gallia
GALLIPOLIS
The
play and fly their models.
County Juni or Fairgrounds. Raccobn Creek Partnership
Also schedu led is a radio
The gospel sing will go and the Raccoon Creek Water
control. swap meet under the from 5 p.m . to midnight Trail Association will- hold a
tent set up for the ievent. both nights, with 15 to 20 trash pick-up this Saturday
along with ~ radio control groups appearing each from 9 a.m. to noon.
plane · raflle and food and night. There is no charge for
The trash pick-up will
refresh mcnts.
admission , but an offering take pi ace at the Raccoon
· Sponsors of the ny-in are wi ll be taken to cover costs . Creek County Park (0.0 .
the Flyin g RC .Aces of
A concession stand will Mcintyre Park Di ~trict ) in
Jackson : RC Mountaineers offer sa nd wiclies, soft drinks Gall ia County.
of Charleston. W.Va., and and 'desserts. Door pri ze
Gloves. trash bags, and

Gospel sing

Trash pickup
at park

8 a.m. - 4-H Horse Fun Show
.9 a.m. - Junior Fair Pet Show, Small Arena
10 a.m. - Kiddie Tractor Pull of Champions, Small
Arena
1 p.m. - Junior Fair Awar:ds .
5 p.m. - Riverside Cloggers, "Dew Zone" Hill Stag.e
6 p.m.- Truck Pull, Pull Track
·
7 p.m. - Missing in Action, "Dew Zone" Hill Stage
9 p.m. - K~lly Perry, Gospel, "Dew Zone" Hill.
Stage

then. i( yo ur immu ne

'-~Y '.h.'tn

gch

weak because of ath anL·in g ~ tgc . i nfir-

ANNIE 'S MAILBOX

. Relationship complicates work life
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY S~GAR
: f)ear Annie: My co~vo rkers and ] are experihKing a very awkward situ~1tion : 1 wo rk fo r a large
tompany. My department
consists of ci dozen employ~ es and one fetnale supervi~o r (I am her assistant).
! About eig ht months ago, a
~up e r v i sor
for a nother
llepartment (male) was
j1 ired. Our departments have
lo wo rk together, but these
lwo supervisors seem to be
larrving it to another level. .
!rhcy are always together
lmd. if not in the same room,
!hey are on t!1e telephone
~vhispering and gigglin g.
fv!Y supervi sor is married.
!fhe other one is divorced.
i At fir st. . I thought my
~nea s ine ss was due to jeal1&gt;l"Y because my superVISOr
'"1d I had become good
fr iends and often spent time
tog ether socially. Now I' m
m~ so sure. Snide remarks
th-e circulating ' among the
,[atr. although no one has .
&lt;tctuallv confronted them .
The situation puts u·s all in an
\twkward and uncomfortable
position, and sometimes
t ~ings get tense iri the office.
·, I have never told anyone
that I happened to sec them
&lt;ngether (after hours) at a
l'Cstauran t, an art gallery and
.a grocery store. I am fond of
Moth my supervi sor and her
hushand and fee l as though

Sponsored by Kawasaki Motor sports
Kiddie and Senior Citizens Day ..

9 a.m. ~ Pretty Baby Contest, "Dew Zone" Hill Stage

io a.m • ..,. Market Rabbit Sale, Livestock Arena
' 10:40 a.m. - Market Poultry Sale,Livestock Arena ·
11:30 a.m. -Market Goat Sale, Livestock Arena
Noon - Harn~ss Racing, Race Track
·12:15 p.m. - Market Lamb Sale, Livestock Arena
1:30 p.m. - Dairy Market Steer Sale, Livestock ·
Arena
2 p.m •.- Market Hog Safe·, Livestock Arena
4 p.m. - Market Steer ·Sl\fe. Livestock Arena
4:30p.m. - Commercial Feeder Sale, Livestock
Arena
'
·
· '
5 p.m. -Market Dairy Feeder Sale, Livestock Arena ·.
6 p.m. - Chain Saw Contest '
,.
.
·
6 p.m. - Mud Volley Ball, Horse Are'na ~,, :· '"":
6 p.in. - ATV and Youth Garden Tractor Pull, Pull ·
Track
.
7:30p.m. - Karaoke \\'ith Kip, "Dew Zone" Hill
Stage
8 p.m. - Tough Track Contest, Grandstand

'Grow With Music'
announces·fall.schedule

Noodle supper

Yuu ~:an hu ve a la t~nt TB infecti on j·£;r
years ·w ithou! an ) -., y m pt o m ~. Rut.

funct ion and HIV status is desirable.
After completion- of the treatment, your
'dnctor will monitor youfor symptoms
of TB and do periodic chest X-rays..
As you can see, treatment for LTBI is
usuall y much easier than that for active
TB . Thi s is why we w~nt to do everything poss ible to prevent a latent TB
i nt~c tion from becoming a active one.
So . the short answer to your questioll is. yes 1 Take the medication your
Joctor prescribed .
Finall y. some information for all my
readers to· help prevent the spread of
LTBL If you travel to a foreign country where active TB infections are
prevalent. have a TB skin test do ne
pri or to your .travel and then within 10
· wee ks of your return.

•

Saturday. Aug. 16

Wintersville fin ished sixth in
the world, while Debbie
Andrews
and Cynthia
Tindongan, both of Albany,
finished 19th and 23rd . .In
the youth division (children
under 16), Jeff Kingery of
Flint Ridge finished seventh,
whil~ Tarin Tindongan of
Albany finished 15th.
For the entire month of
August, there will be an atlatl
display at The Plains Public
Library. You can see locally
made atlatls as well as ancient
artifacts from the area.
Ir. formation on the Atlatl,
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. with current world rankings · "Grow Wi.th Music," a popuand a schedule of all atlatl lar program fo r children ages
eve nts can be fo und at birth to 5 and their parents,
www. worldatlatl.org. ·
will resume this fall beginFor additional inforna- ning the week of Sept. I.
, tion. contact Steve Barnell, . " Parents and their kids are
treasurer.
Ohio At/at/ having a great time at these
Association at( 740) 698· classes," program directoi
6553. or bamz@juno.com.
Joni Pappas said . The program is offered through the
SP.eech and Hearing Clinic
at Marshall University.
:'I recommend early registration to assure getting a
lunch wi ll be provided. The space in the right class, in
group w'ill atte mpt to,recy- addition to taking advantage
cle what it can.
i
of the discount."
Classes are avai !able· for
The
Raccoon Cree k
Partnership is a non ~ profit babies from birth to 18
organization th at formed to months; toddlers from 18 to
jmprove and protect water 36 months; 3 year olds, and
quality in !he Raccoon 4 and 5 year olds. Parent
participation is r~quired in
Creek Watershed.
For mnre information, the classes for the baby, tod nmtact Ben McCament ar dler and 3-year-old cate(140) 597-1473, or mcca- gories and optional for the 4
and 5-year-old category.
ment@ohio.edu.
Classes take place in the
early evenings on Mondays
and during the day on
Mondays and Tuesdays. A
WILKESVILLE
maximum of 8. children is
Wilkesville
.Methodist accepted per class and chH-·
Church ·s annual noodle sup- dren with special needs are
pe r is this Saturday from 4 welcome.
to 6:30 p.m . at $5 per plate.
Pappas said the 45-minute
· The chu rch is located on sessions are designed to
Ohio 160 at Wilkesville.
enhance a child's cognitive,

yu ur. ca., c. by ha\ ing ·a po"iti \L' TB
;., kin test and a nct.!atin: t' h C'-11 X -r:1 \ .

lnit v or d isease. tht' infec ti on c;m
quit· kl y turn in to ac ti\·c T B J I\C:J,c .
From a ' tati, tical ' landpuin t. p~nple
~o ;ug off rn co/leg"e. I u·a.)· born in who have LTBI h a\· ~ abou t a I0 pe rfnclia bllf have fired in America}(,,. tile , cent c h :.m c~ of de ' d opin g &lt;Jet i ,.c TR at
last 14 rears. Should I consider wking some point in tllci r live, . if no t treated.
~he 111ediciuion nn· doctor prescrihed:' Tho~c who have illt h.~:-.'&gt;e'&gt; th at compro·
; Answe r: Tuberc ulosis (TB J is a mi se the i mmune .. v-..te m. l ike i._· ~ nu.:c r:
major communicable disease world- or AIDS . ha v~ a cl&gt; nsidcrahlv hi gher
oviile. TB . is caused by a bacterium. n sk of dcvc lr) pi ng aL·t i \'e _tu hci·cuh~o; i ' ·
ll\ ually Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
Typical sy mptom s of actiw TB arc
)hm is spread through the ai r when a cough. re ver. . wci ght loss and ni ght
pe r~on wi th active TB does little more
sweats. At this stage. a ch6 t X-ray
l han breathe.
will sl1ow a l un ~ infectio n. and the ill Family Medicine® is a weekly col: In fact, TB can be spread when the ness is conta ~ iolt !-1. Ac ti ve TB i.... ;t \ 'LT\ 1111111. To submit questio11s, write to
Infected person coughs. sneezes, talks. seriou s illness til at c·an lead to death .- Martha A. Simpso11, D.O., M.B.A.,
~in gs. or even just laughs. If you ' re
Treatment for actir e TB ofte n Ohio
University
College
of
t1rnund thi s person when he or she requ ires multipl e medi catio n'. and the Osteopathic Medici11e, P.O. Box JlO,
hpels these bacteria into the air, all ym1 bucteriltm G ill beco me res io;~Cint tn Athens; Ohio 45701, or via e-mail to
)1ecd to d!J is to breathe them into your the se dru g'-~ . Thi s ca n m;d..;l..' th e di ..,c'ase reade rq 11 esti o11 s@family medicine·
pwn lungs to become infected with TB . v ery diffi cult to cure.
uews.org. Medical information in
• When you are exposed to TB and get
Treatment of L r fl l usu&lt;JII y rcq uir~' this colwim is provided as an educa)he bacteria in your lungs, you don ·, onl y nne medi c:nion . c:&gt;lkJ iso ni:uid tional service only. It does not replace
tilways -become sick. In these cases (INH J, whic h is takon bv mouth t(ir si., the judgment of your personal physi·
" 'here you are infected but not sick you 10 nine !ll0111hS. If \'O LJ ha VL~ prC~(' .\ i , t i ll ~ ciau, who should be relied 011 to diag·
:,re said to h'ave a latent TB infection fned ica l Condi t ion ~ . however. the treat'":. · 11o.•r a11d recmmnetrd treatment for
I L1~BIJ : When you have this type of. ment mi l!ht int..:ludf' addi ti{1n:tl dru ~ " any medical conditions. Past columns
.~'13. you can ' t spread it to anyone else.
Prfor )o initiation of ii\'H therapy. are available 0111i11e at www.fami/y.
: LTB I is usually diagnosed, as in baseline lah wurk lilr " 'ch things as li;·c·r medici11 enew s.org.

Schedule of events
'

tinctive :-..ou r{d r~verh~ rat ing
froti l H unq ngton . to the

Radio fly-in

Questio11: I recentlr fwd a tulx rcuiiisis skin test fo r scin&gt;ol, and it ll'as
f" '·' irive. Iliad a chest X-ra r done. and
)r 11 as negarive. Mr doctor .i·aid I didn 't
11111'1' acti1•e wherculosis. bur I needed
to wke medicine f or se&gt;·era/ months.
l litis doesn 'r make sense to me. If I
rlon ·, lw1•e TB, 1rh.r do I need ro .rake
ln•·dicine :' I am 18 rear.&lt;old and wn

Meigs County Fair

GALLIPOLIS - · Li sten!
What\ that J ee p. rich. di s-

chorus · of the
Tri -State Area .
T he Tl lllnde rtones group
been d e lidllin~ audiences
since cha,1erinu in 200 I.
altho ugh somcc prev iousl y
had been members of other
area harhcrshop · choruses.
They are about . 30 of the
30.000 men of Barliershop
Harm ony. Soc iety world wide. · alon~ with those in
other local chapters ·i n
Gallipoli s . Ashla nd . Ky ..
and Charleston. W.Va .. performin g
a
uniquel y

-, Reader should take drug for latent TB

Thursday, August 14, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

social/emotional, speech/Ian. guage and J?hysical development by usmg age-appropriate music activities and
movement. Emphasis is
made on American folk
music , with which most of
the parents wi II be farni liar,
and virtually all of it will bel
performed live .
Pappas .is a board-certified neurologic music !hera,
pi st speciali zing in early
childhood intervention, spec ial education and older
adults. Her private practice
has incluoed work in
numerou s pre-schools , early
.childhood centers, special
ed ucation programs, nursing homes and rehabi!itaii\!e
centers in Iowa, Mississippi
and Indiana. She also is ·a
music educ,ator, having
taught pre-K- 12 general alid
choral music in Dubuqu~.
Ia. She is currently serving
as adjunct faculty for the
Department of Music at
Marshall ·
:

'

I shoul d say something. but
what 0 I love this job and my
co-workers, but the atmu'phere is reall y gett ing to me.
-Bewildered Assistant
Dear Bewildered : Your
supervisor and her fri end
may run the risk of being
fired if their relm ionship goes
further. You have no ev idence
of mi·sbeha vior, but she
should be made aware of the
rumors. Tell her you val ue the.
fri endship and thought. she
should know What 's being
said; and that the re lationshi p
is creating a ditticul! work
environment. Beyond that.
please stay out of it.
Dear Annie: I have a pn&gt;blem with my nex t-dour neighbor. He is a reti red man. very
religious. and when he tal ks
to me, he's forever adjusting
his you-know-what.
It is so embarrassin g tlmt I
don't eve n want to say hello
to him. He is 62 and has a
lpvely wife. I am in my 80s.
Do you suppose he . has a
medical problem'' Or doe.s he ·
think he's giving me a thrill''
How can I let him know hi s
actions are repulsive?- Not
Interested in the Stud
Dear Not Interested: For
the sake of being a . good
neighbor. you should assume
he has a med ical problem.
The ne xt time this happen.s.
say with a st raight face and
great concern, " You oughi to
have that chec ked . It cou ld
be serious." Or you can tell
his wife that you are worried

about the co nstant scratching
and he should set· his doctor.
Since you arc o nly di snJSsi ng hi s health. the mortifi cal iuil will be minimal.
()car An nie: I rem! th e
lette r from ·:o ld. Stuprd and
Tired." who rs sti ll supporting her son and hi s famil y. I
am I ~ and mv sister. married wit h twci children: is
seven years older. l.love her
fam ily dea rly. bLII they still
live with my parents-.
I' m used to :1 bustl ing
home, bui thi s drama has
bee n go ing. on for o ver six
years. I feel cheated of what
slio uld have been spec ial
time wit h· my parents, and I
have no pri vacy. Instead.
our house is overrun wi th
my sister 's childre n and
pets. Since neither she ' nor
her hushan d work. my paren ts income must stretch
over seven '()Cup !e.
When I was 16, I got ajob
to case the burden on my
parents. and I have cndcavored to be self-su ffi cien t
cvn since . unlike my greedy
;md spoiled si ster whu takes
whatever l1andout she can
ge t. I am goi1ig to a local
un iversit y soo n. ·. mainly
hcc·ausc it will co.st less. I
rese nt my sister and brotherin -law for putting so much ·
strai n on our fa mily budget
that it in tlu enced 1"ny choice
of college . and it certa inl y
has damagcu our relat ionship. - F~d Up in Florida
Dear Fed Up: It 's Lll!for-

.

lunate that your parents
.don ' t reafize they are hurting your sister's future by
' upporting her now, with the
added bonus that they have
alienated you. Hang in there.

Thursday, August 14, :mo8

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Thursday, Aug. 14
RACINE
- South ern
Local School Board, special
meeting, 10 a.m., high
sc hool media room, discu ss
upcomin g renewal levy,
personnel actions and any
other business deemed necessary by the board.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Aug. 14
CHESTER
' Shade
River Lodge 453, 7:30p.m.
at the hall. Refreshments.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 Auxiliary, 7
p.m. at post home.

Saturday, 1\ ug. 16 .
POMEROY - Christian
Motorcycle . Association
"Delivered" Chapter, regu lar meeting, 5 · p.m.,
Common Grounds.

Youth events
Sunday, Aug. 17
MIDDLEPORT - Oasis ·
Christian Fellow ship will
sponsor a free school supply
giveaway from 6 to 8 p.m. ,
Park.
Dave
Diles
Refreshments and music ,.
Tuesday, Aug. 19
POMEROY Meigs
Middle School will have an
open house for all sixth
grade students and newly
enrolled students 5 to 7 p.m.
at the school.
r
·
I

'

'

Local Weather
Thursday... Partly sunny..
A slight chance of showers
and thunderstorms in the
afternoon. Highs in the
lower 80s. West winds
around 5 mph. Chance of
rain 20 percent .
Thursday night ... Mostly
cloudy with-a slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows around 60. Northwest
winds around 5 mph in the
evening ... Becoming light and.

variable. Chance of rain 20
percent.
Friday... Partly
sunn y
with a slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Hi ghs in the lowe r 80s.
Northwest winds around 5
mph . Chance ofrain 20 percent.
Saturday
through
Sunday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Highs in the mid
80s. Lows in the lower 60s.

Local Stocks

AEP (NYSE) - 38.29
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 60.60
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 39.22
Annie's Mailbox is wrine11 Big Lois (NYSE)- 33.18
Evans (NASDAQ) - 29.36
by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Bob
BorgWarner (NYSE)- 41.63
Sugar, longtime editors of Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
the An11 Landers column. - 50.30
Please e·!lUlil your questions Champion (NASDAQ)- 4.42
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) to
anniesmailbox@com- 5.30
cast.net, or write to: Annie's Clly Holding (NASDAQ)- 45.49
Mailbox; P.O. Box 118190, Collins (NYSE)- 52.84
Chicago, IL 60611. To find DuPont (NYSE)- 45.14
US Bank (NYSE)- 30.04 ·
out more about A 11nie 's Gannett
(NYSE)- 19.26
Mailbox, and read feaJures Ganaral Electric (NYSE)- 29.31
by other Creators SyndicaJe Hartay-Davldson (NYSE)- 40.92
Morgen (NYSE)- 36.91
writers atul cartoonists, visit JP
Kroger (NYSE)- 29.57
tlze creators SyndkaJe Web Limited Brands (NYSE) -18.20
page at www.creators.com.
Nortolk Southern (NYSE)- 69.91

Ohio Valley aanc Corp. (NASDAQ)- 24
BBT (NYSE)- 28.51
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 22.60
Pepsico (NYSE)- 69.74
Premier (NASDAQ)- 9.99
Rockwell (NYSE)- 48.79
Rocky Boo1s (NASDAQ) - 5.99
Royal Dutch Shell- 68.80
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)- 90.15
Wai·Mart (NYSE)- 57.88 .
Wendy's (NYSE) - 23.80
WesBanco (NYSE)- 25.04
Worthington (NYSE) - 18.15
Dally stock raporture lha 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of trana-

acttonslor Aug. 13,2008, pro-

vided by Edward Jones financial

advisors Isaac Mills In Gallipolis
at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant al

(304) 674.0174. Member SIPC.

.

..._

.._
.....

f'.,
f'.,

----

-

Summer is here, so
learn how to reduce energy costs.
AEP Ohio has energy-saving tips to he~ you keep your energy costs down.
Set your thermostat to 78 degrees and use fans to circulate the air
I Repi;M:e air conditioning filters at least once amonth
I Avoid running heat.producing awliances (ovens, dryers) during the hottest time of day
1 Close blinds or curtains on sunny windows to keep the beat out

1

'

't

'

Jilin~.. /ni,/N.,J.I.ulill.t;i(i-..,,',.,,~;rqlf,. /Mpriltt I!! Ci\llllle t~ !lghlighl )~ur""'wR'i ·

AEP Ohio has more tips and an Average Monthly Payinent plan to he~ you manage
your bills.

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

Be energy smart Do your~ to save energy,and younsave money.
Ri'monhflfl'llg you .

HOLZER
CLINIC·
740-446-5381
•

mr 1hi.\ ,\pcria! rilly.'

Medical Excellence.
Lqcal Caring..

!.o•·e,
Your Family

Mail to: Grandparents Day

The Daily Sentinel

To learn more, go to: AEPOhio.ccm,
or write to:
AEPOhioFulfillment
3950 Business Park Drive
Columbus, OH 43204 .

c/o

www. holzerclinic.com
•

·

'

so

I II II/ It/

'

For information oil
"Grow with Music ," per~
sons may visit the program's
Web
site
al
www.ma rshal I .edu/ com '
mdislmusic, contact Pappas
bye-mailing pappasj®!lUlri
shall.edu, or call her ai
(304) 697-02J/.

.PageA3

EBEND

The Daily Sentinel

,

111 Court St. Pomero~. Ohio
992-2155

•·

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,·

....

,,,

�,
'

Family Medicine
Page A2 ·The Daily Sentinel

.

Thursday, Aug. 14
Sponsored by Ridenour Tv. Appliance

Gallipolis .. Boardw alk''·&gt;
Cou ld it be thund e r"'
Actuall v. it\ the sound elf
· The Thu.ndert ones.
Come hear it' t(&gt;r ymu·self.
as the French Colony Chorus
.. Under
tile
presents
Boardwal k' ' on Saturday at 8
p.m. at the Ariel Themre on ·
Second Ave nue in Gallipolis.
Featured guests for the .
show
w iII
be
The

and Gas Service
Senior Citizens Day
Noon- Flower Show Judging , Thompson Roush
· .
Building
2 p.m. - 4-H Demonstrations. Hill Stage ·
4 p.m. - Kiddie Tractor Pull , Small Arena
5 p.m. - 4-H Style ~evue , " Dew Zone" Hill Stage
6 p.m. - Truck and Tractor Pull, Pull Tra~~ .
6 p.m • .:.. Barbershop Quartet. "Dew Zone H1ll
Stage
.
7:30p.m. - Rocky Mountain Bluegrass, "Dew
Zone" Hill Stage

Thunde rtones , men 's . bar-

bershop

Huntin~ton

..

Friday, Aug. IS
Sponsored by Home National Bank
Submitted photo
The Thundertones Barbershop Ha rmony Society Chapter of the Huntington Tri-State Area
will be featured performers at "Under the Boardwalk," a 1950s-'60s beach s how being presented by the French Colony Chorus at th e Ariel Theatre in Gallipolis this Saturday at 8 p.m.

care professiomils. fi nancia l Thundertones chorus · hosts
planners, mechanics, rea l- . a 9111 patriotic tribute to the
tors, and a real barber 1 The first responders and mili tary
Thundertone s · ·director is effort of the Sept. II . 200 I .
Steve Patrick .
disaster. The ladies of
American art form.
Their music styles include French Colony Chorus have
While most of the runes from the I XOOs to cur- joi ned .th e men in this tribThundertones have had lit - rently popular songs. spiri- . utc the past several years in
tle forma l musi c edLlcation. tual and patriotic numbers. Huntingtorl .
they love to perform four and the group loves to
Prior to the guest appearpart barbershop sty le num- enterta in wi th a dash of ance Of The Thundertones
bers. They range from low- humor. They participate in on Satu rd ay , the French
. vo iced basses to hi gh- BHS com petition s. stage Colony Cho ru s wi ll enterpitched tenors. and the mid- seve ral shows eac h year. tain with 'a nostalgic perfordle part baritones. who sup- provide Singing Valentines. mance of so ngs of the 1950s
port the leads si nging the and even hold Singing Car and ' 60s in a beach side setmelody in most songs. The · Washes. where patrons are tin g . As Gallipolis area
_men range from high-school serenaded while their vehi- chaoter of Sweet Adeli nes
students to retirees, and cl es are polished .
International. the lad ies will
Eac h
year.
The conclude the show with a
incl ude s'tlesmen. health-

presentati on of their competition numbers which successfu lly placed them during tile five-s tate Region
Fom con test the past spring.
Both cho ru ses will fea ture ·
members sing ing in barbershop quartets .
Limited reserved tickets
are available for a catered
afterglow pany to be at the
nearby Elks' Cl ub . Tickets
for the show will be avai lable
from French Colony Chorus
members and at the Ariel box
office up to show time .

For more information,
con tact Be•• Alberchinski at
(740 ) 446-2476 'or Suzy
Parker at (740) 992 :5555.

Annual Atlatl Contest this weekend .
ALBANY - The Ohio
Arlatl Association and the

is illegal to · hunt with in
Ohio. It is believed th at
Vietnam
Vett:rans
o f some areas of the world.
America Chapter 100 wi ll New · Zealand , Austrailia
hold th eir ni nth annual ai1d Alaska, may have never
Atlatl Con test in Albany stopped using the atlatl.
this Saturday and Sunday at
The
World
Atlatl
the Albany · Riding C lub Association has created a
(fairgrounds) at the co rn er standard ized contest · in
of state routes 68 1 and 32.
which people all over the
The atlatl is an anc ient world can compete in the
hunting system 'claimed to be same contest . and their
over 30.000 years old. It was scores can be compared.
replaced by the bow about The Internation al Standard
5,000 years ao. The atlatl is a Accuracy Con test (!SAC).
fexible stick , about 2 feet consists of 10 throws, five
long, that is used to propel 6 at 15 meters and five itt 20
foot or longer spears with meters. This would have
.great speed and .accuracy. been the effective hunting
The atlatl was used almost range in ancient times.
everywhere in the world.
In Albany, there will be
Today. the a't latl is still ' instructions, demonstrations
used all over the world but and state con tests all day,
mainl y for sport ·and recre- but World Atlatl Association
ation. It is used for hunting rules mandate .th at a comin some states but currently petitor can only throw one

ISAC a day. On Saturd ay,
the world com petition will
begin at 2 p.m . and · on
S unday they will start
aro und II a.m. There will
also be Internati onal Atlatl
Society competitions and
Ohio Atlatl Association
contests both days.
Many
world
ranked
atlatlist live in Pennsylvania,
Ohio and Indiana. The 2007
international
rankings
included many southern
Ohio competitors. Mike
Glenn of Lucasville fin ished
fifth in the world, while
Mamerto Tindongan of
Albany finished II th . Other
local men that were world
ranked
include
Ray
Strischek of Athens. who
was 14th and Rick Shephard
of Hilliard, who fin ished
30th . In the women's div ision, Margie Tachok of

Entertainment Briefs
the Rio Gra nde Flyers.

· For ,inforJmilion. comacr
Bill Cm·per ar (740) 286-

drawings will be held both
nights. Seating is limited . so
bring a law n chair. Camping
is avai lable . The si ng will go
on, rain or shine.

RIO GRANDE - The
20th annual Radio Co ntro l 2915.
Fly-in will be held at the
For infonnastion , coli
Bob Eva ns Farm this
(740) 37Y-264 7.
Saturday and Sunday, each
GALLIPOLIS
The
day from 9 a.m. unti15 p.m.
There is free parking and 19th annual Gall ia County
admission to the gathering Gospel Sing will be. 'held
~et
of radio controlled aircraft Friday and Saturday. Aug.
enthusiasts. who wi i'l dis- 22 and 23 at th e Gallia
GALLIPOLIS
The
play and fly their models.
County Juni or Fairgrounds. Raccobn Creek Partnership
Also schedu led is a radio
The gospel sing will go and the Raccoon Creek Water
control. swap meet under the from 5 p.m . to midnight Trail Association will- hold a
tent set up for the ievent. both nights, with 15 to 20 trash pick-up this Saturday
along with ~ radio control groups appearing each from 9 a.m. to noon.
plane · raflle and food and night. There is no charge for
The trash pick-up will
refresh mcnts.
admission , but an offering take pi ace at the Raccoon
· Sponsors of the ny-in are wi ll be taken to cover costs . Creek County Park (0.0 .
the Flyin g RC .Aces of
A concession stand will Mcintyre Park Di ~trict ) in
Jackson : RC Mountaineers offer sa nd wiclies, soft drinks Gall ia County.
of Charleston. W.Va., and and 'desserts. Door pri ze
Gloves. trash bags, and

Gospel sing

Trash pickup
at park

8 a.m. - 4-H Horse Fun Show
.9 a.m. - Junior Fair Pet Show, Small Arena
10 a.m. - Kiddie Tractor Pull of Champions, Small
Arena
1 p.m. - Junior Fair Awar:ds .
5 p.m. - Riverside Cloggers, "Dew Zone" Hill Stag.e
6 p.m.- Truck Pull, Pull Track
·
7 p.m. - Missing in Action, "Dew Zone" Hill Stage
9 p.m. - K~lly Perry, Gospel, "Dew Zone" Hill.
Stage

then. i( yo ur immu ne

'-~Y '.h.'tn

gch

weak because of ath anL·in g ~ tgc . i nfir-

ANNIE 'S MAILBOX

. Relationship complicates work life
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY S~GAR
: f)ear Annie: My co~vo rkers and ] are experihKing a very awkward situ~1tion : 1 wo rk fo r a large
tompany. My department
consists of ci dozen employ~ es and one fetnale supervi~o r (I am her assistant).
! About eig ht months ago, a
~up e r v i sor
for a nother
llepartment (male) was
j1 ired. Our departments have
lo wo rk together, but these
lwo supervisors seem to be
larrving it to another level. .
!rhcy are always together
lmd. if not in the same room,
!hey are on t!1e telephone
~vhispering and gigglin g.
fv!Y supervi sor is married.
!fhe other one is divorced.
i At fir st. . I thought my
~nea s ine ss was due to jeal1&gt;l"Y because my superVISOr
'"1d I had become good
fr iends and often spent time
tog ether socially. Now I' m
m~ so sure. Snide remarks
th-e circulating ' among the
,[atr. although no one has .
&lt;tctuallv confronted them .
The situation puts u·s all in an
\twkward and uncomfortable
position, and sometimes
t ~ings get tense iri the office.
·, I have never told anyone
that I happened to sec them
&lt;ngether (after hours) at a
l'Cstauran t, an art gallery and
.a grocery store. I am fond of
Moth my supervi sor and her
hushand and fee l as though

Sponsored by Kawasaki Motor sports
Kiddie and Senior Citizens Day ..

9 a.m. ~ Pretty Baby Contest, "Dew Zone" Hill Stage

io a.m • ..,. Market Rabbit Sale, Livestock Arena
' 10:40 a.m. - Market Poultry Sale,Livestock Arena ·
11:30 a.m. -Market Goat Sale, Livestock Arena
Noon - Harn~ss Racing, Race Track
·12:15 p.m. - Market Lamb Sale, Livestock Arena
1:30 p.m. - Dairy Market Steer Sale, Livestock ·
Arena
2 p.m •.- Market Hog Safe·, Livestock Arena
4 p.m. - Market Steer ·Sl\fe. Livestock Arena
4:30p.m. - Commercial Feeder Sale, Livestock
Arena
'
·
· '
5 p.m. -Market Dairy Feeder Sale, Livestock Arena ·.
6 p.m. - Chain Saw Contest '
,.
.
·
6 p.m. - Mud Volley Ball, Horse Are'na ~,, :· '"":
6 p.in. - ATV and Youth Garden Tractor Pull, Pull ·
Track
.
7:30p.m. - Karaoke \\'ith Kip, "Dew Zone" Hill
Stage
8 p.m. - Tough Track Contest, Grandstand

'Grow With Music'
announces·fall.schedule

Noodle supper

Yuu ~:an hu ve a la t~nt TB infecti on j·£;r
years ·w ithou! an ) -., y m pt o m ~. Rut.

funct ion and HIV status is desirable.
After completion- of the treatment, your
'dnctor will monitor youfor symptoms
of TB and do periodic chest X-rays..
As you can see, treatment for LTBI is
usuall y much easier than that for active
TB . Thi s is why we w~nt to do everything poss ible to prevent a latent TB
i nt~c tion from becoming a active one.
So . the short answer to your questioll is. yes 1 Take the medication your
Joctor prescribed .
Finall y. some information for all my
readers to· help prevent the spread of
LTBL If you travel to a foreign country where active TB infections are
prevalent. have a TB skin test do ne
pri or to your .travel and then within 10
· wee ks of your return.

•

Saturday. Aug. 16

Wintersville fin ished sixth in
the world, while Debbie
Andrews
and Cynthia
Tindongan, both of Albany,
finished 19th and 23rd . .In
the youth division (children
under 16), Jeff Kingery of
Flint Ridge finished seventh,
whil~ Tarin Tindongan of
Albany finished 15th.
For the entire month of
August, there will be an atlatl
display at The Plains Public
Library. You can see locally
made atlatls as well as ancient
artifacts from the area.
Ir. formation on the Atlatl,
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. with current world rankings · "Grow Wi.th Music," a popuand a schedule of all atlatl lar program fo r children ages
eve nts can be fo und at birth to 5 and their parents,
www. worldatlatl.org. ·
will resume this fall beginFor additional inforna- ning the week of Sept. I.
, tion. contact Steve Barnell, . " Parents and their kids are
treasurer.
Ohio At/at/ having a great time at these
Association at( 740) 698· classes," program directoi
6553. or bamz@juno.com.
Joni Pappas said . The program is offered through the
SP.eech and Hearing Clinic
at Marshall University.
:'I recommend early registration to assure getting a
lunch wi ll be provided. The space in the right class, in
group w'ill atte mpt to,recy- addition to taking advantage
cle what it can.
i
of the discount."
Classes are avai !able· for
The
Raccoon Cree k
Partnership is a non ~ profit babies from birth to 18
organization th at formed to months; toddlers from 18 to
jmprove and protect water 36 months; 3 year olds, and
quality in !he Raccoon 4 and 5 year olds. Parent
participation is r~quired in
Creek Watershed.
For mnre information, the classes for the baby, tod nmtact Ben McCament ar dler and 3-year-old cate(140) 597-1473, or mcca- gories and optional for the 4
and 5-year-old category.
ment@ohio.edu.
Classes take place in the
early evenings on Mondays
and during the day on
Mondays and Tuesdays. A
WILKESVILLE
maximum of 8. children is
Wilkesville
.Methodist accepted per class and chH-·
Church ·s annual noodle sup- dren with special needs are
pe r is this Saturday from 4 welcome.
to 6:30 p.m . at $5 per plate.
Pappas said the 45-minute
· The chu rch is located on sessions are designed to
Ohio 160 at Wilkesville.
enhance a child's cognitive,

yu ur. ca., c. by ha\ ing ·a po"iti \L' TB
;., kin test and a nct.!atin: t' h C'-11 X -r:1 \ .

lnit v or d isease. tht' infec ti on c;m
quit· kl y turn in to ac ti\·c T B J I\C:J,c .
From a ' tati, tical ' landpuin t. p~nple
~o ;ug off rn co/leg"e. I u·a.)· born in who have LTBI h a\· ~ abou t a I0 pe rfnclia bllf have fired in America}(,,. tile , cent c h :.m c~ of de ' d opin g &lt;Jet i ,.c TR at
last 14 rears. Should I consider wking some point in tllci r live, . if no t treated.
~he 111ediciuion nn· doctor prescrihed:' Tho~c who have illt h.~:-.'&gt;e'&gt; th at compro·
; Answe r: Tuberc ulosis (TB J is a mi se the i mmune .. v-..te m. l ike i._· ~ nu.:c r:
major communicable disease world- or AIDS . ha v~ a cl&gt; nsidcrahlv hi gher
oviile. TB . is caused by a bacterium. n sk of dcvc lr) pi ng aL·t i \'e _tu hci·cuh~o; i ' ·
ll\ ually Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
Typical sy mptom s of actiw TB arc
)hm is spread through the ai r when a cough. re ver. . wci ght loss and ni ght
pe r~on wi th active TB does little more
sweats. At this stage. a ch6 t X-ray
l han breathe.
will sl1ow a l un ~ infectio n. and the ill Family Medicine® is a weekly col: In fact, TB can be spread when the ness is conta ~ iolt !-1. Ac ti ve TB i.... ;t \ 'LT\ 1111111. To submit questio11s, write to
Infected person coughs. sneezes, talks. seriou s illness til at c·an lead to death .- Martha A. Simpso11, D.O., M.B.A.,
~in gs. or even just laughs. If you ' re
Treatment for actir e TB ofte n Ohio
University
College
of
t1rnund thi s person when he or she requ ires multipl e medi catio n'. and the Osteopathic Medici11e, P.O. Box JlO,
hpels these bacteria into the air, all ym1 bucteriltm G ill beco me res io;~Cint tn Athens; Ohio 45701, or via e-mail to
)1ecd to d!J is to breathe them into your the se dru g'-~ . Thi s ca n m;d..;l..' th e di ..,c'ase reade rq 11 esti o11 s@family medicine·
pwn lungs to become infected with TB . v ery diffi cult to cure.
uews.org. Medical information in
• When you are exposed to TB and get
Treatment of L r fl l usu&lt;JII y rcq uir~' this colwim is provided as an educa)he bacteria in your lungs, you don ·, onl y nne medi c:nion . c:&gt;lkJ iso ni:uid tional service only. It does not replace
tilways -become sick. In these cases (INH J, whic h is takon bv mouth t(ir si., the judgment of your personal physi·
" 'here you are infected but not sick you 10 nine !ll0111hS. If \'O LJ ha VL~ prC~(' .\ i , t i ll ~ ciau, who should be relied 011 to diag·
:,re said to h'ave a latent TB infection fned ica l Condi t ion ~ . however. the treat'":. · 11o.•r a11d recmmnetrd treatment for
I L1~BIJ : When you have this type of. ment mi l!ht int..:ludf' addi ti{1n:tl dru ~ " any medical conditions. Past columns
.~'13. you can ' t spread it to anyone else.
Prfor )o initiation of ii\'H therapy. are available 0111i11e at www.fami/y.
: LTB I is usually diagnosed, as in baseline lah wurk lilr " 'ch things as li;·c·r medici11 enew s.org.

Schedule of events
'

tinctive :-..ou r{d r~verh~ rat ing
froti l H unq ngton . to the

Radio fly-in

Questio11: I recentlr fwd a tulx rcuiiisis skin test fo r scin&gt;ol, and it ll'as
f" '·' irive. Iliad a chest X-ra r done. and
)r 11 as negarive. Mr doctor .i·aid I didn 't
11111'1' acti1•e wherculosis. bur I needed
to wke medicine f or se&gt;·era/ months.
l litis doesn 'r make sense to me. If I
rlon ·, lw1•e TB, 1rh.r do I need ro .rake
ln•·dicine :' I am 18 rear.&lt;old and wn

Meigs County Fair

GALLIPOLIS - · Li sten!
What\ that J ee p. rich. di s-

chorus · of the
Tri -State Area .
T he Tl lllnde rtones group
been d e lidllin~ audiences
since cha,1erinu in 200 I.
altho ugh somcc prev iousl y
had been members of other
area harhcrshop · choruses.
They are about . 30 of the
30.000 men of Barliershop
Harm ony. Soc iety world wide. · alon~ with those in
other local chapters ·i n
Gallipoli s . Ashla nd . Ky ..
and Charleston. W.Va .. performin g
a
uniquel y

-, Reader should take drug for latent TB

Thursday, August 14, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

social/emotional, speech/Ian. guage and J?hysical development by usmg age-appropriate music activities and
movement. Emphasis is
made on American folk
music , with which most of
the parents wi II be farni liar,
and virtually all of it will bel
performed live .
Pappas .is a board-certified neurologic music !hera,
pi st speciali zing in early
childhood intervention, spec ial education and older
adults. Her private practice
has incluoed work in
numerou s pre-schools , early
.childhood centers, special
ed ucation programs, nursing homes and rehabi!itaii\!e
centers in Iowa, Mississippi
and Indiana. She also is ·a
music educ,ator, having
taught pre-K- 12 general alid
choral music in Dubuqu~.
Ia. She is currently serving
as adjunct faculty for the
Department of Music at
Marshall ·
:

'

I shoul d say something. but
what 0 I love this job and my
co-workers, but the atmu'phere is reall y gett ing to me.
-Bewildered Assistant
Dear Bewildered : Your
supervisor and her fri end
may run the risk of being
fired if their relm ionship goes
further. You have no ev idence
of mi·sbeha vior, but she
should be made aware of the
rumors. Tell her you val ue the.
fri endship and thought. she
should know What 's being
said; and that the re lationshi p
is creating a ditticul! work
environment. Beyond that.
please stay out of it.
Dear Annie: I have a pn&gt;blem with my nex t-dour neighbor. He is a reti red man. very
religious. and when he tal ks
to me, he's forever adjusting
his you-know-what.
It is so embarrassin g tlmt I
don't eve n want to say hello
to him. He is 62 and has a
lpvely wife. I am in my 80s.
Do you suppose he . has a
medical problem'' Or doe.s he ·
think he's giving me a thrill''
How can I let him know hi s
actions are repulsive?- Not
Interested in the Stud
Dear Not Interested: For
the sake of being a . good
neighbor. you should assume
he has a med ical problem.
The ne xt time this happen.s.
say with a st raight face and
great concern, " You oughi to
have that chec ked . It cou ld
be serious." Or you can tell
his wife that you are worried

about the co nstant scratching
and he should set· his doctor.
Since you arc o nly di snJSsi ng hi s health. the mortifi cal iuil will be minimal.
()car An nie: I rem! th e
lette r from ·:o ld. Stuprd and
Tired." who rs sti ll supporting her son and hi s famil y. I
am I ~ and mv sister. married wit h twci children: is
seven years older. l.love her
fam ily dea rly. bLII they still
live with my parents-.
I' m used to :1 bustl ing
home, bui thi s drama has
bee n go ing. on for o ver six
years. I feel cheated of what
slio uld have been spec ial
time wit h· my parents, and I
have no pri vacy. Instead.
our house is overrun wi th
my sister 's childre n and
pets. Since neither she ' nor
her hushan d work. my paren ts income must stretch
over seven '()Cup !e.
When I was 16, I got ajob
to case the burden on my
parents. and I have cndcavored to be self-su ffi cien t
cvn since . unlike my greedy
;md spoiled si ster whu takes
whatever l1andout she can
ge t. I am goi1ig to a local
un iversit y soo n. ·. mainly
hcc·ausc it will co.st less. I
rese nt my sister and brotherin -law for putting so much ·
strai n on our fa mily budget
that it in tlu enced 1"ny choice
of college . and it certa inl y
has damagcu our relat ionship. - F~d Up in Florida
Dear Fed Up: It 's Lll!for-

.

lunate that your parents
.don ' t reafize they are hurting your sister's future by
' upporting her now, with the
added bonus that they have
alienated you. Hang in there.

Thursday, August 14, :mo8

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Thursday, Aug. 14
RACINE
- South ern
Local School Board, special
meeting, 10 a.m., high
sc hool media room, discu ss
upcomin g renewal levy,
personnel actions and any
other business deemed necessary by the board.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Aug. 14
CHESTER
' Shade
River Lodge 453, 7:30p.m.
at the hall. Refreshments.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 Auxiliary, 7
p.m. at post home.

Saturday, 1\ ug. 16 .
POMEROY - Christian
Motorcycle . Association
"Delivered" Chapter, regu lar meeting, 5 · p.m.,
Common Grounds.

Youth events
Sunday, Aug. 17
MIDDLEPORT - Oasis ·
Christian Fellow ship will
sponsor a free school supply
giveaway from 6 to 8 p.m. ,
Park.
Dave
Diles
Refreshments and music ,.
Tuesday, Aug. 19
POMEROY Meigs
Middle School will have an
open house for all sixth
grade students and newly
enrolled students 5 to 7 p.m.
at the school.
r
·
I

'

'

Local Weather
Thursday... Partly sunny..
A slight chance of showers
and thunderstorms in the
afternoon. Highs in the
lower 80s. West winds
around 5 mph. Chance of
rain 20 percent .
Thursday night ... Mostly
cloudy with-a slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows around 60. Northwest
winds around 5 mph in the
evening ... Becoming light and.

variable. Chance of rain 20
percent.
Friday... Partly
sunn y
with a slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Hi ghs in the lowe r 80s.
Northwest winds around 5
mph . Chance ofrain 20 percent.
Saturday
through
Sunday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Highs in the mid
80s. Lows in the lower 60s.

Local Stocks

AEP (NYSE) - 38.29
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 60.60
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 39.22
Annie's Mailbox is wrine11 Big Lois (NYSE)- 33.18
Evans (NASDAQ) - 29.36
by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Bob
BorgWarner (NYSE)- 41.63
Sugar, longtime editors of Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
the An11 Landers column. - 50.30
Please e·!lUlil your questions Champion (NASDAQ)- 4.42
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) to
anniesmailbox@com- 5.30
cast.net, or write to: Annie's Clly Holding (NASDAQ)- 45.49
Mailbox; P.O. Box 118190, Collins (NYSE)- 52.84
Chicago, IL 60611. To find DuPont (NYSE)- 45.14
US Bank (NYSE)- 30.04 ·
out more about A 11nie 's Gannett
(NYSE)- 19.26
Mailbox, and read feaJures Ganaral Electric (NYSE)- 29.31
by other Creators SyndicaJe Hartay-Davldson (NYSE)- 40.92
Morgen (NYSE)- 36.91
writers atul cartoonists, visit JP
Kroger (NYSE)- 29.57
tlze creators SyndkaJe Web Limited Brands (NYSE) -18.20
page at www.creators.com.
Nortolk Southern (NYSE)- 69.91

Ohio Valley aanc Corp. (NASDAQ)- 24
BBT (NYSE)- 28.51
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 22.60
Pepsico (NYSE)- 69.74
Premier (NASDAQ)- 9.99
Rockwell (NYSE)- 48.79
Rocky Boo1s (NASDAQ) - 5.99
Royal Dutch Shell- 68.80
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)- 90.15
Wai·Mart (NYSE)- 57.88 .
Wendy's (NYSE) - 23.80
WesBanco (NYSE)- 25.04
Worthington (NYSE) - 18.15
Dally stock raporture lha 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of trana-

acttonslor Aug. 13,2008, pro-

vided by Edward Jones financial

advisors Isaac Mills In Gallipolis
at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant al

(304) 674.0174. Member SIPC.

.

..._

.._
.....

f'.,
f'.,

----

-

Summer is here, so
learn how to reduce energy costs.
AEP Ohio has energy-saving tips to he~ you keep your energy costs down.
Set your thermostat to 78 degrees and use fans to circulate the air
I Repi;M:e air conditioning filters at least once amonth
I Avoid running heat.producing awliances (ovens, dryers) during the hottest time of day
1 Close blinds or curtains on sunny windows to keep the beat out

1

'

't

'

Jilin~.. /ni,/N.,J.I.ulill.t;i(i-..,,',.,,~;rqlf,. /Mpriltt I!! Ci\llllle t~ !lghlighl )~ur""'wR'i ·

AEP Ohio has more tips and an Average Monthly Payinent plan to he~ you manage
your bills.

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

Be energy smart Do your~ to save energy,and younsave money.
Ri'monhflfl'llg you .

HOLZER
CLINIC·
740-446-5381
•

mr 1hi.\ ,\pcria! rilly.'

Medical Excellence.
Lqcal Caring..

!.o•·e,
Your Family

Mail to: Grandparents Day

The Daily Sentinel

To learn more, go to: AEPOhio.ccm,
or write to:
AEPOhioFulfillment
3950 Business Park Drive
Columbus, OH 43204 .

c/o

www. holzerclinic.com
•

·

'

so

I II II/ It/

'

For information oil
"Grow with Music ," per~
sons may visit the program's
Web
site
al
www.ma rshal I .edu/ com '
mdislmusic, contact Pappas
bye-mailing pappasj®!lUlri
shall.edu, or call her ai
(304) 697-02J/.

