<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4488" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/4488?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-07T09:57:25+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="14415">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/0b09ed408c11ba7f2590550676e82064.pdf</src>
      <authentication>c1d146fb72580b9976999817ebe90f80</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="15566">
                  <text>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

'.

�Thursday, August 2, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page A2 • The Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar
Public meetings·
•

Blizzard Of
The Month
O'reO
fi~01rd f.T,.ea~

There "IS" Such AThing As
AFree Lunch!
Enter Here For A

$30 Gift Certificate

-=....

~

... ~MOO

.-............
aa•P.=..,ua.
ca:.:,d--.

--$3.95 ff:OOIM ·130I

To One Of These Great Restaurants

Drawing Each Week!

LUNCH BUFFET

Name:

Need We Say More?

Thursday, Aug. 2
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m., town hall.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council, regular
session, 7 p.m., village hall.
Friday, Aug. 3
MIDDLEPORT -The
Middlepon Village Council
finance committee will
meet at 4 p.m. at village
hall.
Monday, Aug. 6
SYRACUSE - Sutton
·Township Trustees , regular
meeting, 7 p.m., Syracuse
Village Hall.
Tuesday, Aug. 7
ALFRED Regular
meeting
of
Orange
Township Trustees, 7:30
p.m., at home of fiscal officer Osie Follrod.
CHESTER - Chester
Township Trustees meet at
7 p.m., town hall.
PAGE VILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees, regular
p.m. ,
meeting, . 6:30
Pageville Town Hall.
·Wednesday, Aug. 8
POMEROY - Meigs
County Board of Health,
regu lar meeting, 5 p.m.,
conference room, Meigs
County
Health
Department.

·~·

Phone#

2208 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant,WV
304-675-5427

Mail to: Free Lunch
Gallipolis Daily liibune
825 3rd Ave. ·Gallipolis, OH 45631 .

Shade River Coon Club, 7
p.m., fairgrounds .
Monday, Aug. 6
RACINE
- Racine
Chapter 134, OES will
meet at 6:30 p.m. for a
potluck before ll meeting.
All officers are asked to
attend.
Thesday, Aug. 7
MIDDLEPORT
Regular business mee,ting of
Middleport Lodge #363 ,
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m . All
Master Masons invited.
Refreshments.
EASTERN - Eastern
High
School
Music
Boosters will meet at 7 p:m.
in the high school band
room. The fair booth will be
the topic of discussion.
Thursday, Aug. 9
, CHESTER Shade
River Lodge will meet at
7:30p.m. Refreshments.
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053, 7 p.m. Meal served at
6:30p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS The Ladies Auxiliary of the
Tuppers Plains VFW 9053
will meet at 7 p.m.

Reunions

Saturday, Aug. 4
REEDSVILLE
Descendants and friends of
Laura and John Wells will
have a reumon at the
Belleville Dam picnic
area. A potluck will be
served at noon with paper
products and utensils to be
Thursday, Aug. 2
provided.
TUPPERS PLAINS POMEROY - A reunion
Tuppers Plains VFW ladies of the descendants of Joel
auxiliary, regular meeting, 7 and Lydia Still Staneart
p.m.
will be held Saturday at
CHESTER
noon at Juniper . Ridge
Chester/Shade Historical Campground near Lake
,Association meets at 7 p:m., Hope in Vinton County.
Chester Courthouse to make The address is 71587 Two
Meigs County Fair plans.
Mile Rd., New Plymouth.
Friday, Aug. 3
Each family is asked to
POMEROY PERI take a picnic lunch and
Chapter 74 of Meigs lawn chairS. For more
County meets at I p.m., information call 992-5502.
Mulberry
Community
RACINE
Beegle
Center (God's NET) on reunion, noon, Racine
Mulberry Ave. Sheriff Legion Hall, square dance
Robert Beegle will speak on to follow from 7 p.m. - II
identity theft and ways to p.m., for more information
call843-5146.
avoid the problem.
Saturday, Aug. 4
RACINE- Stover-Casto
ROCKSPRINGS
reunion, 12:30 p.m. at Star

Clubs and
organizations

PageA3

BYTHE .BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday,August2,2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
Mill Park, Racine.
Sunday, Aug. 5
RUTLAND
Descendants of Orlando
and Katherine Sheline
Davis reunion, with c~-in
dinner at noon. Relatives
and friends invited.

Despite all, they're still your parents
BY KAT!tv MITCHEI,L
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: I had the
misfonune to be born to the
two most selfish people
known to mankind. I am
their only child. ·
When Dad divorced Mom,
he divorced me. He's spent
. Friday, Aug. 3
the rest of his 1\fe being a
POMEROY - Forgiven wonderful husband to his
4 Quartet along with new wife (who doesn' 1 like
Earthen Vessels will be me) and a (ather to her son.
singing at the Hillside My mother has spent her life
Baptist Church, 7 p.m. looking for love in all the
Public invited.
wrong places. My father and
Monday, Aug. 6
I pretend to have a relationMIDDLEPORT
ship, and my mother and I
Vacation Bible School, run hot and cold. Right now,
6: 15·9 p.m., through Friday, we're very, very cold.
Hope Baptist Church, 570
I have been married to the
Grant St. "Game Day same man for 40 years, and
Central." 992-5334.
we have two great kids. My
MIDDLEPORT .
parents are now elderly and
Revival services will be not in good health. They
held at the Hobson seem to think I should take
Christian
Fellowship care of them, even though
Church, 7 p.m., Aug. 6-10. when I was young, neither
Special singing nightly. had time to take care of me.
Kenny Bledsoe, speaker.
I can't tum back the clock
and create feelings for them
that should have been formed
many years ago. Where do I
from here ? - Old
go
Saturday, Aug. 4
Enough
to Know Better
SYRACUSE
Dear Old
Enough:
Community Kids Safety
Day, beginning at I p.m., Obviously, you still harbor a
free food, music, Med great deal of resentment
Flight helicopter, emer- toward your parents. You
gency vehicl~s. free swim- don't have to be fond of
ming at London Pool, 9 them, but you do have an
obligation to see that they are
p.m. - 11 p.m.
not out on the street. Please
Monday, Aug. 6
POMEROY
The check that their fmances are
Meigs High School golf in order, that they have insurteam will have its first offi- ance and, if necessary, that
cial practice at 11:15 a.m. at they are placed in an assistedthe Riverside Golf Course. living residence or given
Athletes need to be pre- nursing care. You do not have
pared for 18 holes of qualifying. For more informationcall Coach Dugan, 4162620.

Church events

Youth events

tb do this personally if you
(or they) can afford to hire a
geriatric care manager (caremanager.org). Otherwise,
check with your Area Agency
on Aging.
'
Dear Annie: Just how long
is my husband's middle age
crisis supposed to las~? At the
age of 47, he is in his rockstar phase. For the last two
_years, everything in our lives
has revolved around his
music. Our friends avoid us
because they are bored to
death by this - not to mention their own teenagers are
going throu/PI the same stage.
I don't mmd him having a
hobby, but it involves getting together with his unemployed musician friends
three or four evenings ·a
week to practice, and that is
having a very negative
effect on our family. Our
children miss him, and I find
that we are growing apart.
I've resisted the urge to get
too close to any of the men I
meet, but I am very much a
single person these days.
I want our marriage to
work, but it seems I am the
only person in it. Please
don't suggest counseling.
- Sickoflt
Dear Sick oflt: Your husband has catapulted himself
into his adolescence in order
to escape the responsibility
of being a husband and
father. Talk to him about
how much the children need
both their parents and see if
you can wake him up.
Otherwise, if you truly want
to save your marriage, you
will use all the options avail. able - and that includes

counseling, like it or not.
Dear Annie: My husband
and I have been married for
nearly four years, and this
intimacy topic in your column
has really gotten us talking.
I'm a nurse and work
three 12-hour shifts in a row.
I sure don't feel up to sex
when I get home. But I don't
want my marriage to turn
out like many of your readers' . My husband and I
openly discuss, what we
need from each other. I want
more hugs and kisses that go
nowhere, and he would like
more that go somewhere.
Talking has deepened our
bond and helped us understand each other's needs. This
will help our marriage in the
long run. Thank you for this
topic. I think it may have
ensured the success of my
marriage. - Pensacola, Fla.
Dear Pensacola: One of
the things we try to do is bring
up topics that wiU help our
readers communicate. You
are smart to recognize this
and deal with these sensitive
issues before they become '
problems. Thanks for writing. '1,
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy MiJchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and rend features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
an.li cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

HiStory event comes to Point

Birthdays
Saturday, Aug. 4
SALEM CENTER
Dorothy Bolen will observe
her 94th birthday·on Aug. 4.
A surprise ~ard shower is
being J.1eJd for. her. Cards
may be sent to her at 28188
Strongs Run Road, Dt;xter,
Ohio 457841.

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Fort Randolph
will host Long Hunters and
Land Grabbers Saturday.
According to Craig
Hesson, who serves as chairman of the Fort Randolph
Commiuee. this ' will be the
second year the event has
taken place at the fort.
The name of the event

was inspired by colonial
times. Long hunters were
men who traveled and hunted for long periods of time
to get hides for the fur trade.
The name land grabber
often was used by Native
Americans to describe men
who were land surveyors.
The event will feature
both land grabbers and long

hunters inside the fon. The
surveyors will be set up with
all their tools, and the long
hunters will display furs.
Re-enactors also will be
present throughout the day.
The event will take place
during regular fon hours, I 0
a.m. to 5 p.m.
For more injormntio11, call
-Hesson at (304) 675-7933.

ro~ery ·&amp; Qatering .

. · Service

.... , .• K

·. ·.

or SmaJI'• Ho'fliffityle MmJs.
C.a'Ll 11orMenu
·

Stop In J1Jat At'
Our
Diner
•·'
'
N()w ()J~~n:toa*n·
. . 'I\) .7Il,n l .· ·. · •·

REACH 3 COUNTIES

,.. ,

Middleport, OH

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

www.hometownniktoom

REACH OVER
17,000 HOUSEHOLDS!

CO H\IER'I

H. 72k m
Vie&lt;l. $949

C:O'

$311110 lc h

~PAN ­
:adQd. s ~

•

•

•

•

-

SEOAHSII

q. AC. $ ,'l

ff!M

. •/801(-

. ' ~

IEDAN bO'
SEDAN
AC, &lt;ldr '
SEDAN· t
. enh'¥ &gt;:.

...

. rtifttMtPI'

~ d .•

AC· S

SEDAfl ·

lbe ~alltpolts Jlailp ~rtbune
740-446-2342
www.mydailytribune.com

·Joint fleasant legister The Daily Sentinel
304-675-1333
www.mydailyregister.com

740-992·2155

W\_VW .lnydai~sentinel.com

. AC,;-:!4[

l~J
5~~101
:J&lt;Joo: iS.

�Thursday, August 2, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page A2 • The Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar
Public meetings·
•

Blizzard Of
The Month
O'reO
fi~01rd f.T,.ea~

There "IS" Such AThing As
AFree Lunch!
Enter Here For A

$30 Gift Certificate

-=....

~

... ~MOO

.-............
aa•P.=..,ua.
ca:.:,d--.

--$3.95 ff:OOIM ·130I

To One Of These Great Restaurants

Drawing Each Week!

LUNCH BUFFET

Name:

Need We Say More?

Thursday, Aug. 2
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m., town hall.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council, regular
session, 7 p.m., village hall.
Friday, Aug. 3
MIDDLEPORT -The
Middlepon Village Council
finance committee will
meet at 4 p.m. at village
hall.
Monday, Aug. 6
SYRACUSE - Sutton
·Township Trustees , regular
meeting, 7 p.m., Syracuse
Village Hall.
Tuesday, Aug. 7
ALFRED Regular
meeting
of
Orange
Township Trustees, 7:30
p.m., at home of fiscal officer Osie Follrod.
CHESTER - Chester
Township Trustees meet at
7 p.m., town hall.
PAGE VILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees, regular
p.m. ,
meeting, . 6:30
Pageville Town Hall.
·Wednesday, Aug. 8
POMEROY - Meigs
County Board of Health,
regu lar meeting, 5 p.m.,
conference room, Meigs
County
Health
Department.

·~·

Phone#

2208 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant,WV
304-675-5427

Mail to: Free Lunch
Gallipolis Daily liibune
825 3rd Ave. ·Gallipolis, OH 45631 .

Shade River Coon Club, 7
p.m., fairgrounds .
Monday, Aug. 6
RACINE
- Racine
Chapter 134, OES will
meet at 6:30 p.m. for a
potluck before ll meeting.
All officers are asked to
attend.
Thesday, Aug. 7
MIDDLEPORT
Regular business mee,ting of
Middleport Lodge #363 ,
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m . All
Master Masons invited.
Refreshments.
EASTERN - Eastern
High
School
Music
Boosters will meet at 7 p:m.
in the high school band
room. The fair booth will be
the topic of discussion.
Thursday, Aug. 9
, CHESTER Shade
River Lodge will meet at
7:30p.m. Refreshments.
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053, 7 p.m. Meal served at
6:30p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS The Ladies Auxiliary of the
Tuppers Plains VFW 9053
will meet at 7 p.m.

Reunions

Saturday, Aug. 4
REEDSVILLE
Descendants and friends of
Laura and John Wells will
have a reumon at the
Belleville Dam picnic
area. A potluck will be
served at noon with paper
products and utensils to be
Thursday, Aug. 2
provided.
TUPPERS PLAINS POMEROY - A reunion
Tuppers Plains VFW ladies of the descendants of Joel
auxiliary, regular meeting, 7 and Lydia Still Staneart
p.m.
will be held Saturday at
CHESTER
noon at Juniper . Ridge
Chester/Shade Historical Campground near Lake
,Association meets at 7 p:m., Hope in Vinton County.
Chester Courthouse to make The address is 71587 Two
Meigs County Fair plans.
Mile Rd., New Plymouth.
Friday, Aug. 3
Each family is asked to
POMEROY PERI take a picnic lunch and
Chapter 74 of Meigs lawn chairS. For more
County meets at I p.m., information call 992-5502.
Mulberry
Community
RACINE
Beegle
Center (God's NET) on reunion, noon, Racine
Mulberry Ave. Sheriff Legion Hall, square dance
Robert Beegle will speak on to follow from 7 p.m. - II
identity theft and ways to p.m., for more information
call843-5146.
avoid the problem.
Saturday, Aug. 4
RACINE- Stover-Casto
ROCKSPRINGS
reunion, 12:30 p.m. at Star

Clubs and
organizations

PageA3

BYTHE .BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday,August2,2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
Mill Park, Racine.
Sunday, Aug. 5
RUTLAND
Descendants of Orlando
and Katherine Sheline
Davis reunion, with c~-in
dinner at noon. Relatives
and friends invited.

Despite all, they're still your parents
BY KAT!tv MITCHEI,L
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: I had the
misfonune to be born to the
two most selfish people
known to mankind. I am
their only child. ·
When Dad divorced Mom,
he divorced me. He's spent
. Friday, Aug. 3
the rest of his 1\fe being a
POMEROY - Forgiven wonderful husband to his
4 Quartet along with new wife (who doesn' 1 like
Earthen Vessels will be me) and a (ather to her son.
singing at the Hillside My mother has spent her life
Baptist Church, 7 p.m. looking for love in all the
Public invited.
wrong places. My father and
Monday, Aug. 6
I pretend to have a relationMIDDLEPORT
ship, and my mother and I
Vacation Bible School, run hot and cold. Right now,
6: 15·9 p.m., through Friday, we're very, very cold.
Hope Baptist Church, 570
I have been married to the
Grant St. "Game Day same man for 40 years, and
Central." 992-5334.
we have two great kids. My
MIDDLEPORT .
parents are now elderly and
Revival services will be not in good health. They
held at the Hobson seem to think I should take
Christian
Fellowship care of them, even though
Church, 7 p.m., Aug. 6-10. when I was young, neither
Special singing nightly. had time to take care of me.
Kenny Bledsoe, speaker.
I can't tum back the clock
and create feelings for them
that should have been formed
many years ago. Where do I
from here ? - Old
go
Saturday, Aug. 4
Enough
to Know Better
SYRACUSE
Dear Old
Enough:
Community Kids Safety
Day, beginning at I p.m., Obviously, you still harbor a
free food, music, Med great deal of resentment
Flight helicopter, emer- toward your parents. You
gency vehicl~s. free swim- don't have to be fond of
ming at London Pool, 9 them, but you do have an
obligation to see that they are
p.m. - 11 p.m.
not out on the street. Please
Monday, Aug. 6
POMEROY
The check that their fmances are
Meigs High School golf in order, that they have insurteam will have its first offi- ance and, if necessary, that
cial practice at 11:15 a.m. at they are placed in an assistedthe Riverside Golf Course. living residence or given
Athletes need to be pre- nursing care. You do not have
pared for 18 holes of qualifying. For more informationcall Coach Dugan, 4162620.

Church events

Youth events

tb do this personally if you
(or they) can afford to hire a
geriatric care manager (caremanager.org). Otherwise,
check with your Area Agency
on Aging.
'
Dear Annie: Just how long
is my husband's middle age
crisis supposed to las~? At the
age of 47, he is in his rockstar phase. For the last two
_years, everything in our lives
has revolved around his
music. Our friends avoid us
because they are bored to
death by this - not to mention their own teenagers are
going throu/PI the same stage.
I don't mmd him having a
hobby, but it involves getting together with his unemployed musician friends
three or four evenings ·a
week to practice, and that is
having a very negative
effect on our family. Our
children miss him, and I find
that we are growing apart.
I've resisted the urge to get
too close to any of the men I
meet, but I am very much a
single person these days.
I want our marriage to
work, but it seems I am the
only person in it. Please
don't suggest counseling.
- Sickoflt
Dear Sick oflt: Your husband has catapulted himself
into his adolescence in order
to escape the responsibility
of being a husband and
father. Talk to him about
how much the children need
both their parents and see if
you can wake him up.
Otherwise, if you truly want
to save your marriage, you
will use all the options avail. able - and that includes

counseling, like it or not.
Dear Annie: My husband
and I have been married for
nearly four years, and this
intimacy topic in your column
has really gotten us talking.
I'm a nurse and work
three 12-hour shifts in a row.
I sure don't feel up to sex
when I get home. But I don't
want my marriage to turn
out like many of your readers' . My husband and I
openly discuss, what we
need from each other. I want
more hugs and kisses that go
nowhere, and he would like
more that go somewhere.
Talking has deepened our
bond and helped us understand each other's needs. This
will help our marriage in the
long run. Thank you for this
topic. I think it may have
ensured the success of my
marriage. - Pensacola, Fla.
Dear Pensacola: One of
the things we try to do is bring
up topics that wiU help our
readers communicate. You
are smart to recognize this
and deal with these sensitive
issues before they become '
problems. Thanks for writing. '1,
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy MiJchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and rend features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
an.li cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

HiStory event comes to Point

Birthdays
Saturday, Aug. 4
SALEM CENTER
Dorothy Bolen will observe
her 94th birthday·on Aug. 4.
A surprise ~ard shower is
being J.1eJd for. her. Cards
may be sent to her at 28188
Strongs Run Road, Dt;xter,
Ohio 457841.

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Fort Randolph
will host Long Hunters and
Land Grabbers Saturday.
According to Craig
Hesson, who serves as chairman of the Fort Randolph
Commiuee. this ' will be the
second year the event has
taken place at the fort.
The name of the event

was inspired by colonial
times. Long hunters were
men who traveled and hunted for long periods of time
to get hides for the fur trade.
The name land grabber
often was used by Native
Americans to describe men
who were land surveyors.
The event will feature
both land grabbers and long

hunters inside the fon. The
surveyors will be set up with
all their tools, and the long
hunters will display furs.
Re-enactors also will be
present throughout the day.
The event will take place
during regular fon hours, I 0
a.m. to 5 p.m.
For more injormntio11, call
-Hesson at (304) 675-7933.

ro~ery ·&amp; Qatering .

. · Service

.... , .• K

·. ·.

or SmaJI'• Ho'fliffityle MmJs.
C.a'Ll 11orMenu
·

Stop In J1Jat At'
Our
Diner
•·'
'
N()w ()J~~n:toa*n·
. . 'I\) .7Il,n l .· ·. · •·

REACH 3 COUNTIES

,.. ,

Middleport, OH

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

www.hometownniktoom

REACH OVER
17,000 HOUSEHOLDS!

CO H\IER'I

H. 72k m
Vie&lt;l. $949

C:O'

$311110 lc h

~PAN ­
:adQd. s ~

•

•

•

•

-

SEOAHSII

q. AC. $ ,'l

ff!M

. •/801(-

. ' ~

IEDAN bO'
SEDAN
AC, &lt;ldr '
SEDAN· t
. enh'¥ &gt;:.

...

. rtifttMtPI'

~ d .•

AC· S

SEDAfl ·

lbe ~alltpolts Jlailp ~rtbune
740-446-2342
www.mydailytribune.com

·Joint fleasant legister The Daily Sentinel
304-675-1333
www.mydailyregister.com

740-992·2155

W\_VW .lnydai~sentinel.com

. AC,;-:!4[

l~J
5~~101
:J&lt;Joo: iS.

�OPINION

· The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
· 111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

•
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, Aug. 2, the 214th day of 2007. There
.
are 151 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
·
On Aug. 2, 1776, members of the Continental Congress
began attaching their signatures to the Declaration of
Independence.
On this date:
In 1790, the enumeration for the first United States census began; the final total was 3,929,214.
.
In 1873, inventor Andrew S. Hallidie successfully tested
a cable car he had designed for the city of San Francisco.
In 1876, frontiersman "Wild Bill" Hickok was shot and
killed while playing poker at a saloon in Deadwood,
Dakota Territory. ·
In 1927, four years after becoming presidimt, Calvin
Coolidge issu~d a S'!lte~ent to reporters; "I ~o not choose
to-run for President m mneteen twenty-e1ght.'
In 1939, Alben Einstein signed a letter to President
Roosevelt urging creation of an atomic weapons research
program.
· In 1943, during World War II, Navy boat PT-109, commanded by Lt. John F. Kennedy, sank after being rammed
by the Japanese destroyer Amagiri off the Solomon Islands.
In 1967, the crime and race drama "In the Heat of the
Night," starring Sidney Poitier and Rod Steiger, opened in
New York.
Five years ago: A federal judge ruled the U.S. government had to reveal the names of people .detained in the
investi~ation of the 9-11 terrorist attacks; an appeals court
later s1ded with federal authorities. Pope John Paul II
returned to Rome after ending an 11-day pilgrimage to
Canada, Guatemala and Mexico.,
One year a~o: Five days after being pulled over by
police, actor-duector Mel Gibson was charged with misdemeanor drunken driving, having an elevated blood-alcohol
level and having an open container of liquor in his car.
(Gibson later pleaded no contest to drunken driving under
a deal in which he received three years ' probation, paid a
.fine and agreed to attend alcohol rehabilitation classes.)
Today's Birthdays: Former Sen. Paul Laxalt, R-Nev., is
85. Actor Peter O'Toole is 75. Country singer Hank
Cochran is 72. Rock musician Garth Hudson (The Band) is
70. Movie director Wes Craven is 68. Singer Kathy Lennon
(The Lennon Sisters) is 64, Actor Max Wright is 64.
Actress Joanna Cassidy is 62. Actress Kathryn Harmld is
57. Singer Andrew Gold is 56. Actor Butch Patrick ("The
Munsters") is 54. Singer Mojo Nixon is 50. Actress
Victoria Jackson is 48. Actress Apollonia is 48. Actress
Cynthia Stevenson is 45. Actress Mary-Louise Parker is 43.
Rock musician John Stanier is 39. Writer-actor-director
Kevin Smith is 37. Actor Edward Furlong is 30. Rock ·
musician Devon Glenn (Buckcherry) is 27. Actress Hallie
Eisenberg is 15.
Thought for Today: "Idea~ are powerful things, requiring
not a studious contemplation but an action, even if it 1s only
an inner action."- Midge Deeter, American writer.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 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, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organi:;:.ations and individuals.wi/1 not be accept·
ed for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services . Ohl~u::.::~~~~lng
Correction Polley

Co.

every ·aftemoon , Monday
Our main concem In all .stories is to
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
be accurale. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class
, In a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeloy.

992·2t56.

Publish~

Member: The Associated Press and
the Ohio Newspaper Association.

Our main number Is
(740) 992·2156.

Poatmeater: Send address corrections to Th8 Daily Sentinel, 111 Court

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Department extensions are:

News .
Editor:

Cha~eno

Hoellich, Ext. t2
RepOrter: Brian Reed. Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext t 3

Subacrlptlon Rates
By carrier or motor route
110.27
One month
One year
'115.84
Dally
50'
Senior Citizen rates
One month
'10.27
One year
'103.90

Subecribefs should romn In advance
clrect to the Daily Sentinel. No sub·
Outelde Salas: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
scription by mail permtned in areas
Outside Sileo: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home carrier service is avail-

Advertising

CliiUJCirc.: Judy Clart&lt;, Ext. 10

General Manager
Cha~ene

Hoeflich. Ext. 12
E·mall:

news@mydailysentinel.com

Web:
www.mydailysentinel.com

able.

Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks
·
'32.26
26 Weeks
'64.20
52 Weeks
. ' 127.11
Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks
'53.55
26 Weeks
' 107.10
52 Weeks
'214.21

Thursday, August 2, 2007.

