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BUSINESS IN REVIEW

PageB8

••

'

Rice, 'GateS tell Arab

Tuesday, July 31, 2001

.

leaders US troops won't
leave Iraq abruptly; A2

Companies explore new ways of reaching conswners Now in your job description: Get fit
BY DAN SEWELL
AP BUSINESS WR ITER

CINCINNATI - She calls herself
"an irresistible babe" with a fondness for strawberries and champagne, and encourages people to use
her MySr,ace page to send "naughty
(or nice) ' e-mail cards .
Her online friends include TV
celebrity/model Brody Jenner and
the Australian singer-songwriter
known as New Buffalo, among an
eclectic, colorful, tens of thousandsstrong, group .
"Miss Irresistible" is a new face of
a five-&lt;!ecade-old toothpaste brand,
Procter &amp; Gamble Co.'s Crest. She
also illustrates how large companies
increasingly are trying multiple new
outlets - such as social networking
and online video-sharing - as they
try to lure the attention of consumers who have a smorgasbord of
information and entertainment
choices.
"I think there's a lotof experimentation going on right now," said
King Hill, president of DigiKnow
Inc., an mteractive marketing
agency. "It's very complicated,
although it's very, very exciting."
Companies such as IBM Corp. and
Comcast Corp. have established
presences on the "Second Life" virtual. reality world, Unilever Corp.
just launched an online food/cookmg video series on Yahoo, while
Anheuser-Busch Inc. this year started its own entertainment Web site
called Bud.TV, which the company
recently said was being improved
after a decline in visitors.
."I think a lot of marketing today is
little neurotic," said Gary Stibel, a
marketing analyst who heads New
England Consulting Group. "You've
got people going off in all different
directions and it is less focused than
it once was."
Hill said . the advantat~es to new
technologies include bemg able to
target smaller groups of consumers
and lower costs than traditional
mass-media campaigns. But he said
many companies are still learning
how to evaluate the impact of the
new marketing and deciding which
of dozens of techniques to use.
Because of all the competing
choices, today's marketing, Stibel

KARISSA MARCUM
said, faces tough challenges to "get brought hundreds of submitted BY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
attention No. I; it has to hold atten- videos. They range from the humortion long enough to deliver a mes- ously poignant - a boy tells about
BALTIMORE - Stacey
sage; and then the message has to be his father taking his own Heinz bot- Barich changed her mind
both compelling and memorable." tle to baseball games to pour on hot about having a tummy tuck
He cites P&amp;G as an example of a dogs - to the strange - a young when her mother contractcompany that is effectively targeting man brushes his teeth with ketchup. ed a serious infection after
different audiences with different
P&amp;G utilized Facebook for a col- · a hospi\al stay. That's
media.
lege concert contest - ~he four when she knew she had to
In the past year, P&amp;G has also schools that got the most 'sign-ups find another way to drop
promoted Crest products on the col- for a Facebook group called "Smile her weight .
·
lege-oriented. Facebook .com site State" won a free on-campus con"I couldn't even do a sitand in a mobile campaign with dat- cert this spring.
up when I got here, but
ing quizzes and tips aimed at textAdam Kincaid, a North Carolina this was a no-brainer for
messaging club-goers.
State University freshman who says me,'' Barich said.
The consumer-products company he typically . spends as muc,ll as an
The no-brainer was a 12recently had contests for video- hour a day on Facebook, saiil he fre- week weight-loss contest
recorded jingles for the Pringles quently visited the Crest sit~ to see offered by her employer,
chips brand and to create a Mr: submitted photos and listen to Agora Inc ., a newsletter
Clean commercial for posting on the songs. He said it didn't look or feel publishing company based
'YouTube video~sharing site . The like an advertising site ..
m Baltimore. The reward:
company created an online forum
"It was more interactive,'' said A $1 ,000 prize for the top
for women's issues, and myriad Kincaid, who attended the free show "losers" in male, female
micro-Web sites with various his school won by the grOUJ? Young and team categories. .
approaches.
Love and began using Crest s teethBarich, a corporate com·
"In terms of how we do market- whitening strips after trying samples rnunications manager, has
ing, this has really ex~loded in handed out at the concert.
lost 15 pounds • she'd
approaches, methodologies, meaKevin Buss, a P&amp;G . interactive rather not say how much
surement systems," said James · manager, said the Facebook site was
Stengel, the P&amp;G !llobal marketing repeatedly updated, highlighting
officer who has said that the tradi- new artists, contests and news and
tiona! marketing model is broken.
video on upcoming music · and
"Consumers are right now very movies.
from PageB6
dynamic in their media habits ," said
"You can't just have a stagnant
Stengel, whose company, which page for this group," he said.
didates. Therefore, preparspends nearly $7 billion a ·year on
An emerging frontier is mobile ing for such questions can
global advertising, he lped pioneer marketing, with use of text menagtelevision soap operas. "If you stay int~ . Meijer Inc :, a Grand Rapids, be a great way to set yourself apart.
in touch with that and you want to Mich .-based
retailer,
rece'ntly
In addition to the · more
be relevant in their lives, obviously, expanded
throughout
its traditional in~uiries, topics
a lot of things change ... It's the Midwestern chain a system that
same reason we got into television alerts customers to impending gaso- such as conflict resolution,
problem solving and how
60 years ago."
line price increases.
well
you work with others
Four decades after its memorable
The system was developed by are now subjects many
tbick-ketchup · commercial featurin* SmartReply Inc., which also enables
Carly Simon's song "Anticipation,' Crate &amp; Barrel customers to get recruiters prefer to broach.
H.J. Heinz Co. has consumers sub- word of sales and specials by text. The more specific your
answers, the more likely
mitting homemade commercials this Mike Romano, SmartReply execusummer in what it says is the tive vice president, said companies you are to stick out in the
brand's broadest promotion , includ- are taking increasing note of the mterviewer's mind. A J?OPUlar trend among many mtering YouTube and online advertising possibilities as texting has spread viewers is presenting hypotied to Google.corn searches.
beyond youths to become common thetical situations and ask"Thios is really sort of the latest among young and middle-age in~ applicants how they
evolution in our strateg~ to directly adults.
m1ght deal with such situaengage our consumers,' said David
But amid all the new outle~s. tions. Think about the job
Cieseilski, vice president for Stibel advises marketers not to leave · before your interview and
ketchup for Pittsburgh-based Heinz, the old media on the shelf. He said what situations might arise·
among several companies that have television remains a powerful that the interviewer could
had make-your-own-ad promotions weapon.
present
hypothetically.
this year.
"People are goin~ to realize that it Stron~ responses to such
. The Top This TV contest has is not going away,' he said.
quest)ons will certainly

Seekers

she weighs _ by working ·
hard in the small, wellkept gym in Agora's basement.
"It's funny b~Jcause P.eO'!
pie that know me are like,
You work out?' But I
enjoy
coming
here;:
Barich said.
By the time the contest
ended Friday, 84 emfloy.
ees had shed nearly ,000
pounds, with two losing
over 40 pounds:
•
Fitness programs and
weight-loss competitions
such as Agora's, whicll
was inspired by the NBC
show "The Biggest Loser,~
are catching on in offices,
where workers are con"
cerned about their waist"
lines and employers about
health care costs. The
goals are .to improve
employee health, increase
productivity,
reduce
absenteeism and lower
costs.
'

•
.

)j'«!\.1"" ·\~.1

,

SPORTS
• Locals coniPefi-'in .SK
race. see P&amp;De·B1

make you stand out.
• '
· Be mindful of manner•
isms. Though most job .
seekers are smart enough to
look the part with a nice sui!
and haircut, many don'l
realize their behavior during
the
actual
interview.
Regardless of how nice
your suit is or how good
your hair looks, fidgetin~
failing to make eye contac~
and even taking too many
notes while the interviewet
is speaking can distract the ·
inter-viewer from you amj.
what you have to say. EveR
if your insides are racing;
appear as calm and collect•
ed as possible on the outi
sid~.
:
If offered a glass of water;
take it. You'll want to speaJc
as clell{ly as possible any:
way. When responding to
questions, be mindful of
how long . ;~;ou've been
speakinll· While vou'll want
to avOid "yes'' or "no~
answers, rambling on will
only make you appear ner·
VOUS and ill-prepared.

See.,.
A3
...
~, · a~

• t..Oeal·· gw,..,tf,
s.!i7~ A5
• Chief .JuStic::e Roberts
leaves hospital in
M@ir)e,.a day after
seiZure. $e!t Page AS
• Only 9 members

t$ke adVantage
of p!'\)'Yision in

Confiscated deer donated to hungry

unioh:contracts.
See~A6

•

•

WEATHER
•"

.,.,

· l!' 1!rrlbune
Avenue ··

tq,

~laonP•Ax

~n~. 0~9 ..,.

)NDEX
; ·aSECI10NS ..,

t

12 PAGES

~ie's Mailbox

lea~ant l\egi~ter •

&lt;

.... ,.,.,.,. Main Street
Point Pleasant, WV

A3

Calendars
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Classifieds
Comics

wwwmydallyreglster.com

Editorials

·tradition:o

Obituaries
Sports Weather

As
B Section
A6

© aoo7 ohio Volley Publlshlns Co.

'

'·

POMEROY - So how
do you go from a child
whose favorite book · is
...The Little Shepherd· of
Kingdom Come" to a
grown woman being given
an Ohio Library Council
(OLC) Trustee Award of
Achievement? Although the
answers to this question
aren't obvious, Patricia T.
/
Holter is the one to ask.
Holter was recently nominated for the award by
Kristi Eblin, the director of
the Mei~s County District
Public Library (MCDPL) as
well as by colleagues Joy
Bentley, Gay Perrin and
Wanda Eblin.
The OLC Board of
Trustees
Award
of
A~vement ·reeognit:es·-ft!t·
indiVi1dual library board
member or entire board of
trustees that demonstrates
distinguished service and
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
innovative leadership within
HOEFl.ICHfiMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
the community or across
Ohio. The person must be
POMEROY Friday
active and demonstrate innoDennis Eichinger, principal
vative leadership and susof Meigs High School subtained
commitment to sermitted . his resignation for
vice
at
the
local or state level.
retirement purposes to the
Holter
has
been serving as
Meigs Local Board of ·
an advocate and trustee for
Education.
'
the local library board since
"It was unexpected;~· .s aid
1968 and was llattered to
Superintendent
William
have
been ·chosen for the
Buckley.
award, saying she was sur"I think he's done a wonprised to receive it, since
derful job in the years he bai;
there
are only 252 libraries
been w,ith us. When he came
in
Ohio,
many of which are
the district it was in academic
much
larger
than the
emel'!lency. Under his leaderSerpn!Jphoto MCDPL
ship 1t moved out of that to Patricia T. Holter (far left) was recently honored by the Ohio Library Council by receiving the
Holter said in the beginthe ranks of effective over the 2007 Board of Trustees Award of Achievement. She was nominated by many local col·
ning
of her work with the
past several years. The school leagues, including fellow library board member Joy Bentley (center) and Kristi Eblin, direc·
has expanded vocational tor of the Meigs County District Public Library.
Ple11se see Holter, AS
offerings particularly in tech
prep, and he's done a lot of
good things in that building. I
hate tO see him go," commented Buckley.
"However, he saw an
BY BETH SERGENT
opportunity to move to the
BSERGENTIIMYOAILYSENTINELCOM
next level and we can't
blame him for doing that.
POMEROY Ever
For us he did an excellent wonder what happens to
job. The kids are performing . those illegally obtained
Jl'etter on ·all measures .that
deer confiscated by the
the state and federal governOhio Division of Wildlife?
ment has in terms of educa- Well, at least 300 pounds of
tion:.. .far better off.. : and the'
t~at "evidence" recently
teachers want for very little
ended
up processed and
in the way of technical
donated
to the God's NET
materials and supplies. He
program.
was very .progressive."
Ke~th
Wood,
Meigs
Eichinger's resignation
Coun~
·
w
.
ildlife
offi~er,
was effective Tuesday. thts 1 .;the ·first lime said
his
Monday he starts into a new
offiee
,has
donated
deer
position as tech-prep coorGod's NET and he
meat
dinator with Washington
hopes
,'it
continues. Tbe
State Community College.
processed
deer
were
When contacted Eichinger
obtained
this
season
from
said he had enjoyed the stu. criminal cases pending in
dents, faculty, and commu- both Meigs and Gallia
nity and had fun (as principal of Meigs High School) countie~. being _held as eviand that he will be continu- dence u~lil those cases were
ing that at Washington State completf.!I. Once the criminal caseiwere resolved the
Comrimnity College at meat, which became the
Marietta.
property of the state of
Eichinger carne to Meigs Ohio,
Beth Sercont/photo
was turned over to
Local schools in 1993 as
Ohio
Division
of
Wildlife
Officer
Keith
Wood
donates
300
pounds
of
processed
deer meat
assistant principal from God's NET.
to
the
God's
NET
program
represented
by
Jenni
Dunham.
The
meat
came
from
deer
taken
Jenni Dunham, one of the
Eastern Local where he was
illegally in both Meigs and Gallia counties this year.
a teacher and athletic direc- coordinators at God's NET,
said the program has at
tor. He became principal in times received donated deer John Riley, actually donated God's NET to those who men wishing to feed the
August 1998.
hungry. Cal l the Ohio
his time in preparing some need it.
A speCial meeting of the · meet but never this much at of
the meat.
,
The Ohio Division of Division of Wildlife for
one
time.
The
donations
Meigs Local . Board of
Dunham said me was Wildlife has a program more information about the
Education has been· called include everything from
called Hunters for the program or call God 's NET
for Thursday at 7 p.m. in the steaks, to tenderloins, to glad to get the donation and
roasts to deer burgers. Wood it is already being put to use Hungry which accepts at 992-9919 to make a simiPle111e see Prlnd,.L A5 added that a local processor, by being distributed through donated deer from sports- lar donation.

Accepts position
Washington State

• Brickles baby bom.

'

BY SETH SERGENT

\

See.,.A3

',..

.

Kansas, but was not jailed.
Hobbs was imprisoned in
Oklahoma in the . 1990's on
charges of forgery, conceal ing stolen property and possession of .cocaine. Two
years ago, Hobbs pleaded
guilty to a charge of domestic violence in Meigs
County Court and in 2006,
was charged in that court
with felonious assault. That
charge was later dismissed.

BSERGENT@MYDAJLYSENTINELCOM

• Meigs County 4-H
News, See Page A3
• 'Half' birthday party.

.. j

·'I

Hobbs has been the subject of investigations by
both Ohio and West Virginia
Attorneys General, and the
subject of a local investigation, although no criminal
charges are pending. Earlier
this year, West Virginia
Attorney General Darrell
McGraw ordered Hobbs to
pay victims through his
office for undelivered prod; uct~. Hobbs was located in

'

INSIDE

•

ing his ·arm and rendering tire iron on July 23, 2006.
him disabled. Allen Young
Hobbs is .a former
of Chester Road, Pomeroy, employee
of
Meigs
POMEROY - .The man filed a personal injury law- Memory Gardens and foraccused of cheating ¢erne'' · ~uit . ih - Meigs · Cdunty tner operator of Beautiful
tery customers through a Common . Pleas Court Jast Meniories Monuments of
local cemetery and his own week. The suit· demands Pometoy. He is the subject
monument sales company is judgment in excess of of complaints by customers
now the defendant in a per- . $25,oq&lt;&gt;.
_
.
who say they ordered moosonal· injury lawsuit.
f\ecording to the corn- umeflts from the cemetery,
KeJJ Hobbs is accused of ,pla4it; '· liPbbs allegedly Ulrough Hobbs, or from
assaulting a neigHbor wjtli a ' a5s~Uited Young-~ a me~ . Hobbs' own busine~s. and ,
crowbar a year ago, break- .,Qbj~t sirtli)aroto acrowbar Qr never received them.
··
&lt;,
,,·

by: 0~~ Library Council

'

.'

t""' · ""'.l.n l ~ 't' t ll ll ll'L tn nl

\(( ; {"-,IJ . :!oo -

BY BRIAN J: REID

'

• Jerry Baker, ·19

41.

\\11•'\.l'"'lJ\'t

1

BREEO@MYDAILVSENTINELCoM

•

.

\q

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

'.

Aileged scamlner named in personal injury suit

Page AS

..,. ·

Tabler and Munn
families celebrating
historic ancestors, As

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

�•

•

The Daily Sentinel

" ?ageA2

NATION • WORLD

WednesdaY, AUgust 1, 2007

us

Rice,

ANNIE·' S MAILBOX

Bv LOUTA..C. BALDOR
AND

ANNE GEARAN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

SHARM
EL-SHEIK.
Egypt Visiting U.S.
Cabmet officers, hearing
blunt concerns from nervous Arab leaders Th~§day,
assured them the U.S. will
not abruptly withdraw
troops from Iraq and trigger ·
chaos that eould spread
across the Gulf region.
Even as an · increasingly
impatient Congress presses
for troops to come home,
Secretary
of
State
Condoteezza Rice and
Defense Secretary Robert
Gates said · they told IO;ulf
leaders that Pi'esident Bush
will take the region 's stability into account as he plans
long-term strategy for Iraq.
"There clearly is concern
on the part Of the Egyptians,
and I think it probably represents concern elsewhere
in the region, that the
United States will somehow
withdraw
l'recipitously
from Iraq. or m some way
that is destabilizing to the
A number of his commanentire region," Gates told across Iran's bow.
ders
in Iraq have made simireporters after he and Rice
"We are out here to talk
wrapped up meetings with about the long term," Gates lar pleas for patience and
Egypt's top leaders.
said as he and , Rice began caution in recent w~ks, sayGates, in fact, seemed to two days of meetings ing that while they believe
open the door a bit wider among Persian Gulf allies the recent buildup of U.S.
toward a more gradual pull- and Egypt. Gates noted that forces has begun to have an
out - something comman- U.S. relationships in the effect, they need m()re tiriie
ders in Iraq have been Gulf and beyond predate the to ensure the momentum
angling for of late - saying current unease over Iran's does not reverse.
Gates and . Rice made a
he is sensing greater open- ambitions and influence.
ness on Capitol Hill to a · · If Iran perceives the joint rare joint tour of key Arab
more careful, deliberate visit and U.S. overtures dif- fnends to renew long-stand·
withdrawal.
ferently, "that's in the eye of ing pleas for inore regions)
support for Iraq's struggling
Rice said they told the the beholder," Gates said.
government.
Many of the
allies that Bush's Iraq poliThe defense secretary
cies "have at their core an also said that in the last few largely Smini Arab states
understanding of the funda- weeks he has heard rrlpre regard Iraq's Shiite-led govmental importance of a sta- sounds of caution from law- ernment with suspicion, and
ble Iraq to the stability of makers when talking about have dragged their .feet on
this region." Those con- how the U.S. will eventual- fulfilling pledges of financial and other aid.
cerns, she said, will be a pri- ly leave Iraq.
The crux of the argument
ority for Bush as he awaits
"While there are still strong
the upcoming report from advocates clearly of with- Bush's advisers are making
commanders and officials in drawal, some of withdrawing is that the ripple effects of
very quickly, what I have chaos and failure in oil-rich
Iraq, due in September.
During a joint press con- begun to hear is more and Iraq would make it worth
ference at this luxurious more undertones, even from the allies' risk to get
Red Sea resort, the two . those who oppose the presi- involved.
Cabinet secretaries also said dent's J.X?licies," of the need
The duo - who traveled
their double-barreled show to constder the consequences ·together l~te Tuesday on
of diplomatic and military of a policy change and ''the Gates plan from Egypt to
SUJ?port for friendly Arab dangers inherent in doing it Saudi Arabia to meet with
King Abdullah - wrapped
alhes this week is not a shot unwisely," said Gates.

In this photo
released by
Saudi News
Agency, U.S.
Secretary of
State
Condoleezza
Rice. center,
and U.S.
Defence
Secretary
Robert Gates.
left, are
accompanied
by Saudi foreign minister
Prince Saud
ai-Faisal upon
their arrival at
Jeddah, Saudi
Arabia, late,
Tuesday. ,
AP photo

up sessions with nine allies
in Egypt with no new specific promises of help, but
Rice said sbe heard the right
expressions of suyport after
a gathering o
several
nations listed as reJ;ipients
0~ an expanded aid and
weapons
package. for
friendly states in .the region.
Iraq's Arab neighbors
repeated a gen_eral p_Iedge to
pfQmote stabthty m Iraq,
torn by more than four years
of W¥ and bitter sectarian
· divisions that have killed
thousands and driven far
more from their homes.. . ·
. While they won no· specif·
ic new promises of Arab
help · for struggling Iraq on
Thesday, Rice said she heard
the·right el\pressions of support' after a .gathering of several nations listed as recipients Qf an expanded aid and
weapons package for friendIy states in the region.
'"I think we know what the
obli,¥ati_ons of the ne_ighbors
are, Rice swd, addmg that
Egypt and other U.S. allies
are working to meet past
promises of relief for Iraq's

heavy international debt,
additional foreign aid · and
help tamping down violence
ins1de ltaq, .
.
A statement issued after a
nine-nation
meeting
promised only "to continue
to support lrlJq and expand
their financial and polttical
support';" and resta:ted a general commi!Jnent to blocking would-he terrorists and
financing that supports them
fiVm ~;ntering Iraq.
'1lul ... commitment was
always·to help a united Iraq
to reach !hat point of fi!ll ~t;l­
bilicy, atid Jhat ~e have been
trying to do over the last foW'
years," Egyptian Foreign
Minister Ahmed Aboul
Gheit said after the meeting.
Rice and Gatos were making a rare joint show of
diplomatic force during two
days of meetings with Arab
allies - part of an lithhour effort to rally diplomatic and practical help for
the U.S.-backed Shiite'-led
government in Baghdad.
The tour also opens talks on
a proposed U.S. arms package for Arab states worth

more than $20 billion.
The Cabinet secretaries
are also trying to solidify
what the U.S. sees as a bulwark of generally moderate
Arab states against an
increasingly ambitious and
unpredictable Iran.
"We have also been calling for the noninterference
of any foreign powers into
iraq," Aboul Gheit said.
"That is something we
would renew."
The Bush administration
also proposed a more than
25 percent increase in military aid to Israel over the
nel\t I 0 years, an effort to
balance the deal with Arab
countries.
Contending . that
the
increase of defense aid to.
Israel would "initiate a dangerous armament race in the
region," Syria's foreign
minister on Tuesday said
the .proposal goes against
Bush's call for an international Mide&lt;~st peace conference:
.
"Anyone who wants to be
an honest broker of the peace
process must not be biased
toward ·a pany and isolate
another pany in the peace
process," Wa!id · al-Moallem
told reporters at a neWs conference in Dam&lt;tSCus.