.PageA3

EBEND

The Daily Sentinel

,

111 Court St. Pomero~. Ohio
992-2155

•·

~

•

.
,·

....

,,,

�The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

P NIO

Thursday, August

14, 2008

BY RACHEL BECK
AP BUSINESS WRITER

July, the most stnce late sec:und qu.u1er Economtsb
March 2002 when the JOb .ue expccung th.u to rever;e
market w,ts stntgglmg to get m the second hdlt of 1he )edt
b.tck on tts teet alter the a~ compdn te" t.tke advantdge
200 I recess tOn
of the t.tx wnte-ofts for bu'!Should the weak_l:&gt;ustne" nes&gt;es unde1 the US ecocltmate sput compantes to nomic stunulus plan howevslow exp,mstun drastically. er. That lets compantes buythat could tunher weaken mg new eqtu pmenr tn 2008
the labor m,uket And tf that to deprect.tte .tn 1tdd tttanal
we re to happen. tl could put 50 percent ul the cu&gt;t of the
more pressure on Amertcan asse1s placed 111 ser\I Ce thts
co nsumers, whose ex pendt
yeat but the buymg must be
tures luel 70 percent ul ecu- dune before Jan I
'A second h.tlt stuge cou ld
nomtc growth
But we· re not m that bad come .tt the expense ot what
spot yet We 1mght not be lo1 wtll be purchased ne xt yeat.'
sdtd Dav1d Wyss. ch1ef ccunthe rest ot thts year
Whtl e debt-laden con- onJtst at Sr.md.trd &amp; Poor's
sutncts hdve been ltm pmg "Those tnterested ttl buymg
along desptte the U S gov- equtpment 111 the ltrst quaner
ernment's economtc stu1Ju- wt ll push tt back to the
lus program - wh1ch doled fourth quatter tor the tax
out $ROhtlltnn so t.tr m extra ' adv.tn t.lge"
mcome to mc1ny AmencdnS
Wyss also ex pec ts contn recent months - bust- strut:ltun spcndmg to st.trt
nesses haven't heen curbmg slowmg gmng uuo next year
the1r 111vestmenrs 111 any stg- ,15 bu&gt;tnesses wmd down
protec ts thar they had
ntltcant way
Spendmg on nonrestden- pl.mned when the economy
lt.tl structut es tose m a 144 wa~ bqonung Comp~m1es ­
percent annual rdte 111 the espcLt,tll y those consumersecond quarter, dCCordtng to focu sed - may be more
the lates t figures on GDP reluctant to commtt to new
trom the Ltbor Department stores or to build new factoOrder to U S f.tctones .tlso nes gtven the stare of the
h.t ve nsen. cltmbmg I 7 pet - economy
cent 111 June - the tastest
For msr.mce. Whole Foods
pdce st nce ldst 9 ecember M.trket Inc s.ud last -...eek
.tnd more than double what thdt tt would cut tis ftscal
econo mtsts had been expect- 2009 srore-opemng pl.m to
th e
Co mmerce 15 from as m&lt;~ny .1s 21 three
mg.
Dep.trtment reported
month s ago. and s'md tt
Purchases of eq111pme nt woul d hal\ e capttal spendand soft ware fell at an .mnu- tng not re lated to new stote
,tl rare of 3 4 percent 111 the opemngs The slugg1sh
111

econom v has wewhed hea'tly on -the Aust~n. Texasbased otg-an tc and natttrdl
toods supermark et chattt,
wh tch reputted qu.t rterly
earntngs th.u came tn below
expectattot1S.
Also W.ttch wh.tt compantes do wtth theu mvcntones
tn 1hc comtng months In the
second quarter busttte"e'
dt e'W down thei r tnventones
by a su t pmmg $62 2 btl !ton
stx ttmes the level seen 111 the
firs t quarter. .tcwrdtng to the
ldte't US GDP tepott Th.u
medns th ey dtdn't expand
thetr output. but let p.tst ptoductton abSOI b ,lily s[IITIUlU SCheck tnduced consumer
spendm g. .tccotdtng to
Mernll L~nch
l:lusmesses m.ty also tdcc
wedkenmg
condttton~
abtoad, -...h tch could hutt
U S exporters rliat have
enJ oyed btg g.uns hom the tt
glob,tl operattons "h tle the
U S economy has v.aned
Re,tl exports of goods and
serv 1ces rose at an annual

pdcc of 9 2 perce nt m the
second quat1et. ,Jccotdmg to
the L.tbor Depanmem
Corporate mvestments are
, ttJI tollmg ,tlong now.
though 1he pace ts slowmg
The trouble 1s that compdntes could Jam on the btakes
any ttme
(Rachel Be( k 11 the llalw ll -

al bu)men
T/1(;

10

I

I
I

www.mydailysentinel.com

·Obituaries

£

olwnnnt jm

A\.IIVl wted P1 en Wnte

he1 m i/Jeck@ap

011{)

POM EROY - Mane W.trd, 74. Pomeroy, p.tssed away
on Aug 13 2008, at Hol7er Setuor Cate 111 G.tlltpnlts.
She was born on Aug 16. 1933, m Kcntttcky. daughter of
the late Ben .tnd Eltz.tbcth (S lusher ) Howctrd She battled
c.mcer lor ll ye.u s .tnd ltved .t functtunal .urd very me.mmglul ltle She contnbuted to nmstonury groups She was
a regt&gt;tered nurse .tnd cated for her dts,tbled gra nddaughter
tor m,my yeats She w.ts best known to her fnends fur
bcmg d canng lov111g and compa:.,~ I O!hll e person
In .tddtt ton to her p.rrents she w.ts pteceded b' .t b1other
M.tr\ln ll ow,trd
·
She ts sU IVI\ed by D,tUghter. Tern (D,m) Leonatd
Romeroy. gt.mdchtldten Kattlm .tnd Co11 Dewhurst. ststers, Marg te Btshop St.mfOtd. Ky. Emma Wtllts. Florence.
Ky and W.mda Wtllenbotg. Con nth . Ky scvcJal meces
nephews d)ld

lOU'\Itls

A memon.tl sctvtce " '"be held at II .t m. S.ttu rclay, Aug
16. 200g. at the Fust Southern Bapttst Church 111 Pomeroy
Otlict&lt;~ttng wtll be Re' L.tm.u O'Bry.mt But1al wtll tollow
111 Chester Cemetety Fttends m\ty ~:all from 5-8 p m
Fnd.1y. Aug IS .tt the Ftrst Sout hern Bapti st Chutch
Arr.mgements wete completed bv Anderson McD.mtel
Funer&lt;t l Home On-lure tegtstty 1s .tvatl able at www andcrsonmcdamel com

I ·

ROCKS PRI NGS
Results ut Mond&lt;ty 's open
cJ.ts, d.tt tV show .tt the
Metgs C(•.utlly Fatr have
beeh posted by the SentOt
F.ut Bo.rrd
Resu lt s. ur descend tng
order and by class were .ts
follows
Holsteins
Spttng hetler ca lf. Cmdy
Kob lentz. Pomeroy. Roy
Holtet. Pomeroy. wtntet
hetlcr c.tl t.
Kob le ntz .
Kelsey Hulte t. Pom ero y.
summer ye arlin g hetl et.
Kobl en tz. spnng ye.trlmg
hetfer. Roy Holtet. 'Wttltet
yeadt ng he-tf er. Kehe y
Holtet. Koblent z
h tmur tv-u )e.t(-uld

Deaths

Lucy A. Wilfong

Local Briefs

Supply giveaway

School from Page AI

on a one-ye"1 contt dct ,\s d

Gene
Lyons

to the rune of " Bat p.tr.t
Ann" - a reckless. tutt le
.tct that would make tm.Jdmg lr.tq look rel.tttvely senstble' (The flyboys .tlways
want ro · htt Thud Wotld
countttes. ask the ground
sold1et s what they think ) A
man of the peopl e who .
Jogether wtth ht s mul ttmtl ltonmre hetress wtte, owns
mne houses m sev't;tal
states?
Stmplc: Attack yo ur
handsome. telegemc yo un g
opponent .ts a vaptd ce lebn ty hke Putt s Hilt on .rnd
Bruney Spears Fly 11110 .1
phony sn tt abou t O)lama's
allegedly "playtng the race
card," as tf rac 1al poltttcs
were even mtldly ottenst ve
to the Republtcan base
Conrn ve a bulltantly mane
for mul a lot solvtn g the

sitcom character Not real at
all Nor'd1d most Amencans
grasp that when The
Cowboy
chMmmgly
mocked the Stufted Shtrt's
"fuzzy math," vtrtually
~ve ry word was a fal sehood Among name- br,111d
pundits, Prmceton economt st Paul Kru gman was
almost alone Ill saymg so
The rest concentrated on
Gore 's
condesce ndtng
stghs, hts pedanttc atrs, etc
nat ton ' s
ene rgy ~ woe ~
'Amencan Idol " stuff
Today, ol course, we re through the nmacle of utiall pay mg for Bush's eptc shore dtilltng.
Because as H L Mencken
dishonesty and sheer f1 scal
long
ago observed. "For
mcompetencc. Meanwhtle,
gtve n the std kes m every ~:omplex problem,
Nove mber. you'd hke to there 1s a solutton that ts
thmk Amencans had cullcc- s1mple. nedt and wro ng."
llvely soberep up and would Never mmd thdt otl cum]lltprefet preStdentwl cam- mes curre nt ly earn mg stagpatgn
on
somethm g genng proftts arcn t domg
approachmg an adult level much dnllmg on domestic
A job mterview, say, tn, tead leases they already hold
Nor that otl from such we lls
of TV talent show.
Alas. a shallow, personal- wouldn 't make the Untied
tly-dnven race appears to be Stdtes energy- mdependent,
\\I hat both John McCam and but be .wc uoned on the
Barack Obama's campa1gns same mte rn attonal mark et
!rom Ru ssta,
want the Str.ttght -Talkmg .ts otl
Mavenck
vers us
the Venezuela and Iran
Tec hmcolor Pted Ptper
See. for years, sunpletons
On the Republtcan s1de. out m Ltmbaugh-land have
dumbtng things dow n been sold the pleas ing ficwork s to McCam's advan- tto n that "envtronmentaltst
tage Stuck wttlt a prestden- wackos" are the source of
tial candtd ate who voted all energy problems As
agamst Pres1dent Bu sh's Kru gman
correctl y
rumous tax cuts but now obse rves, the GOP's "de
says he·d make them per- f,tcro srogan has becotJIC ·
manent? A belltcose forme1 ' Real men don ' t thtnk
llyboy who makes a Joke of th mgs throu gh .,
singmg "Bomb, bomb lr.m"
As tor the Pted Ptper, h1 s

tntern auon.tll y re lev1se d
tour ot wo rld captta ls defimtely m.tde him look
"pte stdentta l " Except he
am' t prestdcnt yet GlVIng
spe eches betore huge,
adonng Europe.1n .tttdt ences was

c ert~lln

to 2et

hun called "ptes umptuous'
or worse Fot supportet'i
hke Herhelt to treat that
cntlcJsm as .t rac 1al slur
tn to
plays · du ectl y
Republtc.tn hdnds. As he
htm se ll ubsct ves e lse where m the sa me column .
" Every day that the camp.ugn IS about race tS "'
good day
for
John
McCam "

As Bob Somerby trenchantl y obse rves on hi s
Datly Howler blog. r.tce
makes everybody stuptd
Presumptuous, arrogant ,
eltttst. GOP tactJctans h.tve
applted these words to all
DemocratiC candidates tor a
ge neratt on So 1f the ptesumptt ve De moc~atic nmmnee doesn ·r want the ca nlp.ugn to be tactal , why d1(1
he gtve speeches ctttng
MeCum by name as somebody sure to say "he doesn't
look ltke all those other
preSidents on the doll.tr
htll s?"
'
It m.ry have worked
.tg.unst H1ll ary Cltnton tn a
Democratic pnmary But it
won' t play agatnst a
Republican
Somebody
needs to remmd Obama he's
runmng for piestdent ot the
Untted States. nor the
Umverstty of Chtcago
(A rk an ws
DemocwrGazelte tolunm nt Gene
L1 011' 11 "
Narwnq l
Maga ::.me Ah·Wd \11/flt er
and co au ril o1 of 'Til~
Hummg of ril e P" ' ""&lt;'lli )'
(Sr Marlm 1 P1t11 , 2000)

You

e-mwl Lr on; llf
ge11el10ns2 @\/)( r;jobu lll el.)
CCfl l

'

1eplacement lot ,, te.tcheJ
reasstgned to ,, gr.mt funded
posttton Th,lt contJ,tct wt ll
ex p1re .rutomattcally dt the
end ot the school ye&lt;tt
Rebecc,t Zurchet and
Kell y Batlcy we1e rehued
as petso nnel to suppott the
2 1st Century Grant on oneyear contracts as tunded by
the 2 1st Century Grant
Employed on supplemental contracts were Donna M
Wolfe, MHS student counctl advtsor; Davtd L Deem,
asstst.mt m.trchtng hand
dtrector, M Suzanne Bentz,
MHS newspdper .tnd web
destgner, Celu R McCoy,
MHS dr.tmd .td"sor, Brellt
B1 ssell .md Mtke Kloes. 8th
gr.tde foo tb.tll codc!Jes
Htred on supplemental
contt .tcts tor exte nded servtce were Mtck Albcto
Weber. voc.ttto n,tl .tgnculture. 30 d.tys. St.tcte Ro.tch ,
Mtddle School gutd,mce
counse lot 20 d.1ys, Cltl f
Kenn edy,
.md
Mtke
Wilfong. ht gh school gtudance counse lot s 40 d.tys
Substttute teac hers htred
-...ere C.trne Abbott, T.td
Alb.tno, Peggy Batl ey.
Bt ent Btsscll , - Camtll e
Bolm , li se Burns, Teres.t
Can , Cy ntht.t Cthtlt. Jamce
CUt ry. Btl! Dow me. Marge
Fetty. Randall Fulks. Dall.ls
Htll . Ntcole Honaker. Tncm
Jackson. Aut umn Lts le,
Lestet
Manu el, All en
Mtdcap. Gay Pern n. Narl1an.
Robtnetre Ryan Sletght .
Anglea Weeks. Eltzabeth
Wtlfong. Judy Wtlliam s,
Roxanne Willtams Robm
Wttham. Carne Woll e,
Ktmberly Wolfe. Beverly
Davts, and Barry McCoy
Persons hiJ ed as substitutes 111 vanous classtltcattons were
Wetze l
Bu s dnvers

B.uley, Dav td C.tsc t. Chdrles
Rtck Ch.mcey, Clyde Gaus.
L Dean Hat1 ts Jenny
Hy sell , D.IVtd Lam bet t.
OltveJ Noll IS, Chatles Perry.
G.r tl Smtth. Lmd.t Ellmger,
Geo rgAn n Sulewskt , and
Yvonne Moore
Cooks Grace Abbott,
M.ulene Pterce. dOd Fhuntl.t
YoL1ng

Custodtans,
Wetze l
B.uley, John Gomez. G.try
Kmg, Jr. Olner Noms.
Donoh m Rt chmond, Carl E.
Smtth . Gregory Satter!J eld.
James R Johnson. Sr , Gary
K.rutt. Tony Qutllen. Ddvtd
Staats. Jr . Tnnmy Tillis,
Charl es Eggers. Tdm.tra
Marsh.tll. Joseph Pat ker,
James Cra vens. Roger
Mo wc t ~, .md D.mny Dav1s
Mamte nancc
D,mny
Dav1 s and Ro ger Mo-...ery
Mechan ic Dann y Davts
Accepted a1 the meettng
were the resJgn.ltton s lor
retirement purposes ot
Kenda Wtllt.tm s, l11 gh
school sc1ence ,md he.tlth
teacher, ShMon Btrch ,
school nurse, ,mel W1lltam
Green, e lemenr,u y custodl.tn Also acce pted was the
resignation of Enc Cullums
.IS an etghth grade f oot ~al !.
coach , and the approval of
hun .ts a volunteer varst ty
.tsstst.mt football coach ,
both effecttve unmedtatclv
An OVe1111ght field lrtp
req uest from the Metgs
Ht gh School FFA to attend
the
N.ttton.tl
FFA
Conventton ttl lndt.tnapolts,
lnd on Oct 22-25, was
granted by the Bo.rrd
Following a lengthy dtscusston abo ut a GPA calcuI,Itton revJ'Ion lot Me1gs
Htgh School ,md he.mng
the recommendatton by the
Oh1o
Department
of
Education presented by the
supenntendent, - tt was
by
Board
req uested
Membe r Barbara Musser
rh ar the enttre board hear
from Steve Ohltnger, ht gh
school pnnctpal, ,md one of
th e gutd.tnce coun selor'
be lore any dCtton ts taken
Attendmg the meeung were
Roger Abbott, Ron Logan,
Mu &gt;Ser, Larry
Barbara
Tucker and Scott Walton,
Board ot Ed u~:at1on members,
and Supcnntcndent Wtlham
Buckley

) e.u ltng he tier Todd Tll]l]l, .:\uli ttonna Pulltn'. Lon!!
Pometoy lout yea t-old Buuon1. ..,umme1 ) edt ltng
cow Ro" Holtet d.tm .md hctlct Kobkllll L.tur.t E
d.tughlet. Ros- Holtet
Pulltns. Lone Bottom.
Brown Swiss
'Ptln)! hetlct c.~lt. L.tut.t E
Pulltn :-. . -.enHH Vt'~H l1n~
Summer ye.trltng hetle1
Trtpp
sentor ye.llltng hetlcr 1\udtll&gt;llll.t 'Pullttb"
het ler Trtpp Junt ot tltrce ... en1nr t\\ O Y L:'~u - o ld L.1ur~1
ye.tr-uld
cow.
Brenn.t E Pullur' tUt1tut thtee yc.trHoller three ye.u-o ld cm1 o\d LO\\. LL~ur.t Pui]Jlh
Tnpp, tout ~e.t r- old cow Audttontr.t Pulluh
Trtpp. dr) COli. T1tpp .tgcd
Fne
' ~~~~ old
UH\
d1 y cow. fnpp hcst 1hree 1\udnonn.t· Pullurs G.tt telt
lemales. Trtpp het J ol tour • Rllchtc Reed" tile .tged
lcmales rnpp
CO\\
B~ll].ll1ll!l
-\\ t (' ...
Ayrshit·es
Reed" ti le
he,t
ihtee
Semur two 1e.tr-old Kuk lem.rlc' L.tul 1 F Pullin'
Pulltns Long l:lonom
1\ud tJ nnn.t Pulltns d.ttn .111d
JerSC)S
d.tuglncr LtUI,t E Pulluh
Sprt ng
hetle t
ca ll
Audn on n.t Pulltrt' pt&lt;&gt;ducc·
Kohl em1. 11 1111er he tfet c.tl f ol ddm Amh Jnllil.l Pul11n ..,

11 -D Tec hn ology, $9 3 16.
Tt tle
V.
lnnov.ttt ve
Progr.tm $2. 174, E.t rly
Ch tldhood
Educ.ttton
(Presc hool)
$ 199 480
ONE-Net Ohto Pto~tam
$12.000.
Gtfted
Supp lement
(TAG I
ldenttftc.ttton. $ ~ .429
Also renewed for ,mothet
ye.u w.ts federal gt.tnt ol
571,595 tor thP fresh trutt
and veget.tble ll llttltton ptogtam opet.tted .tt the Met gs
Element .tt y Sc hool by

M.t nl yn Metet. food set 1 tee slhool yc~u
duedor Lds t )t.u Wds the
The Bo.ud .titer tCIICII
first· ye,u lot the piOg J,\111 1ng bllhli.j uute' lwrn 'uppl t
ami Me1et felt tt ""s vet v eJ' ~111d \C J \Ile" iJIO\ldC J S
successful ttl ft llmg " nee(l .tccepted tile iol loll tn g
...d. to ge t h trtety 11110 .. the ~ ILl ­
Ntck k s B.tkell !tiL lot
dents' dtcts
b.tket v
.tllcl
bt c.td
Appt oved duttng the Br utrg.htun Food" Cnmpar l)
meet HH! v.ere the tut tton ftn milk .tlld d.ttl) Rumpke
r,lles lot students who du CtJ tNJitd.tted Comp.ttttes
not qu.tltly undet open h5I gtt rhd gellt d' h p11.:kup
enro llment

tn

the ,tmounb

of S I S3 13 ur -st.tte .urd
$840 45 out -o l st,tte pet
month lo t the 2008-0Y

dlld

J\,h ldn d

Bt dtllkd

M.tl ketmg by F&amp;M Fuel
Co

tor ~d' ~md dll''&gt;ll

l tll

fu el

"

Horse show from Page AI
by Altcta Hanshdw. L1 sa
Graham
Open
Pole
Bcndtng. second Jl\ ts ton .
Puoge Gtecr. ltrst place. tulluwed by Shannon Btuwn
.Chcss.t Bluwct.
Open B.trrels. lust dt vtsJott. Lacev Gr.th.un . Itt st
place. followed by 1\dttan
Boltn, Jttn Ferns, Mtchacl
Smuh Open Bancl s. second
dtvtstun.
Z&lt;1d 1
Stmpson. l1rst place. fo llowed by L1 sa G~aham .
Mi chael Sm1th
Dustin
Whne. Open B.tne ls, thu d

C i.ty
l ydt.t
hlll,ttds
lus t p],l(;c . toll owcd by Bt.tdlcy Long Rht.tn non
Dustt n Whtte . Sh.mnon ivlottts. M.tll ts.t Keesee
Bt own. En n Dunn
Alt ,,t Otd H.ttt n.t Km ~
Sm,tll Fr) B.n rel s. Casey lndl.t Moltt s Al ll t.t O t ~l
Greet. Jcrrt k.t Keese Wy.ttt Cll"ie\
Gtccr
Antli cw
Wooten. Rb t.mnun Monts. Rt ltlc. 1\udte) Rtllle Kykc
Alts.t Otd G,tt tc tt Rces . Ctt&lt;.:lt- l.ts tn.t Wtll
St cn.t Clcl .tnd. Lc Dc.tn.t
Snull l-11 W.tlk Tttll p.uSmclau G1dcon l\11111gton. ttc tp.itll s IIll i~ 1111 Jl i.&gt;L CS
Kylte K1ng
S.tt.t Sdrenkclhct ~ K.tleb
Youth Le.td- ln , pdtttct - Gheen. B.t) lt e ' Holter
p.mt s · onl ). no p l.t~es LeDe.m.t Stncl.tl t :&gt;1.tden
Hann .th
Durst,
Kyl te 0 Nctl
ll us KenncJv
Gheen , Ba1I ey Sll.ttle l Stctt.t Clcl.t nd
le11 1k.t
Brade n Coffman Hunte! Kce'L'C

dt\.Js Jon Delultu Arnngton

Reports from Page AI
Garry Cremeans. Rut l.md
Crcmc&lt;tns sa1d he d re~:e ntl y
had hts 1998 lsuzu broken
mto 111 the Auto Zone p.u kmg lot wtth a latge amount
of tool s stole n Also, the
hood on h1 s 1984 c,MC thai
w as also '\Hm g on Auto

Zone's parkmg lot w,ts damaged wtth an approxttnate
two-toot deep scr.ttch on the
hood U ltunately $100 111
tools were taken .tnd a $ 150
chtome altern ,nor

Re cent tr.tfl" .tcctdent s
reported.
D.tvtd
Krd\vsczy n.
Pometoy. reported hts vehicle was damaged by ,, ve ht clc ow ned by the Vtll.tgc ot
Pomeroy Kra wsczyn sr.tted
he wa' passtng " VIllage
t1 uck h.tulmg a lo.td ot gr.tv el .utd as the two trucks
passed. a tock from the
dump truck htt h1 s "tndow.
c,tu sJtlf!

11

to

Cld Ck

D.tmL1ge

w.ts re ported jUst helow the

washct bl.tde un the dnver 's
s1dc .tnd then cJ.tcked
upwards on the wmdshtcld
Sgt Kt11L'c IS tnvest Jnatmn
c
c
K.nh y Scnrt Mtddlepmt
rcpo1tcd a ve h1cle she ""s
dn vmg was htt 111 tile b.tck
end whtle tn t il~ dtJ ve-t hru
.tt McDon.tlds 1 h ~ mc1d ~n t
re mdtn s unde r tn \oesttg.ltton

by P.nto lm.m Ron.tld Sp.tun
Hedthc t Babl e R.tc mc.
'W.ts ctted lot .tssurcd cle.11
dtst.mce when .t vehtcle ' he

d rt V ltl ~

v...ts

dllegedl y

~lllll'k

.t vc ht clc dt tl en hy Jttll lll)
B Mc Ci uJc Pomero) on
West M,ttn Sucet ne.tt the
Pomett&gt;y M.tson llt tdge
Ktng

l"i

dl l.\o 111\Cs tJ g.,tllng

En n E Cll.tpm.m R.tc tne
""' uted !01 .tssurctl clea1dJst..mcc. wil ~n .1 \Cht... k ... he \\'.Is
d11\ mg .t ll cgcdly sll w.:k, a

\Chtc lc dJI \Cil hv St.tt hcrtc
W(K&gt;l.ud New H.tlell W Va
til the McDon.tltls p.tlkmg lot
Sgt Kill!.! ts .tlso lllVCst lgdtlllf!

Course r~m Page A1
attend the tntormattonal
mectmgs
Kc1th Satmders. fac ult y
member at R10 Grande and
advtsor tor the new concentration. ex plamed th.tt students 111 the cumculum wt ll
recetve hands-on trdtnlng
prep.trtng them lor c,treers
m power plant mdtntendnce
The sktll s wtll be &lt;~pph c.tble
at the numerous powet
plants tn the reg1on, but .1lso
could be used at power
plants aro und the countt y .
Warren Jetfets, le.trnmg
,td mm tstrauon superv1sor
fot Shop .md Support
Servtces for AEP. ex plamed
rh.tt gr.1duares of the concenrratton wtll be tramed ttl p.trt
to work tor the m.unrenance
teams that travel around to
the many AEP plants tn the
regton to do d1fterent -...ork
Students 111 the concentration wtll also be taught the
sktlls and knowledge necessary to be on-site mamtcnance employees 111 the
plants, he added
The Jobs arc all qualtty
pusttluns wtth cumpetttt ve
pay. and sktllcd worke rs 111
thts ftcld are 111 demand.
Jeffers satd
"Wtth the regtonal servtce
m,ttntenance groups look mg
at rettrements. we' re lookmg
at a little btt ut g10wth."
Jeffers smd AEP wtll need
employees for both the

~ndtrson 'Mc'DanieC
Ad~!n M CDCllllcl
&amp; J ~U'I•es Al'\det'$on

DIR ECTO RS

Mtddlcpon
992-5141

j

I

!!!!
Pomcro)

992-5#1

regtonal servtce mamtenance
gtuups dnd the on-stte m.tllltenance groups In the next
five years, tl 1s ex pected th.ll
40 perce nt of th€se workers
could rettre. he added
" We are JU St tryltl g to

meet those needs hy genmg
people tt atned betOtch.tntl"
Jeffers s.ud
The pay fot these post lions can sldlt o ul d;., ht gll d:-.

$ 15-$ 19 an hmu .md c.m
mcre.rse ur 10 le\e ls as hi gh
'" $30 an hour The rcg ton~tl
sen1ce mdtnt en(:lncc
employees Jr,IVe l tor much
ot the ye,tt to the powet
plants tn the regton ,md .tt e
home tor three month s of
the year, Jeffers explatned
Jeffers '.tid he " pleased
to be -...orktn g wt!h R1o
Gr.mde on the curnculum ,
and ISexctted abolll how the
new uptton wtll tr.un sktlled
employees lot AEP
"We 're look1ng tor someSPRING0 VALLEY
01101111 IM'd
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one th.tt has the h,mJ s-on,
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l e it ers s.ud ·A nd 1~c IC
provtdmg the hook kn&lt;mledge to gave the person .111

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progJ.tlll' .!IH.I " ILH.Icll t '-1 \Vrl J
k .un d \~Jde J.t n~ ~ ol . , k_,l \-.

the pnstlton " Once .t stu dent h.ts the degree. he ot
she w11l be .tblc to butld
upon tl !01 I uture degree
work .md .tdhtnce ment
" Rt o Gr.t nde h.ts bee n

tUnl ttCs. he .tddcd
The npt tnn I ti s we ll 1\l tlt
nun y ot Rto Gt.nKk' othet

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daughte t " ,tlstJ " Rt o

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S.ttltlder' s,ud R10 Gr.mdc
1s ple.tscd to he wm kmg
wtlh AEP.• tnd s.ud the students wt ll be .tble to rcce t ~c
hands-on labur.ttot y ex pen-

w1 11 ~~c~ ,n .~t Rtu
1\hl'tt ' the t.tll

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delr;@l uo edu f m i ddd tlfOIIal 111 /fll mwwu on 1he
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Friday, August IS, 2008
''Home National Bank Day"
7:00a.m.
8:00a.m.
9:00a.m.

TROPIC THUNDER (R)
_ 1:Go, 3:3o, 1 3o &amp; 9·~L
SISTERHOOD OF THE
TRAVELING PANTS 2 (PG13)
THE MUMMY. TOMB OF THE
DRAGON EMPERIDR (PG13)

Punera( '1fome

To sec more ncwsphotos
from our photographers go to

www .lt).ydailyseniinel.coJn
You ca n order r e pnnt s a nd
ph o to g tfts of your favonte
photos there too .

Bren n.t Holtct. Pomeroy .
Jun1ot three yeat-old Kelse)
Holter. F11e year-old cow
Kelsey Holtet . dry cow. John
T Cook. Pom~roy. Best
thtcc
fe males
Kelsey
Holter. Brenn,t Holter. Datil
.tnd
D.tughter.
Kelsey
Holt er. Herd tour fema les
Kelsey Hol ter
Guunseys
Wtllter hc tfer c.tll Jt m
Osbu111C. Reeds\llk Jun to!
twu ye.t r-o ld O'btHile. ,tgcd
ww. Osborne. best th1cc
lcm.tlc&gt;. OsbOillC d.tm .md
d.tughter. Oshotnc. Produ ce
ot d.tm. Osborne
Milking shorthorn
F,tll hetlet c&lt;tll. Ross
Holter Pumeto} 'W tntel

PO STED

Contract rrom Page AI

T.trgeted
A' stst,mce
$')92,200 IDEA -B Spec tal
,Educ.ttton ~~71,8 0 2. Carol
M
While
Phystc.tl
Educ.ttton
Prog 1,tm .
$24 1 992
Tttl e
II A
lmprovmg Te.tcher Qu,tltty
$22 1 452, 2 1st Cen tury.
Commu ntt y
Le.trn mg
Center. $200 000. C.trl D
VINTON - Lucy A W1lfong, 80. of Vmto n. d1 ed on Perktn s
second.try
Wednesday. Aug 13, 2DOH at her restdence
$82, 105. Tttle VI-B. Rur.1l
Funeral seJVICes Wtli be held at 11 . 1111 . Saturday. Aug and Low Income $45.24 1
16. 2008. m the Tnntty Unttcd Met hod tst Churl h. Porter. Tttle IV-A . S.tfe .md Drug
Ohto. wtth Paslor Sherron Courn een oftt ctattne Bunal wt ll Free Schools, $ 11.663 Tttle
tollow 111 Vmtnn Memon.tl Park
~
Fncnds m.ty c.tll at the McCoy-Moore Funet.tl Home ,
Vmton. on 1-tld.ty !tom 5 to H p m
In lteu of tlowets the t.tmtly tequests memonal gtfts be
made to Tnnny Unlled Merhodtst Chut ch c/o Sharon
Stout, 101 Porter Rd Btdwell, OH 456 14 or Holzer D"' 1s.
Karrd Conrad .
Dentse Sheets Letgh An n
Hosp ice. 100 J.tckson Pt ke. Galltpolls. OH 45611
Gabnel
Youth Barrels. lirst dtHstun, Bt ednna Hens le v. fi r' t
place, foll owed by Adn.tn
Boltn. Cattl yn Arrtn gton .
Altct.t H,mshaw. Zach
Stmpson Youth Barrels.
second dtvlston , Sh,tl yn
MIDDLEPORT - O.tst s Chn sttan Fe llows htp 'Wtll spo n- G1eer, tt rst place. followed
sor,, ftee S~:hool supply gtveaw.ty from 6 to 8 p on Sunday by Brook Ervm, Chess.t
at Da~e Dtlc s P.trk 111 M!ddlcpolt Ret1eshments and mustc Blower. Enn Hardwt~k.
Will be plOV Jdcd.
Rachellc Davts Open Pole
Bendmg, l1rsr dtvtston , Jtm
Ferns, first pldce. fo llowed

the Me1gs lntettnedt.tte
School Welket w.ts hu-ed on
a one-ye.1r contract tor the
current school yeru
Also htred on one-ye.u
eomracts were Kn sti Al,me
Powell, elemenr.uy school
nurse, C.tr.t Lynn Bullmgto n.
ht gh school sctence teachet.
and Mtck 1\ lbetto Webet .
hr gh sthool vocdt Jo n,ll ..tgt 1cultUt e te.tc het Tony Dug.tu
was hu ed ,,, .tn clement.ny
phystcal ed uc.ttton te.tcher

The Ddlly Sentrnel • Page As

OPEN CLASS DAIRY

Marie ward

Campaigning the American way

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Keep an eye on business spending

NEW
YORK
Economists and the medta
Oh1o Valley Publishing Co.
kee p ta lktng about the state
ol the ft.lgtle consume r. but
Dan Goodrich
tt mtght be time to loo k at
how busmesses are spendPublisher
mg. too
Construction ul new
Charlene Hoeflich
stores and more ts
plants.
General Manager-News Edttor
gro \o\.tng at a b11sk pace, t~tc ­
tory orders are at stx-munth
htghs .tnd corporate purchases
of thmgs ltke computers
Co ngress shall make no law respecting an
and' soft ware I&gt; slowtng but
establishmmt of religion, or prohibiting the
not hy much
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of That 's good news - as
speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo- long .ts It lasts The trouble tS
that spendmg could begm to
ple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
fi zzle fast There ate some
Go11ernment for a redress ofgrier1ances.
temporary l.tx wnte-olfs for
equt pment that run out at the
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution end of the year and fewer
new btttldmg proJects dre
slated go111g forward
How thts shakes outm the
com111g months matters
Tod.ty "Thu rsday, Aug 14. the 227th day ol 2008 There bec.lUse ot the wtdespread
.tre I ]9 d.tys left tn the year
effect that cotpotate tn vestTod.ty'' Htghltght m Ht story
One hundred years .tgo. on Aug 14, 1908, 11ottng eJUpted ment s have on the overall
tn Sp11 ngfte ld. Ill . as a whtte mob. enr.tged that two black econom y Pn vate bus 111ess
cnmmal suspect' (one later cunvtcted of murder. the other Ill Vestment contn butes about
exonerated ol rape) had been spirited away from the ctty JU!l I0 percent to U S gross
by authontt es. began settmg black-owned homes and busi- domestic product but It .tlso
nesses on ft re. AI least two blacks and fi ve whiles were plays .t btg rule tntluencmg
ktlled m the vtolence (The nor helped "tsptre the creatt on the labor market
Already compames h.tve
of the NAAC P the tollowmg year)
been sl.tshing JObs as they
On th ts d.tte
stru ggle wtth a taltenn g
In 1848. the Otegon Ten Hory was cre.ned
In 1900, mternation.tl forces. tncludtng U S Mannes. economy, soanng costs .tnd
ente ted BetJtng to put down the Boxer Rebelhon, wht ch tt ght credit condttJOns New
w.1s .umed .tt purgmg Chtna uf turetgn mflucnce.
.tpphcattons hied for unemIn 1935. Prestdcnt Roosevelt stgned the Soctal Secunry ployment bene ftt s rose to
Ac t tnto ldW
455.000 dunng the last week
In 1945, President Truman announced that Japan had surtendered uncondltJon,tlly, endtn g World War II
In 1947, Paktstan became tndependent of Bnu sh rule
In 1948. the summer Olymp1c games m London ended
In 1958. Ehts Presley's mother, Gladys Love Smtth
Ptesley. d1ed tn Memphts, Tenn , at age 46
In 1969. Bnttsh troops ,went to Northern Ireland to mtervc nc ttl scctanan VIolence between Protestant s and Roman
Cathohcs '
In 14,)7 3 the US bombmg ot Cambodta came to a halt
ettecu ve at mtdntght
In 14,)80, workers went on smke at the Lemn Shtpyard in
Gd.tnsk, Poland, m a JOb action !hat resulted 111 the creat1on
of the Soltdanty labor movement
One ye,u .tgo Te.tcher-.lstt on.wt Barbara Morgan transformed the space shuttle Endeavour and space statio n mto
,, cl.tsstoo m fot het lu st educattonal se"ton from orbtt, fulftllm g the legacy ol Chnstd McAultffe. who dted m the
1986 Ch,tllenger thsastcr Toy company Mattei recalled
18 6 mtllton lc.td-tamted. Chmcsc- made toys worldwtde
Sutctdc bombers targeted the Yaztdt s sect 111 northern Iraq ,
some 500 are thought to have d1ed m the ,macks
Tnd.ty s BIMhdays· Pulttzer Pnze-wmnmg author Russell
B,tket ts 83 Rock smger D.lVId Crosby 1s 67 Countty stnger
Conn1e Smtth 1s 67 Former JOCkey Robyn Smtth Astatre ts 64
Comedtdn-actor Ste\e Mat1m ts 63 Actor Antonto Fargas IS
62 Smge t-mustctan Lany Gr.tham ts 62 Actress Susan Samt
James ts 62. Author D,mtelle Steel ts 61 Ruck smger-mustctan
Te11 y Adams (NRBQ) " 58 "Far Stde" cm1oon1st Gary
Ltrsun IS 58. Actor Carl Lumbl y ts 57 F1lm composer James
Horner 1s 55 Former basketball playe r Earvm "M.tgtc"
Johnson IS 49 Smger Sarah Bnghtman 1s 48 Actress Sus,m
W1th Labor Day nednn g,
Olsen ts 47 Rock mustCt.lfl Keuh Ho-...I.md !Chtc.tgo) ts 44
a
wary n.ltton awluts th e
Actress Emn'lanuelle Be.ut ts 43 Actress Halle Berry 1s 42
Actress C.nhenne Bell ts 40 Country mustctan Cody premtere of " Dumb and
Dumber Ill The 2008
McCarver (Confederate Railroad) IS 40
Campatg n ·•
Prestdenttal
Thought fat Today "Nothmg ts so soothtng to our se lfCould
It posstbly be st llter
esteem as to ftnd our bad tratts m our forebears It seems to
absolve us"- VanWyck Brooks, Amencan author ( 1886- than 2000. ptttmg a makebelteve Texas rancher
1963)
.
agamst
an
"eltttst"
Washmgton
know -tt-all
who
boasted
he
'd
tnvented
LETTERS TO THE
the Internet&gt; Of course. AI
EDITOR
Gore neve1 satd that, any
more than George W Bush
Lette11 10 th e ed110r are. welcome They should be len could saddle a horse Withrhan JOO IWIYI~ All I eite~ 1 (lie wh;err ro edwng, mus r be
out prot csstonal help
11gned and mdude add' f" and releph one nwnbe 1 No
But, hey. tt made tor a
Ull\ l~n ed /e1le1 1 11111 he pt&lt;bl11hed Le1lel'l 1lwuld he "'
dtvertmg story ltne The
~ood ta\te. addre,\ mg H\lle\ , not pe1\mw!Jtte"' Lerrn \ of
Stuffed Shtrt versus The
rlumk1 w 0 1 ~a nt ~mwn 1 and llld111duall 11 1/lnm he acaprCowboy TV ner-...orks ate tt
ed /1!1 puhl" mwn
up, as , alas, d1d mJiltons ot
low-mtormatton voter~ til------~----------------------,
served by the news medta's
preference tor srorytel ltng
over substance Thus when
tmcrophones ptcked up
(USPS 213·960)
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publlt;hing
Gore' s exasperated stghs
Co.
dunn g h1 s ft rst debate wtth
Correction Polley
Published every afternoon Monday
Bush , pund1ts made the
Our ma1n co ncern 1n all stones 1s to through Fnday 111 Court Street
Stuffed
Sh1rt's bad manners
be accu rate If you know of an erro r Pomeroy
Oh10
Second·ctass
a
"ch.tracte
r" tSsue Instead
1n a story call the newsroom at (740) postage pa1d at Pomeroy
of dnalyzmg what made hun
Member· The Associa ted Press and
992 2156
s1gh The Cowboy's wildly
the Oh10 Newspaper Assoc1a1Jon
Postmaster Send address correc 1
tnaccurate descttpttons of
Our main n'umber Is
lions to The Dally Sentmel 111 Court
hts ow n tax, Soctdl Secunty
(740) 992-2156
Street Pomeroy Oh1o 45769
and
prescnptton-drug plans
•
Department extenstons are·
Exactly
how does one
Subscription Rates
polt
tely
debate
somebody
By carrier or motor route
1
News
One month
'1 0 27
who e1the1 does11 ' t underOne year
' 115 84
Editor Cha r1ene Hoefhch Ext ' 12
stand
or mtsre presents hts
1Reporter· Bnan Reed Ext 14
Dally
50'
own
puhcy
proposais1 Even
Senior Citizen rates
Reporter Beth Sergent Ext 13
somebody ltke rh e New
110.27
One month
York Ttmes Bob Herbert,
One year
' 103 90
Subscnbers should remit 1n adva~
who treats Barack Obama
Advertising
d1rect to the OaJiy Sentinel No sub
as the Second Commg,
Outside Sales Dave Hams Ext t s
sdnpt on by mall perm1tted In areas
opt ned that "(m)ost of
Outside Sales · Brenda Davis Ext 16 where home carrier serv1ce Is ava11
Amenca understand' that
ClassJ Circ. Judy Clark Ext 10
able
the com petence bar 1s set so
•
Mail Subscriplton
low tor Gov George W
General Manager
Inside Meigs County
Bush of Texas th at tt 's pracCharlene Ho9thch Ext 12
13 Weeks
'32 26
ttcally
lymg on the ground "
26 Weeks
'64 20
Gore,
however,
was smug.
52 Weeks
' 127 11
E-mail
•
superctltou s .tnd "doesn't
news@mydallysAnhnel corn
Outside Meigs County
seem to re.tltze that tn the
13 Weeks
'53 55
rea l wo rld , people hate
Web.
'1 07 10
26 Weeks
Eddte Haske ll "
www mydarlysent1nel com
52 Weeks
'214 2~
Actually. Haske ll 's " TV

TODAY IN HISTORY

PageA4

1 ---=·~ 3 10,7

00__! 9·10 STEP BAt;lTHEAS (R)

THE DARK KNIGHT (PG13)
12 55, 3 40,6 55 &amp; 9 40
MAMMA MIA (PG13)
1 30, 3•30, 7 30 &amp; 9 30
~OW

SHOWING MATINEES

- G.ttes Open
- -1-H Ho1 'e Fun Sho11
- J I F.tn Pet Shu\\Small Aten,t
111:00 a.m. - Ktddte Tt.tctot Pull nt
Champtons- Sm.tll Atell.t
I :00 p.m. - Jr F.tt r l\11.ttds
Ptogr.tlll- Ltvc&gt;tock
Aren,\

- Rl\ crstde Cloggcrs"Dew Zone" Htll St.tge
6:00 p.m - Ttud Pu ll - Pull Tt .tck
7:00p.m. - 'M 1ss1ng Ill Atlecttt&gt;n ·"Dew Zone" Htll St.tgc
9:(HI p.m. -Kelly Pert y· Gospel 'Del\ Zone'' H1ll St.tgc
II :00 p.m. G.ues Close

5:00 p.m.

c filii/'~''·
du

�The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

P NIO

Thursday, August

14, 2008

BY RACHEL BECK
AP BUSINESS WRITER

July, the most stnce late sec:und qu.u1er Economtsb
March 2002 when the JOb .ue expccung th.u to rever;e
market w,ts stntgglmg to get m the second hdlt of 1he )edt
b.tck on tts teet alter the a~ compdn te" t.tke advantdge
200 I recess tOn
of the t.tx wnte-ofts for bu'!Should the weak_l:&gt;ustne" nes&gt;es unde1 the US ecocltmate sput compantes to nomic stunulus plan howevslow exp,mstun drastically. er. That lets compantes buythat could tunher weaken mg new eqtu pmenr tn 2008
the labor m,uket And tf that to deprect.tte .tn 1tdd tttanal
we re to happen. tl could put 50 percent ul the cu&gt;t of the
more pressure on Amertcan asse1s placed 111 ser\I Ce thts
co nsumers, whose ex pendt
yeat but the buymg must be
tures luel 70 percent ul ecu- dune before Jan I
'A second h.tlt stuge cou ld
nomtc growth
But we· re not m that bad come .tt the expense ot what
spot yet We 1mght not be lo1 wtll be purchased ne xt yeat.'
sdtd Dav1d Wyss. ch1ef ccunthe rest ot thts year
Whtl e debt-laden con- onJtst at Sr.md.trd &amp; Poor's
sutncts hdve been ltm pmg "Those tnterested ttl buymg
along desptte the U S gov- equtpment 111 the ltrst quaner
ernment's economtc stu1Ju- wt ll push tt back to the
lus program - wh1ch doled fourth quatter tor the tax
out $ROhtlltnn so t.tr m extra ' adv.tn t.lge"
mcome to mc1ny AmencdnS
Wyss also ex pec ts contn recent months - bust- strut:ltun spcndmg to st.trt
nesses haven't heen curbmg slowmg gmng uuo next year
the1r 111vestmenrs 111 any stg- ,15 bu&gt;tnesses wmd down
protec ts thar they had
ntltcant way
Spendmg on nonrestden- pl.mned when the economy
lt.tl structut es tose m a 144 wa~ bqonung Comp~m1es ­
percent annual rdte 111 the espcLt,tll y those consumersecond quarter, dCCordtng to focu sed - may be more
the lates t figures on GDP reluctant to commtt to new
trom the Ltbor Department stores or to build new factoOrder to U S f.tctones .tlso nes gtven the stare of the
h.t ve nsen. cltmbmg I 7 pet - economy
cent 111 June - the tastest
For msr.mce. Whole Foods
pdce st nce ldst 9 ecember M.trket Inc s.ud last -...eek
.tnd more than double what thdt tt would cut tis ftscal
econo mtsts had been expect- 2009 srore-opemng pl.m to
th e
Co mmerce 15 from as m&lt;~ny .1s 21 three
mg.
Dep.trtment reported
month s ago. and s'md tt
Purchases of eq111pme nt woul d hal\ e capttal spendand soft ware fell at an .mnu- tng not re lated to new stote
,tl rare of 3 4 percent 111 the opemngs The slugg1sh
111

econom v has wewhed hea'tly on -the Aust~n. Texasbased otg-an tc and natttrdl
toods supermark et chattt,
wh tch reputted qu.t rterly
earntngs th.u came tn below
expectattot1S.
Also W.ttch wh.tt compantes do wtth theu mvcntones
tn 1hc comtng months In the
second quarter busttte"e'
dt e'W down thei r tnventones
by a su t pmmg $62 2 btl !ton
stx ttmes the level seen 111 the
firs t quarter. .tcwrdtng to the
ldte't US GDP tepott Th.u
medns th ey dtdn't expand
thetr output. but let p.tst ptoductton abSOI b ,lily s[IITIUlU SCheck tnduced consumer
spendm g. .tccotdtng to
Mernll L~nch
l:lusmesses m.ty also tdcc
wedkenmg
condttton~
abtoad, -...h tch could hutt
U S exporters rliat have
enJ oyed btg g.uns hom the tt
glob,tl operattons "h tle the
U S economy has v.aned
Re,tl exports of goods and
serv 1ces rose at an annual

pdcc of 9 2 perce nt m the
second quat1et. ,Jccotdmg to
the L.tbor Depanmem
Corporate mvestments are
, ttJI tollmg ,tlong now.
though 1he pace ts slowmg
The trouble 1s that compdntes could Jam on the btakes
any ttme
(Rachel Be( k 11 the llalw ll -

al bu)men
T/1(;