•

Iraq war report implies Baghdad buildup
won't work unless troops st~y far longer
BY ROBERT BURNS

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.Page.A4 .

AP MILITARY WRITER

WASHINGTON
While many in Congress
are pushing President
Bush to alter course in Iraq
by September if not sooner, his new status report on
the war strongly 1mplies
that the administration
believes its military strategy will take many more
months to meet its goals.
The report cited no specific' timeframe, .but its
language suggests what ·
some U.S . commanders
have hinted at recently:
The troop reinforce111ents
that Bush ordered in
J apuary may need to
remain until spring 2008.
That's a mihtary calcula·
tion at . . odds . with an
emerging political consensus in . Washington on
bringing the troops home
soon.
The disconnect between
the military and political
views on the best way forward is a symptom of fourplus years of setbacks in
Iraq - not only missteps
by the U .S. government
but also by Iraqi political
leaders, who have fallen·
far short of their stated aim
of creating a government
of national unity.
In the view of some
members of Congress and not just Democratsthe time has long_ passed
for the Iraqis to show that
they can parlay U.S.-led
military
efforts
into
progress on the political
front.
"That government. is
simply not providing leadership worthy of the considerable sacrific.e of our
forces, and this has to
change immediately," Sen.
John Warner, R-Va., said
after the White House
delivered its war report to
Congress on Thursday.
Warner was the author of
legislation requiring the
report.
Hours after the report's
release, the House, on a

223-201 vote, approved a
Democratic
measure
requiring U.S. troops to be
withdrawn from Iraq by
spring. House .Democrats
pursued the vote despite a
veto threat from Bush.
The president apparently
has made the calculation
that he can ward off political pressure to change
course before the next
required progress report,
set for mid-September.
That's when Gen. David
Petraeus, the top U.S.
commander iii Iraq, plans
to lay out his assessment
of whether the counterinsurgency
strategy
he
launched in February is
working and recommends
to Bush whether to stick
with . it into the comi~g
year.
Secretary
of
State
Condoleezza
Rice
advanced that view Friday
morning,
telling
Fox
News' "Fox &amp; Friends"
that by waiting until
September, "we can make
a coherent judgment of
where we are and we can
chart a way forward." '
"I understand people's
concern. I understand people's impatience," she
said, "but I would just
hope that we could recognize that our men and
women in the field , our
ambassadors, our generals
outthere, our commanding
general, are on a course
that was laid out by the .
president in J aunary. We
ought to stick to that."
By extending troop
deployments in Iraq from
12 months to 15 months,
the Army has made it possible for Bush to maintain
the troop ·buildup until
abo.,u_t April 2008. But if he
wanted to go beyond that it
would require some even
more painful moves by the
Army, at the risk of reaching a breaking point.
Although the war is
increasingly unpopular,
Bush does have support in
some prominent quarters
for continuing his current

military strategy, not only sequences of giving up and
for the remainder of this withdrawing the troops ,
year but into 2008 . John now would be even worse. ~
Keane, a retired four-star
His report to Congress ·
Army general, said this acknowledged shortcom- ,
week
that
security ings while asserting that
progress, though slow, is the "overall trajectory" of
gaining momentum.
the . military and political ,
"The thou~ht of pulling effort in Iraq "has begiln to
out now or m a couple of stabilize, compared to the
months makes no sense
militarily," Keane said.
deteriorating trajectory" in
Between
now
and 2006.
September the battle for
Sprinkled ' through the
Baghdad will intensify, report are phrases tb,at
likely costing hundreds of make clear the administra" .
American troops ' lives, tion believes its military .'.
and the Iraqi government . strategy is the right one,
of Prime Minister Nouri ihat it should be given
al-Maliki will be pressured more time and that pt;&gt;sito do more to weed out . tive results are at least
sectarian influences in the months away.
Iraqi sec~rity. forces ~nd to
Some examples:
pass leg1slatwn d~s1~ned
• There are encouraging
s'gns
that should "over ,
to promote reconc1hat10n.
. The U.S. casualty rate
.1 ..
·
th '
to ·
has increased in recent ume, pomt
e way .
months, and total U.S . lower U.S. troop levels m • .
deaths in Iraq sitice the Iraq.
.
.
• Meanmgful and lastmg •
war began in March 2003
progress . on natiOnal rec- '
now exceed 3,600.
Petraeus hopes that by onciliation may require a ,
September the U.S.-led "sustained period" of ·
counteroffensive will have reduced violence .
,
• Pushing "too fast" for .:
reduced the level of violence enough to create an reforms to allow former ,
~tmosphere in which polit- Sunni Baathists to particiICa~ progre.ss can .be made, pate more fully in the gov·
wh1le lraq1 secunty forces ernment could make it
move ~easurably closer to harder to ~chieve reconcilthe ~omt where ~hey ~an · t' ' Likewise it said the
sustam the secunty gams 1 ~ 100 :
. •
made by u .S. forces.
t~me IS not nght .to estab"We shoqld expect, how- !1sh amnesty for those
ever, that AQI will attempt msurgents . who. · fought
to increase its tempo of agamst the government
attacks as · September since · ~003,
although ~
approaches in an effort to amnesty IS a key goal. At ,
influence U.S domestic the moment, the ' report •
opinion about sustained said, "a general amnesty :
U .S. engagement in Iraq," program would be coun- ·
Bush's report said. AQI is terproductive" because no •
an . acron.y~ f?r the a!- major armed · group has ·
Qatda af~1l!ate m Iraq that said it is willing to
U.S. offtc1als say . has a renounce violence and join
small num~r of ~~~hters the government.
but an outs1zed ~b1hty. to · • The report listed eight ,,
accelerate sectanan v1o- .. .
b' ·
.. h
·ll
lence in Baghdad and elsecore o ~ec51ves t a!, w1 .
where.
be the mam . focus ove.~ "
At a White House news 2007 and mto 2008. ,
conference, Bush pleaded These. included defeating
for patience, saying that as ai-Qmda and 1.ts supporters ,
difficult and painful as the and helping Iraqis regain
war has become, the con- control of Baghdad.

Every day is (Mission Accomplished' Day
Lately, even once-worshipful GOP pundits have
been puzzled by the mys~
tery of George W. Bush.
Some find his jauntiness
in the face of disaster
Gene
inspiring; others find it
Lyons
unsettling. Almost everybody finds it rather unusu_a l (but hold that thought).
With Iraq War support
eroding
among capture . and successful
Republicans, the White interrogation.of Khalid alHouse launched a rec.e nt Mashhadani, supposedly a
propaganda offensive. On high-level courier who
Independence Day, Bush hand-carried operational
informed a West Virginia orders from Osama bin
audience , ''Many of the Laden
. to his Iraqi• underd
stu
1es.
spectacular car bombings
I don 'r'believe that even
and killings you see are as
a result of AI Qaeda - the the Bush admin,istration
very same . folks that would be dumb enough to
attacked us on September announce the capture of
the li th. :A major enemy someone with knowledge
in Iraq is the same enemy of bin Laden' s wherethat dared attack the abouts. Nor do I believe
United States on that fate- the AI Qaeda leader would
try . to run 311 Indigenous
·
ful day."
Iraqi uprising frorn the
"The very same folks,"
wilds
of
Pakistan.
he said. Except that AI Unfortunately, · he 's a far
Qaeda in Iraq- the fanat- more cpnning adversary,
ics he's talking about having duped the United
didn't exist on 9/11. The States into a terrible
2003 U.S. invasion creat- strategic blunder in Iraq,
ed them. The word squandering lives and
"folks," incidentally, is treasure;· bitterly dividing
what poker players call Americans and helping
.Bush's "tell." It invariably bin Laden foment murdersignifies he's lying 'to peo- ous rage among Muslim
ple he considers yokels.
youth.
According
to
The
If
Bergner's
name
Washington Post, CIA sounds familiar, it is
director Michael Hayden because he was on the
has told the White House White, House national
that AI Qaeda is a deadly security staff until May.
but relatively minor threat On July 2, The New York
in Iraq . Many experts Times reported his claim
believe rival Sunni and that "senior leadership" in
Shiite militias would deci - Iran helped mastermind "a
mate them following a January raid in Karbala in
U.S. withdrawal.
-which five American solDuring a July 12 press diers were killed." He proconference, Bush never-· vided no evidence except
theless
mentioned the · his say-so.
organization 31 times .
USA Today has reported
What an amazing coinci- that an Army investigation
dence that in Baghdad .on of the Karbala incident
July 13, Brig. Gen. Kevin blamed Iraqi police conBergner announced the spiring with insurgents .

It 's a measure of how bad
things are that these are
not mutually exclusive
possibilities: Even so,
Bergner's flair for timely
"intelligence" coups supporting the White House
line is ~mpressive . .
The great hero of
Baghdad, however, is
expected to be Gen. David
Petraeus. The president
el(oked his name 11 times
on July 12. Bush has
cashiered all the generals
who opposed his "surge."
It's to this mighty Caesar a
war-weary
nation
is
expected to turn for . an
objective appraisal of Iraq
policy come September.
Alas, the fix is in. By all '
accounts a brave and capable
soldier, · Petraeu·s
declared the "surge" a success approxil!lately four
years before 1t was conceived. Oh his Salon.com
blog, Glenn Greenwald
documents an extensive
series of triumphal claims
by Petraeus dating to
December 2003, when he
told Newswet;k the Iraqi
insurgency was already
fading .
To hear Petraeus tell it,
the United States ha§
turned more corners in
Iraq than a stable of barrel -racing horses. Sil\
weeks before the 2004
presidential election, he
wrote a Washington Post
column claiming victory .
was imminent , largely
because of the fighting
spirit of Iraqi soldiers
Petraeu s himself had
trained - an effort that's
quietly been all but abandoned.
On evidence, Petraeus
appears to be a familiar
American type, a capable
soldier combining strong
ri ght -wing views and
dreadful political judgment . Compare him, for ·

example, to Gen. Douglas
C. MacArthur.
On July 13, Bush invited
a platoon of conservative
columnists to the White;
House to admire his steely '
resolve. "Bush seems ..
empowered,"
gushed
David Brooks of The N~w _
York Times . " His self- :
confidence is the most ,
remarkable feature of his .
presidency." . Evidently, ..
Bush assured .the pundits ,
that ''the Almighty" is
firmly on his side.
.
One conservative who '
wasn't invited is The Wall ·
Street Journal's Peggy '
Noonan. Citing a "rock- ·
ribbed" Republican friend
who told her "I don't ·
believe a word that' comes out of his mouth," Noonan -'
admits being creeped out .
by "the president's seem- ·
ingly effortless high spir- '
its . .. . His Iraq leadership
has failed. His standing is :
lower than any previous ;
president's since polling
began . He 's in a good
mood. Discuss."
'
(Some of the diagnostic .'
criteria for Narcissistic ·
Disorder ..
Perso.nality
include "a ·grandiose sense .
of self importance" and .
"fantasies of unlimited '
,
success, power.")
It's the classic con .
man' s personality. For '
such an emotional cripple, :
every day being genuflect- .
ed to and addressed as '
" Mr. President" would be '
"Mission Accomplished" ·,
Day.
Nothing else would mat ter.
. (Arkansas Democ rat Gazelle columnist Gene ::
Lyons is a national maga -zine award winner and co- ·
author of "The Hunting of
the
Presidenr"
(St. '
Martin's Press, 2000). YoU'·
can e-mail Lyons at gene-'
lyons2 @sbcglobal.net.)

Thursday,August2,2007

Deaths

Bridge collapses into Mississippi River
during rush hour in Minneapolis

James Pabick

Bv PATRICK CONDON
AND GREGG AA!'t'!OT

GALLIPOLIS -James Patrick, 80, Gallipolis (Kanauga
Community), died Tuesday, July 31, 2007, in the
Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy.
He is survived by his wife, Betty Jane Jones Patrick.
Masonic funeral services will be conducted by Morning
Dawn Lodge No. 7, F&amp;AM. at I p.m: Sunday in the
Cremeens Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis.
A memorial service will follow the Masonic funeral service, Friends may call one hour prior to the service.
. Memorials may be made in Jim's memory to .the
American Lung Association of Mid-Ohio, 1850 Arlingate
Lane, Columbus, Ohio 43228.
·
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by
visiting www.~remeensfuneralhomes.com .

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

MINNEAPOLIS An
i nterstate bridge jammed with
rush-hour traffic suddenly
broke into huge sections and
collapsed into the MississipPi
River Wednesday, pitching
dozens of-cars 60 feet into the
water and killing' at least
seven people.
The eight-lane Intersljlte.
35W bridge, a major
Minneapolis artery, was in
t he midst of being repaired
and two lanes in each direcPOMEROY- Roberta Marie (Cornwell) O'Brien, 91, t ion were closed when the
died Wednesday, Au¥.. I , 2007 at her home in Pomeroy. A bridge buckled.
'.'There were two lanes of
complete obituary will be in the Sunday's Times-Sentinel.
traffic, bumper to bumper,
at the point of the collapse.
Those cars did go into the
river," said Minneapolis
CLIFrON, W.Va. - George A. Bums, 86, of Clifton, Police Lt. Amelia Huffman.
W.Va. died July 31, 2007 at Saint Francis Hospital, ' 'At this point there is nothCharleston, W.Va.
I ng to suggest that this was
He was preceded in death by his wife, Alma J une (Henry) anything other than a strucBums.
tural collapse."
·
··
Graveside services will be hdd Saturday at 10 a.m. at
Jamie Winegar of Houston
the Kirkland Memorial Gardens with the Rev. Jim was sitting in traffic shonly
Richards officiating. Military services will be by Smith- after 6 p.m. wh~n all of a
Capehart American Legion Post #140 and Stewart- sudden she started hearing
Johnson Post #9926.
•'boom, boom. booi!t and we
Friends may call at the Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home were just dropping, drop6:30 to 8 p.m. Friday.
ping, dropping, dropping."
In lieu of flowers contributions to Leukemia and
The car she was nding in
Lymphoma Society PO Box 9031 Pittsfield, Mass. 01202 landed on top "of a smaller
and Clifton United Methodist Church Clifton, WV 2526.
E-mail Condolences to foglesongtucker@myway.com.

Roberta Marie O'Brien

George A. Bums

.

Eastern does not, such as
vocational education programs.
.
However,
Edwards
said,
from PageA1
convenience is not always a
A district sees a direct consideration. Some district
financial benefit when it employees brio$ their stuenrolls
more
students dents from outsl&lt;1e the disthrough the ~!icy than it trict to attend school. The
loses. The Oh1o Department Eastern · Local .district has
of Education pays its per- received students from the
Local
and
student allotment to the dis- Warren
trict where the student is Alexander Local districts •
enrolled, not where he lives. whose parents must make a
There are nearly as many considerable trip each . day
reasons for sending children to get their children to
to another district as there school in Eastern Local.
Edwards said the district
are families, but Edwards
has
also seen an increase in
said convenience plays a
open
enrollment students
major role in the decision.
.
from
Federal . Hocking
Most of Eastern Local's students who leave the district Local School District in
to attend school go to Meigs . Athens County, which is
financiaI
Local Schools, because the experiencing
struggles.
.
facilities are closer to their
"There are a number of
homes. The same applies to
many Meigs Local residents considerations," Edwards
who attend Eastern Local said; "but many of our open
enrollment students are
schools.
of Eastern alumni •
children
Other Eastern students
leave the district for Meigs and many others are from
said, families who appreciate the
Local,
Edwards
because that district offers small school environmen t
'programs and curriculum we offer."

School

Local Weather
Thursdar ... Areas
of
dense fog m the momin~.
Sunny... Hot with highs m
the lower 90s. Light and
variable winds ... Becoming
southwest around 5 mph in
the afternoon.
Thursday night.•• Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper
60s. South winds around 5
mph
in
the
evening ... Becoming light
and variable. ·
. Friday... Mostly sunny
with a slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Hot with highs in the lower
90s. West winds 5 to 10
mph. Chance of rain 20 percent.

Friday
night ...Mostly
cloudy with a slighl chance
of showers and thunder storms. Lows in the mid
60s. Northwest winds 5 to
10 mph. Chance of rain 20
percent.
Saturday and Saturday
night... Partly cloudy. Hot
Highs around 90. Lows in
the mid 60s.
Sunday and Sunday
night ... Mostly cloudy. Hot
Highs around 90. Lows in
the mid 60s.
Monday... Mostly sunny
with a chance of shower s
and thunderstorms. HoI
with highs in the lower 90s
Chance of rain 30 percent.

Local Stocks
AEP ( NYSE) - 46.81
AkZo (NASDAQ}- 83.06
Aahland Inc. (NYSE) - 61.83
Ble loti (NYSE)- 25.41
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 32.54
Bor&amp;Warner INYSE) - 87.83
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) 60.25
•
Champion (NASDAQ) - 6.40

Worthington INYSE) - 20.98
Dally stock raporla are the 4 p.m
ET closing quoteo of transactions
for Aupt 1, 2007, provided by
Edward Jones ftnanclal advloom
Isaac Mills In Galllpollo at (740)
441-9441 and Lesley Manero In

.

Point Pleasant at (304) 8740174. Member SIPC.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Waterline
fi'om Page A1

. "National investmeilt· in
water resources has not kept
pace With our level of economic
exransion,"
Voinovich said. "I the steep
decline in federal invest-

August
fromPageA1
are too great not to breast·
fed and include fewer upset
stomachs compared to other
babies and no bottles to
wash or prepare in the wee
hours of the morning.
Other benetits to breastfeeding, according to WIC
are:

car but did not fall into the
water. She said her nephew
yelled, '"It's an earthquake!'
and then we realized the
brid~e was collapsing."
Mmneapolis Fire Chief
Jim Clack said 60 people
were taken to area hospitals
for treatment and that the
death toll could rise.
Rescuers called off the
search as nightfall made it
too dangerous to search the
waters, which were filled
with chucks of the mangled
bridge and at least 50 vehi- ·
cles in the water.
"We think there are several more vehicles in the river
we can't see yet,"' Clack
said, adding th at the likelihood of finding survivors
was slim.
Authorities referred family members searching for
missing loved ones to a
nearby hotel, where the Red
Cross had set up operations.
Dr. Joseph Clinton, emergency medical chief at
Hennepin County Medical
Center, s~i~ his hospital
treated. 28 IDJured people inclUding six who were in
critical condition.
Clinton said at least one·
of the victims had drowned.
The Homeland Security
Department also said the col-

lapse did not ~ppear to be terrorism-related. The National
Transportation Safety Board
planned to send a team of
mvestigators to Minneapolis,
NTSB
spokesman Ted
Lopatkiewicz said.
Gov. Tim Pawlenty said
the bridge was inspected by
the Minnesota Department
of Transportation in 2005
and 2006 and that no structural problems were noted.
"There were some minor
things that needed attention," he said.
Police Chief Tim Dolan
said officers were checking
other bridges as a precaution.
The steel-arched bridge,
which was built in 1967, rose
about 64 feet above the river
and stretched about I ,900
feet across the river. The
bridge was built with a single
458-foot-long steel arch to
avoid putting any piers in the
water that might interfere
with river navigation. ..
A burning truck and a
school bus clung to one
slanted slab. The bus had just
crossed the ·bridge before it
crumpled into pieces.
Christine Swift's to-yearold daughter, Kaleigh, was
on the bus returning from a
field trip and called her

mother. "She was screaming, 'The bridge col·
lapsed!'" Swift said.
She said a police officer
told her all the kids got off
the bus safely.
It appeared that the center
section of the bridge
dropped straight down and
pancaked in the middle of
the river, leaving several
vehicles stranded on a broken island of wreckage. As
divers plumbed the waters,
other rescuers searched
frantically for victims amid
broken, zigzagged sections
of blacktop. Some . of the
injured were carried up the
riverbanks.
Dozens of vehicles were
scattered and·stacked on top·
of each other amid the rubble. Some people were
stranded on pans of the
bridge that weren't completely in the water.
Many motorists may have
been headed to the Minnesota
1\vins game not far from the
bridge. Team officials decided to play the game after conferring with department of
public safety officials. It was
decided that sending 20,000
to 25,000 people back into
traffic could hinder rescue
efforts, said team president
Dave St. Peter.

ment persists, our continued .
eco~omic ~;xfan~ion , .and
env1ronmenta
1mprovements will be threatened."
''This is a big Step f9rward·
to help address the clial" ·
Ienges we face as a -nation ,
. and iii many of Ohio's com.
munities with water quality."
As part of the WRDA ·
conference report, Sen.
Voinovich
secured
an

authorization of nearly $21
million for a study of the
Hocking River Basin in
Athens, Perry and Hocking
Counties to evaluate the
applicability and feasibility·
of vl!rious restoration soh,l_lions to the overall clegradation of the ecosrstem.
Options include hmited
stream restoration, wetland
.creation and wildlife habitat

restoration.
The report also includes
authorization for $1 million
for new water lines · in
Vinton County, $4 million
for a treatment plant for the
Burr Oak Reg1onal Water
District in Athens, Hocking,
Perry and Morgan counties,
and $5 million for a treatment plant for a water system in Lawrence County.

• Formula fed infants and infant botulism.
• Breastfed babies have
have twice the risk of having ear infections in the first IClSS chance of allergies,
year than infants who are asthma and eczema..
• Evidence suggests that
exclusively breastfed for at
exclusive breastfeeding for
least four months. • Breastfeeding reduces at least two months protects
the incidence, and lessens susceptible children from
the severity of a large num- ~pe I insulin dependent
ber of infections, including d1abetes mellitus (DDM) ..
• Breastfeeding may
pneumonia and meningitis
reduce the risk for subsem infants.
• Breastfeeding protects quent intlaDlfflatory bowel
. infants against a variety of disease, multiple sclerosis,
illnesses, such as diarrhea rheumatoid arthritis and

Season
from Page A1·
"mom and pop" farms that
remain productive. These
farms are the heart of Meigs
County's "agribusiness."
Despite the changes, Jim
says the Ohio River tomatoes from the sandy bottoms
of Meigs County are still a
well known product -must
like Georgia's Vidalia
onion. Jim spends a lot of
time and money in fuel
costs to truck these Ohio
River tomatoes to market in
Cleveland up to five times a
week during the busy season. In fact, Jim estimates
he makes his money for the
year in the span of one
month to six weeks during
picking season.
.
Jim has been in the farming businesses s ince he
graduated from Southern
High School in 1979 and
says he 's seen "more lean
than good years" in a time
when expenses continue to
rise, particularly with fuel
in the last few years.
However, he added farming is in his blood and
joked "I'm in too deep to
get out" before explaining
he enjoyed it, he even
enjoys a good tomato
every now a11d then, growing · Sun Bright and

.

Beth Ser&amp;ent/photo

Workers at Jim O'Brien Farm wnrk in the tomato packing plant.
Mountain Spring varieties.
Farming 25 acres of
tomatoes and 50 acres of
sweet com takes some extra
employees during the harvesting season. Jim says he

doesn't hire migrant workers but doesn't judge those
who do, saying he's just
been· .lucky over the years
and has had the same local
people work for him season

childhood cancers.
"It's all about the babies,"
Ellis said as to the point of
promoting the WIC breastfeeding program which she
believes results in happier,
healthier babies.
Ellis currently has 60
clients throughout the county and if you would like to
see if you -qualify for her .
free services or the WIC
program call 992-0392 or
the Help Me Grow helpline
at 1-800-755-GROW.
after season. Jim also said
he couldn't run the farm
without his family, particularly his parents Larry and
Phyllis, wife Sherry, daughte'ts Erin and Jamie and
nephew Derek Teaford who
this year has taken a more
active role in getting the
tomatoes to market.
Nephew Dale Teaford
holds the O' Brien picking
record at 225 buckets in one
momin$. For those of you
wondenng, the expert tomato pickers say the best way
to get tomato stains off of
your hands is.a green tomato or bleach.
Jim said he gives his pickers cash incentives for picking the most tomatoes over
the season on top of an
hourly wage. Picking usually starts at 6:30 a.m. and
goes to 2:30 p.m., then it's
off to the packing plant and
loading the trucks.
However, each year
begins in Jim's greenhouses
preparing for the summer
heat and Cleveland markets.
He added running the farm
is a year-round job that can
leave you tired and asking
why you're doing what
you're doing but he says
once 'he gets a little time to
sit and catch his breath he 's
ready to gu again.

Channing Shops (NASDAQ) - 9.92
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 33.14
Collins (i!YSE) - 69.38
c
DuPont (NYSE)- 47.33
US Benk (NYSE) - 30.48
GMnott (NYSE) - 60.69
Ganera: Electric (NY$E) - 38.95
Hade,.Oavldlon t NYSE) - 57.81
JP Morgan ( NYSE) - 44.38
Kroger (NYSE)- 27.00
Umlted Brands (NYSE) - 23.72
Norfolk Southam (NYSE) - 53.81
Oak Hill Rnanclal (NASDAQ) 28.98
Ohio Yalley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)

"'A.,
,~N

~

-&lt;

"'

~
.......

• FREE JA/1 Ttc:nnttll..,._
• lnM'!I ~ • Qep )'QUI bUCfct1111(1

BBT (NYSE) - 38.52
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 23.26
Pepsico (NYSE) - 66.43
Premier (NASDAQ) - 14.59
Rockwell (NYSE) - 69.38
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) -11.57
Royal Dutch Shell - 77.39
Soars Holding (NASDAQ) -

• Custom Slarl Page · nevtt. wed'lef &amp;more!