Internet
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Dream
Catchers
4-H Club
The Dream Catchers 4-H
Club has been meeting regularly with a variety of disqJsstons including project
work, skillathons, food
safety and clothing clinics.
Mee_tings have included a
health report by Matthew
Brown, a clothing project
report by Abbie Houser,
project book and reports on
camps.
At one recent meeting the
club members met at the
home of Rebecca Minshall,
advisor, where Lindsey and
Abbie Houser reported on .
the difficulty in getting
poultry to show and
Lindsey gave a report on
breeds of rabbits. Abbie
Houser made chocolate
krinkles from her cooking
project for refreshments .. At
another meeting a report
was given on judging and
displays in the booth.

Abigail Houser, News
Reporter

Lakeside
Leaders
4-H Club

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ed out and discussed, 4-H lesson on how to make lemon
shirts were handed out, the squares; Mandy Roush gave
·bake sale and car wash was one on bargain shopping for
finalized, 4-H Club cook- Frugal Fashions and Cassie
books were discussed, and Haruber diseussed exercises
plans for the Cloverbud to do for staying healthy.
trash cans were made at
Amanda Eason gave a
recent meetings of the club. demonstration on From A to
A trip to Splashdown Water Z - animal safety and
Park was taken on July 22.
behaving and Cheyenne
Demonstrations
were Doczi told the parts of a
given by Caitlyn Cowdery chicken for Raising Market
on Caitlyn's Life, Christian · chickens.
Speelman on Bugs, Abby
Andrea Buckley and Ryan
Collins on the Food Guide Davis served refreshments.
pYramid and Cookies, Mark The next meeting· will be at
Gibbs on My Quarter the
Buckley
house.
Collection,
Nicole Members are to take items
Moodispaugh on Working to start making booth decoWith Foods and Zuchinni rations and pictures for fair
Bread, Wade Collins on The passes.
Global Gourmet, and Amber
Reported by Pam Buckley
Moodispaugh on Pear Bread
and Peanut Butter Bread at
recent meetings.
At the July 8 meeting at
F!Jrked Run, mock judging
was held.
Demonstrations
were
given by Brooke Johnson
The Salem Center Go
on Frugal Fashions; Tori Getters 4-H Club met recentGoble on Quilt Making, ly at the home of Dawn
Heaven Westfall on Projects Kopec with 18 members and
Galore,
and
Becca two advisors present.
Chadwell on Dottie Bars:
A discussion on judging
A s~fety report was given and livestorck sktllathon
by Brooke Johnson on practice was held during a
Bicycle Safety. At another recent meeting of the Salem
meeting
demonstrations Center Go Getters 4-H Club.
were given by Mor!lan
Each member gave a report
Barringer, Dakota Colhns, on her projects. Basketball,
Baylee Collins,
Nicole led by Brayden Kopec was
Moodispaugh,
Caitlyn enjoyed. Refreshments were
Cowdery, Abby Collins, Taco in a Bag, with ingredi\Yade
Collins,
Austin ents brought by all.
Amber Davidson, News
Dillard.,
Kimberly
Hawthorne, Mark Gibbs, Reporter
Amber
Moodispaugh,
Shawna Murphy, David
Warner &amp; Aimee Watson.

Salem Center
Go Getters
4-H Club

Kayla Hawthorne, News
Reporter
·

Whiz Kidz
4-H Club

The Lakeside Leaders 4H Club met recently at
Forked Run State Park, with
17 membe;·s, four advisors,
and 13 visitors present.
Project updates were
gtven, Forked Run and
Canter's Cave camping
remark s were made, pre-fair
judging packets were hand-