10

I

I
I

www.mydailysentinel.com

·Obituaries

£

olwnnnt jm

A\.IIVl wted P1 en Wnte

he1 m i/Jeck@ap

011{)

POM EROY - Mane W.trd, 74. Pomeroy, p.tssed away
on Aug 13 2008, at Hol7er Setuor Cate 111 G.tlltpnlts.
She was born on Aug 16. 1933, m Kcntttcky. daughter of
the late Ben .tnd Eltz.tbcth (S lusher ) Howctrd She battled
c.mcer lor ll ye.u s .tnd ltved .t functtunal .urd very me.mmglul ltle She contnbuted to nmstonury groups She was
a regt&gt;tered nurse .tnd cated for her dts,tbled gra nddaughter
tor m,my yeats She w.ts best known to her fnends fur
bcmg d canng lov111g and compa:.,~ I O!hll e person
In .tddtt ton to her p.rrents she w.ts pteceded b' .t b1other
M.tr\ln ll ow,trd
·
She ts sU IVI\ed by D,tUghter. Tern (D,m) Leonatd
Romeroy. gt.mdchtldten Kattlm .tnd Co11 Dewhurst. ststers, Marg te Btshop St.mfOtd. Ky. Emma Wtllts. Florence.
Ky and W.mda Wtllenbotg. Con nth . Ky scvcJal meces
nephews d)ld

lOU'\Itls

A memon.tl sctvtce " '"be held at II .t m. S.ttu rclay, Aug
16. 200g. at the Fust Southern Bapttst Church 111 Pomeroy
Otlict&lt;~ttng wtll be Re' L.tm.u O'Bry.mt But1al wtll tollow
111 Chester Cemetety Fttends m\ty ~:all from 5-8 p m
Fnd.1y. Aug IS .tt the Ftrst Sout hern Bapti st Chutch
Arr.mgements wete completed bv Anderson McD.mtel
Funer&lt;t l Home On-lure tegtstty 1s .tvatl able at www andcrsonmcdamel com

I ·

ROCKS PRI NGS
Results ut Mond&lt;ty 's open
cJ.ts, d.tt tV show .tt the
Metgs C(•.utlly Fatr have
beeh posted by the SentOt
F.ut Bo.rrd
Resu lt s. ur descend tng
order and by class were .ts
follows
Holsteins
Spttng hetler ca lf. Cmdy
Kob lentz. Pomeroy. Roy
Holtet. Pomeroy. wtntet
hetlcr c.tl t.
Kob le ntz .
Kelsey Hulte t. Pom ero y.
summer ye arlin g hetl et.
Kobl en tz. spnng ye.trlmg
hetfer. Roy Holtet. 'Wttltet
yeadt ng he-tf er. Kehe y
Holtet. Koblent z
h tmur tv-u )e.t(-uld

Deaths

Lucy A. Wilfong

Local Briefs

Supply giveaway

School from Page AI

on a one-ye"1 contt dct ,\s d

Gene
Lyons

to the rune of " Bat p.tr.t
Ann" - a reckless. tutt le
.tct that would make tm.Jdmg lr.tq look rel.tttvely senstble' (The flyboys .tlways
want ro · htt Thud Wotld
countttes. ask the ground
sold1et s what they think ) A
man of the peopl e who .
Jogether wtth ht s mul ttmtl ltonmre hetress wtte, owns
mne houses m sev't;tal
states?
Stmplc: Attack yo ur
handsome. telegemc yo un g
opponent .ts a vaptd ce lebn ty hke Putt s Hilt on .rnd
Bruney Spears Fly 11110 .1
phony sn tt abou t O)lama's
allegedly "playtng the race
card," as tf rac 1al poltttcs
were even mtldly ottenst ve
to the Republtcan base
Conrn ve a bulltantly mane
for mul a lot solvtn g the

sitcom character Not real at
all Nor'd1d most Amencans
grasp that when The
Cowboy
chMmmgly
mocked the Stufted Shtrt's
"fuzzy math," vtrtually
~ve ry word was a fal sehood Among name- br,111d
pundits, Prmceton economt st Paul Kru gman was
almost alone Ill saymg so
The rest concentrated on
Gore 's
condesce ndtng
stghs, hts pedanttc atrs, etc
nat ton ' s
ene rgy ~ woe ~
'Amencan Idol " stuff
Today, ol course, we re through the nmacle of utiall pay mg for Bush's eptc shore dtilltng.
Because as H L Mencken
dishonesty and sheer f1 scal
long
ago observed. "For
mcompetencc. Meanwhtle,
gtve n the std kes m every ~:omplex problem,
Nove mber. you'd hke to there 1s a solutton that ts
thmk Amencans had cullcc- s1mple. nedt and wro ng."
llvely soberep up and would Never mmd thdt otl cum]lltprefet preStdentwl cam- mes curre nt ly earn mg stagpatgn
on
somethm g genng proftts arcn t domg
approachmg an adult level much dnllmg on domestic
A job mterview, say, tn, tead leases they already hold
Nor that otl from such we lls
of TV talent show.
Alas. a shallow, personal- wouldn 't make the Untied
tly-dnven race appears to be Stdtes energy- mdependent,
\\I hat both John McCam and but be .wc uoned on the
Barack Obama's campa1gns same mte rn attonal mark et
!rom Ru ssta,
want the Str.ttght -Talkmg .ts otl
Mavenck
vers us
the Venezuela and Iran
Tec hmcolor Pted Ptper
See. for years, sunpletons
On the Republtcan s1de. out m Ltmbaugh-land have
dumbtng things dow n been sold the pleas ing ficwork s to McCam's advan- tto n that "envtronmentaltst
tage Stuck wttlt a prestden- wackos" are the source of
tial candtd ate who voted all energy problems As
agamst Pres1dent Bu sh's Kru gman
correctl y
rumous tax cuts but now obse rves, the GOP's "de
says he·d make them per- f,tcro srogan has becotJIC ·
manent? A belltcose forme1 ' Real men don ' t thtnk
llyboy who makes a Joke of th mgs throu gh .,
singmg "Bomb, bomb lr.m"
As tor the Pted Ptper, h1 s

tntern auon.tll y re lev1se d
tour ot wo rld captta ls defimtely m.tde him look
"pte stdentta l " Except he
am' t prestdcnt yet GlVIng
spe eches betore huge,
adonng Europe.1n .tttdt ences was

c ert~lln

to 2et

hun called "ptes umptuous'
or worse Fot supportet'i
hke Herhelt to treat that
cntlcJsm as .t rac 1al slur
tn to
plays · du ectl y
Republtc.tn hdnds. As he
htm se ll ubsct ves e lse where m the sa me column .
" Every day that the camp.ugn IS about race tS "'
good day
for
John
McCam "

As Bob Somerby trenchantl y obse rves on hi s
Datly Howler blog. r.tce
makes everybody stuptd
Presumptuous, arrogant ,
eltttst. GOP tactJctans h.tve
applted these words to all
DemocratiC candidates tor a
ge neratt on So 1f the ptesumptt ve De moc~atic nmmnee doesn ·r want the ca nlp.ugn to be tactal , why d1(1
he gtve speeches ctttng
MeCum by name as somebody sure to say "he doesn't
look ltke all those other
preSidents on the doll.tr
htll s?"
'
It m.ry have worked
.tg.unst H1ll ary Cltnton tn a
Democratic pnmary But it
won' t play agatnst a
Republican
Somebody
needs to remmd Obama he's
runmng for piestdent ot the
Untted States. nor the
Umverstty of Chtcago
(A rk an ws
DemocwrGazelte tolunm nt Gene
L1 011' 11 "
Narwnq l
Maga ::.me Ah·Wd \11/flt er
and co au ril o1 of 'Til~
Hummg of ril e P" ' ""&lt;'lli )'
(Sr Marlm 1 P1t11 , 2000)

You

e-mwl Lr on; llf
ge11el10ns2 @\/)( r;jobu lll el.)
CCfl l

'

1eplacement lot ,, te.tcheJ
reasstgned to ,, gr.mt funded
posttton Th,lt contJ,tct wt ll
ex p1re .rutomattcally dt the
end ot the school ye&lt;tt
Rebecc,t Zurchet and
Kell y Batlcy we1e rehued
as petso nnel to suppott the
2 1st Century Grant on oneyear contracts as tunded by
the 2 1st Century Grant
Employed on supplemental contracts were Donna M
Wolfe, MHS student counctl advtsor; Davtd L Deem,
asstst.mt m.trchtng hand
dtrector, M Suzanne Bentz,
MHS newspdper .tnd web
destgner, Celu R McCoy,
MHS dr.tmd .td"sor, Brellt
B1 ssell .md Mtke Kloes. 8th
gr.tde foo tb.tll codc!Jes
Htred on supplemental
contt .tcts tor exte nded servtce were Mtck Albcto
Weber. voc.ttto n,tl .tgnculture. 30 d.tys. St.tcte Ro.tch ,
Mtddle School gutd,mce
counse lot 20 d.1ys, Cltl f
Kenn edy,
.md
Mtke
Wilfong. ht gh school gtudance counse lot s 40 d.tys
Substttute teac hers htred
-...ere C.trne Abbott, T.td
Alb.tno, Peggy Batl ey.
Bt ent Btsscll , - Camtll e
Bolm , li se Burns, Teres.t
Can , Cy ntht.t Cthtlt. Jamce
CUt ry. Btl! Dow me. Marge
Fetty. Randall Fulks. Dall.ls
Htll . Ntcole Honaker. Tncm
Jackson. Aut umn Lts le,
Lestet
Manu el, All en
Mtdcap. Gay Pern n. Narl1an.
Robtnetre Ryan Sletght .
Anglea Weeks. Eltzabeth
Wtlfong. Judy Wtlliam s,
Roxanne Willtams Robm
Wttham. Carne Woll e,
Ktmberly Wolfe. Beverly
Davts, and Barry McCoy
Persons hiJ ed as substitutes 111 vanous classtltcattons were
Wetze l
Bu s dnvers

B.uley, Dav td C.tsc t. Chdrles
Rtck Ch.mcey, Clyde Gaus.
L Dean Hat1 ts Jenny
Hy sell , D.IVtd Lam bet t.
OltveJ Noll IS, Chatles Perry.
G.r tl Smtth. Lmd.t Ellmger,
Geo rgAn n Sulewskt , and
Yvonne Moore
Cooks Grace Abbott,
M.ulene Pterce. dOd Fhuntl.t
YoL1ng

Custodtans,
Wetze l
B.uley, John Gomez. G.try
Kmg, Jr. Olner Noms.
Donoh m Rt chmond, Carl E.
Smtth . Gregory Satter!J eld.
James R Johnson. Sr , Gary
K.rutt. Tony Qutllen. Ddvtd
Staats. Jr . Tnnmy Tillis,
Charl es Eggers. Tdm.tra
Marsh.tll. Joseph Pat ker,
James Cra vens. Roger
Mo wc t ~, .md D.mny Dav1s
Mamte nancc
D,mny
Dav1 s and Ro ger Mo-...ery
Mechan ic Dann y Davts
Accepted a1 the meettng
were the resJgn.ltton s lor
retirement purposes ot
Kenda Wtllt.tm s, l11 gh
school sc1ence ,md he.tlth
teacher, ShMon Btrch ,
school nurse, ,mel W1lltam
Green, e lemenr,u y custodl.tn Also acce pted was the
resignation of Enc Cullums
.IS an etghth grade f oot ~al !.
coach , and the approval of
hun .ts a volunteer varst ty
.tsstst.mt football coach ,
both effecttve unmedtatclv
An OVe1111ght field lrtp
req uest from the Metgs
Ht gh School FFA to attend
the
N.ttton.tl
FFA
Conventton ttl lndt.tnapolts,
lnd on Oct 22-25, was
granted by the Bo.rrd
Following a lengthy dtscusston abo ut a GPA calcuI,Itton revJ'Ion lot Me1gs
Htgh School ,md he.mng
the recommendatton by the
Oh1o
Department
of
Education presented by the
supenntendent, - tt was
by
Board
req uested
Membe r Barbara Musser
rh ar the enttre board hear
from Steve Ohltnger, ht gh
school pnnctpal, ,md one of
th e gutd.tnce coun selor'
be lore any dCtton ts taken
Attendmg the meeung were
Roger Abbott, Ron Logan,
Mu &gt;Ser, Larry
Barbara
Tucker and Scott Walton,
Board ot Ed u~:at1on members,
and Supcnntcndent Wtlham
Buckley

) e.u ltng he tier Todd Tll]l]l, .:\uli ttonna Pulltn'. Lon!!
Pometoy lout yea t-old Buuon1. ..,umme1 ) edt ltng
cow Ro" Holtet d.tm .md hctlct Kobkllll L.tur.t E
d.tughlet. Ros- Holtet
Pulltns. Lone Bottom.
Brown Swiss
'Ptln)! hetlct c.~lt. L.tut.t E
Pulltn :-. . -.enHH Vt'~H l1n~
Summer ye.trltng hetle1
Trtpp
sentor ye.llltng hetlcr 1\udtll&gt;llll.t 'Pullttb"
het ler Trtpp Junt ot tltrce ... en1nr t\\ O Y L:'~u - o ld L.1ur~1
ye.tr-uld
cow.
Brenn.t E Pullur' tUt1tut thtee yc.trHoller three ye.u-o ld cm1 o\d LO\\. LL~ur.t Pui]Jlh
Tnpp, tout ~e.t r- old cow Audttontr.t Pulluh
Trtpp. dr) COli. T1tpp .tgcd
Fne
' ~~~~ old
UH\
d1 y cow. fnpp hcst 1hree 1\udnonn.t· Pullurs G.tt telt
lemales. Trtpp het J ol tour • Rllchtc Reed" tile .tged
lcmales rnpp
CO\\
B~ll].ll1ll!l
-\\ t (' ...
Ayrshit·es
Reed" ti le
he,t
ihtee
Semur two 1e.tr-old Kuk lem.rlc' L.tul 1 F Pullin'
Pulltns Long l:lonom
1\ud tJ nnn.t Pulltns d.ttn .111d
JerSC)S
d.tuglncr LtUI,t E Pulluh
Sprt ng
hetle t
ca ll
Audn on n.t Pulltrt' pt&lt;&gt;ducc·
Kohl em1. 11 1111er he tfet c.tl f ol ddm Amh Jnllil.l Pul11n ..,

11 -D Tec hn ology, $9 3 16.
Tt tle
V.
lnnov.ttt ve
Progr.tm $2. 174, E.t rly
Ch tldhood
Educ.ttton
(Presc hool)
$ 199 480
ONE-Net Ohto Pto~tam
$12.000.
Gtfted
Supp lement
(TAG I
ldenttftc.ttton. $ ~ .429
Also renewed for ,mothet
ye.u w.ts federal gt.tnt ol
571,595 tor thP fresh trutt
and veget.tble ll llttltton ptogtam opet.tted .tt the Met gs
Element .tt y Sc hool by

M.t nl yn Metet. food set 1 tee slhool yc~u
duedor Lds t )t.u Wds the
The Bo.ud .titer tCIICII
first· ye,u lot the piOg J,\111 1ng bllhli.j uute' lwrn 'uppl t
ami Me1et felt tt ""s vet v eJ' ~111d \C J \Ile" iJIO\ldC J S
successful ttl ft llmg " nee(l .tccepted tile iol loll tn g
...d. to ge t h trtety 11110 .. the ~ ILl ­
Ntck k s B.tkell !tiL lot
dents' dtcts
b.tket v
.tllcl
bt c.td
Appt oved duttng the Br utrg.htun Food" Cnmpar l)
meet HH! v.ere the tut tton ftn milk .tlld d.ttl) Rumpke
r,lles lot students who du CtJ tNJitd.tted Comp.ttttes
not qu.tltly undet open h5I gtt rhd gellt d' h p11.:kup
enro llment

tn

the ,tmounb

of S I S3 13 ur -st.tte .urd
$840 45 out -o l st,tte pet
month lo t the 2008-0Y

dlld

J\,h ldn d

Bt dtllkd

M.tl ketmg by F&amp;M Fuel
Co

tor ~d' ~md dll''&gt;ll

l tll

fu el

"

Horse show from Page AI
by Altcta Hanshdw. L1 sa
Graham
Open
Pole
Bcndtng. second Jl\ ts ton .
Puoge Gtecr. ltrst place. tulluwed by Shannon Btuwn
.Chcss.t Bluwct.
Open B.trrels. lust dt vtsJott. Lacev Gr.th.un . Itt st
place. followed by 1\dttan
Boltn, Jttn Ferns, Mtchacl
Smuh Open Bancl s. second
dtvtstun.
Z&lt;1d 1
Stmpson. l1rst place. fo llowed by L1 sa G~aham .
Mi chael Sm1th
Dustin
Whne. Open B.tne ls, thu d

C i.ty
l ydt.t
hlll,ttds
lus t p],l(;c . toll owcd by Bt.tdlcy Long Rht.tn non
Dustt n Whtte . Sh.mnon ivlottts. M.tll ts.t Keesee
Bt own. En n Dunn
Alt ,,t Otd H.ttt n.t Km ~
Sm,tll Fr) B.n rel s. Casey lndl.t Moltt s Al ll t.t O t ~l
Greet. Jcrrt k.t Keese Wy.ttt Cll"ie\
Gtccr
Antli cw
Wooten. Rb t.mnun Monts. Rt ltlc. 1\udte) Rtllle Kykc
Alts.t Otd G,tt tc tt Rces . Ctt&lt;.:lt- l.ts tn.t Wtll
St cn.t Clcl .tnd. Lc Dc.tn.t
Snull l-11 W.tlk Tttll p.uSmclau G1dcon l\11111gton. ttc tp.itll s IIll i~ 1111 Jl i.&gt;L CS
Kylte K1ng
S.tt.t Sdrenkclhct ~ K.tleb
Youth Le.td- ln , pdtttct - Gheen. B.t) lt e ' Holter
p.mt s · onl ). no p l.t~es LeDe.m.t Stncl.tl t :&gt;1.tden
Hann .th
Durst,
Kyl te 0 Nctl
ll us KenncJv
Gheen , Ba1I ey Sll.ttle l Stctt.t Clcl.t nd
le11 1k.t
Brade n Coffman Hunte! Kce'L'C

dt\.Js Jon Delultu Arnngton

Reports from Page AI
Garry Cremeans. Rut l.md
Crcmc&lt;tns sa1d he d re~:e ntl y
had hts 1998 lsuzu broken
mto 111 the Auto Zone p.u kmg lot wtth a latge amount
of tool s stole n Also, the
hood on h1 s 1984 c,MC thai
w as also '\Hm g on Auto

Zone's parkmg lot w,ts damaged wtth an approxttnate
two-toot deep scr.ttch on the
hood U ltunately $100 111
tools were taken .tnd a $ 150
chtome altern ,nor

Re cent tr.tfl" .tcctdent s
reported.
D.tvtd
Krd\vsczy n.
Pometoy. reported hts vehicle was damaged by ,, ve ht clc ow ned by the Vtll.tgc ot
Pomeroy Kra wsczyn sr.tted
he wa' passtng " VIllage
t1 uck h.tulmg a lo.td ot gr.tv el .utd as the two trucks
passed. a tock from the
dump truck htt h1 s "tndow.
c,tu sJtlf!

11

to

Cld Ck

D.tmL1ge

w.ts re ported jUst helow the

washct bl.tde un the dnver 's
s1dc .tnd then cJ.tcked
upwards on the wmdshtcld
Sgt Kt11L'c IS tnvest Jnatmn
c
c
K.nh y Scnrt Mtddlepmt
rcpo1tcd a ve h1cle she ""s
dn vmg was htt 111 tile b.tck
end whtle tn t il~ dtJ ve-t hru
.tt McDon.tlds 1 h ~ mc1d ~n t
re mdtn s unde r tn \oesttg.ltton

by P.nto lm.m Ron.tld Sp.tun
Hedthc t Babl e R.tc mc.
'W.ts ctted lot .tssurcd cle.11
dtst.mce when .t vehtcle ' he

d rt V ltl ~

v...ts

dllegedl y

~lllll'k

.t vc ht clc dt tl en hy Jttll lll)
B Mc Ci uJc Pomero) on
West M,ttn Sucet ne.tt the
Pomett&gt;y M.tson llt tdge
Ktng

l"i

dl l.\o 111\Cs tJ g.,tllng

En n E Cll.tpm.m R.tc tne
""' uted !01 .tssurctl clea1dJst..mcc. wil ~n .1 \Cht... k ... he \\'.Is
d11\ mg .t ll cgcdly sll w.:k, a

\Chtc lc dJI \Cil hv St.tt hcrtc
W(K&gt;l.ud New H.tlell W Va
til the McDon.tltls p.tlkmg lot
Sgt Kill!.! ts .tlso lllVCst lgdtlllf!

Course r~m Page A1
attend the tntormattonal
mectmgs
Kc1th Satmders. fac ult y
member at R10 Grande and
advtsor tor the new concentration. ex plamed th.tt students 111 the cumculum wt ll
recetve hands-on trdtnlng
prep.trtng them lor c,treers
m power plant mdtntendnce
The sktll s wtll be &lt;~pph c.tble
at the numerous powet
plants tn the reg1on, but .1lso
could be used at power
plants aro und the countt y .
Warren Jetfets, le.trnmg
,td mm tstrauon superv1sor
fot Shop .md Support
Servtces for AEP. ex plamed
rh.tt gr.1duares of the concenrratton wtll be tramed ttl p.trt
to work tor the m.unrenance
teams that travel around to
the many AEP plants tn the
regton to do d1fterent -...ork
Students 111 the concentration wtll also be taught the
sktlls and knowledge necessary to be on-site mamtcnance employees 111 the
plants, he added
The Jobs arc all qualtty
pusttluns wtth cumpetttt ve
pay. and sktllcd worke rs 111
thts ftcld are 111 demand.
Jeffers satd
"Wtth the regtonal servtce
m,ttntenance groups look mg
at rettrements. we' re lookmg
at a little btt ut g10wth."
Jeffers smd AEP wtll need
employees for both the

~ndtrson 'Mc'DanieC
Ad~!n M CDCllllcl
&amp; J ~U'I•es Al'\det'$on

DIR ECTO RS

Mtddlcpon
992-5141

j

I

!!!!
Pomcro)

992-5#1

regtonal servtce mamtenance
gtuups dnd the on-stte m.tllltenance groups In the next
five years, tl 1s ex pected th.ll
40 perce nt of th€se workers
could rettre. he added
" We are JU St tryltl g to

meet those needs hy genmg
people tt atned betOtch.tntl"
Jeffers s.ud
The pay fot these post lions can sldlt o ul d;., ht gll d:-.

$ 15-$ 19 an hmu .md c.m
mcre.rse ur 10 le\e ls as hi gh
'" $30 an hour The rcg ton~tl
sen1ce mdtnt en(:lncc
employees Jr,IVe l tor much
ot the ye,tt to the powet
plants tn the regton ,md .tt e
home tor three month s of
the year, Jeffers explatned
Jeffers '.tid he " pleased
to be -...orktn g wt!h R1o
Gr.mde on the curnculum ,
and ISexctted abolll how the
new uptton wtll tr.un sktlled
employees lot AEP
"We 're look1ng tor someSPRING0 VALLEY
01101111 IM'd
f

llh +)/'1

'IH ~t~ ·,o~ r,~F

7

!

one th.tt has the h,mJ s-on,
ablltty to do the work·
l e it ers s.ud ·A nd 1~c IC
provtdmg the hook kn&lt;mledge to gave the person .111

encc

cx t1a .td h lll tdge t.:O illlll g tn to

progJ.tlll' .!IH.I " ILH.Icll t '-1 \Vrl J
k .un d \~Jde J.t n~ ~ ol . , k_,l \-.

the pnstlton " Once .t stu dent h.ts the degree. he ot
she w11l be .tblc to butld
upon tl !01 I uture degree
work .md .tdhtnce ment
" Rt o Gr.t nde h.ts bee n

tUnl ttCs. he .tddcd
The npt tnn I ti s we ll 1\l tlt
nun y ot Rto Gt.nKk' othet

c'd"e"

llt.tttde
Jll e ne11

\c ty Cd'Y to work wllh ··

Jet tcrs s.tttl .tddmg that lm
daughte t " ,tlstJ " Rt o

w/1

S.ttltlder' s,ud R10 Gr.mdc
1s ple.tscd to he wm kmg
wtlh AEP.• tnd s.ud the students wt ll be .tble to rcce t ~c
hands-on labur.ttot y ex pen-

w1 11 ~~c~ ,n .~t Rtu
1\hl'tt ' the t.tll

sc mc..., tcr \(d th on A ug 25
f 01 /I lOll' 111/0I 1110 !1 0 11 OIJ
!he

GrdnUe g t~td udtc

St ude nts IH.t) .tlso

h.1 ve ' llllllll Ct Lo-op oppOt·

£OJ/(_

enn oflon or on
IJU (fill li

Ul{tiJIIIUf/ rll/(1/

~utlll£111 1 111 / - 80U - ~.~2
7~ 01 0 1 £'-111(1{//r uo ot \ll/111

delr;@l uo edu f m i ddd tlfOIIal 111 /fll mwwu on 1he
H

ule urlr~e of w adeouc
olfel£'d on Rw

fH0 ~/(/1/1\

Guoult '
fog

\t ' //1 (

0/1{() \\II II I W t

Friday, August IS, 2008
''Home National Bank Day"
7:00a.m.
8:00a.m.
9:00a.m.

TROPIC THUNDER (R)
_ 1:Go, 3:3o, 1 3o &amp; 9·~L
SISTERHOOD OF THE
TRAVELING PANTS 2 (PG13)
THE MUMMY. TOMB OF THE
DRAGON EMPERIDR (PG13)

Punera( '1fome

To sec more ncwsphotos
from our photographers go to

www .lt).ydailyseniinel.coJn
You ca n order r e pnnt s a nd
ph o to g tfts of your favonte
photos there too .

Bren n.t Holtct. Pomeroy .
Jun1ot three yeat-old Kelse)
Holter. F11e year-old cow
Kelsey Holtet . dry cow. John
T Cook. Pom~roy. Best
thtcc
fe males
Kelsey
Holter. Brenn,t Holter. Datil
.tnd
D.tughter.
Kelsey
Holt er. Herd tour fema les
Kelsey Hol ter
Guunseys
Wtllter hc tfer c.tll Jt m
Osbu111C. Reeds\llk Jun to!
twu ye.t r-o ld O'btHile. ,tgcd
ww. Osborne. best th1cc
lcm.tlc&gt;. OsbOillC d.tm .md
d.tughter. Oshotnc. Produ ce
ot d.tm. Osborne
Milking shorthorn
F,tll hetlet c&lt;tll. Ross
Holter Pumeto} 'W tntel

PO STED

Contract rrom Page AI

T.trgeted
A' stst,mce
$')92,200 IDEA -B Spec tal
,Educ.ttton ~~71,8 0 2. Carol
M
While
Phystc.tl
Educ.ttton
Prog 1,tm .
$24 1 992
Tttl e
II A
lmprovmg Te.tcher Qu,tltty
$22 1 452, 2 1st Cen tury.
Commu ntt y
Le.trn mg
Center. $200 000. C.trl D
VINTON - Lucy A W1lfong, 80. of Vmto n. d1 ed on Perktn s
second.try
Wednesday. Aug 13, 2DOH at her restdence
$82, 105. Tttle VI-B. Rur.1l
Funeral seJVICes Wtli be held at 11 . 1111 . Saturday. Aug and Low Income $45.24 1
16. 2008. m the Tnntty Unttcd Met hod tst Churl h. Porter. Tttle IV-A . S.tfe .md Drug
Ohto. wtth Paslor Sherron Courn een oftt ctattne Bunal wt ll Free Schools, $ 11.663 Tttle
tollow 111 Vmtnn Memon.tl Park
~
Fncnds m.ty c.tll at the McCoy-Moore Funet.tl Home ,
Vmton. on 1-tld.ty !tom 5 to H p m
In lteu of tlowets the t.tmtly tequests memonal gtfts be
made to Tnnny Unlled Merhodtst Chut ch c/o Sharon
Stout, 101 Porter Rd Btdwell, OH 456 14 or Holzer D"' 1s.
Karrd Conrad .
Dentse Sheets Letgh An n
Hosp ice. 100 J.tckson Pt ke. Galltpolls. OH 45611
Gabnel
Youth Barrels. lirst dtHstun, Bt ednna Hens le v. fi r' t
place, foll owed by Adn.tn
Boltn. Cattl yn Arrtn gton .
Altct.t H,mshaw. Zach
Stmpson Youth Barrels.
second dtvlston , Sh,tl yn
MIDDLEPORT - O.tst s Chn sttan Fe llows htp 'Wtll spo n- G1eer, tt rst place. followed
sor,, ftee S~:hool supply gtveaw.ty from 6 to 8 p on Sunday by Brook Ervm, Chess.t
at Da~e Dtlc s P.trk 111 M!ddlcpolt Ret1eshments and mustc Blower. Enn Hardwt~k.
Will be plOV Jdcd.
Rachellc Davts Open Pole
Bendmg, l1rsr dtvtston , Jtm
Ferns, first pldce. fo llowed

the Me1gs lntettnedt.tte
School Welket w.ts hu-ed on
a one-ye.1r contract tor the
current school yeru
Also htred on one-ye.u
eomracts were Kn sti Al,me
Powell, elemenr.uy school
nurse, C.tr.t Lynn Bullmgto n.
ht gh school sctence teachet.
and Mtck 1\ lbetto Webet .
hr gh sthool vocdt Jo n,ll ..tgt 1cultUt e te.tc het Tony Dug.tu
was hu ed ,,, .tn clement.ny
phystcal ed uc.ttton te.tcher

The Ddlly Sentrnel • Page As

OPEN CLASS DAIRY

Marie ward

Campaigning the American way

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Keep an eye on business spending

NEW
YORK
Economists and the medta
Oh1o Valley Publishing Co.
kee p ta lktng about the state
ol the ft.lgtle consume r. but
Dan Goodrich
tt mtght be time to loo k at
how busmesses are spendPublisher
mg. too
Construction ul new
Charlene Hoeflich
stores and more ts
plants.
General Manager-News Edttor
gro \o\.tng at a b11sk pace, t~tc ­
tory orders are at stx-munth
htghs .tnd corporate purchases
of thmgs ltke computers
Co ngress shall make no law respecting an
and' soft ware I&gt; slowtng but
establishmmt of religion, or prohibiting the
not hy much
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of That 's good news - as
speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo- long .ts It lasts The trouble tS
that spendmg could begm to
ple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
fi zzle fast There ate some
Go11ernment for a redress ofgrier1ances.
temporary l.tx wnte-olfs for
equt pment that run out at the
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution end of the year and fewer
new btttldmg proJects dre
slated go111g forward
How thts shakes outm the
com111g months matters
Tod.ty "Thu rsday, Aug 14. the 227th day ol 2008 There bec.lUse ot the wtdespread
.tre I ]9 d.tys left tn the year
effect that cotpotate tn vestTod.ty'' Htghltght m Ht story
One hundred years .tgo. on Aug 14, 1908, 11ottng eJUpted ment s have on the overall
tn Sp11 ngfte ld. Ill . as a whtte mob. enr.tged that two black econom y Pn vate bus 111ess
cnmmal suspect' (one later cunvtcted of murder. the other Ill Vestment contn butes about
exonerated ol rape) had been spirited away from the ctty JU!l I0 percent to U S gross
by authontt es. began settmg black-owned homes and busi- domestic product but It .tlso
nesses on ft re. AI least two blacks and fi ve whiles were plays .t btg rule tntluencmg
ktlled m the vtolence (The nor helped "tsptre the creatt on the labor market
Already compames h.tve
of the NAAC P the tollowmg year)
been sl.tshing JObs as they
On th ts d.tte
stru ggle wtth a taltenn g
In 1848. the Otegon Ten Hory was cre.ned
In 1900, mternation.tl forces. tncludtng U S Mannes. economy, soanng costs .tnd
ente ted BetJtng to put down the Boxer Rebelhon, wht ch tt ght credit condttJOns New
w.1s .umed .tt purgmg Chtna uf turetgn mflucnce.
.tpphcattons hied for unemIn 1935. Prestdcnt Roosevelt stgned the Soctal Secunry ployment bene ftt s rose to
Ac t tnto ldW
455.000 dunng the last week
In 1945, President Truman announced that Japan had surtendered uncondltJon,tlly, endtn g World War II
In 1947, Paktstan became tndependent of Bnu sh rule
In 1948. the summer Olymp1c games m London ended
In 1958. Ehts Presley's mother, Gladys Love Smtth
Ptesley. d1ed tn Memphts, Tenn , at age 46
In 1969. Bnttsh troops ,went to Northern Ireland to mtervc nc ttl scctanan VIolence between Protestant s and Roman
Cathohcs '
In 14,)7 3 the US bombmg ot Cambodta came to a halt
ettecu ve at mtdntght
In 14,)80, workers went on smke at the Lemn Shtpyard in
Gd.tnsk, Poland, m a JOb action !hat resulted 111 the creat1on
of the Soltdanty labor movement
One ye,u .tgo Te.tcher-.lstt on.wt Barbara Morgan transformed the space shuttle Endeavour and space statio n mto
,, cl.tsstoo m fot het lu st educattonal se"ton from orbtt, fulftllm g the legacy ol Chnstd McAultffe. who dted m the
1986 Ch,tllenger thsastcr Toy company Mattei recalled
18 6 mtllton lc.td-tamted. Chmcsc- made toys worldwtde
Sutctdc bombers targeted the Yaztdt s sect 111 northern Iraq ,
some 500 are thought to have d1ed m the ,macks
Tnd.ty s BIMhdays· Pulttzer Pnze-wmnmg author Russell
B,tket ts 83 Rock smger D.lVId Crosby 1s 67 Countty stnger
Conn1e Smtth 1s 67 Former JOCkey Robyn Smtth Astatre ts 64
Comedtdn-actor Ste\e Mat1m ts 63 Actor Antonto Fargas IS
62 Smge t-mustctan Lany Gr.tham ts 62 Actress Susan Samt
James ts 62. Author D,mtelle Steel ts 61 Ruck smger-mustctan
Te11 y Adams (NRBQ) " 58 "Far Stde" cm1oon1st Gary
Ltrsun IS 58. Actor Carl Lumbl y ts 57 F1lm composer James
Horner 1s 55 Former basketball playe r Earvm "M.tgtc"
Johnson IS 49 Smger Sarah Bnghtman 1s 48 Actress Sus,m
W1th Labor Day nednn g,
Olsen ts 47 Rock mustCt.lfl Keuh Ho-...I.md !Chtc.tgo) ts 44
a
wary n.ltton awluts th e
Actress Emn'lanuelle Be.ut ts 43 Actress Halle Berry 1s 42
Actress C.nhenne Bell ts 40 Country mustctan Cody premtere of " Dumb and
Dumber Ill The 2008
McCarver (Confederate Railroad) IS 40
Campatg n ·•
Prestdenttal
Thought fat Today "Nothmg ts so soothtng to our se lfCould
It posstbly be st llter
esteem as to ftnd our bad tratts m our forebears It seems to
absolve us"- VanWyck Brooks, Amencan author ( 1886- than 2000. ptttmg a makebelteve Texas rancher
1963)
.
agamst
an
"eltttst"
Washmgton
know -tt-all
who
boasted
he
'd
tnvented
LETTERS TO THE
the Internet&gt; Of course. AI
EDITOR
Gore neve1 satd that, any
more than George W Bush
Lette11 10 th e ed110r are. welcome They should be len could saddle a horse Withrhan JOO IWIYI~ All I eite~ 1 (lie wh;err ro edwng, mus r be
out prot csstonal help
11gned and mdude add' f" and releph one nwnbe 1 No
But, hey. tt made tor a
Ull\ l~n ed /e1le1 1 11111 he pt&lt;bl11hed Le1lel'l 1lwuld he "'
dtvertmg story ltne The
~ood ta\te. addre,\ mg H\lle\ , not pe1\mw!Jtte"' Lerrn \ of
Stuffed Shtrt versus The
rlumk1 w 0 1 ~a nt ~mwn 1 and llld111duall 11 1/lnm he acaprCowboy TV ner-...orks ate tt
ed /1!1 puhl" mwn
up, as , alas, d1d mJiltons ot
low-mtormatton voter~ til------~----------------------,
served by the news medta's
preference tor srorytel ltng
over substance Thus when
tmcrophones ptcked up
(USPS 213·960)
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publlt;hing
Gore' s exasperated stghs
Co.
dunn g h1 s ft rst debate wtth
Correction Polley
Published every afternoon Monday
Bush , pund1ts made the
Our ma1n co ncern 1n all stones 1s to through Fnday 111 Court Street
Stuffed
Sh1rt's bad manners
be accu rate If you know of an erro r Pomeroy
Oh10
Second·ctass
a
"ch.tracte
r" tSsue Instead
1n a story call the newsroom at (740) postage pa1d at Pomeroy
of dnalyzmg what made hun
Member· The Associa ted Press and
992 2156
s1gh The Cowboy's wildly
the Oh10 Newspaper Assoc1a1Jon
Postmaster Send address correc 1
tnaccurate descttpttons of
Our main n'umber Is
lions to The Dally Sentmel 111 Court
hts ow n tax, Soctdl Secunty
(740) 992-2156
Street Pomeroy Oh1o 45769
and
prescnptton-drug plans
•
Department extenstons are·
Exactly
how does one
Subscription Rates
polt
tely
debate
somebody
By carrier or motor route
1
News
One month
'1 0 27
who e1the1 does11 ' t underOne year
' 115 84
Editor Cha r1ene Hoefhch Ext ' 12
stand
or mtsre presents hts
1Reporter· Bnan Reed Ext 14
Dally
50'
own
puhcy
proposais1 Even
Senior Citizen rates
Reporter Beth Sergent Ext 13
somebody ltke rh e New
110.27
One month
York Ttmes Bob Herbert,
One year
' 103 90
Subscnbers should remit 1n adva~
who treats Barack Obama
Advertising
d1rect to the OaJiy Sentinel No sub
as the Second Commg,
Outside Sales Dave Hams Ext t s
sdnpt on by mall perm1tted In areas
opt ned that "(m)ost of
Outside Sales · Brenda Davis Ext 16 where home carrier serv1ce Is ava11
Amenca understand' that
ClassJ Circ. Judy Clark Ext 10
able
the com petence bar 1s set so
•
Mail Subscriplton
low tor Gov George W
General Manager
Inside Meigs County
Bush of Texas th at tt 's pracCharlene Ho9thch Ext 12
13 Weeks
'32 26
ttcally
lymg on the ground "
26 Weeks
'64 20
Gore,
however,
was smug.
52 Weeks
' 127 11
E-mail
•
superctltou s .tnd "doesn't
news@mydallysAnhnel corn
Outside Meigs County
seem to re.tltze that tn the
13 Weeks
'53 55
rea l wo rld , people hate
Web.
'1 07 10
26 Weeks
Eddte Haske ll "
www mydarlysent1nel com
52 Weeks
'214 2~
Actually. Haske ll 's " TV

TODAY IN HISTORY

PageA4

1 ---=·~ 3 10,7

00__! 9·10 STEP BAt;lTHEAS (R)

THE DARK KNIGHT (PG13)
12 55, 3 40,6 55 &amp; 9 40
MAMMA MIA (PG13)
1 30, 3•30, 7 30 &amp; 9 30
~OW

SHOWING MATINEES

- G.ttes Open
- -1-H Ho1 'e Fun Sho11
- J I F.tn Pet Shu\\Small Aten,t
111:00 a.m. - Ktddte Tt.tctot Pull nt
Champtons- Sm.tll Atell.t
I :00 p.m. - Jr F.tt r l\11.ttds
Ptogr.tlll- Ltvc&gt;tock
Aren,\

- Rl\ crstde Cloggcrs"Dew Zone" Htll St.tge
6:00 p.m - Ttud Pu ll - Pull Tt .tck
7:00p.m. - 'M 1ss1ng Ill Atlecttt&gt;n ·"Dew Zone" Htll St.tgc
9:(HI p.m. -Kelly Pert y· Gospel 'Del\ Zone'' H1ll St.tgc
II :00 p.m. G.ues Close

5:00 p.m.

c filii/'~''·
du

�The Dai ly Sentinel

.

PageA6

\;-

"

Thursday, August 14, 2008

...

PageA7

COMMUNITY

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August

14, 2008

Baking and canning judging results announced
BY CHARLENE H oEFLICH
f i0fi·LICH\i'f!I.1YUA L YSEN INEL CUM

Th,· 27X

1'0\lf ROY
L'lllllc.'"

111

tlw

ha~ing

:md

-

l'anning dl·parlmcnt .tt tilL'
\le i~ . . ( ·I HI Ill\' F;tir ha\ L'
hL'L'tl JUdg,•d ·alld . rihh u n . .

l'lace·d .

'
llakinl!

In :1 ~..· l,oki~..· - ba~ill!..! nml
jlditiOil \\ hL'IL' till'~ 'a Ill('
fL'1.,:ip1..' \\ '-'" ll '-l'd h~ t iHI '-l'
~..·nterin!..! th~..· cia, .... til~..· '' 111-

I

n~r' wcr~ ll(·,· k 1 C'on.:ri II or

Po11H.:ro\. fi r&lt;..t-. Donna .1.
Smith 1) !' l~a~..·i l h..'. · 'L'l' L~nd .
~tnd
Ahi~~1i l
Cotton 1d.

.

.

Brian J. ReecVphotos .
Kelsey Holter showed the grand ·champion dairy market
-steer, and was named Dairy Market Steer Showmanship
graod champion Tuesday. She is pictured with Fair King
Daniel Buckley and Dairy Princess Laura Pullins. .

f\l idllicpon tlmd .
"l~ t hin£

blue ribhun.., i 11 the
cake cTl·co r:tt in!..! 1.:nlltc ... 1
\\C I\ .' r\hil.!t\1 1 l'l~t!O il !"or :1
ln,I HI:II c&lt;;kc. Kila Frauk or
Re·c d,\·ii k rm a birthd a1
c.1ke. anll.knn.i rer Schadler
(lr i\'l idd kp&lt;ll·t ro r h~r them.:

Audrionna Pullins; 2008 Fair Queen. showed the reserve Brenna Holter VIas named grand champion dairy feeder
champion dairy market steer and was named reserve showman and her calf was named reserve champion
champion showman at the Dairy Market Steer Show held Tuesday at the Meigs Qounty Junior Fair Dairy Feeder Calf
Tuesday. Her first runner- up, Ashley Life, Fair King Ashley Show. ·Holter is pictured with Fair King Daniel Buckley,
Life, and Dairy Princess Laura Pullins are also pictured.
·Queen Runner-up Ashley Life and Queen Audrionna Pullins.

l'liiV'.

In oth~..·r L'&lt;l lt..:'!..!OI"ie ... or the
haking tompcdlion. the hiUL'

Charlene Hoeflich/photo

winr1cr ' II'Crc: Bread, Drmna R. Jenkin&gt; or Rutland :
Jennifer
Schcl!' ffcr
or
M illcl lepon.
'·
Mor~ ,111
Cotton uf Middleport . Jo1
Bentley or Syracu,e. Lr nd;r
Rathbum or Pomern v. Ab ieail
Cqrton or Middlepoi·t. Dot1n a
R. Jenkin &gt;. and Frcln cis Kuhn
or Reedsville.
Cake' - Linda Rathburn

of Pomcrov. .l: Vanc . . -. ,t
Ful mer oi'
\'lidd ll'pu n .
Shadee EL&lt;r n' of Pnrtl cmd.
Cun ki es Shirle y J.
Han11n or Racine. Donrl:r R.
Jenkin' or Rutl"ml. Mur~an
Cotton or MiddkplHLC .'\:
Sharlec EvllnS ur Portland .
and Mary Pcrd:os of Chc.&gt;tcr.
Pi es - Abbie Cheval ier
of Pomeroy: Bedy Colterill
. or Porneruy. :1.
Candy - Sharon L Hall
ur Racine, :1: Sllirlc v J.
llamm or'Ra ci ne.
·
Canning
Preserves
Ma xi 11C

Stac ey Pullins of Long Bottom took best of show in the pho~
' tography compe ti tion at th e Meigs County Fair. Here sha
t displ ays her entry in the Meigs County scenery category. ·

· Fair photography ~
winners announced:
Charlene HoefllchJphoto

Larry Ebersbach of Syracuse looks 0ver the wide array of canned f(uits and vegetab les
entered in competition at th e Meigs County fair. The display is in the Coonhunters building w here the public· can enjoy looking at fair proJects in air-cond rtroned comfort.
Dvn of Bidw~ll . Pcnrl\' Brickll'&gt; of Shade. 1\mamla
1:icu11 ,;r l~ac in c.
·
Pa ck ·or A lh'"'"
Pickle' - P-enny Ebm ol
Jan1 ' - k 11n il~r Doui ol
Mrddkort. Maxi ne· D1cr ol Racine. 2: Fram:i.&gt; Kullll ol
ll iu wc ll. Robin With;&lt;lll or . Reed" ill.:. t'.i ml11 R11thhurn
Cool vi ll e. Tere"1 A. Wr l,.lli or 1\H.llt'I"O\. &lt;lild DaYid
ol Ra'c·inc. ~rnd Srne 1&lt;. I\ in~ uf Poni Lrol.
R~ li &gt; h e·s
· llu11 ard
Harndt or Pomnuy. ·
Jclli e&gt; - An~ic l:l rid.lc , En in or R&lt;ll'illl' . .1.
Sauu.:-...;/ci J-..u p - Lin d~1
of Shade . Ma xine DH·r of
or I\ HllL'I'o y.
Flidwcll. Opal Dy~ &lt; "r R~ll hhnrn
Bid we ll.
Dn.: ~ Bric~le &gt; ,,r Slr:rde.
("; II Jill'&lt;i fruit - c ~la\ i n c
Sp rea&lt;h
Angie

D\L'r 11 1' Bid\\L'IL r. AnEiL'
Hi·icklc" of '-;hade . '· "P~1l11\'

l:l11m or R11c ine· .
(U illl l'd n :gL't&lt;l h ll'-. -TL.'rL'\a t\. \Vi! '-OII of R. ,tc im: .
.:::!: Pc1111\' hlam1 1r R ~ IL' illc . -L

~'la,i lw· D1 er ,r llicll1c ll :
L 111d11
kalihum
of
PoJJI Crt 1\. llo\\ an i 1-,n iII or
l&lt;11ci nc. ··7·.
Clmlc'd mc·11t ···· ll n~r ard

Er\'in of

R;IL'IIlL' . ~: Tcrc&lt;.~a

,\ . Wilson of

l~11eine .