Wendy's (NYSE) -

46.22
34.93

0

'a_,--;&gt;

..
' ....
,•. 1;;

;'

/_.

~-···----·-

• ,aHliA eddre6eee wiltl WWnail!

Wa~Mart INYSE) -

,:..

{, \

.. --..·-----

ff.IHIRMifotG .YtTS &lt;;r.~Rt:

-25.00

137.57

'

C,J4&gt;

c=::6X...~asm!J
., ....
~---

Sign Up Ontlne! www.L.oc*Ntt..com

The Unsinkable
Molly Brown
August 17 &amp; ts; 8 pm
Ducktona,' Sept. 8
Jrd Prize:
2007 Honda Rebel
Donated by:
River Front Honda
"How fast is your duck?!"
Box OHice: 428 2nd Ave.

Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Rime R. Ph. .
Prescription Ph. 992-2955
112 East Main Streel
Pomeroy, Ohio

HOURS
Mon - Frl8am- Bpm
Sal.8am·5pm
Sun. CLOSED

'TillS •

QuaUty Prescription Service
at Competitive Prices
.Utility Payments
Mon-Sat. 8am-6pm;
Sat 8am·3pm

.\

.

�OPINION

· The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
· 111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

•
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, Aug. 2, the 214th day of 2007. There
.
are 151 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
·
On Aug. 2, 1776, members of the Continental Congress
began attaching their signatures to the Declaration of
Independence.
On this date:
In 1790, the enumeration for the first United States census began; the final total was 3,929,214.
.
In 1873, inventor Andrew S. Hallidie successfully tested
a cable car he had designed for the city of San Francisco.
In 1876, frontiersman "Wild Bill" Hickok was shot and
killed while playing poker at a saloon in Deadwood,
Dakota Territory. ·
In 1927, four years after becoming presidimt, Calvin
Coolidge issu~d a S'!lte~ent to reporters; "I ~o not choose
to-run for President m mneteen twenty-e1ght.'
In 1939, Alben Einstein signed a letter to President
Roosevelt urging creation of an atomic weapons research
program.
· In 1943, during World War II, Navy boat PT-109, commanded by Lt. John F. Kennedy, sank after being rammed
by the Japanese destroyer Amagiri off the Solomon Islands.
In 1967, the crime and race drama "In the Heat of the
Night," starring Sidney Poitier and Rod Steiger, opened in
New York.
Five years ago: A federal judge ruled the U.S. government had to reveal the names of people .detained in the
investi~ation of the 9-11 terrorist attacks; an appeals court
later s1ded with federal authorities. Pope John Paul II
returned to Rome after ending an 11-day pilgrimage to
Canada, Guatemala and Mexico.,
One year a~o: Five days after being pulled over by
police, actor-duector Mel Gibson was charged with misdemeanor drunken driving, having an elevated blood-alcohol
level and having an open container of liquor in his car.
(Gibson later pleaded no contest to drunken driving under
a deal in which he received three years ' probation, paid a
.fine and agreed to attend alcohol rehabilitation classes.)
Today's Birthdays: Former Sen. Paul Laxalt, R-Nev., is
85. Actor Peter O'Toole is 75. Country singer Hank
Cochran is 72. Rock musician Garth Hudson (The Band) is
70. Movie director Wes Craven is 68. Singer Kathy Lennon
(The Lennon Sisters) is 64, Actor Max Wright is 64.
Actress Joanna Cassidy is 62. Actress Kathryn Harmld is
57. Singer Andrew Gold is 56. Actor Butch Patrick ("The
Munsters") is 54. Singer Mojo Nixon is 50. Actress
Victoria Jackson is 48. Actress Apollonia is 48. Actress
Cynthia Stevenson is 45. Actress Mary-Louise Parker is 43.
Rock musician John Stanier is 39. Writer-actor-director
Kevin Smith is 37. Actor Edward Furlong is 30. Rock ·
musician Devon Glenn (Buckcherry) is 27. Actress Hallie
Eisenberg is 15.
Thought for Today: "Idea~ are powerful things, requiring
not a studious contemplation but an action, even if it 1s only
an inner action."- Midge Deeter, American writer.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 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, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organi:;:.ations and individuals.wi/1 not be accept·
ed for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services . Ohl~u::.::~~~~lng
Correction Polley

Co.

every ·aftemoon , Monday
Our main concem In all .stories is to
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
be accurale. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class
, In a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeloy.

992·2t56.

Publish~

Member: The Associated Press and
the Ohio Newspaper Association.

Our main number Is
(740) 992·2156.

Poatmeater: Send address corrections to Th8 Daily Sentinel, 111 Court

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Department extensions are:

News .
Editor:

Cha~eno

Hoellich, Ext. t2
RepOrter: Brian Reed. Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext t 3

Subacrlptlon Rates
By carrier or motor route
110.27
One month
One year
'115.84
Dally
50'
Senior Citizen rates
One month
'10.27
One year
'103.90

Subecribefs should romn In advance
clrect to the Daily Sentinel. No sub·
Outelde Salas: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
scription by mail permtned in areas
Outside Sileo: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home carrier service is avail-

Advertising

CliiUJCirc.: Judy Clart&lt;, Ext. 10

General Manager
Cha~ene

Hoeflich. Ext. 12
E·mall:

news@mydailysentinel.com

Web:
www.mydailysentinel.com

able.

Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks
·
'32.26
26 Weeks
'64.20
52 Weeks
. ' 127.11
Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks
'53.55
26 Weeks
' 107.10
52 Weeks
'214.21

Thursday, August 2, 2007.

•

Iraq war report implies Baghdad buildup
won't work unless troops st~y far longer
BY ROBERT BURNS

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.Page.A4 .

AP MILITARY WRITER

WASHINGTON
While many in Congress
are pushing President
Bush to alter course in Iraq
by September if not sooner, his new status report on
the war strongly 1mplies
that the administration
believes its military strategy will take many more
months to meet its goals.
The report cited no specific' timeframe, .but its
language suggests what ·
some U.S . commanders
have hinted at recently:
The troop reinforce111ents
that Bush ordered in
J apuary may need to
remain until spring 2008.
That's a mihtary calcula·
tion at . . odds . with an
emerging political consensus in . Washington on
bringing the troops home
soon.
The disconnect between
the military and political
views on the best way forward is a symptom of fourplus years of setbacks in
Iraq - not only missteps
by the U .S. government
but also by Iraqi political
leaders, who have fallen·
far short of their stated aim
of creating a government
of national unity.
In the view of some
members of Congress and not just Democratsthe time has long_ passed
for the Iraqis to show that
they can parlay U.S.-led
military
efforts
into
progress on the political
front.
"That government. is
simply not providing leadership worthy of the considerable sacrific.e of our
forces, and this has to
change immediately," Sen.
John Warner, R-Va., said
after the White House
delivered its war report to
Congress on Thursday.
Warner was the author of
legislation requiring the
report.
Hours after the report's
release, the House, on a

223-201 vote, approved a
Democratic
measure
requiring U.S. troops to be
withdrawn from Iraq by
spring. House .Democrats
pursued the vote despite a
veto threat from Bush.
The president apparently
has made the calculation
that he can ward off political pressure to change
course before the next
required progress report,
set for mid-September.
That's when Gen. David
Petraeus, the top U.S.
commander iii Iraq, plans
to lay out his assessment
of whether the counterinsurgency
strategy
he
launched in February is
working and recommends
to Bush whether to stick
with . it into the comi~g
year.
Secretary
of
State
Condoleezza
Rice
advanced that view Friday
morning,
telling
Fox
News' "Fox &amp; Friends"
that by waiting until
September, "we can make
a coherent judgment of
where we are and we can
chart a way forward." '
"I understand people's
concern. I understand people's impatience," she
said, "but I would just
hope that we could recognize that our men and
women in the field , our
ambassadors, our generals
outthere, our commanding
general, are on a course
that was laid out by the .
president in J aunary. We
ought to stick to that."
By extending troop
deployments in Iraq from
12 months to 15 months,
the Army has made it possible for Bush to maintain
the troop ·buildup until
abo.,u_t April 2008. But if he
wanted to go beyond that it
would require some even
more painful moves by the
Army, at the risk of reaching a breaking point.
Although the war is
increasingly unpopular,
Bush does have support in
some prominent quarters
for continuing his current

military strategy, not only sequences of giving up and
for the remainder of this withdrawing the troops ,
year but into 2008 . John now would be even worse. ~
Keane, a retired four-star
His report to Congress ·
Army general, said this acknowledged shortcom- ,
week
that
security ings while asserting that
progress, though slow, is the "overall trajectory" of
gaining momentum.
the . military and political ,
"The thou~ht of pulling effort in Iraq "has begiln to
out now or m a couple of stabilize, compared to the
months makes no sense
militarily," Keane said.
deteriorating trajectory" in
Between
now
and 2006.
September the battle for
Sprinkled ' through the
Baghdad will intensify, report are phrases tb,at
likely costing hundreds of make clear the administra" .
American troops ' lives, tion believes its military .'.
and the Iraqi government . strategy is the right one,
of Prime Minister Nouri ihat it should be given
al-Maliki will be pressured more time and that pt;&gt;sito do more to weed out . tive results are at least
sectarian influences in the months away.
Iraqi sec~rity. forces ~nd to
Some examples:
pass leg1slatwn d~s1~ned
• There are encouraging
s'gns
that should "over ,
to promote reconc1hat10n.
. The U.S. casualty rate
.1 ..
·
th '
to ·
has increased in recent ume, pomt
e way .
months, and total U.S . lower U.S. troop levels m • .
deaths in Iraq sitice the Iraq.
.
.
• Meanmgful and lastmg •
war began in March 2003
progress . on natiOnal rec- '
now exceed 3,600.
Petraeus hopes that by onciliation may require a ,
September the U.S.-led "sustained period" of ·
counteroffensive will have reduced violence .
,
• Pushing "too fast" for .:
reduced the level of violence enough to create an reforms to allow former ,
~tmosphere in which polit- Sunni Baathists to particiICa~ progre.ss can .be made, pate more fully in the gov·
wh1le lraq1 secunty forces ernment could make it
move ~easurably closer to harder to ~chieve reconcilthe ~omt where ~hey ~an · t' ' Likewise it said the
sustam the secunty gams 1 ~ 100 :
. •
made by u .S. forces.
t~me IS not nght .to estab"We shoqld expect, how- !1sh amnesty for those
ever, that AQI will attempt msurgents . who. · fought
to increase its tempo of agamst the government
attacks as · September since · ~003,
although ~
approaches in an effort to amnesty IS a key goal. At ,
influence U.S domestic the moment, the ' report •
opinion about sustained said, "a general amnesty :
U .S. engagement in Iraq," program would be coun- ·
Bush's report said. AQI is terproductive" because no •
an . acron.y~ f?r the a!- major armed · group has ·
Qatda af~1l!ate m Iraq that said it is willing to
U.S. offtc1als say . has a renounce violence and join
small num~r of ~~~hters the government.
but an outs1zed ~b1hty. to · • The report listed eight ,,
accelerate sectanan v1o- .. .
b' ·
.. h
·ll
lence in Baghdad and elsecore o ~ec51ves t a!, w1 .
where.
be the mam . focus ove.~ "
At a White House news 2007 and mto 2008. ,
conference, Bush pleaded These. included defeating
for patience, saying that as ai-Qmda and 1.ts supporters ,
difficult and painful as the and helping Iraqis regain
war has become, the con- control of Baghdad.

Every day is (Mission Accomplished' Day
Lately, even once-worshipful GOP pundits have
been puzzled by the mys~
tery of George W. Bush.
Some find his jauntiness
in the face of disaster
Gene
inspiring; others find it
Lyons
unsettling. Almost everybody finds it rather unusu_a l (but hold that thought).
With Iraq War support
eroding
among capture . and successful
Republicans, the White interrogation.of Khalid alHouse launched a rec.e nt Mashhadani, supposedly a
propaganda offensive. On high-level courier who
Independence Day, Bush hand-carried operational
informed a West Virginia orders from Osama bin
audience , ''Many of the Laden
. to his Iraqi• underd
stu
1es.
spectacular car bombings
I don 'r'believe that even
and killings you see are as
a result of AI Qaeda - the the Bush admin,istration
very same . folks that would be dumb enough to
attacked us on September announce the capture of
the li th. :A major enemy someone with knowledge
in Iraq is the same enemy of bin Laden' s wherethat dared attack the abouts. Nor do I believe
United States on that fate- the AI Qaeda leader would
try . to run 311 Indigenous
·
ful day."
Iraqi uprising frorn the
"The very same folks,"
wilds
of
Pakistan.
he said. Except that AI Unfortunately, · he 's a far
Qaeda in Iraq- the fanat- more cpnning adversary,
ics he's talking about having duped the United
didn't exist on 9/11. The States into a terrible
2003 U.S. invasion creat- strategic blunder in Iraq,
ed them. The word squandering lives and
"folks," incidentally, is treasure;· bitterly dividing
what poker players call Americans and helping
.Bush's "tell." It invariably bin Laden foment murdersignifies he's lying 'to peo- ous rage among Muslim
ple he considers yokels.
youth.
According
to
The
If
Bergner's
name
Washington Post, CIA sounds familiar, it is
director Michael Hayden because he was on the
has told the White House White, House national
that AI Qaeda is a deadly security staff until May.
but relatively minor threat On July 2, The New York
in Iraq . Many experts Times reported his claim
believe rival Sunni and that "senior leadership" in
Shiite militias would deci - Iran helped mastermind "a
mate them following a January raid in Karbala in
U.S. withdrawal.
-which five American solDuring a July 12 press diers were killed." He proconference, Bush never-· vided no evidence except
theless
mentioned the · his say-so.
organization 31 times .
USA Today has reported
What an amazing coinci- that an Army investigation
dence that in Baghdad .on of the Karbala incident
July 13, Brig. Gen. Kevin blamed Iraqi police conBergner announced the spiring with insurgents .

It 's a measure of how bad
things are that these are
not mutually exclusive
possibilities: Even so,
Bergner's flair for timely
"intelligence" coups supporting the White House
line is ~mpressive . .
The great hero of
Baghdad, however, is
expected to be Gen. David
Petraeus. The president
el(oked his name 11 times
on July 12. Bush has
cashiered all the generals
who opposed his "surge."
It's to this mighty Caesar a
war-weary
nation
is
expected to turn for . an
objective appraisal of Iraq
policy come September.
Alas, the fix is in. By all '
accounts a brave and capable
soldier, · Petraeu·s
declared the "surge" a success approxil!lately four
years before 1t was conceived. Oh his Salon.com
blog, Glenn Greenwald
documents an extensive
series of triumphal claims
by Petraeus dating to
December 2003, when he
told Newswet;k the Iraqi
insurgency was already
fading .
To hear Petraeus tell it,
the United States ha§
turned more corners in
Iraq than a stable of barrel -racing horses. Sil\
weeks before the 2004
presidential election, he
wrote a Washington Post
column claiming victory .
was imminent , largely
because of the fighting
spirit of Iraqi soldiers
Petraeu s himself had
trained - an effort that's
quietly been all but abandoned.
On evidence, Petraeus
appears to be a familiar
American type, a capable
soldier combining strong
ri ght -wing views and
dreadful political judgment . Compare him, for ·

example, to Gen. Douglas
C. MacArthur.
On July 13, Bush invited
a platoon of conservative
columnists to the White;
House to admire his steely '
resolve. "Bush seems ..
empowered,"
gushed
David Brooks of The N~w _
York Times . " His self- :
confidence is the most ,
remarkable feature of his .
presidency." . Evidently, ..
Bush assured .the pundits ,
that ''the Almighty" is
firmly on his side.
.
One conservative who '
wasn't invited is The Wall ·
Street Journal's Peggy '
Noonan. Citing a "rock- ·
ribbed" Republican friend
who told her "I don't ·
believe a word that' comes out of his mouth," Noonan -'
admits being creeped out .
by "the president's seem- ·
ingly effortless high spir- '
its . .. . His Iraq leadership
has failed. His standing is :
lower than any previous ;
president's since polling
began . He 's in a good
mood. Discuss."
'
(Some of the diagnostic .'
criteria for Narcissistic ·
Disorder ..
Perso.nality
include "a ·grandiose sense .
of self importance" and .
"fantasies of unlimited '
,
success, power.")
It's the classic con .
man' s personality. For '
such an emotional cripple, :
every day being genuflect- .
ed to and addressed as '
" Mr. President" would be '
"Mission Accomplished" ·,
Day.
Nothing else would mat ter.
. (Arkansas Democ rat Gazelle columnist Gene ::
Lyons is a national maga -zine award winner and co- ·
author of "The Hunting of
the
Presidenr"
(St. '
Martin's Press, 2000). YoU'·
can e-mail Lyons at gene-'
lyons2 @sbcglobal.net.)

Thursday,August2,2007

Deaths

Bridge collapses into Mississippi River
during rush hour in Minneapolis

James Pabick

Bv PATRICK CONDON
AND GREGG AA!'t'!OT

GALLIPOLIS -James Patrick, 80, Gallipolis (Kanauga
Community), died Tuesday, July 31, 2007, in the
Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy.
He is survived by his wife, Betty Jane Jones Patrick.
Masonic funeral services will be conducted by Morning
Dawn Lodge No. 7, F&amp;AM. at I p.m: Sunday in the
Cremeens Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis.
A memorial service will follow the Masonic funeral service, Friends may call one hour prior to the service.
. Memorials may be made in Jim's memory to .the
American Lung Association of Mid-Ohio, 1850 Arlingate
Lane, Columbus, Ohio 43228.
·
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by
visiting www.~remeensfuneralhomes.com .

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

MINNEAPOLIS An
i nterstate bridge jammed with
rush-hour traffic suddenly
broke into huge sections and
collapsed into the MississipPi
River Wednesday, pitching
dozens of-cars 60 feet into the
water and killing' at least
seven people.
The eight-lane Intersljlte.
35W bridge, a major
Minneapolis artery, was in
t he midst of being repaired
and two lanes in each direcPOMEROY- Roberta Marie (Cornwell) O'Brien, 91, t ion were closed when the
died Wednesday, Au¥.. I , 2007 at her home in Pomeroy. A bridge buckled.
'.'There were two lanes of
complete obituary will be in the Sunday's Times-Sentinel.
traffic, bumper to bumper,
at the point of the collapse.
Those cars did go into the
river," said Minneapolis
CLIFrON, W.Va. - George A. Bums, 86, of Clifton, Police Lt. Amelia Huffman.
W.Va. died July 31, 2007 at Saint Francis Hospital, ' 'At this point there is nothCharleston, W.Va.
I ng to suggest that this was
He was preceded in death by his wife, Alma J une (Henry) anything other than a strucBums.
tural collapse."
·
··
Graveside services will be hdd Saturday at 10 a.m. at
Jamie Winegar of Houston
the Kirkland Memorial Gardens with the Rev. Jim was sitting in traffic shonly
Richards officiating. Military services will be by Smith- after 6 p.m. wh~n all of a
Capehart American Legion Post #140 and Stewart- sudden she started hearing
Johnson Post #9926.
•'boom, boom. booi!t and we
Friends may call at the Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home were just dropping, drop6:30 to 8 p.m. Friday.
ping, dropping, dropping."
In lieu of flowers contributions to Leukemia and
The car she was nding in
Lymphoma Society PO Box 9031 Pittsfield, Mass. 01202 landed on top "of a smaller
and Clifton United Methodist Church Clifton, WV 2526.
E-mail Condolences to foglesongtucker@myway.com.

Roberta Marie O'Brien

George A. Bums

.

Eastern does not, such as
vocational education programs.
.
However,
Edwards
said,
from PageA1
convenience is not always a
A district sees a direct consideration. Some district
financial benefit when it employees brio$ their stuenrolls
more
students dents from outsl&lt;1e the disthrough the ~!icy than it trict to attend school. The
loses. The Oh1o Department Eastern · Local .district has
of Education pays its per- received students from the
Local
and
student allotment to the dis- Warren
trict where the student is Alexander Local districts •
enrolled, not where he lives. whose parents must make a
There are nearly as many considerable trip each . day
reasons for sending children to get their children to
to another district as there school in Eastern Local.
Edwards said the district
are families, but Edwards
has
also seen an increase in
said convenience plays a
open
enrollment students
major role in the decision.
.
from
Federal . Hocking
Most of Eastern Local's students who leave the district Local School District in
to attend school go to Meigs . Athens County, which is
financiaI
Local Schools, because the experiencing
struggles.
.
facilities are closer to their
"There are a number of
homes. The same applies to
many Meigs Local residents considerations," Edwards
who attend Eastern Local said; "but many of our open
enrollment students are
schools.
of Eastern alumni •
children
Other Eastern students
leave the district for Meigs and many others are from
said, families who appreciate the
Local,
Edwards
because that district offers small school environmen t
'programs and curriculum we offer."

School

Local Weather
Thursdar ... Areas
of
dense fog m the momin~.
Sunny... Hot with highs m
the lower 90s. Light and
variable winds ... Becoming
southwest around 5 mph in
the afternoon.
Thursday night.•• Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper
60s. South winds around 5
mph
in
the
evening ... Becoming light
and variable. ·
. Friday... Mostly sunny
with a slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Hot with highs in the lower
90s. West winds 5 to 10
mph. Chance of rain 20 percent.

Friday
night ...Mostly
cloudy with a slighl chance
of showers and thunder storms. Lows in the mid
60s. Northwest winds 5 to
10 mph. Chance of rain 20
percent.
Saturday and Saturday
night... Partly cloudy. Hot
Highs around 90. Lows in
the mid 60s.
Sunday and Sunday
night ... Mostly cloudy. Hot
Highs around 90. Lows in
the mid 60s.
Monday... Mostly sunny
with a chance of shower s
and thunderstorms. HoI
with highs in the lower 90s
Chance of rain 30 percent.

Local Stocks
AEP ( NYSE) - 46.81
AkZo (NASDAQ}- 83.06
Aahland Inc. (NYSE) - 61.83
Ble loti (NYSE)- 25.41
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 32.54
Bor&amp;Warner INYSE) - 87.83
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) 60.25
•
Champion (NASDAQ) - 6.40

Worthington INYSE) - 20.98
Dally stock raporla are the 4 p.m
ET closing quoteo of transactions
for Aupt 1, 2007, provided by
Edward Jones ftnanclal advloom
Isaac Mills In Galllpollo at (740)
441-9441 and Lesley Manero In

.

Point Pleasant at (304) 8740174. Member SIPC.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Waterline
fi'om Page A1

. "National investmeilt· in
water resources has not kept
pace With our level of economic
exransion,"
Voinovich said. "I the steep
decline in federal invest-

August
fromPageA1
are too great not to breast·
fed and include fewer upset
stomachs compared to other
babies and no bottles to
wash or prepare in the wee
hours of the morning.
Other benetits to breastfeeding, according to WIC
are:

car but did not fall into the
water. She said her nephew
yelled, '"It's an earthquake!'
and then we realized the
brid~e was collapsing."
Mmneapolis Fire Chief
Jim Clack said 60 people
were taken to area hospitals
for treatment and that the
death toll could rise.
Rescuers called off the
search as nightfall made it
too dangerous to search the
waters, which were filled
with chucks of the mangled
bridge and at least 50 vehi- ·
cles in the water.
"We think there are several more vehicles in the river
we can't see yet,"' Clack
said, adding th at the likelihood of finding survivors
was slim.
Authorities referred family members searching for
missing loved ones to a
nearby hotel, where the Red
Cross had set up operations.
Dr. Joseph Clinton, emergency medical chief at
Hennepin County Medical
Center, s~i~ his hospital
treated. 28 IDJured people inclUding six who were in
critical condition.
Clinton said at least one·
of the victims had drowned.
The Homeland Security
Department also said the col-

lapse did not ~ppear to be terrorism-related. The National
Transportation Safety Board
planned to send a team of
mvestigators to Minneapolis,
NTSB
spokesman Ted
Lopatkiewicz said.
Gov. Tim Pawlenty said
the bridge was inspected by
the Minnesota Department
of Transportation in 2005
and 2006 and that no structural problems were noted.
"There were some minor
things that needed attention," he said.
Police Chief Tim Dolan
said officers were checking
other bridges as a precaution.
The steel-arched bridge,
which was built in 1967, rose
about 64 feet above the river
and stretched about I ,900
feet across the river. The
bridge was built with a single
458-foot-long steel arch to
avoid putting any piers in the
water that might interfere
with river navigation. ..
A burning truck and a
school bus clung to one
slanted slab. The bus had just
crossed the ·bridge before it
crumpled into pieces.
Christine Swift's to-yearold daughter, Kaleigh, was
on the bus returning from a
field trip and called her

mother. "She was screaming, 'The bridge col·
lapsed!'" Swift said.
She said a police officer
told her all the kids got off
the bus safely.
It appeared that the center
section of the bridge
dropped straight down and
pancaked in the middle of
the river, leaving several
vehicles stranded on a broken island of wreckage. As
divers plumbed the waters,
other rescuers searched
frantically for victims amid
broken, zigzagged sections
of blacktop. Some . of the
injured were carried up the
riverbanks.
Dozens of vehicles were
scattered and·stacked on top·
of each other amid the rubble. Some people were
stranded on pans of the
bridge that weren't completely in the water.
Many motorists may have
been headed to the Minnesota
1\vins game not far from the
bridge. Team officials decided to play the game after conferring with department of
public safety officials. It was
decided that sending 20,000
to 25,000 people back into
traffic could hinder rescue
efforts, said team president
Dave St. Peter.

ment persists, our continued .
eco~omic ~;xfan~ion , .and
env1ronmenta
1mprovements will be threatened."
''This is a big Step f9rward·
to help address the clial" ·
Ienges we face as a -nation ,
. and iii many of Ohio's com.
munities with water quality."
As part of the WRDA ·
conference report, Sen.
Voinovich
secured
an

authorization of nearly $21
million for a study of the
Hocking River Basin in
Athens, Perry and Hocking
Counties to evaluate the
applicability and feasibility·
of vl!rious restoration soh,l_lions to the overall clegradation of the ecosrstem.
Options include hmited
stream restoration, wetland
.creation and wildlife habitat

restoration.
The report also includes
authorization for $1 million
for new water lines · in
Vinton County, $4 million
for a treatment plant for the
Burr Oak Reg1onal Water
District in Athens, Hocking,
Perry and Morgan counties,
and $5 million for a treatment plant for a water system in Lawrence County.