•

~~~~~J:~~~~~TJ!

T-shirts, trips and show
rules were discussed when the
Backyard Critters 4-H Club
met recentely at the Meigs
Museum. Plans were made
for a fun day activities to be
held at the Lazy T Chapperal
campgrounds. Angie Parker
served refreshments.

Joshua · Parker, News
Reporter

REACH OVER
17,00() HOUSEHOLDS!
740-446-2342
www.mydailytribune.com

BEtckyard
Critters 4-H

·.' 1111,

•

should check to see if the lingerie could be his size.
I am a cross-&lt;lresser, vety
straight and would never
cheat on my wife. I thought
my secret was safe until one
day my wife handed me a
package and said she was
going shopping for four
hours. Inside was a pink
teddy with a note saying she
didn't care what I did to relax
as long as I did it when she
wasn't around. Since that
time, our marriage has been a
lot better, I'm not hiding anything, I have time to relax and
I get_great gifts from my wife.
-Happy In New York
Dear Happy: Yoit have a
loving and understanding
. Wife, and we hope you let
her know how much you
appreciate her.

Annie's Mailbox is writ·
ten by Kllthy MilcheU and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to an-niesmail·
box@comeast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190; Chicago, JL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's MailbOx,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at -w.crearors.com.

MEIGS COUN1Y 4-H NEWS

9.95

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

~oint ~leasant legtster

Dear Annie: What happens when it's the husband
who has no interest in sex? I
am 38. " Marty" is 45. Both
of us are attractive and in
shape, and we've been married for five years. It has
been almost two years without any intimacy, and prior
to that, sex would occur
only every six to eight
months, and it didn't
include any affection, kissing, foreplay or romance.
Marty refuses to address
the problem or see a therapist. We do not have any
significant outside stressors.
Our finances are fine, there
are no family crises, no
career concerns, no children
in the way. When Marty's
father died two years ago, it
made the situation worse,
but it was hardly good
before that I think Marty
had a one-night stand back
then, but I don't have any
proof other than my intuition. He also has been to
business seminars which I
am not allowed to attend
because I "won't like the
women there because of
how well they dress."
. Annie, I may not be a fash. ion diva, but I certainly take

Access

REACH 3 COUNTIES

~~t ~alHpohs 1Jlatlp ~ribune

AND MARCY SUGAR

my appearance seriously.
· lion stated that although .I
This is ruining my self- might not know Gladysrshe
esteem and self-confidence. lived in the nei~borhood
I am seeing a counselor and with her mother, 'Matilda,"
have a wonderfully support- and attending the shower
ive women's church group. would allow me to meet
But I am seriously consider- both mother and daughter. I
ing leaving the marria~e. , am not acquainted with
Marty refuse s to recogmze Matilda, either. The invitawhat ·his behavior is 'doing tion included names of two
to our lives. I have asked ex~nsive stores where the
what I am doing wrong, and bnde had registered.
he says he doesn 't know.
I tracked down the showWhat is the nel\t step? My er hostess, a woman I know
husband loves me and I love only by sight, and told her I
him, but I cannot continue would be unable to attend. I
with this kind of loneliness. did not purchase a gift. I
-Almost Having It AU in always thought showers
New York
should be limited to friends ,
Dear New York: It's pos- family and possibly close
sible Marty is asexual, or co-workers. What is the etigay, or having a series of quette for inviting perfect
affairs. Either way, he needs strangers? Must Be
to address the issue so you Living Under a Rock
can de~ide if you want to · D~r Living: There is no
stay with him. Tell Marty if etiquette, because it is not
he wants to remain married appropriate
to
invite
to you, he must come with strangers to showers. If
you for counseling. If he Matilda and Gladys want to
refuses, ask your counselor get to know their neighbors,
for specific guidance. If they can invite them over
your counselor isn' t help- for a barbecue.
mg. find another. You need
Dear Annie: This is for
to get out of this limbo.
"Losing Sleep," whose husDear Annie: Recently, I band, a trucker, has ·a collecfound a handwritten invita- tion of women's lingerie that
tion to a bridal shower he says he found on the road.
attached to my front door. It You said he could be cheatwas for "Gladys," a girl I've ing, but more likelr,. he's a
never heard of. The invita- cross-dresser.
' Losing"

The Whiz Kidz 4-H Club
meeting recently at the
Buckley home where they
made plans to be in the fair
parade and discussed setting
up the fair booth.
Judging dates, times and
places were discussed and
questions about judging
were answered.
Ryan Davis gave a project

Pioneers
4-H Club

The Pioneers 4-H Club
met on July I, 2007 at the
Drake home with 13 members and three advisors present. Discussion was on
judging, !-shirts and the
demonstration contest.
Katy Lawrence gave a
report on "You're the
Athlete" and Austin Life
gave one on "Archery."
Camp games was recreation. Katlyn Sauvage
served refreshments.

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The coroner declined to
speculate on the causes of
death or reveal where the
bodies were found inside
the house, citing the ongoing Delhi Township police
investigation. Preliminary
autopsy results might be
available
Wednesday,
Owens said.
He said police were conducting interviews and no
arrests have been made. A
message seeking comment
was left Tuesday night at

.Meigs County
Shepherds
A project lesson ·on animal parts, breeds and withdrawal times for medications was given at recent
meetings of the Meigs
County Shepherds and
More 4-H Club held at the
home of Sally Ervin.
·Brandon Counts gave a
report on cattle breeds and
the good and bad qualities of
his project. J. R. Hupp, Lacy
Hupp, Heath Dettwiller,
Alyson Dettwiller, Kyle
Young, Ronnie Wilson all
te f ·
·
reporled on ra 0 gwn, arumal parts and three good and
three bad features of their
project.
Demonstrations
were given by Heath
Dettwiller on breeds of
swine; Kyle Young on four
breeds of sheep; Alyson
Detwiller on the history of
4-H in the United Statesd
and in Meigs County. As
part of her project, Alyson
Dettwiller served a fruit tray
and cookies
At the next meeting projects were reviewed and
members discussed thank
you cards for buyers and
feed supply certificates.
Members revisited rate of
gain, reviewed skillathon
and discussed preparing
their animals for show.
Basketball was enjoyed
for recreation. The next
meeting to be on Aug. 4
with animals to be looked at
if necessary.
Officers of the club are
Heath Dettwiller, president;
Kyle Young, vice !?resident;
and Alyson Dettw11Ier, secretary.

AI Dettwiller, reporter.

Public meetings
..,ed _ _._ A
.. , n.,....y, ug. 1
.,. REEhif?SVTILLE - Oli~e
.owns P ~stee~ meet m
renular sesslo~. 7.30 p.m.,
0 lYe Township Garage.
Thursday, A~~ 2
POMI?ROY -. Salisbury
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m., town hall.
_S YRACUSE -. Syracuse
Vlll~ge Counci~, regular
sess1on, 7 p.m., VIllage hall.
Tuesday, Aug. 7
CHE~TER - ehester
Township Trustees meet at
7 p.m., town hall.
. .
PAGE,VILLE - Sc1pto
Tow~ship Tru~tees, regular
meetmg,
6.30
p.m.,
Pagevllle Town Hall.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, AIJI. 2
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains VFW regular meeting, 7 p.m.
CHESTER
Chester/Shade Historical
Association meets at 7
p.m., Chester Courthouse
to make Meigs County Fair
plans.
Friday, Aug. 3
POMEROY PERI
Chapter 74 of Meigs
County meets at I p.m.,
Community
Mulberry
Center (God's NET) on
Mulberry Ave. Sheriff
Robert Beegle will speak on
iden,tity theft and ways to
avoid the problem.
Saturday, Aug. 4
· ROCKSPRINGS
Shade River Coon Club, 7
p.m., fairgrounds.
Thursday, Aug. 9
CHESTER Shade
River Lodge will meet at
7:30p.m. Refreshments.

Reunions
Saturday, Aug. 4
REEDSVILLE
Descendants and friends of
Laura and John Wells will
have a reunion at the
. Belleville Dam !'icnic
area. A potluck will be
served at noon with paper
products and utensils to be
provided.
POMEROY- A reunion
of the descendants of Joel
and Lydia Still Staneart

will be held Saturday at
noon at Juniper Ridge
Campground near Lakr
Hope in Vinton County.
. The address is 71587 Two
Mile Rd., New Plymouth.
Each family is asked to
· take a picnic lunch and
lawn chairs. For more
information call 992-5502.
RACINE
Beegle
reunion,
noon, Racine
Legion Hall, square dance
to follow from 7 p.m.• 11
p.m., for more information
call 843-5 146.
Sunday, Aug. 5
RUTLAND
Descendants of Orlando
and Katherine Sheline
Davis reunion, with c~-in
dinner at noon. Relatives
and friends invited.

Church events
Friday, Aug. 3.
POMEROY- Forgiven
4 Quartet along with
Earthen Vessels will be
singing at the Hillside
Baptist Church, 7 p.m.
·
Public invited.
Monday, Aug. 6
MIDDLEPORT
Vacation Bible School,
6:15-9 p.m., through Friday,
Hope Baptist Church, 570
Grant St. "Game Day
Central." 992-5334.

Youth events
Wednesday, Aug. 1
REEDSVILLE
.
Eastern youth signups for
third and fourth graders
only will be held from 6 to
7:30 p.m. at Eastern High
School football field.
Saturday, Aug. 4
SYRACUSE
Community Kids Safety
Day, beginning at I p.m.,
free food, music, Med
Flight helicopter, emergency vehicles, free swimming at London Pool, 9
p.m.· II p.m.

•

Birthdays
Saturday, Aug. 4
SALEM CENTER
Dorothy Bolen will observe
her 94th birthday on Au~. 4.
A surprise card shower is
being held for her. Cards
may be sent to her at 28188
Strongs Run Road, Dexter,
Ohio 457841.

'Half birthday party
RACINE -A surprise "half' birthday party was held in
honor of Betty Spaun rece11tly.
Since her birthday is Dec. 28, so close after Christmas,
she had never had a birthday party. It Wl!,S decided by some
friends that it was time she had one. Spaun was completely surprised as she did not expect a birthday party in June.
. She was presented with half a birthday cake, half birthday cards and half presents (one sock, one glove, etc.).
Only half the area was decorated, and the guests wore half
party hats. Ice cream and cake were served on half-decorated plates.
Attending were Dolores and Raymond Donohue,
Mildred Williams, Julia Combs, Pat Collins, Tom and Carol
Reed, Midge Satterfield, Chelsey Imboden, and Shirley and
Gerald Simpson.

Brickles baby born
MIDDLEPORT - Jeremy and Angel Brickles of
Middleport announce the birth of a son, Dolton Wesley
Brickles, on Wednesday, July 25, at the O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital in Athens. The Brickles reside on South
Third Avenue.

Makya Trussell, News
Reporter

Coroner: Mother, 2 children found dead
CINCINNATI (AP)- A
44-year-old woman was
, found dead inside a house
Tuesday along with the bodies . of her I 0-year-old so~
and 7-year-old daughter, the
coroner said.
The death s are being
investigated as homicides,
although murder-suicide is
"certainly a possibility,"
Hamiltoli County Coroner
O' dell Owens said.
The names of the victims
were not released.

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Community Calendar

Reader needs to get out of this limbo
BY KATIIY MITCHELL

PageA3

BY mE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

the police department.
Some residents reported
hearing gunshots, and police
received a call around 5:30
p.m. about three people
being f01md' unresponsive
and not breathmg.
The woman 's 24-year-old
daughter, who doesn't live
at the house, found the bodies, Owens said. The woman
used a keypad to open the
garage door and enter the
house after no one ails we red
her knocking , Owens said.

FEATURING

ampJueoo
9-1

CR 7A • POMEROY, OH
748-992-5787

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Wednesday, August t, 2007

PageA4-

OPINION .

1'Jle Daily Sentinel

....

Obituaries

·wednesday, ~ugust t, 2007:

111 Court Street • Pomeroy,

~hlo

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740} 992-2157
www.mydsllysentlnel.com

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

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, .and to petition
tile Government for a redress ofgfievances.
~

The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

Today is Wednesday, Aug. I, the 213th day of 20CJ7. There
are !52 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
One hundred yearn ago, on Aug. I, 1907, the U.S. Air Force
had its beginnings as the U.S. Army Signal Corps established
an aeronautical division in charge of "all matters pertaining to
military ballooning, air machines and all kindred subjects."
On this date:
•
fu 1774, British scientist Joseph Priestley succeeded in isolating oxygen from air.
In 1876, Colprado was admitted as the 38th state.
In 1894, the First Sino-Japanese War erupted, the result of a
dispute over control of Korea; Japan's army routed the
Chinese.
.
In 1914, Germany declared war on Russia at the onset of
World War I.
·"
In 1936, the Olympic games opened in Berlin with a ceremony ·presided over by Adolf Hitler.
In 1944, an uprising broke out in. Warsaw, Poland, against
Nazi occupation, a revolt that lasted two months before collapsing.
In 1946, America's Atomic Energy Commission was estalr
lished.
In 1957, the United States and Canada agreed to create the
North American Air Defense Command (NORAD).
In 1966,- 25-year-old Charles Joseph Whitman went on a
shooting rainpage at the University of Texas in Austin, k:illing
14 people. Whitman, who had also murdered his wife and
mother hours earlier, was gunned down by police.
One year ago: 'Mel Gibson issued a statement in which he
denied being a bigot; he also apologized to "everyone in the
Jewish community for the vitriolic and hannful words" he'd
used when he was arrested for investigation of drunken dri- ·
ving. Fidel Castro released a statement a day after ieniporari~
ly ceding power to his brother Raul in which he sought to reassure Cubans that his health was stable after intestinal surgery.
Thday's B~ys: Actor-director Geoffrey Holder is 77.
Sin~er Ram~~~~· !ack ~lliott i~ 76; Cartoonist To~ Wd5on
(retired creator of "Ziggy") IS 76. Actor-comedian Doin
DeLuise is 74. Fashion designer Yves Saint lAurent is 71.
Fonner Sen. Alfonse D' Amato, R-N.Y., is 70. ActorGiancarlo ~~~';'t
Giannini is 65. Blues singer-musician Robert Cray is 54n · il
Singer Michael Penn is 49. Rock singer Joe Elliott (Def W:'\1,\i::'~
Leppard) is 48. Rock singer-musician Suzi Gardner (L7) js 47.
Rapper Chuck D (Public Enemy) is 47. Actor Jesse Borrego is
45: R.apper Coolio is 44. Rock singer Adam Diuitz (Counting
Crows) is 43. Movie director Sam Mendes is 42. Country
singer George Ducas is 41. Country musiCian Charlie Kelley
(Buffalo Club) is 39. Actress Tempest! Bledsoe is 34. Actor
Jason Momoa is 28. Singer Ashley Parker Angel is 26. Actress
Taylor Fry is 26. Actor James Francis Kelly is 18.
Thought for "{oday: "As
as truth is, the supply is
always greater than the demand." - Josh Billings, nom de
plume of Henry Wheeler Shaw, American author (18181885).

The Daily Sentinel
Correction Polley
Our main concem in all stories is to

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I

Local Briefs
Plan social
WILKESVILLE ·- Wilkesville Presbyterian Church
will have its annual homemade ice cream social from 4 to
6 p.m. on Saturday. The menu will.include sloppy joes, hot
dogs, shredded chicken sandwiches, potato salad, cole
slaw, and baked bcjans, homemade pies and ice cream.

Car show ·

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'53.55
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ATHENS - A celebration of area-wide historic
interest in interracial integration by the Tabler and
Muon family ancestors during the early 1830s will be
held in Athens County
Saturday.
The ceremony will begin
at 11 a.m. in the Kilvert
communjty at the Kilvert
Church of God and then
move to the adjacent cemetery for a noontime unveiling of the restored stone
marking the Tabler grave.
According to information
submitted by a descendent,
Tabler, a white son of a
wealthy Virginia . slave
owner who fathered six
children by a slave named
Hannah, defied lhe norms of
the tinle, gathered up his
family and moved them to
Ohio where they could be
free and inherit property.
There he bought a large
tract of land near what is
now Kilvert . in Athens
County and lived until his
Pboto courtay of- Wlllker
death in 1843. The family
The
Tabler
stone
has
been
reset.
and
will
be
dedicated
at
no.
o
n
on
Saturday. Here descenprospered and multiplied
dants,
left
to
right,
Julian
Gonzalez,
Cecil
Tabler,
Tom
Walker,
Dessie
Workman, and David
and there are now several
Butcher,
gather
at
the
site.
thousand descendants of
Michael and Hannah.
A related story is that of buddy's 17-year-old daugh- Athens, gave a talk about tery rededicating the Tabler
the stone and celebrating the two
the pioneer settler Francis ter Sarah, sired seven chil- that · project to
Munn who, in o)d age, sold dren. Both Muon and ' Multicultural Genealogical historic families. Following
Tabler his first piece of land Wickham are commemorat- Society in ChesterhilL
the II a.m. program at the
ed
as
Athens
pioneers
on
After
the
talk,
Tabler
church and the unveiling of
on Federal Creek in 1830.
An illiterate soldier who stones in the little park on descendant Dave Butcher the stone in the cemetery at
originally came to Anierica East State Street in Athens. asked Walker if he would noon, a potluck reunion of
Now, the Tablers and the use his knowledge of repair- both families will follow at I
to fight for the British in the
Revolutionary War, Munn Munns, who lived together ing gravestones to help p:in. at the Federal Valley
and a buddy, · Joseph 170 years ago on what was repair the Tabler stone; by Resource Center Senior
Wickham,
eventually then our country's remote then uprooted and broken Room in Stewart.
deserted and j,oined the rev- western frontier are coming into tlu'ee pieces. Walker
All Tabler and Munn
together again.
agi-eed. On May 30, he and descendants
olutionary cause.
urged to
Last year, Muon .descen- several Tablers reset the attend. For further informaAt the tum of the century,
long after the war, the two . dant Tom Walker, who has restored stone in the Kilvert tion or to offer input, descenmiddle-aged men moved to been involved in restoring cemetery.
dants may call Tom Walker
Ohio where Munn acquired the old mental hospital
That group then decided to . at 740-593..13757 or Ada
land and, after marrying his ceiJieteries on the Ridges in have a ceremony at the ceme- Adams at 740-591-8807.

are

Ice crea:.m social
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flushed
.

SYRACUSE - The S)'l'acuse Water Depllrtment will be
flushing fire hydrants' on Thursday and Friday.
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Holter

fro~ Page.A1.
local library system, the
biggest challenge was .to
find money to work with .
and to keep the public interested by promoting art
shows, children's reading
programs and book sales .
The biggest change Holter
has seen during her tenure
is going from a school district library to a county
library system.
"I was shocked she hadn't
won already," Bentley said
when described all of
Holter's achievements.
Some of those achievements include increasing
funding for the library,
working to .renovate the
Middleport Library, establish the new Pomeroy
Library and urging the creation of the Racine and
Eastern Libraries with the
Eastern Library being the
.first library-school combination in Ohio. Holter has
also initiated book stations
in Reedsville and Salem
Center by offering bornebound services and by operating the bookmobile for
six years.
Eblin described Holter as
a "visionary" when it comes
to working to move the
library forward, specifically

.,.,

All the news that's fit for an Idiot

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 3()() words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, nor personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be aq:ept·
ed for publication.

Reader Services

POMEROY- Jerry Baker, 19, passed away on July 29,
2007, in Pomeroy, Ohio. He was the son of Jeff Baker and
the late Shirley Bunner Baker.
Jerry graduated from Meigs High School in 2006 and
would have graduated in two weeks from Mt. State School
of Massage. He was a member of Rock Springs United
Methodist Church and a . very active member of God's
NET Youth Center. Jerry was loved by everyone who
knew him; his big smile and willingness to help anyone
who needed an extra hand.
.
He is survived by his father Jeff; sisters, April and her
fiance Sam Rush, Natalie, Emily and Misty; brother, Andy
(Ashley); grandparents, Dick and Joan Baker, Trudy
Rin~er. Also surviving are special avnt Bev Britton, Betty
(Charles) Porter, Dave (Cathy) Baker, Dean (Martha)
Baker and extended family, Keith, Dee and Becky Rader,
Godparents, Pete and Tammy Waybright and special
friends, Cassi Huffer, Jenni Dunham, Grandma and Oscar
Starkey, Dennis Adkins.
·
He was preceded in death by his mother Shirley and
grandmother Alice Baker.
.;,
Funeral services will be held at I p.m. on Saturday at
McClure-Schafer-Lankford Funeral Home, 314 Fourth
Street, Marietta, with Reverend R. Keith Rader officiating.
Burial will be in Gravel Bank Cemetery. Friends may call
after 7 p.m. on Thursday at the funeral home until the hour.
of the service. A memorial service will be held at 5 p:m. on
Saturday at Rock Springs United Methpdist Church m Rock
Springs for family and friends. In lieu of flowers, a fund has
been set up at the funeral home to offset expenses.

COOLVD..LE -A car show will be held in. conjunction
with the 17th annual Coolville Lions Club Founders Day celebration on Saturday. Registtation is from 9 am. to noon, with
judging at 12:30 p.m. Dash plaques will be awarded to the first
50 cars. Trophies and Top 25 Award plaques will be awarded.
All cars are welcome in the parade at 10 a.m. The celebration will include food, crafts, live entertaiument, and
other events.
·
Information is available by ealling 667-3276 or 667-3166.

searce

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

historic ancestors

NEWWMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Jeny Baker

who live there."
public schools, for all kids." .
He's right to embrace
Which is why, Obama,_
alternatives for Americans families should have the · ·
of all income brackets. · choice - public or private . .
School choices, studies But on July 5, Obarna was
Kathryn
find, raise graduation rates, bashing No Child Left .
Lopez
and - as Jay Greene of the Behind at the National
Manhattan . Institute · has Education· Association 's ·
pointed out - '"result in annual convention, refer- ,
· higher tes\ scores for both·
the kids who use them and ring to procedures as "abananswer with whal seemed to the kids who remain in pub- doning" public schools.
bC a misplaced mea culpa: lie schools."
In "The Audacity of •
"My kids,. would not have
Supporting school chQice Hope" (Crown, 2006), :
gone to tftat school were it is, .frankly, a populist posi- Obama wrote: "When we as :
not for the fact that my wife tion. Most Democtats a society pretend that poor '
and daughter were killed would have adopted it by childfen will fulfill their ' .
and my· two children were now if they weren't so potential in dilapidated,'
under the care of my sister, beliolden to teachers' unsafe schools with outdatwho drove them to school. unions and other liberal ed equipment and teachers .
every morning."
pressure groups.
who aren't trained in the:
Perhaps .it was the stress
It's a position you'd think subjects they teach, we are·:
of the moment or the per- Barack Obama should be
perpetrating a lie on these :
sonal nature of the question. taking - heralding a mes- children, and on ourselves."·:
For, on the Senate floor, sage of empowennent and
Biden has seen the civil rights. But in that same
He ought to look at the
American education ·land- . debate, the Illinois senator test score numbers. The sta-·
scape more clearly: "When explained: "My kids have tistics have made other lib-·.
· you have an area · in the gone to the University of era! · Democrats
(Sen. '
country - and niost often Chicago Lab School, a pri- Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif.,
helll we are talking about vate school, because I Gov. Eliot Spitzer, D-N.Y.),
inner cities - where. the .taught ·there, and it was five take a look at school choice.!
public schools are abysmal minutes frorri our house. So It 's the new civil-rights
or dysfunctional or not it was the best option for our movement,
.and
the
working and where most of kids." Makes sense tQ me. Democrats should all
the children have no way But he, too, sounded defen- embrace it for the children.
out, it is legitimate to ask · sive for absolutely no rea,
what would happen to the son. He went on to explain
(Kathryn Loper. is the edi·
public
schools ·with · that "there.are some terrific · tor of National Review·
increased competition from public schools in Chicago Online (www.nationplre· ;
private schools and what that they could be going to. view.com). She can be con· .:
would happen to the quality The problem is, is that we tacted at klopez@ national·
of education·for 'the children, don't have good schools, review.com.)
~·

Tabler, Mono families

The Daily Sentinel • Page Aq

STAFF REPORT

The Daily Sentinel Democrats backtrack on school-choice statements. Democrats missed a real
opportunity during the July
23 CNNNouTube debate to
declare themselves proudly
pro-choice. Not on abortion,
but on education.
During the unconventional debate, Sen. Joseph
Biden, D-Del., could have
·done il easily. He's been an
advocate for giving j)oor
families the same opportunities wealthy families
have: moving kids out of
failing public schools and
into private ones.
· Unfortunately,
his
admirable position wasn't
clear during the debate.
Asked if cilndidates would
send their children to public
or private scl)ool, Biden's
answer sounded positively
apologetic. He said that;
after his wife and daughter
were killed in a car accident, his two sons went to
the private Wilmington
Friends School, \Yhere his
sister taught. When it came
time for high school, he .sent
the boys to a Catholic
school: "I'm a practicing
Catholic - it was very
important to me they go to a
Catholic school, and they
went to Catholic.school."
Biden should be proud of
the choice he r:nade, and this
came through somewhat
when he talked about high
school, but he retreated
from that when be ended his

www.mydailysentinel.com

I called my friend Tammy
in Texas to tell her the exciting news - that Lindsay
Lohan had been arrested in
Santa Monica, Calif., on a
DUI charge.
"Are you out of your
mind?" she asked. "My
entire county's under 10
feet of water, I haven't had
power for three weeks,
everything is a total loss,
the house smells like Tony
Soprano's car trunk, and
you think I care about some
minor-league
movie
actress? Who is Linseed
Low hand?"
"A flood," I said. ''That's
horrible ..When did that happen? Is Lindsey Lohan's
house OK? She doesn't
have a second or third home
down there, does she?"
"Don't ever call me
again," Tammy said, and
her line went dead. Water
damage is a terrible thing,
but I'm pretty sure if
Lcihan 's house were dam·
aged in a flood, we 'd have
heard about it. Still, I worry
about her. I don't know why
Tammy thinks she's in the
same jeague with Lohan. A
little conceited if you ask
me.
I called my old buddy
Charlie in California.
"Pretty shocking, isn't it,"
I said.
.
"You're not kidding. I've
never seen fires like this.

Jim
Mullen

They've closed roads from
the smoke, and there are
emergency vehicles everywhere. Two hundred houses
have
been
destroyed
already, and they think it
may get worse."
"I don't know what tires
you're talking about. I
meant the news about that
Beckham guy and his wife."
"What are you talking
about?"
· "The soccer player. David
Beckman.
Or
is
it
Beecham? Or Breckman?
Or is it Peter Breakstone?
Something
like
that.
Anyway, he 's married to
one of the Space Girls or the
Spice Cadets or someone.
Trust me, even though
the'y've ·been saying every
year for 30 years. that soccer's gonna be huge, this
time you can bet the farm
on it. It's all over the news.
Don't you watch the news?"
"I must have missed it.
Probably out hosing down
my roof or something. Or
maybe planning my evacuation route. Gee, really good

talking to you. Please lose
my number." The line went
dead. Maybe fire burned his
. telephone· pole. I sure hope
David Beckworth and
Space Woman's home is all
right, or I'd have seen it on
the news. I wouldn't! want
them to move back to
Europe, or whatever country they're from, and disappoint the hundreds of
American soccer fans.
I called AI in Atlanta to
chat about Britney Spears'
meltdown at a photography
session for some magazine.
He hadn't even heard about
it. Am I the only one left