Lanham named manager Farmers Bank of Pt. Pleasant
POINT
W.Va.

He lla., hc~n acti ve 111
C lla rlottc. N.C. c:ornlllllllill
~.: ITn rl !-1. ;-.l' rvi ng a-. pa~t

PL,EASANT.
Michael ·R.

Liev in g.
Pre;-. ident
of
Fanners Bank. wc~ l Vin.!lllia
Di Vision, ha..; arlll Ullll.l'L'llthal
Edgar S. Lanham II will join

Co\mJinah Jr td' the l lni tcd
\Vay an d pa~t Courdinat P'r

Pleasa1it office . He wi ll a!'so
serve as . 1"\"sistant VicePresident of the cu mpan y.
L1111ham. a n;rti ve .ul' Point
Pl eas11nt. return' to his
hometown
lrorn . Nnrth
Cam lina. where he was previn u, ly employed " ' Wch

Ru si ness Manager

of

SM I

Fanner:-;

hi~

LIIH.ier~ nrdULI[ t'

degree
!'ru m North Caml ina State.

""I'

ate

ol' P() i11t Pk&lt;l',&lt;lll t

Hi ~ IJ

Schno l. She i&gt; a reach er
wit h 1_-1 ye ars ex perie nce in
tire Bank or America . v;rri'lnrs No rth Camli na
{'mporation . &lt;\' here' he
Te&lt;:hnology lmpl cmCn tati on. o;ervcd in vario u ~ capacitil'~ .
"Edd ie w anh to com e mo&gt;t recently as Senior
home, and we are'" pl eased Vice -Pre&gt; ide1rt or Integrated
that he i s .joining

"''L

nf til e Ch;rrlv !te A rt ' and and is ""'" i11 ~ raduat e
Sc: ienL-es Co uncil. 1-1 .: i&gt; lhc ;c hoo l '" thc , lJ ni1·c rsit y ol
ror111cr Pre &gt;idem or ·the .North C:iwl rna . Charlotte:
Norlh M c-c k Hi ~ ll Sc hool and a d;ruulrtcr. Meredith.
Athleti c
Booslcr-. &lt;. tnd \\'ho i~ &lt;~ "Pp lwlllorc at
"c r v~-. on the F i1Ja tlC C Furmdll Llni \l'r-.ity ;.u Jd "
Colllrnittcc of llunt L· r~\'i l le tl lt' ll lhc r ol th ~._· \\"\1111;111'-·
Llnited Mc·&lt;hodi't Clll1rd1.
hc.-kerh&lt; rl l lc' ll ill.
Lanham·, wile. Patriei a
F:rrrne'r' !l ank ir n·itc•,, !li e'
Ke dcr 1.1n1h;rrn. i' · al.'o pull lie tn
In the fioirll
urig in cdl'
rrnm
l'oinr · l'k a,all t ,,rrin· '" 17 1(&gt;
Pk"scm r and a 1')75 ,:rduu - Jeilcr.&gt;&lt;orl Bo11kl 11rd and

Farmers Flank '" VicePrc,idenl
;rnd
Hruncll
Manager of the b;rnk \ Point

Properties. a- Di v isinn or
Spee dway Motor Sporl &gt;.
Prior to thdt, he served as
Proj ect
M anager

,,·llool 'Y'"'Im: Th.: .m uplc
lla&gt; two chi ld re n: a
"tanton. who hu ~ · ohla ined

Edgar S. Lanham II

Plantlin g.

HL·

rreviuusl y

Bank." says Licving... _"' Hi &gt; · served
as
Pres ident.
ex ten&gt;ive expert i&gt;e in bank- Nati on&gt;Bank o f Delaware.
ing al1ll information tech - N.A .
nology w ill greatl y benefi t
L anham i.&lt; a ~ra duat ~ of
arc&lt;r bu sinc's and drive the Lfniver, i ty
or' Virginia ·
co mm erc ial expa nsion .of Mclnty i·e
Sc hool
uf
our bank ."
Commerce ami i&lt; a ·1975
Lanham 's re sume abo oradu atc of Poi nt Plea sant
includes " le ngthy te nure at l-figh SehouL

\H?Ic(llll C F::d dt c

Edd i e.Lanharn ~'' lh'&lt;·.eon r.

\

~·,

~~

HOEFLICH Cii1 MYDA IL'(SENTINEL.COM

I'm lEROY - Stacie Pullins ur L ong Bottom took be st
ol ' h"w in til e M eig' Count y Fc1ir ph otography show i1~
L·ompt! ltion ,,·ith 4S4

e ntric~ .

~x 12 print in the Mei gs County
Scclll'l"\ L'l:l.'-"- wa:-. a LTt~ ni vc :.IJTlUH!i.' lll ent showing the front

'I he 11·inning ph oto. a

ol a l ra~·t"r p«r,cd a!" n"tic harrLCThe reserve best of show
rm.:tte· we nI IO Beck y RlldCJ' o r Syracuse for her entry of a

in the animal clas:-;.
·
Blu e rihlmn 11inncrs in the show were as follows:
,
S11a p' h" 1 si1c: Sharke Eran,, Portland, Meigs Count ~ .
,~cncr, · :
kiln\'. Wh« n. Syr «cusc. anima ls: Joyce E:
Ma 11 u~l. Rae·in~. adu lt wi th charac ter: Peg gy Crane.:
· Middlcpnn.-,·hildrcn at lay: nature cln,e ups. M eig&gt; county'
'-JlO rl '\. hi rd'-.. iri secls. and historical.
Rc11cc Car&gt;on. L.o 11 ~ Bottom . flowers in bloom; Tara. Rose;
Rm·i 11c. al1&gt;tract &gt;: Cln~mcn Cllllurd. Rac ine: Morgan Culton;
Middl cp"rt creepy cra wler: Decanna Sayre . Racine, picture
' llllll'ing fun: ,\hi ga il Co tt on. Middleport pictures of pets. :
In Ill.: c·o lnr enlarge ment category. the top winners. i1~
addi ti on 1&lt;1 P&lt;rllin ., and Rader. were Robert Rubinson;
I Middlo:pun adult w ith cha1:acter. natme clo.&lt;eups: Jenny
Wha n. Syracuse. children at pla y; Peggy Crane, Meigs
Co unty spnrt.&gt;. hird &gt;. mi sccllancou &gt;. Meigs County Fair. :
Rnhcrl /1. Ba i ley. Lon ~ Bottom. f lowers a blooming:·
S11rah D. Jen kin s. Rutbnd. in sec ts: Renee Carson, lon g:
Bur tom . al, tr:rcts: Lind a M cTurner:. Meigs County hi stori ;
c·11 l: i\u dri&lt;H ill« Pullin &gt;. Lung Bottom. creepy craw lers;
. ~ho,·gc&lt;~ l Cll tton. M idd kporL picture sll ow ing fun ; ancl
Kc l'e.) ll olrcr. Pomcru y. pictures of pets.
In ril l' black :r nd white sna ps hot category, the blue ribbon

Laura Pullins was named reserve champion showman at
Tuesd.ay's Junior Fair Dairy Market Steer show. Fair King
DAniel Buckley, Queen Runner-up Ashley Life, and Queen
Audrionna Pullins are also pictured.

Taylor Parker showed the grand champion dairy feeder
Tuesday at the Meigs County Fair dairy market steer show.
Fair Queen Audrionna Pullins and King Daniel Buckley are
also pictured.

Alyssa 'Newland was named grand champion commercial
feeder s.teer showman at Tuesday's Commercial Feeder
Steer Show. Fair King Daniel Buckley, Queen Aud rionna
Pullins arid Li!Ue Mister Meigs County, Augu stus Kennedy.

Amanda Gilkey was reserve champion showman in the
commercial feeder steer show. Fair King· Daniel Buckley,
Queen, Audrionna Pullins and Little Mister Meigs County
Augustus Kennedy
are .also pictured.
.

Alyssa Newland's commercial feeder steer was judged grand
champion at Tuesday's show. Fair King Daniel Buckley,
Queen Runner-up Ashley Life , Queen Audrionna Pullins and
Beef Princess Mallory Nicodemus are also pictured.

Wade Collins is pictured with his reserve champion com·
merical feeder steer. Fair King Daniel Buckley, Queen
Runner-up Ashley Life, Queen Audrionna Pullins and Beef
Princess Mallory Nicodemus are also shown.

Jordan Wood, pictured with Fair King and Queen Daniel
Buckley and Audrionna Pullins and Beef Princess Mallory
Nicodemus, was named grand champion steer showman at
Tuesday's Beef Show.
·

Jo~athan Barrett was named reserv·e · champion market

~.:olor L'llian.!c !;l rnt

\Vill i H:r~ \v~:re :

Rem:e Carson . Long Bottom; JL1Iie Spaun,

P&lt;lmn oy. pm traits " nd mi s.:ell11neous: Jennifer Sch;re ffer~
Middlc·port . creepy cr11 wlers: Jennifer Schae ffer,
M iddleport · picture&gt; show ing fun: Morgan Co\ton.
~ l iddll'pmL picture s ol' pet&gt; .
.
:
l 11 hl"d 11nd whit e enlargeme nts. fi rst were taken by
f'c·gg) C r;r nc of Middleport in abstracts: Joyce E. Manuel,
R11et ne. portraits: Jenn y Wh:m. Syracuse. m.isc:ellaneous:
1\higail Cutton. Middleport. creepy craw lers ; Jennife ~
Scl r:1cffcr. Midul epurt . pi ctures ' hawing fun; and KelseY.
!-l oit er. Pomemy. picture' of pets.

Meigs County Fair "Thank You" Ads
SHOW APPRECIATION TO YOUR FAIR BUYER ...
Here are some of the most popular "Thank You" ad sizes.
Please see Dave or Brenda at the The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
or call 992·2155 for details. Ads must be paid for in advance.
,,

2 Col. .x 5"

Red
.. Cross Offers CPR
Training at AEP 's Gavin Plant

Weekday
$67.80
Sunday
$103.50

1 Col. x 2" The Gallia County American Red Cross w1 !1
conduc t tra ining on how to perform .cardiopulmonary
resu sc1tat1on (CPR) on adults and children, The
training will take place at the Gavin plant in Cheshire
on Saturday, September 13.
The class begins at 9 a m and will last
approximately four hours . This training is free and
open to allr ntere sted .persons ages 13 and above.
but particrpants must preregister wrth the Gall1a
Cou nty Re d Cross . Call 446-8555 to reg ister, or for
more rn form ation abouf the tra&lt;ni ng. Class size 1s
limited and wrll be filled on a first-call frrst-served
basis .
The Amerrcan Red Cross CPR program rs
designed to grve people the confidence to respond rn
an emergency situation with skills that can save a.
life . This course provides particrpants wrth basic
emergency techniques so that they can respond to
breathing and cardrac emergencres rn adults and
children .

h;tck IHHliC.

H.: can al"' 11.: r,·ae hed at
.\ 04.(,7-I .K200
or
at

~··

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Weekd;:~y

$13.56
Sunday
$20.70

·: /]/)]JJ[JJ{k;:
' - - - - - - - ·- - - - - · -

~- -

1/tal1h 'ljo.tt .2 Col. x .4"
1 Col. x 3" -

Weekday
$20.34
Sunday
$31.05

Weekday
$54.24
Sunday
$82.80 .

J

Steers rrom Page At
Audrionna Pullins, 2008
.. Fair Queen, was reser~e
champion dai ry market
steer ·showman and · her
steer, at I, 125 pounds, was
named reserve champion.

· Sam Collins showed the
reserve champion market
steer at Tuesday's Junior
Fair Beef Show. Fair King
:and Queen Daniel Buckley,
' Queen Runne r-up Ashley
Life and Beef Princess
Mallory Nicodemus are
also pictured.

Dairy Feeder Calves
Brenna Holter was named
grand champion, dairy feed·
er calf showman. Her feeder
calf was reserve champion .
Taylor Parker 's . grand
champion dairy feeder was
grand champi on. Laura

2 Col. x 3"
•

GCC grad hired

Weekday $40;68
Sunday $62.10
2 Col. x 2"
Weekday
$27.12
Sunday

Call 446-8555 to register
for the free CPR training class.

1.40

Gavin Plant/Cheshire , Ohio

Borders and Artwork

steer showman at Tuesday's Beef Show. Fair King and
Queen Daniel Buckley and Audrionna Pullins and Beef
Princess Mallory Nicodemus are also pictured.

Jordan Parker is pictured with the grand champion market
steer she showed at Tuesday's Junior Fair Beef Show. Fai r
King and Queen Daniel Buckley, Queen Runner-up Ashley
Life and Audrionna Pullins ·- and Beef Princess Mallory
Nicodemus are also pictured . .

GALLIPOLI S Bessie Fisher
,wa s rece ntly hired as an account
J;:lerk by United Producers Livestock
Association in Gallipolis.
·Fisher is a graduate of Ga llipoli~
Career College where she received
an A ssociate of Applied Business in
Accountin g. She resides in Meigs
with her famil y. For information
about cla sses or programs offered at
GCC , ca ll 446-43n7. 800-214-0452,
or visit the web site at www.ga llipoli scareercollege.edu .' Fall quar•
ler begin s Odober 6.

•

. Kid~e

Commercial
Feeder Steers
Alyssa Newland was
judged grand champion
commercial feeder steer
showman, and her feeder
steer was reserve champion .
•Wade Co llins sHowed the
reserve champion. Amanda
· Gilkey rec ei ved the reserve
champion commercial feei:l-

Day give-away

.POMEROY - A Kidoie Day fealure at the Meigs County Fair this
year i s an electronics gi ve-away
which .takes place from the Dew Zone
hill stage.
The first one was Tuesday with
· MP3 player s, portable DYD players
and a variety of other electronics. The
next one wi ll be Saturday, the second
Kiddie Day at the Fair at noon. Kids
under 12 en tering the gate before
noon are admitted free and at that

Bessie Fisher

Pullin s· was j udged reserve
champion . dairy feeder
showman.

time receive a ticket half of which
they place in a bucket on the hill
stage where the drawings take pl ace. ·
Monday's winners of elec tronic
items were Sydney Z irkle. Madeline
Hill . Jenna Summers. Sabra Bailey,
Bailey Spaun. Taylor Cheval ier,
Jackie Jordan. Robert Shull. Andrea
Cremeans, Erica Mil iron, Renee
Dosey, Justin Bush, Danny Burton ,
Nicole Eblin, Zack Bartrum. Ciem
Harper and Noah Grate.

er steer showman ribbon.
Turner acknowleu~ ed tha t
the pre sent econornic cli mate makes it di ffi cult for
some famili es to afford a
beef project. and &gt;aid he
expects the cost to be even
more next yem. Sti ll , he
encouraged those in vol ved
in the beef ind&lt;rstry to
encourage oth er youngs ters
to learn about it and become
involved in projects
their
own.

or

Keeping
Meigs
County
informed
The Daily Sentinel
Subserlbetoday

992-2155

�The Dai ly Sentinel

.

PageA6

\;-

"

Thursday, August 14, 2008

...

PageA7

COMMUNITY

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August

14, 2008

Baking and canning judging results announced
BY CHARLENE H oEFLICH
f i0fi·LICH\i'f!I.1YUA L YSEN INEL CUM

Th,· 27X

1'0\lf ROY
L'lllllc.'"

111

tlw

ha~ing

:md

-

l'anning dl·parlmcnt .tt tilL'
\le i~ . . ( ·I HI Ill\' F;tir ha\ L'
hL'L'tl JUdg,•d ·alld . rihh u n . .

l'lace·d .

'
llakinl!

In :1 ~..· l,oki~..· - ba~ill!..! nml
jlditiOil \\ hL'IL' till'~ 'a Ill('
fL'1.,:ip1..' \\ '-'" ll '-l'd h~ t iHI '-l'
~..·nterin!..! th~..· cia, .... til~..· '' 111-

I

n~r' wcr~ ll(·,· k 1 C'on.:ri II or

Po11H.:ro\. fi r&lt;..t-. Donna .1.
Smith 1) !' l~a~..·i l h..'. · 'L'l' L~nd .
~tnd
Ahi~~1i l
Cotton 1d.

.

.

Brian J. ReecVphotos .
Kelsey Holter showed the grand ·champion dairy market
-steer, and was named Dairy Market Steer Showmanship
graod champion Tuesday. She is pictured with Fair King
Daniel Buckley and Dairy Princess Laura Pullins. .

f\l idllicpon tlmd .
"l~ t hin£

blue ribhun.., i 11 the
cake cTl·co r:tt in!..! 1.:nlltc ... 1
\\C I\ .' r\hil.!t\1 1 l'l~t!O il !"or :1
ln,I HI:II c&lt;;kc. Kila Frauk or
Re·c d,\·ii k rm a birthd a1
c.1ke. anll.knn.i rer Schadler
(lr i\'l idd kp&lt;ll·t ro r h~r them.:

Audrionna Pullins; 2008 Fair Queen. showed the reserve Brenna Holter VIas named grand champion dairy feeder
champion dairy market steer and was named reserve showman and her calf was named reserve champion
champion showman at the Dairy Market Steer Show held Tuesday at the Meigs Qounty Junior Fair Dairy Feeder Calf
Tuesday. Her first runner- up, Ashley Life, Fair King Ashley Show. ·Holter is pictured with Fair King Daniel Buckley,
Life, and Dairy Princess Laura Pullins are also pictured.
·Queen Runner-up Ashley Life and Queen Audrionna Pullins.

l'liiV'.

In oth~..·r L'&lt;l lt..:'!..!OI"ie ... or the
haking tompcdlion. the hiUL'

Charlene Hoeflich/photo

winr1cr ' II'Crc: Bread, Drmna R. Jenkin&gt; or Rutland :
Jennifer
Schcl!' ffcr
or
M illcl lepon.
'·
Mor~ ,111
Cotton uf Middleport . Jo1
Bentley or Syracu,e. Lr nd;r
Rathbum or Pomern v. Ab ieail
Cqrton or Middlepoi·t. Dot1n a
R. Jenkin &gt;. and Frcln cis Kuhn
or Reedsville.
Cake' - Linda Rathburn

of Pomcrov. .l: Vanc . . -. ,t
Ful mer oi'
\'lidd ll'pu n .
Shadee EL&lt;r n' of Pnrtl cmd.
Cun ki es Shirle y J.
Han11n or Racine. Donrl:r R.
Jenkin' or Rutl"ml. Mur~an
Cotton or MiddkplHLC .'\:
Sharlec EvllnS ur Portland .
and Mary Pcrd:os of Chc.&gt;tcr.
Pi es - Abbie Cheval ier
of Pomeroy: Bedy Colterill
. or Porneruy. :1.
Candy - Sharon L Hall
ur Racine, :1: Sllirlc v J.
llamm or'Ra ci ne.
·
Canning
Preserves
Ma xi 11C

Stac ey Pullins of Long Bottom took best of show in the pho~
' tography compe ti tion at th e Meigs County Fair. Here sha
t displ ays her entry in the Meigs County scenery category. ·

· Fair photography ~
winners announced:
Charlene HoefllchJphoto

Larry Ebersbach of Syracuse looks 0ver the wide array of canned f(uits and vegetab les
entered in competition at th e Meigs County fair. The display is in the Coonhunters building w here the public· can enjoy looking at fair proJects in air-cond rtroned comfort.
Dvn of Bidw~ll . Pcnrl\' Brickll'&gt; of Shade. 1\mamla
1:icu11 ,;r l~ac in c.
·
Pa ck ·or A lh'"'"
Pickle' - P-enny Ebm ol
Jan1 ' - k 11n il~r Doui ol
Mrddkort. Maxi ne· D1cr ol Racine. 2: Fram:i.&gt; Kullll ol
ll iu wc ll. Robin With;&lt;lll or . Reed" ill.:. t'.i ml11 R11thhurn
Cool vi ll e. Tere"1 A. Wr l,.lli or 1\H.llt'I"O\. &lt;lild DaYid
ol Ra'c·inc. ~rnd Srne 1&lt;. I\ in~ uf Poni Lrol.
R~ li &gt; h e·s
· llu11 ard
Harndt or Pomnuy. ·
Jclli e&gt; - An~ic l:l rid.lc , En in or R&lt;ll'illl' . .1.
Sauu.:-...;/ci J-..u p - Lin d~1
of Shade . Ma xine DH·r of
or I\ HllL'I'o y.
Flidwcll. Opal Dy~ &lt; "r R~ll hhnrn
Bid we ll.
Dn.: ~ Bric~le &gt; ,,r Slr:rde.
("; II Jill'&lt;i fruit - c ~la\ i n c
Sp rea&lt;h
Angie

D\L'r 11 1' Bid\\L'IL r. AnEiL'
Hi·icklc" of '-;hade . '· "P~1l11\'

l:l11m or R11c ine· .
(U illl l'd n :gL't&lt;l h ll'-. -TL.'rL'\a t\. \Vi! '-OII of R. ,tc im: .
.:::!: Pc1111\' hlam1 1r R ~ IL' illc . -L

~'la,i lw· D1 er ,r llicll1c ll :
L 111d11
kalihum
of
PoJJI Crt 1\. llo\\ an i 1-,n iII or
l&lt;11ci nc. ··7·.
Clmlc'd mc·11t ···· ll n~r ard

Er\'in of

R;IL'IIlL' . ~: Tcrc&lt;.~a

,\ . Wilson of

l~11eine .

Lanham named manager Farmers Bank of Pt. Pleasant
POINT
W.Va.

He lla., hc~n acti ve 111
C lla rlottc. N.C. c:ornlllllllill
~.: ITn rl !-1. ;-.l' rvi ng a-. pa~t

PL,EASANT.
Michael ·R.

Liev in g.
Pre;-. ident
of
Fanners Bank. wc~ l Vin.!lllia
Di Vision, ha..; arlll Ullll.l'L'llthal
Edgar S. Lanham II will join

Co\mJinah Jr td' the l lni tcd
\Vay an d pa~t Courdinat P'r

Pleasa1it office . He wi ll a!'so
serve as . 1"\"sistant VicePresident of the cu mpan y.
L1111ham. a n;rti ve .ul' Point
Pl eas11nt. return' to his
hometown
lrorn . Nnrth
Cam lina. where he was previn u, ly employed " ' Wch

Ru si ness Manager

of

SM I

Fanner:-;

hi~

LIIH.ier~ nrdULI[ t'

degree
!'ru m North Caml ina State.

""I'

ate

ol' P() i11t Pk&lt;l',&lt;lll t

Hi ~ IJ

Schno l. She i&gt; a reach er
wit h 1_-1 ye ars ex perie nce in
tire Bank or America . v;rri'lnrs No rth Camli na
{'mporation . &lt;\' here' he
Te&lt;:hnology lmpl cmCn tati on. o;ervcd in vario u ~ capacitil'~ .
"Edd ie w anh to com e mo&gt;t recently as Senior
home, and we are'" pl eased Vice -Pre&gt; ide1rt or Integrated
that he i s .joining

"''L

nf til e Ch;rrlv !te A rt ' and and is ""'" i11 ~ raduat e
Sc: ienL-es Co uncil. 1-1 .: i&gt; lhc ;c hoo l '" thc , lJ ni1·c rsit y ol
ror111cr Pre &gt;idem or ·the .North C:iwl rna . Charlotte:
Norlh M c-c k Hi ~ ll Sc hool and a d;ruulrtcr. Meredith.
Athleti c
Booslcr-. &lt;. tnd \\'ho i~ &lt;~ "Pp lwlllorc at
"c r v~-. on the F i1Ja tlC C Furmdll Llni \l'r-.ity ;.u Jd "
Colllrnittcc of llunt L· r~\'i l le tl lt' ll lhc r ol th ~._· \\"\1111;111'-·
Llnited Mc·&lt;hodi't Clll1rd1.
hc.-kerh&lt; rl l lc' ll ill.
Lanham·, wile. Patriei a
F:rrrne'r' !l ank ir n·itc•,, !li e'
Ke dcr 1.1n1h;rrn. i' · al.'o pull lie tn
In the fioirll
urig in cdl'
rrnm
l'oinr · l'k a,all t ,,rrin· '" 17 1(&gt;
Pk"scm r and a 1')75 ,:rduu - Jeilcr.&gt;&lt;orl Bo11kl 11rd and

Farmers Flank '" VicePrc,idenl
;rnd
Hruncll
Manager of the b;rnk \ Point

Properties. a- Di v isinn or
Spee dway Motor Sporl &gt;.
Prior to thdt, he served as
Proj ect
M anager

,,·llool 'Y'"'Im: Th.: .m uplc
lla&gt; two chi ld re n: a
"tanton. who hu ~ · ohla ined

Edgar S. Lanham II

Plantlin g.

HL·

rreviuusl y

Bank." says Licving... _"' Hi &gt; · served
as
Pres ident.
ex ten&gt;ive expert i&gt;e in bank- Nati on&gt;Bank o f Delaware.
ing al1ll information tech - N.A .
nology w ill greatl y benefi t
L anham i.&lt; a ~ra duat ~ of
arc&lt;r bu sinc's and drive the Lfniver, i ty
or' Virginia ·
co mm erc ial expa nsion .of Mclnty i·e
Sc hool
uf
our bank ."
Commerce ami i&lt; a ·1975
Lanham 's re sume abo oradu atc of Poi nt Plea sant
includes " le ngthy te nure at l-figh SehouL

\H?Ic(llll C F::d dt c

Edd i e.Lanharn ~'' lh'&lt;·.eon r.

\

~·,

~~

HOEFLICH Cii1 MYDA IL'(SENTINEL.COM

I'm lEROY - Stacie Pullins ur L ong Bottom took be st
ol ' h"w in til e M eig' Count y Fc1ir ph otography show i1~
L·ompt! ltion ,,·ith 4S4

e ntric~ .

~x 12 print in the Mei gs County
Scclll'l"\ L'l:l.'-"- wa:-. a LTt~ ni vc :.IJTlUH!i.' lll ent showing the front

'I he 11·inning ph oto. a

ol a l ra~·t"r p«r,cd a!" n"tic harrLCThe reserve best of show
rm.:tte· we nI IO Beck y RlldCJ' o r Syracuse for her entry of a

in the animal clas:-;.
·
Blu e rihlmn 11inncrs in the show were as follows:
,
S11a p' h" 1 si1c: Sharke Eran,, Portland, Meigs Count ~ .
,~cncr, · :
kiln\'. Wh« n. Syr «cusc. anima ls: Joyce E:
Ma 11 u~l. Rae·in~. adu lt wi th charac ter: Peg gy Crane.:
· Middlcpnn.-,·hildrcn at lay: nature cln,e ups. M eig&gt; county'
'-JlO rl '\. hi rd'-.. iri secls. and historical.
Rc11cc Car&gt;on. L.o 11 ~ Bottom . flowers in bloom; Tara. Rose;
Rm·i 11c. al1&gt;tract &gt;: Cln~mcn Cllllurd. Rac ine: Morgan Culton;
Middl cp"rt creepy cra wler: Decanna Sayre . Racine, picture
' llllll'ing fun: ,\hi ga il Co tt on. Middleport pictures of pets. :
In Ill.: c·o lnr enlarge ment category. the top winners. i1~
addi ti on 1&lt;1 P&lt;rllin ., and Rader. were Robert Rubinson;
I Middlo:pun adult w ith cha1:acter. natme clo.&lt;eups: Jenny
Wha n. Syracuse. children at pla y; Peggy Crane, Meigs
Co unty spnrt.&gt;. hird &gt;. mi sccllancou &gt;. Meigs County Fair. :
Rnhcrl /1. Ba i ley. Lon ~ Bottom. f lowers a blooming:·
S11rah D. Jen kin s. Rutbnd. in sec ts: Renee Carson, lon g:
Bur tom . al, tr:rcts: Lind a M cTurner:. Meigs County hi stori ;
c·11 l: i\u dri&lt;H ill« Pullin &gt;. Lung Bottom. creepy craw lers;
. ~ho,·gc&lt;~ l Cll tton. M idd kporL picture sll ow ing fun ; ancl
Kc l'e.) ll olrcr. Pomcru y. pictures of pets.
In ril l' black :r nd white sna ps hot category, the blue ribbon

Laura Pullins was named reserve champion showman at
Tuesd.ay's Junior Fair Dairy Market Steer show. Fair King
DAniel Buckley, Queen Runner-up Ashley Life, and Queen
Audrionna Pullins are also pictured.

Taylor Parker showed the grand champion dairy feeder
Tuesday at the Meigs County Fair dairy market steer show.
Fair Queen Audrionna Pullins and King Daniel Buckley are
also pictured.

Alyssa 'Newland was named grand champion commercial
feeder s.teer showman at Tuesday's Commercial Feeder
Steer Show. Fair King Daniel Buckley, Queen Aud rionna
Pullins arid Li!Ue Mister Meigs County, Augu stus Kennedy.

Amanda Gilkey was reserve champion showman in the
commercial feeder steer show. Fair King· Daniel Buckley,
Queen, Audrionna Pullins and Little Mister Meigs County
Augustus Kennedy
are .also pictured.
.

Alyssa Newland's commercial feeder steer was judged grand
champion at Tuesday's show. Fair King Daniel Buckley,
Queen Runner-up Ashley Life , Queen Audrionna Pullins and
Beef Princess Mallory Nicodemus are also pictured.

Wade Collins is pictured with his reserve champion com·
merical feeder steer. Fair King Daniel Buckley, Queen
Runner-up Ashley Life, Queen Audrionna Pullins and Beef
Princess Mallory Nicodemus are also shown.

Jordan Wood, pictured with Fair King and Queen Daniel
Buckley and Audrionna Pullins and Beef Princess Mallory
Nicodemus, was named grand champion steer showman at
Tuesday's Beef Show.
·

Jo~athan Barrett was named reserv·e · champion market

~.:olor L'llian.!c !;l rnt

\Vill i H:r~ \v~:re :

Rem:e Carson . Long Bottom; JL1Iie Spaun,

P&lt;lmn oy. pm traits " nd mi s.:ell11neous: Jennifer Sch;re ffer~
Middlc·port . creepy cr11 wlers: Jennifer Schae ffer,
M iddleport · picture&gt; show ing fun: Morgan Co\ton.
~ l iddll'pmL picture s ol' pet&gt; .
.
:
l 11 hl"d 11nd whit e enlargeme nts. fi rst were taken by
f'c·gg) C r;r nc of Middleport in abstracts: Joyce E. Manuel,
R11et ne. portraits: Jenn y Wh:m. Syracuse. m.isc:ellaneous:
1\higail Cutton. Middleport. creepy craw lers ; Jennife ~
Scl r:1cffcr. Midul epurt . pi ctures ' hawing fun; and KelseY.
!-l oit er. Pomemy. picture' of pets.

Meigs County Fair "Thank You" Ads
SHOW APPRECIATION TO YOUR FAIR BUYER ...
Here are some of the most popular "Thank You" ad sizes.
Please see Dave or Brenda at the The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
or call 992·2155 for details. Ads must be paid for in advance.
,,

2 Col. .x 5"

Red
.. Cross Offers CPR
Training at AEP 's Gavin Plant

Weekday
$67.80
Sunday
$103.50

1 Col. x 2" The Gallia County American Red Cross w1 !1
conduc t tra ining on how to perform .cardiopulmonary
resu sc1tat1on (CPR) on adults and children, The
training will take place at the Gavin plant in Cheshire
on Saturday, September 13.
The class begins at 9 a m and will last
approximately four hours . This training is free and
open to allr ntere sted .persons ages 13 and above.
but particrpants must preregister wrth the Gall1a
Cou nty Re d Cross . Call 446-8555 to reg ister, or for
more rn form ation abouf the tra&lt;ni ng. Class size 1s
limited and wrll be filled on a first-call frrst-served
basis .
The Amerrcan Red Cross CPR program rs
designed to grve people the confidence to respond rn
an emergency situation with skills that can save a.
life . This course provides particrpants wrth basic
emergency techniques so that they can respond to
breathing and cardrac emergencres rn adults and
children .

h;tck IHHliC.

H.: can al"' 11.: r,·ae hed at
.\ 04.(,7-I .K200
or
at

~··

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Weekd;:~y

$13.56
Sunday
$20.70

·: /]/)]JJ[JJ{k;:
' - - - - - - - ·- - - - - · -

~- -

1/tal1h 'ljo.tt .2 Col. x .4"
1 Col. x 3" -

Weekday
$20.34
Sunday
$31.05

Weekday
$54.24
Sunday
$82.80 .

J

Steers rrom Page At
Audrionna Pullins, 2008
.. Fair Queen, was reser~e
champion dai ry market
steer ·showman and · her
steer, at I, 125 pounds, was
named reserve champion.

· Sam Collins showed the
reserve champion market
steer at Tuesday's Junior
Fair Beef Show. Fair King
:and Queen Daniel Buckley,
' Queen Runne r-up Ashley
Life and Beef Princess
Mallory Nicodemus are
also pictured.

Dairy Feeder Calves
Brenna Holter was named
grand champion, dairy feed·
er calf showman. Her feeder
calf was reserve champion .
Taylor Parker 's . grand
champion dairy feeder was
grand champi on. Laura

2 Col. x 3"
•

GCC grad hired

Weekday $40;68
Sunday $62.10
2 Col. x 2"
Weekday
$27.12
Sunday

Call 446-8555 to register
for the free CPR training class.

1.40

Gavin Plant/Cheshire , Ohio

Borders and Artwork

steer showman at Tuesday's Beef Show. Fair King and
Queen Daniel Buckley and Audrionna Pullins and Beef
Princess Mallory Nicodemus are also pictured.

Jordan Parker is pictured with the grand champion market
steer she showed at Tuesday's Junior Fair Beef Show. Fai r
King and Queen Daniel Buckley, Queen Runner-up Ashley
Life and Audrionna Pullins ·- and Beef Princess Mallory
Nicodemus are also pictured . .

GALLIPOLI S Bessie Fisher
,wa s rece ntly hired as an account
J;:lerk by United Producers Livestock
Association in Gallipolis.
·Fisher is a graduate of Ga llipoli~
Career College where she received
an A ssociate of Applied Business in
Accountin g. She resides in Meigs
with her famil y. For information
about cla sses or programs offered at
GCC , ca ll 446-43n7. 800-214-0452,
or visit the web site at www.ga llipoli scareercollege.edu .' Fall quar•
ler begin s Odober 6.

•

. Kid~e

Commercial
Feeder Steers
Alyssa Newland was
judged grand champion
commercial feeder steer
showman, and her feeder
steer was reserve champion .
•Wade Co llins sHowed the
reserve champion. Amanda
· Gilkey rec ei ved the reserve
champion commercial feei:l-

Day give-away

.POMEROY - A Kidoie Day fealure at the Meigs County Fair this
year i s an electronics gi ve-away
which .takes place from the Dew Zone
hill stage.
The first one was Tuesday with
· MP3 player s, portable DYD players
and a variety of other electronics. The
next one wi ll be Saturday, the second
Kiddie Day at the Fair at noon. Kids
under 12 en tering the gate before
noon are admitted free and at that

Bessie Fisher

Pullin s· was j udged reserve
champion . dairy feeder
showman.

time receive a ticket half of which
they place in a bucket on the hill
stage where the drawings take pl ace. ·
Monday's winners of elec tronic
items were Sydney Z irkle. Madeline
Hill . Jenna Summers. Sabra Bailey,
Bailey Spaun. Taylor Cheval ier,
Jackie Jordan. Robert Shull. Andrea
Cremeans, Erica Mil iron, Renee
Dosey, Justin Bush, Danny Burton ,
Nicole Eblin, Zack Bartrum. Ciem
Harper and Noah Grate.

er steer showman ribbon.
Turner acknowleu~ ed tha t
the pre sent econornic cli mate makes it di ffi cult for
some famili es to afford a
beef project. and &gt;aid he
expects the cost to be even
more next yem. Sti ll , he
encouraged those in vol ved
in the beef ind&lt;rstry to
encourage oth er youngs ters
to learn about it and become
involved in projects
their
own.

or

Keeping
Meigs
County
informed
The Daily Sentinel
Subserlbetoday

992-2155

�The Daily Sentinel

Page AS

FAIR SCENES

Thursday, August 14,2008

Inside
..

'

.

'
'

'

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

t\rnericans back Beijing Olympics, Page B2
O's 'top Indians, Page 83
Bills 'host' Steelers in Toronto, Page B3
US women top Mali, Page 83

. Thursday, August 14, 2008

Countdown
to Kickoff

Winebrenner widens lead in Semor League
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

MASON , W.Va . - Mick
Winebrenner of Racine has
widened his lead to II
points in the 2008 Riverside
· Senior Mens Golf League.
Mick has a total of 237.5
points to lead Paul
Somerville from Point
Pleasant in second place. In
third place is Carl Stone
with 216 points followed by
Jim Gress {20 1), Don
Waldie (185 :5), Bob Hill
(185), Haske I Jones (183 ).

Kenny Greene ( 179.5) ,
Gary Minton (I 79.5) and
Earl Johnson ( 178).
A total of 69 players were
on hand for Tuesday 's play.
There wc;re 15 foursome
_teams and three teams of
three players making 18
points possible for the day.
There was a tie for the
•best round of the day at 59
between the teams of Ken
Whited, .. Bill Buck, 'Claude
Proffitt
and
Bill
Winebrenner and Gary
Minton, Bob Wi seman.
Chct Thomas and Clark

Greene.
. There was a three way tie
· for third place with a score
of 60 betwec!n the team of
Mick Winebrenner. Bobby
Joe Roush, Phil Burton and
Jack Maloney. the team of
Paul
Maynard,
Tom
McNeely and Earl John son
and the team of Howard
Lee Miller, George Miller:
Phil Burgess and Harley
Rice.
The closest to the pin
winners were Bill Yoho on
the ninth hole and Paul
Maynard on hole No. 14.

A_,g_

Rlv.nlft Senior Stancllngo
Name

Score
237.5
226.5
216.0
201 .0
185.6
185.0
183.0

1 . Mlek Winebrenner

2. Paul Somerville
3 . Carl S10ne
4. Jim Grese ·

5. Oon Wa.ldle
5. Bob Hill
7 . H•skel Jones
6, l&lt;enny Greene

179.5

179.5
178.0

8. Gary Minton

10. Earl Johnson
11. Curus Grubb
12. Ken Whited

1n.o

170.5
169.0
168.0
181.5
159:0
157.5
157.0
156.5
156.0

13. Cecil Minton
14. Bub Stivers

15. Clarl&lt; Gr""'"'
16. Rick Northup
17. Bill Winebrenner
18. Jack Fox
19. Bucky Dont
20. Willis Dudding

Pirates
past Reds

.

.Cavs acquire Mo Williams in 3-team trade

DAYS
locAL SCHEDULE
POMEROV q

sChool

Charlene Hoeftlchlphoto

vars~

A schedule of upooming high
eporting events Involving teams

!tOm Gsllia and Meigs count~.

Heaven Westfall of Reedsville loves her goat but like many more animals at the Saturday
livestock sale, it will go to mar.ket.

Thuraday. Auguat 14
Golf
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth , 9 a.m.
River Valley at Buffalo, 10 a.m.
Frldw Augy1t 15
Golf

iOver Valley, Wellston at Jackson
(liairgreens) , 11 a.m.

· Mond1v. Aygyat 18
Golf

Kiddie tractbr pulls
are taking place .
every day at 4 p.m.
at the Meigs County
.Fair in the small
arena. The pull of
champions will come
at 10 a.m. Friday.
Here seven-year-old
Auston Colburn of
Pomeroy gives his
best effort to get the
tractor .down the
track.

Dave Harris/photo

Up and coming country music ~tar Trent Tomlinson performed before a ·large crowd
Wednesday night at the Meigs County Fair. Tomlinson had the crowd on it's feet, with mix·
lure of his hits, covers of classic country music and even mixed in some' rock and roll,
much to ,the delight of the large crowd.

River Valley, Jackson at GJlllia Academy·
(Cliffside}, 4:30p.m.
VInton County at Meigs (Pine Hills) , 10

a.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

Fall sports passes .
available at EHS

Charlene Ho.tllchlpholo

I

'

...

' '

..

..

Brian J. Raed/pholo

Pepsi Cola of Athens and WYVK sponsored kiddie games on the Meigs County Fair's mid·
way Tuesday. The limbo was just one event on the course, and prizes were. awarded.
'

.

'

•'
'

•i·

~,

·'

. I

-J.,..' \·

'

' 'c

Chertene Hoeftlch/pholo

.Over a period of many years the late Merrilee Bryant has been a faithful exhibitor at the
Meigs County Fair. She has earned many blue ribbons for her entries in the open class
displays, particularly so in the domestic arts department She recently died and in tribute
to her th.e Meigs County Senior Fair Board has placed a commemorative display in the
Roush·Thompson building along side the domestic arts exhibits. ·
Young Ty
Bissell of
Long
Bottom, a
second year
4-Her,
displays one
of his
Cornish rock
chickens
entered at
the Meigs
County Fair.
Charlene

•'

Hoeftlch/phOio

!

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
~:30 p.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
[all sports season may be
p4rchased for $50. The pass
tS good for junior high and
!Jigh school volleyball and
r~otball games.
t ·A;j:_student pass may be
pun;hased by Eastern stuilents for $25 for the '08
juni'or high and high school
volleyba'il and football seasons..
A,senior pass may be purchased for the '08 fai 1sports
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 volleyball matches.
An adult football pas.s
may be purchased for $25
and is gQOd for all fall junior
high and high school foot·
\i)lll games.
:: At)lletic ticket prices for
ibe 2008-09 school year for
high school and junior high
~es will be $4 for adults
~d $2 for students.

..
"
Meigs Athletic
Boosters
to meet
•

MILWAUKEE (AP) The Cleveland Cavaliers are .
getting some help for
LeBron James.
With James. in Beijing for
the Olympics, high-scoring
Milwaukee point guard Mo
Williams is headed to
Cleveland as part of a threeteam trade that also
involves Oklahoma City.
The six-player deal 'Completed Wt;:,dnesday reshapes
the rebuilding Bucks while
giving Cleveland an additional scoring threat and
Oklahoma City an instant
fan favorite in Desmond
Mason in the first year of
the franchise 's move from
Seattle.
In exchange for Williams,
who averaged 17.2 points
pe'r game last season in the
first year of a six,year,
$51.5 million contract, the
Bucks receive Damon Jones
from Cleveland along with
guard Luke Ric:!nour · and
forward Adrian Griffin from
Oklahoma City.
Oklahoma City . ~ts
Mason from Milwaukee and
former No. I pick Joe Smith

"l.t"': Is our goal... .to
:

•

Chorlene Hoelllch/photo

'

••

\

,;'

'

Please see Reds, Bl

.de you with
while
health."

.

United States' gold medal winners, from left, Michael
Phelps, Peter Vanderkaay and Ryan Lochte, hold an
Americ.an flag after the medal ceremony for the men's
4x20Q.meter freestyle relay during the swimming competi·
tions in the National Aquatics Center at the Beijing 2008
Olympics in Beijing Wednesday. ·

It finally startS to •
sink in for Phelps
BY PAUL NEWBERRY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

a

If its an antique Allis Chalmers it probably belongs to Roger Gaul of Pomeroy who has a
collection of about 20. He has these on display this week in the Thompsen-Roush build·
ing beside many other antique tractors owned by Meigs Countians.

AP photo .

Please see Trade, Bl

shoulders twitched. The
slightest of smiles ·creased
his lips .
. .
BEIJING
Michael
"Growing .up, ·I always
Phelps finally seems to be wanted to be an Olympian,"
grasping
what it all' means. Phelps said later. "I just kept
••
Maybe
started to sink in thinking ; 'Wow, greatest
:; ROCKS{'RINGS - The when the itpresident
showed Olympian of all time.' It's a
:deigs High School Athletic up at the Water Cube and · pretty cool title."
IJoosters will meet on came back for an encore.
After, winning five gold
tuesday, August 19, at 7 Maybe he got better idea medals . and setting. five
p,m. to finalize ·plans for the when all those NBA super- world records over the
~ming football season. stars Kobe Bryant· and course of four days, Phelps
;-\nyooe involved or inter- LeBron James among them · actually got a bit of a resp1te
!ls.ted .. in participating are -actually led the cheers for Thursday at the Beijing
prM\1 to attend.
·
him. Maybe it was those Games, maybe he' ll even
relentless text messages take a minute or two to
,.
from friends back home.
reflect. He merely had the
Maybe he actually lis- semifinals of the 200-meter
tened when the race individual medley in the
announcer at the pool said in morning, followed by the
' 1·740-446·2342 ext. 33
a deep, authoritative voice: preliminaries of the I00 but-·
"M1chael Phelps, greatest terfly.in the evening.
Fox - 1-740·446·3008
Olympian ever.''
The head dipped. The , Pl~ase see Phelps. Bl
aportoOmydellyMntlnel.com ,

....
t:OmAcrUs

In this
March 22
file photo,
MUwaukee
Bucks' Mo
Williams drives past
Cleveland
Cavaliers'
Damon
Jones (19)
during the
second half
of an NBA
basketball
game in
Milwaukee .
'Fhe high·
scoring
Milwaukee
point guard
Mo Williams
has been
traded to
Cleveland
as part of a
three-team
trade that
also
involves
Oklahoma
City. '

PITTSBURGH (AP) Paul Maholm threw first·
pitch strikes to 22 of the 28
batters he faced Wednesday,
a formula that led to a big
night for the left-hander.
Maholm went eight solid
innings. and Jason Michaels
and Brandon Moss homered
. to lead the Pittsburgh
Pirates past the Cincinnati
Reds 5-2.
Maholm (8-7 ). who
improved to 6-1. w1th a 3.06
ERA at PNC Park this season, allowed scl'cn hits. did·
n 't walk a batter and struck
out· five in an efficient 97pitch outing.
The game was played in a
cri sp 2 hours, 14 minut es.
"The key W&lt;~&gt; going' after
them and staying ahead in
the count," Maholm said. "I
was trying to get deep into
the game and let the load off
our bullpen."
The 25-year-old. a No. 8
overall draft pick by the
Pirates in 2003. has developed into the team 's most
reliable starter. He has a
2.8 1 ERA in his last 14
starts and has pitched at
least six innings in his past
18 outings.
·
"He's been very good for
us, obviously." Pittsburgh
manager John Russell said.

Tess Simon, MD
.Internal Medicine
• Point Pleasant Office:
Tuesdays, Thursdays &amp; Fridays
PVH Medical Office Center
2414 Jefferson Avenue ,
o Accepting New Patients
Point Pleasant, WV

·a Most Insurances Accepted
o Same Day Appointments Available

PLEASANT
VALLEY HOSPITAL
..
'

'

Tk ramt~ uf P~F~Iul(aft

�The Daily Sentinel

Page AS

FAIR SCENES

Thursday, August 14,2008

Inside
..

'

.