• Formula fed infants and infant botulism.
• Breastfed babies have
have twice the risk of having ear infections in the first IClSS chance of allergies,
year than infants who are asthma and eczema..
• Evidence suggests that
exclusively breastfed for at
exclusive breastfeeding for
least four months. • Breastfeeding reduces at least two months protects
the incidence, and lessens susceptible children from
the severity of a large num- ~pe I insulin dependent
ber of infections, including d1abetes mellitus (DDM) ..
• Breastfeeding may
pneumonia and meningitis
reduce the risk for subsem infants.
• Breastfeeding protects quent intlaDlfflatory bowel
. infants against a variety of disease, multiple sclerosis,
illnesses, such as diarrhea rheumatoid arthritis and

Season
from Page A1·
"mom and pop" farms that
remain productive. These
farms are the heart of Meigs
County's "agribusiness."
Despite the changes, Jim
says the Ohio River tomatoes from the sandy bottoms
of Meigs County are still a
well known product -must
like Georgia's Vidalia
onion. Jim spends a lot of
time and money in fuel
costs to truck these Ohio
River tomatoes to market in
Cleveland up to five times a
week during the busy season. In fact, Jim estimates
he makes his money for the
year in the span of one
month to six weeks during
picking season.
.
Jim has been in the farming businesses s ince he
graduated from Southern
High School in 1979 and
says he 's seen "more lean
than good years" in a time
when expenses continue to
rise, particularly with fuel
in the last few years.
However, he added farming is in his blood and
joked "I'm in too deep to
get out" before explaining
he enjoyed it, he even
enjoys a good tomato
every now a11d then, growing · Sun Bright and

.

Beth Ser&amp;ent/photo

Workers at Jim O'Brien Farm wnrk in the tomato packing plant.
Mountain Spring varieties.
Farming 25 acres of
tomatoes and 50 acres of
sweet com takes some extra
employees during the harvesting season. Jim says he

doesn't hire migrant workers but doesn't judge those
who do, saying he's just
been· .lucky over the years
and has had the same local
people work for him season

childhood cancers.
"It's all about the babies,"
Ellis said as to the point of
promoting the WIC breastfeeding program which she
believes results in happier,
healthier babies.
Ellis currently has 60
clients throughout the county and if you would like to
see if you -qualify for her .
free services or the WIC
program call 992-0392 or
the Help Me Grow helpline
at 1-800-755-GROW.
after season. Jim also said
he couldn't run the farm
without his family, particularly his parents Larry and
Phyllis, wife Sherry, daughte'ts Erin and Jamie and
nephew Derek Teaford who
this year has taken a more
active role in getting the
tomatoes to market.
Nephew Dale Teaford
holds the O' Brien picking
record at 225 buckets in one
momin$. For those of you
wondenng, the expert tomato pickers say the best way
to get tomato stains off of
your hands is.a green tomato or bleach.
Jim said he gives his pickers cash incentives for picking the most tomatoes over
the season on top of an
hourly wage. Picking usually starts at 6:30 a.m. and
goes to 2:30 p.m., then it's
off to the packing plant and
loading the trucks.
However, each year
begins in Jim's greenhouses
preparing for the summer
heat and Cleveland markets.
He added running the farm
is a year-round job that can
leave you tired and asking
why you're doing what
you're doing but he says
once 'he gets a little time to
sit and catch his breath he 's
ready to gu again.

Channing Shops (NASDAQ) - 9.92
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 33.14
Collins (i!YSE) - 69.38
c
DuPont (NYSE)- 47.33
US Benk (NYSE) - 30.48
GMnott (NYSE) - 60.69
Ganera: Electric (NY$E) - 38.95
Hade,.Oavldlon t NYSE) - 57.81
JP Morgan ( NYSE) - 44.38
Kroger (NYSE)- 27.00
Umlted Brands (NYSE) - 23.72
Norfolk Southam (NYSE) - 53.81
Oak Hill Rnanclal (NASDAQ) 28.98
Ohio Yalley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)

"'A.,
,~N

~

-&lt;

"'

~
.......

• FREE JA/1 Ttc:nnttll..,._
• lnM'!I ~ • Qep )'QUI bUCfct1111(1

BBT (NYSE) - 38.52
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 23.26
Pepsico (NYSE) - 66.43
Premier (NASDAQ) - 14.59
Rockwell (NYSE) - 69.38
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) -11.57
Royal Dutch Shell - 77.39
Soars Holding (NASDAQ) -

• Custom Slarl Page · nevtt. wed'lef &amp;more!

Wendy's (NYSE) -

46.22
34.93

0

'a_,--;&gt;

..
' ....
,•. 1;;

;'

/_.

~-···----·-

• ,aHliA eddre6eee wiltl WWnail!

Wa~Mart INYSE) -

,:..

{, \

.. --..·-----

ff.IHIRMifotG .YtTS &lt;;r.~Rt:

-25.00

137.57

'

C,J4&gt;

c=::6X...~asm!J
., ....
~---

Sign Up Ontlne! www.L.oc*Ntt..com

The Unsinkable
Molly Brown
August 17 &amp; ts; 8 pm
Ducktona,' Sept. 8
Jrd Prize:
2007 Honda Rebel
Donated by:
River Front Honda
"How fast is your duck?!"
Box OHice: 428 2nd Ave.

Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Rime R. Ph. .
Prescription Ph. 992-2955
112 East Main Streel
Pomeroy, Ohio

HOURS
Mon - Frl8am- Bpm
Sal.8am·5pm
Sun. CLOSED

'TillS •

QuaUty Prescription Service
at Competitive Prices
.Utility Payments
Mon-Sat. 8am-6pm;
Sat 8am·3pm

.\

.

�Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Browns Roye undergoes surgery, Page 82
Scully just delivers the calls, Page 86

Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday,August2,2007

Thursday, August 2, 2007 .

GALLIPOLIS
Winners of "Nashville Star"
competition take the Main
Stage of the Gallia County
Junior Fair on Thursday,
Aug. 2 at 8:30 p.m . .
"Nashville Star" is a combination talent search and
reality series that aims to
find the next country music
superstar. Contestants are
judged by industry executives and artists. Fan viewers also help determine the
weekly survivors through
telephone and online voting.
The shows will feature
Warner Bros. recording
artist and the USA
Network's 2007 "Nashville
Star"
winner
Angela
Hacker, along with the three
runners-up from the popular
talent search television
series: Zac Hacker, David
Saint Romain and Joshua
Stevens, respectively.
Partners Brinson Strickland
an:l Kyle Gustie of 262 Five
Ltd. bring the "Nashville
Star'' television series out to
music fans in the form of a
live concert performance.
"This is the fourth year our
comeany has produced this
tour, ' notes Strickland. "It's
been a great partnership with
Reveille Entertainment and
the Nashville Star brand. We
want country music fans
who watched and participated in voting during the USA
Network's talent search television series this year to be
able to experience bits of the
television show right in their
own backyard."
"We've assembled some of
the most sought-after musicians in Nashville for the
Nashville Star Tour band,"
says Gustie. "It's a very, very
entertaining show. Fans will
see all four 2007 finalists per-

Vinton's 139th bean
dinner is Saturday
VINlON - A tradition going back to the days following the
Civil War continues every year on the first Salllrl;!ay of August
when the Vinton Bean Dinner and parade is staged under the
sponsorship of American Legion Post 161 and its auxiliary._
This year's dinner, the !39th, will be from II a.m. unlll4
p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 4 in the Vinton Community Park,
featuring bean soup, com bread, music and awards.
Those planning to participate in the parade should be at
Vinton Elementary School by II a.m. The parade proceeds'
south on Ohio 160 to Ohio 325 North and disperses at the
park. Anyone interested in participating in the parade
should contact Mayor Sam Sowards at 388-8461.
Vinton Masonic Lodge 13{ will host a pancake and .
sausage breakfast at the lodge on Holcomb Street from ?
until 10 a.m.
. .
When the soup, cooked in cauldrons, is ready to be served
around II, tho~e 'atten&lt;fulg' will find themselves near the
swinging bridle ac;ros~ .Rl!CCOOn Creek, the same location as
the bridge burned by &lt;C.onfederate Gen. John Hunt Morgan
during his fam~ raid through southern Ohio in 1863.
.
. , .Harnburgets\ .b\:ii..@,!!S, anllother refreshments will be avail:
'able and a..~~;6f.fJIIe'.event is the announcement. of th~
Bl'jpge(,;:'l!.,~.oot passed out at the 2003 dinner. •
I

·~

.

~·

l

E~ltainlnent Briefs
~.

.

-~. '

· GAI.J..IPOLIS.'- Bossatd Memorial Library will provide two wee~ of evenrog programs aimed at students in
. grades K-6. Guest presenters from the area will provide the
programs, whi4;~Jlegin ~~~ 7 p.m. each evening.
Topics inc)udfrSpanish Langua~e and culture; sign lanI Jr:ru'~~;~ nutrition, radio/commumcation, first aid, lawn
1. 1
safety, knitting and pet first aid.
Program's are being coordinated by Helen Lanier,
Bossard Library Youth Services, and begin the week after
·,,.'
the Gallia' County Junior Fair. Programs are being sched•
forming together and in fuU
Friday is local entertain- concerts by country music uled for Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday of each
musical sets individually."
ment night, with area stars Adam Tucker, Tony week, beginning Atf~. 6. Pre-registration is encoumged.
All four artists will be bands Armistace and Top Rio and Sbilwna Corder.
Some programs will include a project or food item.
available for media inter- Hat promising powerful
Tuclce,r wa~ recognize,q a~
For more 'information, contact Youth Services (extensio'l
views and meet-and-greet perfoi"m!jnces begmning at the New · ··Artist Ra!tio 225) at Bossard Memorial Library, (740) 446-7323.
autograph sessions in each 8:30p.m:
Ne!Work
., Independen\
city. There.will be Nashville
Saturday, audiences will Country Music Artist Of
Star merchandise available be amazed by the Triple The Year In 2006, and
at every show, along with Treat at 7 p.m.
Corder is well-known Jpr
GALLIPOLIS -;-· · that. time of year again, when the
CDs and items from each
The four-hour show will
individual artist.
feature three back-to-back her bright personality lind
·
0 artists to enter
. ".-.
,. . .
..
- - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - should have a general
statement regarding th~ show,
-~
a resume for each artist, and a satnplin~ of work that best

FRIDAY, AUG. 3
9 a.m. - 25th Annual Tobacco Sale,

:~cep~-~~ s~~:~~: st~-~ ~- ·I·~F~r~e~nc~h:~A~;rt~~~~~~~~·~·f;fo~r;~~in~te~r;e~sted~~~~Jfe s~~:;;sal

~··

Show Arena*
9:30 a.m. -49th Annual Market
·· 'Lamb Sale. Show Arena"
10 a.m~ - Pretty Baby Contest, Main
Stage, sronsored by the Gallia Jr.
Women s Club
·
11:30 a.m; - 56th Annual Market
Steer Sale, Show Arena*
5 p.m. - Holzer Clinic Small Animal
Award, Gray Pavilion
•
6 p.m. - Holzer Clinic Activity
Building Awards,
Gray Pavilion
6 p.m. - Kiddie Tractor Pull, Main
Stage, sponsored by' Galli pols
PFAAlumni
7:jo p.m.- OSTPA Sanctioned
Tractor Pull, Pulling Track

r~presentsthes.ho.w(usually: around6ptllCes).

8:30 p.m~ - Armistace &amp; Top Hat,
Main Stage
·
SATURDAY, AUG. 4
9 a:m. - 47th Annual Market Hog
Sale, Show Arena•
11 a.QJ. - Kiddie Games, sponsored
by the 0.0. Mcintyre Park
District, Main Stage
4 p.m. - Mini Car Demo Derby,
Pulling Track
7 p.m. - Demolition Derby-Standard,
Pulling Track
7 p.m. - Triple Treat, Main Stage
• All sale times are approximate
At time of printing, some of the ePents
could not be confirmed.

Mason County Fair schedule
MONDAY, AUG. 6
8 a.m. - Weigh feeder calves, steers,
goats and lambs
9 a.m. - 2007 Fair opens
10:30 a.m.- Youth 4-H Horse Show
4:45 p.m. - Jason Eades Memorial
Scholarship Aw'ard
5 p.m. - Little Mr. and Miss Mason
County (Main Stage)
5 p.m. - Market Hog Showmanship
followed by Market Hog Show
6 p.m. - Anllque Tractor Pull,
followed by Greasy Pig ·catch
7 p.m. - Fair dedication (Main Stage)
8 p.m. -Fair Queen Contest,
including Annette Hanes Award,
Amy Boggs Award and Brandy
Barkey Community Service Award
ll p.m. - Gates closed.
TUESDAY, AUG. 7
Senior Citizen D:Jy
9 a.m. - Fair opens
9:15 a.m. - Pet Parade (Show Ring)
11 a.m~- Junior Dairy Goat Show,
Market Goat Show next
Noon - Egg Toss
4 p.m. -Youth in Gospel Music
(Main Stage)
5:30 p.m. - Harry Rhodes Gospel
Sing (Main Stage)
5:45 p.m. - Point Pleasant High
School Band (Inside Stage)
5:45 p.m. - 4-H Scholarship Awards
6 p.m.- 4-Wheel ATV Drag Races
6 p.m.- Market Lamb Show
6 p.m. - Special Lamb Show
8 p.m. - Eternity (Main Stage)
9 p.m. - Gold City (Main Stage)
9:30 p.m. -Banana Eating Contest
11 p.m. - Gates closed.
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 8
Kids Day
9 a.m. - Fair opens

.

MASON, W.Va. - Mick
Winebrenner (rom Racine,
Ohio is the 2007 leader of
the Riverside Senior Men's
Golf League.
Winebrenner has a total of
216 points to lead Chet
Thomas of Patriot by 20.5
points. In a tie for third place
is the duo of Jack Maloney
and Paul Somerville with
totals of 194.5 points, just
one point out of second.
The rest of the top 10 are

Bill Winebrenner ( 188), K,enny Bass and Paul 1. Micke Winebrenner 216; 2 . Che1
Curtis Grubb (175), Bob · Somerville. Second place Thoma~ 195·5' 3· (tie) Jack Maloney and
Paul Somerville
194.5; 5. Bill
Brook~
(175), Charley · with a score of 59 was the Winebrenner 188: s. (tie) curlis Grubb
Hargraves (172 .5), Ken team of Rich Ash, Mac and Bob Brooks t75; 8. Charley
Whited Ti, 69) and Bob McCarty, Jim Fmsher and Hargraves 172.5;9. Ken Whtted 169:'10.
H k 1J
Bob Hysell 167.5; 11. Joe Long t64.5;
Hysell (167 .5).
as e ones.
12.Tom McN..ty 163; 13. (tie) Bill Pathot
A total of 65 players were
The closest to the pin win- and Gary Minton 160: 15. cart Stone
on hand for the Tuesday · ners were Paul Somerville 159; 16. Pat wmtamoon 156.5: 17. Riel&lt;
'th th h'gh temper- .on hole No 7 and Ji ~.orthup 156;18.Jim Turley 152; 19.Did&lt;
rou nd WI
e I ,
·
•;r··'ll\Jgan 148.5; 20. Jack Fox 147.5; 21 .
atures maybe causmg the Spencer on hole No . J.4. (tie) HasketJoneo and Ralph Sayre 147;
low attendance. There were There are still eight more 23. Kenny Groene 145; 24. Claude
three teams of three players weeks of competition Proffitt 140.5: 25. Harvey Btatn 14~ 26.
,· · b c
h
(tie) Ed Coon and Bob Oliver 139; 28.
I
and 14 teams of four payers
rem~mmg etore t e season
Ray Oliver. Don Waldie and Harley
making 17 points possible endmg dinner and awards RiCe 135.5; 31. Bill Yoho 135: 32. Gene
for the day.
· banquet on September 25 .
Gray 134; 33. Jim Cunningham 129; 34.
Cecil Minton 121.5; 35. Clart&lt; Gr'"'ne
The 1OW SCOre 0 f 57 WaS
2007 Senior League Standlngo
121·36. (tie) Tom Flllher and Gerald Kelly
shot by Mick Winebrenner,
Alter 17 wHko
115:5

l.

LocAL SCJffiDULE
POMEFIOV - A schedut. ' of upcoming
Ai'nerlcan L..aglon be.sei:*l apor!lrJ&lt;j events lrr.tolv..."'"' from -County.

Monelty. Auguat 0

Amtrlcan Logton lloubell
Feeney Bennett Post 128 versus TBA at

Alhono, TBA

SPORTS BRIEFS

Fall ball sign-ups
in Middleport
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Youth League
will ho1d another fall ball
'sign-up
session
this
l)aturday from 1-3 p.m. at
the ball fields.
· All boys and girls ages 712 are welcomed to sign-up:
For more ipformation,
call Dave Boyd 'at 5900438; or ypu can also call
416-5301 or 992-5481.

Exhibit proposals are due

-··-t ·v_Tum•
·• .,..~
' .
2007
'
..
3-~1 Y
.\ or FmrGalli

THURSDAY, AUG. 2
12:30 p.m.- Kiwanis Youth
Program, Main Stage
1 p.m.· Steer &amp; Feeder Calf
Showmanship Contest, Show Arena
2 p.m. - Feeder Calf and Dairy
Feeders, Show Arena
4 p.m. - Goat Show, Show Arena
6 p.m. - Horse Costume Contest,
Horse Arena
7 p.m.- Master Exhibitor, Show Arena
· 8 p.m.- Big Time Wrestling,
Pulling Track
8:30p.m. -Nashville S~ Tour
"As Seen on TV," Show Arena

SPORT~MYOAI LYSENTINELCOM

.I

Summer ptqgrams at library
'

Winebrenner leads Riverside Seniors.League Bengals
Thurman

Noon - Hay Bail Toss/Farm Games
3 p.m. - Open Sheep Show
5 p.m. - Ltp Sync Contest
5:30p.m.- Wahama High.School
Band Concert
6 p.m. - Commercial Feeder
Calf Show
7 p.m. - 4-H Lead« Memorial
Award, Jr. Building
7 p.m. - Demolition Derby
7:30 p.m. - All Star Twirlers
7:45 p.m. - Leah Smith
(Main Stage)
9 p.m. -Jason Michael Carroll
(Main Stage)
9:30 p.m. - Potato Sack Race
following Calf Show
II p.m. - Gates closed.
THURSDAY, AUG. 9
Kids Day
9 a.m. - Fair OJl!;~~, Kids
Kid Show
,•
9:50a.m.- Young' uns Calf Show
10 a.m. -Open Beef Cattle Show,
immediately followed by the
Junior Beef Show
Noon- Paper Airplane Fly
I p.m. - Mark Wood Fun Show
2 p.m.- Seed Spitting (outside
Show Ri11g)
4 p.m. - Market Steer Show
5 p.m. - Hannan High School Band
Concert
5:45 p.m.- Pretty Baby Contest
6 p.m. - Jr. Horse Show-Trail Class
7 p.m. - Jr. and Open Dairy Show,
including John McCausland
. Award and Terry
Lynn Williamson Award
7 p.m. - Farm Stock Tractor Pull
8:30p.m. - Goat Catch
9 p.m. - Stella Parton
(Main Stage )
ll p.m. - Gates closed.

••

FRIDAY, AUG. 10
9 a.m. - Fair opens
9 a.m. - Master Market
Showmanship
Noon - Scavenger Hunt
1 p.m.- Jr. Livestock Sale- Feeder
calves, market steers, special
lambs, market lambs, market
meat goats, market hogs. Includes
Fair Scholarship Award and ·
Mason County Born and Raised
Market Animal Awards
5 p.m~- Point Pleasant Middle
School Band Concert
6 p.m.- Big Bend Cloggers
.'1 p.m. - Super Stock Trucks,
Tractors and Modified Stock Trucks
7:30p.m. - Greasy Pig Auction and
Chick~n Catch, following sale
7:45 p.m. - Bunkhammer
(Main Stage)
9 p.m. - LoCash Cowboys
(Main Stage)
11 p.m. - Gates closed.
SATURDAY,AUG. II
9 a.m. - Fair opens
9 a.m. - Open Mason County Youth
Fun Show
10:30 a.m. - Open Miniature
Horse Show
11 a.m. - Dash for Cash
I p.m. - Horseshoe Pitching
2 p.m. - Pedal Tractor Pull
5 p.m. - S.H. Kang's Tae Kwon Do
Academy
5 p.m. - Open Horse Show
5 p.m. - Motocross Practice
5:45p.m. - Robert Lutton Award and
Joey Arrington Award
6 p.m. - Motocross
8:45 p.m. - Sweepstkes Award and
Donnie Hill Award
9 p.m. - Tracy Lawrence
(Main Stage)

•

· You can hardcopy the images, stnd slides or a CD of jpeg
images ..Keep ii\ mind that the FAC encompasses multi-art
opportunities, so atlding other creative stimuli to your show
proposal- like creative writing, audio or even a complimenting artist· is welcome.
The deadline for proposals is Aug. 15.

Artists invited
JACKSON- Af!ist registration forms for the 26th annual Foothills Art Festival are now available.
Scheduled to run from Friday, Oct. 12 to Sunday, Oct. 14,
the festival is a weekend full of visual arts, live music, and
hands-on arts activities presented free for the entire family.
The event takes place in the Lodge at Canter's Cave 4-H
Camp, five miles northwest of Jackson.
Artists are invited to exhibit in the following categories:
Oil/ Acrylic, Pastel/Drawing, Photography, Enhanced
Photography, Prints, Three Dimensional Work and Watercolor.
This show is professionally judged, but not juried. Artists
of all ages and experience are encouraged to enter, both professional and amateur. Entrants are limited to four works per
category. Entry fees are $7 per piece or $24 for 4 pieces until
the Aug. 31 deadline and slightly higher thereafter.
$1 ,395 in cash prizes will be awarded. Dozens of purchase
award donors will select artwork during a preview reception
on Thursday, Oct. 11 to which all artists are invited.
Foothills Art Festival is a program of the Southern Hills
Art Council. Call the Council at (740) 286-6355, e-mail at ·
art@shacmarkay.com, or write Box 149, Jackson, Ohio
45640 for further information or entry forms. Registration
deadline is Aug. 31.

Ice cream social slated
WILKESVILLE- Wilkesville Presbyterian Church will
have it~ annual homemade ice cream social on Saturday,
Aug. ~ from 4 to 6 p.m .
On the menu are sloppy joes, hot dogs, shredded chicken
sandwiches, potato salad and baked beans. For dessert are
homemade pies and ice cream.

Beach party is Saturday
WELLSTON - Plans for the 11th annual Lake Alma
Beach Party have been finalized. The party is Saturday,
Aug. 4 at Lake Alma State Park, one mile north of Wellston
on Ohio 349.
Activities for the entire family include games for kids,
baby . contests, entertainment , 3-on-3 basketball, a
triathalon, 4-on-4 coed beach volleyball, boat rides, a kids
treasure hunt, a sand castle contesr, horsehoe contest, shuffleboard contest, cornhole and more.
For information, corwct the Lake Alma State Park office
at (740) 384-4474.

Car show planned
COOLVILLE - A car show will be held in conjunction
with the. 17th annual Coolville Lions Club Founders Day
celebration on Saturday, Aug. 4.
Registration is from 9 a.m. until noon and judging begins
at 2 p.m.
Dash plaques will be awarded to the first 50 vehicles, ·
along wtth trophies and Top 25 awards. All cars are welcome to join the parade at 10 a.m.
The day will feature food, crafts, live entertainment, raffles and more . For more information, call (740) 667-3276
or (740) 667-3166.