who watches the nightly
news? What is wrong with
people? Should people even
be allowed to vote if they
don't keep up with current
events? I mean, it's not like
Al's stupid or anything, but
how could he not have
heard about this?
"To tell you the truth, I've
been worried about the
drought and trying to obey
all the water-restriction
ordinances. It's tough trying
to take a shower in I gallon
of. water."
"What drought? That's
the first I've heard about it.
Do you think it's lack of
water that's making Britney
act so strange? Maybe the
government can get some
water to her. Wouldn't that
be the right thing to do, AI?

AI? AI, are you there?"
The phones are really acting funny today. I called ;
Bob in Boston..
"Wasn't that the most ,
moving thing you ever saw, ,
Eva Longoria's wedding" ·
"To tell you the truth, I've .
never heard of her. I'm fol- ·
lowing the stories on ·
Colony Collapse Disorder.
Seems half the honeybees in
the whole country have dis- :
appeared almost over night. ..
We need the bees to grow a·
lot of the crops we need to '
·
stay alive."
"Sure, but she married '
some guy in Paris. Paris! If
that's not news, I don't
know what is."
"I really couldn't care less ·
who is getting married to .
whom . Especially people
I've never met. Please, tum
off the TV and get some
help." He hung up.
Tum it off? I think I'm
not watching enough television. Because I must have .
missed all the stories about ·,
the effect floods, fires,
droughts and the lack of .
bees will have on Britney,
Lindsay, the Blockmans·and
· Eva. When are they going to
start reporting on that?
(Jim Mullen is the author
of "It Takes a Village Idiot:
Complicating the Siinple :
Life" and "Baby's First ;
Tattoo. " You can reach him .
at jim_mullen@myway.com) ·

Principal
from PageA1
'

administrative
building.
Buckley said at that time the
Board will give consideration to a replacement for
Eichinger, as well as handle
· other personnel matters.
He said that there are two
"internal candidates" who
are qualifie;d for the princi-

.

I

,

citing tl)e · Ell&amp;tern Librliry
pr9jecl. · Onde.r H'llter's
tenure, Eblin said the librarY
has "grown from two·smafl
facilities . with fewer than
five employees and a budget of less (bim $20,000 per
~ear, to four modem and
timovative facilities with 23
employees and a budget of
over $1.5 million [Jer year."
Eblin added Holter has also
impacted libraries across
the state by serving on
boards at the regional and
state level.
Holter is quick to thank
the other volunteers that
have been in the fight with
her when it comes to
improving the district
libr!lfY . in Meigs County,
calling. the library board
"outstanding" and acknowledging them all for their
work and support.
The OLC ts the statewide
professional association
which represents the interests of Ohio's public
libraries as well as their
trustees, Friends and staffs.
The OLC's mission statement is "to serve as an
advocate for public libraries
and to provide opportunities
for education and growth
for library trusrees, library
Friends, library staff and
library related personnel.
Holter lives in the Five
Points area of Pomeroy and
is also an avid reader.
pal 's job and that if one of
them is selected then that
means another position in
the school system will have
to be filled.
Since school starts on Aug.
20, a special meeting of the
Board had to be called, said
Buckley. If neither of the
internal candidates are hired ·
for the position, then an
interim principal will have to
be named while an outside
search takes place.

~

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~A·t
' .
'

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...:
.,:.
.,..

!..

uJ

i

/

1:\

0
;.o:.

. ...... " !(;-;

ft:R}'OR\U\"IJ JRT~ L'E~'TRE

The Unsinkable
Molly Brown
August 17 &amp; 18, 8 pm
Ducktona, Sept. 8
2nd Prize
Nordic.Crown Hot Tub
Donated By:
Ratliff Pool &amp; Spa
"How fast is your duck?!"
Box Olllce: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

New Horizons
,,
Childhood Enrichment
Center
Has Openings In Afternoon
Classes For Children
Ages 3-5
Call992-6245 for enrollment
information

..

�••

PageA6.'

OHIO
Only 9 members ~e Ally of.al-Qaida terrorist ad1nits
adyanta~e of prov1s.1on
to conspiracy in ntall plot ...

The Daily Sentinel

In umon contracts

BY JOHN McCARTHY
~SOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS - Only
nine workers have claimed
exemptions since a labor
agreement 10 months ago
allowed state employees
who object to union activities on religious grounds to
donate ~ues to charity, state
records show.
They are among the
42,000 union .members who
won that right in September,
after
Environmental
Protection Agency employee
Grell Greenwood objected to
paymg dues to the Ohio
Civil Service Employees
Association because he
believed the union supported
abortion rights and same-sex
marriages.
· Previously, members of
Ohio's public-employee
unions who had religious
objections were permitted
to donate their dues to their
church, but Greenwood had
no church to which to make
a donation. A settlement
was reached between the
OCSEA and U.S. labor
agencies that allows objecting members to donate to
any charity.
1\vo other state-employee
unions - the Ohio Education
Association and the Service
Employees
International
Union-1199- agreed to the
settlement. The OEA represents about 700 workers in
state libraries and prisons and
the SEIU has about 4,200
social workers, ,doctors, dentists, psychologists, parole
officers and other state
employees. The OCSEA, the
state's largest J?Ublic workers
union, represents about
37,000 employees.

lVednesday,Augustt,2oo;

•

Cfttlcs ollldaiJy welcome Garnett,~ Bl
SeorelioUd, ~ B6
.

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

c ......

BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

Since the Greenwood case
was resolved, 12 state workers have applied for the
exemption, according to
Department
of
Services
Administrative
records. Nine were approve&lt;).
one was denjed, one is pertding and one.was withdrawn.
The agreement came after
the U.S. Justice Department
sued the state and OCSEA
alleging religious discrimination against Greenwood.
The case was supported by
the anti:union National
Right to Work Legal
Defense Foundation, a
Springfield, Va.-based no~
profit group.
. .
The OCSEA was required
to post details of the agreement on its Web site, union
.spokesman Peter Wray said;
The procedure for diverting
dues to charity also is avail. able\ on the state's
Administrative Services'
Web site.
Wray said the union occasionally fields calls about
agreement, but most members seem satisfJ.ed that all
union workers are paying
their fair share, even if lhe
union isn't gelling some of
the money.
"When Greenwood first
surfaced there was confusion among some of our
folks,"Wray said. "Then,
they understood they were
diverting their dues to a
charity organization, that
eased their concerns."
Justin Hakes, legal information director for the
right-to-work group, said
the union could have done
more to inform its members
of the settlement but
acknowledged it was not
required to do so.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRIT£R

COLUMBUS - In early
August 2002, small businessman Nuradin Abdi was
angry and frustrated with
the w~ on terror his adopted country was waging in
Afghartistan.
Sitting in a popular suburban coffee shop, Abdi, who
ran a cell phone business,
voiced his frustration to
friends. His lawyer says he
was doing nothing more
than venting. Federal prosecutors say he was plotting
an attack on America.
AbPi's words are. at t~e
heart of a plea deal he
reached Tuesday, becoming
the second of the three men
at that coffee shop who have
been convicted.ofterrorismrelated crimes.
Abdi pleaded guilty to
one count of conspiring lo
provide material support to
terrorists, a conspiracy that
included the mall plot.
Abdi, 35, entered his plea
before U.S. District Judge
Algenon Marbley a week
before the expected Aug. 6
start of his · trial. He
answered each of the
judge's questions with a
quiet, "Yes, Your Honor."
Under the deal Abdi is
expected to receive a !(),.year
sentence on the count, which
carries a maximum penalty
of 15 years. Three charges
were dropped in exchange
for the plea. He'll be deported after serving his sentence.

as

The Justice Department tion hearin~:s ," auomey
accused Abdi of suggesting Aurora Bew1cke said after
the plan to attack an uniden- the hearing. "He's not sai4
tified Columbus shopping that the conversation hap, ·
mall during an August 2002 pened or that there was
coffee sh?P meetinjl with plans
to
hurt
now-convtcteji al-Qa1da ter- Americans."
rorist lyman Faris and a
A second
third suspect, Christopher Sherif, said
Paul. The . alleged plpt was made those
never earned out.
because·of
Abdi testified under oath in solitary
that he talKed with Fans and \ ,Sherif
Paul at . tha'" coffes shop the plea to
where , li~ sugges~lt they lifc.and
"plan to detonate a bohib in what a jury would liay
'
a shopping mall to
' the country's current
U.S. pdlicy
and attitudes toward
action·'' in ,
and ;Muslims .. Abdi ~pleflld;,;
lo ·
the plea aga~~; Sherif'~,
facts ·
··· advice, he add · !,'ii
' .J'In this-' :·c imate an
hearing. n
American juty'we 'felt could '
The statement of facts, potentially find bini guilty
agreed to by the govern- because of all this rtegative
ment and Abdi as part of the stuff thWs coming in and if
plea deal, .outlined a series they found him guilty he ·
of events that began when was looking at spending tbt·,
Abdi ·entered the United rest of his life iii custo'\ly,'" '
States from Somalia in Sherif said. "The-·govetn- ·
1995, continued with triJ?S ment came back With anolhto Kenya and Somalia m er offer, so he decided to
2000 seekinjl camps where take it."
he could tram for holy war
Abdi previously turned
and concluded with the cof- down a plea deal that would
fee shop conversation.
have meant only five yeilfs
An attorney for Abdi said in prison, Sherif said.
Abdi was only acknowledgAbdi, wearing jailhouse
ing he made statements blue pants and a light brown
about the mall plot under shirt, stood before Marbley
oath, not that the conversa- shackled at the feet and
tion regarding the attack han1Is. He smiled as he·
.actually happened.
struggled to raise his right
"He's never said that that hand to take the oath before
conversation
actually answering Marbley's quesoccurred during this plea tions.
agreement, he's just saying
He laughed as he chatted
that he said that in immigra- with Sherif before the hear-

ing and smiled at s~ve~
family members and friendS·
gathered in the courtroom
as he was led out.
•'
The government called.
the agreement a victocy
against terrorists.
"Today's case should
serve notice to those :Will&gt;
would ~e ad~an~ge of~\.1{
country's freedoms to su~
p&lt;irt and conspiie with inte~:
national terroiists· who are
our sworn enemies," ·said
Kenneth Wainstein, assit
tant/ U:S. ·attorney genenll
for nationahecurity. ' ::
Faris is serving 20 .yerut
in a maximum-security fedf
era! prison in Florence;.
Colo., for· his role in ail al•
Qaida plot to destrO)' • -~
Brooklyt\ Bridge. : 1 ~{.t'!
Federal agents arrested'
Abdi the morning of Nov.
28, 2003, the day aftet
Thanksgiving, out of feat
the attack would be carrie4
out on the heavy shopping
day. H~ was · arreslj:d at 6
a.m. while leaving his
Columbus home for mom•
ing prayers.
Prosecutors accused Paul,
who was arrested in April,
of joining al-Qaida and
plotting to bomb Europeail
tourist resorts and U.S. government facilities and mili-· ·
tary bases overseas.
·.
Abdi was to remain at the
Franklin County jail until
his sentencing date, which
was not set.
.
Associated Press writer
Lara Jakes Jordan i~
Washington contributed to
this report.
'

M9ther says condo association bars kids from pool
AKRON (AP) -

. An

PR.o FOOTBAlL

Pacman won't
wresde in his

APphoto

deal with TNA
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
- .Adam ''Pacman" Jones
won't be wrestling in a deal
being finalized with TNA
BY BRAD SHERMAN
Entertainment as the Titans
BSHERMANOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
cornerback works to keep
himself busy durint~ his seaROCK SPRINGS - Eastern High
son-long suspensiOn from
School distance runner Aaron
the NFL.
"Anyone who lias seen Martindale edged recent South Gallia.
wrestlmg knows there are · grad Steven Call to win the inaugural
other OPJ?Ortunities to be Alligator Jack's Flea Market 5K run
involved, Jones' atlomey this past weekend.
Worrick Robinson said
Martindale fil)ished the course in a
Tuesday.
winning time of 18:49, three seconds
The contract hasn't been in front of Call. Meigs' Andrew
signed yet, and TNA, which O'Bryant (19:47) was third while
is
headquartered
in River Valley products Kyle Hivley
N;Wiville
has weekly (19:50) and Brandon Kirby (21 :54)
shows on
TV cable rounded out the ~p five.

San Francisco Giants' Barry
Bonds reacts to a pitch dur·
ing the sixth inning of their .
baseball game against the
Los Angeles Dodgers in Los
Angeles Tuesday. Bonds
Ashley Fitch, a junior at River · Amy Perrin was the 40-49 age walked.
Valley, was crowned the ·overall bracket women's champion; Jennifer
women's champion - finishing ninth Bartrum, wife of former NFL star
overall in a time of 23:37.
Mike Bartrum, was the top 3(),.39 runProceeds from the run, organized by ner and Mindy Durst won the 20-29
the River Valley and Meigs cross coun- bracket. Shawnella Patterson was tops
try teams, will be used to benefit both in the 13 and under age class.
programs. RV coach Ed Sayre said that
There was also a 2K walk at the
the teams plan on making the run an event, and that .was won by Lori
annual event.
Patterson, who finished in a time of
O'Bryant (17), Hively (20) were rec- 20:25. Close behind were Stephanie
ognized as champions of their respec- Cleland, Amanda Hedrick and Debra
tive age brackets. Ed Sams was the 50 Kennedy.
and over male champion while Cody
All runners and walkers received
Haning, who was eighth overall, was some son of award, which were prothe top 13 and under performer.
vided by the market's inside vendors.

uan

rplaints ·againsthaveher

Local Weather

Slugger still one
shy of Hank Aaron

cott'g~ . ··-

ass~ci~tiq_q, charging
the grou~'"ilenied swi~tii
~I use to·children who
ifiSt tty trained..
'' 'Sthahn~' Malcom fi'.t;.ll'~'~'
Forecasl for Wedneec18y, Aug. 1
High I Low l8mp8 .
c_OIIlplaints with the Ohio
.Commission
after Seven
East Condominium5
her that her one-year92" 166'
sl. l~l~~~~~ .Lucas wasn't wei~·
in ilie outdoor pool,
·said.
"As a parent, it's my
responsibility to defend his
rights," Malcom said.
Malcom, 35, claims a
condo
board member
*Columbu•
her twice while
approached
92" 164'
AP photo
she was swimming with her
Lucas
Malcom
looks
down
from
the
balcony
of
his
grandmother's
condominium
at
the
pool
son and asked if the boy,
he
IS
no
longer
allowed
to
swim
in
at
the
Seven
Stories
East
condomlnulm
complex
on
who was wearing. a swim
diaper, was .potty trained. MondaY in Akron. His mother, Suzanne, has filed complaints with the Ohio Civil Rights
The second time the mem- Commission this month after the condO association told her that her one-year-old son
ber asked Malcom not to Lucas wasn't welcome in the outdoor pool, she said.
bring her son int9 the water,
she said.
·
living at the complex with called the rule a violation of Civil Rights Commission in
Tire board then enacted a her grandmother and son for federal and stale housing the next few months.
rule barring children under about a year, described the laws. ·
Seven Stories East has
~ Ooudy ~ =-~ ~'""
leo
the age of 3 from the pool incidents as unfair and
East
Seven
Stories
been
sued twice since 1995
PorUy.
~ ~ ~~
~ for health and safety rea- embarrassing. She took her
declined
to
comment,
saying
for
discrimin;ttion
against
Qoudy
Showem ~ Ran
• •
Snow ~
sons, Malcom said.
complaints to the Fair only that their attorney will families. Both cases were
Weather Undergroll'ld • AP
Malcom, who has been ·Housing Association, who resolve the matter with the settled out of court.
Wednesday •.• Sunny... Hot 60s. Southwest winds
with highs in the lower 90s, around 5 mph.
Light
and
variable
Friday••. Mostly sunny.
winds ... Becoming
east Hazy...Hot with hig&amp; ·in the ·
around 5 mph in the after- lower 90s.
'· ·"
noon.
Friday nlght ••• Mostly
Wednesday
night ••• cloudy in the evening...Tben
Mostly clear. Lows in the becoming partly cloudy.
mid 60s. Northeast winds Hazy in the evening. Lows
around 5 mph. in the in the mid 60s.
evening ... Becoming light
Saturday•••Mostly sunny.
and variable.
Hot with highs in the lower
Thursday••• Sunny... Hot 90s.
with highs in the lower 90s.
Saturday night and
South winds' around 5 mph. Sunday...Mostly clear. Hot
Thursday nighl•••Mostly Lows in the mid 60s. Highs
clear. Lows in the upper in the lower 90s.

Today's Forecftt.,.~ ...

e.:.::

Office of Economic and

Local Stocks

Workforce.Development

TitaliiS to make' it
the former West
Univeresity standout would
be doing.
"I think the club wants to
see him do something, obviously, while we've got this
time off before we report
back. His intent is only to
make appearances and do
things and not get into any
kind of physical activity
that's ~oing to jeopardize his
health, ' Huy~ue said.
"He's looking for a number of thint~s obviously to
occupy his time."
.
Jones was suspended for
the 2007 season m April for
conduct detrimental to the
NFL, and he can have his
case reviewed after the
Titans' I Oth game, which is
Nov. 19 at Denver.
He has been arrested six
times since being drafted by
the Titans in April 2005,
including June 22 when he
turned himself in on two
feiony counts of coercion in
a Las Vegas strip club fi~ht
that left a man paralyzed.
The cornerback had been
preparing for training camp
!,he past six weeks, hoping
the NFL might agree to his
request to let him join his
teammates. But the league
denied his bid last week.

NO.
1.

2.
3.
4.

111.54
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ChannJnc
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City Holcl.. (NASDAQ) - 32.85
Collins (NY5EI- 86.70
DuPont (NYSE)- 46.73
US (NYSE) - 29.95
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ElecbiG (NYSEI- 38.76
tt....,.Oo-.... (NYSE) - 57.32
JP Morpn (NYSE) - 44.01
Kr..... (NYSEI - 25.96
Umltod Brandl (NYSE) - 24.15
Norfalk Sout11em (NYSE)- 53.78
Oak Hill Fl...., lot CNASDAQ) -

S"-

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28.22

CoNTAqrUs

Olllo Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)
-25.00
BBT (NYSE)- 37.42
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 22.42
Pepolco (NYSE) - 65.82
Pramler (NASDAQ) -14.47
Rockwell (NVSE) - 89.99
Rocky Boota (NASDAQ) -11.83
Royal Dutch Shell - 77.59
Sea111 Holdlnc (NASDAQ) 138.79
Wa~art (NVSE) - 46.95
Wendy'o (NVSE) - 38.03
Worthington (NVSE)- 20.70
Dally otock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET clolln&amp; quotes o1 transaction•
for,July 30, 2007, provided by
Edwanllones ftnanclal - " '
luac Millo In GaiHpolls at (740)
441-9441 and lesley M811'8ro In
Point Pleasant at (304) 8740174. Member SIPC.

·-·-- ---··

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OVP S¢q!Jtlne:(is pm.·t o.ni.)

1~740f/.i6-2342 ext

•

33

Fax~1·~3008
E·mtlll- sport90mydallysentlnel.com

Sparta Staff

Brad Sharman, Sporta Editor

'•

1

118 'ER
HEALTH SYST E MS

__.,__ -· ------- ----

· (740) 4411-2342, ext. 33
bsherma.no m~llytribune. com

Home
,National

Bank

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 4411-2342, ext. 23
krumOmydaltyreglster.eom

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740)446-2342. ext. 33
bwalters 0 mydaltytribune.com

Lori Patterson
Stephanie Cleland
Amanda Hedrick
Debra Kennedy

AGE MIF TIME
:20:25
F
43
F
:20:27
34
28
F
:20:30
:20:31
F
50

NOTE
Overall

C~amplon

LOS ANGELES (AP) Barry Bonds reached on an
error when Dodgers shortstop Rafael FurcaPdropped
a pop fly during his fourth
plate appearance Tuesday
night , leaving the Giants'
slugger at 754 home runs
and one from tying Hank
Aaron's record.
Bonds was removed for a
pinch-runner after reaching
first in the seventh inning.
He finished the game 0·
for-2 with two walks .
Bonds struck out on
three pitches against Los
Angeles pitcher Brad
Penny in his first at-bat,
was walked intentionally
From left are Lori Patterson, 2K walk champion, Aaron his second time 'up and
Martindale, overall 5K race winner, and Ashley. Fitch, women's walked again in his third
5K run champion.
plate appearance.

Zimmerman's double lifts Nationals over Reds

\ ---------,...------~---

AEP·(NYSE) - 43.49
Akl8 (NASDAQ)- 81.96
.bhland Inc. (NYSE) - 81.08
111C Lob (NY&amp;EI- 25.86
Bob Ev. . (NASDAQ) - 32.46
Bor&amp;Womor (~YSE) - 86.45
Century Aluniliium (NASDAQ) -

WALKER

race

Bonds
doesn·'t
homer

+~~~~·im;:o::ther and thcr Filll ·

t

Bl

,The Daily Sentinel

Inside

.

WASHINGTON (AP)
Ryan Zimmerman's three-run
double was the biggest hit in
Washington's big fifth inning
Tuesday night, and .the
Nationals beat the Cincinnati
Reds 6-3 in a game between
.two of the NL's worst teams.
Washington entered the
day at 45-60 and Cincinnati
at 45-61 - only Pittsburgh
(42-61) was worse in the NL
- but neither club made any
deals before the deadline for
trades without waivers.
So there was Ken Griffey
Jr., hitting third and manning
right field'for the Reds. And
there was Adam Dunn,
another subject of trade speculati0n, batting fifth and
playing left field.
'There wasn't anything out
there today that was suitable
for us, so we passed,'' Reds
general 01anager VVayne
Krivsky said.
For the Nationals, relievers
Jon Rauch and Chad Cordero
- thought to be available
earlier in the day - were in
uniform and in the bullpen
throughout the evenmg.
Until, that is, Cordero came
Ol\ for a 1-2-3 ninth inning
and his 22nd save.
Rookie Matt Chico (5-6)
earned the victory by going
five innings. He gave up two
runs despite allowing nine
hits and three walks.
Cincinnati kept putting
runners on base - and then
kept leaving them there. The
Reds got at least one runner
to second base in every

inning through the first four,
but failed to score.
The Nationals had chances,
too, stranding a runner at
third in each of the first two
innings. In the second, Brian
Schneider was held at third
base on Nook Logan's double
with two outs and Chico ·
coming up. The pitcher
grounded out, drawing some
boos.
In the fifth, the Reds fmally
put somet!:ling together. It
began with Dunn, who
snap~ an (),.for-13 drought
by doubling off the wall in
tight-center. That was followed by three m.ore hits,
including Jeff Conine's RBI
double
and
Edwin
Encarnacion's RBI single,
and the Reds led 2-0.
But that didn't last long,
because Wa'shin~ton sent I 0
men to the plate m its half of
the fifth and scored five runs,
all charged to starter Bobby.
Livingston (2-2). He left after
facing five batters in that
inning and retiring none.
Ronnie Belliard singled in
a run,
bringing
up
Zimmerman with the bases
loaded. His double brought in
all three runners to put the
hosts ahead 4-2. Todd Coffey
replaced Livingston and got
two outs before Ryan Church
delivered an RBI single to·
make it 5-2.
After Brandon Phillips'
RBI single off Saul Rivera in
the sixth pulled the Reds
within S-3 Church added an
·
AP photo
RBI do~ble off Jon · Cincinnati Reds' Ken Griffey Jr., reacts to being called out on strikes in the..sixth inning of
Coutlangus in the seventh.
a baseball game against the Washington Nationals, Tuesday in Washington.

;___,,------~---·---------.,--~------J----

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Page 82 • The paily Sentinel
I

~ednesday , Augustt , 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

¥Wednesday,August1,2007

Celtics land Garnett
in unprecedented 7-for-1 deal
.

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HowARD ULMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

-

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l,,

,,
,•,

~-·

1~

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BOSTON
Garnett gives Boston a new
Big Three that brings the
Celtics much closer to what
their old Big Three delivered
- an NBA title.
The Celtics, who have 16
championships · but have
gone without one for more
than two decades, obuUned
the former MVP and I 0-tirne
All-S tar on Tuesday in a 7for- I deal - the NBA's
biggest trade for one player.
Boston sent the Minnesota
Tunberwolves forward s AI
Jefferson, Ryan Gomes and
Gerald
Green,
guard
Sebastian Telfair and center
Theo Ratliff, two first-round
draft picks and cash considerations. Besides Ratliff, 34,
ihe other fGur are 24 or
younger.
With Paul Pierce and Ray ·
Allen already on the roster,
the Celtics have been transformed from a promising
collection of roungsters who
APphoto
had the NBA s second-worst
record last season into an Newly-acquired Boston Celtics forward Kevin Garnett, center, stands with forward Paul Pierce, left, and. guard Ray Allen
instant contender in the during a news conference in Boston Tuesday. The Celtlcs sent the Minnesota Timberwofves forwards AI Jefferson, Ryan
mediocre
Eastern Gomes and Gerald Green, guard Sebastian Telfair and center Theo Ratliff, two first-round draft picks and cash c;Onslder&amp;Conference.
tions In the trade for Garnett.
"This i~ probabl~ my best
conditional a rookie again."
Garnett, th~ NBA's leading players are · under contract,
opportumty at wmmng a Minnesota's
draft
piCk
The key to the deal for rebounder each of the past although they are expected
ring," Garnett said. "It was a first-round
obtained in January 2006 Minnesota is Jefferson, four seasons, before the June to sign second-round draft
no-brainer." ·
The Celtics won their last when they sent Ricky Davis whom the Celtics were draft. But he preferred other picks Glen Davis, a forward
/ championship, the third with to the Timberwolves for reluctant to part .with. He teams than Boston, and the from LSU, and Gabe Pruitt,
had a breakout season in Celtics didn't want to give a guard from Southern
the original Big Three of Wally Szczerbiak.
California.
The previous biggest NBA 2006-07, his third with up Jefferson.
Larry Bird, Kevin McHale
The Timberwolves came
The acquisition of Allen,
and Robert Parish, in 1986. trade for one player carne in Boston, when he averaged
when· Houston . 16 points and II rebounds 32, in a draft-day trade with within two wins of the NBA
Two · members of that club 1999,
Scottie Pippen after
struggling
with Seattle to go with Pierce, 29, finals in 2004. Garnett averobtained
orchestrated
Tuesday's
from
Portland
for
~ix.
playinjuries.
He
joins
a
youth
was a major factor in chang- · aged 24.2 points and a
blockbuster trade - Celtics
ers.
movement
in
Minnesota,
ing
Garnett's mind. It gave league-high 13;9 rebounds
executive director of basket"I'm confident I made the which drafted forward Garnett, 31, a better chance that season, joining Bird· as
ball operations Danny Ainge
and Ttmberwolves vice pres- right decision here, even Corey Brewer from Florida. at a title after Minnesota the only players -to average
"The past few seasons our missed the last three playoffs at least 20 points, 10
ident of basketball opera- thou§h that it was a difficult
one, said Wolves owner on-court performance has in the tough Western rebounds and five assists for
tions Kevin McHale.
five consecutive years.
But Ainge cautioned that Glen Taylor, who made .· it been disappointing to our Conference.
But Minnesota has fired
He also realized that he
it's much too early to equate clear that G,arnett did 11()1 fans, myself, Glen · Taylor
two
coaches and .not made
request a trade.
and the entire organization," didn't
fit
in
with
the two trios.
the
playoffs
since. Garnett
The Garnett trade eclipses McHale said. "Through this· Minnesota's strategy of
"These guys will never be
the Big Three until they the latest one involving an trade, we have obtained very rebuilding with youth and never said he was unhappy
win" a championship, he NBA star. Allen Iverson. talented, young players with was amazed at all the activi- and never asked to be traded,
but expressed frustration
Philadelphia traded the a lot of potential, future flex- ty to finalize the trade.
said.
with
some of McHale 's per"It's like being in a
Garnett si~ned a multi- guard. and Ivan Mcfarlin to ibility with the salary cap
sonnel
. decisions .and chalyear extensiOn - Ainge Denver last Dec . 19 for" and' two fpture fJISt-round Lamborghini doing·. 200
(mph) with your head sll~ck lenged him to upgrade the
wouldn't say how long. He Andre Miller, j01; Smith and NBAd!:aft picks.
had one year plus an option two first-round draft choic-· "Personally, I want. to·, out the window," Garnett roster.
"1' d say this certainly is a
thank Kevin for all of his . said. "It's been like a whirlyear remaining on his .con- es.
big
day in our franchise's
"This is a tremendous hard work through the years 'wind the last 72 hours."
tract.
TayiQr said. "Kevin
.
history,"