'
'

'

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

t\rnericans back Beijing Olympics, Page B2
O's 'top Indians, Page 83
Bills 'host' Steelers in Toronto, Page B3
US women top Mali, Page 83

. Thursday, August 14, 2008

Countdown
to Kickoff

Winebrenner widens lead in Semor League
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

MASON , W.Va . - Mick
Winebrenner of Racine has
widened his lead to II
points in the 2008 Riverside
· Senior Mens Golf League.
Mick has a total of 237.5
points to lead Paul
Somerville from Point
Pleasant in second place. In
third place is Carl Stone
with 216 points followed by
Jim Gress {20 1), Don
Waldie (185 :5), Bob Hill
(185), Haske I Jones (183 ).

Kenny Greene ( 179.5) ,
Gary Minton (I 79.5) and
Earl Johnson ( 178).
A total of 69 players were
on hand for Tuesday 's play.
There wc;re 15 foursome
_teams and three teams of
three players making 18
points possible for the day.
There was a tie for the
•best round of the day at 59
between the teams of Ken
Whited, .. Bill Buck, 'Claude
Proffitt
and
Bill
Winebrenner and Gary
Minton, Bob Wi seman.
Chct Thomas and Clark

Greene.
. There was a three way tie
· for third place with a score
of 60 betwec!n the team of
Mick Winebrenner. Bobby
Joe Roush, Phil Burton and
Jack Maloney. the team of
Paul
Maynard,
Tom
McNeely and Earl John son
and the team of Howard
Lee Miller, George Miller:
Phil Burgess and Harley
Rice.
The closest to the pin
winners were Bill Yoho on
the ninth hole and Paul
Maynard on hole No. 14.

A_,g_

Rlv.nlft Senior Stancllngo
Name

Score
237.5
226.5
216.0
201 .0
185.6
185.0
183.0

1 . Mlek Winebrenner

2. Paul Somerville
3 . Carl S10ne
4. Jim Grese ·

5. Oon Wa.ldle
5. Bob Hill
7 . H•skel Jones
6, l&lt;enny Greene

179.5

179.5
178.0

8. Gary Minton

10. Earl Johnson
11. Curus Grubb
12. Ken Whited

1n.o

170.5
169.0
168.0
181.5
159:0
157.5
157.0
156.5
156.0

13. Cecil Minton
14. Bub Stivers

15. Clarl&lt; Gr""'"'
16. Rick Northup
17. Bill Winebrenner
18. Jack Fox
19. Bucky Dont
20. Willis Dudding

Pirates
past Reds

.

.Cavs acquire Mo Williams in 3-team trade

DAYS
locAL SCHEDULE
POMEROV q

sChool

Charlene Hoeftlchlphoto

vars~

A schedule of upooming high
eporting events Involving teams

!tOm Gsllia and Meigs count~.

Heaven Westfall of Reedsville loves her goat but like many more animals at the Saturday
livestock sale, it will go to mar.ket.

Thuraday. Auguat 14
Golf
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth , 9 a.m.
River Valley at Buffalo, 10 a.m.
Frldw Augy1t 15
Golf

iOver Valley, Wellston at Jackson
(liairgreens) , 11 a.m.

· Mond1v. Aygyat 18
Golf

Kiddie tractbr pulls
are taking place .
every day at 4 p.m.
at the Meigs County
.Fair in the small
arena. The pull of
champions will come
at 10 a.m. Friday.
Here seven-year-old
Auston Colburn of
Pomeroy gives his
best effort to get the
tractor .down the
track.

Dave Harris/photo

Up and coming country music ~tar Trent Tomlinson performed before a ·large crowd
Wednesday night at the Meigs County Fair. Tomlinson had the crowd on it's feet, with mix·
lure of his hits, covers of classic country music and even mixed in some' rock and roll,
much to ,the delight of the large crowd.

River Valley, Jackson at GJlllia Academy·
(Cliffside}, 4:30p.m.
VInton County at Meigs (Pine Hills) , 10

a.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

Fall sports passes .
available at EHS

Charlene Ho.tllchlpholo

I

'

...

' '

..

..

Brian J. Raed/pholo

Pepsi Cola of Athens and WYVK sponsored kiddie games on the Meigs County Fair's mid·
way Tuesday. The limbo was just one event on the course, and prizes were. awarded.
'

.

'

•'
'

•i·

~,

·'

. I

-J.,..' \·

'

' 'c

Chertene Hoeftlch/pholo

.Over a period of many years the late Merrilee Bryant has been a faithful exhibitor at the
Meigs County Fair. She has earned many blue ribbons for her entries in the open class
displays, particularly so in the domestic arts department She recently died and in tribute
to her th.e Meigs County Senior Fair Board has placed a commemorative display in the
Roush·Thompson building along side the domestic arts exhibits. ·
Young Ty
Bissell of
Long
Bottom, a
second year
4-Her,
displays one
of his
Cornish rock
chickens
entered at
the Meigs
County Fair.
Charlene

•'

Hoeftlch/phOio

!

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
~:30 p.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
[all sports season may be
p4rchased for $50. The pass
tS good for junior high and
!Jigh school volleyball and
r~otball games.
t ·A;j:_student pass may be
pun;hased by Eastern stuilents for $25 for the '08
juni'or high and high school
volleyba'il and football seasons..
A,senior pass may be purchased for the '08 fai 1sports
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 volleyball matches.
An adult football pas.s
may be purchased for $25
and is gQOd for all fall junior
high and high school foot·
\i)lll games.
:: At)lletic ticket prices for
ibe 2008-09 school year for
high school and junior high
~es will be $4 for adults
~d $2 for students.

..
"
Meigs Athletic
Boosters
to meet
•

MILWAUKEE (AP) The Cleveland Cavaliers are .
getting some help for
LeBron James.
With James. in Beijing for
the Olympics, high-scoring
Milwaukee point guard Mo
Williams is headed to
Cleveland as part of a threeteam trade that also
involves Oklahoma City.
The six-player deal 'Completed Wt;:,dnesday reshapes
the rebuilding Bucks while
giving Cleveland an additional scoring threat and
Oklahoma City an instant
fan favorite in Desmond
Mason in the first year of
the franchise 's move from
Seattle.
In exchange for Williams,
who averaged 17.2 points
pe'r game last season in the
first year of a six,year,
$51.5 million contract, the
Bucks receive Damon Jones
from Cleveland along with
guard Luke Ric:!nour · and
forward Adrian Griffin from
Oklahoma City.
Oklahoma City . ~ts
Mason from Milwaukee and
former No. I pick Joe Smith

"l.t"': Is our goal... .to
:

•

Chorlene Hoelllch/photo

'

••

\

,;'

'

Please see Reds, Bl

.de you with
while
health."

.

United States' gold medal winners, from left, Michael
Phelps, Peter Vanderkaay and Ryan Lochte, hold an
Americ.an flag after the medal ceremony for the men's
4x20Q.meter freestyle relay during the swimming competi·
tions in the National Aquatics Center at the Beijing 2008
Olympics in Beijing Wednesday. ·

It finally startS to •
sink in for Phelps
BY PAUL NEWBERRY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

a

If its an antique Allis Chalmers it probably belongs to Roger Gaul of Pomeroy who has a
collection of about 20. He has these on display this week in the Thompsen-Roush build·
ing beside many other antique tractors owned by Meigs Countians.

AP photo .

Please see Trade, Bl

shoulders twitched. The
slightest of smiles ·creased
his lips .
. .
BEIJING
Michael
"Growing .up, ·I always
Phelps finally seems to be wanted to be an Olympian,"
grasping
what it all' means. Phelps said later. "I just kept
••
Maybe
started to sink in thinking ; 'Wow, greatest
:; ROCKS{'RINGS - The when the itpresident
showed Olympian of all time.' It's a
:deigs High School Athletic up at the Water Cube and · pretty cool title."
IJoosters will meet on came back for an encore.
After, winning five gold
tuesday, August 19, at 7 Maybe he got better idea medals . and setting. five
p,m. to finalize ·plans for the when all those NBA super- world records over the
~ming football season. stars Kobe Bryant· and course of four days, Phelps
;-\nyooe involved or inter- LeBron James among them · actually got a bit of a resp1te
!ls.ted .. in participating are -actually led the cheers for Thursday at the Beijing
prM\1 to attend.
·
him. Maybe it was those Games, maybe he' ll even
relentless text messages take a minute or two to
,.
from friends back home.
reflect. He merely had the
Maybe he actually lis- semifinals of the 200-meter
tened when the race individual medley in the
announcer at the pool said in morning, followed by the
' 1·740-446·2342 ext. 33
a deep, authoritative voice: preliminaries of the I00 but-·
"M1chael Phelps, greatest terfly.in the evening.
Fox - 1-740·446·3008
Olympian ever.''
The head dipped. The , Pl~ase see Phelps. Bl
aportoOmydellyMntlnel.com ,

....
t:OmAcrUs

In this
March 22
file photo,
MUwaukee
Bucks' Mo
Williams drives past
Cleveland
Cavaliers'
Damon
Jones (19)
during the
second half
of an NBA
basketball
game in
Milwaukee .
'Fhe high·
scoring
Milwaukee
point guard
Mo Williams
has been
traded to
Cleveland
as part of a
three-team
trade that
also
involves
Oklahoma
City. '

PITTSBURGH (AP) Paul Maholm threw first·
pitch strikes to 22 of the 28
batters he faced Wednesday,
a formula that led to a big
night for the left-hander.
Maholm went eight solid
innings. and Jason Michaels
and Brandon Moss homered
. to lead the Pittsburgh
Pirates past the Cincinnati
Reds 5-2.
Maholm (8-7 ). who
improved to 6-1. w1th a 3.06
ERA at PNC Park this season, allowed scl'cn hits. did·
n 't walk a batter and struck
out· five in an efficient 97pitch outing.
The game was played in a
cri sp 2 hours, 14 minut es.
"The key W&lt;~&gt; going' after
them and staying ahead in
the count," Maholm said. "I
was trying to get deep into
the game and let the load off
our bullpen."
The 25-year-old. a No. 8
overall draft pick by the
Pirates in 2003. has developed into the team 's most
reliable starter. He has a
2.8 1 ERA in his last 14
starts and has pitched at
least six innings in his past
18 outings.
·
"He's been very good for
us, obviously." Pittsburgh
manager John Russell said.

Tess Simon, MD
.Internal Medicine
• Point Pleasant Office:
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o Accepting New Patients
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Tk ramt~ uf P~F~Iul(aft

�•

Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday,Augustt4,2008

www .mydailysentinel.com

.~

.

.

•. Thursday; August l~, 2008

www. mydailysentinel.com

Most Americans back holding Olympics in Chin~
'

Bv

ALAN FRAM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

plans about 4,500 drug tests
and is specifically testing
suspected drug users. So' far,
more than 50 athletes are
missing due to doping accusations.
Thirty-nine percent said
they thought the smog was
having a major effect on athletes' performances, while 43
percent saw a minor impact.
Despite stark steps like shutting factories and removing 2
million vehicles from the
streets, Beijing's pollution
has been persistent, though
rain ·sunday cleared some of
it.
None of that has stopped
• many Americans from rooting hard for their athletes. By
51 percent to 45 percent,
more want the U.S. team to
return with a huge haul of
medals than are simply
enjoying athletic accomplishments without keeping score
by country. · ·
That preference, though. is
hardly uniform. Those focusing on American victories are
likelier to be white, higher
income, Republican and conservative, according to the
AP-lpsos poll. Those not primarily intere sted in the
national race for medals have
higher proportions of minorities, liberals, Democrats and
independents, ,
"Of course you're going to
root for the American team,"
said Pennie Doss, 54, a
homemaker
from
Des
Moines, Iowa. "If anybody
said any different, they'd be

lying."
Two-thirds said they were
interested in this year'S
Olympics, almost identical to
the number whb said sO
about the Athens Games.
Men and women expressll(l
interest in virtually equal
numbers.
As was true in 2004, gym: ·.
nastics was the sport people
said they would follow most
closely, with 30 percent. sayi
ing so. But the sexes
diverged : Forty-four percent
of women and 13 percent of
men said they would pay
most attention to gymnastics.
Swimming rose to No. 2
this year, named by 22 per,
cent. It switched places froni
2004 with track and field;
which 17 percent said they
would watch closest.
Swimming was most interesting to more women than to
men, and to nearly three
times as many whites as
minorities. Nearly twice as
many minorities as whites
named track as their No. I
sJ)on, and more men than
women said the same.
About half say they have
watched coverage of th~
games, with men the likelier
viewers. Seven in 10 are
mostly watching the coverage on NBC, which has th.e
broadcast rights to the games.
Yet four in I 0 are reading
Olympics stories on tlie
Internet, one in four watching
video online and one in 20
watching video on cell
phones.

shots and one of those guy s point guard, and considered · guard Rt1ssell Westbrook 1 "We're excited," said
that is capable of rising to trades in the past for Mike with the fourth pick.
Mason 's . agent, Roger
Bucks general manager Montgomery. "He's been to
important time s and obvi- Bibby and Jason Kidd, but
ously we want to be playing never made one. Williams John Hammond said he can Oklahoma City, he's familcould be that big trade , envision Ridnour thriving · iar with the people there,
in those tin\es."
in Milwaukee.
· he's familiar with the Ford
Ferry said the team let Ferry said.
"I think this is a move to
"H is • most productive Center, he 's played there,
James know of the deal
even though he' s on the be able ~,0 get a talented. days in the NBA were just a the fans loved him when he
young, 25-year-old point few shon years ago when was there. His nickname is
other side of the world.
"We ' ve communicated guard that can be part of the he had Ray Allen on one the Cowboy. It 's really
with most of the team ,'' future," said . Ferry. who wing and Rashard Lewis on apropos to con1e back. "
Oklahoma City general
Ferry said. "All these guys added that restricted free the other wing," Hammond
agent
Delonte
West
remains
said
.
"Here,
you
say
you
manager
Sam Pre &amp;ti sees
are very excited. They
in the team's plans even have Michael Redd on one the basketball benefits.
-respect Mo as a player, and with the trade.
wing and Richard Jefferson
"We understand that it 's a
they ' re looking forward to
The deal was previously on another wing, you're unique opportunit~ here
playing with him ."
reported by ES PN .com and putting Luj(e Ridnour in the specifically but we ve got
Larry Hughes was sup- media outlets in all three best possible position to be to do the best thing for. our
posed to be James· side- 'markets.
successful again as he has basketball team, and we.
ki ck, b~t couldn't fulfill" the
feel like the best thinll for
Ridnour, who aver&lt;J~ed been in the past."
role and \.vas sent to 6.4 points and four ass1sts
Mason played in college. our basketball team IS to
Chicago last year at the last season as the backup to at Oklahoma State and add some toughness and
trade deadline in a I0-play- Earl Watson in Seattle, had spent time with the Hornets some intangibles defensiveer deal. ·
faced decreased playing franchise in Oklahoma City ly for u~ at that position,"
Cleveland also has been time in Oklahoma Cny after when it was relocated after Presti said. ''It just seemed
searching for years for a the franchise drafted point Hurrieane Katrina.
like the right fit for us."

' For the Bucks, it's the
next step in an offseason .
facelift by Hammond.
Milwaukee fired coach
Larry Krystkowiak after
going 26-56 last season and
replaced him with Scott
Skiles.
The Bucks then sent Yi
Jianlian
and
Bobby
Simmons to New Jersey in
exchanlle for Jefferson on
draft mght and added forward Joe Alexander with
the eighth pick .
Milwaukee also signed
guard Tyronn Lue and forward Malik Allen in an
effort to bol ster what has
been one of the league's
worst defenses.
Griffin averaged 1.9
points in minimal playing
time after going to Seattle
from Chicago in a midsea:
·
son trade.

Wednesday highlights at Beijing Games

China tias 17 gold and 27 medals overall.
STAR
WASHINGTON - Most
Michael Phelps swam into history as the The host was helped by its monopoly of the
American' th ink 'taging the
synchronized diving events with. a domiOlympics in China was a winningest Olympic. athlete ever with his nating victory in men's 3-meter springI
Oth
and
J
lth
career
gold
medals
and
good decision despite its
board. putting it on course for a sweep of
govermhent'" human ri ghts five world records in five events at the all eight diving gold medals.
abuses. , Beij111g's· smog and Beijing Games. He won the 200-meter butthreats of attacks by mili - terfly, then swam the lea(!off of a runaway
CHINESE TAKEOUT
tants, ac~ording to·· a poll victory by the U.S. 800 free style relay
The
U.S.
men's soccer team lost 2-1 to
team , which shattered the world mark by
released Wednesday.
Nigeria
and
was
eliminated .... Cat Osterman
The ·Associated Press- more than four seconds and brought him pitched a no-)litter as the U.S. softball team
lpsos survey also found that more than halfway to his goal of a record stretched its winning streak to 16, beating
while just &lt;J\er half of eight gold medals in Beijing.
'Australia 3-0 .... Atier tying the g3)11e in the
Americans root for the U.S.
GYMNASTICS FLOP
top of the ninth, the U.S. baseball team gave
team to capture as many
up the winning run on a sacrifi~e fly by
medals as possible. nearly as
The favored U.S. women's gymnastics South Korea. and the Americans dropped
· many would rather see great team collapsed in the tinal two events, their opener 8-7 .... Eric Sh~nteau, who p11t
achievement&gt; no matter allowing China to win the gold.
· off surgery for testicular cancer to compete
where the ath letes come
at the Olympics, failed by 0.13 seconds to
from. Gymn.,stics remains
MEDALS
qualify for a spot in the 200-rneter breastthe mDst popular. sport,
In the medal battle between the U.S. and stroke. His surge1y is scheduled in two.
though swi mming has over- China, the Americans have 29 medals· weeks .... China played its first Olympic
taken track and tield as No. overall through 70 events. I0 of them gold. baseball game, losing I0-0 to Canada.
2.
By 55 per~ent to 34 per- its brutal handlin~ of Tibetan the rest of the world has been successfu l in its historic
cent, respondents said the freedom demonstrators; and influence." said Pulsipher. goal of making the world
lnternmional
Olympic ih close relat•onship. with 41, in a follow-up interview. more peaceful through
Others would have pre- spons. That was similar to
Committee's s~lection nf Sudan. which has waged a
China was the right choice savage war in D(trfur. There ferred shunning China, ' the number who said so in
rmher than a mistake. a senti - were also worries about which before the games was 2004. when the games were
ment expressea eve nly threatened attacks by an the target oJ demon strations held in the less controversial
~cross party and ideological hlamic gryup seeking inde- around the globe as the Greece, .rod to the large
hnes. The poll was conduct- pendence
for Xinjiang Olympic torch journeyed to majorities who have called
ed during the games' early . province in western China Beijing.
the competi tions good for
days, which went smooth ly, and about the capital's haze,
"1 don't thi~k we should international understanding
although an American w.as heat and humidity.
legitimize their government,. in Gallup Polls s.ince 19.48.
stabbed to death at a tourist
Among those supponing which oppresses people,"
A'bout four in 10 say they
site in an incident apparently China's seleCtion was David said Donna DiMauro, 45, a think Olympians' use of perunrelated to the Olympics.
Pulsipher. an American his- homemaker from Vineland, formance-enhancing drugs
Beijing has been a contm- tory professor from Rexburg, N.J.
like steroids is a major probvers ial choice because of Idaho.
Evcn as Russia attacked its lem, with about the same
how the communist govern·'The more the Chinese neighbor Georgia as the number calling it a minor
ment treats minorities. di s- become dependent on the games'began, 74 percent said concern. For these games,
senters and religious groups; rest of the world, the more the Olympic movement has the Olympic committee

Trade
from
Page
B1 ·
'
.
from Cleveland.
The Cavs have . long
sought a scorer to take pressure off James, who led the
NBA last season with a 30.0
scoring average .
James' lack of help was
. particularly noticeable in
Cleveland's Game 7 loss to
Boston in the Eastern
Conference
se mifinal s
when he scored 45 of the
Cavs' 92 poin.ts.
"Mo ·has the ability to
space the floor. He 'sshown
hirliself to be a good shooter." Cavaliers general manage r Oanny Ferry said. '' I
like him. He' s a competitive
player that can make big ·

Phelps
from Page Bl
By Phelps ' standards, a
rather light day.
, Just look what he did
Wednesday: In the span of
an hour, he set a world
record in the 200-meter butterll y - even though a
faulty pair of goggles tilled
with water during the race
- and then came back to
lead the tirsi 800 freesty le
relay to crack the sevenminute barrier, vinually lapping the rest of the field.
Those were the IOth and
11th gold medals of Phelps'
career. leaving Mark Spitz,
Carl Lewis &amp; Co: in the
dust. And he's sti ll aiming to
win three more before he
leaves China, which would
take down the record he
· really wants: Spitz's sevengold performance from 36
yea" ago.
Everyone else i~; just a
spectator.
·"I think he.'s undisputedly
the greatest swimmer of all
time," longtime Italian
coach Alberto Castagnetti
said. "He's stratospheric, in
technical terms and in terms
of mental preparation. I've
never seen anyone like .
him."
Castagnetti should know.
He raced against Spitz at the
Munich Games.
"Spitz was much more
limited," the coach said. "He
had two races that were: sim11111'. free~tyle and butterfly.
and he hud . a team bohln\1
him for the relays In which
even I CO!lld have won."
These are the finals Phelps
ha~ left:
- Friduy. 200 indivi\lual
medley: Teammate and feJ.
low hip·hop aficionado
Ryan Lochte certainly
makes this a potential stumbling block, considering he
put up the third-fastest time
m htstory at the U.S. tnals
last month . Then again,
Phelps set a world record in
')

that same race and will benefit from Loch~e trying to
pull off a tough double, also
racing in the 200 backstroke
on the same morning.
- Saturday, I00 butter- ·
fly·: American Jan Crocker
holds the world record, but
he set that mark three long
years ago. Phelps has won
nearly · every big race
between the two, including
the 2004 Olympics, last
year·~ world championships
and the most recent U.S. trials, where he pulled away to
an easy win. Crocker will be
well rested, however, si nee
this is his only individual
event.
- Sunday, 400 medley
relay: The U.S . .has never
actually lost thi s event at the
Olympics, the only blip on
its perfect record coming in
1980 when the Americans
boycotted. This is about as
sure of a lock as Phelps will
have at these games, though
there is always the chance of
a stll!nble. Remember
Crocker jumpi ng in too
early on a relay .exchange
during what should have
been a routine prel"ims swim
at last year's world champiot;tships? The Americans
were disqualified, denying
Phelps the chance to win an
eighth gold.
Judging by the way he 's
swimming in China, it
would likely take a similar
fluke for Phelps to miss out
on Spitz's record.
"He is just a n\)rmul person, bu1 maybe from a dif·
ferent planet," said Russia's
Alexun\ler
Sukhorukov,
fresh otf u thrashing by the
Phelps-led Americans in the
800 free relay Wedne~duy
hut still wearing a silver
medal uround his neck.
Cornel Mnrculescu. who
runs the spon's governing
body, concurred with the
intergaluctic theory.
"The problem is, we have
an
extraterrestrial,"
Marculescu said. "No one
else can win."
British swimmer Simon
Burnett has a different take,

which he shared with
American men's coach
Eddie Reese when they ran .
into each other in the cafetefrom Page B1
ria.
•
·' He was saying to me, 'l
think I've fi gu red out "When we send him out
Michael Phelps ,"' Reese there. we know we have a
said. "' He is not from anoth- good chance to win."
Corey Patterson and Jay
er planet; he is from the
homered
for
future. His father made him . Bruce
Cincinnati,
which
has
lost
and made a time machine.
Sixty years from now he is 15 of 18 games .
Just one other baserunner
an average swimmer. but he
)jas come back here to mop advanced to second a~ainst .
Maholm. ·Three Cincmnati
up."'
Science tiction aside, the hits were w.iped out by dou23-year-old from Baltimore ble plays, and third baseman
is clearly swimming off. the Andy LaRoche made two
diving stops.
.
charts in Beijing.
"The left side of their
After a six-gold perfor.
infield
is really alert
mance at the 2004 Athens
because
he's throwing
Games, Phelps needed only
sinkers
and
changeups out
live days here to surpass
Spitz, Lewis, Soviet gym- there," Cincinnati manager
nast Larysa Latynina and Dusty Baker said. "He's
Finnish runner Paavo Nurmi · been great of late, but he got
as the wimlingest Olympian some defensive help, and
they turned some double
ever.
Even when things don't plays."
Ryan Doumit had a twogo according to plan, Phelps
finds a way to o'ercome·. In run double, and Michaels
the 200 fly, .his signature and Moss !loth had two hits
stroke, his goggles filled for the Pi rate's. John
with water shortly after he Grabow pitched a scoreless
do~e in. the pool. Still, he
ninth for his third save.
glided across the surface, hi s . Josh Fogg (2-5) breezed
long arms gobbling up through the first four
water.
innings, allowing two hits,
"I couldn't see," he said. before running into trouble
"I was more or less sort of in the fifth.
counting strokes. I son of
Moss led off with a douknow .how many strokes I ble, and Michaels followed
take for 50 un\1 I was hoping with his eighth home run.
that I would "be dead-on."
Pittsburgh loaded the bases '
Phelps ripped off his gog- on two walks and a single
gles ul\er touching the wall. before Doumit " ended
'clearly perturbed, un\1 Fogg's nig~t with a drive off
rubbed the chlorine out of the top ol the right·ficld
his eyes. Then he looked ut wull that was ruled a double
the scoreboard, which becuu~e of fun Interference.
showed I minute, !12 .03 sec·
"He was pltchlni well
onds - u world re~ord by un.tll t.~ut one inning. Bilker
sixth-hundredths of a sec- satd. He had them ofl'·bal·
ond .
unce, off-stride,'and he was
Phelps held up his right changing speeds. He got the
index finger hut barely ball. up on Moss, and be, got
smiled. The fastest 200 fly behmd a dangerous h1~ter
in history wasn't up to his like Douma. He almost htt a
exacting standards.
grand slam. Wr played a
"It was a be ~ 1 time, but I good game, but that one
was just disappointed," he inning cost us."
. .
said. " I know I can go
The four-run mmng
faster."
equaled the amount of runs

Reds

.'

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

Bills 'host' Steelers in Toronto series
BY JOHN WAWROW
ASSOCIATED PRESS

. AP photo

Cleveland Indians' Asdrubal Cabrera (13) gets Baltimore Orioles' N1ck Markakis out at se.cond base and Melvin Mora at first base for the double play in the first in ning in a baseba ll
game Wednesday in Cleveland.
.

~uthrie

helps O's top Indians 6~ 1

'·CLEVELAND (AP) .leremy Guthrie blocked out
his emotions, then shut
llown hi s former team .
Guthrie ( I 0-8) went
~even innings to win his
fourth straight start, and the
Baltimore Orioles beat
Cleve land 6-1 Wednesday
,iight to snap the Indian s'
five-game winning streak.
:·" I just focused on what I
had to do, blocked things
t&gt;'ut, and the guys got some
big hits." said Guthrie,
refu sing to say he felt that
he extracted any revenge on
~h Indian s team that "put
him on waivers in January
~007.
.
~ The right-hander allowed
o'ply four hits and st~uck out
\'p~r.. s~owing the form that
l:iad Cleveland make him its
fir st-round draft pick in
2002 out of Stanford. But
C;uthrie pitched only 16
i)1nes with one start for the
Jr&lt;lians "and was claimed by
Baltimore.
"I had a sense of what this
ii1eant to him ," Orioles
f!1ana~er Dave Trembley
~aid. 'He has worked hard
tQ establish an identity as an
D.riole, but he did tell me,
~t felt good.'
•~'·Each time out, he is
~aking a statement, estab~!Shing himself as a legiti)'liate
top-of-the-order
~arter in either league . I
IJ,ink he's still got so me
"r.tJlSI"de. "
t: Guthrie gave up one run

for the fourth time in a row St. Louis on .July 26. was
and has yie lded two or called up from Triple-A
fewer in six or his last seven Bu ffalo on Fri&lt;.luy to face
start s. In I 0 s1ans si nce Toronto and held the Blue
June 24, Guthrie is "I-I wit h Jays to one run and seven
hits 1n 6 1-~ innings or a 5a 2.79 ERA.
"l'm feel in&lt;&gt; confiden t 2 win.
and have a deal of grati tu&lt;le
Guthrie picked up an
for progress ," Guthrie said. Orinlcs rntation that l1a&lt;.l
"I'm very grateful. The allow ed fo ur firsf- inning
guys got some big hits late runs in th ree strai~ ht losses
to pad the lead."
and came in witl1 a 6.13
Nick
Markakis ' · and ERA uvcrall 'ince !he AllMelvin Mora had three hit s Star break.
apiece for
Baltimore.
It was Guihric's first start
Markaki s' two-run single in and hest
performance
a four-run ninth made him · ag.linst the ln&lt;l i&lt;ins. In two
8'-for-12 with eight ·RBis in relief outings against them
"the first three games of the a year ago, ·he allowed six
~

four-game series.

rup-. in I 1-3 inning~.

Aubrey Huff had an RBI
sin,gle 'in the ninth. He
opened the Orioles' seco nd
by hitting hi s 25th homer. a
drive off Anthony Reyes (II) that landed just over the
wall and out of the reach of
a
leapin g
rightfielder
Franklin Gutierrez and centerfielder Grady Sizemore.
Kevin Millar walked and
eventually scored on a
groundout by Jay Payton to .
make it 2-0 later in the
inning.
Andy Marte opened the
Jndian s' fifth with a do11bk
to left-center and sco red on
Sizemore's one-out double
near the same spot on the
warning track.
R~ycs allowed two runs
and six hits over six innmgs
in hi s second AL start. The
right-hander. acqu ired from

··He threw th e ball great.
He was on top of his game,"
said Indians mana ger Eric
Wed~e. whn hcf~&gt;re the
game tri e"d to explain ·that
Guthrie's
prngrc"
in
Cle\cland just dicln't· matcll
up with !he Indian s'
ti metabl e. "I'm happy for
him. He's a good kid.
Sometim es 11 just isn 't a
guy's ti me with a team and
he gets away. We've got
players like that from other
teams. It happens."
Ori()les second' baseman
.l:lrian Roberts went 0-for-5
to stop hi ' hitting streak "'
14 games. He was robbed of
a hit by Cleve land second
basem .. n Asdruba l Cahrcra,
who ran ged behind the bag
in !he fifth to field a sharp
~rotJnUe r

BUFFALO, N.Y. - · The
Cowboys can have the label
of being ''America's Team."
The Buffalo Bills can go one
better as far as punter Brian
Moorman's concerned: How
about, "North America's
Team."
"Somebody's got to .be
North America's team,
right~ It might as · well be
us," Moorman said as the
Bills prepare to open a fiveyear series of games in
Toronto. The Bills' version
of "Northern Exposure"
begins Thursday. when they
"host"
the
Pittsburgh
Steelers at the downtown
Rogers Centre . The game
will be the tlrst of an eightgame series (five regular
season and three preseason).
which runs through 2012.
and will make the Bills the
NFL's first team to play regular-season games annually
outside the United States.
Buffalo will open the regular-season part of the
Toronto series on Dec . 7,
when it faces AFC East rival
Miami.
"I hope people in Toronto
welcome us," Moorman
said. ''I'm looking forward
to getting Toronto people to
believe in the Bills and make
it like a home away from
home."
In other preseason action
Thursday, Carolina plays at
Philadelphia. On Friday,
Oakland plays at Tennessee.
Saturday's
preseason
schedule feat ures Brett
Favre prepared to mak~ hi s
debut with the Jets, when
New
York
hosts
Washington, while Miami is
at Jacksonville, Indianapolis
at Atlanta. Minnesota at
Baltimore, San Diego at St.
Louis, Houston at New
Orleans, Arizona at Kansas
City,
Chicago at Seattle,
·
Dallas at Denver and Green
Bay at San Francisco.
On Sunday, Detroit is at
Cincinnati - and
New
England at Tampa Bay. On
Monday. Cleveland plays at
the New York Giants..
It's the international flavor
0f the game in Toronto that
has drawn attention from
outside two Rustbelt cities,
with the focus on how it will
1mpact the small-market

States." Halliday said, who
is selling T-shirts featuring a
Bills logo with a line slashed
.
through it.
He was encouraged that
Toronto organizers had diffi·
culty selling out the preseason game. Most of the final
2,500 seats were finally distributed on Tuesday. Tickets,
averaging at about $200, are
also still available for the
game against Miami.
Bills fans allending trainBills' efforts to remain
viable by expanding their ing camp · in suburban
reach a 90-minute drive Rochester had mixed reaction over their team losing
nonh of the border.
By establishing a foothold home games to Toronto . .
in Toronto, the Bills are hop- · "''m all for it if it helps
ing to tap into Cana(la's bring the fan base . to·. the
largest city and financial Bills," said Joe Dunham,
capital, as well as "· North from Norwich, N.Y. "It's a
America's fifth -largest mar- small-market team and I'd
ket, featuring a regional . say we need all the help we
population of about 5 mil- can get."
lion.
Sue
Fleig,
from
The move is already pay- Williamson, N.Y., was skeping off. Toronto organizers. tical.
eager to show the NFL that
"That's what I'm afraid of:
the city can host a franchi se I detinitely don't want us
of its own, are paying the losing them to Toronto."
Bills $78 million - more Fleig said.
than double the team's calThe Bill s and NFL comculated 2006 ,operating missioner Roger Goodell ·
income - for the right to have maintained that the
host the games.
Toronto series is part of the
"It's like electric around team's regionalization strathere,"
said
Anthony egy, and part of a move to
Antonelli. senior marketing keep the franchise in
director for Rogers Media, Buffalo.
the Canadian communicaMoorman is excited about
tions giant that is the series' the Bills desire to expand
main sponsor. ''People are their fan base . and he
excited that the game is accepts Goodell's assurfinally here."
ances after the commissionThat's not entirely the er addressed the team during
case.
a recent trip to training
As much buzz as there is camp.
in Toronto over becoming
With all these subplots,
part of the NFL landscape. the actual game has become
there are also concerns being secondary.
raised on both sides of the
The Steclers are focused
border.
on the debut of Byron
In Buffalo, Bills fans fear Leftwic)l, who signed last
this might be the first step of weekend after backup quarthe franchise's permanent terback Charlie Batch broke
relocation. Across Canada. .his right collarbone in a 16CFL fans are worried that 10 win over Philadelphia.
Leftwich has had only
the NFL in Toronto could
lead to the demise of the three days to get accustomed
Cana~ian three-down game.
to the Steelers offense in
Sterling Halliday, a 19- preparing to make his first
year·old college student on-tield appearance in nine
from Toronto, is organizing month s, since playing' for
an anti-NFL protest to . be Atlanta last season.
staged outside the stadium
The Bills need a better
on Thursday:
. outing from their Trent
. '.'I'm not against the NFL Edwards-led offense, which
or the Buffalo Bills, it's just sputtered during a brief
keeping the CFL alive and appearance in a 17-141oss at
the NFL in the United Washington last weekend.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 22,2008
• MEIGS • EAS,.ERN • SOUTHERN

and threw to first

to get the sp,·c·dy Roberts.

' '

Be sure To 8e

Leslie
perfect
as
US
routs
Mali
'

AP photo

Pittsburgh Pirates'· Brandon Moss, left, is greeted by teammate Luis Rivas after hitting a solo home run against the
Cincinnati Reds in the eighth inning of the baseball game lr)
Pittsburgh Wednesday. The Pirates won 5-2.
the Pirates had scored in
Notes : After the game,
Mahblm's past three starts Pittsburgh activated IB
combined.
.
Adam LaRoche (strained
"It was, big," he said. rib cage) from the 15-day
"They really picked me up. DL and sent 3B Jose
It was my job then to make Bautista
to
Triple-A
sure the momentum stayed Indianapolis. LaRoche went
with us."
6-for-1 0 in three games in a
Fog~ allowed four runs rehab
assignment with
and SIX hits in four-plus Class A Hickory.... Fogg is
innings. The right-hander, the all-time leader in victowho played for the Pirates ries at PNC Park with 20.
from 2002·05, dropped to I· Maholm is tied for second
2 with a 10.42 ERA in four with 18. ... The Pirates
starts against his former announced the signing of
team.
LHP Justin Wilson, their
"I didn't mak~ the pitches .fifth-round draft choice out
when I needed to,' Fogg of Fresno State. Wilson was
said. "After Michaels hit th~ the winning pitcher In the
home run, the inning got decldins same of this year's
away from me."
College World Serle&amp;, ,,
Moss hit a solo homer, his Pirates · SS Jack Wllaorl
first lit PNC Park, offrcllcv· miRRcd hl1 &amp;lxth 1tral1ht
er Mike Lincoln In the Ntlll't with a sore rlaht ahoul·
eighth. Nate McLouth hit dor. ,, Cinclnnntl OF Chrla
his league·lcadlna 38th Dickerson. who made hit
double and had two hits for major-league
debut
the Pirates. Second base· Tuesday, was named the
man Freddy Sanchez. both· organization's
M!nor
erect by a sore right shoul· League Player of the Month
der, returned to the starting · for July. ,, Jalbert Cabrera
lineup after pinch-hitting made his first start of the
the past two games. He season in left field for the
went O-for-4.
Reds .... l&gt;atterson's home
Jeff Keppinger broke out run came on his 29th birth•
of a 4-for-37 slump· with day, and ,Bruce's shot
two singles for the Reds:
snapped an 0-for-11 streak.
·~

.

I

: ' BEIJING (AP) - Lisa
lLe.slie set a. U.S. Olympic
kccord going 7-for-7 from
J!ie field as the women 's
, team continued its unblemi~hed
run through the
Beijing Games with a 97-41
v'ictory aga inst" Mali:
Leslie finished with 16
. )lOints as the U.S. won its
' · ;)~th straight Olympic contest; the last loss was against
tlJe Unified Team in the
semifi nal s of the . 1992
Barcelona Games. The
Americans have run ,aver
their first three opponents
"' inning by an average of 47
points. They routed the
G:zech Republic, China, and
rrow Mali.
, Katie Smith . (2000) and
)'likki McCray ( 1996) held
1he record for highest field
gmli percentage, each going
6-for-6 from the held . The
0.s. plays Spain next on
Friday.
·Mali was missing it's top
player Hamchetou Maiga~a of the Ho(lston Comets,
wh,l injured her ankle in a
l~Jss to· the Czech Republic
pn Monday. Even with
/l-1aiga-Ba , the winless M?li
t~am would have been hardpressed to be compet!tive
:,~gains! the U.S.
, However, for a brief twominute stretch in the first
q~rarter Mali gave its fans
~!mething to cheer about.
:{:tailing 7-0. Mali rattled off
eight straight points. hitting
two
deep . 3-pointers.
Aminata Sininta's 3 with
5:3~ left in the period gave

Mali an 8-7 lead and forced
U.S. coach Anne Donovan
to call a timeout.
The numerous Mali fan s
in attendance started snapp.ing pictures of the overhead scoreboard and cheering their team 's lead.
It didn 't la st long as the
Americans responded with
a 17-4 run to close the quarter as seven dillerent players scored. The U.S. D-0)
conti nued the spurt scoring
the first eight points of the
seco nd quarter to hu i ld the
advantage to 32- 12 and led
51 -28 at the half. It was
only thai close as Mali hit
five 3-poi'nters, includin g
three by Sininta.
· The U.S. outscored Ma li
25-5 in the third yuartcr and
the on ly suspense left was
whether Candace Par ker.
Leslie. or Sylvia Fowles

wo ul d become the first
woman to dunk in Olympic
competi ti on. Th~ trio h~v c
all dunked in either collc&lt;&gt;e
e
or the WNBA and Fowles

-

lfl00/

'

wa:-. throwing down slams
i 11 pregam e warm ups to the

delight of tl1e crowcl.
Sminta led Mali (0-3)
with 13 po int ,.
Seimone Augustus added
12 point s for lhe U.S.,
which . had five players
score in double figures .
Tina Thompson . Parker,
and Cappie Pondexter each
had 10. ,
In
other
games
Wednesday. Spain beat the
Czech Repuhli c 74-55,
Russia topped Belarus 71 65. Latvia edged Brazil 7978, China bea t New
Ze&lt;1l:md
S0-63,
and
Austral ia routed South
Korea 90-62.

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Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday,Augustt4,2008

www .mydailysentinel.com

.~

.

.

•. Thursday; August l~, 2008

www. mydailysentinel.com

Most Americans back holding Olympics in Chin~
'

Bv

ALAN FRAM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

plans about 4,500 drug tests
and is specifically testing
suspected drug users. So' far,
more than 50 athletes are
missing due to doping accusations.
Thirty-nine percent said
they thought the smog was
having a major effect on athletes' performances, while 43
percent saw a minor impact.
Despite stark steps like shutting factories and removing 2
million vehicles from the
streets, Beijing's pollution
has been persistent, though
rain ·sunday cleared some of
it.
None of that has stopped
• many Americans from rooting hard for their athletes. By
51 percent to 45 percent,
more want the U.S. team to
return with a huge haul of
medals than are simply
enjoying athletic accomplishments without keeping score
by country. · ·
That preference, though. is
hardly uniform. Those focusing on American victories are
likelier to be white, higher
income, Republican and conservative, according to the
AP-lpsos poll. Those not primarily intere sted in the
national race for medals have
higher proportions of minorities, liberals, Democrats and
independents, ,
"Of course you're going to
root for the American team,"
said Pennie Doss, 54, a
homemaker
from
Des
Moines, Iowa. "If anybody
said any different, they'd be

lying."
Two-thirds said they were
interested in this year'S
Olympics, almost identical to
the number whb said sO
about the Athens Games.
Men and women expressll(l
interest in virtually equal
numbers.
As was true in 2004, gym: ·.
nastics was the sport people
said they would follow most
closely, with 30 percent. sayi
ing so. But the sexes
diverged : Forty-four percent
of women and 13 percent of
men said they would pay
most attention to gymnastics.
Swimming rose to No. 2
this year, named by 22 per,
cent. It switched places froni
2004 with track and field;
which 17 percent said they
would watch closest.
Swimming was most interesting to more women than to
men, and to nearly three
times as many whites as
minorities. Nearly twice as
many minorities as whites
named track as their No. I
sJ)on, and more men than
women said the same.
About half say they have
watched coverage of th~
games, with men the likelier
viewers. Seven in 10 are
mostly watching the coverage on NBC, which has th.e
broadcast rights to the games.
Yet four in I 0 are reading
Olympics stories on tlie
Internet, one in four watching
video online and one in 20
watching video on cell
phones.

shots and one of those guy s point guard, and considered · guard Rt1ssell Westbrook 1 "We're excited," said
that is capable of rising to trades in the past for Mike with the fourth pick.
Mason 's . agent, Roger
Bucks general manager Montgomery. "He's been to
important time s and obvi- Bibby and Jason Kidd, but
ously we want to be playing never made one. Williams John Hammond said he can Oklahoma City, he's familcould be that big trade , envision Ridnour thriving · iar with the people there,
in those tin\es."
in Milwaukee.
· he's familiar with the Ford
Ferry said the team let Ferry said.
"I think this is a move to
"H is • most productive Center, he 's played there,
James know of the deal
even though he' s on the be able ~,0 get a talented. days in the NBA were just a the fans loved him when he
young, 25-year-old point few shon years ago when was there. His nickname is
other side of the world.
"We ' ve communicated guard that can be part of the he had Ray Allen on one the Cowboy. It 's really
with most of the team ,'' future," said . Ferry. who wing and Rashard Lewis on apropos to con1e back. "
Oklahoma City general
Ferry said. "All these guys added that restricted free the other wing," Hammond
agent
Delonte
West
remains
said
.
"Here,
you
say
you
manager
Sam Pre &amp;ti sees
are very excited. They
in the team's plans even have Michael Redd on one the basketball benefits.
-respect Mo as a player, and with the trade.
wing and Richard Jefferson
"We understand that it 's a
they ' re looking forward to
The deal was previously on another wing, you're unique opportunit~ here
playing with him ."
reported by ES PN .com and putting Luj(e Ridnour in the specifically but we ve got
Larry Hughes was sup- media outlets in all three best possible position to be to do the best thing for. our
posed to be James· side- 'markets.
successful again as he has basketball team, and we.
ki ck, b~t couldn't fulfill" the
feel like the best thinll for
Ridnour, who aver&lt;J~ed been in the past."
role and \.vas sent to 6.4 points and four ass1sts
Mason played in college. our basketball team IS to
Chicago last year at the last season as the backup to at Oklahoma State and add some toughness and
trade deadline in a I0-play- Earl Watson in Seattle, had spent time with the Hornets some intangibles defensiveer deal. ·
faced decreased playing franchise in Oklahoma City ly for u~ at that position,"
Cleveland also has been time in Oklahoma Cny after when it was relocated after Presti said. ''It just seemed
searching for years for a the franchise drafted point Hurrieane Katrina.
like the right fit for us."

' For the Bucks, it's the
next step in an offseason .
facelift by Hammond.
Milwaukee fired coach
Larry Krystkowiak after
going 26-56 last season and
replaced him with Scott
Skiles.
The Bucks then sent Yi
Jianlian
and
Bobby
Simmons to New Jersey in
exchanlle for Jefferson on
draft mght and added forward Joe Alexander with
the eighth pick .
Milwaukee also signed
guard Tyronn Lue and forward Malik Allen in an
effort to bol ster what has
been one of the league's
worst defenses.
Griffin averaged 1.9
points in minimal playing
time after going to Seattle
from Chicago in a midsea:
·
son trade.