Rangers
outlast
·Tribe in 10
CLEVELAND (AP) Rookie reliever Jensen
Lewis failed to ge.t an out on
consecutive bunts by Texas
and the Rangers took
advantage with three runs in
the I Oth inning to defeat the
Cleveland Indians 9-6
Wednesday night.
The Indians' fourth
straight loss and seventh in
nine . games kept Cleveland
a game behind Detroit in the
AL Central. Cleveland had
a chance to gain a share of
· first-place with Detroit in
the AL Central for the first
time since before games of
July 8 The slumping Tigers
have lost eight of I 0.
Ramon Vazquez lined a
single to center to open the
I Oth against Lewis (0-1),
who then fielded a bunt by
Frank Catalanotto and
threw too late to second to
get the lead runner.
After pitching coach Carl
Willis visited the mound,
Lewis grabbed another bunt
by Ian Kinsler. The right·
hander, in his eighth outing
since being called up from
Triple-A Buffalo on July 13,
stumbled as he went to
throw to third, then fired the
ball into t~ dirt at first for
an error, letting Vazquez
score to go-ahead run.
Michael Young was intentionally walked and Jason
Botts, recalled from TripleA Oklahoma before the
·game, scored Catalanotto
with a sacrifice tlv. Marlon
Byrd followed wiih an RBI
single, finishing Lewis and

Please see Tribe,
. Bl

CoNTACfUS
ScoreLine (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)
1·740·446·2342 ext. 33
Fax- 1·740·446·3008
OVP

E-mail- sports @mydallysentinel .com

SllOrloS.ta!l
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342. ..... 33
bsherman @ mydai lytribu ne.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, e&gt;&lt;t 23
Ierum 0 mydailyreg1ster.com

Bryan Watters, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342. ..... 33
bwalters @ mydailytrl bu ne.com

AP photo

Cincinnati Reds catcher David Ross, center, looks over to home plate umpire Rick Reed, right, who called Washington
Nationals' Felipe Lopez, left, safe at home in the second inning of a baseba ll game Wednesday in Washington. Lopez
scored on a double by Ronnie Belliard.

Nationals slide past Cincinnati, 7-2
BY HOWARD fENDRtCH
AP SPORTS

WRITER

WASHINGTON - John
Lannan stuck around longer
in his second career start
than his first - long enough
to get win No. I.
Ejected from his big
league debut last week after
hitting consecutive batters,
Lannan took a shutout into
the sixth inning Wednesday
night, and the Washington
Nationals . roughed up
Bronson Arroyo in a 7-2
victory over the Cincinnati
Reds.
. Lannan ( 1-0) got rienty of

support from the majors'
lowest-scoring
offense:
Arroyo (4-12) was lifted
after allowing seven runs in
I 2-3 innings, the shortest
start of his eight-year career.
Lannan cruised through
three hitless innings at the
outset, and after Jeff
Keppinger lined a single to
right leading off the fourth,
Ken Griffey Jr. grounded
into a double play.
Brandon Phillips followed
with a single - and then
produced a nue sight. With
left-handed-hitting Adam
Dunn up, the Nationals
employed a shift that put

three, infielders on the right
side, with third baseman
Ryan Zimmerman essentially playing shortstop. Phillips
stole second and, when
catcher Brian Schneider didn't attempt to throw him out,
rounded the bag and headed
for third without breaking
stride.
He was credited with two
stolen bases on the play, giving.him 21 for the season.
. That oddity was the Reds'
only highlight.
Washington batted around
in the first inning, scoring
four runs on five hits,
including doubles by Felipe

Lopez and Austin Kearns
'!!)d a two-run single by
Ryan Church. It dido 't get
any better for Arroyo in the
second,
when
Ronnie
Belliard hit an RBI double,
and Kearns deposited a 69
mph hanging curveball in
the upper deck in left for a
two-run holl)er.
That was Arroyo's final
pitch. His shortest start in
the
majors
before
two
Wednesday? The
innings he we,nt. against
Washington on May 21,
when he gave up six runs. So

Please see Slide, Bl

accused of

violating
probation
CINCINNATI (AP) Suspended
Cincinnati
Bengals linebacker Odell
Thurman has been ordered to
appear in court for allegedly
v1olating probation on his
drunken
driving conviction.
Hamilton
County probation officer
Liz
Albert said
Thurman
failed
to
show up for
a scheduled
Thurman
meeting on
July
24.
Thurman was then ordered to
appear before Municipal
Court judge John Burlew on
Aug. 21 to explain himself.
If the judge decides that
Thurman violated probation,
the linebacker could be sent
to jail. The NFL suspended
Thurman last season after he
skipped a drug test and later
was arrested on a drunken
driving charge.
Two days after Thurman
allegedly skipped the meeting with probation officers,
NFL commissioner Roger
Goodell denied his request
for reinstatement for the
2007 season.
Thurman's lawyer didn 't
return a phone message
Wednesday.
The linebacker was arrest- •
ed last September. He pleaded no contest to the drunken
driving charge in February
and was sentenced to 90 days
in jail, with a .chance to
reduce the sentence if he got
treatment for alcohol abuse.
At a hearing on June I,
Borlew reduced to sentence
to six days in a treallnent
center. Thurman could be
ordered to serve the full sentence if he violated probation.
It's the second time
Thurman has been in trouble
since his sentencing.
Two men in Monticello,
Ga., filed a complaint against
Thurman, alleging that he
kicked and hit them at a party
two days after he appeared in
court to settle the drunken
driving case. Thurman, who
lives in Monticello, was
never charged, and his
accusers later dropped their
complaint.
Thurman is one of 10
Bengals arrested over a
14-month span . Receiver
Chris Henry also has been
suspended by Goodell for
the first eight games of the
2007 season for repealedly
violating the league's conduct poli,cy.

WR Irvin humbled by
Hall of Fame induction
BY

JAIME ARON

A.P SPORTS WRITER

IRVING, Texas - Days
before officially becoming a
member of the Pro Football
Hall of Fame, Michael Irvin
has a confession to make .
"I'm afraid," Irvin said.
The hesitation has nothing
to do with the speech he'll
give during Saturday's
induction ceremony. Anyone
who has followed football
the last 20 years knows Irvin
is anything but shy.
What worries the former
Dallas Cowboys star receiver is the burden that comes
with being part of this fraternity. The thought of seeing
"Hall of Famer Michael
lrviij got in trouble again"
cmwl across the bottom of a
TV screen intimidates him
more than any defense ever
did.
'
"Absolutely!" Irvin said.
"Being a Hall of Farner
deserves the best that I have.
I respect it, and I believe it
deserves that. I think that

fear will keep me tied down.
It's a reality, something I
think about. That's just
being honest."
Playing alongside Troy
Aikman and Emmitt Smith,
Irvin set nearly every meaningful receiving record in
Cowboys history and was
widely acknowledged as the
heart and soul of teams that
won three Super Bowls in
four years.
Yet he , and his teams,
might've been better if not
for Irvin 's problems with
drugs and life in the fast lane.
The downfall began in
March 1996, a few weeks
after the third Super Bowl
win, wh!!n police crashed
Irvin's 30th birthday party
and found him, marijuana,
cocaine and strippers in a
hotel room. He pleaded no
contest to felony cocaine
po'ssession and was put on
probation for four years.
AP photo
He's turned up on the
police blotter many times Dallas Cowboys' Michael irvin celebrates after gaining 30-yards on a Jason Ga rrett pass in
the third quarter against the New York Giants in this Sept. 21 , 1998 file photo , at Giants
Please see Irvin, Bl
Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J.
'

�Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Browns Roye undergoes surgery, Page 82
Scully just delivers the calls, Page 86

Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday,August2,2007

Thursday, August 2, 2007 .

GALLIPOLIS
Winners of "Nashville Star"
competition take the Main
Stage of the Gallia County
Junior Fair on Thursday,
Aug. 2 at 8:30 p.m . .
"Nashville Star" is a combination talent search and
reality series that aims to
find the next country music
superstar. Contestants are
judged by industry executives and artists. Fan viewers also help determine the
weekly survivors through
telephone and online voting.
The shows will feature
Warner Bros. recording
artist and the USA
Network's 2007 "Nashville
Star"
winner
Angela
Hacker, along with the three
runners-up from the popular
talent search television
series: Zac Hacker, David
Saint Romain and Joshua
Stevens, respectively.
Partners Brinson Strickland
an:l Kyle Gustie of 262 Five
Ltd. bring the "Nashville
Star'' television series out to
music fans in the form of a
live concert performance.
"This is the fourth year our
comeany has produced this
tour, ' notes Strickland. "It's
been a great partnership with
Reveille Entertainment and
the Nashville Star brand. We
want country music fans
who watched and participated in voting during the USA
Network's talent search television series this year to be
able to experience bits of the
television show right in their
own backyard."
"We've assembled some of
the most sought-after musicians in Nashville for the
Nashville Star Tour band,"
says Gustie. "It's a very, very
entertaining show. Fans will
see all four 2007 finalists per-

Vinton's 139th bean
dinner is Saturday
VINlON - A tradition going back to the days following the
Civil War continues every year on the first Salllrl;!ay of August
when the Vinton Bean Dinner and parade is staged under the
sponsorship of American Legion Post 161 and its auxiliary._
This year's dinner, the !39th, will be from II a.m. unlll4
p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 4 in the Vinton Community Park,
featuring bean soup, com bread, music and awards.
Those planning to participate in the parade should be at
Vinton Elementary School by II a.m. The parade proceeds'
south on Ohio 160 to Ohio 325 North and disperses at the
park. Anyone interested in participating in the parade
should contact Mayor Sam Sowards at 388-8461.
Vinton Masonic Lodge 13{ will host a pancake and .
sausage breakfast at the lodge on Holcomb Street from ?
until 10 a.m.
. .
When the soup, cooked in cauldrons, is ready to be served
around II, tho~e 'atten&lt;fulg' will find themselves near the
swinging bridle ac;ros~ .Rl!CCOOn Creek, the same location as
the bridge burned by &lt;C.onfederate Gen. John Hunt Morgan
during his fam~ raid through southern Ohio in 1863.
.
. , .Harnburgets\ .b\:ii..@,!!S, anllother refreshments will be avail:
'able and a..~~;6f.fJIIe'.event is the announcement. of th~
Bl'jpge(,;:'l!.,~.oot passed out at the 2003 dinner. •
I

·~

.

~·

l

E~ltainlnent Briefs
~.

.

-~. '

· GAI.J..IPOLIS.'- Bossatd Memorial Library will provide two wee~ of evenrog programs aimed at students in
. grades K-6. Guest presenters from the area will provide the
programs, whi4;~Jlegin ~~~ 7 p.m. each evening.
Topics inc)udfrSpanish Langua~e and culture; sign lanI Jr:ru'~~;~ nutrition, radio/commumcation, first aid, lawn
1. 1
safety, knitting and pet first aid.
Program's are being coordinated by Helen Lanier,
Bossard Library Youth Services, and begin the week after
·,,.'
the Gallia' County Junior Fair. Programs are being sched•
forming together and in fuU
Friday is local entertain- concerts by country music uled for Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday of each
musical sets individually."
ment night, with area stars Adam Tucker, Tony week, beginning Atf~. 6. Pre-registration is encoumged.
All four artists will be bands Armistace and Top Rio and Sbilwna Corder.
Some programs will include a project or food item.
available for media inter- Hat promising powerful
Tuclce,r wa~ recognize,q a~
For more 'information, contact Youth Services (extensio'l
views and meet-and-greet perfoi"m!jnces begmning at the New · ··Artist Ra!tio 225) at Bossard Memorial Library, (740) 446-7323.
autograph sessions in each 8:30p.m:
Ne!Work
., Independen\
city. There.will be Nashville
Saturday, audiences will Country Music Artist Of
Star merchandise available be amazed by the Triple The Year In 2006, and
at every show, along with Treat at 7 p.m.
Corder is well-known Jpr
GALLIPOLIS -;-· · that. time of year again, when the
CDs and items from each
The four-hour show will
individual artist.
feature three back-to-back her bright personality lind
·
0 artists to enter
. ".-.
,. . .
..
- - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - should have a general
statement regarding th~ show,
-~
a resume for each artist, and a satnplin~ of work that best

FRIDAY, AUG. 3
9 a.m. - 25th Annual Tobacco Sale,

:~cep~-~~ s~~:~~: st~-~ ~- ·I·~F~r~e~nc~h:~A~;rt~~~~~~~~·~·f;fo~r;~~in~te~r;e~sted~~~~Jfe s~~:;;sal

~··

Show Arena*
9:30 a.m. -49th Annual Market
·· 'Lamb Sale. Show Arena"
10 a.m~ - Pretty Baby Contest, Main
Stage, sronsored by the Gallia Jr.
Women s Club
·
11:30 a.m; - 56th Annual Market
Steer Sale, Show Arena*
5 p.m. - Holzer Clinic Small Animal
Award, Gray Pavilion
•
6 p.m. - Holzer Clinic Activity
Building Awards,
Gray Pavilion
6 p.m. - Kiddie Tractor Pull, Main
Stage, sponsored by' Galli pols
PFAAlumni
7:jo p.m.- OSTPA Sanctioned
Tractor Pull, Pulling Track

r~presentsthes.ho.w(usually: around6ptllCes).

8:30 p.m~ - Armistace &amp; Top Hat,
Main Stage
·
SATURDAY, AUG. 4
9 a:m. - 47th Annual Market Hog
Sale, Show Arena•
11 a.QJ. - Kiddie Games, sponsored
by the 0.0. Mcintyre Park
District, Main Stage
4 p.m. - Mini Car Demo Derby,
Pulling Track
7 p.m. - Demolition Derby-Standard,
Pulling Track
7 p.m. - Triple Treat, Main Stage
• All sale times are approximate
At time of printing, some of the ePents
could not be confirmed.

Mason County Fair schedule
MONDAY, AUG. 6
8 a.m. - Weigh feeder calves, steers,
goats and lambs
9 a.m. - 2007 Fair opens
10:30 a.m.- Youth 4-H Horse Show
4:45 p.m. - Jason Eades Memorial
Scholarship Aw'ard
5 p.m. - Little Mr. and Miss Mason
County (Main Stage)
5 p.m. - Market Hog Showmanship
followed by Market Hog Show
6 p.m. - Anllque Tractor Pull,
followed by Greasy Pig ·catch
7 p.m. - Fair dedication (Main Stage)
8 p.m. -Fair Queen Contest,
including Annette Hanes Award,
Amy Boggs Award and Brandy
Barkey Community Service Award
ll p.m. - Gates closed.
TUESDAY, AUG. 7
Senior Citizen D:Jy
9 a.m. - Fair opens
9:15 a.m. - Pet Parade (Show Ring)
11 a.m~- Junior Dairy Goat Show,
Market Goat Show next
Noon - Egg Toss
4 p.m. -Youth in Gospel Music
(Main Stage)
5:30 p.m. - Harry Rhodes Gospel
Sing (Main Stage)
5:45 p.m. - Point Pleasant High
School Band (Inside Stage)
5:45 p.m. - 4-H Scholarship Awards
6 p.m.- 4-Wheel ATV Drag Races
6 p.m.- Market Lamb Show
6 p.m. - Special Lamb Show
8 p.m. - Eternity (Main Stage)
9 p.m. - Gold City (Main Stage)
9:30 p.m. -Banana Eating Contest
11 p.m. - Gates closed.
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 8
Kids Day
9 a.m. - Fair opens

.

MASON, W.Va. - Mick
Winebrenner (rom Racine,
Ohio is the 2007 leader of
the Riverside Senior Men's
Golf League.
Winebrenner has a total of
216 points to lead Chet
Thomas of Patriot by 20.5
points. In a tie for third place
is the duo of Jack Maloney
and Paul Somerville with
totals of 194.5 points, just
one point out of second.
The rest of the top 10 are

Bill Winebrenner ( 188), K,enny Bass and Paul 1. Micke Winebrenner 216; 2 . Che1
Curtis Grubb (175), Bob · Somerville. Second place Thoma~ 195·5' 3· (tie) Jack Maloney and
Paul Somerville
194.5; 5. Bill
Brook~
(175), Charley · with a score of 59 was the Winebrenner 188: s. (tie) curlis Grubb
Hargraves (172 .5), Ken team of Rich Ash, Mac and Bob Brooks t75; 8. Charley
Whited Ti, 69) and Bob McCarty, Jim Fmsher and Hargraves 172.5;9. Ken Whtted 169:'10.
H k 1J
Bob Hysell 167.5; 11. Joe Long t64.5;
Hysell (167 .5).
as e ones.
12.Tom McN..ty 163; 13. (tie) Bill Pathot
A total of 65 players were
The closest to the pin win- and Gary Minton 160: 15. cart Stone
on hand for the Tuesday · ners were Paul Somerville 159; 16. Pat wmtamoon 156.5: 17. Riel&lt;
'th th h'gh temper- .on hole No 7 and Ji ~.orthup 156;18.Jim Turley 152; 19.Did&lt;
rou nd WI
e I ,
·
•;r··'ll\Jgan 148.5; 20. Jack Fox 147.5; 21 .
atures maybe causmg the Spencer on hole No . J.4. (tie) HasketJoneo and Ralph Sayre 147;
low attendance. There were There are still eight more 23. Kenny Groene 145; 24. Claude
three teams of three players weeks of competition Proffitt 140.5: 25. Harvey Btatn 14~ 26.
,· · b c
h
(tie) Ed Coon and Bob Oliver 139; 28.
I
and 14 teams of four payers
rem~mmg etore t e season
Ray Oliver. Don Waldie and Harley
making 17 points possible endmg dinner and awards RiCe 135.5; 31. Bill Yoho 135: 32. Gene
for the day.
· banquet on September 25 .
Gray 134; 33. Jim Cunningham 129; 34.
Cecil Minton 121.5; 35. Clart&lt; Gr'"'ne
The 1OW SCOre 0 f 57 WaS
2007 Senior League Standlngo
121·36. (tie) Tom Flllher and Gerald Kelly
shot by Mick Winebrenner,
Alter 17 wHko
115:5

l.

LocAL SCJffiDULE
POMEFIOV - A schedut. ' of upcoming
Ai'nerlcan L..aglon be.sei:*l apor!lrJ&lt;j events lrr.tolv..."'"' from -County.

Monelty. Auguat 0

Amtrlcan Logton lloubell
Feeney Bennett Post 128 versus TBA at

Alhono, TBA

SPORTS BRIEFS

Fall ball sign-ups
in Middleport
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Youth League
will ho1d another fall ball
'sign-up
session
this
l)aturday from 1-3 p.m. at
the ball fields.
· All boys and girls ages 712 are welcomed to sign-up:
For more ipformation,
call Dave Boyd 'at 5900438; or ypu can also call
416-5301 or 992-5481.

Exhibit proposals are due

-··-t ·v_Tum•
·• .,..~
' .
2007
'
..
3-~1 Y
.\ or FmrGalli

THURSDAY, AUG. 2
12:30 p.m.- Kiwanis Youth
Program, Main Stage
1 p.m.· Steer &amp; Feeder Calf
Showmanship Contest, Show Arena
2 p.m. - Feeder Calf and Dairy
Feeders, Show Arena
4 p.m. - Goat Show, Show Arena
6 p.m. - Horse Costume Contest,
Horse Arena
7 p.m.- Master Exhibitor, Show Arena
· 8 p.m.- Big Time Wrestling,
Pulling Track
8:30p.m. -Nashville S~ Tour
"As Seen on TV," Show Arena

SPORT~MYOAI LYSENTINELCOM

.I

Summer ptqgrams at library
'

Winebrenner leads Riverside Seniors.League Bengals
Thurman

Noon - Hay Bail Toss/Farm Games
3 p.m. - Open Sheep Show
5 p.m. - Ltp Sync Contest
5:30p.m.- Wahama High.School
Band Concert
6 p.m. - Commercial Feeder
Calf Show
7 p.m. - 4-H Lead« Memorial
Award, Jr. Building
7 p.m. - Demolition Derby
7:30 p.m. - All Star Twirlers
7:45 p.m. - Leah Smith
(Main Stage)
9 p.m. -Jason Michael Carroll
(Main Stage)
9:30 p.m. - Potato Sack Race
following Calf Show
II p.m. - Gates closed.
THURSDAY, AUG. 9
Kids Day
9 a.m. - Fair OJl!;~~, Kids
Kid Show
,•
9:50a.m.- Young' uns Calf Show
10 a.m. -Open Beef Cattle Show,
immediately followed by the
Junior Beef Show
Noon- Paper Airplane Fly
I p.m. - Mark Wood Fun Show
2 p.m.- Seed Spitting (outside
Show Ri11g)
4 p.m. - Market Steer Show
5 p.m. - Hannan High School Band
Concert
5:45 p.m.- Pretty Baby Contest
6 p.m. - Jr. Horse Show-Trail Class
7 p.m. - Jr. and Open Dairy Show,
including John McCausland
. Award and Terry
Lynn Williamson Award
7 p.m. - Farm Stock Tractor Pull
8:30p.m. - Goat Catch
9 p.m. - Stella Parton
(Main Stage )
ll p.m. - Gates closed.

••

FRIDAY, AUG. 10
9 a.m. - Fair opens
9 a.m. - Master Market
Showmanship
Noon - Scavenger Hunt
1 p.m.- Jr. Livestock Sale- Feeder
calves, market steers, special
lambs, market lambs, market
meat goats, market hogs. Includes
Fair Scholarship Award and ·
Mason County Born and Raised
Market Animal Awards
5 p.m~- Point Pleasant Middle
School Band Concert
6 p.m.- Big Bend Cloggers
.'1 p.m. - Super Stock Trucks,
Tractors and Modified Stock Trucks
7:30p.m. - Greasy Pig Auction and
Chick~n Catch, following sale
7:45 p.m. - Bunkhammer
(Main Stage)
9 p.m. - LoCash Cowboys
(Main Stage)
11 p.m. - Gates closed.
SATURDAY,AUG. II
9 a.m. - Fair opens
9 a.m. - Open Mason County Youth
Fun Show
10:30 a.m. - Open Miniature
Horse Show
11 a.m. - Dash for Cash
I p.m. - Horseshoe Pitching
2 p.m. - Pedal Tractor Pull
5 p.m. - S.H. Kang's Tae Kwon Do
Academy
5 p.m. - Open Horse Show
5 p.m. - Motocross Practice
5:45p.m. - Robert Lutton Award and
Joey Arrington Award
6 p.m. - Motocross
8:45 p.m. - Sweepstkes Award and
Donnie Hill Award
9 p.m. - Tracy Lawrence
(Main Stage)

•

· You can hardcopy the images, stnd slides or a CD of jpeg
images ..Keep ii\ mind that the FAC encompasses multi-art
opportunities, so atlding other creative stimuli to your show
proposal- like creative writing, audio or even a complimenting artist· is welcome.
The deadline for proposals is Aug. 15.

Artists invited
JACKSON- Af!ist registration forms for the 26th annual Foothills Art Festival are now available.
Scheduled to run from Friday, Oct. 12 to Sunday, Oct. 14,
the festival is a weekend full of visual arts, live music, and
hands-on arts activities presented free for the entire family.
The event takes place in the Lodge at Canter's Cave 4-H
Camp, five miles northwest of Jackson.
Artists are invited to exhibit in the following categories:
Oil/ Acrylic, Pastel/Drawing, Photography, Enhanced
Photography, Prints, Three Dimensional Work and Watercolor.
This show is professionally judged, but not juried. Artists
of all ages and experience are encouraged to enter, both professional and amateur. Entrants are limited to four works per
category. Entry fees are $7 per piece or $24 for 4 pieces until
the Aug. 31 deadline and slightly higher thereafter.
$1 ,395 in cash prizes will be awarded. Dozens of purchase
award donors will select artwork during a preview reception
on Thursday, Oct. 11 to which all artists are invited.
Foothills Art Festival is a program of the Southern Hills
Art Council. Call the Council at (740) 286-6355, e-mail at ·
art@shacmarkay.com, or write Box 149, Jackson, Ohio
45640 for further information or entry forms. Registration
deadline is Aug. 31.

Ice cream social slated
WILKESVILLE- Wilkesville Presbyterian Church will
have it~ annual homemade ice cream social on Saturday,
Aug. ~ from 4 to 6 p.m .
On the menu are sloppy joes, hot dogs, shredded chicken
sandwiches, potato salad and baked beans. For dessert are
homemade pies and ice cream.

Beach party is Saturday
WELLSTON - Plans for the 11th annual Lake Alma
Beach Party have been finalized. The party is Saturday,
Aug. 4 at Lake Alma State Park, one mile north of Wellston
on Ohio 349.
Activities for the entire family include games for kids,
baby . contests, entertainment , 3-on-3 basketball, a
triathalon, 4-on-4 coed beach volleyball, boat rides, a kids
treasure hunt, a sand castle contesr, horsehoe contest, shuffleboard contest, cornhole and more.
For information, corwct the Lake Alma State Park office
at (740) 384-4474.

Car show planned
COOLVILLE - A car show will be held in conjunction
with the. 17th annual Coolville Lions Club Founders Day
celebration on Saturday, Aug. 4.
Registration is from 9 a.m. until noon and judging begins
at 2 p.m.
Dash plaques will be awarded to the first 50 vehicles, ·
along wtth trophies and Top 25 awards. All cars are welcome to join the parade at 10 a.m.
The day will feature food, crafts, live entertainment, raffles and more . For more information, call (740) 667-3276
or (740) 667-3166.