Tl!e Timbcrwolves ~et tl_l~ IHY/' said a smiling Pierce, . lllld )'(P~Ihe, ~as meant totlie •. The Celtics' c;&gt;ther starters Garnett has
really meant a
Cel!lcs' first-round ptck 10 wlid had" been frustrated for '' TimberwOlves franchise." .. ,. ltre second-year point guard
lot
to
our
franchise,,
not only
2009, unless it is among the years as the sole star on a . The teams had discussed a Raj on Rondo and center
as
a
member
of
our
team,
but
top three, and a return of rebuilding team. "I feel like trade for the 6-foot.Jl Kendrick Perkins. Only nine

as a friend.
"On the other hand, it was
time we had to make a decision on the direction of this
team, look toward the future
and try to figure out the best
way we can develop a team
that has a better record and
better success than we've
had."
Garnett was the fifth player drafted in 1995, coming
out of Farragut Academy in
Illinois and skipping college.
He has averaged more than
20 points and 10 rebounds
for each of the last nine seasons. He is among five players in NBA history with at
least 19,000 points, 10,000
rebounds and 4,000 assists.
The others
are Wi It
Chamberlain,
Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar, Karl Malone
and Charles Bllf)dey. He also
is an .outstanding defensive
player and· .an excellent
passer.
The Timberwolves had
lost 60 games in each of the
four seasons before Garnett
arrived. But in his second
season, he helped lead them
to the first o( eight straight
playoff appearances .
Before his third season,
Garnett got a six-year, $126
million extension in 1997, a
deal that ultimately changed
collective bargaimng iil the
league and prevented the
Timberwolves from surrounding him with topflight
talent in the ensuing years.
With Garnett, seven-time
All-Star Allen and five-time
All-Star Pierce, the Celtics
upgraded their protile in a
sports market dominated by
the New England Patriots
and Boston Red Sox .
Owners John Henry of the
Red Sox and Robert Kraft of
the Patriots and Boston
Bruins executive vice president Charlie Jacobs all
called
to
congratulate
Celtics co-owner Wyc
Grousbeck.
In his four full seasons as
executive director of basketball OJ?erations, Ainge has
stockptled youngsters. He
could be patient and Jet
them develop or speed the
process through trades for
stars.
"We are delighted to have
a core of three All-Star ial·ents to anchor our team,"
Grousbeck said.

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Local Matal Band looking for REWARD: Lost dark blue
Lead Singer Call 992·9904 picture album ·near Blues
or 416-621 0 or 416-1090.
Festival· Pomeroy, Frl 7127,
n~----""""1 (502)599·1673

01 Lot 11t=ltldr·

on

ty tiling

lht Tltx Dup lotlt 11
Lot 47 Dl lubdlvlalon
of Lot

No. 118 In
PoiiiiiOY, Ohio. .
Tht 1foraNid' 1111
eel8te bllngaub)IGI to
a otrtaln agr11ment
mtdl ' * - n J.P.
lredbu,Y and Henry
Kolhlar on Novambar
14, 1811, •• rtCOrdtd
In Volume t, Page 2M,
Melg1 Cour.ty taan
Recorda,
reference
'whlcltlt hereby made.
TrliOI No.2:
Tht following real
tellla ellllllted In the
County of Melgl, In the
Stole of Ohio, ond In
the Village 01 Pnmeroy,
and bounded and

---

d811crlbed 11 follows: It
being Lot No. 48 of
Subdlvlolon of Lot No.
189, and part of
Trlongulir, Lot No. 515
Situate on Butternut
ind Valo Streeta In
Pomeroy.
Parcel
Nos.
1600614.000 and 16·
00613.000
Property Address: t32
Butternut
Avenue,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Current
Owner:
Charles Klein Jr. et at
Prior Dtedllelerencea:
Volume 2t3, page 667
App!liiHCI at $50,000
Tarmo of Sole: Cannot
be sold lor leao than
213rda of the appraiHCI
value. tO% down on
day of aele, Calh or
certlllsd check, belonce due on conllrmalion ofMio.
The approlul did not
Include an Interior
examination of the

The above described
collateral will be sold
"ao Is-where Is", with
no
expressed . or
Implied
warranty
given.
For further lnlorrna!Jon, or lor an appointmont to Inspect colletoral, prior to sale date
contact Cyndle, Ken or
Randy at 992-2t36.
(7) 3t (B) 1, 2
Public Notice

Shariff Sileo

check, balance due on
confirmation ol sale.
The appraisal did
Include an Interior
examination ol the
houss.
Robert E. Beegle,
Melga County Sheriff
Attorneys lor the
Plaintiff
Lerner Sampson &amp;
Rothfuss
120 E. 4th St, 8th Floor
Cincinnati, Oh 452024007
.
513-24t-3t00
(B) 1,_a, t5

·
'
CaM Number07CV024
Chou· Home Finance
Public Notice
LLC.PialntlffVS
Jackie P. Cremeans et Shariff Sale
at Defendants
Case
Numbel
Court of Common 06CV099
Plnae, Malgs County, Unites
States
of
Ohio
America Plaintiff vs
In purauence of an Joanno Ferguson et al
order of ·aale to me Defendants
directed 11om said Court ol Common
court In the obove anti- Pleou, Meigs County,
houH.
tied action, I will Ohio
Robert E. Beegle, expose to sale st pub- . In pursuance of 'an
Malga County Sherlll lie auction on the lront order ol sola to me
Attorney
lor
the atepa of the Meigs directed from nld
Plalntlll
County Court House court In then obove
Fronk &amp; Wooldridge on Friday, S.ptamber entitled action, I will
Co. LPA
7,2007 at 10 a.m., of expoae to sale at pub800 S. Pearl St.
uld dey, the following lie auction on the front
Columbus, Ohio 43206 described real estate: steps ol the Meigs
8t4-22t-t662
Situated In the Stole of County Court Houae
(7) 4, 11, t8, 25 (~ 1
Ohio, County of Meigs, on Frldoy, September
ond In the VIllage of 7, 2007 ot tO a.m., of
Middleport:
said day; thll following
Public Notice
Being the Eoat one- daacrlbed earl aatata;
hall of Lot• Numberl Situated In the VIllage
PUBLIC NOTICE
One Hundred Thirty- of Middleport, County
NOTJC.: II hereby Sown (t37) ond One of Melgl end Still of
given thlll on Saturday, Hundred Thlrty·Eight Ohio .
Auguat 4, 20071110:00 (t38) of Waterman Parcel Ono: Thl Nat
a.m., a public Mle will Palmer'• Addition to ona-hall of Iouth o be htld at 21t
lhelflald,
now hall (SO laet of Lot
IHond It,, Pomeroy, Mlddlaport, tiling 100 Utl7) In Horton••
Ohio. Tht Fermara ft., more or ltlt, on the Addition to what It
ltnk and 8avlnga allay batwHn ~ourth now tha VII Iaiit of
Com111ny 11 nlllng for and fifth Slrltll, and Middleport, Ohio, loraaah In hand or
Fifty (SO) 11. fronting on mtrly lower Pomeroy,
IIIII ohtoll the follow· Hooker Street.
Ohio. Said original lot
Jng oolllltrll:
Curr1nt Owner: Jackie btlrig SO feet In width
1883 Harloy Devldaan P. Cltmaanallal
and t40 feet In depth
tHDtiQK28DY018238 Property At:
389 and btlng further
The Fartnlra Bank •ncl Hooker Strtet
deacrlbtd 11 lollowa:
8avlnga '1 Company, Middleport, Oh 45780 Beginning 70 fHt Eaet
Pomeroy,
Ohio, PPI 15-00t22.000
of the 8oulhwaat cor·
renrv11 the right to Prior Dted Ralerenca: nor of LoU287;Thance
bid at thle Mit, and to Volume 80, Poga 357
North 50 feet; Thanca
withdraw the obova Appral18d
ot Eoot 70. feet; Thence
collateral prior to aele. $55,000.00. Term a ol South 50 feet; Thence
Further, The Farmart aele: Cannot be sold West 70 feet to the
Bank and Sovlngo lor less than 213rds ol place ol beginning.
Company re1erveo the the appraised value . Parcel Two: A right-ofright to reject any or all . 10% down on day of way lor aewer linea as
bids submlned.
sale, cash or certified currently
existing

-----··--

w,

eartl-

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I

across West one-hall Beginning
at
the west line of fraction 2 feet;
of the South one-holl southeast corner ol and tha eoot llna ol Containing
5.172
of Lot 1297 connecting E.K. Taylor's land In fraction 6 used aa an acres, more or less, of
Into
High
Street. Fraction No. 2, town assumed bearing of which 2.985 acres are
SubJect to an eaaa- no. 6, range no. 14, of north 03 degi'IHIII 29' In lroctlon 2 and 2.187
ment lor the beneftt ol the Ohio company's 2t" easll
acres are In fraction 6;
the West one-hall of purchased and In the Thence, with the west Subject to all legal
the South one-haH of center of tha road; line of fraction 2 and rights of way, easeLot 8297 lor water and thence
north
25 the eaotllna of fraction menta,
reatrlctlona,
gas linea connecting degrees weal 48 rods 6, north 03 degrees 29' reservations, and zonInto the alley between along the rood; thence 2t" east a distance ol lng regulations of
Broadway and High north 19 tl2 degrees t414.75feet to a point, record.
Streets.
· weal 74 rods and 5 bring the true place of Subject to the right· of
Current
Owner: links olongthe road to beginning lor thla way to Township rood.
Joanna Ferguson et at A. A. 'Humphrey's description.
No. 58.
748 High Street
south line; thence west Thence from aald point Subject to the 100 year
Middleport, Ohio
110 rods; thence south of beginning and taav- flood plain restrictions,
PPitS.01t38.000
7 112 degrees east 36 lng the lot line, aoulh It applicable.
Prior Deed Reference: rods and 10 links; 75degraaa51'15"weat Subject to a 50.00 laet
Volume 324 Page 543
thence west 22 links; a lilatance of 145.00 wide easement being
Appralled
ot thence
south
t2 feet to an Iron pin sst: reserved unto the
$32,000.00 terms of deg,_ wtat 4t rode Thence,
north
18 Grantor, their ~eire,
aele:. Camot be sold and t2 links to a stone degrees 08' 27" east a and or assigns, loravlor. leal than 213rds of corner; thence east 37 dlatance of 417.84 feet er. Said easement
the ·appraised value. rods and 15 links; to an Iron pin Ml, paaa- being lor the purposo
tO% down on day of thence
south
28 lng through an Iron pin of running ullthles to
Mle, cash or certHied degrees ' east 4t rods set at 1 distance .ol other parcels ol land
chock, balance due on and t5 IInke; thence plua190.00 feet;
on or near Township
conflr'matlon olaate.
south 51 degrees east Thence
north
74 Road No. 58. Said
Tlie appraisal did not 27 rods and 6 links; degrees 11 ' 52" aaat a easement runs In e
Include an Interior thence
south
5 distance ol 260.97 feet north-south ·direction
examination of the degrees west 1 rod; to an Iron pin sat;
across the east end of
houae.
thence
north
Bt Thence
north
85 the above described
Robert E. Beegle, degree• 80 rods to the degrees 04' 16" east a property with the east
Meigs County Sheriff place of beginning, distance of 357.65 feet line of said eaaament
Anorney
lor
the containing 85 acres to a point In the center, being the center line of
Plalntlll
more or less.
line of township road township road no. 58.
Stephan D. Miles
. Excepting .80.03t acres no. 58 (Whites Hill containing 0.237 acres,
t8 W. Monument Ave.
conveyed to Burner Road) passing over the more or leas, ol easeDlylon, Ohio 45402
Land Company, Inc., by eaat line ollractlon 6 at mont.
937-481-t900
daed
dated
May a distance of plus All Iron plna aet are
(8) 1, 8, .15
30,t998, and recorded 46.281eetand palling t/2" and 30" rebar
In volume 69, page 393, through two Iron pin capped ond labeled
of the ¥alga County uto at a distance of Clout 8458.
Public Notice.
official racort11.
plu• 234.65 laet plue 'The bearing• In thll
Reference
Deed: 334.8518111, re1pactlve- deecrlptlon 111 lor
Sheriff Salt
Volume 14, page 373, Jy.
engle calculation only
Can Number 07CV003 Malga County Olllclol Thonct, .with tht ctn- and are beHCI on the
J P Morgan Chna Racordl.
terllne of townlhlp well lint of fraction 2
Bank Plalnflll va
Tht above dtacrlbtd road. no. 58, aouth 18 and tha tttl lint of
Allan R. Jacka 11 al 1111 eatata Ia more dagraae 33' tl" aall a fraction
ultd at en
Dtfandanta
accuretaly daacrlbad dllltnce of 208.10 lett auumad blaring of
Court of Common by aurvay aelollow1; to a point,
north .3 dagreet2tl'2t"
Pint, Mtlgl County, 81tuat~d I~ the atata of Thence, leaving the till,
Ohio
Ohio, county of Mtlga, road, aouth 53 dagiHl A pitt of tha abova
In pureuance of an Townahlp of Rutland, 18' OS" uat 1 distance Cltlcrlbecl aurvey hal
order o! tala to me btlng Plrt of fraction 2 of 1117.41 gtet to an bean aubmlllld for Ilia
dlrecttd from aald and part of lltotlon 8, Iron pin ltl, palling at the oounty anglcaurt In the abova entl· r~na• t4 well, town· through an Iron pin Mt naar•a olllot.
tlad action, I will ahlp 8 north, of lhe ot a dllltnce of plue The above ducrlptlon
axpoM to aela at pub- Ohio Company II rat 10.58 fHt.
prepared by Roger w,
lie auction on the front purchase ol t787, ond Thenct, 1outh t9 Claua, ragllltred IUr·
1tepa of the Molga being bonded ond degrMI oe• 3e" auto vayor ;jo, 8458, bated
County Court Houle d11crlbed aalollowa: dl1tonca olt21 ,72feet on actual field eurvey
on Friday, Sept 7, 2007 Commencing''" relar- to on Iron pin Ml;
of May 7, 19118: sold
ottO o.m., of eold tilly, ence at 518" Iron Pin Thence, south 75 eurvey being subject
tha
following found
capped " E. degrees 51 ' 15" wast a to an facto that maybe
deticrlbed real ellate: Triplett 6766" In the · distance ol 311.34 feet disclosed In o lull and
Situated In the town- west line ol lrectlon 2 to the place ol begin- occurell title search.
ship
ol
Rutland, altho ooutheaal corner nlng, posslng through The real estate · above
County ol Melga, and of fraction 6 (Note: ref- an Iron pi~ satoto dis- described lo subJect to
In the state ol Ohio:
erence hearing on the lance or plus 85.38 all leases, eaae"!ents,

e

and rights of way of
record.
The preparar of thll
Instrument does not
eartHy the occurocy of
the above description.
Parcel one: 1t-00675
Parcel ,two: tl-00676
Known
ao: 33565
Whites Hill Road,
Rutland, Ohio 45775
Current Ownar: Allen
Jacko
Property at: 33565
Whites Hill Rd
Rutland, Ohio
PP8 11-00675.000
11-00676.000
Prior deed Reference:
Volume 185, Page 485
Approlied
at
$95,000.00 termt of
sale: Connot be sold
for leas than 2/3rds the
appraised value. tO%
down on day ol sale,
cash
or
certified
check. Balance due on
conlllmatlon of sale.
The appralool did
Include an lntorlor
examination of the
home.
Robert E. Beegle,
Malgs County Shariff.
Atto1ney
lor
the
Plolntlll
Shapero &amp; Felty
1500 W. Third St. Suite
400
Cleveland, Oh 44113
216-621-1530
(8) t, 8, 15
r--=-~-:--:-----,

Get AJump
On
C!A'Y
.

~

tNGS

· '
· ··'

c.~:.~:'::~=~I

7

looking tor experienced 104 Tatum Dr. New
cook, wilh full time hours Haven.WV 3bd'2ba. Ranch,

adorable ..__..

andbenefitl.$9.30-10.15/hr. lg.surwoom,;: car gar. ~eat
Please apply at the ca1e1e· area. D; 304·675·3637 E;
ria.
304-882·2334

colors. 3 Families. Fri Only. 4 mites

740-415-3969.
- - - - - - -Giveaway- Gats &amp; Kittens to
good home 304-675-11720

out SA 160 on right. Brand
name boys &amp; girls clolfles,
mise items.
----,----5th Annual name your price
lab/Aott miK , male 1yr old, yard 'sale: Airg. 101. 2nd &amp;
very friend~, grea1 wi1h kids, 3rd, AI 160N, 7/fO mile past

----babysit
Will

186

1

shape. Floral print 446·2a05 household Items.
Two

Bwk

old

till

spm.

Rodney

good home. Call 304-882· Community Center, State
3854
Aouto 850,
Aug 3-4, Woodland Drive.

~~
(.,.I...)A VHf

www.comlcs.com

C)

beautiful Hnes. Come 8nd

\\\1)1 \II \11\1 ...

i

~

"r"iii"-----""""1I

LOIS STRODE at 304-727- - - - - - - - - lions. Rain or shine, 14
7556.
LOST!Golden
Retriever
G
Wickham

301h,John

Road

Deere Coller - - - - - - - -

Concealed &amp; Carry Class, lost, Middleport area, male

NAA Certified Instructor, mixed breed dog, 101.
·8am
sharp,
Aug .4, black -whlte·brown,
has
Mercerville Fire Dept. 740· gr'een collar with fables tag,
starkey@inbox.com

Vln1on Avo, allipoHs, 740-

Monday 446
·8731

Male,Full grown. 992-68641

256-8514

iii

YARD SAul-

Irii

YARD Sow!-

1118

Large Yard Sale 3 miles out Cemetery Ad. off Baa han multi·famlly, woman's, Infant
554 Irom red light In Rd. Radne, 3rd trelklr on boy&amp; end girls, IP"af meterCheshire. Nursing scrubs, nght, glassware, clothes, nity, home decor, details call
(740)867•52••
name brand clothes all stand9
-.v
sizes, furniture, mise Items, Aug. 3rd &amp; 4th, earn-? 1 ~ Yard &amp; garage sale, Maeon,
cheap. Aug 2, 3, 4.
TV, men's jeans &amp; shoes, 4th Street, 9e.m-5pm, Aug.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4'e For Sale •.••.••..•.•...••.. :.•.......••....••.•.••. ••• 725
Announcem•nt ............................................ 030

Antlqueo ....................................................... 630
Apertrnentafor Rent ..................... ............. . 440

Auction and Fin Mllrket.............................oao
Auto Parte &amp; Accee.or .. e ••..••••..••.•••. •••...••. 780
Auto R..,.lr ........ .......................................... 770
Auto• for Sale ................................. ............. 710
Boata &amp; Mota,. lor Sale ............................. 750
Building SuppiiH ........................................ 550
Bualne•• and BuHdlnge ............................. 340

Buol,.oo Opportunlty................................. 210
Buelnesa Trelnlng ...................... ................. 140'
Campers &amp; Molt Home1 ................... ........ 790

camping Equlpmont ................................... 780
cardo' ol Thonko .......................................... 010
Chlld/Eldorly Cere ...................................... 190
El8ctrlcaVAe1rlgeratlon ............................... 840
Equipment for Rent ..................................... 480
Excavatlng ................................ ,.................. 830
Farlri Equlpment ....... .... ...................... ,, ....... 6t0
Farms for flent ............... .... ,.........................430
Farm• for S.le ............................................. 330
For LHH .. ................................................. .. 490
For 9ale ......................... ............................... 585
For S.le or Trade ..................... - ...... ............ 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetablea ....... .................. ............ 580
Fuml•hed Aooma .................... ....................450
Generaj Haullng .................. .................. .......850
Glveaway,....................... ..... ..... .............. :····-040

Happy Ado ....................................................050
Hay &amp; Graln ....................... ,, .........................fS40

Holp Wanted ................................................. 110

Home 1mprovemen11 .................................. .a1o
Homea for Sale ............. ............... ................ 310
Houaehold Goode ....................................... 510
Houeea for Aant ................ ...................... ,, •• 410
In Mamorlem ....................... ......................... 020
lnaurence ............ , ......... .... ,,~........................ 130
Lawn a. Garden Equlpmenl ••......•.•............. 660
Llveetock,, ....................... ............................. 630
Lost and Found ............ ............................... 060
Lola a Acreage .............. ................... ........... 350
Mlacellaneaua............ .................................. 170
Mlacelleneoua Merchandlae •... .....•.............540
Mobile Home Aepalr.. .................................. 860
Mobile Home• for Rent ........... ......... ........... 4:ZO
Mobile Homes for Sale ••..•••.••• ,, ................... 320
Money to Loan ....... ... ,, .... ........................ ;.... 220
Motorcyclel &amp; 4 Wheelera.. .............. .......... 740
Mualcallnatrumenta ................................... 570
Peraonale ..................................... .......... ...... oos
Pete for Sale .•.........•....... ......... ..•..••..•••.•••...• 560
Plumbl-:ag &amp; Heatlng ........................,.......... . 820
Profes810n•l S.VIce1 •••. ,............................ 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... 160
Real Eatate Wanted ..................................... 360
Schoolalnetructlon .... ................................. 160
Seed , Plant a. Fertlli::ter ....................... , .•••••650
Situations Wanted .......... ........................ .... . 120
Space tor Aent....... ...................................... 460

_,.,..QII

Truck• for Sale ..••... ~··········· ...... ................... 711

Upholstery .............................. ·............ ·. ·..... 110
Vans For Sale ..... .................. , ....................... 130
wanted to Buy ......................................... ..... 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies •... ........ .•••.. 620
wanted To Do ....... ............... ............. ,••...•••.• 180
Wanted to Rent .. .......................................... 470
Yard Sal• Galllpolle .................................... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy!Middle ........................... 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleaeanl ..........•..•.•...........•••.. 076

r..__i. .

tlon),furniture,mlscck:rthing
(children &amp; adults) Frl &amp; Sat,
Aug 3rd &amp; 41h 9•3. .
Mulfl·Femlf):· Donf Mloo
thle
onoli
Sumllltr
CleanncoVerd Seloll Kldo
loovlng

YARD s.w..

n.. n. ... ·... .....

III!U WANml

-

an Application or contact

Holle Bumgarner, LPN,
S1a"
o-~topmon1
"
•••

I

Womens

6·20,

Antiques, Bathn;JOm items,

Furnllure. kilchen Items,

Work Place Prcqam.

0

olllfto available
0 Up to $1.101hour +
-ybonuapo1en11ol
0 Paid training
0 Paid vacations &amp; paid
holidays

0 Medea!, dentel &amp; vision

_, .. _, \Nil
•••
&amp;"""

my C.PR. and ------4000 sq. ft. , brick ranch, 8
Flrs1 Aid. Very depandeblo. I rooms, 2·I01s, 2 112 bfh, 2·
would prefer to work days or garages, 2-tlre places, large
evenings, no nights. If Inter· patio wlawnlng, Middleport

ested call Catherine at .740· out at flood plane, quiet

441·9323or740·208·9318
All Typee Masonry, Brick,

neighborhOOd, de1eils call
17401992-4 197

Blodt, Stone, Free Estimate, 15bd
2bl
(304)n3-9550 • 304·593· Foncloo~nl

lnaurance64
-,.-2_1._ _ _ _ _ _ SM,IOOI

0 401(k) retirement plan
0 Friendly, professional

wen atmosphere
Join ueln milking ctllla
for moJor Po1111..1

o-tutlonal

1-877-•A~.c!47

....,.,
ext. 2341

New Horizons Childhood

GllllpoUI

Buy

tor

5%dn,
More home•

- ,
20yra08%.
Caregiver wtth 5 yrs experl- Fn:lm S188{mol For Jocll
ence would like 10 care for 11~
11 · - ••• '109

ca

I d
· lh · ••ngl
-~
ove one 1n
e1r
54_ _ _ _ __
homo. Ret.availal&gt;le. 446- _•F2_

your

7165 or 44 t-9232

806 Wllk&gt;w Lane Racine 3 to

_la_wn_.C-ar-e_Se_rvl_c_e_,M
- JNt-ln-g 4 Bd. ,2 bath walking dis·
tance to school. Quiet nelgh&amp; Trimming, Call (740)441 -

buidlng, trash doan, paln1A-onl
L I
Ita I "NO
ing, yard work. I do many dlf- "(;' com'""t,~N~ng

:e:,~s ~~:a~:·

0
gra:aN
to buy
home Instead ofrenting.

forp:~

:~~;·

Professionally
Clean. • 100% financing
Office/Housec l ean ing. • Lo111han pe ................it
IIO\,il

l&lt;ll'vv

Aug.2,
4635
4thSt .. Middleport.AU size todcler, Matemity cfothls

Aeasonabte
Rates, accepted
..,...._.
sent to P.O. Box 706, References 740..4-46-2262 • pavmen1 cou ld be th e
clothes.Boy&lt;fs Bears.A lo1 of _ _ _ __;__ _ _ AVONI All Areasl To Buy or Pomeroy, OH. Deadline Is 8- or 448-3881.
same as rent.
Locators.
Longal&gt;ergor basko1s,mlsc. Clean Mu~ family yam saki. Sell. Shirley Spears, 304· 17 7.
Mor1gaga

-o

riO

Christmas

Sl.,
ClasslflcaUon of Ad: 045. •
rrom Garage Sale GPS, electric Htlp W•nted.
Home
Hubbard's Greenhouaa, wrench, costume jewelry, HMitfl A - - Sign On
men's/women's
clothes, tools, · camera, fishing , Bonul Home He~ care
k~chon items, X-box games, knl1181!, lots mqre Thurs,Frl &amp; of SE Ohio Is currantly hiring
OliO's, 2001 Compaq com- Sat8-? 6 Stoneybrook Est. 3 home health aides · compel·
put~r
with
Windows miles out Sand'litl
itive wages. Call 740-662·

dishes, shoes, purses, CO's,
Surtound sound, Stuffed Mlllenlum, SO% discount
1222.
animals, VCR . Wed-Fri, BeautiControl, many other New &amp; Used Sale In AC

Sal?, 7am-6pm, Aug. f, 2, items.
bulidlngA 6 miles outG Jorrys
3«1, 1/4 mile past Buckeye--'--"--------- Run oad,Apple rove Aug
Hills School on Alght740- Big 3family yard sale.Baby 1,2,&amp;39-7304-576-2635
245-5785
clothes,men&amp;women's Yard Sale 2513 JeHerson
R
- a-in- or- Sh-in_e_:-4 -,am
----,11-ies, ~~~;ngi
:rl.:i p:: Ave. Lola of baby girl clo1hes
Airg 2·3 9am-?, 1 mile from Wolfe Pan Rd.on lefl Watch (O·f 2monlha), loya and
~
other misc. Aug 2, 3, 4.
Por1er on SA 554 1owan.1
for siSJ1S.7·3().(17 To 8-4·071
Cheshire
Yard Sale 2nd, 3rd, 4th, just
- - - - - - - - Four family garage sale, 813
1oo1
ol
rylhl · v.......a
1st4omu
Wed-Sun, Airg, 1·5: Mu•"'•. 9am-4pm, girls clo~
..lng 3T· at,.e
aekl evereve
movingng
sale
f/2
family, 918 Spires Ad (SA 5T, boy\; ckllhing 24 mos.·
II
Rad
ond
Ridge
1
160 N 4 mlIas past Ko rner 14, many name bran ds m as111ouhousem011 right '
Store to Morgan Center Ad. (Gymboree, Tommy, Levi ,
after 3 mile road
Go 1 mile lo Spires Ad; 1 Polo, Old Navy, ETC)
mile to yard sale) . Baby· women's dothing, Kenmore Yan:IBale Apple Grove Fri &amp;
adult clothing, 89 KK 250 dryar, toys, mise, 31384 Set 8·? 5 Family, 220 Brown

;;s:;

----==-===--

din bike. misc. 9-5

Noble

Summit

br811d clo1hlng, 10'/11. game,
YARD SALE: Wed 811 • Set
boy 2, turn, toolS, computer.
814 n59 S1 At 218, 1 milo Garage sale, Aug . 2-4, 9am· Kenmore shampooer, lots of
abOve Mercerville . Girls ?. At 7 above Eastarn Hi misc.
clothes Q-24 months, High School,

ChBir, stove &amp; lots more.

maple bedroom

Me, t.in, full &amp; q.-n size

beds •w/mattresses, maple

endulbles, 10 pc. set of

r

W.oom

ro BuY

Oa&lt;ymen needed on Latart
Dairy Farm send Resumes
lo Box TSC-26 c/o Poin1
Pleasant Regls1er 200 Main
St Pf Pleesent, WV 25550
r sr FT, Mldnlgh1
"' "'
E K P 8 r i 8 n c 8 d
Housekeeper I Jan i tor
De·•red·.
ln1e-•a~
,., w• Now
Being Conduc1ad. Many
Benefits Available. Paid
Vacations, Free Meals,
Discoun1s
Available
HQUML

Insurance,

Homelike

A1mosphere. Ravenswood
Center,

1113

IRS JOBS

StB.46-$32.60/hr., now hlr·
ing. Paid Tl81nlng is provld-

wroughl iron patio furniture, Abstlute Top Dollar : U.S. ed. For appltcatlon and

Parking

Lot. All

toys, ladles' &amp; men's brand Proofsets, Gold Rings, Prename clothing, designer 1935
U.S.
Currency,
handbags, shoes &amp; jewelry SOlitaire Diamonds· M.T.S.
Garage Sale, Danville, Aug. Coin . Shop. 151 Second
Avef'lle, Gallipolis, 740-4464 11
2 &amp; 3• (7'30-6·00)
·
· ' m es 2842.
on St. At. 325 • lawn furni·
lure, boys toddler dothes, Wanting to buy 10X10 Large
~rger, ~re, baby dog kennel wkh reasoneble
price. 7~7531

Proceeds will go to Coats for
KidsiMany Items for sale!ll!l
-------2 yard salas front yard &amp; car·
port,
1st-4th,
29081
Bradbury Rd.. Mi~. ~ Sals, f11ii1 or shlna,

3 family yard sale 35200 August 2 &amp; 3. Five Points
Wolf Pen Ad., P~meroy, area, Pomer('f, Wipple Rd.
Aug. 2nd &amp; 3rd. 9am-4pm. (740)992·2475, name brand
- - - - - - - - juniors size 0·6, women's
3 family, Aug. 1·2·3. Sam· size t4&amp; 16, Chevrolettruck .
4pm, 405 Broadway, Ra cine, 112·314 too, 1990-95 budtel
baby items, clothing &amp; more seats, plus misc. items

NEED TRAINING?
ComJ*IYSponiOilKITralnlng.
'GityourCDI.Injultl
Few ShortW..U.

S:~ ~ 1::':.":.
•·T.,._.I
-•
888-497.0SS8
www.jolncm.com
CAST VAN EXPEDITED

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg. Pay $20/hr or

$57K enJ'llally

lnctudng Federal Benefits

and OT,Pald Training,
Vacations-FTIPT

St,
f-866-5&gt;1 2•1531
,
WV.
USWA
Reference&amp; Required. A ~·..,.~:o::'~~:;=:='il
Pleasant Place To Worklll
lr Soles Polltlon

I----=-=--tree

American Assoc. of Labor 1·

913.599-8244, 24nlrs. emp.
_
so_rv_
. -----Nesd lemalo, part-11me Dey
Report Officer's assistant.
Dulles will include searching
&amp; drug screening female
clients, supervising cornmu-nlly service, and detailed

=,---, rOCOfd kseplng. l'!eekdeys
between 8 am till 4:30 pm.
25 hrs per wk 0 $9.00 hr.
Send resumes to f.Aaaon
County Day Report Center,
124 Highland Ave, Point
Pleasant, Wv 25550 before

8110/07

~===~==~
•NOTICb

PloeS811~ WV 25550 304 _ OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·

_
675 5806

Washington
AaiiBnswood.

housewares. ldds dothes &amp; Silver and Gold Coins, government job into, call
11t Annual Peoples for
People 10 Family Yard
Sale.Aug.3,Frl .·8:00am to
5:00pm.Location: Peoples

flelcilje hours required, pick·
up application. Mon·Frl
Pleosanl Valley Apanments
1151 E&lt;Jergreen Dr. Pt

DRIVERS·
NO EXPERIINCE?

Rd., Lana, baby &amp; children name Care

Middleport, Ours1 Aas.

Bank

We offer:

Full·llme and Part·1lme

•xP·rtvetnd
S. T.N.A.
states.
I am

'Dr11·
ucense In
current on

8:11().4:00111
Sal 814-Sun 815. Across 875-1429.
- - - - - - - - iiir;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;~· (740)367-0000
- - - - - - - - from
Farmers
Bank
Pan-11me Cleaning position
~
collogoll August 3rd, ~lh, 9am-4pm, (f't.Pfeaaant) 9-5 bOll dayS - - - - - - - - w1111 scheduled houiS, some
OPPolmJNny

for

Longaberger,

hawe been

mede. As~ng $75000. 304882-3n3 tor details.

._..
Coordlnator0740-992-6472
borhoOd .$65,000.740·9491333 or (?40)S4S-QS46
arxl come eee for yourself C.l todey to IChldule en
2651 or 418·4379.
the difference you can make
lntwvlewl
Odd Jobs wanted Deck - - - - - - - -

American Eagle, Levi's, 1057 Worchester
Tommy, Coot bedding, Lane Syracuse, across

B1yenl,

__,
._.,

ii''iiriii...........,iiiiiiiil'_.l lVI Excellent way to eam Enrichment . Center is
Th N
A
acx:eptlng ' resume's for an
1 W&amp;kaHeld, Wed~ &amp; money. a WN IJOO.
afternoon teacher's aida
Thursday, furniture, baby, CaU Marilyn 304-882·2645
~~~ion. Resume's can be