Wednesday highlights at Beijing Games

China tias 17 gold and 27 medals overall.
STAR
WASHINGTON - Most
Michael Phelps swam into history as the The host was helped by its monopoly of the
American' th ink 'taging the
synchronized diving events with. a domiOlympics in China was a winningest Olympic. athlete ever with his nating victory in men's 3-meter springI
Oth
and
J
lth
career
gold
medals
and
good decision despite its
board. putting it on course for a sweep of
govermhent'" human ri ghts five world records in five events at the all eight diving gold medals.
abuses. , Beij111g's· smog and Beijing Games. He won the 200-meter butthreats of attacks by mili - terfly, then swam the lea(!off of a runaway
CHINESE TAKEOUT
tants, ac~ording to·· a poll victory by the U.S. 800 free style relay
The
U.S.
men's soccer team lost 2-1 to
team , which shattered the world mark by
released Wednesday.
Nigeria
and
was
eliminated .... Cat Osterman
The ·Associated Press- more than four seconds and brought him pitched a no-)litter as the U.S. softball team
lpsos survey also found that more than halfway to his goal of a record stretched its winning streak to 16, beating
while just &lt;J\er half of eight gold medals in Beijing.
'Australia 3-0 .... Atier tying the g3)11e in the
Americans root for the U.S.
GYMNASTICS FLOP
top of the ninth, the U.S. baseball team gave
team to capture as many
up the winning run on a sacrifi~e fly by
medals as possible. nearly as
The favored U.S. women's gymnastics South Korea. and the Americans dropped
· many would rather see great team collapsed in the tinal two events, their opener 8-7 .... Eric Sh~nteau, who p11t
achievement&gt; no matter allowing China to win the gold.
· off surgery for testicular cancer to compete
where the ath letes come
at the Olympics, failed by 0.13 seconds to
from. Gymn.,stics remains
MEDALS
qualify for a spot in the 200-rneter breastthe mDst popular. sport,
In the medal battle between the U.S. and stroke. His surge1y is scheduled in two.
though swi mming has over- China, the Americans have 29 medals· weeks .... China played its first Olympic
taken track and tield as No. overall through 70 events. I0 of them gold. baseball game, losing I0-0 to Canada.
2.
By 55 per~ent to 34 per- its brutal handlin~ of Tibetan the rest of the world has been successfu l in its historic
cent, respondents said the freedom demonstrators; and influence." said Pulsipher. goal of making the world
lnternmional
Olympic ih close relat•onship. with 41, in a follow-up interview. more peaceful through
Others would have pre- spons. That was similar to
Committee's s~lection nf Sudan. which has waged a
China was the right choice savage war in D(trfur. There ferred shunning China, ' the number who said so in
rmher than a mistake. a senti - were also worries about which before the games was 2004. when the games were
ment expressea eve nly threatened attacks by an the target oJ demon strations held in the less controversial
~cross party and ideological hlamic gryup seeking inde- around the globe as the Greece, .rod to the large
hnes. The poll was conduct- pendence
for Xinjiang Olympic torch journeyed to majorities who have called
ed during the games' early . province in western China Beijing.
the competi tions good for
days, which went smooth ly, and about the capital's haze,
"1 don't thi~k we should international understanding
although an American w.as heat and humidity.
legitimize their government,. in Gallup Polls s.ince 19.48.
stabbed to death at a tourist
Among those supponing which oppresses people,"
A'bout four in 10 say they
site in an incident apparently China's seleCtion was David said Donna DiMauro, 45, a think Olympians' use of perunrelated to the Olympics.
Pulsipher. an American his- homemaker from Vineland, formance-enhancing drugs
Beijing has been a contm- tory professor from Rexburg, N.J.
like steroids is a major probvers ial choice because of Idaho.
Evcn as Russia attacked its lem, with about the same
how the communist govern·'The more the Chinese neighbor Georgia as the number calling it a minor
ment treats minorities. di s- become dependent on the games'began, 74 percent said concern. For these games,
senters and religious groups; rest of the world, the more the Olympic movement has the Olympic committee

Trade
from
Page
B1 ·
'
.
from Cleveland.
The Cavs have . long
sought a scorer to take pressure off James, who led the
NBA last season with a 30.0
scoring average .
James' lack of help was
. particularly noticeable in
Cleveland's Game 7 loss to
Boston in the Eastern
Conference
se mifinal s
when he scored 45 of the
Cavs' 92 poin.ts.
"Mo ·has the ability to
space the floor. He 'sshown
hirliself to be a good shooter." Cavaliers general manage r Oanny Ferry said. '' I
like him. He' s a competitive
player that can make big ·

Phelps
from Page Bl
By Phelps ' standards, a
rather light day.
, Just look what he did
Wednesday: In the span of
an hour, he set a world
record in the 200-meter butterll y - even though a
faulty pair of goggles tilled
with water during the race
- and then came back to
lead the tirsi 800 freesty le
relay to crack the sevenminute barrier, vinually lapping the rest of the field.
Those were the IOth and
11th gold medals of Phelps'
career. leaving Mark Spitz,
Carl Lewis &amp; Co: in the
dust. And he's sti ll aiming to
win three more before he
leaves China, which would
take down the record he
· really wants: Spitz's sevengold performance from 36
yea" ago.
Everyone else i~; just a
spectator.
·"I think he.'s undisputedly
the greatest swimmer of all
time," longtime Italian
coach Alberto Castagnetti
said. "He's stratospheric, in
technical terms and in terms
of mental preparation. I've
never seen anyone like .
him."
Castagnetti should know.
He raced against Spitz at the
Munich Games.
"Spitz was much more
limited," the coach said. "He
had two races that were: sim11111'. free~tyle and butterfly.
and he hud . a team bohln\1
him for the relays In which
even I CO!lld have won."
These are the finals Phelps
ha~ left:
- Friduy. 200 indivi\lual
medley: Teammate and feJ.
low hip·hop aficionado
Ryan Lochte certainly
makes this a potential stumbling block, considering he
put up the third-fastest time
m htstory at the U.S. tnals
last month . Then again,
Phelps set a world record in
')

that same race and will benefit from Loch~e trying to
pull off a tough double, also
racing in the 200 backstroke
on the same morning.
- Saturday, I00 butter- ·
fly·: American Jan Crocker
holds the world record, but
he set that mark three long
years ago. Phelps has won
nearly · every big race
between the two, including
the 2004 Olympics, last
year·~ world championships
and the most recent U.S. trials, where he pulled away to
an easy win. Crocker will be
well rested, however, si nee
this is his only individual
event.
- Sunday, 400 medley
relay: The U.S . .has never
actually lost thi s event at the
Olympics, the only blip on
its perfect record coming in
1980 when the Americans
boycotted. This is about as
sure of a lock as Phelps will
have at these games, though
there is always the chance of
a stll!nble. Remember
Crocker jumpi ng in too
early on a relay .exchange
during what should have
been a routine prel"ims swim
at last year's world champiot;tships? The Americans
were disqualified, denying
Phelps the chance to win an
eighth gold.
Judging by the way he 's
swimming in China, it
would likely take a similar
fluke for Phelps to miss out
on Spitz's record.
"He is just a n\)rmul person, bu1 maybe from a dif·
ferent planet," said Russia's
Alexun\ler
Sukhorukov,
fresh otf u thrashing by the
Phelps-led Americans in the
800 free relay Wedne~duy
hut still wearing a silver
medal uround his neck.
Cornel Mnrculescu. who
runs the spon's governing
body, concurred with the
intergaluctic theory.
"The problem is, we have
an
extraterrestrial,"
Marculescu said. "No one
else can win."
British swimmer Simon
Burnett has a different take,

which he shared with
American men's coach
Eddie Reese when they ran .
into each other in the cafetefrom Page B1
ria.
•
·' He was saying to me, 'l
think I've fi gu red out "When we send him out
Michael Phelps ,"' Reese there. we know we have a
said. "' He is not from anoth- good chance to win."
Corey Patterson and Jay
er planet; he is from the
homered
for
future. His father made him . Bruce
Cincinnati,
which
has
lost
and made a time machine.
Sixty years from now he is 15 of 18 games .
Just one other baserunner
an average swimmer. but he
)jas come back here to mop advanced to second a~ainst .
Maholm. ·Three Cincmnati
up."'
Science tiction aside, the hits were w.iped out by dou23-year-old from Baltimore ble plays, and third baseman
is clearly swimming off. the Andy LaRoche made two
diving stops.
.
charts in Beijing.
"The left side of their
After a six-gold perfor.
infield
is really alert
mance at the 2004 Athens
because
he's throwing
Games, Phelps needed only
sinkers
and
changeups out
live days here to surpass
Spitz, Lewis, Soviet gym- there," Cincinnati manager
nast Larysa Latynina and Dusty Baker said. "He's
Finnish runner Paavo Nurmi · been great of late, but he got
as the wimlingest Olympian some defensive help, and
they turned some double
ever.
Even when things don't plays."
Ryan Doumit had a twogo according to plan, Phelps
finds a way to o'ercome·. In run double, and Michaels
the 200 fly, .his signature and Moss !loth had two hits
stroke, his goggles filled for the Pi rate's. John
with water shortly after he Grabow pitched a scoreless
do~e in. the pool. Still, he
ninth for his third save.
glided across the surface, hi s . Josh Fogg (2-5) breezed
long arms gobbling up through the first four
water.
innings, allowing two hits,
"I couldn't see," he said. before running into trouble
"I was more or less sort of in the fifth.
counting strokes. I son of
Moss led off with a douknow .how many strokes I ble, and Michaels followed
take for 50 un\1 I was hoping with his eighth home run.
that I would "be dead-on."
Pittsburgh loaded the bases '
Phelps ripped off his gog- on two walks and a single
gles ul\er touching the wall. before Doumit " ended
'clearly perturbed, un\1 Fogg's nig~t with a drive off
rubbed the chlorine out of the top ol the right·ficld
his eyes. Then he looked ut wull that was ruled a double
the scoreboard, which becuu~e of fun Interference.
showed I minute, !12 .03 sec·
"He was pltchlni well
onds - u world re~ord by un.tll t.~ut one inning. Bilker
sixth-hundredths of a sec- satd. He had them ofl'·bal·
ond .
unce, off-stride,'and he was
Phelps held up his right changing speeds. He got the
index finger hut barely ball. up on Moss, and be, got
smiled. The fastest 200 fly behmd a dangerous h1~ter
in history wasn't up to his like Douma. He almost htt a
exacting standards.
grand slam. Wr played a
"It was a be ~ 1 time, but I good game, but that one
was just disappointed," he inning cost us."
. .
said. " I know I can go
The four-run mmng
faster."
equaled the amount of runs

Reds

.'

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

Bills 'host' Steelers in Toronto series
BY JOHN WAWROW
ASSOCIATED PRESS

. AP photo

Cleveland Indians' Asdrubal Cabrera (13) gets Baltimore Orioles' N1ck Markakis out at se.cond base and Melvin Mora at first base for the double play in the first in ning in a baseba ll
game Wednesday in Cleveland.
.

~uthrie

helps O's top Indians 6~ 1

'·CLEVELAND (AP) .leremy Guthrie blocked out
his emotions, then shut
llown hi s former team .
Guthrie ( I 0-8) went
~even innings to win his
fourth straight start, and the
Baltimore Orioles beat
Cleve land 6-1 Wednesday
,iight to snap the Indian s'
five-game winning streak.
:·" I just focused on what I
had to do, blocked things
t&gt;'ut, and the guys got some
big hits." said Guthrie,
refu sing to say he felt that
he extracted any revenge on
~h Indian s team that "put
him on waivers in January
~007.
.
~ The right-hander allowed
o'ply four hits and st~uck out
\'p~r.. s~owing the form that
l:iad Cleveland make him its
fir st-round draft pick in
2002 out of Stanford. But
C;uthrie pitched only 16
i)1nes with one start for the
Jr&lt;lians "and was claimed by
Baltimore.
"I had a sense of what this
ii1eant to him ," Orioles
f!1ana~er Dave Trembley
~aid. 'He has worked hard
tQ establish an identity as an
D.riole, but he did tell me,
~t felt good.'
•~'·Each time out, he is
~aking a statement, estab~!Shing himself as a legiti)'liate
top-of-the-order
~arter in either league . I
IJ,ink he's still got so me
"r.tJlSI"de. "
t: Guthrie gave up one run

for the fourth time in a row St. Louis on .July 26. was
and has yie lded two or called up from Triple-A
fewer in six or his last seven Bu ffalo on Fri&lt;.luy to face
start s. In I 0 s1ans si nce Toronto and held the Blue
June 24, Guthrie is "I-I wit h Jays to one run and seven
hits 1n 6 1-~ innings or a 5a 2.79 ERA.
"l'm feel in&lt;&gt; confiden t 2 win.
and have a deal of grati tu&lt;le
Guthrie picked up an
for progress ," Guthrie said. Orinlcs rntation that l1a&lt;.l
"I'm very grateful. The allow ed fo ur firsf- inning
guys got some big hits late runs in th ree strai~ ht losses
to pad the lead."
and came in witl1 a 6.13
Nick
Markakis ' · and ERA uvcrall 'ince !he AllMelvin Mora had three hit s Star break.
apiece for
Baltimore.
It was Guihric's first start
Markaki s' two-run single in and hest
performance
a four-run ninth made him · ag.linst the ln&lt;l i&lt;ins. In two
8'-for-12 with eight ·RBis in relief outings against them
"the first three games of the a year ago, ·he allowed six
~

four-game series.

rup-. in I 1-3 inning~.

Aubrey Huff had an RBI
sin,gle 'in the ninth. He
opened the Orioles' seco nd
by hitting hi s 25th homer. a
drive off Anthony Reyes (II) that landed just over the
wall and out of the reach of
a
leapin g
rightfielder
Franklin Gutierrez and centerfielder Grady Sizemore.
Kevin Millar walked and
eventually scored on a
groundout by Jay Payton to .
make it 2-0 later in the
inning.
Andy Marte opened the
Jndian s' fifth with a do11bk
to left-center and sco red on
Sizemore's one-out double
near the same spot on the
warning track.
R~ycs allowed two runs
and six hits over six innmgs
in hi s second AL start. The
right-hander. acqu ired from

··He threw th e ball great.
He was on top of his game,"
said Indians mana ger Eric
Wed~e. whn hcf~&gt;re the
game tri e"d to explain ·that
Guthrie's
prngrc"
in
Cle\cland just dicln't· matcll
up with !he Indian s'
ti metabl e. "I'm happy for
him. He's a good kid.
Sometim es 11 just isn 't a
guy's ti me with a team and
he gets away. We've got
players like that from other
teams. It happens."
Ori()les second' baseman
.l:lrian Roberts went 0-for-5
to stop hi ' hitting streak "'
14 games. He was robbed of
a hit by Cleve land second
basem .. n Asdruba l Cahrcra,
who ran ged behind the bag
in !he fifth to field a sharp
~rotJnUe r

BUFFALO, N.Y. - · The
Cowboys can have the label
of being ''America's Team."
The Buffalo Bills can go one
better as far as punter Brian
Moorman's concerned: How
about, "North America's
Team."
"Somebody's got to .be
North America's team,
right~ It might as · well be
us," Moorman said as the
Bills prepare to open a fiveyear series of games in
Toronto. The Bills' version
of "Northern Exposure"
begins Thursday. when they
"host"
the
Pittsburgh
Steelers at the downtown
Rogers Centre . The game
will be the tlrst of an eightgame series (five regular
season and three preseason).
which runs through 2012.
and will make the Bills the
NFL's first team to play regular-season games annually
outside the United States.
Buffalo will open the regular-season part of the
Toronto series on Dec . 7,
when it faces AFC East rival
Miami.
"I hope people in Toronto
welcome us," Moorman
said. ''I'm looking forward
to getting Toronto people to
believe in the Bills and make
it like a home away from
home."
In other preseason action
Thursday, Carolina plays at
Philadelphia. On Friday,
Oakland plays at Tennessee.
Saturday's
preseason
schedule feat ures Brett
Favre prepared to mak~ hi s
debut with the Jets, when
New
York
hosts
Washington, while Miami is
at Jacksonville, Indianapolis
at Atlanta. Minnesota at
Baltimore, San Diego at St.
Louis, Houston at New
Orleans, Arizona at Kansas
City,
Chicago at Seattle,
·
Dallas at Denver and Green
Bay at San Francisco.
On Sunday, Detroit is at
Cincinnati - and
New
England at Tampa Bay. On
Monday. Cleveland plays at
the New York Giants..
It's the international flavor
0f the game in Toronto that
has drawn attention from
outside two Rustbelt cities,
with the focus on how it will
1mpact the small-market

States." Halliday said, who
is selling T-shirts featuring a
Bills logo with a line slashed
.
through it.
He was encouraged that
Toronto organizers had diffi·
culty selling out the preseason game. Most of the final
2,500 seats were finally distributed on Tuesday. Tickets,
averaging at about $200, are
also still available for the
game against Miami.
Bills fans allending trainBills' efforts to remain
viable by expanding their ing camp · in suburban
reach a 90-minute drive Rochester had mixed reaction over their team losing
nonh of the border.
By establishing a foothold home games to Toronto . .
in Toronto, the Bills are hop- · "''m all for it if it helps
ing to tap into Cana(la's bring the fan base . to·. the
largest city and financial Bills," said Joe Dunham,
capital, as well as "· North from Norwich, N.Y. "It's a
America's fifth -largest mar- small-market team and I'd
ket, featuring a regional . say we need all the help we
population of about 5 mil- can get."
lion.
Sue
Fleig,
from
The move is already pay- Williamson, N.Y., was skeping off. Toronto organizers. tical.
eager to show the NFL that
"That's what I'm afraid of:
the city can host a franchi se I detinitely don't want us
of its own, are paying the losing them to Toronto."
Bills $78 million - more Fleig said.
than double the team's calThe Bill s and NFL comculated 2006 ,operating missioner Roger Goodell ·
income - for the right to have maintained that the
host the games.
Toronto series is part of the
"It's like electric around team's regionalization strathere,"
said
Anthony egy, and part of a move to
Antonelli. senior marketing keep the franchise in
director for Rogers Media, Buffalo.
the Canadian communicaMoorman is excited about
tions giant that is the series' the Bills desire to expand
main sponsor. ''People are their fan base . and he
excited that the game is accepts Goodell's assurfinally here."
ances after the commissionThat's not entirely the er addressed the team during
case.
a recent trip to training
As much buzz as there is camp.
in Toronto over becoming
With all these subplots,
part of the NFL landscape. the actual game has become
there are also concerns being secondary.
raised on both sides of the
The Steclers are focused
border.
on the debut of Byron
In Buffalo, Bills fans fear Leftwic)l, who signed last
this might be the first step of weekend after backup quarthe franchise's permanent terback Charlie Batch broke
relocation. Across Canada. .his right collarbone in a 16CFL fans are worried that 10 win over Philadelphia.
Leftwich has had only
the NFL in Toronto could
lead to the demise of the three days to get accustomed
Cana~ian three-down game.
to the Steelers offense in
Sterling Halliday, a 19- preparing to make his first
year·old college student on-tield appearance in nine
from Toronto, is organizing month s, since playing' for
an anti-NFL protest to . be Atlanta last season.
staged outside the stadium
The Bills need a better
on Thursday:
. outing from their Trent
. '.'I'm not against the NFL Edwards-led offense, which
or the Buffalo Bills, it's just sputtered during a brief
keeping the CFL alive and appearance in a 17-141oss at
the NFL in the United Washington last weekend.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 22,2008
• MEIGS • EAS,.ERN • SOUTHERN

and threw to first

to get the sp,·c·dy Roberts.

' '

Be sure To 8e

Leslie
perfect
as
US
routs
Mali
'

AP photo

Pittsburgh Pirates'· Brandon Moss, left, is greeted by teammate Luis Rivas after hitting a solo home run against the
Cincinnati Reds in the eighth inning of the baseball game lr)
Pittsburgh Wednesday. The Pirates won 5-2.
the Pirates had scored in
Notes : After the game,
Mahblm's past three starts Pittsburgh activated IB
combined.
.
Adam LaRoche (strained
"It was, big," he said. rib cage) from the 15-day
"They really picked me up. DL and sent 3B Jose
It was my job then to make Bautista
to
Triple-A
sure the momentum stayed Indianapolis. LaRoche went
with us."
6-for-1 0 in three games in a
Fog~ allowed four runs rehab
assignment with
and SIX hits in four-plus Class A Hickory.... Fogg is
innings. The right-hander, the all-time leader in victowho played for the Pirates ries at PNC Park with 20.
from 2002·05, dropped to I· Maholm is tied for second
2 with a 10.42 ERA in four with 18. ... The Pirates
starts against his former announced the signing of
team.
LHP Justin Wilson, their
"I didn't mak~ the pitches .fifth-round draft choice out
when I needed to,' Fogg of Fresno State. Wilson was
said. "After Michaels hit th~ the winning pitcher In the
home run, the inning got decldins same of this year's
away from me."
College World Serle&amp;, ,,
Moss hit a solo homer, his Pirates · SS Jack Wllaorl
first lit PNC Park, offrcllcv· miRRcd hl1 &amp;lxth 1tral1ht
er Mike Lincoln In the Ntlll't with a sore rlaht ahoul·
eighth. Nate McLouth hit dor. ,, Cinclnnntl OF Chrla
his league·lcadlna 38th Dickerson. who made hit
double and had two hits for major-league
debut
the Pirates. Second base· Tuesday, was named the
man Freddy Sanchez. both· organization's
M!nor
erect by a sore right shoul· League Player of the Month
der, returned to the starting · for July. ,, Jalbert Cabrera
lineup after pinch-hitting made his first start of the
the past two games. He season in left field for the
went O-for-4.
Reds .... l&gt;atterson's home
Jeff Keppinger broke out run came on his 29th birth•
of a 4-for-37 slump· with day, and ,Bruce's shot
two singles for the Reds:
snapped an 0-for-11 streak.
·~

.

I

: ' BEIJING (AP) - Lisa
lLe.slie set a. U.S. Olympic
kccord going 7-for-7 from
J!ie field as the women 's
, team continued its unblemi~hed
run through the
Beijing Games with a 97-41
v'ictory aga inst" Mali:
Leslie finished with 16
. )lOints as the U.S. won its
' · ;)~th straight Olympic contest; the last loss was against
tlJe Unified Team in the
semifi nal s of the . 1992
Barcelona Games. The
Americans have run ,aver
their first three opponents
"' inning by an average of 47
points. They routed the
G:zech Republic, China, and
rrow Mali.
, Katie Smith . (2000) and
)'likki McCray ( 1996) held
1he record for highest field
gmli percentage, each going
6-for-6 from the held . The
0.s. plays Spain next on
Friday.
·Mali was missing it's top
player Hamchetou Maiga~a of the Ho(lston Comets,
wh,l injured her ankle in a
l~Jss to· the Czech Republic
pn Monday. Even with
/l-1aiga-Ba , the winless M?li
t~am would have been hardpressed to be compet!tive
:,~gains! the U.S.
, However, for a brief twominute stretch in the first
q~rarter Mali gave its fans
~!mething to cheer about.
:{:tailing 7-0. Mali rattled off
eight straight points. hitting
two
deep . 3-pointers.
Aminata Sininta's 3 with
5:3~ left in the period gave

Mali an 8-7 lead and forced
U.S. coach Anne Donovan
to call a timeout.
The numerous Mali fan s
in attendance started snapp.ing pictures of the overhead scoreboard and cheering their team 's lead.
It didn 't la st long as the
Americans responded with
a 17-4 run to close the quarter as seven dillerent players scored. The U.S. D-0)
conti nued the spurt scoring
the first eight points of the
seco nd quarter to hu i ld the
advantage to 32- 12 and led
51 -28 at the half. It was
only thai close as Mali hit
five 3-poi'nters, includin g
three by Sininta.
· The U.S. outscored Ma li
25-5 in the third yuartcr and
the on ly suspense left was
whether Candace Par ker.
Leslie. or Sylvia Fowles

wo ul d become the first
woman to dunk in Olympic
competi ti on. Th~ trio h~v c
all dunked in either collc&lt;&gt;e
e
or the WNBA and Fowles

-

lfl00/

'

wa:-. throwing down slams
i 11 pregam e warm ups to the

delight of tl1e crowcl.
Sminta led Mali (0-3)
with 13 po int ,.
Seimone Augustus added
12 point s for lhe U.S.,
which . had five players
score in double figures .
Tina Thompson . Parker,
and Cappie Pondexter each
had 10. ,
In
other
games
Wednesday. Spain beat the
Czech Repuhli c 74-55,
Russia topped Belarus 71 65. Latvia edged Brazil 7978, China bea t New
Ze&lt;1l:md
S0-63,
and
Austral ia routed South
Korea 90-62.

lprlnbo 111100 tu Willi
$11100 to Willi

;

Part Of This
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ADVERTISING DEADLINE- Thursday, AUGUST 14,2008- 5:00P.M.

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Thursday, August14, 2008

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Overbrook Reh abrlttat1cin Gallipoli s Career College
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Ma1ntenance Asststant. Th1s
1-800-2 14-04 52
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and able to work independ· ·
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forward re sume. including
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Sat. 8/16, 9am-5pm. 2742.
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tools. co llectible dishes. ,___ _ _ _ _ _ _,.; ~--------" ,___ _ _ _ _ _ _,.; accepttng applt cat1 ons fo r
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lamps. old irons, trun ks.
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sewing
machine. trg mixer, rototi ller.
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Aides (A s-needed substltute basis ): Buckeye Hill s
Career Cen ter is now
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Contact
the
Superintendent's Office at
740-245-5334. EOE
Altera tion pe rson needed
full trme at Dukes C leaners
2419 Jackson Ave . Apply in
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and product orders. Also
se rv
recru it voluntee rs lor
FOS TER PAREN TS AN D non-proi11organizat ions that
RESPIT E
PROVIDER S help save lives and preve nt
diseases such as cance,r.
NEEDED, become state
lung and heart disease!
licensed by attending train ·

An Exce llent way to earn
H uge yard safe- antique money. The New Avon .
ings held on Satur.days
tools, house hold items, Call Marilyn 304·882·264 5
Earn $30-$45 a day lor the
mise, Terry McGurre, 40720
Laurel Cl iff Ad , Fn. ·Sal 9-7
AVO N! Alj Area s! To Buy or ca re ol a child living in your
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304- home·. Homes are ne eded in
07&amp;
YARIJ Soll.l:•
your county. Call Oasis· toll
675· 1429.
Pr. Pt.~CISANT
- - - - - - - - - free
1·877-325 -1558
Tra intng will begrn August in
Yard Sale Aug 16. 2008
Albany.
8am-4prn,
2942
Earn up to S9.25fhr with
Immediate Open1ng~ :
M eadowbrook Dr. Boys &amp;
qualifying customer service
1 Car and Truck Techn1cian
Girls baby clothes
e)(pe rience 1n c~rren t
1 Otl and Lube Techni cia n
position .
Yard Sale Fri 3 Family cross
Ca r and Truck Technicians
RR at Beale School tra iler
We are seeking indiVIdUals . are co~pensaled b~~ed on
be hind 2 hou se on rig ht on
with Customer Service
expe nence and e lfi CI~ncy.
Fo rshee Circle Rain Ca ncels
Skills to take incoming calls
Oil and Lube Technlcrans
for Time Warner Cabl e
are c? mpensated hourly.
WANTED
Benef1t s ava1lable for both
_ . m8L1'
positions includ e:
• Weeklv Pay
Hea lth Insurance. Disability
• Fixed Schedules
Absolute Top Dollar - silInsurance , 401K
ve r/gol d
corns,
any
• ·Paid Training
Retir eme nt and Life
10KI14K/18K g0td jewel ry.
Insurance.
dentctl gold. pre 1935 US Call or go online to apply : If you are under apprecia t·
cu rrency, proof /mi nt sets,
1·888-IMC-PAV4
ed by yout curre nt employer
diamonds . 'MTS Coin Shop.
Ext. 23 21
or just looking lor a career
151 2nd Avenue. Gallipolis. http:/ljoba.infoci&amp;ion.com
change, join us today.
446-2842
At John Sang Ford Lincoln
Caregiver for elderly mate
Mercury you are not JUSt an
Junk cars paying $50-$300 apro x 3-4 hrs daily, halt
employee: you are part of
If no .answer, leav e a mes- morn-half eves, meals. light
our family.
housekeeping. Hysell . Ru n
sage 740· 388-0011
Ask. for Brad Sang to
·Pomeroy area Call740-388 sched ul e your intervtew
Tools &amp; etc mech· power
02B1 after 5pm. need reiertoday.
too ls carpenter tools lawn &amp;
ences &amp; will discuss pay.
garden knifes &amp; watches.
jewelry. Buy tra di or sell.
Cost Technicl!ln:
home 388·1515 or cell '2080320
Candidate must be well
organized. able to multitask.
Tools &amp; etc mech- power
195 Upper River Ad
dedicated with good work
too ls carpenter tools lawn &amp;
Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631
ethics.. Position requires
garden kn11es &amp; watches.
H00-272-5179,
good baste math. spelling
jewelry. Buy trade or sell.
EOE
and
grammar
ski ll s,
home 388- 1515 or cell208·
Mtcrosof1 Word and Excel.
Resumes being accepted for
0320
Sporadic overtrme may be full time Teachef. full time
Wan t · to buy JUNK Cars required. Star ting pay rate Assistant and Substitutes.
$256.00 Full Ca r 740· 41 6· ol $14/hr. Thts is a long term Must be 18 yrs and have
contract pos. t st shin. 40 High
1594
School
Diploma.
hr/wk . work location is Experience pre ferred but not
Want to buy j unk Cars. ca ll
Cheshire OH . II qualified necessary.
.Must enjoy
740·388·0884
please lmmed. lax an updat· workinQ With young children
I \11'1 0\ \II\ I
ed resume to: (6 14) 716· and wtlling to do add t onal
11
2272, note ·cost Tech' on
"~ IH It I·..,
trainrng. It interested please
resumetc over page. EOE
Send. Resumes to: Magic

./ $8.5 0/h r Full Ti me
./ Part Time Dayshrft
available
./ Professional Work
Environment!
./ Med1ca1. Oenfal EAP,
401K1
./ On·stte Doctor
./ Weekly Pay and Bonus
lncentives 1 ·

'

Call TOOAVI
Interview TOMORROW I!
Work NEXT WEEK!!!

1-888-IMC-PAYU
Ext. 1921
http :/l)obs.lnfocision.com
LPN Des~red - 1 Full -Time
LP N,
LPN
. 1 Pa rt -Time Tur!IOn
"Possible
Reimbursement
or
Discounted Rent on Rontal
Home. Ravenswood Ca re
Center. A Large, Pe rsonally
Owned. Licensed Home.
Pl easani
Enwonmen l,
Caring Stat!. Paid Meal s.
Paid Vacation. Discounts.
Partial
Paid
Insurance
Avdilabte .
Interested
Appl icants May Apply Daily
M·Sun..
10"4 ,
1113
Washington
51 ..
Ravenswood . WV 26164.
(Across Ritchie Br idg e, TI:Hn
Right. Very Last Business on
Right. North 68) Resume
May Be Faxed to 304·2739236 References Required.

No Fee Unless We Wtnl
1·888·582-3345

Rt ILI·SI'IH:
310

RN
Jenk1ns
Memo nal
Health Fac tlity , a long term
care fac1ltty and ass1sted living, is seckrng a Registered
Nurse with good supervtso ry
and
1ech n1cal
s krll.~.
Compet1t1 ve wages and
grea t benefits packag e.
Please se nd 1esume or su bmit application lo . JMHF,
Attn · DON. t42 Jenkrn s
Mem o11al Ad., Wells ton, OH

45692. EOE'
S1tter needed 1n downtown
Galhpohs before school only
Mus t prov1ded ret Nonsmoker only. 446- t1 50

WV

80 hl
Un derground·
Min er Class. starting soon:
Whit-Co-Trarning 304·372-

834p

HO.\II·S

fO~ S .I I.E
3 bed. HUD Homes!

only

S10.0001 for tst_tngs 900620-4946 ex RO t9
3r' 4BR. 2 bath Cape Cod
loca ted on 3 acres mi l m R1o
Grande area Full basement
w lm1s'led FR. vented gas
FP. bonus room over 2 car
gar &amp; much more 740-2455416 tor appt

30r. 1 t 12 bath Ranch Style
Will board your dogs at my Home on 11 + acms close to
home while you are away. Pt Pleasant 304·675-653t
Dogs must be frrendly wrth
JBR. t t '2 bth. full baseoth er dogs. 740·41 6·2424.
ment. In-ground IJOCI (need:;
- - - - -- - - work ). 1 r.;ar yar . r11ce netgh·
Wi il do babysitting 1n my
bor110od c lose to town .
Home 5 days a week. New
Asking S60.000 (prtce nego·
Haven &amp; Mason area. ca11
ltablel 740-645- 1796 leave
304-674-6651
message.
II~

10

I \1 I II

ill 'SNS'
Ol,~lRTI '~ fiT

oNOTI CE o
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommends
that you do busrness With
people you knol'"', and
NOT to send money
through th e mail until you
have 1nvest1gated the
ollenng

MII~[Y

Ill I..&lt; lA~

**'\IHI{' t: • •
Borrow Smart, Contact
the Oh10 OIVIston o,l
F1nanc1al
tnst1tutt on's
Otf1ce
o~
Consum'er
AHa1rs B EFORE you refi·
nance your home or
obta1n a loan BEWARE
of requ·~st s for any large
advance paymen ts of
tees or insurance Cal l the
Ofttce
ot
Consurn er
Aflalf S tol l tree at 1·866·
278·0003 to learn tf th e
mortgage
bro ker
or
lender
rs
properly
licensed (Thrs IS a public
serv1ce announcement
from the Ohio Valley

~===~~~:::::;~~P~ub~li~sh~rn~g~C~o;m:p:a:ny:l:~

All real estate adve rtising
in this r'lewspaper is
subject to the Fed eral
Fa tr Housing Ac t of 1968
whrch makes it ille gal.to
adve rtise " any
prefere nce, lim it ation or
discr iminati on cased on
ra ce. co lor, reli gion . sex
familial stafus or national
origin . or any intention to
ma ke arw such
preference, limit atio n or
di!lcri mination.'
This newspaper will not
knowin gly 11ccept
advertisements !01 rea l
estate wh ic.h is i n
violation of the law. Our
readers ere h e reb ~
Inform ed that atI
dwellings advertised in .
th is news paper are
Bvailebte o·~ an eq ual
opportun,ity bases.
Foreclosu re 4br. 2ba . on ly
S29 900 ' Priced to Selll FOr
Lisi tngs 800·620-494 6 ex

T462
Trr ·levcl brt c~ccdat . on 98
acres. RArtlano . Oh . p r~vmc
.sett rng. cal·ln kttchen . 3 Or.
2 fult baths. lg hvmgroom.
lg. family room .. out of flood
pla1n. (7401742 ·2404 or 740949·2930

E.O.E
~----,---,--,-,­

Ofuo Valley Home Health,
Inc. hiring HOme Health
Aides'. STN A, CNA, CHH.A.
PCA may apply at 1480
Jackson Pike, Galli polis,
Ohio or phone 740·44t·
1393
for
more
info.
Competitive wages, mileage
reimbursement anP ben(lfits
1ncluding health lntMance &amp;
Years Day Care 201 Htgh St. much more.
Pt.
Pleasant. WV 25550
Courtside Bar &amp; Grill now
OTR dnver needed Must be
hiring experienced waitress · ~-----::---~ 24 years old and have 3
Substitute
Teac hers :
es. Great pay in a fast paced
years expenence Apply at
enwonment. Call 10 set up Buckeye_Hills Career Center 2204 Jackosn P1ke
an interview or prck up an is now accepting applicaapplication. 3 8 2 nd Ave. Irons (rn all acadenirc and CPOST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Gallipolis. 740-441-93 71
T areas)
Contact the
Superintendent's Office a1
Avg. Pay S20/hr or
Domino's
Pizza
Now 740·245-5334, EOE
S57Kiyr. includes
Lool\ing to Hire, Drivers, In
Fed Ben, OT.
Point Pleasant, Eleanor,
Placed by adSource. not
Gallipo lis. &amp; Pomeroy Apply
USPS who hires.
in Person .
1-11-866-403-2582

0

TURNED OOW N ON
SOCIA L SECUR ITY ISSI?

!\ IISCELLA~EOI ' S

0

Fri &amp; Sat at 3180 State
Route 141. Clothes furni·
lure , etc. Just past Green
Sc hooL

110

S&lt; 'fl&lt; 01.'
h sTKl rno~

kitnca rlyle@ c omca s t.n e t

r

074

VISA

Or Fax To (304) 675· 5234

Dally In - Column : 1 : 00 p.m.

Free k tttens. Sp ring Valley
area. Born 611108. Great per·
Grandpa
looking for sonalrties. 740-578 -6075
Grandma. 1 want a lady to
ltke me as 1 am , not some·
YARU SALE
one sh e think s I ~hould be. I
love to travel , wr ite poetr y,
gq . to chu rc h: ., study
Y,IRI) SAI.I:America n History, such as
GA U. II'OU~
the Civi l War, oh yes and
sports of all kin.ds. I prefe r
ages 50-70. SOmeone who Aug . 14 15 16 9-p at 1190
likes a good time and enjoys Starc her Ad . 2000 Lincoln
a good co nversa tion or try to Cont. 2002 Mazda Tribute,
se.e the best in everyone. I Blue Book WhOlesale.

love life as you should. ' 11
interested call. My number is
740-367-7325 or cell 41 9·
45 0-932 1 or write me in care
of Bob P.O. Box 33. Bidwell,
Ohio 45614. I will answer all
replies. I pre ler blondes in
the 50-60 yr old range.

992-2157

Monday- Frid a y for In s ertion
In Next Day ' s Pap e r Sunday ln- Co lu'mn : 1 : 00 p . m .
Friday For Sundays P a per

~--------

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ............................................ 030
Antlq ues ................................ ,...... .. .............:530
Apartments' lor Ren1 ....... :........................... 440
-· Auction and Flea Marke1... .......... .. .............. 080
: . Auto Parts &amp; Accessories. '&lt; ....................... 760
• Auto Repalr. :.................................. .. :........... 770
.• . Autos lor Sale .............................................. 710
• Boals &amp; Motors lor Sale ...... .. ..................... 750
Building Supplios ........................................ S50
Business and Buildings ....................... , .... ,340
· Business Opportunily ............ .. ...................21 0
· Business Training·......;.......................".......... 140
~- Campers &amp; Motor Homes ............... - .......... 790
• Camping Equipmen1.. .. ............................... 780
:: Cards of Thanks .......................................... Ot 0
• Child/Elderly Care ......... ..... .. .. .... ................. 190
: · Eleclrlcai/Relrlgeratlon ......... ,..... ...., ........... 840
: Equipment lor Rent ..................................... 480
: Excavating .............................. .. ................... 830
·• Farm Equlpment.. ........................................ 610
Farms for Ren1. .............................. .. ............ 430
•. Farms lor Sale ............................................. 330
: · For Lease ..............................,. ..................... 490
· For Sale ...... ........................ .......................... 585
': For-Sale or Trade ..................... .: .. .. .............. 590
• · Fruils &amp; Vogotables ..................................... 580
' Furnished Rooms .. ......................................450
, · General Haullng ..................... ......... ...........:sso
: Giveaway .... ,, ..................................... ..........040
. • Happy Ads .................................................,.. oso
• Hay &amp; Grain ... ........ .. ...................................... 640
: Help Wanted ........ , ....................................,•.• 110
.-, Home lmprovements ............... ....................810
. ' Homes for Sale ............................................ 310
': Household Goods ...:................................... 510
: · Houses for Rent .................. .... ..........·........~. 410
·: In Memorlam ... ............................................. 020
· . Insurance .. ............................. .. .................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment. ..... .. ................ 660
: Lives1ock ... :...... ,..................... :..... .... ............ 630
Lost and Found .:.................... ..................... 060
•: Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
; . Miscellaneous .............................................. 170
, · Miscellaneous Merchandlse ....................... 540
Mobile Home Repalr ...................... .. ............ 860
• Mobile Homes lor Ren t.. ............ ................. 420
· : Mobile Homes lor Sale ................................320
• Money to Loan .. .. ....................... .. ................ 220
..• Molorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ..........................740
· : Musical Instruments ................................... 570
· · Personals ..................................................... 005
• · Pets lor Sale ....... - ....................................... 560
;: Plumbing &amp; Hea11ng ........................_............ 820
.• Professional Services ......... , .. .....................230
; Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160
• Real Estate Wanled ..................................... 360
' Schools lns1ructlon ...............................:.....150 ·
·: Seed , Plan1 &amp; Fertilizer ......... ..................... 650
: · Sllua11ons Wanted .......... :............................120
· ' Space lor Ren1 ............................................. 460
,. Sporting Goods ................................._
.......... 520
r' SUV's for Sale................................ ............... 720
: : Trucks for Sale ............................................ 715
• Uphols1ery ......................................~............ 870
; Vans For Sale ...............................................730
·· Wanted to Buy ..... :....................................... 090
: · Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies .................. 620
· : Wanled To Do ......................................... ..... 180
~· Wanled to Renl ..................... ....................... 470
.~ Yard Sale· Gallipolls .................................... 072
I: Yard Sale·Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
,: Y rdSale·Pt. Pleasant ................................ 076

&lt;

Ch• ck Out Our ~

&gt; Th is
newspape
ccepts only hel
anl'ed ads meetln
EOE standards.

r

\II~

CLASSIFIED INDEX

A delicious combination of DO soft serve
nestled in a freshly baked chocolate-enrobed
waffle bowl covered with y9ur choice of toppings.

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ iliiiit"" _ _ _ _ _ _ _

FO(l(j &amp;Drink Specifli ''" Splcial IIOmt

968.

\\'iOI '\(I

· ~~~~~~~~~~::::::=:~·::::~

•,
•,

1 To One Of These Great Restaurants 1 2208 Jackson Ave.
I
Drawing Each Week!
I
Point Pleasant,WV
I Name :
I
I
304-675•5427
I Phone#
·
1I
All major credit cards accepted
Mail to: •' ree Lunch
I
I
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
11••••••••••••••••••••••!11
825
3rd
Ave.
Gullinolis.J)H
45631
·
.J
L.
'

''&lt;' ;, Momtn) MOIICII)'I

OhiO Valley
Publi shi ng reserve s
the right to edit,
reject or ca ncel any
ad at any time.
&gt; Errors
Mus t
B
Reported on th e firs
ay of publicati on an
he Tribune-Sentinel
Register
w ill
b
esponsible lor n
ore than the cost o
he spac e occuple
y the error and onl
he first Insertion. W
ny loss or expens
hat results from th
ubllcatlon or omls
ion .of an advertise
ent. Corrections will
made In the firs
vailable edition.

1'1ltlll~ ](()((

10 Y etrr.,· in
Gallipolis

or Fax To

·

• Sta rt Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Descr iption • I nclude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phon'e Number And Address When Nee ded
• Ads Should Run 1 Di!lys

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

I . .·" ------

or Fax To (740) 446·3008

Word Ads

'

3aegister

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

The "Dutc:h Boy" (rt11119mber the Steak Houae?l
. The FONZ (l favorite from U.S.A's It .Burger Place)

Websites:
www.mydailytribune .com
www.mydailysentinel .com
www.mydai lyregister.com

Sentinel

TRY ONE OF OUR NEW BURGERS .

•

.. HOW TO WRITE AN AD

$4.99
Lunch Buffet

Galli a

-~ .~~-~-~.~

l ' U
T kS W'tnner ...
ff f
TIllS
nee

•

We Cove
Meigs, Gallia,
And M.ason
Counties Like
NoOne
Else Can!

• Hometown News
• Area Shopping
• Local Sports
• Community
Calendar

... and much more.

1!Batlp m:ribime
t}ottit+~Ieasrmt 1\.eutster

~alltpohs

The Daily Sentinel

6unbap m:tmefi -~entind

�Page B-_. The Dai ly Senti nel

Thursday, August14, 2008

T hur&gt;day August 14, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

\!l:ribune - Sentinel - ~egister
CLASSIFIED

.........

··- . -

..
(

DELLA
SAUER
CONGRATS!

•

•
)

•
I

•

·- •

Enter To Win A
FREE LUNCH!
~

E-mail
classified @mydailytnbune .com

•

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

Utribune

To Place
Your Ad,

•
(

•
•

..

Call TOday...

'

•

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

The Deep Fried Cheeseburger (our creation I

• ...... • ..-. • ...... • ::o:o::::::·~~

*POLICI ES*

..

MtMIMIMtM

Mon.

Visit Pairy Queen foday!

~~

11:00 AM - 3:30 PM

Sat

I
I

to Our Mtrny
cu~·tonzers

Fudge and chocolate crunch
between layers of chocolate or
vanilla soft serve and topped off
with Blizzard flavored treat.

OHI/0 RIVER PLAZA} GALL/POllS
(740) 446-6888. (740) 441-9907

&gt;All
Real
Estat
ctv8rtlsements ar
ubject to the Federal
air Housing Act o

f'CJ;jj;~~":'r)f'iijfi::}jj;;;.~l:)~'lil
I DINNER BUFFET II DINNER BUPPI!T
$2.ooOfffT'wo

.

•.
•

$2.000ffiTWo Adult1•j

..

r---

~

- -- - - - - - - - - - , •;; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; .;. ; .;. ; .;. ; .;. ; .;. ; .; ;...

·I There "IS" Such A Thing As A 1
I
I
Free Lunch!
Enter Here For A
1

1

1

1

I

$30 Gift certificate

I

•

DQ Waffle Bowl Sundaes

*Chocolate Covered Strawberries
*Fudge Brownie
*Temptation Turtle

'

636 East Main Sire.!
Pomeroy, OH

"Bun's Voted Finali_st for Best Wings"

T • , Plcfteil 6 Wlnga
.40eW~ g.

lablll Slut Pitchers 16.50 with Wing ardor
(Dine In Only)

Wcdr.o•o•y ·l'llta Nlglft
IUt AI You Cln Ell
(KldiU~!atfret)

Thurldo): -lllllf CCmiiOie T Fr~ a y

1Q l'llltlllrln flonl Upol

· Sunday Old Fllllillnld llunclly't

,..JV'V\..n -

"NEW"

Room 8:
Larger Patio
·scenic Rivervil!w .

Din ing
(.

tclfc·
' .\ \\'Prl,

'1..-..Diningrr
vv ,
Happy Hour;

.

Mon.·l'~ .

4-Tpm
GTMI Selection Dl
I'Nmlum Wine I. a-

,.

11.011 Dovo lfl(otchutHiu-.1 and
11.M frot10p -~
lnd "' !;:y o1 h:t. kant., Iring your
T11mComiiOieT~nt

Co· :1 Stp!&lt;:mter
CUolomtr Apprlcilllon S9oc 1111
S11Jn1t1 lluCbyt TlllgllfnQ • Bun'•

&gt;We will not kn()wlng
y aceep1 an~ adver
lsement In vlolatlo
f the law.

IS

PE!l.~)~·ll$

228 W Main, Pomeroy
992-5432

'

r
I

GIVt~IW.\\'

ec ve mme a ey,
pictures that are placed
In ads at the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, must be
picked up within thirty
(30) days. 'Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be discarded.

ecveepemr ,
2008. Any classitled ads
laced in the newspape
that cost less than
525.00 must be prea 'td

Oead't/re&amp;&gt;

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTLCED
Now you can hove borders and graphics
..._,.
added to your classified ads
J-, :~
1m
Borders $3.00/ per ad
~
Graphics 504 for small
S1.00 for large

Display Ads

All Di s pla y : 12 No o n 2
Publ icati o n
Sunday Display: 1 : 00 p . m.
Thurs d a y f or Sunda y s P a p e r

Bu s in e ss Days Pri or TO

• All ads must be prepaid •

POLICIES: Oh io Valley Publishing reserveat he rig ht to edit . reject, or cancel any ad 111t any time. Err or&amp; must ba repo rted on the l lrst day ol publication and the
Tr lbune•Sentinei·Register wi ll be responarble lor no more than the cost of the l!lpoce occ upied b~ the error and onl~ the tin t inlliertion . We shall not be lia ble for
any loa&amp; or expensa that reSutls from the publication or om iaslon ol 11n advertisernent. Correction "~Viii be made in th e first available edition. • Box numoer adS
are always confidential. • Current rate card applie1 . • All real utate adve fliuments are subject to th e Federal Fair Housing Act ot 1968. • Th rs new~ paper
accep ts only help wanted ada meeiin g EOE stand ard e. We wilt not knowingly 11tcept any advertisin g In vio lation of the law. Will not j"Je responsible lor any
enors in an 11 d·taklln over \he phone.
·

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

11 0

150

H ELl' \1'.1\ IHJ

1M
1

Overbrook Reh abrlttat1cin Gallipoli s Career College
Center IS now accepi mg
(Careers Close To Hom e)
appllcat1ons for a full 11me Call Today! 740-446-4367.
Ma1ntenance Asststant. Th1s
1-800-2 14-04 52
Wilt be a short term pos1hon.
Must have exper~e nce m Accr~ drt ed t~embm 6.ccrarhtona
general maintenance includ- COtmcrl lo• lr'(lepeu&lt;JtJul Collsges
.un.l Sdw liS 12746
. ing, carpentry, plumbrng ,
170
e'lectncat. telephone and
cabl e install ation. painting. ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _,..
grou nds work, evaluat1on ·
and inspection of emer· Pet Crema lions. Cal l 740gency
equi pment , item 446·3745
asse mbly, and boi ler system 180
\\ 0\~TUl
operalton. Contact Charla
To B11
Br ow n - M cGu tr e.
Adinintstrator with q u es~ o n s
a\ 1.740)992-6472. Qualified George's Portable Sawrml l.
candidat es may apply at 333 don't haul your Logs to the.
Page Street. Middl eport. Oh Mill Just ca.l1304·675· t95 7

t;o'?-f!.'/, Y~ 'gt&lt;

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230

I~&lt;OHS~III\ I I.