Rangers
outlast
·Tribe in 10
CLEVELAND (AP) Rookie reliever Jensen
Lewis failed to ge.t an out on
consecutive bunts by Texas
and the Rangers took
advantage with three runs in
the I Oth inning to defeat the
Cleveland Indians 9-6
Wednesday night.
The Indians' fourth
straight loss and seventh in
nine . games kept Cleveland
a game behind Detroit in the
AL Central. Cleveland had
a chance to gain a share of
· first-place with Detroit in
the AL Central for the first
time since before games of
July 8 The slumping Tigers
have lost eight of I 0.
Ramon Vazquez lined a
single to center to open the
I Oth against Lewis (0-1),
who then fielded a bunt by
Frank Catalanotto and
threw too late to second to
get the lead runner.
After pitching coach Carl
Willis visited the mound,
Lewis grabbed another bunt
by Ian Kinsler. The right·
hander, in his eighth outing
since being called up from
Triple-A Buffalo on July 13,
stumbled as he went to
throw to third, then fired the
ball into t~ dirt at first for
an error, letting Vazquez
score to go-ahead run.
Michael Young was intentionally walked and Jason
Botts, recalled from TripleA Oklahoma before the
·game, scored Catalanotto
with a sacrifice tlv. Marlon
Byrd followed wiih an RBI
single, finishing Lewis and

Please see Tribe,
. Bl

CoNTACfUS
ScoreLine (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)
1·740·446·2342 ext. 33
Fax- 1·740·446·3008
OVP

E-mail- sports @mydallysentinel .com

SllOrloS.ta!l
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342. ..... 33
bsherman @ mydai lytribu ne.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, e&gt;&lt;t 23
Ierum 0 mydailyreg1ster.com

Bryan Watters, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342. ..... 33
bwalters @ mydailytrl bu ne.com

AP photo

Cincinnati Reds catcher David Ross, center, looks over to home plate umpire Rick Reed, right, who called Washington
Nationals' Felipe Lopez, left, safe at home in the second inning of a baseba ll game Wednesday in Washington. Lopez
scored on a double by Ronnie Belliard.

Nationals slide past Cincinnati, 7-2
BY HOWARD fENDRtCH
AP SPORTS

WRITER

WASHINGTON - John
Lannan stuck around longer
in his second career start
than his first - long enough
to get win No. I.
Ejected from his big
league debut last week after
hitting consecutive batters,
Lannan took a shutout into
the sixth inning Wednesday
night, and the Washington
Nationals . roughed up
Bronson Arroyo in a 7-2
victory over the Cincinnati
Reds.
. Lannan ( 1-0) got rienty of

support from the majors'
lowest-scoring
offense:
Arroyo (4-12) was lifted
after allowing seven runs in
I 2-3 innings, the shortest
start of his eight-year career.
Lannan cruised through
three hitless innings at the
outset, and after Jeff
Keppinger lined a single to
right leading off the fourth,
Ken Griffey Jr. grounded
into a double play.
Brandon Phillips followed
with a single - and then
produced a nue sight. With
left-handed-hitting Adam
Dunn up, the Nationals
employed a shift that put

three, infielders on the right
side, with third baseman
Ryan Zimmerman essentially playing shortstop. Phillips
stole second and, when
catcher Brian Schneider didn't attempt to throw him out,
rounded the bag and headed
for third without breaking
stride.
He was credited with two
stolen bases on the play, giving.him 21 for the season.
. That oddity was the Reds'
only highlight.
Washington batted around
in the first inning, scoring
four runs on five hits,
including doubles by Felipe

Lopez and Austin Kearns
'!!)d a two-run single by
Ryan Church. It dido 't get
any better for Arroyo in the
second,
when
Ronnie
Belliard hit an RBI double,
and Kearns deposited a 69
mph hanging curveball in
the upper deck in left for a
two-run holl)er.
That was Arroyo's final
pitch. His shortest start in
the
majors
before
two
Wednesday? The
innings he we,nt. against
Washington on May 21,
when he gave up six runs. So

Please see Slide, Bl

accused of

violating
probation
CINCINNATI (AP) Suspended
Cincinnati
Bengals linebacker Odell
Thurman has been ordered to
appear in court for allegedly
v1olating probation on his
drunken
driving conviction.
Hamilton
County probation officer
Liz
Albert said
Thurman
failed
to
show up for
a scheduled
Thurman
meeting on
July
24.
Thurman was then ordered to
appear before Municipal
Court judge John Burlew on
Aug. 21 to explain himself.
If the judge decides that
Thurman violated probation,
the linebacker could be sent
to jail. The NFL suspended
Thurman last season after he
skipped a drug test and later
was arrested on a drunken
driving charge.
Two days after Thurman
allegedly skipped the meeting with probation officers,
NFL commissioner Roger
Goodell denied his request
for reinstatement for the
2007 season.
Thurman's lawyer didn 't
return a phone message
Wednesday.
The linebacker was arrest- •
ed last September. He pleaded no contest to the drunken
driving charge in February
and was sentenced to 90 days
in jail, with a .chance to
reduce the sentence if he got
treatment for alcohol abuse.
At a hearing on June I,
Borlew reduced to sentence
to six days in a treallnent
center. Thurman could be
ordered to serve the full sentence if he violated probation.
It's the second time
Thurman has been in trouble
since his sentencing.
Two men in Monticello,
Ga., filed a complaint against
Thurman, alleging that he
kicked and hit them at a party
two days after he appeared in
court to settle the drunken
driving case. Thurman, who
lives in Monticello, was
never charged, and his
accusers later dropped their
complaint.
Thurman is one of 10
Bengals arrested over a
14-month span . Receiver
Chris Henry also has been
suspended by Goodell for
the first eight games of the
2007 season for repealedly
violating the league's conduct poli,cy.

WR Irvin humbled by
Hall of Fame induction
BY

JAIME ARON

A.P SPORTS WRITER

IRVING, Texas - Days
before officially becoming a
member of the Pro Football
Hall of Fame, Michael Irvin
has a confession to make .
"I'm afraid," Irvin said.
The hesitation has nothing
to do with the speech he'll
give during Saturday's
induction ceremony. Anyone
who has followed football
the last 20 years knows Irvin
is anything but shy.
What worries the former
Dallas Cowboys star receiver is the burden that comes
with being part of this fraternity. The thought of seeing
"Hall of Famer Michael
lrviij got in trouble again"
cmwl across the bottom of a
TV screen intimidates him
more than any defense ever
did.
'
"Absolutely!" Irvin said.
"Being a Hall of Farner
deserves the best that I have.
I respect it, and I believe it
deserves that. I think that

fear will keep me tied down.
It's a reality, something I
think about. That's just
being honest."
Playing alongside Troy
Aikman and Emmitt Smith,
Irvin set nearly every meaningful receiving record in
Cowboys history and was
widely acknowledged as the
heart and soul of teams that
won three Super Bowls in
four years.
Yet he , and his teams,
might've been better if not
for Irvin 's problems with
drugs and life in the fast lane.
The downfall began in
March 1996, a few weeks
after the third Super Bowl
win, wh!!n police crashed
Irvin's 30th birthday party
and found him, marijuana,
cocaine and strippers in a
hotel room. He pleaded no
contest to felony cocaine
po'ssession and was put on
probation for four years.
AP photo
He's turned up on the
police blotter many times Dallas Cowboys' Michael irvin celebrates after gaining 30-yards on a Jason Ga rrett pass in
the third quarter against the New York Giants in this Sept. 21 , 1998 file photo , at Giants
Please see Irvin, Bl
Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J.
'

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday,' August 2, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

Thursday, August 2, 2007

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Browns' defensive tackle Orpheus Roye to unde.rgo knee surgery
BY ToM

WITHERS
AP SPORTS WRITER

BE REA - One of Orpheus
creaky, cranky knees needs
more oft -field mamtenance.
Cleveland's dependable defenstve end will undergo arthroscopic
surgery Thursday on hts n ght
knee. an early training camp setb.tl·k for the Browns, who may he
wnhout their best lmeman to start
tl1e season.
The 34-year-old Roye has been
play tng through pam on sore,
.Khtng knees for several years.
He mtssed the final five games
l.tst season wtth a knee injury that
requ ired surgery this winter
Duri ng the first week of training
camp Roye was bothered by a
"c ltckmg" sound m the knee,
coach Romeo Crennel said followmg Wednesda{s morning practice.
Crennel de sen bed Roye 's mjury as
loose cartilage, but said it was in a
dtfferent place in the knee than
where Roye was troubled last season
"He has some tssues with both of
his knees," Crennel said. "It (his
right knee) bears a bit mere weight
so we're going to go ahead and get
it cleaned out Last year or the year
Roy~'s

before, he went through a season
with some cartilage that was loose
but he worked through it and struggled through it.
"We feel hke we want to go
ahead and get it cleaned out. We'te
gmng to try and get htm back for
the regular season."
The Browns, hoping to compete
in the rugged AFC North after a 412 season. open on Sept. 9 against
the Pittsburgh Stee lers. Roye's
team for four seasons before he
signed with Cleveland as a free
agent in 2000.
Roye made it through the first
three days of practice without a
problem. but he left the field during Monday 's morning sessiOn. He
returned in the afternoon and was
out there again on Tuesday bf;fore
the Browns decided to take a closer look at his knee.
"We' re not giving him a cane, a
walking boot or tmmobilize the
leg," Crennel satd. "They (doctors)
are going to clean the joint out.
There's some loose cartilage so
they're going to clean it out It's a
normal procedure m football."
The Browns hilve had more than
their share of injuries the past few
seasons. They finished last season

AP photo

Cleveland Browns defensive tackle Orpheus Roye stretches dunng foot·
ball camp at the Cleveland Browns Training facility on Fnday m Berea.
Roye, Cleveland's best down lmeman, IS scheduled to undergo knee
surgery and could mtss the Browns' season opener, another blow for a
team ravaged by costly injuries tn recent years.
with 14 players, including Roye,
on injured reserve.
Although he has been hampered
by bad knees the past few seasons,
Roye has been one of the Browns'
most durable players. Following
games, he was often one of the last
to leave Cleveland's locker room,
often limping badly as he left the

stadium.
"Orpheus is the kind of guy
that's a tough-minded individual
and he'll do everythmg he can to
get out on the football field,"
Crennel said. "If his body will
allow him, he will be out there.:•
Crennel refused to guess how
much Roye will he able to help the

Bt'owns in 2007.
"I ' m not a doctor." he said. "I'm
going to have to rely on them to
tell me how much they clean out
and what they anticipate for a
recoyery penod."
Roye started all 16 games and
recorded a career-high 95 tackles
in 2005, and the Browns rewarded
him with a three-year contract
extension through the 2009 season.
His experience is vital in
Cleveland's 3-4 defensive scheme,
which puts a premium on its ends
to rush the quarterback and contain
the perimeter. The Browns'
defense was ranked 29th against
the run last season, and the team
attempted to plug some holes up
front by stgning free agent lineman
Shaun Smith and Robaire Smith.
Shaun Smith, who played for
Cmcinnati last season, had been
projected as Ted Washington's
backup at nose tackle but will
begin getting some time at end in
Roye's spot. Crennel said Simon
Fraser, J' Yo nne Parker and Orien
Harris also are in the mill.
"They'll all get some work and
the guy that steps up the most is
the guy we're going to use,"
Crennel said.

iji:rtbune - Sentinel - ~egtster
CLASSIFIED
Galli a

Websijes:
In One Week With Us
www.mydailytribune.com
E-mail
www.mydallysentinel.com
classified@mydailytnbune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
www.mydailyreg1ster.com
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place ·
'«Crthune
Sentinel
l\egtster
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992·2156 (304) 675·1333
Call Today... or Fax To 446-3008 ·
Or Fax To
57

Word Ads

I

I

I
J

f

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
EBay Inc .'s ticketreselling subsidiary StubHub
announced a five-year deal
Wednesday mght making it
the official source of secondary tickets for Major
League Baseball.
The
agreement
puts
StubHub in charge of secondary ticket sales at MLB
Advanced Media LP's
Internet site MLB.com, and
for individual team sites, such
as the San Francisco Giants'
SFGiants.com.
Financial terms were not
dtsclosed. But StubHub
spokesman Sean Pate said
MLB, which is owned by the
30 baseball franchises m
Canada and the Umted States,
would share revenue with the
e-commerce company.
Buyers at StubHub.com
pay a 10 percent fee, while
sellers are charged a IS percent commission. If a baseball ticket sells for $1'00, the
buyer pays $110 and the seller pockets $85, so $25 would

go to StubHub and the basellall teams. ·
,
Franchises don't have to let
StubHub manage their secondary ticket sales, but if they
don't, they cannot resell tickets from their own online
store, Pate said. Sales will
begin next spring and will
cover tickets purchased for
individual games and those
owned by season holders.
"Every team has. a vested
interest m participating," Pate
said. "The hope ts that all 30
teams will participate."
Franchises could not
immediately be reached for
comment.
The agreement comes as
legislators and franchises
grapple with the thriving ticket resale market, which exists
in a legal gray zone.
Most states have no restrictions on reselling tickets,
even for a hefty profit But
several
including
Massachusetts, Michigan,
Missouri , Kentucky, North
Carolina and Rhode Island -

have tight restrictions on selling ticl&lt;:ets above face value.
Many season tickets,
including those for New York
Yankees games; have licenses
forbidding scalping. Last
year, the Yankees revoked
season tickets of several people wbo sold • through
StubHub, eBay and other
Web sites, · and security
guards at Yank~ Stadium
grilled fans seen carrying
StubHub envelopes in an
effort to nail season-ticket
holders who were selling
seats.
Meanwhile, Yankees officials were considering a pl311
to develop an in-house ticketreselling site.
The NCAA signed a deal
last year to resell tournament
tickets
throuldl
RazorGator.com. The NJfA
and some NFL teams have
made Ticketmaster their official reseller· under an agreement that gives teams part of
the profit when a seat is
resold.

Tribe

single by Casey Blake and
run-scoring double by
Travts Hafner off Rangers
starter John Rhe10ecker.
W1th runners on second
and third, however, righthander Willie Eyre struck
out Franklin Gutierrez and
Jason Michaels to end the
threat.
Indtans left-bander Rafael
Perez was even better in the
sixth. After the Rangers
loaded the bases against
starter Paul Byrd with one
out, Perez struck out Botts
and Marlon Byrd on six
pitches
Catalanotto opened the
game with a double to start
Texas on a three-run first
inmng. Young had a.n RBI
single and Saltalamacchta
followed with his first hit
for hts new team.
Mtchaels htt a solo homer
and Blake a two-run shot m
a tour-r.un second inning
that put Cleveland ahead 43
An error by tirst baseman
Ryan Garko, who mts-

played a grounder htt by
Vazquez, enabled Marlon
Byrd to score from second
10 the thtrd to tie it at 4.
Rheinecker allowed six
runs and eight hits over 4 13 innings in his third appearance and second start since
bemg recalled from TripleA Oklahoma on July 23.
Notes: Botts, a 6-foot-5 ,
250-pounder, hit .320 with
13 homers and 78 RB!s to
earn his recall. ... Indtans
2B Josh Barfield got a
pregame vtsit from hi s
father Jesse, the former
All-Star outfie19er.
Catalanotto is 2-for-5 with
a double, homer and t1ve
RBis in his career against
Betancourt. ... Indians C
Kelly Shoppach went 0for-4 to extend his slump
to 1-for-26 (.038 ).
Vazquez ts 5-for-9 in the
ftrst two game s of the
series. He went 9-for-34
( 265) all last season at
Jacobs Fteld as a ullhty
infielder for the Indians.

fromPageBl
I

"

I

I
t:

making it 9-6.
Jarrod Saltalamacchta, in
his lirst game since being
acquired from Atlanta on
Tuesday for Mark Teilleira,
started at first base for
Texas and had a two-run
single while gomg 1-for-5.
Joaqum Benott (5 -3)
pitched 2 2-3 innmgs and
CJ Wilson ended the game
by sinking out Kenny
Lofton with two runners on
for hi s second save The
Texas
bullpen
held
Cleveland to three hits over
the final 5 2-3 innings
Catalanotto's
two-run
double
off
Rafael
Betancourt !ted tt at 6 for
Texas 10 the seventh after
both teams got some
impress1 ve rehef work in
the middle innings
Cleveland broke a 4-all
tte 10 the fifth on an RBI

Irvin
fromPageBl

..
•
',,.
,..
I,

smce, as recentl y as
November 2005 .
His
career was never the same
followm g the birthday bust.
The Cowboys haven't been
either.
Dallas made the pl ayoffs
in 1996 even though Irvin
was suspended the first five
games. The Cowboys won a
wild-card game but have yet
to wm another postseason
game.
·:Most of the guys who
come from where I come
from and have the tssues I
have off the field , ycu have
this sense that, 'I can do tt, I
can fix tt, I can get better,"'
said Irvin, the thirdyoungest of 17 siblings from
Fort Lauderdale , Fla. "It
was a great attitude to have
on the football field, but the
'reahty ts that m life I needed
help. My greatest asset was
my greatest liability. .
"There were times after

(the '96 arrest) that I said,
' We ' ll wm a few more .
Super Bowls, I'll fix tl.' I
couldn 't. I didn't I' ve
always felt I was in debt to
Cowboys fans for robbing
them of that offseason of
braggmg and enJoying and
celebrating after we won
Super Bowl 30."
frvin was forced tnto
retirement by a spine
InJury suffered in the
fourth game of the 1999
season.
As he was taken away m
an
ambulance,
Phtladelphta fans cheered.
It was testament to the
emol!ons lrvm riled up for pushmg off, for making
his exaggerated first-down
ge sture and JUSt plain
llemg Michael Irvin.
The Play maker was a
love-htm-or-hate-him kind
of guy, except m the Dallas
locker room . Hts charm
and wtl helped h1m connect wtlh everyone, while
his work ethtc and wtll to
wm enabled him to hold
others accountable, regardless of hts personal problems.

"Mtchael was unbelievable," former teammate
Jay Novacek' said. "We
lockered ncllt to each
other, two people from
oppostle sides of the country, oppostte ways of thinkmg. opposite color - the
whole thmg. And he ended
up probably being the guy
I looked up to as much as
anybody with his work
ethic in practice, the way
he handled htmself mentally m preparing for a game.
I don't thmk there was
anybody as good at doing
that as he was. He helped
me out a bunch and didn't
even know. it."
Irvin became a household name as the most
flamboyant member of one
of college football 's most
flamboyant teams, the
1987 national champion
~ liami Hurricanes.
He arrived m Dallas in
'88, the final first-round
pick by Tom Landry and
Tell Schramm. His second
season was marked by the
arrival of his college
coach, Jtmmy John so n,
Aikman, an mjury that cost

LATROQE, Pa. (AP) Brett Keisel is a pass-rushing
defensive right end who pqt
more pressure on the quarterback lilst season than any
other Pittsburgh Steelers
player.
At 6-foot-5 and 285
pounds, Keisel doesn't begin
to resemble in size or makeup
the more mobile Tro~
Polamalu, the Steelers' evasive strong safety.
But, to take advantage of
Keisel's ability to ~~ to the
quarterback, defensiVe coordinator Dick LeBeau is
experimenting with having
Keisel be something of a
Polarnalu Part II - a player
who moves, shifts and flipflops positions from down to
down.
LeBeau, who was retained
by new Steelers coach Mike
Tomlin, believes Keisel can
be as disruptive and deceptive as Polamalu is when lie
moves in from the deep secondary to line up as an outside or inside linebacker.
Think Polan1alu, but in a
size XXXL.
Keisel still lines up at his
customary position of right
defensive end but, JUSt before
the snap, he may stand up and
become an outside linebacker.
At other times, Keisel may
shift from one side of the line

to the other immediately
ahead of the
possibly
creating o:verloads that
offenses will fmd difficult to
manage when they hilve two
linemen trying to ·block three
defenders.
..
"That's what training
camp's for, to get comfortable
with everything so it's second
nature," lteisel said.
Some players find it hard to
adjust frOm putting their hand
on the ground as a defensive
lineman tp being upright as a
linebacker, but Keisel feels
comfortable doing either. His
ability to play numerous positions coula help transform the
Steelers from a 3-4 to a ~3
defense within a season or so.
"It is fun, man," Keisel
said. "I really enjoy it so far. I
just hope it works and we can
use it in every game. I think it
can definitely cause the
offense problems and hopefully it will work."
While Keisel is listed as a
defensive end, LeBeau considers him to be a roving linebacker - . the Steelers'
biggest linebacker since
Levon Kirkland played there
at nearly 300 pounds. Keisel
can move for a big man and
has played on special teams
in the past
The AFC North rival
Baltimore Ravens used the 62,
270-pound
Adalius

Thomas in a similar role last
season, but he signed with
t:'Jew England during the offseason.
Since LeBeau came to him
with the idea, Keisel has studied how the 5-l 0, 207-pound
Polamalu - a Pro Bowl
player each of the last three
seasons - adjusts from positioning himself near the line
on one play but drops 15
yards back mto coverage on
the next. Keisel may occasionally drop into pass coverage himself, somethin~ not
many 285-pounders do m the
NFL.
"Troy is definitely the master of deception," Keisel said.
"He looks like he's rushing,
and he 'II get back into the
deep third (of the coverage),
and I'm trying to learn from
him and see how it goes."
With longtime starting outside lmebacker Joey Porter
gone after being released, the
Steelers are looking at various ways to improve a pass,
rush that was !united to 39
sacks last season - their
third fewest in the last 15 seasons.
Porter had a team-high
seven sacks last season, but
Keisel ' was credited with
pressunng the quarterback 23
limes, or nearlr. twtce as
many as Porter's 12.

Slide

htm 10 games and a 1-15
record. But things were
changing quickly.
Two years later, Irvin led
the league m yards recei vmg, po sting the first of
seven 1,000-yard seasons
and starting a run of five
stratght Pro Bow ls The
Cowboys won Super
Bowl s following the '92,
'93 and '95 seasons, reaching the NFC utle game in
'94
Hi s best year was 1995,
when he caught Ill passes for 1,603 yards and I0
touchdowns, all career
highs, and set an NFL
record with 11 100-yard
games.
Chosen to the NFL's alldecade team for the
1990s, Irvin was among
the top I0 on the career
li sts for recepttons (750)
and
yards
receiving
(11 ,904) when he retired .
He wasn't too htgh on the
touchdown list, having
been stopped just shy so
many times that hi s buddy
Smtth wound up setting
all sorts of rushin g TD
record s - or so the joke

goes.
A lack of speed was
more to blame. His phy stcal gifts were size (6-foot2, · 207 pounds) and
strength. And he knew
how to use them, lorcing
the league to create "The
Michael Irvin rule" hmtling contact between
receivers and defenders.
"I never coached a player who had as much passton for the game as
Michael lrvm," Johnson
said "He also was the ~uy
who I knew at crunch ttme
I could depend on to come
through with a key play
He never shied away from
maktng the tough catch "
Despite all his accolades, Irvin couldn't jlel
into the Hall on hi s ftrst
try Or his second.
"Mistakes will cost }'OU .
That's the reality," Irvin
said. "I like that it worked
out the way it worked out
That 's a lot easier to say
now, but I really do
believe that."
Aikman and Cowboys
owner Jerr~ Jones have
been Irvin s most loy al

supporters. Aikman was
enshnned m Canton last
year and wtll return for
Irvin's big day. Jones will
be lrvm's fresenter.
"Mtchae showed us all
how to get on a knee and
get up and come back and
overcome that," Jones
satd. "It jusl seemed like
it kind of Ills his pattern
to have jlOllen knocked
down twtce (by voters)
and then step up fhere and
do 1t."

•

The yellow Hall of
Fame jacket won't be any
more ~arish than many of
the suns in Irvin's closet.
Then there 's the matter of
his bu~t.
The sculptor initially
made it with an intense
game face , but Irvm
requested something "a
little more joviaL" It wasn't so simfk
"When smile , I show
teeth and on the bust the
teeth are brown, so we
didn't go all the way. It's
more of a smirk," Irvin
said. "I hope ~eople aren't
saying , 'He s smirking
that he got in "'

•

Publication
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00

For Sunday• Paper

Ohio Valley
l'llbllahlng ,....,..
tho right to edit,
or ctncelany
ad at any time.
Mutt B
Errors
epor1ed on the firs
of publication a
e Trlbune-Bentlnel
egtater
will
b
eponslble for n

rtlect

ora than the cc&amp;t o
he apace occuple
the error and oil
e first lnaertlon.
hell not be liable fo
loss or expen
at results from l

ubllcallon or

omla

ion of an advertle
ent. Corrections wll
made In the fl
vallable edition.
Box number ada a

lways confidential.
Current rale
ppllea.

car

All Real Estat
dvertlsementtt ar
ubject to the Fodere
air Housing Act o

968.
Thla
newapape
ccepts only hel
anted ads meetln
OE atandartll
We will not knowln
accept any adver
loament In vlolatlo
t the law.