followthesigns

updat~s

Many

4 BA hou,., 2.5 baths, 1
A hard working caregiv~' acre, 1 car garage, gazebo,
Need 1 GREAT Job? would like 10 take caro ol1he moMolorl ShomRda 1 hooAkup.
alderly 1 11181 ho
1haVe
rn ng tar
n &amp;Cine .
We hive whit you ere
n
r mea.
Asking .St;t5,oqo. CaJI 225-

Email. (740)992-2355 or 740·949·
2 3 "Cho •
~ at O..rbrooklll
EOE&amp; A
2576
Mulll Family-Neighborhood 1eather coal, cunains, dish- 1, ' ,
op ' cam.-r,
Yard Sele Pf. Ploesanl, Staff os, PS2 and a lo1 more n~ gun &amp; lois more
Partldpant of lhe Drug-Free
Ad,
(near items, 5 miles frQm
Fairgrounds) New wood· Ravenswood bridge In
on Sl · At · 124 E" -~
working tools (large seJec. Po"land
''

Basement, 9+ Acres, 2 Car
Garage, Pool, CIA, 16&lt;30
Dolaclled Garage, 3 Types

IIIII'"...O_;.._ __, Galftpolls, OH 45631

A CELEBRATION OF
LIFE ...Overbrook Cen1er,
loca1ed at 333 Page Street,
Middleport, Olllo Ia pleased
to anAOUnce we are accept•
lngappllcaffon8 for 11ie luilOWing pooltlona 10 join our
frierdy and dedlca1ad 118ft.
stand, microWave
Ravenswood WV, 26164 , -Full 11m a and Part Time
Huge Inside solo, eJI money 'STNA'S and Part Tlmp
.a.ug
1·2. 570
Pearl toes to schOOl, August 2-4, LPN'S. Appltcattona must
Street.Middleporl. plus slzt 8:30am-3:00pm
be dependable, team play·
womens Clothes up to 4lll,
ers with positive attitudes to
4
114
and much ITIOfe.
sat. Aug. th, ' rrile 5 · of join us 1·n pr--tng --and
- - - - - - - - liuppors Plains, house
~N ~~
lng quall1y care to our resi
Aug. 2·3, Greenwood behind Church of Chrlsl, don1s.
'
·
Stop by and nt OU1

House

Ranch. 2 Kttchens. Full

111

I

I'Oilelov/Mmot..E
i'OMtlloY/Milou:
5
882 Burnett
675-5369
Ad, Gallipolis. Furnl1ure, ~
~
,
glassware,
misc.
5.
family
carpor1
sale,
Ubby
Gara~
Sale•·~·st .. ,
FOUND Young tan &amp; black
F h8(
Ra0I o off
•·
.....,.. ~
dog , near AooseveH School Community Yard
Sale: ~~~- ~ ...... Rd., 011" ·,...,_ antk:jues, hJmiti.J',e, tll'ji, too
Wednesday, no collar 304·
N-•
-"~ m"•h
Something for everyone. Frl Rd. Aug. 3rd &amp; 4th, Fri. &amp;
.... to list ' Sam••
.....,...
675-1138
740
742
1092
andSai9-4. 446JerrySt
Sat, clothes all sizes, 1 1 '
ralnorahlne
FOUND: Blk Bordec Collie Gamge Salo 1165 51 At princess you1h bed, baby GARAGE SALE. Airg.2,3,4
mix, M, Friendly, broken 588 , Aug. 2, 3, 4 , S:00· 3 :oo, swing, seat, toys, 2 tWin mat· at 40938 Laurel Cliff Rd.
leash around nack. 304·896- ~Hchen table wlchalre, bed- tress, kids truck (battery), wa1Ch tor olgno.9:00·
8854 or 675·1270
,&lt;II')Q, CllrtainS, home decor, Cub Ca~t rldlrg lawn~ !S:OOpm,raln or lh~e....
- - - - - - - - and clothing
sr,bedllnor, 2porchehalrs,
L051 on Red Hill Ad In _ ____::,._____ tread mill, 2 mo1ofcycles ho~ Hartlage Chrlstian Acidemy,
Danville · Female Chooola1e Huge Yard Selo FriB/3 &amp; Sel mBts, 30 gal. ftsh 1ank &amp; 300
Elwoo~
Street.,

~

IM!n'RUCllON

Helper.
Experienced Council tor tndependeut Co~eget
Preferred but not neceaaary, anc1 Schooll t2748.
Will train. SenD reaume 10
WANnD ·
CLA Box 103, c/o BaMipolla
To Do
Tribune, PO Box 489, ..__ _ _ _ _ _,1

2007 by NEA, Inc;

CoiiSctible, new and old

FOUND small dog wlblue soe. .
collar on Sandh~l Rd . 304· Airg 3- , B-4pm

"--"

partly furnlshad Leon area.
$24,000. POOr1e 304-674·
0132
------3 or 4 Bad, 2 112 bath, Brick

Oolllpollo eo- eo~ogo
(Careers Closa To Home) of Heating, 20 min S of
Coli Todayl 740-440'4367, Gallipolis, 30 lo WV on At 7,
1-800-214-0452
$165,000. (740)256-6546
Job cperM1o. Pat1 time to
Full time: HeltlnW Cooing ~~.,:~::ng 38R 1BA In New_ Haven.

r=======,-J'IH

kittens, -7-Fa_m_l~-~-a-,d-cSc-a-la_Au_g_t.a,

adoniible, very kwlng to a 9am

In my Letart 3 Bedroom House with bath,

home, behind Coal Mine
Plan1, all ages &amp; hours,
-rtencod, Sfa1o EMT &amp;
CPR certified 304·882·3538

owner moved. C8113B8-0346 554 intersection· Porter, on
- - - - - - - - the right. Look lor signs.
Ll~ng room sofa In good Womens &amp; junior clothing,

sporting Goodo .........................., ..; ....
SUV'I lor Sole ............................., .. , ........11fv

Shop
Classlfleds!

background check. Call 1· home. Corner lol, fireplace,
800-275-8359. M-F. 8:30 to modern kitchen, jacuzzi tub,
5:00. EOE MIF/ON
Payment around $550 per
monlh. 740·367-7129.
Unlvarslfy of R.lo Grande Is

giveaway 304-675-5701 or
304-675-6638
several

HoMts
~o,_..,;FORiiiiitiiSiiUJ!iiito_.l

pass a drug screen and this 3 bedroom . 1 bath

73 12K70 Hou5e Trailer Ia

Kltter:"~S ·-

\ I I " I I. I I

hour, all shifts, F.T.&amp;P.l 0 Down even wilh kiss than
Must have clean record, perfect credit Is available. on

YARD

Giveaway!!!

I. rior~~;;;;;,;~
I~ I

lfw&gt;W.oom

Security Officers needod In
Now HIMn, WV. $7.66 per

""r--~--W-'AY-·' r;;~~~~~~
SALE

~

Sheriff Sales
CoM Number 07CVDt7
JP Morgan ChaM Bank
Pllljntlll
vo
Chorleo Klein Jr, at al
Defendants Court of
Common Piela, Melga
County, Ohio
In pura1111nce of an
order of sole to mo
directed from oald
Court In the above
enthled action, I will
expoae to oale at publie auction on the front
atepa of the Meigs
County Court Housa
on Friday, Auguet 1(),
2007 ttl 10:00 a.m., of
oald dey, the following
described real estate:
ll'act No.1:
·The following real
eel8te In the County of
MIIIJI, Stata of Ohio
ond In the Village of
Pomeroy,
ond
d811crlbecl ulollows:
Beginning
ot
the
Northwaat corner of o
lot lormarty owned by
John Voa1 sometlmea
referred to ••· John
Fop: Thence South on
the line of Slid Lot 44
degrees Wut 100 feet;
thanct
North
34
degrees West 40 feet
thence
North
43
degreea Eaet 82feet to
the
front
atraet,
Buttamut Ava., thence'
with uld etf'8ll 44 feet
to tht piRa of beginnlng, Nld ploperty
baln~rt 01 Lot No.
303,
2, Range 13

6
I
r'
~---'· ~
lfw&gt;W.oom

Ale you a relative d JACK answers to'UIIie. Please call clothes, kt1 appl/cookware,
STRODE ? If so, please call 740-508.()457
household items/decors-

~~ .... .-

j

How you can have borders and vraphlcs
~
added to your classified ads
(. ~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for larQe

old, Wearing black coHar, mowsr, turn, name brand

·'·

Websttes·

www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydallysentinel.com
www.mydallyreglster.com

l\egi~ter

1,~-------' lab puppy approx. 5 monttls t\14 Sam·? _John Deer Riding

,x'

The Daily Sentinel• Page B3

Qeribune- Sentinel-l\e
C L A S S.I F I E D

'

Bv

www.mydlllysentlnel.com

An outs1andlng opponu·
nlfy lor lhe right person.
Prefer some sales
experience.
Offer 5 clay work weett

Excelklnt benelk pkg.
Contact
Carolyn Murdock
Office Admin.
Mon -Frl (740)446·3093
9am-3pm

to schedule an Interview.
No Walk-Ins Please
Security Officers needed in
New Haven, WV $7.66 per

hour. all sMts, F.T &amp; I'T.
Must havo cloao record,
pass a drug screen and
background check. Call 1·

800-275-8359, M·F 8:30 1o
5:00 EOE M!F/ON

lNG CO. recommends

that you do bustness with
people you know, snd
NOT Ia send money

through lhe miOI until you
have

investigated the

olfanng.

i::::::~I
'MONEY

10 LoAN

~ ••NOTICE**

All

rut nhlbl ldYer111h1g
In thl• new1p11per Is

IUbject lo thl Fedll'll
Hou.tng Act ol 1118
wttk:h m~~k• It 1Ueg11lto
advet11M "1ny

F~f

~. llmltotlonO&lt;

*..,

baNd on
color, rwllglon, ..,.
flmlllal 111tu1 or Mtlonll
ol'lgln, or ony Intention to
dlscr1mlm~tlon

m1k1 any
auet'l or
pl'lference,
llmltltlon
dlterlmlnltlon."

Thll newtj)lper will not

Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of
Financial
Institution's
Office of
Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refl·
nan ce your home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
lees or Insurance. Call the
Office of Consumer
Affairs loll free at t·866·
278..()Q(J3 to learn if the
mortgage
broke r or
lender
IS
properly
licensed, (Ttlls is a public
service announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

r~Atj

knowingly accept
ICivartiHmentl tor re~l
tltltt which II in

vtolltlon of tht llw. OUr
I"MdtJI .... hereby
Informed that 1111
dweltlftil ldVIrtlted In
thia newsl)lpet are
IYIIIIble on an equal
opportunity biNs.

For sale/land contract. 3 BR
house in Gallipolis, WID
connection $1500 down
$400/mo or rani $475/mo.

Also 1 BA in

Gal llpol~

$750

down $200/mo or rent
$250/mo.Call Wayne 404·
456-3802 for info.

In Syracuse · 2800sq.ft .
quality built mulli·level brick
home, maintenance free .
Nice quiet nsl~rhood . 3·
4 bedrooms, 2 112 bath with

TURNED DOWN ON
hardwood trim throughout.
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wlnt
1-888·582·3345

U·shaped kitchen wtth 40 of
cabtneta. Wood burning fire·

BARGAINS
IN THE
CLASSifiEDS

.60 acres lot. Immaculate .
condition. l ow utilities.
Selling plice $219,000. can

,-.._;:::;;:-:;,:"i;;.:;:;;:--,

'------....J

pace. 2 112 car detached
N' 1 landscaped
garage. Ice Y

740-441-5171 . Shown by
appt only.

~-- -- ·- -·-·-....:.----~----------------------------:--'----

�•
W~neaday,

~edneada~August1,2007

August 1, 2007

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip
·Alder

•rtll
(11.(11-G'J
K Q 1 0 5 2.

•
I
•

MONTY

•MONHaYOXYGENVIS~

(]amily, :

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

HUD HOMES! 3bd only ·
~01,100. Mo.. 1-4bd
~ """'l
homoo ovolloblol from
S11t/mol
5%dn, 117&lt;1/mol Buy 3bd HUD
2QrtoBI%. For llallngo homo! S%dn, 20yrs 0 8%.
~-~~~~~~11~01~-~~F~1~14~- For ilotlngo eoo.55f.1101

rlO

WPSt

Eul

A 6
• J 98I

• '8 43
• Q 10
• 9
eAJB714

•Q ! 0876

e

~

K2
Soulb

• J 7
• ?S 3 2
IAKJ63
• 6 3

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
70 Pine Street • G a llipolis
740.446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

2 both w/wtirlpool lubs,
llrgo. I.R !!" 3 acres m'l,

1NT

$87,500. 740-447029

Tttf JlJI&gt;t'iE

NOT

- - ONI,.Y tiAI&gt; A
~T~IGT

. OF

l&gt;fFINITIO,..,
'"JtJSTICf; tff

tcNfw

ttow ro use

1T ,,., A

ser~rer~ce.

BARNEY
TH' TI&lt;OU8LE W(F
GIRLS IS THAR'S
NO TALKIN'
TO 'EM !!

YEP, NO MAn:ER
WHATCHA SAY

THEY ALWAYS
WANNA ARGUE II

THE BORN LOSER
\ • ldi11
'"II

' ' " ' ' ' '..,

(

f'

t '

'

'

...

2008.4Bod

I ..... ,.~, , ,

l ld&lt; l l•d

ll

Contractor available for quality
construction on tum key, single
houses and duplexes, garages,
porches. All concrete flatwork
including palios, driveways· ·
and sidewalks.

J&amp;L

•I '

~ ~ WOULI:I'«lll ~'1' Tllf.'1'

!o,[CE."!

-.1

'

THE' SHOW

ENDS Ill
TWO 1'\ttl·
UT'S, I&gt;UI&gt;E
HE Ul()I(,S
!&gt;ONE 'Ttl
ME·

.Reliable &amp; Exp!!rienced
ca11 Dennis Bryant

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homeftll System
• Helios System

Fertilizer and

. s-.owmaster Show
Feeds

Nice 312 alnglewldoo
Ffom $1,800 down

poymen!
Gary (740) 828·2750

lHE

0.:.

TAAT SHOW!.
~T A
G£1j!US· HE
IS cctiES
AT THE
ENO.

r]a.m1Lv .,~.~~:"t~"'&lt;~a!l'!la~-~.....
IIlJ!~~~~~~~J

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

SUNSHINE CLUB
1989 Mu~ng GT 5.0. Lol'

of axtrSs, must see 10 appreciate. $5500 OB0..740-256-

26 Years Experience

David Lewis

1:i75

740-992-6971

------~------- ~5ro~a~ro~r·~~~t~-------Why Pay renl???
~
Clayton Single Wldes!\1
Stanlng at $225.00

per monlh W.A.C.

Call todaylll

1-886-928-3426

2002 Dodge lnlrepid 94,000
miles $5,600 304·593-3040

$

200 deposll, (740)949·

2025

rAND~ 1t

l.o~-oiiiiiiiiiiii-1.1 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartmenls
32X48 Mete! Bldg. lor rent, tor Rent. Meigs County. In
across from the hew SGHS. town, No Pets, Deposit
$500/monlh. Call 740-256- Required, (740)992·5174 or

6034, 740-441·5325

Insured

Free Estimates

Two bedroom trailer In
Minersville that has been
remOdeled, $350/mon!h &amp;

(740)441-()110.