SEKI J[ '1·:'

·.~·

'

Fri 8·5 &amp; Sa t 8-2. at 1480
Addison Pike . Boys clothes
8·12. gi rts· clothes 3- 5 Jr's
an d small. Misc.

45760 . EOE

Indoor multi-family, Aug. 14,
15. 16 : 8·5. Boat equ ip,
te8 ther
recliner.
TV,
m1crowave,
hO useho ld
items. etc. Lower At 7, Bear
Run Rd . follow signs.
Large ·moving -esta te sale.

@

w ww .comics .c om

2008 by NEA ' Inc -

~;==~===~~;======~~;:::::=~

Property Manager needed
for family community. Parttime. Must have prevtous
exper~ e nc e. reltable tr ans-.
portation. be dependable
and able to work independ· ·
ently. EOE/DFW P Pleas e
forward re sume. including
s alar ~· requirements to 8o)(
10 1 c/o Gallipolis Daily

Sat. 8/16, 9am-5pm. 2742.
Gall
tpOIIS , 0h45631
Trt bune
PO 8 0)( 469 ,
110
110
KrinerRd. 1mile olf Rt. 218. 1,10
Knotts residence. Lo ts , of
HU.P\\'Ar~rt l'ED
HEu• \\&gt;'1\ NT EU
HELl) \V. \~"fE() - Res Care Home Ca1e is
tools. co llectible dishes. ,___ _ _ _ _ _ _,.; ~--------" ,___ _ _ _ _ _ _,.; accepttng applt cat1 ons fo r
some pink depression. oil
lamps. old irons, trun ks.
~pholsteri ng machine, haspita!
bed.
lrg
metal
wardrobe. bedsp reads. Cur·
tams. coo kboo ks. dolls,
electronics.
sewing
machine. trg mixer, rototi ller.
To much to list all 63 years
accumulation.

hRIJ SAU :·
l'tJMEROY/MIIJili.E

Aides (A s-needed substltute basis ): Buckeye Hill s
Career Cen ter is now
accepting
ap plicahOns.
Contact
the
Superintendent's Office at
740-245-5334. EOE
Altera tion pe rson needed
full trme at Dukes C leaners
2419 Jackson Ave . Apply in
Person.

FED~RAL ,
POSTAL JOBS

Believe II!

i

lllu W ANTflJ

I DO WOR KERS NEEOEO
Assemble cra lls, wood
1tems.To $480fwk Materials
provided. Free inlormalion

pkg. 24Hr. 801·428·4649
BENNI GAN 'S now hiring
evening cooks. serye rs. host
and. matntenance. Apply
within no phone ca lls
please.

Support Associates. CNA &amp;
Local Compan'tl. Seeking STNA MRIOD e)(p. pre·
Matu re, Dependabl e,
!erred. Apply at 8204 Carla
Quality Focused
. Drrve. Gallipol•s. Man . Frt.
, Individuals!
SA
Emarl resume to :
rharrrson @rescare.com

$17 .89·$28 27/hr. now hll·
ing. For appllcat10n and free
9overnement JOb 1nfo~ call
Am erican Assoc. of Labor 1· -Use your customer serv1ce
skills to accep t donai!Ons
913·599-8226, 24/hrs. emp
and product orders. Also
se rv
recru it voluntee rs lor
FOS TER PAREN TS AN D non-proi11organizat ions that
RESPIT E
PROVIDER S help save lives and preve nt
diseases such as cance,r.
NEEDED, become state
lung and heart disease!
licensed by attending train ·

An Exce llent way to earn
H uge yard safe- antique money. The New Avon .
ings held on Satur.days
tools, house hold items, Call Marilyn 304·882·264 5
Earn $30-$45 a day lor the
mise, Terry McGurre, 40720
Laurel Cl iff Ad , Fn. ·Sal 9-7
AVO N! Alj Area s! To Buy or ca re ol a child living in your
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304- home·. Homes are ne eded in
07&amp;
YARIJ Soll.l:•
your county. Call Oasis· toll
675· 1429.
Pr. Pt.~CISANT
- - - - - - - - - free
1·877-325 -1558
Tra intng will begrn August in
Yard Sale Aug 16. 2008
Albany.
8am-4prn,
2942
Earn up to S9.25fhr with
Immediate Open1ng~ :
M eadowbrook Dr. Boys &amp;
qualifying customer service
1 Car and Truck Techn1cian
Girls baby clothes
e)(pe rience 1n c~rren t
1 Otl and Lube Techni cia n
position .
Yard Sale Fri 3 Family cross
Ca r and Truck Technicians
RR at Beale School tra iler
We are seeking indiVIdUals . are co~pensaled b~~ed on
be hind 2 hou se on rig ht on
with Customer Service
expe nence and e lfi CI~ncy.
Fo rshee Circle Rain Ca ncels
Skills to take incoming calls
Oil and Lube Technlcrans
for Time Warner Cabl e
are c? mpensated hourly.
WANTED
Benef1t s ava1lable for both
_ . m8L1'
positions includ e:
• Weeklv Pay
Hea lth Insurance. Disability
• Fixed Schedules
Absolute Top Dollar - silInsurance , 401K
ve r/gol d
corns,
any
• ·Paid Training
Retir eme nt and Life
10KI14K/18K g0td jewel ry.
Insurance.
dentctl gold. pre 1935 US Call or go online to apply : If you are under apprecia t·
cu rrency, proof /mi nt sets,
1·888-IMC-PAV4
ed by yout curre nt employer
diamonds . 'MTS Coin Shop.
Ext. 23 21
or just looking lor a career
151 2nd Avenue. Gallipolis. http:/ljoba.infoci&amp;ion.com
change, join us today.
446-2842
At John Sang Ford Lincoln
Caregiver for elderly mate
Mercury you are not JUSt an
Junk cars paying $50-$300 apro x 3-4 hrs daily, halt
employee: you are part of
If no .answer, leav e a mes- morn-half eves, meals. light
our family.
housekeeping. Hysell . Ru n
sage 740· 388-0011
Ask. for Brad Sang to
·Pomeroy area Call740-388 sched ul e your intervtew
Tools &amp; etc mech· power
02B1 after 5pm. need reiertoday.
too ls carpenter tools lawn &amp;
ences &amp; will discuss pay.
garden knifes &amp; watches.
jewelry. Buy tra di or sell.
Cost Technicl!ln:
home 388·1515 or cell '2080320
Candidate must be well
organized. able to multitask.
Tools &amp; etc mech- power
195 Upper River Ad
dedicated with good work
too ls carpenter tools lawn &amp;
Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631
ethics.. Position requires
garden kn11es &amp; watches.
H00-272-5179,
good baste math. spelling
jewelry. Buy trade or sell.
EOE
and
grammar
ski ll s,
home 388- 1515 or cell208·
Mtcrosof1 Word and Excel.
Resumes being accepted for
0320
Sporadic overtrme may be full time Teachef. full time
Wan t · to buy JUNK Cars required. Star ting pay rate Assistant and Substitutes.
$256.00 Full Ca r 740· 41 6· ol $14/hr. Thts is a long term Must be 18 yrs and have
contract pos. t st shin. 40 High
1594
School
Diploma.
hr/wk . work location is Experience pre ferred but not
Want to buy j unk Cars. ca ll
Cheshire OH . II qualified necessary.
.Must enjoy
740·388·0884
please lmmed. lax an updat· workinQ With young children
I \11'1 0\ \II\ I
ed resume to: (6 14) 716· and wtlling to do add t onal
11
2272, note ·cost Tech' on
"~ IH It I·..,
trainrng. It interested please
resumetc over page. EOE
Send. Resumes to: Magic

./ $8.5 0/h r Full Ti me
./ Part Time Dayshrft
available
./ Professional Work
Environment!
./ Med1ca1. Oenfal EAP,
401K1
./ On·stte Doctor
./ Weekly Pay and Bonus
lncentives 1 ·

'

Call TOOAVI
Interview TOMORROW I!
Work NEXT WEEK!!!

1-888-IMC-PAYU
Ext. 1921
http :/l)obs.lnfocision.com
LPN Des~red - 1 Full -Time
LP N,
LPN
. 1 Pa rt -Time Tur!IOn
"Possible
Reimbursement
or
Discounted Rent on Rontal
Home. Ravenswood Ca re
Center. A Large, Pe rsonally
Owned. Licensed Home.
Pl easani
Enwonmen l,
Caring Stat!. Paid Meal s.
Paid Vacation. Discounts.
Partial
Paid
Insurance
Avdilabte .
Interested
Appl icants May Apply Daily
M·Sun..
10"4 ,
1113
Washington
51 ..
Ravenswood . WV 26164.
(Across Ritchie Br idg e, TI:Hn
Right. Very Last Business on
Right. North 68) Resume
May Be Faxed to 304·2739236 References Required.

No Fee Unless We Wtnl
1·888·582-3345

Rt ILI·SI'IH:
310

RN
Jenk1ns
Memo nal
Health Fac tlity , a long term
care fac1ltty and ass1sted living, is seckrng a Registered
Nurse with good supervtso ry
and
1ech n1cal
s krll.~.
Compet1t1 ve wages and
grea t benefits packag e.
Please se nd 1esume or su bmit application lo . JMHF,
Attn · DON. t42 Jenkrn s
Mem o11al Ad., Wells ton, OH

45692. EOE'
S1tter needed 1n downtown
Galhpohs before school only
Mus t prov1ded ret Nonsmoker only. 446- t1 50

WV

80 hl
Un derground·
Min er Class. starting soon:
Whit-Co-Trarning 304·372-

834p

HO.\II·S

fO~ S .I I.E
3 bed. HUD Homes!

only

S10.0001 for tst_tngs 900620-4946 ex RO t9
3r' 4BR. 2 bath Cape Cod
loca ted on 3 acres mi l m R1o
Grande area Full basement
w lm1s'led FR. vented gas
FP. bonus room over 2 car
gar &amp; much more 740-2455416 tor appt

30r. 1 t 12 bath Ranch Style
Will board your dogs at my Home on 11 + acms close to
home while you are away. Pt Pleasant 304·675-653t
Dogs must be frrendly wrth
JBR. t t '2 bth. full baseoth er dogs. 740·41 6·2424.
ment. In-ground IJOCI (need:;
- - - - -- - - work ). 1 r.;ar yar . r11ce netgh·
Wi il do babysitting 1n my
bor110od c lose to town .
Home 5 days a week. New
Asking S60.000 (prtce nego·
Haven &amp; Mason area. ca11
ltablel 740-645- 1796 leave
304-674-6651
message.
II~

10

I \1 I II

ill 'SNS'
Ol,~lRTI '~ fiT

oNOTI CE o
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommends
that you do busrness With
people you knol'"', and
NOT to send money
through th e mail until you
have 1nvest1gated the
ollenng

MII~[Y

Ill I..&lt; lA~

**'\IHI{' t: • •
Borrow Smart, Contact
the Oh10 OIVIston o,l
F1nanc1al
tnst1tutt on's
Otf1ce
o~
Consum'er
AHa1rs B EFORE you refi·
nance your home or
obta1n a loan BEWARE
of requ·~st s for any large
advance paymen ts of
tees or insurance Cal l the
Ofttce
ot
Consurn er
Aflalf S tol l tree at 1·866·
278·0003 to learn tf th e
mortgage
bro ker
or
lender
rs
properly
licensed (Thrs IS a public
serv1ce announcement
from the Ohio Valley

~===~~~:::::;~~P~ub~li~sh~rn~g~C~o;m:p:a:ny:l:~

All real estate adve rtising
in this r'lewspaper is
subject to the Fed eral
Fa tr Housing Ac t of 1968
whrch makes it ille gal.to
adve rtise " any
prefere nce, lim it ation or
discr iminati on cased on
ra ce. co lor, reli gion . sex
familial stafus or national
origin . or any intention to
ma ke arw such
preference, limit atio n or
di!lcri mination.'
This newspaper will not
knowin gly 11ccept
advertisements !01 rea l
estate wh ic.h is i n
violation of the law. Our
readers ere h e reb ~
Inform ed that atI
dwellings advertised in .
th is news paper are
Bvailebte o·~ an eq ual
opportun,ity bases.
Foreclosu re 4br. 2ba . on ly
S29 900 ' Priced to Selll FOr
Lisi tngs 800·620-494 6 ex

T462
Trr ·levcl brt c~ccdat . on 98
acres. RArtlano . Oh . p r~vmc
.sett rng. cal·ln kttchen . 3 Or.
2 fult baths. lg hvmgroom.
lg. family room .. out of flood
pla1n. (7401742 ·2404 or 740949·2930

E.O.E
~----,---,--,-,­

Ofuo Valley Home Health,
Inc. hiring HOme Health
Aides'. STN A, CNA, CHH.A.
PCA may apply at 1480
Jackson Pike, Galli polis,
Ohio or phone 740·44t·
1393
for
more
info.
Competitive wages, mileage
reimbursement anP ben(lfits
1ncluding health lntMance &amp;
Years Day Care 201 Htgh St. much more.
Pt.
Pleasant. WV 25550
Courtside Bar &amp; Grill now
OTR dnver needed Must be
hiring experienced waitress · ~-----::---~ 24 years old and have 3
Substitute
Teac hers :
es. Great pay in a fast paced
years expenence Apply at
enwonment. Call 10 set up Buckeye_Hills Career Center 2204 Jackosn P1ke
an interview or prck up an is now accepting applicaapplication. 3 8 2 nd Ave. Irons (rn all acadenirc and CPOST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Gallipolis. 740-441-93 71
T areas)
Contact the
Superintendent's Office a1
Avg. Pay S20/hr or
Domino's
Pizza
Now 740·245-5334, EOE
S57Kiyr. includes
Lool\ing to Hire, Drivers, In
Fed Ben, OT.
Point Pleasant, Eleanor,
Placed by adSource. not
Gallipo lis. &amp; Pomeroy Apply
USPS who hires.
in Person .
1-11-866-403-2582

0

TURNED OOW N ON
SOCIA L SECUR ITY ISSI?

!\ IISCELLA~EOI ' S

0

Fri &amp; Sat at 3180 State
Route 141. Clothes furni·
lure , etc. Just past Green
Sc hooL

110

S&lt; 'fl&lt; 01.'
h sTKl rno~

kitnca rlyle@ c omca s t.n e t

r

074

VISA

Or Fax To (304) 675· 5234

Dally In - Column : 1 : 00 p.m.

Free k tttens. Sp ring Valley
area. Born 611108. Great per·
Grandpa
looking for sonalrties. 740-578 -6075
Grandma. 1 want a lady to
ltke me as 1 am , not some·
YARU SALE
one sh e think s I ~hould be. I
love to travel , wr ite poetr y,
gq . to chu rc h: ., study
Y,IRI) SAI.I:America n History, such as
GA U. II'OU~
the Civi l War, oh yes and
sports of all kin.ds. I prefe r
ages 50-70. SOmeone who Aug . 14 15 16 9-p at 1190
likes a good time and enjoys Starc her Ad . 2000 Lincoln
a good co nversa tion or try to Cont. 2002 Mazda Tribute,
se.e the best in everyone. I Blue Book WhOlesale.

love life as you should. ' 11
interested call. My number is
740-367-7325 or cell 41 9·
45 0-932 1 or write me in care
of Bob P.O. Box 33. Bidwell,
Ohio 45614. I will answer all
replies. I pre ler blondes in
the 50-60 yr old range.

992-2157

Monday- Frid a y for In s ertion
In Next Day ' s Pap e r Sunday ln- Co lu'mn : 1 : 00 p . m .
Friday For Sundays P a per

~--------

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ............................................ 030
Antlq ues ................................ ,...... .. .............:530
Apartments' lor Ren1 ....... :........................... 440
-· Auction and Flea Marke1... .......... .. .............. 080
: . Auto Parts &amp; Accessories. '&lt; ....................... 760
• Auto Repalr. :.................................. .. :........... 770
.• . Autos lor Sale .............................................. 710
• Boals &amp; Motors lor Sale ...... .. ..................... 750
Building Supplios ........................................ S50
Business and Buildings ....................... , .... ,340
· Business Opportunily ............ .. ...................21 0
· Business Training·......;.......................".......... 140
~- Campers &amp; Motor Homes ............... - .......... 790
• Camping Equipmen1.. .. ............................... 780
:: Cards of Thanks .......................................... Ot 0
• Child/Elderly Care ......... ..... .. .. .... ................. 190
: · Eleclrlcai/Relrlgeratlon ......... ,..... ...., ........... 840
: Equipment lor Rent ..................................... 480
: Excavating .............................. .. ................... 830
·• Farm Equlpment.. ........................................ 610
Farms for Ren1. .............................. .. ............ 430
•. Farms lor Sale ............................................. 330
: · For Lease ..............................,. ..................... 490
· For Sale ...... ........................ .......................... 585
': For-Sale or Trade ..................... .: .. .. .............. 590
• · Fruils &amp; Vogotables ..................................... 580
' Furnished Rooms .. ......................................450
, · General Haullng ..................... ......... ...........:sso
: Giveaway .... ,, ..................................... ..........040
. • Happy Ads .................................................,.. oso
• Hay &amp; Grain ... ........ .. ...................................... 640
: Help Wanted ........ , ....................................,•.• 110
.-, Home lmprovements ............... ....................810
. ' Homes for Sale ............................................ 310
': Household Goods ...:................................... 510
: · Houses for Rent .................. .... ..........·........~. 410
·: In Memorlam ... ............................................. 020
· . Insurance .. ............................. .. .................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment. ..... .. ................ 660
: Lives1ock ... :...... ,..................... :..... .... ............ 630
Lost and Found .:.................... ..................... 060
•: Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
; . Miscellaneous .............................................. 170
, · Miscellaneous Merchandlse ....................... 540
Mobile Home Repalr ...................... .. ............ 860
• Mobile Homes lor Ren t.. ............ ................. 420
· : Mobile Homes lor Sale ................................320
• Money to Loan .. .. ....................... .. ................ 220
..• Molorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ..........................740
· : Musical Instruments ................................... 570
· · Personals ..................................................... 005
• · Pets lor Sale ....... - ....................................... 560
;: Plumbing &amp; Hea11ng ........................_............ 820
.• Professional Services ......... , .. .....................230
; Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160
• Real Estate Wanled ..................................... 360
' Schools lns1ructlon ...............................:.....150 ·
·: Seed , Plan1 &amp; Fertilizer ......... ..................... 650
: · Sllua11ons Wanted .......... :............................120
· ' Space lor Ren1 ............................................. 460
,. Sporting Goods ................................._
.......... 520
r' SUV's for Sale................................ ............... 720
: : Trucks for Sale ............................................ 715
• Uphols1ery ......................................~............ 870
; Vans For Sale ...............................................730
·· Wanted to Buy ..... :....................................... 090
: · Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies .................. 620
· : Wanled To Do ......................................... ..... 180
~· Wanled to Renl ..................... ....................... 470
.~ Yard Sale· Gallipolls .................................... 072
I: Yard Sale·Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
,: Y rdSale·Pt. Pleasant ................................ 076

&lt;

Ch• ck Out Our ~

&gt; Th is
newspape
ccepts only hel
anl'ed ads meetln
EOE standards.

r

\II~

CLASSIFIED INDEX

A delicious combination of DO soft serve
nestled in a freshly baked chocolate-enrobed
waffle bowl covered with y9ur choice of toppings.

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ iliiiit"" _ _ _ _ _ _ _

FO(l(j &amp;Drink Specifli ''" Splcial IIOmt

968.

\\'iOI '\(I

· ~~~~~~~~~~::::::=:~·::::~

•,
•,

1 To One Of These Great Restaurants 1 2208 Jackson Ave.
I
Drawing Each Week!
I
Point Pleasant,WV
I Name :
I
I
304-675•5427
I Phone#
·
1I
All major credit cards accepted
Mail to: •' ree Lunch
I
I
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
11••••••••••••••••••••••!11
825
3rd
Ave.
Gullinolis.J)H
45631
·
.J
L.
'

''&lt;' ;, Momtn) MOIICII)'I

OhiO Valley
Publi shi ng reserve s
the right to edit,
reject or ca ncel any
ad at any time.
&gt; Errors
Mus t
B
Reported on th e firs
ay of publicati on an
he Tribune-Sentinel
Register
w ill
b
esponsible lor n
ore than the cost o
he spac e occuple
y the error and onl
he first Insertion. W
ny loss or expens
hat results from th
ubllcatlon or omls
ion .of an advertise
ent. Corrections will
made In the firs
vailable edition.

1'1ltlll~ ](()((

10 Y etrr.,· in
Gallipolis

or Fax To

·

• Sta rt Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Descr iption • I nclude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phon'e Number And Address When Nee ded
• Ads Should Run 1 Di!lys

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

I . .·" ------

or Fax To (740) 446·3008

Word Ads

'

3aegister

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

The "Dutc:h Boy" (rt11119mber the Steak Houae?l
. The FONZ (l favorite from U.S.A's It .Burger Place)

Websites:
www.mydailytribune .com
www.mydailysentinel .com
www.mydai lyregister.com

Sentinel

TRY ONE OF OUR NEW BURGERS .

•

.. HOW TO WRITE AN AD

$4.99
Lunch Buffet

Galli a

-~ .~~-~-~.~

l ' U
T kS W'tnner ...
ff f
TIllS
nee

•

We Cove
Meigs, Gallia,
And M.ason
Counties Like
NoOne
Else Can!

• Hometown News
• Area Shopping
• Local Sports
• Community
Calendar

... and much more.

1!Batlp m:ribime
t}ottit+~Ieasrmt 1\.eutster

~alltpohs

The Daily Sentinel

6unbap m:tmefi -~entind

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel
310

10

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fU~ S.\ 11

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?00 1 S1rn~ •c ty p,.. '''4'' • •t

1ng

Free Rent
Special!!!

J liD
SMOLN 2 01 t I
HOUSF CHfSTER '.'/P

f'"1'1if7RO¥ S,lHI l.iQ

.,, '

8ACKGHOUr-..U CK

QE:•)

R!::OUIRED
1ST

AVAIL ABL(
SFPl FMRfTl

Locust Sheet G1hr• •lr•, •I
I Roums :ll;t f-i )u~e If• Pi
BedrOOrriS 2 Onttr Kll Fld
F'l Pets &lt;1 rnust' $5DO ~e r
OR. LA Laur,rll~ uul towldIBl/1)(11 &amp; I•'IJ JS 1 30.1 ,;7&lt;,
Ulg lei K"d \,lid ·iuo.f' 10
·1532 cr 304 o-r, 5:"51
schools ·
[ ¥ C ·'II~nt
Cond1 t 1or~'
7·11J--1li-1 2C:.' NICP 2BR 1 1 2 h11~110 rowr,
301_.&amp;i 5 6'163
Ret &amp; deiJ 7·10-·l·lb- ~U79

e r wom~
1 b&lt;:O d
rooms / ba!t rs ...... rth 1'100 •;q
nar,ch sly iP tl 'HT

baserner1t

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lanJ locmed 0 11 Ur•ron J\J
S25 OOU d0\~11 ~rd tct~e '''t:'r
S375 111onthly p,l~ri1Pfl l 5 call
r7-10141fl 63•1·1

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1420

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2'BR 2 UWl ijitP&lt;"CIIIC A
10 rnnl fro •n P &gt;,vPr Plan t
q1 0 1 SR .' Chcshrre Ut-I
740-&lt;1 I" · 1 2'~/j qr - 10-2(!&gt;1.
781)1

28R al Johm.u

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r140! 141

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Ail&lt;l&lt;f
St~•'l

1 111 Bar

k&gt;'~l'f1

1

I'I OPfPr
280•1

Cf &amp; C(
15.

(! Bedroom Apartment"
W1tl1 AprJI ancps lwn1Sf1od
On :HIE LauncJry IACIIIIY
C c~ll 'or rft: tail&lt;; 01 p1ck Uj..J
ap~h~,.,III'Jfl at1 e!ltul ofh.; •~
f'US!iltJIII!y Of 'E'r WI
aSSistan ce
E11ual rl'JU ~ 1r1g 0rJIJOIIUillly
TQI)!' 419'126 04Gfi
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OIJr,.'01 11HHiy P•ov1Ur&gt;r rmd
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740-245-9170

.....

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AK( !''-"''r,Tf'!ltPI pt&lt; fp n&lt;;
G ~·,J..s Lid l1ub r. ''·l..rllleU
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I!J..\

AfluTpmron,
nnd
Ooerntor coulol be pr0v1ded
.Largo Mea fo1 pa1k1t1g
F~11I&lt;1 S ir c h•r C;lmp Meclings

f~RM

SC1111d

SUPPLIES

&amp; I.IV ESTOCK

10

hi&lt;ll
1:v1 ~~'' n·s

30&lt;1 552 0268 or 304-949-

J

.,,, ., ,

r&gt;toQI"' \'! ,. l l• '~ "'
"~

Ill

!{)•

29670 Ba stlan Road
Racine Ot110
45771
740·949·2217

wv 036725

N O MATTER
Wf/AT YOUR
STYlE. ..

.

~-

~~

.

.

'

Pomeroy, Ohio

25 Years Local Expt!rfence

i

Rctaii/Wnrehous efStorage
LiJC;'I tiOn ui Galli potts 1800
sq It 1Jurldn1g $400 mo of1
st1er.1 p;uk 1ny caii.Wnyne ill
(404r 45G-3WJ2

11 ,\~DISE

Fourtr.:~x.

·IGOS

ROGER HYSELlS
GARAGE

UWIS
CO NCREll
CON STIIU CTI ON

Open 9·6 M·f

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

9·12Sal.

All Types Of

Johnson' s Tree

se_rvice--

28 Ye.1rs [:o.perience

David Lewis

•! 1rc F~llln.o! c•,
HO Ill gJa?

740·992-6971
Insured
WV0421 82 Free Estimates

Scr oiO I

,1 Cll11rc1t

C&lt;11zen

gns ongu1c new
\I res lune -up belt S2 JUO
mor;" avclll&lt;lb c 304-6 7573B6 or 30 4 67b SG:-1 1

4 sl!okc

2003 Hond,l Stracto.·, 750
Ace

nnles. rnarw
e~ l r&lt;r s $4.AOO 080 304·
675 7126

'

B OUO

"--------,.1
790

( ' \:\11'1 R"'i ,I\,
J\loiOR Ho\IL"i

540

~ lisn:u . 1\FOJ '
~11-:Rlll "ill'!

Cdiii!ICI1ae IE qu 1 ~me nt 7·10·
4fl.6-2 4 12

r

cnm per

,

1ga(')

C 1tatton 2 111 cnrnper $1700
Calf 441 -5062 01 37fl-2923

H11 ,'\

2 j.ltast 1c s iUI&lt;Jg e IJ:'I !Gr L_ _.;.i;(_;;,;'N;.\;,;I,;\_ _,J RV Sel VICe &lt;JI CetrrniCh&lt;~el
tAnks 1 ODI} g i'l t ?. j r;Oo rT'_-'_'eI_cs_7
- ;4•0;--4;,4;:;
b·:;3/;l&lt;-5_-,
;qal WrJ ier pumps &amp; more •1 X 5 ROUND BALES OF
HAY $18 ench

304-675-!1307

~J-CT-- 2os3

740-94Y-

Sloek Call Ron E'ans r. Honio 740·446·r947 Cell
800·537-9528

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FQR
BARGAINS

ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!

~~

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and Quality

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

&lt;l n\ll l t\1
Rt k l t'liL\'' A• .ubl"rk!

}J~d ;/tlo!l e~bl~elr1
~l"rl

J.lnd :iurnHure

rt.limb!!.rerJ:ekca'blnf!tey.cvm

740,446.9200

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

Gel Your Message Across \Wh ADaily SenJ~nel

BULLETIN BOARD

··&gt;

1 ' •
&gt;'
• ) •• '

&lt;l'ttJ&lt;j'

"'"""' "IYf

Stay Informed ... .

'Orl.Je ®alllpolis j!lailp 'Orribmu•
'Orl.Jr l)oint l)leasant £ l'gi!'.~in
The Daily Sentinel

!! HAVE YOU

34

3 NT

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass
All pass

35
36
37
3B

39

club

sounds

51 Feel sorry
about ·
52 Debussy
s~bject

54 London's
Old ..

SEEN MY
''""'"'BUTTER AN' EGG
MONEY i'!

LOSER

';A, Kt-lOW e\OW I

PUT ?AB'&lt; "'I
TE:EH-\ Ul-lOC\2.. M'l
PILLOW /&gt;..1-lt::&gt; H\E
\00\f\ FI\IR'I LEAliE::. :r
MONt.'I?
-a5

Cell: 740·416·5047.

email:
jrshadfrm @aol.com

W~I&gt;.T WOULI&gt;T\l£"'I

COUI-l\E.RfE.\1
lo\01-ll:.'&lt; '

TOOTfl F/&gt;.IR'I l£1&gt;,1J(
IF l PU\~'1'5

FP..,L)E\U..\1\ Ui'\OCR
lo\'( PILLOW

ROOtiNG &amp; RI :MUIJHINli Co.

BULLETIN BOAR8 DEADLINE

_
i:

2:00PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

Rubber Roo fi ng, Room 1\ddition s, Dec k s. Shingles.
Sidi11 g. Wind ows, Po le B01rns. Gnragc~
Insurance Work . R@s ld~nlf n l &amp; Commercial
740-2 45- 0437
Lice nsed &amp; Bonded
30 YeRrs
Free Esti mates
Experience

.·- .

K1pling Shoe Co's

.BACK TO
'
SCHOOL SALE!

~f i y\',ll ' 1'\,fll'l l&lt;'IKI'

All Athletics 20% off
SANDALS 50% off
"Life is Good" T-shirts
30% off

Seamless·Gutters
Rooting, S1dmg. Gutters

lJr,rpo:' "ihC't' l :-. Rod
l'(ld,· t I )1.1pes:
S11 :•j,:•. V.1l. m ~~·, .

Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653-9657

1{ \•tiWII S h d tk'~

and

I'Ju, l)iiiPI\. I.kiJ, j,JrJ-.
T,1hil• Cm l' l ~ &amp; T,rhle

BAD CREDIT?
NO CREDIT?
BANKRUPTCY ?

R t l ll tl t: l ~

Vie can hel p'

~ I t lit,'

( '.\1.1 . SANIJI'
lltJmt':7"0-')4J2-Jl2V

Cell ' 7411·411&gt;·61~~

300 2nd Ave .
Gallipolis , OH

Gutterin~

Ill 'I.' I\ I !1)::

. ANYTHING WHATTA
GOING
YA
MEAN,
ON AI'DUND
• Ai'l'(HERE WHILE
I WA&lt;;. AT
oti!Nu"'

AN'(TtHNG' MAYBE
SOME80DY GOT A NEW
BIKE' MAYSE SOME1\0D'( MOVED I\-.Jfi..Y 1 ...

t'\'( !&gt;RANDPARENT!&gt;'