Lr__

I'F:Il'lO
___
N.us
__

t
_.~l

Wtekham

Road

kltncarlyleGcomcast.net

Retnever

HoUeelr"Q'L FT. Midnight

Monday

Ellperlenced
H o us eke e per I J an1tor
Des1red Interviews Now
Bemg Conducted
Many
Benefits Available Paid
Vacanons. Free Meals,
' 01scounts
Avarlable
Insurance,
Homelike
Atmosphere RavenswOOd
Care
Genter.
t1t3
Washmgton
St
WV
Ravenswood,
References Required
A
Pleasant Place To Worklll

30th ,John Deere Collar
Male Full g1own 992 68641

Lost. Middleport area male
miwed breed dog, 101J
black·whlte~rown ,
has
green collar wnh rabies tag,
(740)992-2355 or 740·949Local Metal Band lookmg for 2576

lead Stnger Call 992-9904
or416·62l0or41 6-1090
REWARD Lost dark blue

r

picture album near Bllles
Fesltval- Pomeroy Fn 7/27 ,

GlVEAWAY

t.,~-----2 8 week old kittens very
adorable &amp; lovable 304 882·
3854

r

(502)599·1673

IRS JOBS
$1846-53260/hr now htr, 1ng Paid Training is prOVld·
ed For application and tree
go\18rnment JOb Info, call
American Assoc of Labor 1·
913-599-13244, 24A1rs emp
aerv

~~;::;:::~
II

I

j

73 12K70 House Tra1ler to
YARD SALEg1veaway 304-675 5701 or 1.~--GitAlJ.li'OUSiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..,;·;l
304-675-6638
•
- - - - -- - - 2 Family Yard Sale corner ot
G1veaway!l l 7 adorable Jessie Creek &amp; Pautms Hill
K1ttens- several colors Ad Chesture Fn and Sat

'ihl-

_74_~_4_16_·_
3~------~- _9a_m_·_?___________

r

~~

~~
® 2007 by NEA. Inc.

IE~:!~~:r~;~;~.~~~~:~ l rl 4l1"Po~;~:-o~~~~ALE---.,I

Rolite 850
FOUND small dog wlblue - - - - - - - c collar on Sandhill Ad 304· a/2.-8/5 67 Plymale Ad oH
SA 7 S Cl eaned the att1c,
675·5369
house and barn. Corne see
Lost on Red H1ll Ad 1n what we 've got
oanv111e - Female Chocolate
Aug 3- 4 Woodtand On\18
lab puppy approx 5 months
Collectible, new and old
old Wearing black collar,
beautiful lineS Come and
answers to Lillie Please call
see
740·508·0457

.,--,---=-.,----

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Electrlcai/Relrlgeratton...............................840

Equipment tor Rent.. ...... . ......... .............. ..480
Excavatlng ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment ......................................... 610
Farms for RenL .......................................... 430
Farms for Sale . ........................................... 330
For Leaae .. ................................................... 490
For Sale ........................................................ 585
For Sale or Trade ............................. .. ....... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetsblea ..................................... 580
Furnished Roorns ........................................450
General Hauling ...... ..... ..............................850
Glveaway ......................................................040
Happy Ada ............ ........................................
Hay &amp; Grain ... ...... ........................................640
Help Wanted ..................................... ......... 110
Home lmprovements ................................... 810
Homes for Ssle ........................ .................... 310
Household Goods ............. ....................... 510
Houses for Rent ................ ......... ............ . 410
In Memorlam .................. .............................. 020
Insurance . ...... ......................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment.. .................. 660
Love81ock .................... .................................. 830
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ....................................... 350
Miscellaneous ................................. ... .... 170
Miscellaneous Merchandlae ......................540
Mobile Home Repalr.. .................................. 860
Mobile Homeo for Rent..... ...... .............. 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ................ ................ 320
Money to loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ...................... 740
Mualcallnstrumants ............................. 570
Personals .... ....... , .............................. ,.......... 005
Pets tor Sale ............................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating ............................ 820
Protesslonal Sarvlces ................................. 230
RadiO, TV &amp; CB Repair ............... ............. ... 160
Real Estate Wanted . .... .... ........................ 360
Schoolslnatructlon ............. ..................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Situattono Wanled .... ................................. 120
Space tor Rent .......................... .. .... ... 460
Sporting Goods . ... ......................... .......... ... 520
SUV's tor Sale .. .......................... ................. 720
Trucks for Sale ... .... .. ..... ........................ 715
Upholstery..... ..... ... .... ......... .. ... ...
870
Vana For Sale ...... ....... ................................ 730
Wanted to Buy ...... ...................... ................ 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies ... ......... ... 6 20
Wanted To Do .. ................................. ...... 180
Wanted to Rent ........................................ . ..470
Yard Sale· Gallipolis .............. ..................... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ..... .... . .....
07 4
Yard Sale· PI. Pleasant.. ......................... · . 0 76

oso

Aug 3·5, 8·4pm 882 Burnett
Ad, Gallipolis Fllrnltu re.
glassware, miSC
'-------Commumty Yard
Sale
Something for everyone Frl
and Sat 9-4 446 Jerry St

_an_d_c_lolh_1_:ng'-'----- Aug
2·3,
Greenwood
Large Yard Sale, 3 m11es out Cemetery Ad off Bashan
554 from red l1ght 1n · Fld Rac1ne, 3rd trailer on
Cheshire. Nursing scrubs, nght, glassware, clothes,
name brand c lothes 811 stands
Sizes, turnlture mrsc Items,
'"g 2, 3 • 4
Aug 3rd &amp; 4th, Sam-? 13"
Cheap ~
1 &amp; h
TV men's eans
s oes
Multl wflfiJIIY· Dont Mill leather coat, curta1ns, diSh·
thla
onel1
Summer es PS2 and a lot more ntce
Ctearance Ylrd Salell Klda 1tems, 5
miles from
leaving
for
college!! Rav.enswood bndge m
Amencan Eagle. Lev1's , Portland on St At 124 E..
Tommy, Cool beddmg lane _lol_low_lh_e_s,=:IQn_s____

==--- --.,--

August 3,d 4th, Sam-4pm
Worchester
St,
1057
Syracuse,
Hubbard's

across from
Greenhouse,

men 'slwomen s
clothes,
kitchen items X-box games,
DVO's, 2001 Compaq com·
puler
With
Windows
Mlllemum, 50% discount
Beaut1Control, many other
nems
Big 3famlly yard sate Baby

t:l olhes men&amp; women s
clothing, home decor, mise clothing mlsc 3 ml out
IIams
St AI 143, 151 drive past
- - - - - - - - Wolfe P~ n Ad on left Walch
Wed Sun Aug l 5 Mlilll
tamlly 918 Spires Ad (S A lor SI!JilS 7-30-07 T11 8·4·071
160 N 4 m1les past Korner

s1g

yard sale, Fnd- Aug
~,
Store to Morgan Center Ad 3rd, Chester on Bauey Ad '
Go 1 m1le to Sp1res Ad t 1us1 ott ot Te~eas Ad tallow
m1le to ya1d saleI Baby- stgns
adult d olhong, 89 KK 250 .,::--::.,-- - - . , . - dirt btke m1sc 9-5
F1ve Po1nts area m Crow
SlibdMSion Aug 3rd&amp;4th

r

4

YARD SAI..&amp;

I

PoMEROY/MJDoi...E •

1•t Annual Peoples for
People 10 Fam1ly Y•rd
Sale.Aug 3, Fr~ ~e OOam to
5 OOpm Locat1on Peoples
Bank
Parkm g
lot All
Proceeds w111 go to Coats for
Ktdsi Many Items for salelllll
2 yard sales front yard &amp; car·
port,
1st·4th
29081
Bradbt~ ry Ad , Middleport
3 fan)lly yard sate 35200
Wol f Pen Ad Pome roy
Aug 2nd &amp; 3rd 9am-4pm
3 tam1ly Aug t -2 3 Bam
4pm 405 Broadway Aac1ne
baby 1tems cloth1ng &amp; more
487 S 4tt1, Middleport Aug
2nd &amp; 3rd name brand k1d s
&amp; mfant clothing desk &amp; bed

-- ~

ePo=v~ I~.,l___

We have whM you are

looklnj) Iori
We oHer

Will babysit In my Letart
home, behind Coal Mme
Plant, all ages &amp; hours,
experienced State EMT &amp;
CPA certHood 304-682·3538

0 Full·t1me and Part·t1me
shifts avallabte

0 Up IO $8.50/hour +
weekly bonus potential
0 Paid training
0 Paid vacations &amp; pa1d
holidays
0 Medical, dental &amp; vision
Insurance
0 401(11.) retirement plan
0 Friendly, professional
work atmosphere

Join uoln making coMa

Galllpollo CoNOr College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740·446-4367,
1·800 214·0452
'*- ganlpoliseareernolloga oom

=~~:
~~=8~~=
and Sellools 127-40

l.teo

WANIID

ToDo

for major PoiRICII

A hard wOf'klng careg1ver
would like to take care of the
elderly 111 their homes I hava
Call today to IChedute an 10yrs 0'1' and STNA
Interview!
License In flva states 1 am
current on my CPR and
- 1-877-463-8247
First Aid Very dependable l
2341
would prefer to work days or
Need female, part·time Day evenmgs, no nights If InterReport Officer's assistant ested call Cetherlne at 740·
Duties wlllmclude seerch~ng 441 ·9323 or 740·208·9316
&amp; drug screemng female
All Types' Masonry, Brick
Block, Stone, Free Estimate
(304)773·9550
304·593
6421
between 8 am till 4 30 pm
25 h
k 11 S9 00 h
rs per w
r Caregiver with 5 yrs eJI.pen·
Send resumes lo Mason ence would like to care for
County Day Report Center, your loved one m the1r
124 H1ghland Ave, Po1nt home Ref available 446·
Pleasant
25550 before
•
7165 or 441 ·9232
8110107
Lawn-Care SerVIce, Mowmg
New Honzons Childhood &amp; Trimming Call (740)441 ·
Ennchmant
Center
1s 1333 or (740)645 0546
accepting resumes for an
afternoon teacher's a1de Odd Jobs wanted Deck
position Resume's can be bUIIdmg trash clean, pwnt·
sent to P:O Bow 706. mg. yard work I do many dlf
ferent types ol work, by the
Pomeroy: OH Deadline Is 8lob call Tim 304·882·8216
li'17=.0=7;;=;=;:;=:;:;o=""i1
Sales Position
Professlonall9
Clean.
Off1ce / House c l ean1ng
A
dl
Reasonable
Rates,
n ou11
a an ng oppor1u- R fe
740 446 2282
nlty lor the nght person
e rences
.
or 446-3881
Prefer some sales
Glq)erlenee
11 \\\ll\1
Offer 5 day work week
EKcellant benef1t pkg
Contact
Carolyn Murd()Ct(
Office Admin
Mon·Frl (740)446-3093.
•NOTICE•
9am-3pm
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
to schedule an Interview
recommends
lNG
No Walk·lns 'Piease
that you do busmess w1th
11=======.!1
people you know, and
security Officers needed in NOT to semt money
New Haven, WV $7 66 per through the marl unt1l you
hour, all shifts, FT &amp; PT
have 1nvost1gated the
organizational