ISHOP CLASSIFIEDSI
Happy Ad

you ~RR
h!llow,
who work!: at DRttwiiiRt lumbRr

wi~h hirn 1-lallby Birthday
on
2nd

NOTICE OF AVAIL·
ABILITY TO THE PUB·
UC
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columb111, Ohio
Logol Copy Number;
DIE FY2001 Goal
UnR Price Contl'llct
Monday, July 30, 2007
The Ohio Depanment
Tranaportotlon
of
(ODOn hereby notmea
all Interested persona
thot tho proposed FY
2008 Stotewlde overall
gool
lor
Disadvantaged
Buslneos Enterprise
(DIE) participation In
Department
of
Tr)lnaportatlon (DOn
noltded contracts will
be available lor review
and comment at the
ODOTCentr'lll Office,
Office of Contracts,
1980 Waet Broad
Street,
Columbus,
Ohio (8DD·4S9·3778,
&amp;14·466-3778).
The
document lncludoa the
and
calculation•
analysis used to proJ·
act t.he portion or the
goal ODOTaxpects to
meat through raceneutral and roc..COn·
lclous menuroe. The
DBE Goal SaHing
Methodology docu·

ment will be available
tor lnopectlon during
normal
business
hours
at
the
ODOTCantral Office,
Office or Contracts lor
30 days following the
data of this notice.
A public meeting will
taka place. at ODOT,
Central
· Office,
Conference Room 1 D
on Auguot 30, 2007,
from 9:00 am to 11 :DD
am where Interested
per.Ons will be given
tho opportunity to
maka comment.
WriHen
comments
concerning the FY
2008 Statewide overall
goal lor DBE psrtlclpa·
tlon In DOT asalated
contracts should be
transmiHod to Ma.
Deborah
Jsmoa,
Manager, External Civil
Rlghta, Olllca or
Contracto, 1vao Waot
Broad
Street,
Columbus,
Ohio
43223.
ODOTwlll accept com·
mentt on the goe.-lor
45 davs from tho dale
of this notice.
'
James G. Beasley, P.E.,
P.S., Director
Oho Deportment of
Tranaportatlon
(8)_ 1, 8

... THE J

2002 Hyundal Acconl GS, 2
door,

automallc, · power
steenng &amp; brak.... looks &amp;
runs great tow mileage

LADY BUGS
BUGGING YOU?

H1l l's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

740-949-2217 .

ROBERT
BISSEU
c•STIICliOI
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete

Remodeling

lrs that time of year lor fall
triatment service ~for 90

HOUri

$3,500 080 304-675-4144

Qays. August thru October
Treatment for ladybug&amp; ,

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

83 Town Car, needs Exhaust
worl&lt; $250 as Is. 441-9571

spiders, ants &amp; wa sps.

1/1 411 mo. pd

740·992-1871
SIDp &amp; Compare

GARFIELD

McCormick's
Extermination Inc.
CCJ~JJ~J~MCJ•I a FfH!Hnlf•J
Your Local T•rmitt I
Peat Control Comp~:ny

(740) 682-6244
740 418·7509

e.

...................

0

0

.........u. ..

'

PIYIII-.PIICISM
i••

Mason ~ounty Soccer
. League
Fall Season FINAL Registration
Mon (7/30), Tue (7/31) and Thurs
(8/2) 5:30 pm - 7:00 pm

AstroGraph
4burCBIU::diitt:

. fortunate that could wortr; to your btlneftt
will be going on behind the scenes.
Although you may not be directly
Involved, Its beneficial effvcts wMI tou-;h
you p&amp;t$0nally.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Hang out
with a friend who has been lucky for you
In the past because oOce agaln you
could derive benefits through the associ·

·

atlon. His or her rabbit's foot wtll l&amp;wor
you aa well.

SCORPIO

(Oct.

24-Nov. 22) - Without

SAGITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) -

Clean, 2br, 1ba, AC In
Hartford, deplrel required,
No pets $350/month 304576·4037

$12,000 080, (740)742· Mobile Home tor Rent, 2 BR,
AJC, HUD Approved, Total
4011
Electric, Rent includes trash,
Trailer lor 8818, $2,000, water &amp; sewer, $325/mo,
$325 deposit, Cell (740)992,
(740)992·5658

than the nine, he would have played tt.
Declarer also had the spade jack. That
"lakes nine points. 11 SoUih has 1t1e oob
jack 100, you are fighling eMile feud. ·
How many trid&lt;s does South have? AI
loest eil1lt: four spades, two hearts and
two diamonds. Yoor only chance Is to
cash the dub king aoo play your second
do.t&gt;, hoping partner has si• heeded by
the ace-jack. Gravyl
·

you even hawing to ask, Dame Fortune
will be doing everything ahe can to
lmprowt your lbt in lffe. Be receptive to
encouraging signals, and take advantage of what's being offered.

E.:cellent Condition 304· 08701 Roger~ Baserne'nt
882-3426 or 304-882·2550 . Waterproofing.
I·

Jon Parrack's Nationwide Insurance

in this

Open to Mason and Meigs Co.
youth bom August 1995 or more
recent For more info call Lauri at
304·675· 7997
Please do NOT call Nationwide

space
for
S60 per

4

-

unw...

5

B~ol

13 llolnled up
-.1
18 CI'HIIIor- 43 Lo-ttr
19 Ancient
~Ita
45
~oodr:doc 20
~:::...
Rollover
IGUICU
46 Vaccine
si.GJ.
22 G,..•v
omto.
&amp;ve,ln
mlll&lt;o
47 "Star Wars'
Brlllol
23 CRizln'o
rogue

~J.s~r 24' il:t~...

25 Fllrto with

greds
6

36 Yuaty

tr·)

Froth••- 3028 Youth
org.
Brown of

7 Pu~no rival
browo
8 Short
37 CIA
snooze
111011011111m 9 -.star
Pictures
36 lllfore
manllge
10 Hurricane
31 ttwyo.
center
40 MMttror
12 Go

~htbe-

48

50 Dolo

regulorty
51 Magazine
big blndl,
execa
34 lledloval
52 Malhor
35 Run-down
rablll!
hotel

40 Epic o1
Troy
41 Proolw'o

· Hawing an optimistiC attitude wiN be
equally as Important to your &amp;U00868 as
Is your knOwledge and know-how. Keep
a smile on rour face under all circumstances and occurrences.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - An
arrangement you've made with someone
could turn out to be one of the ludtler
things you've done In a long time. This
person Is on a roll, and you'll end up
sharing his ·or her good for;tune.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - A part·
nershlp alliance that you establish for
promoting a common cause will be your
tlckeC to success. Collectively, you'll be
able to double your chanoes lor succes&amp;
and all that goes with It
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Even II
you ere matched a~inst aorneorMI who
Is noted tor his or her superior tr&amp;ck
record. the odds will clearty be in your
favo r. Give it your all, and you'll find you
can beat this person.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) - Adopling a
good philosophical ouUook can go a long
way toward 11"18klng this a tortunate day
for you. Treat everything as ~ Lady Luck
Is oreheatratlng things, and ehe won 't let
you down.
TAURUS (April 20-~sy 20) - If you want
to try once again ;tor something meanlnQtul at which you failed prevlouely, thlt
Ia the cMy. You'll see lucky thing~ filii In
plaoe. and you'll achl...,. ~nt .Wtuttl
thll time.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20)- Your out·
gaing ptrton•llty will ttrike- cooperative
oord• wtth pereont who.. help you
would like to eoilolt . OrohHtrete your
tunll with ton•• they 011n't Mip but like
and W&amp;nt to alng.

CELEBRITY C.IPHER
by Lull campos

CeleOIIya,too._.................. br ....... _

,.. .......

Eadlltllerin!he~P'ldlb~.

~

Today's ci1Jt: Poque/S F

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SWDGW LFK YNJR
JKH GME EWFDY
• YWRTDGDTE

NDCF GWDNHVFK,
ZSK PDKIFVT."

JVEWMV T.

FHHDKIEZK
PREVIOUS SQUTION -'Guts is grace under pressure.' · E. Hemingway
'We l!llS1 hove the courage 1o be hajlpy.' • Henrl Frederic Arnie!

~:~:' S©~~~-~t.~~{_::.:j
- - - - - " - - ........ - · I. 'I'OILIH

leHen of th•
0 Rtorrange
four 1&lt;ramblod word• b.

low to form lour slm_ple worcb.

I
I

I
l

CHORIE

I I 1I I
2

51\RGS

I I I 1· I

I I I' I

J R0 F
I have decided thai this country
need~~ computer that will shed

5

NULE'il
tcan;···· it·····.
1-.,-,;:.,::,:Ti~-irl A Complete the chuckle q~Jored
1-.J...;...l_.I.-...1--'......J

V bv ftlling in tho missing wor~
you develop from step No. 3 below.

I' I' I' I' 1~ I' I
TT[I lit I I I I I I
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
1 - ll - o7
' - Irony - Inject - NOTHIN()
Openly - Graph
Country fellow watching teenager's dance, "If that
doe;n'tllringmin NOTHING will."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

Wf..LL, W~ DW'f clO'Rl ~K
00 THe. FIR~TDAY

cr vAIJU-'Il'( .
J

CANCER (Juno Qt .Jul~ Q2) - Chanare there will be a greater martclt for vour
ware~, whether you're leillng gOOdl or
MNioH. Lilt Otl'llrl Know now Vll~ble
your otrw1ng1 oould bl to thlm .

QRIZZWELLS

Advertise

INture
1
26 Tulldoh title
27 Jacket part 2
28 Be 111 omen 3

33

=,.·
DOWN ·

tpNf.'

This woel&lt; we 11e looking at the meat
and potatoes of defense: how deienders
uae poinl-count to place missing honor
cards and find the kiting defanae.
Sometimes you haYS lo hope that your
only cllanc:e wo.fa out. In real life, ol
course, afair percen111ge ollt1e time l!tet
will not happen. But In constructed
de&amp;ls, everything Is always lor lt1e best in
the best ol all poa!lble worlds.
SoU!h Is In one no-trump. You, West,
lead your lourth-hllllest diamond, the
seven:lwo, nine, ~ng. Declarer plays !he
spade jack from his hend, which you
dud&lt;, and ~ second spade to ~ ace.
What wOuld you dO 00111
. Who! did· you team llbou1 declarers
hand from the bidding? That he has 6-1 0
points.
.
- What did you loam ~om the play to lricl&lt;
one? That Soulh IMtgan wllh the ace,
king and jack of diamonds. Don~ be
looled by his .sneaky falsecard. W your ·
panr.er, Eest, had had a ..emond higher

peraonalty. Rell'laln optlmfsllc:: through
thiCk and thin, and you'll capitalize on
Dame Fortune'8 offerings.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Don't waste
your time on Insignificant maners or Prol·
ecta· becau8e the larger the endeawr,
the l~er you'li get. Take on that monumental task you've been putting off for so
lOng.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - Somolhlng

PEANUTS

21 ~lng
23 WllllfY

Bette Davis said, "To fu~ll a dream, to be
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year ahead could be one of your more
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Rental Property ror sere.

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By llorrilco Ooot
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�Page B6 • 1re Daily Sentinel

scoreboard

()barlie Frye hoping tQ beat eoinpetition
to puilch as Browns.starti)J.g quarterback;

'

PRo BASKETBALL
WOOMII'I Nltlonlt
llal-1 Al-llllon
EASTERN CONFERENCE
WL
Pet
GB
O.trolt
21 6
.nq
lnllillrll
11 10 .630 4
Ccnntctlcut
15 12 .556 6
Chicago
12 15 .... 9
New Yort&lt;
10 15 .400 10
Washington
10 15 .400 Ht
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L
Pet
GB
San Antonio
16 9
.MO
Phoenhc
17 10 .630
Sacramento
14 10 .583 1'!.
13 13 .500 31,1.
Seattle
9 16 .:l60 7
Loa Angeles
8 18 .308 8'!.
Houston
Minnesota
7 20 .259 10

I~ PR~S=LL
EutDhrtaliln
W L
Pet
GB
BeAton
e4 .A2 .804 , New Yort&lt;
57 49 .538 7
Toronto
53 53 .500 11
Baltimore
50 55 .476 13~
Tompo Bay . 40 66 .3n 24

l;entl'll Dlvlalon
' - WL
Pd
Dttroil
61 45 .575
Cleveland
60 46 .566
Minnesota
55 51 ·.519
Chk;aflo
.a 58 .453
Kansas City
47 59 .-'43

I

WHt Olvlllon
WL
Pet
62 43 .590
LOs Angeles
58 47 .552
Seattle
50 57 .467
Oakland

ConnectiCut 67, New York 6 t
Chicago 88, Houston 70
Detro~

Phoenix 80, Indiana 75
Minnesota 78. sacramento 73
San Antonio 92, Seattle 88
Monday'• Gam11
No games scheduled

WtclnoodiY'I Gamel

No games scheduled
ThUI'IdiY'I Glmtl

'

Minnesota at New York, 7:30p.m.
Phoenix at San Antonio , 8 p.m.

.

Soccer

EASTERN CONFERENCE
WLTPtoGFGA
New England 8 3 6 30 31 21
Kans&amp;s City
8 5 5 29 32 26
New York
8 7 3 27 26 23
Columbus
6 5 7 25 23 23
D.C. United
7 6 3. 24 26 22
Chicago
5 8 4 19 16 26
Toronto FC
5 9 4 19 18 29
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Houston
10 5 4 34 28 13
FC Doll's
9 6 3 30 24 24
CD Chlvas USA8 6 3 27 24 19
Colorado .
4 8 6 18 16 24
LO&amp; Angslea
3 5 4 13 17 18
Real Salt Lake 1 9 6 9 13 26

ERS

AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING-ISuzukl, Seattle,

Kansas City at New England, 7 p.m.
Saturday's Games
Columbus at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
Colorado at FC Dallas, 8:30p.m.
Houston at Real Salt Lake, 9 p.m.

Sunday'• Gamea
D.C. United at New England, 4 p.m.
Los Angels~ at Toronto FC, 7:30 p.m.

Thuraday, Aug. 9
Los Angeles at D.C. United, 7 p.m.
Saturday, Aug. 11
Columbus ot FC Dallas, 8:3b p.m.
Houston at Colorado, 9 p.m.
SUndly, Aug. 12

Toronto FC at New York, 5 p.m.
Los Angeles at New England, 7 p.m.

TRANSACTIONS
TUooday•a Sports Tl'lnoacttono
BASEBALL
American LHIUI
BALTIMORE
ORIOLES- Named
Dave Trembley manager ltuough the

end of the 2007 season.
BOSTON RED SOX-Traded RHP

Joel Pineiro and cash- to St. Louis for a
player to be named. Traded LHP
Kason Gabbard, OF David Murphy and

OF En~l Beltre to texas for RHP Erlc
Gagne an~ cash.
CHICAGO WH ITE SOX-Activated
OF Darin Eratad from the 15·day DL.
Traded OF-INF Rob Mackowiak to San
Diego for RHP Jon Link.
KANSAS CITY ROYAL6-Traded
RHP Octavlo Dote! to Atlanta for RHP
Kyle Daviea.
NEW YORK YANKEE6-Tradod RHP
Scott Proctor to the Loa Angeles
Dodgers for INF Wilson Betemit.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS-Re leased
OF Bobby Kielty.
TEXAS RANGERs-Traded 1B Mark
Teb:elra and LHP Ron Maha~ to
Atlanta
for
C-18
Jarred
9ahalamacchla, SS·Eivis Andrus-. LHP
Matt Harrison, LHP Beau Jones and
RHP Neftali Feliz. Activated 26 lan
Kinsler from the 15-day DL. Recallled
LHP A.J. Murray 1rom Oklahoma
(PCL). Designated INF Desl Refalord
1or assignment
TORONTO BLUE JAY6-Signed LHP
Mark Redman to a minor league contract.

1

Detroit, .341; Pooadl. New Yort&lt;, .339;
Figgins, Los Angekts, .333; Jeter, New
Vorl&lt;, .330; DOrtlz , Booton, .321 .
RUN6-ARodrlguez, New Vorl&lt;, 97;
Sheffield, Detroit, 89; Granderson,
Detroit, 85; Sizemore: Cleveland, 81;
Alos, Toronto, 77; MOrdonaz, Detroit,
77; DeJesus, Kansas Clly, 75; !Suzuki,
Seattle, 75; BAbreu, New York, 75.
RBI-ARodrlguez, New York, 103;
Morneau, Minnesota, 89; MOrdonez,
Detroit, 88; VGu&amp;m~ro , Los Angeteo, 81 ;
VMtt~ninez. Cleveland, 76; Matsui, New
York, 74; THunter. Minnesota, 74.
HIT6-1Suzukl, Seattle. 151; Jeter,
New Yorf&lt;, 143; Polanco, Detroit, 135;
MOrdonoz, Detroit, 135; BRoberts,
Baltimore , 130: Rios, Toronto, 129;
OCabi'era. Los Angeles, 129.
OOUBLES-MOrdonez, Detroit, 38;
DOrtiz, Boston, 33; VGuerrero, Los
Angeles, 33; AHill, Toronto, 31 ; Cane,
New York, 30.
·
.
TRIPLEs-Granderson, Detroit, 17;
Crawford, Tampa B&amp;v. 8; Crisp, Boston,
1; TPena, Kansas City, 6; Teahan ;
Kansas City, 6; DeJesus, Kansas City, fl;
UByrd, Texas, 6.
HOME RUN6-ARodriguez, New York,
35; Morneau, M!nne~ta, 28; CPena,
Tampa Bay, 25; Sl1ellield, Dot~. · 23;
Konerko, Chicago, 22; THunter,
Minnesota, 22; Matsui, Now Yort&lt;. 21 .
STOLEN BASE$-Crawlord, Tampa
Bay, 33; BRoberts, Baltimore, 32;
!Suzuki, Seattle, 30; Figgins, Los
Angeles, 28; Sizemore, cteveland, 27;
CPatterson, Baltimore, 27; · JLugo,
Boston, 26.
PITCHING (It Declsions)-Haren,
Oakland, 1J.3, .812, 2.44; Bonderman,
Detroit, 10·3, .769, 4.33; Verlander,
Detroit, 11-4, .733, 3.~9; Bedard,
Baltimore, 11-4, .733, 3.05; Csnnona,
Cleveland, 13·5, .722, 3.27; llec:kstt,
Boston, 13-5, .722, 3.41; Wang, New
Yort&lt;, 12·6, .706, 3.61 .
STRIKEOUT6-Bedord, Balllmore,
181 ; JoSantana, Minnesota, 156:
Sabathla, · CleVeland, 145; Kazmir,
Tompo Bay, 144; Matsuzaks, Bo&amp;toQ,
142; JVazquez, Chlosgo, 132; Shields,
Tampa Boy, 128.
SAVES- Putz, Seattle, 31: Jenks,
Chicago, 30; Borowski, Cteveland, 29;
TJone's. Detroit. 28; FrAOdrlguez, los
Angeles, 25; Nathan, 'Minnesota, 24;
Papelbon, Boston, 23.

National League

ATLANTA BRAVE$-Oplioned LHP .
Royce Ring and RHP Chad Paronto to
Richmond (IL). Purchased the contract
of C Corl&lt;y Miller trom Mississippi (SL).
CINCINNATI' REDS-Activated SS
Ala~~: Gonzalez from the restricted list.
Placed INF Juan Castro on the 15-day
Dl, retroactive to July 29. Recalled
RHP Elizardo Ramirez from louisville
(tl) .. Pufchased the contract of INF
Mark Bellhorn from Louisville. Sent C
Chad M~ ller outright to Louisville .
HOUSTON ASTRO$-Traded INF
Morgan Ensberg and cash to San
Diego for a player to be named or
cash .
PHILADELPHIA PH fLUES-Traded
INF Jesus Merchan to Seattle for RHP
Julio Mateo . Optioned MateQ to
Ottawa (IL) . Placed OF Shane
Victorino and OF Michaei _Bourn on the
t 5-day OL Recalled OF Chris
Roberson from Ot1awa.
,
SAN DIEGO PADRES-Acquired
RHP Willredo Ledezma and LHP Will
Startup from Atlanta 1or LHP Royce
Ring. Fired Merv Rettenmund , hitting
coach . Named Wally Joyner "hitting
coach.
' SAN FRANCISCO GIANT6-Troded (
RHP Matt Morris to Pittsburgh for CF
Ra!&amp;l Cavil and a player to be named.
BASKETBALL

rq
'j

.347;

MOrdonez, Detroit, .347; Polanco,

Thurlday'e Geme

.

13
15&gt;

TODAY'S MA.ioR L.EAIIUE LEAD-

NOTE: Three points tor victory, one
point for ti8.

( ';

4

p.m. ,

PRo SoccER

"
.\

GB

TUHdQ'I Gamel

Connecticut 74, Chicago 56
Indiana 66, Washington 57
Los Angeles 73. New York 63
Detroit 84, San Antonio 79
Phoenix 76, Houston 74

.