'Jr!lf-"'.1

1

i

•

~~~ !~~~~~

Cal l ou: Toll Free
866·564·8679

LUV HOMES

Manley's
Rec:yc:llng

Hrs: M-F 9 am · 6 pm
Sat 9 am · 5 pm ·

503 Mill Sl. • Mlddle111n. 0145160
140-992·3894

Olen Mllllllll-fridiY 9:00 IDHi:OO 1m
Sllurdav 9:00 am-12:10 1m

PAYINGTOP PRICES FOR

·cow and BOY

l t1hln '' !iu• rn 'l'"l~l~r'
\ '" ~r.l f r.. ~""" llrltHrul Ni:h1 h&gt;\ ..,,

l~ .. r

.. .-.

PUBLIC NOTICE
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE
NOTICE · is hereby that New ,Par dba
given that on Saturday, Vertzon Wtreless is
August 16, 2008 at proposing to construct
10:00 a .m ., a publi c a self-supporttng tat·
sale Will be held at 211 ti ce co mmunicatiOns
W
Seco nd
St . tower with an overall
Pomeroy. Ohio . The herght of 315 feet (i.e ..
Farmers Bank and 305 ' tower + 10' lightSaving's Co mpany 1s ning rod ) to be loca ted
s elltng for cash m at 39441 Taylors Drive ,
nand or certified check i n
Meigs
County,
the tollow1ng collater- Midd leport.
Ohio
al:
45760
(Site
2006 Harley Davidson Coordmates N39-14s·' o 1 t t a i 1 26; W82·59-17). The
1HD1 BVB196V058487 facility will consist of
The Farmers J3ank and the towe r. equipment
Savings
Company, shelter at ground level
Pomeroy,
Ohio , with wires, cables and
re se rves the right to oth,er appurtenances.
bid at this sa le , and to In order to comply with
withdraw the above the applicable laws
collateral prior to sale. and regulations, lhe
Further, The Fanners Applicant invites any
Bank
and Savings interested party to
Company reserves the s ubmit written comr ight to reject any or all ments on the potenttal
bids submiUed.
effect that this underTh e above desc ribed taking m ay have on
col lateral w111 be Sold histone properties, as
"as is-where is", with defrne d by the National
no
eKpressed
pr Historic Preservation
1mplied
warranty Act and Section 106
given.
Rule s. To be considFor further in1orma· ered , written com~
t1on . or for an appoint- ments must be post'~;:~~ ment to mspect CQIIat- marked within thirty
.~
eral, pnor to sale date (30) days of lhe date of
con tact Cyndie or Ken publication
of thi s'
al 992-2136.
nottce and must sub·
(8) 13, 14, 15
stantially relate to the
potential effect to the
historic
p r operties ~
Public Notice
Send your comments
to : Bipender Jindal,
PUB LIC NOTICE
P.E; CTLEngineering
NEW TELECClMMUNI· Inc.; 2860 Fisher Road;
CATIONS TOWER
Columbus.
Ohio
Middleport PCSITaylor 43204 ; (614) 276·8123.
Cell Stte
(B) 14 ,
(CTL#D451 0256COLg)

PSI CONSTRUCTION
RICK PRICE

Nc" llomcs. Room Additiom~. Remodeling,
Mrh&lt;l &amp; Shingle Roofs, Siding, l)ecks.
l~ulhr110tu Remodeling Licensed &amp; Insured
wv oa40954 Cell 740-590·7666

J&amp;L
Construction
• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement

Windows
• Roofing
• Decks
1 Garages
• Pole Buildings
1

Room

Additions

Owner;
James Keesee II
742·2332

I LIKE DOING 6000
DEEDS. BUT I'M NOT
AFRAID TO ADMIT THAT
I ALSO LIKE RECOQilllllN
FOR HAVING DONE THEM

(_

740 -992·0730

Roofing, S1drng,
· Soffit, Decks,
Doors. Wmdows,
Electric. Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions '

GARFIELD
"f~EIR FORKLIF1''5
IN fHE~HOP

Local Contractor

7 40-367·0544
Free Estimates

7 40-367-0536

Ca ll: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barn' • Paf!O ·s. Porches and Decks

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
Rtc bcl

FINE, THANK YOU FOR
NOT SHARING YOUIIICE
CQEAM BUT INSTEAD
HIDING IN THE COI1NER
THINKING YOU WEQE
BEING POLITE BY.-..~
NOT EATING
IT IN FRONT
OFME.

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

For N.t·mudcling and Ne\\: House Building

-H231J

••

Ro.1Ll. Ltmg 'Bulltml . OH

another club. Buf East shou(d s1gnal w1th
h1s 1wo to warn h1s partner that he has
no help 1n clubs.
·
Wesf sh1lts 1o a trump at tndt; two Now
you must sel uP a second diamond trick
Draw trumps. duck a diamond. wtn
West's return, cash your d1amond ace.
and lead another diamond ~ m1ssion
accomphstled. Cheers!

AstroGraph

QRIZZWELLS

I ~U~~ !It{

·rvE

Cell. 740·4 16· 1SJ4

12S+ yc&gt;rln experience Free E~limates

I"

l'l"~ST fAIUH~ ~ 1\U.T
AI.W~Ys '~E~ Au;nU. LA1.1

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C•phl!&lt; cryptograms areoeo.tec !10m QJOial Jn~ OJ 1;irto,s moe DaSI a1a pesen

1n t~e 1; pner stanos fer a\:~-e·
Today·sdue J equals V

Eac~ l ert~r

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LAS

PA

KBIL

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IFH

NCDO

WADMATIPCAO

NAB

RH . NAB

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KIST WHUIDDH

PREVIOUS SOlUTION - Wh&lt;le we are poslponmg l1 le speeds by ·· Seneca

·we_must use t1me as a tool. nat as a couch · -John F Kenr1edy

,.

r:~~:t~iy S© \\4[1Jl~=~ ~~·~
"411 fo'.lr scrombied words be·
l c.: 1~ :o ir;;rm /o&lt;;r ~ ; m::te ,,ere:

-

CampJnlont IIPIHIOitfl your Yltwl IUl~
gp1nlont b.OIRUtt thty kngw you will 1tl(
the tr\Jth rtQtmllllt of hQW gfllnt~o~l lht
tt!ltl m111y ttl ConllnYtl&lt;'l ltll illl ~l 11 111

SOUP TO NUTZ

by Luis Campos
:::eebr~y

ft. Ro:Jrrauge latlen ol tne

Friday, Aug. 15, 2008
By Bernice Bede Oao1
When you get a bright idea 111 the year
ahead, put 11 to the test because your
own resourcefu lness and JmagJnat• on
will f1nd •ngen1ous ways to further your
amb1t1ons and add to your holding s
LEO (July 23-Aug.-22) ~ One of the
biggest reasons your l1nancial deahngs
w1lf work out 10 yours and everyone
elSe's sa tisfaction? Because you rea hstl·
calfy ask for no more or no less than thai
to Whlch you 're entitled
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22}- Advan c~ng
your sell -Interests looks to be encourag
tng at this time end, as a result. once you
set your s1gh1s on a target you 'll not look
to the lett or to the r1ght unt1l you ve
achieved your goal
UBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) ~ To your
credtt , your word 1s your bond and
although something you had prom•sed
~ mj!y turn out to be a b1t tougher than you
had reaf1z:ed, you'll stand by the co mmit ment.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) ~ Make 11 a
po1nt to gel 1n touch w1\h &lt;ln old tnend
who ha s been 111 your tl--.oughts lately It
wrlf rnttan more to you than you reahze .
because your pal may have some 1mpor·
tan! news
SAGITTARIUS /Nov 23-0ec . 2t l Because you are qurte amb1trous, your
thtnk1ng will be ~11mulalad and you'll be
more clever and pers1stent 111 gell1ng
what you go aller. Th1s w1ll b6 true even
11 obstacl es rmpede your path
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19)- You'll
taka great pnde In how effectively and
effiCientty you handle complicated developments. No1 surpnsingty, logical thinking based on past expenen ces. IS the
reason
AQUARIU S (Jan 20-Feb 19) - View1ng
s1tua t10 ns reahSIICAIIy. and not expecting
anyth1ng to which you aren't entitled, Wilt
maka you exceptionally successful at
whatever you anempllo do
PI SCES (Feb 20-March 20) Involvements w1th mature thinkers Will
produce rewarding results Thfm ability to
' make adjustments to suit th e circum·
stances of the moment Will turn a non·
Productive arrangement 1nto a worthwhile one
AR IES (March 21 ·April 19)- Your great·
est pride and ·&amp;aliSfactlon 1s apt to come
from your abil!ry to take on and success'ully complete several projects that others Mave been unable to handle. You'll be
known as lh11 wonder person
TAURUS (A.prii20-Mav 20)- Some type
of tuture effatr or event can benefit from
a l~ttte reorganflatfon before you launch
ll No one will be bitter l'qulppld to handle thia autgnment than you ere.
GEMINI (May 21-June .20) - Although
you trt working hard on 1 matter that
you are an11foua to ffnallzt , you mutt
continue to 111y the oour11. A•Ja•rdllll
at whal athert 11y, don't devllltfrom the

aH,Iy

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Edit ed by ClAY ii. PO LlAtJ --

"bbr~:

aelealad route.
CANCE~
(J'"o

740-985-4141

Advertise
in this space for
$64. per month

eastly
tn four spades. even if trumps can be
drawn safety, you have only nme tricks
The 10th must come from dubs or diamonds If IS reasonab(e fo duck the f1rst
tnck. hopmg West will err and play

G

BIG NATE
~EEN

~1ng?

North translerred 1nfo spades, then
ra1sed to three spades, 1nvi!lng game
and promis1ng at least a s1x-card su1l
Th1s was reasonable, though many play·
ers would have tnsisted on game (perhaps by ustng a four·heart Texas-tran sfer response) When South corifinued
w1th three no·frump, hopmg for stx
spades and three aces, North should
have trusled him and passed. As you
can see. that contract would have made

MIKE MARCUM

2W column inch Sunday
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

'

Pass

40 Uonster's
loch
41 Dark
42 Ski mecca
43 Famous
lioness
44 No sweat
47 ·'Bus Stop"
· author
48 -·do-well
49 Hesitant

than hav1ng Someth1ng turn ou11ust the
way 1t's supposed 10 be, like estabhshtng
a suit and seeing the w1nner appear that
you need lor your conlract
Look at this deal What do you th1nk o1
lhe b1dd1ng ? How would you plan the
play 1n lour spades after West leads the

' 12ncolumn inch weekdays

' .

I NT

20 Large fleet
21 Speculate
recklessty
22 Chirp
23 Mortar·
board
24 Miles
flower
tear
away
Chalet
7 - spumante' 25 Earlx 007
(hyph.)
• B River
foe(2 wds.)
Toe
deposit
28 Truth
problem
9 Listen
bender
Bamboo
carefully
29 Genlle
munchers
10 Long-faced
exercise
Mesh, as
11 Tux
31 "Bonanza"
gears
go-withs
brother
Kind of hog
(2 wds.)
32 Long-eared
Old horse 12 ··Fernando"
dogs
Lab denizen
band
33 Clear,
Was
17 Come
as profit
in charge
to '8 halt
37 No, loa laird

BnfiSh author and JOurnaliSt Claud
Cockburn wrote. "Nolh1 ng sets a person
up more 1han hav1ng somet ~Jn g furn out
Just 1he way ll's supposed to be. l1ke
tailing 1nlo a Sw1ss snowdntt and seeing
a big dog come up With a little cask o1.

I:Xpl'lll'lll'L'd

C:\1 1Cl an. Swnk .v (a'
7411-)Y 1-KI/44

East

If you need tricks,
establish them

' Rc,l., lmahk Rate.,
'f

Wf'st

Openr ng lead olo K

THE

PUBLIC
NOTICES

30

!\outh

a

BARNEY

(across irom Ciiy Park )

740-;'9·11151

""''"' ...... (;a,_,

&lt;:tW&lt;•

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal

shape
45 Sushlfish
46 Zinfandel or

brandy round 1ls neck.'
Noth1ng sets a bndge player up more

Coachrnan ·· 2J1 t
$3400

Q 8

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Ne1ther

r-LOoking For-,.

.•
.••
.•

R 7 5 2

• AJ 6

D•~to"nl

1

1998 Ycu unlt&lt;J G&lt;:~s Gott Ca r!

•

• ,1\ 9 :J 2
t A 7 3 2

\\ln1 ~

Concrete Work

'"~ ' HilU

'll r,..a 'c •parumc&lt;J

hke new 74(1-446·

• K J 7 .J
t K q

•

Stop &amp; Compare

l"o 1&lt; SIll·:

HITC HES
CARMKJIAEL
EOU!PM ENT I CARM ! C HAEL
TRAIL ERS SALE S &amp; SEA
VICE
SPECIAL
2Uf f
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$399'01 w;._v\1 OUR ENT tHE
1 RAI LER INV,ENl OH Y /\T
WWW CA RMI C HA ELTRAILERS COM 740-446 -

NECK

us

South

140·992-1611

crursr- rormefiL• cnvl• r ~J iil"ll
r xt1.rS 83 000 Ill I S/900
4&lt;16-'::12/0
730
\r \:\,"i

TRAILERS B•W GOOSE

vestments

42 Chevron

5 Suppress
merlol
completely 50 Danger
10 Pharaoh's
signals
amulet
53 More level
12 Brisbane · 55 Points
in question
native
13 Dry gully
56 Long bouts
14 Ladybug
57 Stralum
15 Campus
58 Ten·four
buddy
figure
16 Duck's
foot
DOWN
18 - bean
honor!
'\. ~ Farm unit
19 Takeo
2 Pasternak
a snooze
woman
23 Dishonor·
3 Wild horse
able one
4 Uller
26 Dispose of 5 Vt. neighbor
27 Floating
6 Wear and

4AK I0/65
• 6
• 9 8 6 5
.. 9 :1
East
• J 3 2

K Q tO4

1141mood

Co mplete True C&lt;J re

....-:-.,~

•

03 H

1 White

32

740-992·5682

---;- ·,

• ' 4
¥ Q 10 B 5
• Q J ro

·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Hours
7 :00AM· 8:00PM

TFN

St. ftt. 124 Pomerov. OH
. . THF
NEWSPAPFR
HAS
SOMETf!ING
FOR YOU 1!

West

MONTY

CONSTRUCnON

to 10'x30'

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

ROBERT
BISSEll

Sizes 5'x1 0'

EMPI ~ ()YMENT

&gt;I"

I

Remodelmg
• New Garoges
• Electrrct~l &amp; Pturnbrng
• Roof1ng &amp; Gulters
• Vinyl Stdlng &amp; Parnting
• Palro an d Porch De cks

74L 2'·b tt ·1.,;

SIFIEDS.

.~---==:::::.._.j, ,,.-.:; ::::
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CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addltto ns &amp;

99 Plymrlllttr VoyAQPI fl('W
l!U ill
VA LLI.:: Y
trrBS , runs tj0od S t enu
H 0 AS E l IV E S 1 0 C K
(7•10)992-0730
1 FlAil FRS
tOAD MAX
EOUIPWE NT TRA ILE.RS
40 ~Jc!ICJHI \II.I :'V'
CARr:;o
F..XPRESS
&amp;
~ Wm!IJJ"
1-t 0 M F S T F A 0 F r;
CARGO CONC E SSION 199£ H011da ATV 300

AERATION MOTORS
Hay lor snfe 800 ltJ round
Repomed New &amp; Rrbwlt In tMie. 1600 tb rouncl bate

.,

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Hill's Self
Storage

YOUNG'S

EBY INTEGRITY KIEFER

FREE RENT SPECIAL

®

North

~·/~1-=l~ f ){I fill~

2fJ0·l Dockr'' r i•~oro 4 c,if
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Alder

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20yrs
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BASEMENT

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BRIDGE

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Furn , depoSit requned P. 1n

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615 3600

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3825

Jordan Land1ng
21Jr, 3br &amp; &lt;IIJ1 's
Avn ilrj.hiC
No Pets Tenar·t
RespQnSIIJfe fer Renl &amp;
ElectriC
304·674·0023 or
304 610-0776

•r-

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

rn

Pollc" frrrpau nrfr;l Cdr frorr'
::.sno• Hvr vtas Chevy~
Jeep s Fords &amp; fl 1&lt;)tf•' kH
I 1st n g~. o.;rJ!rt,; • ·ll:i-, r ~ ,' \ f

MER(

$238/rno' 3 bed 2 bBth
Bank Repol 15"o down 20
years. 8"o APR) for f1 shn gs
800 620 4946 e~ R027

1

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810

www.mydailysentinel.com

170?

New 3 Bedr oo n· ~1omes from ~~-------r:-::0~-.,.,-----.,
521 4 36 pe1 montll Includes 2BR C1A water sewe r
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many upgmde s defl'lery 8 trash 1ncluded In town F~ent
c..--·!Cci.liil~iiiJ.'ii~iol'-,..1
setup (740)385-2434
• $475 Oepos11 S4 75 33!1 ...,
2494
350
Wanted ro Lease Hunung
I.Arl&gt; &amp;
Prope rty 111 Mason County
AlKE·\I; E
304·882-2225 o r 304·675·
5679

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16') OUO •'lrlr;s Very yood
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pole hurldu1g &amp; 1•Jt hJr tldwg
3hr Wd"l r,( Ur•tr&gt;r •; 1lh &lt;1
on
6
acre"
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Deck
111 Gl,·rlltOt• I bi,J
Rt6 J66S 07:-fl
'lawn :-1'1·1 'iQ:1 c\.l If•
Reduce d1 N..:w Never IIVE;l.i
'lBFl ::: bil! n MH Oil farm
n 2b r. 2 hCltll ~\ wf-J1rtpool
S600 per rn. ontl l , lil1 :1es
tub s large LA 011 3 ac res
5•10 752·0816
mil $75 000 /.IU-•II\6-7C29
DLI.~rd ~;&gt; 18R LBA lrq \•lrd
320 ,\)01!11.1 . 1 h 1\11 ....
NO
kttr.her' applmnu:s
' ~-tmS\11·
PETS SMOKINC, · £lt 11',&lt;&gt;1
are&lt;l
'5600 rr·nt·D8pr&gt;&lt;;•l
0·1 -' Cl&lt;!yton Sou l!mrnd 740 36r-o5oi
16x 70 3BR ? IJ&lt;itiiS lil t'
[lfn :o, y11tter•; l'lb lf"lcrn FQ' Rr;n1 2• Mof::1IC Ht;lrlf:: S
110n rl1us t n uve pay ot· u1 bo1f' l:br 1 !Ja now tak.1·lg
take ova1 pa)'rPei&lt;IS Ccrfl opphc:Jiil.lns 304-593 6197

5 be{lr OOrl1S "''Jallabfe i40
446 3384

npt:; $385

V'lii"V
[ll 'f,1 S loW) Route :.12·
] h lf' rodrl 011 '() 45685

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812-4350

111

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Drrw,-.&lt;ty" R 'lv'alkwnys ,L&amp;l
CP'•'fll A1r W'D Hoo-.:up
:;c.rc1p r.,etals Ove-n MoMay 710
AltO ...
f,•ninTpa•{o;. ~I€ Cine FHO
Tu"· lr1y War:lll(.:sdiay e.
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Fr1• lrw Blun 4 30t m C!J&lt;;ed
Ellm View Apts. HH.•Sd&lt;~V S.lturday &amp;
107! Che•f tJr&gt;v&lt;~ 3tJ)'J5()
SlHI j,ly 17•101·1·16- 7300
(304 )882·30 17
Runs and loc. lo.s ll • dl 740
24')-0 125
. Gracious Livrng 1 ar.(.! 2 Sr·t 3 black" brrrJ ,uw~s
I c I H, IU 1\ tt1 OIVIIjer:; pm r ll ·
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1rcc
u rdt age
MlddiPPfrl fro1~ \ S827 to Br 1,s
1fh 1fJ )(! ~• 1 2 &lt;Jild £rock\'(•111 ;t('S Ill St(.;[l&lt; Wl!h \\-!Jr
S:'·ll:? ~ 10 qg&lt;l :;nt 1 E ~ hll
11111 nr ~I bu.&lt;O'&gt; /,I llS\ t,lkr&gt; 1 l' 'l Prr C•_•I IO &lt;;fill S !Oi' '1 1
H•l oSHl&lt;; O f poctJr,j~
r,111 COOK MOTORS l.'~&lt;
- - - - .111 ' 1~ ~. ~ 'i
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Hm l~l ·Si
1991 Norns 14)(70 2 ha1t1sextra n1ce All rerHiy sr.t up
on rent ed lot · close to ne•u t qnq 2 bed room nparl·
GAHS Might cons 1der ltmd rnents. hHrii::O iiPd a r1d un1wcontract $13,')00 74C -1tG n1slrod an d hm'Jsc.r, 111
4053
Pome roy &lt;1rvJ M1ddlcpo1 1
~:.=.___ - - - - - - - s••r,vr 1t ~ dopos11 rPqunecl 11::
2 200£ t6x80 Clt&gt;yt 0111 Eled pets 740 992 221 s
2 Bath. 2000
16)(70 ---~----~­
Fleetwood 2 Bert ? ,Rfllll 1BR AtJt W 0 t-oolo.ups
t999 Fortune 3 Bell::: Bath 5i.:lldlil•: 1V lfiCl 1•, IE-11'1
Dilyllme 740-388 0000 or clo"e to lllSfll!nl f::1 ll 1-ln140 388 851 3 Even1nq 7·10 339·0362
38S -80 17 or 7&lt;10 -245·92 t3
--2 bP.d 1oon1 apa 1l'11ent 101
2BR 1 ball; total e lectriC ren t 1n 1,.\i:ldlepoll no pets.
on re11ted lot ce1n s!i:ly (740)992-5858
55500 Call 446-36 t 1
2 IJedroorn Gamge f~ J' I
Brand new 3bed 2bath on
2316 lt2 Mt Vernon Avr.
.. - halt acre 1n PI Plea sa nt 5200 damage d&lt;JpOSit .'3425
OWNER FINANCE /NAil
month 304-675-7902
ABLE. 740-4&lt;16·3570
212 3rd A"e 3 toon 1s All il
Federal Fund s JUSt :efcase(.! b&lt;1tl1 l w r11 sbed 110 pets
for Lar1d Owner's t;Jo clu~. Ren t 1 Dcp 740 44 1 0245
111Q cos t ami ZFRO I JOWNI - -- -~- ~~---2br Apartment 011 Vt.mcl St
W1ll
clo
Land
besrcte Oornmn s
S37S
Improvements Bankr1rptcy
&amp; Bad Creclrr OK 2. :J .J and month . $375 depo&lt;&gt;1t 30·1-

~

1 lhum.·l

2 1 2 batt1 lcJ'-! horne J42f:l6

304 412-:1715

TltJW"I

NEW AND USED STEE L GoOll

Sf· •·I Be ,un~

Thursday, August 14, 2008 .
ALLEY OOP

Thursday, August 14; 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

FROTEr

CN0 K K

P ARGH

I~

1~
I. I'·T·
. , I~-

r·ffyou count all

~our

tl1e moilter lnld her
1

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asset5. ·

daugh\&lt;r,

a --~---. "

' T l' I

:; ·.· :.. ns~ RW lc ; ; l~ ~ n~
:"&lt;SE IOU'RES ·

III
&gt;&lt;'RAMI E'IS AN ) I\'ER S i·IJIO&gt;
&gt;,1!\RO&lt;I'; · JERKY - f LI Sll Ll~ti'I ·T · H l R llff&lt;ll-

! belt eve that a secrel 1s tun ltule for

and too much FOR THREE.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

or1~.

enough for t\~o

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel
310

10

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Special!!!

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HOUSF CHfSTER '.'/P

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1ST

AVAIL ABL(
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Locust Sheet G1hr• •lr•, •I
I Roums :ll;t f-i )u~e If• Pi
BedrOOrriS 2 Onttr Kll Fld
F'l Pets &lt;1 rnust' $5DO ~e r
OR. LA Laur,rll~ uul towldIBl/1)(11 &amp; I•'IJ JS 1 30.1 ,;7&lt;,
Ulg lei K"d \,lid ·iuo.f' 10
·1532 cr 304 o-r, 5:"51
schools ·
[ ¥ C ·'II~nt
Cond1 t 1or~'
7·11J--1li-1 2C:.' NICP 2BR 1 1 2 h11~110 rowr,
301_.&amp;i 5 6'163
Ret &amp; deiJ 7·10-·l·lb- ~U79

e r wom~
1 b&lt;:O d
rooms / ba!t rs ...... rth 1'100 •;q
nar,ch sly iP tl 'HT

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lanJ locmed 0 11 Ur•ron J\J
S25 OOU d0\~11 ~rd tct~e '''t:'r
S375 111onthly p,l~ri1Pfl l 5 call
r7-10141fl 63•1·1

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2'BR 2 UWl ijitP&lt;"CIIIC A
10 rnnl fro •n P &gt;,vPr Plan t
q1 0 1 SR .' Chcshrre Ut-I
740-&lt;1 I" · 1 2'~/j qr - 10-2(!&gt;1.
781)1

28R al Johm.u

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r140! 141

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St~•'l

1 111 Bar

k&gt;'~l'f1

1

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280•1

Cf &amp; C(
15.

(! Bedroom Apartment"
W1tl1 AprJI ancps lwn1Sf1od
On :HIE LauncJry IACIIIIY
C c~ll 'or rft: tail&lt;; 01 p1ck Uj..J
ap~h~,.,III'Jfl at1 e!ltul ofh.; •~
f'US!iltJIII!y Of 'E'r WI
aSSistan ce
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TQI)!' 419'126 04Gfi
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740-245-9170

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Ooerntor coulol be pr0v1ded
.Largo Mea fo1 pa1k1t1g
F~11I&lt;1 S ir c h•r C;lmp Meclings

f~RM

SC1111d

SUPPLIES

&amp; I.IV ESTOCK

10

hi&lt;ll
1:v1 ~~'' n·s

30&lt;1 552 0268 or 304-949-

J

.,,, ., ,

r&gt;toQI"' \'! ,. l l• '~ "'
"~

Ill

!{)•

29670 Ba stlan Road
Racine Ot110
45771
740·949·2217

wv 036725

N O MATTER
Wf/AT YOUR
STYlE. ..

.

~-

~~

.

.

'

Pomeroy, Ohio

25 Years Local Expt!rfence

i

Rctaii/Wnrehous efStorage
LiJC;'I tiOn ui Galli potts 1800
sq It 1Jurldn1g $400 mo of1
st1er.1 p;uk 1ny caii.Wnyne ill
(404r 45G-3WJ2

11 ,\~DISE

Fourtr.:~x.

·IGOS

ROGER HYSELlS
GARAGE

UWIS
CO NCREll
CON STIIU CTI ON

Open 9·6 M·f

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

9·12Sal.

All Types Of

Johnson' s Tree

se_rvice--

28 Ye.1rs [:o.perience

David Lewis

•! 1rc F~llln.o! c•,
HO Ill gJa?

740·992-6971
Insured
WV0421 82 Free Estimates

Scr oiO I

,1 Cll11rc1t

C&lt;11zen

gns ongu1c new
\I res lune -up belt S2 JUO
mor;" avclll&lt;lb c 304-6 7573B6 or 30 4 67b SG:-1 1

4 sl!okc

2003 Hond,l Stracto.·, 750
Ace

nnles. rnarw
e~ l r&lt;r s $4.AOO 080 304·
675 7126

'

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790

( ' \:\11'1 R"'i ,I\,
J\loiOR Ho\IL"i

540

~ lisn:u . 1\FOJ '
~11-:Rlll "ill'!

Cdiii!ICI1ae IE qu 1 ~me nt 7·10·
4fl.6-2 4 12

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cnm per

,

1ga(')

C 1tatton 2 111 cnrnper $1700
Calf 441 -5062 01 37fl-2923

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tAnks 1 ODI} g i'l t ?. j r;Oo rT'_-'_'eI_cs_7
- ;4•0;--4;,4;:;
b·:;3/;l&lt;-5_-,
;qal WrJ ier pumps &amp; more •1 X 5 ROUND BALES OF
HAY $18 ench

304-675-!1307

~J-CT-- 2os3

740-94Y-

Sloek Call Ron E'ans r. Honio 740·446·r947 Cell
800·537-9528

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FQR
BARGAINS

ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!

~~

(, '&gt;-'

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FRANK &amp; EARNEST

&lt;l n\ll l t\1
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}J~d ;/tlo!l e~bl~elr1
~l"rl

J.lnd :iurnHure

rt.limb!!.rerJ:ekca'blnf!tey.cvm

740,446.9200

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

Gel Your Message Across \Wh ADaily SenJ~nel

BULLETIN BOARD

··&gt;

1 ' •
&gt;'
• ) •• '

&lt;l'ttJ&lt;j'

"'"""' "IYf

Stay Informed ... .

'Orl.Je ®alllpolis j!lailp 'Orribmu•
'Orl.Jr l)oint l)leasant £ l'gi!'.~in
The Daily Sentinel

!! HAVE YOU

34

3 NT

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass
All pass

35
36
37
3B

39

club

sounds

51 Feel sorry
about ·
52 Debussy
s~bject

54 London's
Old ..

SEEN MY
''""'"'BUTTER AN' EGG
MONEY i'!

LOSER

';A, Kt-lOW e\OW I

PUT ?AB'&lt; "'I
TE:EH-\ Ul-lOC\2.. M'l
PILLOW /&gt;..1-lt::&gt; H\E
\00\f\ FI\IR'I LEAliE::. :r
MONt.'I?
-a5

Cell: 740·416·5047.

email:
jrshadfrm @aol.com

W~I&gt;.T WOULI&gt;T\l£"'I

COUI-l\E.RfE.\1
lo\01-ll:.'&lt; '

TOOTfl F/&gt;.IR'I l£1&gt;,1J(
IF l PU\~'1'5

FP..,L)E\U..\1\ Ui'\OCR
lo\'( PILLOW

ROOtiNG &amp; RI :MUIJHINli Co.

BULLETIN BOAR8 DEADLINE

_
i:

2:00PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

Rubber Roo fi ng, Room 1\ddition s, Dec k s. Shingles.
Sidi11 g. Wind ows, Po le B01rns. Gnragc~
Insurance Work . R@s ld~nlf n l &amp; Commercial
740-2 45- 0437
Lice nsed &amp; Bonded
30 YeRrs
Free Esti mates
Experience

.·- .

K1pling Shoe Co's

.BACK TO
'
SCHOOL SALE!

~f i y\',ll ' 1'\,fll'l l&lt;'IKI'

All Athletics 20% off
SANDALS 50% off
"Life is Good" T-shirts
30% off

Seamless·Gutters
Rooting, S1dmg. Gutters

lJr,rpo:' "ihC't' l :-. Rod
l'(ld,· t I )1.1pes:
S11 :•j,:•. V.1l. m ~~·, .

Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653-9657

1{ \•tiWII S h d tk'~

and

I'Ju, l)iiiPI\. I.kiJ, j,JrJ-.
T,1hil• Cm l' l ~ &amp; T,rhle

BAD CREDIT?
NO CREDIT?
BANKRUPTCY ?

R t l ll tl t: l ~

Vie can hel p'

~ I t lit,'

( '.\1.1 . SANIJI'
lltJmt':7"0-')4J2-Jl2V

Cell ' 7411·411&gt;·61~~

300 2nd Ave .
Gallipolis , OH

Gutterin~

Ill 'I.' I\ I !1)::

. ANYTHING WHATTA
GOING
YA
MEAN,
ON AI'DUND
• Ai'l'(HERE WHILE
I WA&lt;;. AT
oti!Nu"'

AN'(TtHNG' MAYBE
SOME80DY GOT A NEW
BIKE' MAYSE SOME1\0D'( MOVED I\-.Jfi..Y 1 ...

t'\'( !&gt;RANDPARENT!&gt;'

'Jr!lf-"'.1

1

i

•

~~~ !~~~~~

Cal l ou: Toll Free
866·564·8679

LUV HOMES

Manley's
Rec:yc:llng

Hrs: M-F 9 am · 6 pm
Sat 9 am · 5 pm ·

503 Mill Sl. • Mlddle111n. 0145160
140-992·3894

Olen Mllllllll-fridiY 9:00 IDHi:OO 1m
Sllurdav 9:00 am-12:10 1m

PAYINGTOP PRICES FOR

·cow and BOY

l t1hln '' !iu• rn 'l'"l~l~r'
\ '" ~r.l f r.. ~""" llrltHrul Ni:h1 h&gt;\ ..,,

l~ .. r

.. .-.

PUBLIC NOTICE
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE
NOTICE · is hereby that New ,Par dba
given that on Saturday, Vertzon Wtreless is
August 16, 2008 at proposing to construct
10:00 a .m ., a publi c a self-supporttng tat·
sale Will be held at 211 ti ce co mmunicatiOns
W
Seco nd
St . tower with an overall
Pomeroy. Ohio . The herght of 315 feet (i.e ..
Farmers Bank and 305 ' tower + 10' lightSaving's Co mpany 1s ning rod ) to be loca ted
s elltng for cash m at 39441 Taylors Drive ,
nand or certified check i n
Meigs
County,
the tollow1ng collater- Midd leport.
Ohio
al:
45760
(Site
2006 Harley Davidson Coordmates N39-14s·' o 1 t t a i 1 26; W82·59-17). The
1HD1 BVB196V058487 facility will consist of
The Farmers J3ank and the towe r. equipment
Savings
Company, shelter at ground level
Pomeroy,
Ohio , with wires, cables and
re se rves the right to oth,er appurtenances.
bid at this sa le , and to In order to comply with
withdraw the above the applicable laws
collateral prior to sale. and regulations, lhe
Further, The Fanners Applicant invites any
Bank
and Savings interested party to
Company reserves the s ubmit written comr ight to reject any or all ments on the potenttal
bids submiUed.
effect that this underTh e above desc ribed taking m ay have on
col lateral w111 be Sold histone properties, as
"as is-where is", with defrne d by the National
no
eKpressed
pr Historic Preservation
1mplied
warranty Act and Section 106
given.
Rule s. To be considFor further in1orma· ered , written com~
t1on . or for an appoint- ments must be post'~;:~~ ment to mspect CQIIat- marked within thirty
.~
eral, pnor to sale date (30) days of lhe date of
con tact Cyndie or Ken publication
of thi s'
al 992-2136.
nottce and must sub·
(8) 13, 14, 15
stantially relate to the
potential effect to the
historic
p r operties ~
Public Notice
Send your comments
to : Bipender Jindal,
PUB LIC NOTICE
P.E; CTLEngineering
NEW TELECClMMUNI· Inc.; 2860 Fisher Road;
CATIONS TOWER
Columbus.
Ohio
Middleport PCSITaylor 43204 ; (614) 276·8123.
Cell Stte
(B) 14 ,
(CTL#D451 0256COLg)

PSI CONSTRUCTION
RICK PRICE

Nc" llomcs. Room Additiom~. Remodeling,
Mrh&lt;l &amp; Shingle Roofs, Siding, l)ecks.
l~ulhr110tu Remodeling Licensed &amp; Insured
wv oa40954 Cell 740-590·7666

J&amp;L
Construction
• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement

Windows
• Roofing
• Decks
1 Garages
• Pole Buildings
1

Room

Additions

Owner;
James Keesee II
742·2332

I LIKE DOING 6000
DEEDS. BUT I'M NOT
AFRAID TO ADMIT THAT
I ALSO LIKE RECOQilllllN
FOR HAVING DONE THEM

(_

740 -992·0730

Roofing, S1drng,
· Soffit, Decks,
Doors. Wmdows,
Electric. Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions '

GARFIELD
"f~EIR FORKLIF1''5
IN fHE~HOP

Local Contractor

7 40-367·0544
Free Estimates

7 40-367-0536

Ca ll: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barn' • Paf!O ·s. Porches and Decks

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
Rtc bcl

FINE, THANK YOU FOR
NOT SHARING YOUIIICE
CQEAM BUT INSTEAD
HIDING IN THE COI1NER
THINKING YOU WEQE
BEING POLITE BY.-..~
NOT EATING
IT IN FRONT
OFME.

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

For N.t·mudcling and Ne\\: House Building

-H231J

••

Ro.1Ll. Ltmg 'Bulltml . OH

another club. Buf East shou(d s1gnal w1th
h1s 1wo to warn h1s partner that he has
no help 1n clubs.
·
Wesf sh1lts 1o a trump at tndt; two Now
you must sel uP a second diamond trick
Draw trumps. duck a diamond. wtn
West's return, cash your d1amond ace.
and lead another diamond ~ m1ssion
accomphstled. Cheers!

AstroGraph

QRIZZWELLS

I ~U~~ !It{

·rvE

Cell. 740·4 16· 1SJ4

12S+ yc&gt;rln experience Free E~limates

I"

l'l"~ST fAIUH~ ~ 1\U.T
AI.W~Ys '~E~ Au;nU. LA1.1

aa)

C•phl!&lt; cryptograms areoeo.tec !10m QJOial Jn~ OJ 1;irto,s moe DaSI a1a pesen

1n t~e 1; pner stanos fer a\:~-e·
Today·sdue J equals V

Eac~ l ert~r

" C IMX

LAS

PA

KBIL

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NCDO

WADMATIPCAO

NAB

RH . NAB

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KIST WHUIDDH

PREVIOUS SOlUTION - Wh&lt;le we are poslponmg l1 le speeds by ·· Seneca

·we_must use t1me as a tool. nat as a couch · -John F Kenr1edy

,.

r:~~:t~iy S© \\4[1Jl~=~ ~~·~
"411 fo'.lr scrombied words be·
l c.: 1~ :o ir;;rm /o&lt;;r ~ ; m::te ,,ere:

-

CampJnlont IIPIHIOitfl your Yltwl IUl~
gp1nlont b.OIRUtt thty kngw you will 1tl(
the tr\Jth rtQtmllllt of hQW gfllnt~o~l lht
tt!ltl m111y ttl ConllnYtl&lt;'l ltll illl ~l 11 111

SOUP TO NUTZ

by Luis Campos
:::eebr~y

ft. Ro:Jrrauge latlen ol tne

Friday, Aug. 15, 2008
By Bernice Bede Oao1
When you get a bright idea 111 the year
ahead, put 11 to the test because your
own resourcefu lness and JmagJnat• on
will f1nd •ngen1ous ways to further your
amb1t1ons and add to your holding s
LEO (July 23-Aug.-22) ~ One of the
biggest reasons your l1nancial deahngs
w1lf work out 10 yours and everyone
elSe's sa tisfaction? Because you rea hstl·
calfy ask for no more or no less than thai
to Whlch you 're entitled
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22}- Advan c~ng
your sell -Interests looks to be encourag
tng at this time end, as a result. once you
set your s1gh1s on a target you 'll not look
to the lett or to the r1ght unt1l you ve
achieved your goal
UBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) ~ To your
credtt , your word 1s your bond and
although something you had prom•sed
~ mj!y turn out to be a b1t tougher than you
had reaf1z:ed, you'll stand by the co mmit ment.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) ~ Make 11 a
po1nt to gel 1n touch w1\h &lt;ln old tnend
who ha s been 111 your tl--.oughts lately It
wrlf rnttan more to you than you reahze .
because your pal may have some 1mpor·
tan! news
SAGITTARIUS /Nov 23-0ec . 2t l Because you are qurte amb1trous, your
thtnk1ng will be ~11mulalad and you'll be
more clever and pers1stent 111 gell1ng
what you go aller. Th1s w1ll b6 true even
11 obstacl es rmpede your path
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19)- You'll
taka great pnde In how effectively and
effiCientty you handle complicated developments. No1 surpnsingty, logical thinking based on past expenen ces. IS the
reason
AQUARIU S (Jan 20-Feb 19) - View1ng
s1tua t10 ns reahSIICAIIy. and not expecting
anyth1ng to which you aren't entitled, Wilt
maka you exceptionally successful at
whatever you anempllo do
PI SCES (Feb 20-March 20) Involvements w1th mature thinkers Will
produce rewarding results Thfm ability to
' make adjustments to suit th e circum·
stances of the moment Will turn a non·
Productive arrangement 1nto a worthwhile one
AR IES (March 21 ·April 19)- Your great·
est pride and ·&amp;aliSfactlon 1s apt to come
from your abil!ry to take on and success'ully complete several projects that others Mave been unable to handle. You'll be
known as lh11 wonder person
TAURUS (A.prii20-Mav 20)- Some type
of tuture effatr or event can benefit from
a l~ttte reorganflatfon before you launch
ll No one will be bitter l'qulppld to handle thia autgnment than you ere.
GEMINI (May 21-June .20) - Although
you trt working hard on 1 matter that
you are an11foua to ffnallzt , you mutt
continue to 111y the oour11. A•Ja•rdllll
at whal athert 11y, don't devllltfrom the

aH,Iy

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Edit ed by ClAY ii. PO LlAtJ --

"bbr~:

aelealad route.
CANCE~
(J'"o

740-985-4141

Advertise
in this space for
$64. per month

eastly
tn four spades. even if trumps can be
drawn safety, you have only nme tricks
The 10th must come from dubs or diamonds If IS reasonab(e fo duck the f1rst
tnck. hopmg West will err and play

G

BIG NATE
~EEN

~1ng?

North translerred 1nfo spades, then
ra1sed to three spades, 1nvi!lng game
and promis1ng at least a s1x-card su1l
Th1s was reasonable, though many play·
ers would have tnsisted on game (perhaps by ustng a four·heart Texas-tran sfer response) When South corifinued
w1th three no·frump, hopmg for stx
spades and three aces, North should
have trusled him and passed. As you
can see. that contract would have made

MIKE MARCUM

2W column inch Sunday
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

'

Pass

40 Uonster's
loch
41 Dark
42 Ski mecca
43 Famous
lioness
44 No sweat
47 ·'Bus Stop"
· author
48 -·do-well
49 Hesitant

than hav1ng Someth1ng turn ou11ust the
way 1t's supposed 10 be, like estabhshtng
a suit and seeing the w1nner appear that
you need lor your conlract
Look at this deal What do you th1nk o1
lhe b1dd1ng ? How would you plan the
play 1n lour spades after West leads the

' 12ncolumn inch weekdays

' .

I NT

20 Large fleet
21 Speculate
recklessty
22 Chirp
23 Mortar·
board
24 Miles
flower
tear
away
Chalet
7 - spumante' 25 Earlx 007
(hyph.)
• B River
foe(2 wds.)
Toe
deposit
28 Truth
problem
9 Listen
bender
Bamboo
carefully
29 Genlle
munchers
10 Long-faced
exercise
Mesh, as
11 Tux
31 "Bonanza"
gears
go-withs
brother
Kind of hog
(2 wds.)
32 Long-eared
Old horse 12 ··Fernando"
dogs
Lab denizen
band
33 Clear,
Was
17 Come
as profit
in charge
to '8 halt
37 No, loa laird

BnfiSh author and JOurnaliSt Claud
Cockburn wrote. "Nolh1 ng sets a person
up more 1han hav1ng somet ~Jn g furn out
Just 1he way ll's supposed to be. l1ke
tailing 1nlo a Sw1ss snowdntt and seeing
a big dog come up With a little cask o1.

I:Xpl'lll'lll'L'd

C:\1 1Cl an. Swnk .v (a'
7411-)Y 1-KI/44

East

If you need tricks,
establish them

' Rc,l., lmahk Rate.,
'f

Wf'st

Openr ng lead olo K

THE

PUBLIC
NOTICES

30

!\outh

a

BARNEY

(across irom Ciiy Park )

740-;'9·11151

""''"' ...... (;a,_,

&lt;:tW&lt;•

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal

shape
45 Sushlfish
46 Zinfandel or

brandy round 1ls neck.'
Noth1ng sets a bndge player up more

Coachrnan ·· 2J1 t
$3400

Q 8

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Ne1ther

r-LOoking For-,.

.•
.••
.•

R 7 5 2

• AJ 6

D•~to"nl

1

1998 Ycu unlt&lt;J G&lt;:~s Gott Ca r!

•

• ,1\ 9 :J 2
t A 7 3 2

\\ln1 ~

Concrete Work

'"~ ' HilU

'll r,..a 'c •parumc&lt;J

hke new 74(1-446·

• K J 7 .J
t K q

•

Stop &amp; Compare

l"o 1&lt; SIll·:

HITC HES
CARMKJIAEL
EOU!PM ENT I CARM ! C HAEL
TRAIL ERS SALE S &amp; SEA
VICE
SPECIAL
2Uf f
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$399'01 w;._v\1 OUR ENT tHE
1 RAI LER INV,ENl OH Y /\T
WWW CA RMI C HA ELTRAILERS COM 740-446 -

NECK

us

South

140·992-1611

crursr- rormefiL• cnvl• r ~J iil"ll
r xt1.rS 83 000 Ill I S/900
4&lt;16-'::12/0
730
\r \:\,"i

TRAILERS B•W GOOSE

vestments

42 Chevron

5 Suppress
merlol
completely 50 Danger
10 Pharaoh's
signals
amulet
53 More level
12 Brisbane · 55 Points
in question
native
13 Dry gully
56 Long bouts
14 Ladybug
57 Stralum
15 Campus
58 Ten·four
buddy
figure
16 Duck's
foot
DOWN
18 - bean
honor!
'\. ~ Farm unit
19 Takeo
2 Pasternak
a snooze
woman
23 Dishonor·
3 Wild horse
able one
4 Uller
26 Dispose of 5 Vt. neighbor
27 Floating
6 Wear and

4AK I0/65
• 6
• 9 8 6 5
.. 9 :1
East
• J 3 2

K Q tO4

1141mood

Co mplete True C&lt;J re

....-:-.,~

•

03 H

1 White

32

740-992·5682

---;- ·,

• ' 4
¥ Q 10 B 5
• Q J ro

·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Hours
7 :00AM· 8:00PM

TFN

St. ftt. 124 Pomerov. OH
. . THF
NEWSPAPFR
HAS
SOMETf!ING
FOR YOU 1!

West

MONTY

CONSTRUCnON

to 10'x30'

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

ROBERT
BISSEll

Sizes 5'x1 0'

EMPI ~ ()YMENT

&gt;I"

I

Remodelmg
• New Garoges
• Electrrct~l &amp; Pturnbrng
• Roof1ng &amp; Gulters
• Vinyl Stdlng &amp; Parnting
• Palro an d Porch De cks

74L 2'·b tt ·1.,;

SIFIEDS.

.~---==:::::.._.j, ,,.-.:; ::::
&gt;

.,

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addltto ns &amp;

99 Plymrlllttr VoyAQPI fl('W
l!U ill
VA LLI.:: Y
trrBS , runs tj0od S t enu
H 0 AS E l IV E S 1 0 C K
(7•10)992-0730
1 FlAil FRS
tOAD MAX
EOUIPWE NT TRA ILE.RS
40 ~Jc!ICJHI \II.I :'V'
CARr:;o
F..XPRESS
&amp;
~ Wm!IJJ"
1-t 0 M F S T F A 0 F r;
CARGO CONC E SSION 199£ H011da ATV 300

AERATION MOTORS
Hay lor snfe 800 ltJ round
Repomed New &amp; Rrbwlt In tMie. 1600 tb rouncl bate

.,

r.t "• n1 ..m&lt;~nc-e

Hill's Self
Storage

YOUNG'S

EBY INTEGRITY KIEFER

FREE RENT SPECIAL

®

North

~·/~1-=l~ f ){I fill~

2fJ0·l Dockr'' r i•~oro 4 c,if
'3j)CP.ll
SLil IOC'f S ~ O lcr

GI ~1&lt;J

w

c
,. , "

!",- tril 11'' i)l)f
n M~.; ctlrh g1P C1' -1 :,11,..1,
cJn •,&lt;&gt; S 10 UL:O ;'• J'l(J CliPII'I
C&lt;Jv.&lt;11iUI
1CO ()(..[) rn.lw,
rr 1.1nual Trall '&gt; lll ~!'i iO il
IH I
rur1t ~ lver Si' ·.o~,,O 7JrJ·11 ')
G100 or 74 0 111 mo 1

Fllllec I.OCiil '! IPrt·rYeS l\11·
lll"h~U Et&gt;talJitstleU 1975
Cnl! ?-1 Hro; Ti401 446
UU!O Ar&gt;qP.rs B.l&lt;&gt;ement

Z459 St. Rt. 160 ·Gallipolis
LL
RF
511
T

1

T46 1

Phillip
Alder

WATERPROOFING

.1()()3 I li5&lt;;lr1

ptlt&gt;ed Cll(!Ck out our Lrsed
IIIV('fi!Ory
n1
w w cARE 0 cU M 1991

l iSIHl gS 800 -620-•194 6 eli

1

I

IIOL'SJ:'

•l br 2ba, HUOI on ly $317
month' Great Locnlton 1 (5"o
down ,
20yrs
8"oAPR )

ACROSS

BASEMENT

1

HIM

HI~ RENI

Mason, 304-675· 7783

BRIDGE

IIIJ\11

- - -"?;....... - - - - -- - -

H,we )'till nm:cd &lt;1 lotm
Deere late ly ? YoL II lle ~~ur -

2br MutJif c Humc K1t ctlc n
Furn , depoSit requned P. 1n

''

NEA Crossword Puzzle

I\II'IU.\1 \11· \ J\

,.

615 3600

~·17~)0

3825

Jordan Land1ng
21Jr, 3br &amp; &lt;IIJ1 's
Avn ilrj.hiC
No Pets Tenar·t
RespQnSIIJfe fer Renl &amp;
ElectriC
304·674·0023 or
304 610-0776

•r-

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

rn

Pollc" frrrpau nrfr;l Cdr frorr'
::.sno• Hvr vtas Chevy~
Jeep s Fords &amp; fl 1&lt;)tf•' kH
I 1st n g~. o.;rJ!rt,; • ·ll:i-, r ~ ,' \ f

MER(

$238/rno' 3 bed 2 bBth
Bank Repol 15"o down 20
years. 8"o APR) for f1 shn gs
800 620 4946 e~ R027

1

'&gt;'J

810

www.mydailysentinel.com

170?

New 3 Bedr oo n· ~1omes from ~~-------r:-::0~-.,.,-----.,
521 4 36 pe1 montll Includes 2BR C1A water sewe r
\\\\11·1)
many upgmde s defl'lery 8 trash 1ncluded In town F~ent
c..--·!Cci.liil~iiiJ.'ii~iol'-,..1
setup (740)385-2434
• $475 Oepos11 S4 75 33!1 ...,
2494
350
Wanted ro Lease Hunung
I.Arl&gt; &amp;
Prope rty 111 Mason County
AlKE·\I; E
304·882-2225 o r 304·675·
5679

10

~lrlll'dl.r&lt;J

S~·

qj "':o nvHCJ ld t , ru1St&gt; rw
L,I!Jrndor flcttl l'Yf ' ! l iP ~ PL CD J.l, ryi-'1 f'() 1~ ,11r '.1
r wH , 1:1 S:!rt {JIJ
r1•1
V6 louk~ •y r 11 1 run s u 'c1!
~ti'lpc:rs r t 111 r;are11h w· on
S.'4\JO 4M q?,P
s1te Call 740-367 o;.n 1
Fr 111
Purelr'e t Slb&lt;')n, t ll 11 l'&gt;lo.y E-xpcU 1t on t as 1·r rr 1 Pv~
lliiJU ~"'· ~ lcn,-11 ", ,? 1tr.r os Pl 'po PS h· ;,tPJ 1~ ,11 1·'1
wh 11l lid k .'! 1\ll•l"' '&gt; Jt •lt&gt; sca t&lt;.. '&gt;llfli(J:)t r) d1 •,c CD r.
'•' •IW' 1~1111 lllu&gt;:l t'VO ~. rr ,u ty :.l1cl '&gt;·•a t Mutor h(tZ. clj)iJf(!(
- - - - - - - 110\V -; 1f!O !('l rnrrl r="'. Sl60
FlO ClJO mrlu, hod) '1,1~
Tw111 Rt~CTS Tcwer s a l:C ep!·
rn::tles i/J~I),;(l U£.'1), pll
16') OUO •'lrlr;s Very yood
~O n C tl!tOr1 5r1 (J(J(I 30•1 882·

,\1'\lti\11· \T"

2BR oPt CIA

(,,,, rf'l&lt;

l~r

'.. ,n 1111111

$5 ·oo as"'lf''J

1!

r,t)JI

&lt;~I'd 1.1~·

1./ 1 C\'~·1ilrl1Cii!S

Horn(' r ;;r k C.t~l 7 4 0-fi~ "•
Crew Ad Pom erov ly OSOb or 7-l O .1~ 6-2003
pole hurldu1g &amp; 1•Jt hJr tldwg
3hr Wd"l r,( Ur•tr&gt;r •; 1lh &lt;1
on
6
acre"
w pmrd
Deck
111 Gl,·rlltOt• I bi,J
Rt6 J66S 07:-fl
'lawn :-1'1·1 'iQ:1 c\.l If•
Reduce d1 N..:w Never IIVE;l.i
'lBFl ::: bil! n MH Oil farm
n 2b r. 2 hCltll ~\ wf-J1rtpool
S600 per rn. ontl l , lil1 :1es
tub s large LA 011 3 ac res
5•10 752·0816
mil $75 000 /.IU-•II\6-7C29
DLI.~rd ~;&gt; 18R LBA lrq \•lrd
320 ,\)01!11.1 . 1 h 1\11 ....
NO
kttr.her' applmnu:s
' ~-tmS\11·
PETS SMOKINC, · £lt 11',&lt;&gt;1
are&lt;l
'5600 rr·nt·D8pr&gt;&lt;;•l
0·1 -' Cl&lt;!yton Sou l!mrnd 740 36r-o5oi
16x 70 3BR ? IJ&lt;itiiS lil t'
[lfn :o, y11tter•; l'lb lf"lcrn FQ' Rr;n1 2• Mof::1IC Ht;lrlf:: S
110n rl1us t n uve pay ot· u1 bo1f' l:br 1 !Ja now tak.1·lg
take ova1 pa)'rPei&lt;IS Ccrfl opphc:Jiil.lns 304-593 6197

5 be{lr OOrl1S "''Jallabfe i40
446 3384

npt:; $385

V'lii"V
[ll 'f,1 S loW) Route :.12·
] h lf' rodrl 011 '() 45685

~lew

812-4350

111

P1p • At&gt;tw

2(.tlp

r.)r 11111 1
Fl.i
Or 11r1!&gt;
I ll. I NSPOI!T ITIO~
Drrw,-.&lt;ty" R 'lv'alkwnys ,L&amp;l
CP'•'fll A1r W'D Hoo-.:up
:;c.rc1p r.,etals Ove-n MoMay 710
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Sf· •·I Be ,un~

Thursday, August 14, 2008 .
ALLEY OOP

Thursday, August 14; 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

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�Page B8 • The Daily

Sen tin ~l

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Back to School edition
inside today's Sentinel

Fair scenes, AS

•·

at

Printed on 100 9,
!\'(.'" ·sprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;,n CENTS • Vol. 58, No. 26

FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 2008

lh·cJcl~d

-

.

-

t;:&gt;

www.mydailyscntinel.com

.,

SPORTS
• US 'team moves
on to medal round.
See Page Bl

God's NET distributing
.school supplies Tuesday

Dee Rader
of God's

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

child along wi th some bas ic school supplies
as needed." said Rader this week as she
accepted a $200 che~k from Peoples Bank
POMEROY - For many years God's this week to buy more. For several years the
NET, a part of the Meigs County Bank has collected supplies and then donatCooperative Parish program of service to ed them to God 's~N ET but thi s year decided
residents, has distributed school supplies to give money from their fund-raising pro' just about the time schools open in the fall. jects so that agency could purchase what was
This year will be no exception. Dee still needed in the way of school supplies.
Rader, who works in the program. advises
Rader said that last year 250 children
that the distribution will take place Tuesday came by for supplies. but this year they are
- the day before school begins - at the e.x pecting eve n more because of economic .
Genter from 2 to 4 p.m. or as .long a s the conditions here. She credited contributions
supplies last. One requirement is that ·the like the one which came from Peoples Bank
children come in to get their s.upplies. They to making it possible for God's Net to carry
cannot be picked up by parents or friends.
out its "hands- up" programs such as giving
"We' re trying to offer backpacks to every out school supplies.

NET

HOEFLICH@ MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

LIS4

'
·
.
&amp;
.

'•

PageAJ
• Jean M. Fitch, 74
• Lucy A Wi~ong, 80

INSIDE
• Hollers sweep
hay show wins.
See Page AJ
• Local Briefs.
·see Page AJ
• A Hunger For More.
See ,Page A6
• Coming soon!
See Page A6

WEATIIER

..

Detalla on Page A2

2 SECTIONS- 16 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
A2
. J\2
Calendars
Bs-6,
Cl assifieds
Comics
B?
Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
As-7
Movies
A3
NASCAR
B4
Obituaries
A3
Sports
B Section
Weather
© aoo8 Ohio Valley Publlshlna Co.

Eastern
Local begins
year with
open house
Bv BRII!.N

J.

REED

Please see Eastern, A3

Charlen.e
Hoefllchlphoto

Robert Strohl
(second from
11 left) showed
the grand
champion market hog at this
year's Junior
· Fair Market
Hog Show.
· Also pictured
Daniel
Buckley, fair
king·, Rebecca
Chadwell,
swine
princess.
Audrionna
Pullins, fair
queen, Ashley
Life, fair queen
first runner-up,
Mark Gibbs ,
swine prince.

BRE'E'O@ MYOAILYSENTI NELCOM

TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern Local School
[)istrict will hold an open
house for students, parents
and the community on Aug.
18, with classes scheduled
to begin on Aug. 20.
Superintendent
Rick
Edwards said students can
meet their homeroom teachers and receive other information about the upcoming
school year at the annual open
house. Refreshments will be
served during the event,
which will be held from 5 to 7
p.m. in both the high school
and the elementary building.
Only one major staffing
change is planned for the
new school year. Edwards
said Shawn Bush has been
hired as a new middle school
principal in the elementary
building. Jody Howard will
continue in her capacity as
the elementary principal.
The school board modi.fied the admini strative
structure at the elementary
school, eliminating the
position of !ISsistant principal and dividing the responsibilities for two principals.
Bus routes
'The district has announced
minor changes in the bus
routes for the new year, and
asks that students be ready
and at their bus stop early.
Routes are' as follows :
• Bus 6 (C. Ritchie): The
route begins at Owl Hollow
Road at 7:10 a.m., and proceeds to Calaway Ridge
Road, Ohio 681, Main Street
in Tuppers Plains, Ohio 7
through Tuppers Plains to
the Athens County line, and
the Arbaugh Addition.
.
. • Bu.sh 15: The route
begins at Horse Cave Road
at 7:20 a.m. The bus travels
to Bashan Road to Keno,
exits Bashan Road at Bissell
Road before getting to
Keno. From Keno, the bus .
will travel Ohio 248 and exit
at Taylor, Riebel and Oak
Hill Roads. pick up children
in Chester, and share
responsibilities in Chester
with Tom Pullins (14).

accepts a
check from
People's
Bank fo r the
school supply giveaway program. ·

Submitted photo ,

IOIOPhOU
BY BETH SERGENT
BSE'RGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

ROCKSPRINGS
Robert Strohl and Jackie
Jordan will be showing the
grand and reserve champion
market hogs, respectively. at
· tomorrow 's livestock sale.
Strohl
and
Jordan
emerged on top of a competitive show consisting of
98 market hogs all vying fo r
the top slot.
In
addition,
Dani el
Jenkins· was named grand

champion showman and Miya Gilmore, Matthew
Michael Manuel was named Keesee, Josiah Lawson ,
reserve champion showman Breanna Colburn, Angela
during a competition which Keesee, Jennifer Fife, Jackie
included nine classes.
Jordan, .Adam Lavender,
Those placing' first in their Mitchell Howard.
respective weight classes
Those showing market
were: Tonv Roush, Sav.annah hogs at this year's Juni or
Hawley, · Shandi Beaver, Fair Market Hog Show are
Morgan Ru ssell, Jordan as follows, in random order:
Roush, Ky le Russell, Heath Nicole Andrus, Briann a
Dettwiller, Robert Strohl , Ayres , Shanda Welch .
Matt Durst, Zyon Gilmore.
Those placing second in their Mathew Gilmore, Jacob
res pective weight classes Pillow, Rebecca Chadwell,
were as follow s: Justin Lee, ·' Ple.ase see Hog show, Al

Southern Local .
announces
scheduling
.·changes
STAFF REPORT
'

NEWSilMYDA ILYSENTINEL COM

RA C INE Southern
Local School Di stric·t will
ha ve new ~ tart ing times for
sc hools
thi s
year.
Superimendcnt Tony Deem
has announced.
The superin te ndent said
that the time changes were
necessary so as to be in alignment with the vocatioml education program times scheduled at Meigs Loc ;il and
attended by some Southern
students. Busing change
times were annoui1eed earlier
by the Meigs District.
Essentially. Southern will
start 15 minutes earlier this
school year. Free Break fas ts
will be served once again
thi s year beginning at 7:30.
All students are g i v~ n a free
break!itst and all students
are urged to participate in
the program.
he
Students
cannot
dropped off at the sclwol
prior to 7':30 a.m. Deem
said adding that no unsupervised stude nts can be left on
school premi ses. Cert ified
staff will report at 7:45 a.m.
with so me duty rosters call ing for supervisory duti es at
7:30 a.m. School for stu dents will ·start Wednesda y
with teache rs reporting for
an opening day teacher's

Please see Southern, A3

Harrison, Barber have
top rabbit market pens

Charles Harrison
(front right) and
Katlyn Barber
(front left) took
the pnzes for
grand and
reserve cham pion market pens,
respectively, at
yesterday's
Junior Fair
Rabbit Show.
Also pictured ,
second row
(from left) Sabra
Bailey, rabb it
princess , Daniel
Buckley, lair
king. Audrionna
Pullins. fair
queen .

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT @MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

ROCKSP~INGS - Durin g a marathon
Junior Fair Rabbit Show, Charles Harrison and
Katlyn Barber took the ·prizes for grand and
reserve champion market pens, respectively.
Of ihe upwards of 30 market pens showing
this year. in addition to Harrison and Barber,
Dakota O'Brien finished third, Eli zabeth
Teaford, fourth, .Sarah Turner, fi fth .
When it carne to ,the showmanship awards,
50 contestants competed for the top prizes
with Haley Perdas taking the ribbon for grand
champion showman and Sarah Lawrence takin2 the ribbon for reserve champion showman.
First and second place showmanship winners
in their division were as follows : Senior,
'
· Please see Rabbits, Al
.

Beth Sergentlphoto

.

. We at Home
National Banlc
.
,

•

~

GATIJNG AN,__, to we1co1te tiatli119 Coal ComPaiiY to tile Neighbol'ltOOII.
;£U OHIO. LLC
·
We are loolclft9 (owarrl to wortlng witlt ,YOM.
. . ·

3rrl St. • R«ine • 1110.9119·21l0
St Itt 1.24 • Syracllse • 140·992.fJJJ
_..,.Got It/ .

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