1
6
13
14

Baltimore 5, Boston 3
Texas 3, Cleveland 1
N.Y. Yonkess 16, Chicago Whne Sox 3
Toronto 2. Tampa Bay o
Minnesota 5, Kansaa Clly 3
Oakland 7. Detroit 3
L.A. Angels 8. seattle o
WldMtclay'o Glmao
Toronto (Towers 5-7) at Tampa Bay
(Hammel H), 3:10p.m.
Detroit (Robertson 6·8) at Oakland
(Braden 1·6). 3:35 p.m. .
Baltimore (Trachsel 5-7) at Boston
(Tavarez 6-8), 7:05
Texas (Rhelneckor Hl) at Clevefsnd
(Byrd 9-4), 7:05p.m.
Chicago While Sox (Danks 1!-7) at N.Y.
Yon~&lt;ees (PeHine 6-7). 7;05 p.m.
KanSas City (Bannister 7.e) at
Mlnnospto (Bonser 5-7), 8:10p.m.
L.A. A~gels (Jer.W&amp;aver 7·5) ot Seottle
(F.Homondez 7-6), 10:0!i p.m.
Thul'ldlly'o Gamao
T-at Cleveland, 12:0!i p.m.
Ba~lmore at Boston, 1:05 p.m.
Chk;ago White Sox 01 N.Y. Yankees,
1:06 p.m.
Kansas Clly at Mlnneoola, 1:10 p.m.'
LA. Angels at ~llfld. 10:05 p.m. ·

Tueodly'l Gamel

l.Hgu~

-~

GB

Monday'• Ga.,..
Tampa Bay 5, Toronto 4, 11 innings
Minnesota 3, Kansas City 1
Detroit 5, Oakland 2
Seattle 2, L.A. Angels 0

75, Los Angeles 73

Major

47 59

Te xas

Sunday'• Gem••

Notion• League

EaatOivlllon
W L Pet
New York
59
Philadelphia
58
Atlanta
56
Florida
49
Washington
-\5
Control

47
50
51
58

60

3

.523

3'h

.458

10~

.434

13

Dfvlofon
Pet
58 49 .5&lt;12
56 49 .533
50 53 .485
46 60 .434
45 62 .421
42 62 .404

Milwaukee
Chicago

St. LOuis
Houston
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh

Waet Division
W L · Pet
Arizona
Los Angeles
San Diego
Colorado
San Francisco

59
57
56
54
46

49
49
49
51
58

GB ·

.557
.528

W L

National Baeketb811 AIIDclatlon

GB
1
6
11 h
13
14~

I

I

I

BY TOM WllHEIIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

BEREA - Charlie 'Frye
slipped on boxing gloves
and stepped inside the.ropes
a few weeks ago.
He was already set to fight
for his starting job.
·
Looking to hold off Derek
Anderson - and maybe
rookie Brady Quinn - as
Cleveland's No. I quarterback, Frye spent several
weeks in the .scorching
Arizona heat last month·
working
out
with
Philadelphia QB Donovan
McNabb and others before
reporting to training camp.
Instead of going to one of
tl}ose high-tech facilities
with the latest in weight-lifting equipment and technology, Frye chose Make Plays,
a· no-frills gym, to break a
sweat. There were no juice
bars or resistance-traming
machines to be found, just
barbells, jump ropes and
heavy bags. .
· ·
"It's an old-school, Rocky
Balboa-type gym," he said.
"We did everything froin
boxing-to running to throwing."
Frye boxed a few rounds,
throwing jabs and left hooks
at an imaginary oppone11t.
"I didn't want an~bQdy to
mess up my face,' he said
with a laugt!. "So I was just
swinging at the (sparring)
mitts. My_feet are a little too
heavy for boxing:· You go
one round in the ri~g and it
feels like four quarters ·of
football. It's tough. I have a
lot of respect for what kind
of condition those guys are
in just from messing around
with it for a little bit."
So, what kind of boxer is
he?

.538
.533
.514
.442

CHICAGO (AP) - Joe
Paterno called it a setback,
that's all. After more than
four decades as head coach
at Penn State, his experiences are wide-ranging and
varied, so being run over on
the sideline and injured didn't deter him. Still doesn't.
At age 80, with a 16th
grandchild on the way this
fall, Paterno said Thesday
he's feeling swell and bas no
immediate plans to abdicate
as he enters his 42nd 'season.
"I've been healthy and I'm
health.y now," he said during
the Big Ten's two-day media
convention. ·"I got a · little
setback when I got run over
in the ball game last year. .. .
It's kind of flattering that so
many people are interested
in what I'm going to do."
Paterno's right leg was
broken and knee ligaments
were torn when he was hit
on the sideline · during a
game last Novemb~r at
Wjsconsin. He was forced to
miss a game and then had to
coach the Outback Bowl in a
coaching box above the
field.
Being high above the
action wasn't so bad, after
all, he said. He slipped his

BY, ToM

WITHER

·

.

3~

11

Monday'o Games
Philadelphia 4, Chicago Cubs 1

Tuaaday'l Gamel

e,

Colorado Florida 3
St. Louis 6, Pittsburgh 4
Washington B. Cincinnati 3
Atlanta 12, Houston 4
Milwaukee 4, N.Y. Mots 2, 131nnlngs
Chicago Cubs 7, Philedolphla 3
Arizona 4, San Diego 0
Son Francisco 3, L.A. Dodgere 1

CLEVELAN
Brandon McCarthy won
for the first time in more
than two months , beating
13-game winner Fausto
Carmona and leading the
trade-happy Texas Rangers
to a 3-1 . win over the
Cleveland Indians on
Tuesday night.
McCarthy (5-7) had been
winless since May 27, with
three tosses and four nodecisions since a 14-1 victory over Houston in an
interleague game.
But the right-hander, who
made ju st one start in June
and went on the disabled
list because of a blister on
his middle finger, baffled
the Indians and took a
shutout into the seventh
before Ryan Garko homered.
Carmona ( 13-5) was
unbeaten in five July starts
and was bidding to become
the majors' second pitcher
with 14 wins. He allowed
three runs - two-earned and five hits in seven
innings.

a

APphoto

Cleveland Browns quarterback Charlie Frye throws.during football camp at the Cleveland Browns Training facility,' in this July
27 file photo in Berea. Looking to hold off Derek Anderson _
an&lt;j maybe rookie Brady Quinn _ as Cleveland's No. 1 quarterback, Frye spent several weeks in t11e scorching Arizona heat
last month wor1&lt;ing out with Philadelphia QB Donovan McNabb
and others before reporting to training camp.
'The~ said if it wasn't for
footb&lt;\11, I'd be the next
(Muhammad)' Ali," he
cracked.
The greatest quarterback
in camp would be good
enough for the Browns.
Frye. is in a three-way
competition with Anderson
and Quinn, the ftrs(-round
draft pick who has' yet to
report to training camp
because of a contract bold•
out, to start the season opener · against Pittsburgh on
Sept. 9.
Last weok, Browns coach
Romeo Crennel said Frye
had a leg up on the competi-

tion.
Frye went 4-9 in l3 starts
last season, and tlie former
third-round pick from Akron
came tQ.-'camp confident he
can jlbld off Cleveland' s
other QBs and keep his starting job. It's a mindset he has
had to develop during two
tough seasons with the
Browns.
"I think that's the biggest
part of playing quarterback
an~ being successful," he
saici. "If you look at Peyton
(Manning) or Tom Brady,
they have a lot of confidence\ and that's the key
factor i'\ being a successful

..
;;o ('I.N 'l S • \ ol.

·'

Middleport • Pom~roy, Ohio
'j'"

:\o.

"

coaches a couple of notes Walker died•Jast June from to. that. I think at some poini
wid! suggestions and even an.apparent hCart attack.
we're going to all retire and
h&lt;1d a cup of ·coffee, adding · J1at · Fitzge. aid,
who there is always 11!1 appropri;
.as a joke that he felt at time~ replace~ Walke has talked ate time to speak to · thai
like a newspaper reporter with Lynch·abou the experi- issue," he said. ... New Big
because he was sitting and ence of trying to heal your Ten Network President
football team.
Mark Silverman said the:
·watching TV.
Now it's 'liaek ·to the side- . "Pat ha~ ~n ,a 1! h~lp," . Ieagu&amp;; , is. stick!ng .with it&amp;
lines.
~ync~ sa1d. It a umqne · vow tp have the network
''When I think I can't do sttuallon.. Terry Ho ppner included as part of expanded
the job that Penn State and R~ndy W!!l~er were basic cable and not on a
deserves as head coach; I' ll great fne!Jds·. That s the~sad sports tier in the eight states
start to think about getting part of It, two guys ho that comprise the league.
out," he added. "People ask w'?rke~ together for years . t "We believe that's the right
me about how ,long you M1at!!• (Ohm). A~.d then 1Jlace for the network,''
Silverman said. Comcast,
going to go. I just'thorough- fam1hes were close.
ly enjoy what I'm doin and
Ho~ppner had, been an which has 5.7 million sub~ulog1s~ at Walker s memor- scrlbers in those eight state
being in this league."
The Big Ten has i leg- 1al serv1ce.
·
.
s,
ends like Paterno an veterNotes:
Michigan, has argued the cost l_s too
an coaches like Mi igan's Wisconsin and Ohio State high. If a~ agreement IS not
Lloyd Carr, low s Kirk were picked 1-2-3 in a pre- reached With the cable o~r­
Ferentz and Ohio ate's Jim season poll of the media. ators, !"any fan~ could lli!Ss
Tressel. And thi ' season it Michigan RB Mike Hart got watchmg theu . favonte
Ten
features three n coaches: the nod as preseason offen- teams.. . ... . ~hg
Mark Dantoni at Michigan . sive player of the year and CotruruSSJoner J1m Delany
State, Tim , ' rewster at Ohio State linebacker James says the league has iJppro~e()
Minnesota
Bill Lynch at Laurinaitis as defensive an across-the-board testmg
Indiana. /
. player.... Carr didn't direct- program fol;. . perform~ceLynch replaces Terry ly address a questiorr on enhancmg
s. He saJd ,)()
Hoeppner, who died in June whether he was entering his percent of the
etes would
of complications from a final season with the be tested. .. .
lany said
brain tumor at age 59. It's Wolverines, or if there were there is no immed te plan to
the secqnd time in a year a any health issues concerning expand to 12 te s and
tragedy struck the teague's him. "To the best of my break the league in~ clivicoaching
ranks. knowledge I'm healthy and I sions or have a chl!mpiNorthwestern coach Randy don't think there is anything onship game in football\

s

• Nationals slide past
Cincinnati. See Page 81

22-innning scoreless streak
and gave the Rangers a 1-0
!~ad in the fifth with his
SIXth homer, a· 446-foot
shot that whistled through
the trees beyond the centerfield wall.
It was the first homer off
Carmona in 38· 1-3 innings
in July, and first' since he
allowed two in a 13-7 loss
to Oakland on June 27 .
Th R
k d
two ;uns ange~~e t!~r:ed on
in the sixth, when Carmona
briefly lo~t his control and
the Indians' defense didn't
bail him out. •
Ian Kinsler walked leading off, and hustled to third
when Michael Young singled to right. Young
advanced on the throw and
the Rangers loaded the
bases
when Carmona
plunked Sammy Sosa, who
briefly glared at the rightbander before heading to
first. Sosa was beaned by
Cleveland 's Cliff Lee I 0
days ago.
Marlon Byrd followed
with a hard grounder to
third that Casey Blake
should
have
knocked
down, but it scooted past

him for a two-run error. "'Blake, though, atoned for
his misplay by turning a
double play on a similar
ball hit • by Cruz and
Carmona escaped, further
damage . by getting Brad
Wilkerson to fly to left.
Notes: Saltalamacchia
didn't arrive until the gam~
. ,
was underway. He didn t
play . but. war~ed up
Fr~nc~sco m the ~1ghth....
TeJxeua and his agent~
Scot.t Boras, turned ~o~n
an eJght-year, $1~0 mllhon
contract extenston offer
from the Rangers before
the two-time AU-Star wa~
shipped to Atlanta... . At
14-12, the Rangers had
their first winning record in
July smce 200 I.
Cleveland LHP Cliff Lee,
demoted to Triple A
Buffalo last week after a
horrid stretch of games,
struck out eight in 5 2-3
innings for the Bisons in a
start against Syracuse. Lee
took a shutout into the
sixth before giving a tworun double .... The Rangers
also designated INF Desi
Relaford for assignment.

J.

WRDA committee, and said
the committee has signed
the
2007
WRDA
POMEROY - A $1 mil- Conference Report, expectlion grll!lt for a waterline. ed to be passed in the House
extension to serve proposed and Senate this week.
power plants in southern
The ponference report
Meigs County has been authorizes funding for
authorized by the Water southeastern Ohio projects
Resources
Development requested
by
Sen.
Act Conference Committee . Vomovich, including $1
U.S. Senator George V. million to assist the Tllppers
Voinovich serves on the Plains-Chester
Water
BY BRIAN. REED
BREED41MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

nourishes in
Meigs school .

District in expanding water
service into the area where
American Electric PowerOhi o
and
American
Municipal Power plan to
build new clean-coat generating facilities.
An Ohio River Basin
Comprehensive
Plan
secured under the report
authorizes lhe Army Corps
of Engineers to draft a comprehensive, basin-wide plan

Jefferson,
of the Ohio River Basin to ·columbiana,
determine what investments . Belmont, Noble, Monroe,
and reinvestments in system Washington, Athens, Meigs.
components would be nee- Gallia, Lawrence and Scioto
essary and advisable to Counties.
assure protection of lives
This is the fJTSt WRDA bill
a,nd property and sustain passed by the, Senate since
flood damage reduction and 2000. when Sen. Voinovich
ecosystem restoration.
was Chairman of the
The conference report Transportation
and
authorizes the Corps to con- Infrastructure Subcommittee.
duct flood control studies on
the Ohio River for Mahoning, Please see Waterline, AS

BY BRIAN

08ITUARIES
PageA5
• George A. Bums, as
• Roberta O'Brien, 91
• James Patrick, 80

INSIDE
• History event
comes to Point.
See Page A3
•· Bridg!rcollapses •
· in~: MisSissippi fliver
during rush hour
in Minneapolis.
See Page AS
• Vinton's 139th bean
dinner is Saturday.
See Page A6
• Mason .County
Fair schedule. ·
See Page A6

WEATHER

&gt;'

.•·
TUPPERS · PLAINS Superintendent
Rick
Edwards said it appears the
number of students entering
the Eastern Local School
District through
open
enrollment in the urcoming
school year wil again'
exceed the number of students who leave the district
under the same policy.
Under the · state's open
enrollment, students may
attend school in any public
school district with an open
enrollment policy. In years
past, students could .
attend schoob.it1 a d. liMrii·tit·1T:
that bordered their home
district, but that restriction .
no longer applies.
The Ohio Department of ·
Education reports that 95
students enrolled in the district through open enrollment last year, while 781eft
the district to attend other
schools. Edwards said .the
statisticS are likely to
remain near the same for the
2007-2008 school year.
Wednesday was the deadtine for open enrollment
applications. Last year, 28
students enrolled in the
Southern · Local district
through open enrollment.
In Meigs Local, I 12 students entered the district, Packed and ready to go, these tomatoes are on their way to
and 142 left the district for market from Jim O'Brien Farm in Letart Falls. Pictured are,
other schools.
front row (from left) Jamie O'Brien, Adam P.ape , second row
(from left) Sherry O'Brien (and Tripp) Jim O'Brien. ·
Pl•se see School, AS
.

.

\

-

Calendars
I

A3
A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

Obituaries

A4
As

Places to go

A6

Sports

B Section

Weather

Bv

BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTIN[l.COM

12 PAGI'S

Annie's Mailbox

Bath' Serr;onl/photoo

.

~IT's ·r86 •ttiVJE
OFTHKSEASON
BY BETH

SERGENT
8SERGENTii&gt; MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

LETART FALLS - The
tomato fields in Letart Falls
are about as picked and red
as they' re going to get as
another season draws to a
close at farms all over the
county, including Jim
O' Brien 's in Letart Fall s
which is now preparing to
harvest sweet com.
For Jim, he says the tomato picking season has
become consider~bly shorter over the years, remembering a time when il used to

run until Aug. 12, his grandpa's birthday. He attributes
this to a changing market
and changes in society such
people who no longer have
the time to can tomatoes.
"Anymore people are so
busy they microwave everything,'' Jim laughed.
Jim said when he was
young there were farms up
and down Letart Falls
though that is not the case
anymore with many old
timers dying off and leaving
a handful . of independent

Please see Season, AS

August marks Breastfeeding
Awareness Month

Details on Paee A&amp;

2 SllC110NS -

Jim O'Brien's
farm in Letart
Falls produces
25 acres of tomatoes that are
picked and transported to mar1&lt;et
with the help..of
famUy members
like Derek ·
Teaford (center)
and Adam Pape
(foreground).

'

J. REED

BREEDIIMYDAILYSENnNELCO

As

© 2007 Ohlo Vall")' Publishing Co.

POMEROY
Nora
Ellis, breastfeediilg coordinator for Meigs County's
WIC office, loves her job
and loves promoting breastfeeding which she believes
goes hand in hand with
healthier babies.
Ellis', who I ives in
Pomeroy. has been at her job
for a year now aild wants to
get the word out that August
is Breastfeeding Awareness
Beth Sertlenl/photo Month with this year's
:It's all about the babies " according to Nora Ellis, breast· theme being "Breastfeeding:
feeding coordinator for Meigs County seen here with clients The Crucial First Steps."
Ellis said the first week in
Brodyn Swatzel and Hannah Circle.
_,

,.
.•

'

"'""·mytiHil~"· nlnwl.tolH

:!oo-

Open
enrollment

sf!

Nelson Cruz homered for
the last-place Rangers, who
were baseball's most active
wheelers
and
dealers
before the 4 p.m. EST tradmg deadline.
They completed a sevenplayer swap :OVJth Atlanta,
sendmg stuggm~ f1~st baserl!an Mark Te1xetra and
pttcher Ron Mahay to the
Braves for catcher/first
baseman
Jarrod
Saltalamacchia and four
minor leaguers.
Texas also traded Eric
Gagne to the Boston Red
Sox for starter Kason
Gabbard and two minor
leaguers .
The shakeup left manager Ron Washington without
a proven closer. He used
Frank Francisco to get
through lhe seventh and
C.J. Wilson got the final
five outs for his first save
of the season.
The Indians, who didn't
pull the trigger on any
trades, have scored two
runs or less in six of eight
games. Cleveland dropped
to 2"6 on a 10-game homestand.
Cruz snapped Carmona's

:.! .

Senate committee approves funding for waterline project

SPORTS

will

a

1111 RSil \' . \l t ; t ST

(t

...
'

Texas outlasts Tribe
in to innings, Bt

'Nashville Star' tour at
Gal~ia fair tonight, A6

McCarthy gets first win since May as Rangers beat Indian~\

GB

1
"

quarterback.';
Hanging around with
McNabb made a huge
.impression on Frye, _who
missed three games With
wri~;t injury before in 2000·
returning to play the season
fmale. Frye tried to absorb
all he could from McNabb,
who brought some of his
Eagles teammates along
with him to the desert.
.
"Donovan
has
been
throu~h everything," Frye
said. 'To see how he interacts with his· pla~ers , .I
picked up some different
1deas from him liB far as hi ~
scrambling abilities and why
he doesn't do it anymore ju~t little stuff like that.
;
"Just being around· a guy
with that experience and guy
who has been to the Supet
Bowl and to Pro . Bowls,
He's a great guy and I. th~
I picked up_ a lot in thos~
couple weeks."
··
One of Fry'e's biggest failings last season was a tendency· to tuck the ball and
.run as soon as his pocket
protection broke down. Did
McNabb give him any poit;lt~
ers on when to run and when
to stay put?
.
'That's his secret,'' Frye
said with a smile. "But l
think you guys
be able
to tell during the ftrst couple
games what the secre.t is.'
Frye doesn't expect to' b.¢
on the run nearly as mucli
this season. Cleveland
revamped-its offensive line
~uring the offseason, si8J.I'
mg free agent guard Eri~
Steinbach, re-signing cent~
Hank Fraley and drafting
left tackle Joe Thomas with
the No. 3 overall pick.
'
"I think they'll give me
lot of time this year,'! Frye
said.
'

Paterno feeling great as he returns to · sidelines~

.546

BOSTON CELTICS-Acqulred F
Kevin Garnett !rom Minneaota for F AI
Wedne1day'e GlmH
Jefferson, F Ryan Gomes, G-F Gerald
Green, ll Sebollllon Telfair,
Theo
Colorado (Fogg 5-6) at Florida (Kim 5·
Ratliff and two firat-round draft picks. , 5), 7:05p.m.
FOOTBALL
St. Louis (Looper 8·8) at Pl1tsburgh
Nollonol Footbaff Llogue
1 (Anmasl&gt;-3) . 7:05p.m.
CHICAGO BEAR6-Agreed to term&amp; I Cincinnati (Arroyo 4·11) al Waohlnglon
with DT Darwin Walke on a live-year J (Lannan G-0), 7:05p.m.
contract.
Houston (Rodriguez 7-9) at Atlanta
GREEN BAY PACKERS- Signed TE (Carlyle 5-3), 7:35p.m.
Joe Werner.
· N.Y. Meta (O.Perez 9-7) al Milwaukee
NEW YORK JETS-Released RB (Undecided), 6:05p.m.
Tony Fisher.
Philadelphia (Moyer 9·8) at Chicago
ST. LOUIS RAMS-Signed C . Dave Cubs (Hill 6·6), 8:05 p.m.
Pearson. Waived C Donovan Ra1o1a.
Arizona (Owings 5·5) at San Diego
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEEAS:-S,gned (D.Wells 5·7), 10:05 p.m
DE Tim Jones.
San Francisco (Lincecum 6·2) at LA .
HOCKEY
Dodgers (Hendrickson 4·5), 10:10 p.m.
National Hockey LaaS!Iue
1
Thureday's Gam11
6UFFALO SABRES- Agre ed to
St. Louis at Pinsburgh, 12:35 p.m.
terms with 0 Nathan Paetsch on a , N.Y. Mets at Milwaukee, 2:05p.m.
th ree·yea r contract.
I Philadelphia at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 ·
DALLAS STARS-Named Brett Hull 1 p.m.
_
special advisor to hockey operations. 1 Arizona at San Diego", 3:35 p.m.
OTTAWA SENATORS-Re-signed C
CoiOfado at Florida, 7:05 p.m.
Chns Kelly to a one-year contract.
Cincinnati at Washington, 7:05p.m.
PITISBUAGH PENGUINS-Named 1 Houston al Atlanta, .7:35 p.m.
Derek Clancey professional scout and' I San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10
David McNamara amateur scout.
' p.m.

c

Wednesday,
,..___ August t, 2QP7

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

~-

a newborn's life is crucial to first week," Tara Swatzel,
establishing a routine of moll1er of three ag reed.
Swalzel is currently
breastfeeding durin g a lime
when many mothers feel breastfeedin g four-month
overwhelmed and unsure of old son Brodyn and is also
their baby getting enough Ellis' client through WIC.
milk. To help with this WIC Despite having previously
provides free appointments breastfed two children. ·
for weigh-ins., Swatzel said Ellis has proCarolyn C1rcle of Long vided information on .how
Bottom and her six-month to breaslfeed that even she
old daughter Hannah partic- didn't know.
ipate in the WlC program .
':Nora is really the only
Circle said it was a chal- support I had," Circle said,
lenge 10 ·get started on a say ing she was basically the
breastfeeding regime but first person to breaslfeed
now the biggest challenge is her child in her family. .
lo find a place to feed while
Swatzel feels 1he benefits
out in public .
Pluse 5ee Aucust. AS
"II is overwhelming that

'.

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