8 00-? Baby clothes

~~~::::~g~~==:

:w.TOiANIIDtiBiiuviioo-·

s

ding, curta1ns, home decor, -'14:.::3...:olf:::...c.At:..:7.:__ _ _

Bryant. Womens 6 20,
Antiques, Bathroom tlems,
Furniture, kitchen Items,
Longaberger
Chnstmas
dtshes, shoes, purses CO's,
Surround sound, StuHed
an1mals. VCR
Wed·Fn,
Sat?, 7am-6pm, Aug 1 2,
3rd, 1/4 mile past Buckeye
HillS School on Right 740·
_
245 5785
- - - -- - - Sat 8/4 Slss lon Ad Btdwell
Gently used baby stuff, adult

www.comJca.com

5 family carpo&lt;l sa~. Libby
Fishers
Racme off Garage sale. Aug. 2-4, 9am ?, Rt 7 above Eastern HI
Yellowbush Ad • on Johns
School, maple bedroom
Ad Aug 3rd &amp; 4th Frl &amp;
sull e, twin, full &amp; queen slze
Sat , clothes aU s1zes.
beds w/mattresses, maple
princess youth bed, baby endtables, 10 pc. set ot
swing. seat toys 2 tw1n mat- wrou!1lt JIR!1 patiO furnitUre,
tress, k1ds truck (battery), housawafe"l, kids clothes &amp;
Clib Cadet ridi ng lawnmowtoys, ladles' &amp; men's brand
er bed liner 2 porch chairs.
tread mill, 2 motorcycles hel- name cloth ing, designer
mats, 30 gal. llsh tank &amp; handbags, shoes 8 jewelry
stand, miCrowave
- - - - -- - - Garage Sale-172 H1ll t,
Rutland
August
34
6
family
Jr ·Adult
'
• '
clothes Mise House beSide antiques, furniture, tovs, too
Alligator
Jacks
813· much to list, 8am·5pm,
(740)742-1092rainorshlne
814 Furnlture&amp;Ant~ques

Garage Sale, 1165 StAt
588 , Aug 2, 3 4 , 8 00•3:00• Aug. 2'3•4 9 00 -1 1st II me
Kitchen table w/cha1rs, bed- yard sale 1 2 of a m11e out

===.:::.::::...___

Need 1 GREAT Job?

ext.

?,.....~

G1veaway Cats &amp; Kmens to 3 Families, Fn Only 4 mYes
goocl home 304-675 6720
out SR 160 on nght Brand
nama boys &amp; girls clothes
Living room sofa In good
shape Floral pnnt 446-2805 _
m_•sc_
•Iem
_ • _ __ _ _

4r4's Fol Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement .......... .............. ..... .. ........... 030
Antlques ........ ............................................... 530
Apartments tor Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Marlcet .............................OBO
Auto Parta &amp; Acce. .orlea ......................... 760
Auto Repalr.............................. ...............770
Autos for 5ale ...........................................710
Boola &amp; Motors for Sale ........................... 750
Building Supptl........................................ 550
Business and Bulldlnga ............................ 340
Business Opportu'nlly ................................. 210
Bltolneso Training ....................................... 140
Campen &amp; Motor Honiea ......................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cordo of Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190

'

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publ'-hlng lftii'VII the right to edit, rajKt, or cane.! en~ .ct .t any time. I!~ mual btl raported on
TrlbUn•Sentlntl-Regllttr wiiiiM l'eaponllblt tot' no more INin tht eott of thl ·~ OOGupltd br the tn'OI' r.nd ontw tfM llrtt lnHrtion.
1ny 1011 or expMtll thlt '"'*'from thl INbllcltlon or omlulon of en actvertJHIMftt, ConfttiOn wm be mtctt In tht tlrll avtl..bla tdiUon. • Box
,,. alwaya eorTftct.rrtW • Currwd m:a c.rd appllet. • All rHI "~ ld\l«tl...,.nta 1ft 1~ 10 rhl ~ Fair Houtlng Act of 1111 • Thle
accept. only
.cia mMIIng 1!01! stllndMdt We will not knowk\gfW accept eny lldv.rtiHig In vloaatlon or the llw

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

rro:

LOSTIGotden

'
Ate you a relatiote of JACK
STRODE ? II so, please call
LOIS STRODE at 304-7277556

Thuraday for Sunday•

• All ada must be prepaid'

-~------

began the season at Class-A game, Acta was asked what
Potomac but steadtly moved he'd hke to see from
h1s way up, level by level, Lannan against the Reds.
until getting his first chance
"I just hope that he has a
fromPageBl
to pilch for the Nationals at quality outing," Acta said.
the Philadelphia Phillies on "There's been so much said
tn 2007 agamst the weak- Thursday.
about what happened in the
hitting Nationals, Arroyo
It was an OK outing that first outmg. He wants to
has allowed 13 runs in 3 2-3 turned downri~ht odd in put it behind."
mmngs, a 31.91 ERA.
the fifth inmng , when
Consider it done.
Quite a contrast from last Lannan hit Chase Utley Notes:
Zimmerman
season, when Arroyo tossed who later turned out to made two errors in a game
16 shutout innings against have a broken hand - and for the first time s1nce
Washington.
then Ryan Howard.
Sept. 8, 2006 - a fielding
Lannan, meanwhile, went
Lannan was immediately error in the first and a
5 2-3 inmngs Wednesday, tossed from the game, as throwing error in the sev-·
allowing two runs and fiVe was manager Manny Acta enth . That gave him 17
singles. The rookie left-han- for arguing about hts pttch- errors in 2007, two more
der left after giving up RBI er's ejection. The Nationals than ~n all of 2006. . .
singles to Griffey - whose were losing at the ttme, but LHP Phil Dumatrait will
h1t snapped an 0-for-14 came back to win, while be recalled from 1'riple-A
drought - and Dunn m the Acta and Lannan watched Louisville on Thursday so
on TV in the clubhouse.
he can start that night for
sixth
Before
Wednesday :s the Reds
The 22-year-old Lannan

In Next Day•• Paper

Dacrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Jndude Phone Humber And Addrtll When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Dlyl

*POLICIES*

All Dleplay: 12 Noon 2
8u81n.aa Day• Prior To

Sunday ln..Column: 1:00 p.m.

AD. • Start Your Adl With A Keyword • Include Complete

\\\111 \l I \I I \ I "'

Now you can have borders and graphics ·
~
addedtoyourclasslfledads
(.~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!i4
Graphics 504 for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

Dally Jn•Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Jn•ertlon

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

StubHub to become ofti,cial resale S·teelers seek 'to.:disguise defense
source for Major League Baseball
sruq),
.
..

Oeo.rl~ir~

Absolute Top Dollar U 5
Silver and Gold Coins,
Proo1sets, Gold R1ngs, Pre·
1935
US
Currency,
SotltBJre 01amonds- M T S
Com Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, GaiMpolls. 740-4462842

w..

Ball Perfect Mason 112 pint
green Jar, wllh #13 on the
bottom, standard screw top
l1d, will buy or tr'ade some
nice guns for it, please don't

call unless you have thiS
particular J&amp;r (740)533-3870 Job opening Pan time to
- - - - -- - - F u l l ttme Heating/ Cooling
Wentlngtobuy 10X10Large Helper
Ellperlenced
GARAGE SALE Aug 2,3,4 dog kennel with reasonabte
at 40938 Laurel Cliff Ad
rt 740-645 753t
Preferred but not necessary.
P ce
•
Will lra 1n Send resume to
watch
for
signs 9'00·
SOOpm,raln or shine
CLA Box t 03 c/o Gallipolis
Tnbune, PO Box 469,
Heritage Chrlstlan Academy, mll"'"_ _ _ _ _., Gallipolis, OH 45631
300
Elwood
Street ·
Rallflnswood WV, 26164 ,
'lbl.2 WANIDJ . LPN's A(ld(spnngs Nursing
Huge inside sale, all money
Nursmg and Rehabilitation
foes to SChool, August 2-4, A
CELEBRATION
OF Center IS looking lor a few
k C
8 30am-3 OOpm
dediCated people to become
LIFE 0 verbroo
enter
Sat Aug 4th, 1/4 mileS of located at 333 Page Street a pan of our team We are a
Tuppers Plains,
house
100 bed skiMed tacY1ty localMiddleport OhiO IS pleased ed 5 m1les from Pomeroy
01
behind Church
Chr~st to announce we are accept· ThtS IS a 20 minute commute
mulll·famlly, woman's, Infant IOQ appltcahons lor the lol· from Athens and Albany We
boys and girtS. great mater- towing positiOns to JOif1 our just recently 111stalled a state
nity. home decor, details call fnendly and dedicated stan of th8 an on line documents·
(740)667-6248
-Full Time and Part T1me
STNA S and Part Time t1oo system ror the nursing
Sat Aug 4th, 9am·4pm, LPNS A h 1 n
st ass1stants which reduce
Drake reSidence. 3 m11es on
PP CSIO 5 mu paper work lime consider·
be dependable team play·
Eagle Ridge. l"'irls -'~thes
w·
'l,;tU
e s wtlh poSitive' anlludes to abfy We are a low lift fa.c1111y
household 1teme, books, r
wh1ch has reduced our bat*
sewing suppiJes
JOin us In providing outstand- lnJlitle&amp; to almost 0 Stop by
1ng, quality care to our reSI· and 1111 out an appllcat1on
Yard &amp; garage sale, Mason. dents Stop by and fill out and recEMve an mtervtew
4th Street, 9am·5pm, Aug an ApplicatiOn or contact Monday through Friday
1, 2. 3, "Cheap", camper. Hollie Bumgarner. LPN between 9 AM and 4 PM or
gun &amp; lots more
Staff
Development
f
D bb
' - - - - - - -- C d1 at @ 740 _992-64 72 call and ask or e 1e
Yard Sale 957 Broadway St ,
oor n or
Wayland
Statfmg
Middleport, OH
Fnday and come see tor yourself CoordlnatOI' Rockspnngs tS
the difference you can make
On ly Ram Cancels
Ov rbrook" '
A an
equal
opportunity
=~~-~--., at e
employer
PrYi\IIIJ.I'IEs.oo'SALE
-~
Parhctpant of the Dno~g- Free - - - - - - - Work Place Program
McCiures Restaurant (

·------,.1

I-----

litO

r

I

EOE&amp;

-------An Ellcetlent way to earn
Clean Multi family yard sale
Th N A
money
e ew von
Sat 8/4 Sun 815 Across Call Manlyrt 304·882·2645
from
Farmers
Bank
(Pt Pleasant) 9·5 both days AVONI All Areasl To Buy or
Sell Shirley Spears, 304·
Garage Sale GPS electnc
wrench costume jewelry, 675· 1429
tools,

camera , f1Sh1ng
kmves, lots more Thurs Fn &amp; Classii1C8110n of Ad 045 ·
Four fam1ly garage sale, 813 Sate-? 6 Stoneybrook Est 3 Help Wanted
Homt
9am-4pm, g1rls clothmg 3T· mllesoutSandh~l
Health Ald11. Sign On
5T. boy s ciothmg
mos - - - -- -- - - Bonus Home Health Cere
14 many nam e brands Multi Fam1ly-Ne1ghborhood ol SE Oh1o IScurrently hiring
(G ymboree Tdmmy, Lev1, Yard Sale PI Pleasanl, Staff home health a1des- compel·
Polo, OICI Navy, ETC) House
Ad ,
(near 1t1ve wages Call 74Q-662·
women s clothing, Kenmore Fairgrounds) New wood 1222
dryer, toys, m1sc, 31384 wort.:rng tools (large selec- - -- - -- - Noble
Sllmmll
Ad • tlon), furnitu re, m1sc clothmg oa 1ryman needed on Letart
Middleport, Durst Res
(children &amp; adlllts) Fn &amp; sat, Da 1ry Farm send Resumes
_ _
A_:
ug:_3_rd_&amp;_4_th_~.:.·_
3 _ _ _ to Box TSC -26 c/o Potnl
_
9 5 00 3
:~~~y~nhques.flshlng gear New &amp; Used Sale 10 AC Pleasant RegiSter 200 Ma1n
St Pt Pleasant WV 25550
clothes.&amp; etc 255 Adams bOIIdmg 6 m1les out Jerrys
•
St Mason WV
Run Road Apple Grove Alig
1 2 &amp; 3 g.? 304·576-2635
POST OFFICE NOW
Garage Sale ram or shine
HIRING
Augusl 2 &amp; 3, F1ve Pomts Yard Sale Apple Grove Fn &amp;
Avg Pay $20/hr or
area Pomeroy, Wtpple Ad Sat 8-" 5 Fam1ly, 220 Brown
$57K annually
(740)992·2475 name Orand Lane baby &amp; Children name tncludmg Federal Benefits
JUntors s1ze 0·6 women's brand clothing toys game
and OT,PaldTralmng,
size 14 &amp; 16, Chevrolet truck boy 2, !urn , tools, computer,
Vacat 1ans·FTIPT
112-3/4 ton 1990·95 bucket Kenmore shampooer, lots of
1·866·542·1531
m1sc
USWA
seats pius mtsc 1lems

2..,

--- - ·-----~---------

Gallipolis Only) now hlnng
part &amp; full t1me - dayst11ft
avai lable Apply between 10
and
11AM Monday •
Salurday
-------NURSING ASSISTANT AD
Rockspnngs Nursing and
Rehabthtahon Center ts
looking fOI' a lew OOd1cated
people to become a part of
our team We are a 100bed
skrlled fac1111y located 5
m1les tram Pomeroy This IS
a 20 mtnute commute from
Athens and Albany We JUSt
recently Installed a state ol
the art on hne documents·
tlon system Jor the nursmg
asSIStants wh 1ch reduce
paper work 11me conSiderably We offer competitiVe
rates, health dental and
VISion Insurance as well as
a 401K plan We are a low
lift facllty whiCh has reduced
our back lnJunes to almost 0,
Stop by and fill out an apph·
cauon and receive an Inter·
VIew Monday throuon Fnday
between 9.AM and 4PM
Rocksprings IS an equal
opportunity employer

co

Must have clean record,
pass a drug screen and
background check Call 1·
800·275·6359, M F 8 30 to
5 00 EOE MIFION

----""'C'C
Secunly Officers needed 1n
New Haven 'IN $7 66 par
hour, atl sh1fts, F T &amp;P T
Must have clean record,
pass a drug screen and
background check Call 1w
800·275·8359, M F B 30 lo
5 00 EOE M/FIDN

Temporary
Home
Supervisor, DI!Ues mclllde
Prot 1c1ent 1n Microsoft Word
and Excel with good organlzational skills BS 10 Human
SeMces t1eld a plus
Aesponsrble lor schedul,ng
of staff and coordmatlng
d 1ent lnances for a caseload of 35 adults m a MR/00
ReSidential sett1ng
11 you would like to take
advantage of this opportuOI·

:o:"~":'n:g::;:;;=~

j

~

MoN~'Y
TO WAN

Borrow Smart Contact
the Ot11o Division of
Financ1al
Institution's
Consumer
Office of
AffairS BEFORE you raft
nance your home or
ob1aln a loan BEWARE
of requests lor any large
advance payments of
fees or Insurance Call the
Off1ce ol
Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1·866
278-0003 to learn II the
mortgage
broKe r or
lender
IS
properly
l1censed (Th ts IS a publ1c
service announcemenl
from the Oh10 Valley

I,P=u~bl:";h•:ng:C:o:m:pa:n:y)=~

ty, you may apply at 8204
Carla Onve, Gallipolis Oh10 11'1
Mooday thru Friday 8 OOam·
PRo•B.~ONAI
4 OOpm
Am
Equal
SEKVICEi
Opportunity
Employer t..-.,;iiiiiliiiiiiiiio-r

VIM/ON
-------Umverslty of Alo Grande IS
lookmg for expe r1enced
cook , With lull hme hours
and
benef1ts
$9 30·
10 15/hr Please apply at the
caletena

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Wml
1 BBB 582 3345
IU \I I 'I \II

H011m;
toR S\1£

Want1ng someone to ca re
for small dog, In PGi nt
Plea sant area while on 0 Down even with less than
vaca t1on ~phone 304-675· perfect credtt rs available on
2749
thi s 3 bedroom 1 bath
home Corner lot firepla ce
modem krtchen 1acuzl1 tub
Payment around 5550 per
month 740-367 7 129

;;--'--..,.;-;::=-:--,

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

------------ - .- -· - -

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday,' August 2, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

Thursday, August 2, 2007

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Browns' defensive tackle Orpheus Roye to unde.rgo knee surgery
BY ToM

WITHERS
AP SPORTS WRITER

BE REA - One of Orpheus
creaky, cranky knees needs
more oft -field mamtenance.
Cleveland's dependable defenstve end will undergo arthroscopic
surgery Thursday on hts n ght
knee. an early training camp setb.tl·k for the Browns, who may he
wnhout their best lmeman to start
tl1e season.
The 34-year-old Roye has been
play tng through pam on sore,
.Khtng knees for several years.
He mtssed the final five games
l.tst season wtth a knee injury that
requ ired surgery this winter
Duri ng the first week of training
camp Roye was bothered by a
"c ltckmg" sound m the knee,
coach Romeo Crennel said followmg Wednesda{s morning practice.
Crennel de sen bed Roye 's mjury as
loose cartilage, but said it was in a
dtfferent place in the knee than
where Roye was troubled last season
"He has some tssues with both of
his knees," Crennel said. "It (his
right knee) bears a bit mere weight
so we're going to go ahead and get
it cleaned out Last year or the year
Roy~'s

before, he went through a season
with some cartilage that was loose
but he worked through it and struggled through it.
"We feel hke we want to go
ahead and get it cleaned out. We'te
gmng to try and get htm back for
the regular season."
The Browns, hoping to compete
in the rugged AFC North after a 412 season. open on Sept. 9 against
the Pittsburgh Stee lers. Roye's
team for four seasons before he
signed with Cleveland as a free
agent in 2000.
Roye made it through the first
three days of practice without a
problem. but he left the field during Monday 's morning sessiOn. He
returned in the afternoon and was
out there again on Tuesday bf;fore
the Browns decided to take a closer look at his knee.
"We' re not giving him a cane, a
walking boot or tmmobilize the
leg," Crennel satd. "They (doctors)
are going to clean the joint out.
There's some loose cartilage so
they're going to clean it out It's a
normal procedure m football."
The Browns hilve had more than
their share of injuries the past few
seasons. They finished last season

AP photo

Cleveland Browns defensive tackle Orpheus Roye stretches dunng foot·
ball camp at the Cleveland Browns Training facility on Fnday m Berea.
Roye, Cleveland's best down lmeman, IS scheduled to undergo knee
surgery and could mtss the Browns' season opener, another blow for a
team ravaged by costly injuries tn recent years.
with 14 players, including Roye,
on injured reserve.
Although he has been hampered
by bad knees the past few seasons,
Roye has been one of the Browns'
most durable players. Following
games, he was often one of the last
to leave Cleveland's locker room,
often limping badly as he left the

stadium.
"Orpheus is the kind of guy
that's a tough-minded individual
and he'll do everythmg he can to
get out on the football field,"
Crennel said. "If his body will
allow him, he will be out there.:•
Crennel refused to guess how
much Roye will he able to help the

Bt'owns in 2007.
"I ' m not a doctor." he said. "I'm
going to have to rely on them to
tell me how much they clean out
and what they anticipate for a
recoyery penod."
Roye started all 16 games and
recorded a career-high 95 tackles
in 2005, and the Browns rewarded
him with a three-year contract
extension through the 2009 season.
His experience is vital in
Cleveland's 3-4 defensive scheme,
which puts a premium on its ends
to rush the quarterback and contain
the perimeter. The Browns'
defense was ranked 29th against
the run last season, and the team
attempted to plug some holes up
front by stgning free agent lineman
Shaun Smith and Robaire Smith.
Shaun Smith, who played for
Cmcinnati last season, had been
projected as Ted Washington's
backup at nose tackle but will
begin getting some time at end in
Roye's spot. Crennel said Simon
Fraser, J' Yo nne Parker and Orien
Harris also are in the mill.
"They'll all get some work and
the guy that steps up the most is
the guy we're going to use,"
Crennel said.

iji:rtbune - Sentinel - ~egtster
CLASSIFIED
Galli a

Websijes:
In One Week With Us
www.mydailytribune.com
E-mail
www.mydallysentinel.com
classified@mydailytnbune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
www.mydailyreg1ster.com
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place ·
'«Crthune
Sentinel
l\egtster
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992·2156 (304) 675·1333
Call Today... or Fax To 446-3008 ·
Or Fax To
57

Word Ads

I

I

I
J

f

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
EBay Inc .'s ticketreselling subsidiary StubHub
announced a five-year deal
Wednesday mght making it
the official source of secondary tickets for Major
League Baseball.
The
agreement
puts
StubHub in charge of secondary ticket sales at MLB
Advanced Media LP's
Internet site MLB.com, and
for individual team sites, such
as the San Francisco Giants'
SFGiants.com.
Financial terms were not
dtsclosed. But StubHub
spokesman Sean Pate said
MLB, which is owned by the
30 baseball franchises m
Canada and the Umted States,
would share revenue with the
e-commerce company.
Buyers at StubHub.com
pay a 10 percent fee, while
sellers are charged a IS percent commission. If a baseball ticket sells for $1'00, the
buyer pays $110 and the seller pockets $85, so $25 would

go to StubHub and the basellall teams. ·
,
Franchises don't have to let
StubHub manage their secondary ticket sales, but if they
don't, they cannot resell tickets from their own online
store, Pate said. Sales will
begin next spring and will
cover tickets purchased for
individual games and those
owned by season holders.
"Every team has. a vested
interest m participating," Pate
said. "The hope ts that all 30
teams will participate."
Franchises could not
immediately be reached for
comment.
The agreement comes as
legislators and franchises
grapple with the thriving ticket resale market, which exists
in a legal gray zone.
Most states have no restrictions on reselling tickets,
even for a hefty profit But
several
including
Massachusetts, Michigan,
Missouri , Kentucky, North
Carolina and Rhode Island -

have tight restrictions on selling ticl&lt;:ets above face value.
Many season tickets,
including those for New York
Yankees games; have licenses
forbidding scalping. Last
year, the Yankees revoked
season tickets of several people wbo sold • through
StubHub, eBay and other
Web sites, · and security
guards at Yank~ Stadium
grilled fans seen carrying
StubHub envelopes in an
effort to nail season-ticket
holders who were selling
seats.
Meanwhile, Yankees officials were considering a pl311
to develop an in-house ticketreselling site.
The NCAA signed a deal
last year to resell tournament
tickets
throuldl
RazorGator.com. The NJfA
and some NFL teams have
made Ticketmaster their official reseller· under an agreement that gives teams part of
the profit when a seat is
resold.

Tribe

single by Casey Blake and
run-scoring double by
Travts Hafner off Rangers
starter John Rhe10ecker.
W1th runners on second
and third, however, righthander Willie Eyre struck
out Franklin Gutierrez and
Jason Michaels to end the
threat.
Indtans left-bander Rafael
Perez was even better in the
sixth. After the Rangers
loaded the bases against
starter Paul Byrd with one
out, Perez struck out Botts
and Marlon Byrd on six
pitches
Catalanotto opened the
game with a double to start
Texas on a three-run first
inmng. Young had a.n RBI
single and Saltalamacchta
followed with his first hit
for hts new team.
Mtchaels htt a solo homer
and Blake a two-run shot m
a tour-r.un second inning
that put Cleveland ahead 43
An error by tirst baseman
Ryan Garko, who mts-

played a grounder htt by
Vazquez, enabled Marlon
Byrd to score from second
10 the thtrd to tie it at 4.
Rheinecker allowed six
runs and eight hits over 4 13 innings in his third appearance and second start since
bemg recalled from TripleA Oklahoma on July 23.
Notes: Botts, a 6-foot-5 ,
250-pounder, hit .320 with
13 homers and 78 RB!s to
earn his recall. ... Indtans
2B Josh Barfield got a
pregame vtsit from hi s
father Jesse, the former
All-Star outfie19er.
Catalanotto is 2-for-5 with
a double, homer and t1ve
RBis in his career against
Betancourt. ... Indians C
Kelly Shoppach went 0for-4 to extend his slump
to 1-for-26 (.038 ).
Vazquez ts 5-for-9 in the
ftrst two game s of the
series. He went 9-for-34
( 265) all last season at
Jacobs Fteld as a ullhty
infielder for the Indians.

fromPageBl
I

"

I

I
t:

making it 9-6.
Jarrod Saltalamacchta, in
his lirst game since being
acquired from Atlanta on
Tuesday for Mark Teilleira,
started at first base for
Texas and had a two-run
single while gomg 1-for-5.
Joaqum Benott (5 -3)
pitched 2 2-3 innmgs and
CJ Wilson ended the game
by sinking out Kenny
Lofton with two runners on
for hi s second save The
Texas
bullpen
held
Cleveland to three hits over
the final 5 2-3 innings
Catalanotto's
two-run
double
off
Rafael
Betancourt !ted tt at 6 for
Texas 10 the seventh after
both teams got some
impress1 ve rehef work in
the middle innings
Cleveland broke a 4-all
tte 10 the fifth on an RBI

Irvin
fromPageBl

..
•
',,.
,..
I,

smce, as recentl y as
November 2005 .
His
career was never the same
followm g the birthday bust.
The Cowboys haven't been
either.
Dallas made the pl ayoffs
in 1996 even though Irvin
was suspended the first five
games. The Cowboys won a
wild-card game but have yet
to wm another postseason
game.
·:Most of the guys who
come from where I come
from and have the tssues I
have off the field , ycu have
this sense that, 'I can do tt, I
can fix tt, I can get better,"'
said Irvin, the thirdyoungest of 17 siblings from
Fort Lauderdale , Fla. "It
was a great attitude to have
on the football field, but the
'reahty ts that m life I needed
help. My greatest asset was
my greatest liability. .
"There were times after

(the '96 arrest) that I said,
' We ' ll wm a few more .
Super Bowls, I'll fix tl.' I
couldn 't. I didn't I' ve
always felt I was in debt to
Cowboys fans for robbing
them of that offseason of
braggmg and enJoying and
celebrating after we won
Super Bowl 30."
frvin was forced tnto
retirement by a spine
InJury suffered in the
fourth game of the 1999
season.
As he was taken away m
an
ambulance,
Phtladelphta fans cheered.
It was testament to the
emol!ons lrvm riled up for pushmg off, for making
his exaggerated first-down
ge sture and JUSt plain
llemg Michael Irvin.
The Play maker was a
love-htm-or-hate-him kind
of guy, except m the Dallas
locker room . Hts charm
and wtl helped h1m connect wtlh everyone, while
his work ethtc and wtll to
wm enabled him to hold
others accountable, regardless of hts personal problems.

"Mtchael was unbelievable," former teammate
Jay Novacek' said. "We
lockered ncllt to each
other, two people from
oppostle sides of the country, oppostte ways of thinkmg. opposite color - the
whole thmg. And he ended
up probably being the guy
I looked up to as much as
anybody with his work
ethic in practice, the way
he handled htmself mentally m preparing for a game.
I don't thmk there was
anybody as good at doing
that as he was. He helped
me out a bunch and didn't
even know. it."
Irvin became a household name as the most
flamboyant member of one
of college football 's most
flamboyant teams, the
1987 national champion
~ liami Hurricanes.
He arrived m Dallas in
'88, the final first-round
pick by Tom Landry and
Tell Schramm. His second
season was marked by the
arrival of his college
coach, Jtmmy John so n,
Aikman, an mjury that cost

LATROQE, Pa. (AP) Brett Keisel is a pass-rushing
defensive right end who pqt
more pressure on the quarterback lilst season than any
other Pittsburgh Steelers
player.
At 6-foot-5 and 285
pounds, Keisel doesn't begin
to resemble in size or makeup
the more mobile Tro~
Polamalu, the Steelers' evasive strong safety.
But, to take advantage of
Keisel's ability to ~~ to the
quarterback, defensiVe coordinator Dick LeBeau is
experimenting with having
Keisel be something of a
Polarnalu Part II - a player
who moves, shifts and flipflops positions from down to
down.
LeBeau, who was retained
by new Steelers coach Mike
Tomlin, believes Keisel can
be as disruptive and deceptive as Polamalu is when lie
moves in from the deep secondary to line up as an outside or inside linebacker.
Think Polan1alu, but in a
size XXXL.
Keisel still lines up at his
customary position of right
defensive end but, JUSt before
the snap, he may stand up and
become an outside linebacker.
At other times, Keisel may
shift from one side of the line

to the other immediately
ahead of the
possibly
creating o:verloads that
offenses will fmd difficult to
manage when they hilve two
linemen trying to ·block three
defenders.
..
"That's what training
camp's for, to get comfortable
with everything so it's second
nature," lteisel said.
Some players find it hard to
adjust frOm putting their hand
on the ground as a defensive
lineman tp being upright as a
linebacker, but Keisel feels
comfortable doing either. His
ability to play numerous positions coula help transform the
Steelers from a 3-4 to a ~3
defense within a season or so.
"It is fun, man," Keisel
said. "I really enjoy it so far. I
just hope it works and we can
use it in every game. I think it
can definitely cause the
offense problems and hopefully it will work."
While Keisel is listed as a
defensive end, LeBeau considers him to be a roving linebacker - . the Steelers'
biggest linebacker since
Levon Kirkland played there
at nearly 300 pounds. Keisel
can move for a big man and
has played on special teams
in the past
The AFC North rival
Baltimore Ravens used the 62,
270-pound
Adalius

Thomas in a similar role last
season, but he signed with
t:'Jew England during the offseason.
Since LeBeau came to him
with the idea, Keisel has studied how the 5-l 0, 207-pound
Polamalu - a Pro Bowl
player each of the last three
seasons - adjusts from positioning himself near the line
on one play but drops 15
yards back mto coverage on
the next. Keisel may occasionally drop into pass coverage himself, somethin~ not
many 285-pounders do m the
NFL.
"Troy is definitely the master of deception," Keisel said.
"He looks like he's rushing,
and he 'II get back into the
deep third (of the coverage),
and I'm trying to learn from
him and see how it goes."
With longtime starting outside lmebacker Joey Porter
gone after being released, the
Steelers are looking at various ways to improve a pass,
rush that was !united to 39
sacks last season - their
third fewest in the last 15 seasons.
Porter had a team-high
seven sacks last season, but
Keisel ' was credited with
pressunng the quarterback 23
limes, or nearlr. twtce as
many as Porter's 12.

Slide

htm 10 games and a 1-15
record. But things were
changing quickly.
Two years later, Irvin led
the league m yards recei vmg, po sting the first of
seven 1,000-yard seasons
and starting a run of five
stratght Pro Bow ls The
Cowboys won Super
Bowl s following the '92,
'93 and '95 seasons, reaching the NFC utle game in
'94
Hi s best year was 1995,
when he caught Ill passes for 1,603 yards and I0
touchdowns, all career
highs, and set an NFL
record with 11 100-yard
games.
Chosen to the NFL's alldecade team for the
1990s, Irvin was among
the top I0 on the career
li sts for recepttons (750)
and
yards
receiving
(11 ,904) when he retired .
He wasn't too htgh on the
touchdown list, having
been stopped just shy so
many times that hi s buddy
Smtth wound up setting
all sorts of rushin g TD
record s - or so the joke

goes.
A lack of speed was
more to blame. His phy stcal gifts were size (6-foot2, · 207 pounds) and
strength. And he knew
how to use them, lorcing
the league to create "The
Michael Irvin rule" hmtling contact between
receivers and defenders.
"I never coached a player who had as much passton for the game as
Michael lrvm," Johnson
said "He also was the ~uy
who I knew at crunch ttme
I could depend on to come
through with a key play
He never shied away from
maktng the tough catch "
Despite all his accolades, Irvin couldn't jlel
into the Hall on hi s ftrst
try Or his second.
"Mistakes will cost }'OU .
That's the reality," Irvin
said. "I like that it worked
out the way it worked out
That 's a lot easier to say
now, but I really do
believe that."
Aikman and Cowboys
owner Jerr~ Jones have
been Irvin s most loy al

supporters. Aikman was
enshnned m Canton last
year and wtll return for
Irvin's big day. Jones will
be lrvm's fresenter.
"Mtchae showed us all
how to get on a knee and
get up and come back and
overcome that," Jones
satd. "It jusl seemed like
it kind of Ills his pattern
to have jlOllen knocked
down twtce (by voters)
and then step up fhere and
do 1t."

•

The yellow Hall of
Fame jacket won't be any
more ~arish than many of
the suns in Irvin's closet.
Then there 's the matter of
his bu~t.
The sculptor initially
made it with an intense
game face , but Irvm
requested something "a
little more joviaL" It wasn't so simfk
"When smile , I show
teeth and on the bust the
teeth are brown, so we
didn't go all the way. It's
more of a smirk," Irvin
said. "I hope ~eople aren't
saying , 'He s smirking
that he got in "'

•

Publication
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00

For Sunday• Paper

Ohio Valley
l'llbllahlng ,....,..
tho right to edit,
or ctncelany
ad at any time.
Mutt B
Errors
epor1ed on the firs
of publication a
e Trlbune-Bentlnel
egtater
will
b
eponslble for n

rtlect

ora than the cc&amp;t o
he apace occuple
the error and oil
e first lnaertlon.
hell not be liable fo
loss or expen
at results from l

ubllcallon or

omla

ion of an advertle
ent. Corrections wll
made In the fl
vallable edition.
Box number ada a

lways confidential.
Current rale
ppllea.

car

All Real Estat
dvertlsementtt ar
ubject to the Fodere
air Housing Act o

968.
Thla
newapape
ccepts only hel
anted ads meetln
OE atandartll
We will not knowln
accept any adver
loament In vlolatlo
t the law.

Lr__

I'F:Il'lO
___
N.us
__

t
_.~l

Wtekham

Road

kltncarlyleGcomcast.net

Retnever

HoUeelr"Q'L FT. Midnight

Monday

Ellperlenced
H o us eke e per I J an1tor
Des1red Interviews Now
Bemg Conducted
Many
Benefits Available Paid
Vacanons. Free Meals,
' 01scounts
Avarlable
Insurance,
Homelike
Atmosphere RavenswOOd
Care
Genter.
t1t3
Washmgton
St
WV
Ravenswood,
References Required
A
Pleasant Place To Worklll

30th ,John Deere Collar
Male Full g1own 992 68641

Lost. Middleport area male
miwed breed dog, 101J
black·whlte~rown ,
has
green collar wnh rabies tag,
(740)992-2355 or 740·949Local Metal Band lookmg for 2576

lead Stnger Call 992-9904
or416·62l0or41 6-1090
REWARD Lost dark blue

r

picture album near Bllles
Fesltval- Pomeroy Fn 7/27 ,

GlVEAWAY

t.,~-----2 8 week old kittens very
adorable &amp; lovable 304 882·
3854

r

(502)599·1673

IRS JOBS
$1846-53260/hr now htr, 1ng Paid Training is prOVld·
ed For application and tree
go\18rnment JOb Info, call
American Assoc of Labor 1·
913-599-13244, 24A1rs emp
aerv

~~;::;:::~
II

I

j

73 12K70 House Tra1ler to
YARD SALEg1veaway 304-675 5701 or 1.~--GitAlJ.li'OUSiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..,;·;l
304-675-6638
•
- - - - -- - - 2 Family Yard Sale corner ot
G1veaway!l l 7 adorable Jessie Creek &amp; Pautms Hill
K1ttens- several colors Ad Chesture Fn and Sat

'ihl-

_74_~_4_16_·_
3~------~- _9a_m_·_?___________

r

~~

~~
® 2007 by NEA. Inc.

IE~:!~~:r~;~;~.~~~~:~ l rl 4l1"Po~;~:-o~~~~ALE---.,I

Rolite 850
FOUND small dog wlblue - - - - - - - c collar on Sandhill Ad 304· a/2.-8/5 67 Plymale Ad oH
SA 7 S Cl eaned the att1c,
675·5369
house and barn. Corne see
Lost on Red H1ll Ad 1n what we 've got
oanv111e - Female Chocolate
Aug 3- 4 Woodtand On\18
lab puppy approx 5 months
Collectible, new and old
old Wearing black collar,
beautiful lineS Come and
answers to Lillie Please call
see
740·508·0457

.,--,---=-.,----

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Electrlcai/Relrlgeratton...............................840

Equipment tor Rent.. ...... . ......... .............. ..480
Excavatlng ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment ......................................... 610
Farms for RenL .......................................... 430
Farms for Sale . ........................................... 330
For Leaae .. ................................................... 490
For Sale ........................................................ 585
For Sale or Trade ............................. .. ....... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetsblea ..................................... 580
Furnished Roorns ........................................450
General Hauling ...... ..... ..............................850
Glveaway ......................................................040
Happy Ada ............ ........................................
Hay &amp; Grain ... ...... ........................................640
Help Wanted ..................................... ......... 110
Home lmprovements ................................... 810
Homes for Ssle ........................ .................... 310
Household Goods ............. ....................... 510
Houses for Rent ................ ......... ............ . 410
In Memorlam .................. .............................. 020
Insurance . ...... ......................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment.. .................. 660
Love81ock .................... .................................. 830
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ....................................... 350
Miscellaneous ................................. ... .... 170
Miscellaneous Merchandlae ......................540
Mobile Home Repalr.. .................................. 860
Mobile Homeo for Rent..... ...... .............. 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ................ ................ 320
Money to loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ...................... 740
Mualcallnstrumants ............................. 570
Personals .... ....... , .............................. ,.......... 005
Pets tor Sale ............................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating ............................ 820
Protesslonal Sarvlces ................................. 230
RadiO, TV &amp; CB Repair ............... ............. ... 160
Real Estate Wanted . .... .... ........................ 360
Schoolslnatructlon ............. ..................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Situattono Wanled .... ................................. 120
Space tor Rent .......................... .. .... ... 460
Sporting Goods . ... ......................... .......... ... 520
SUV's tor Sale .. .......................... ................. 720
Trucks for Sale ... .... .. ..... ........................ 715
Upholstery..... ..... ... .... ......... .. ... ...
870
Vana For Sale ...... ....... ................................ 730
Wanted to Buy ...... ...................... ................ 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies ... ......... ... 6 20
Wanted To Do .. ................................. ...... 180
Wanted to Rent ........................................ . ..470
Yard Sale· Gallipolis .............. ..................... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ..... .... . .....
07 4
Yard Sale· PI. Pleasant.. ......................... · . 0 76

oso

Aug 3·5, 8·4pm 882 Burnett
Ad, Gallipolis Fllrnltu re.
glassware, miSC
'-------Commumty Yard
Sale
Something for everyone Frl
and Sat 9-4 446 Jerry St

_an_d_c_lolh_1_:ng'-'----- Aug
2·3,
Greenwood
Large Yard Sale, 3 m11es out Cemetery Ad off Bashan
554 from red l1ght 1n · Fld Rac1ne, 3rd trailer on
Cheshire. Nursing scrubs, nght, glassware, clothes,
name brand c lothes 811 stands
Sizes, turnlture mrsc Items,
'"g 2, 3 • 4
Aug 3rd &amp; 4th, Sam-? 13"
Cheap ~
1 &amp; h
TV men's eans
s oes
Multl wflfiJIIY· Dont Mill leather coat, curta1ns, diSh·
thla
onel1
Summer es PS2 and a lot more ntce
Ctearance Ylrd Salell Klda 1tems, 5
miles from
leaving
for
college!! Rav.enswood bndge m
Amencan Eagle. Lev1's , Portland on St At 124 E..
Tommy, Cool beddmg lane _lol_low_lh_e_s,=:IQn_s____

==--- --.,--

August 3,d 4th, Sam-4pm
Worchester
St,
1057
Syracuse,
Hubbard's

across from
Greenhouse,

men 'slwomen s
clothes,
kitchen items X-box games,
DVO's, 2001 Compaq com·
puler
With
Windows
Mlllemum, 50% discount
Beaut1Control, many other
nems
Big 3famlly yard sate Baby

t:l olhes men&amp; women s
clothing, home decor, mise clothing mlsc 3 ml out
IIams
St AI 143, 151 drive past
- - - - - - - - Wolfe P~ n Ad on left Walch
Wed Sun Aug l 5 Mlilll
tamlly 918 Spires Ad (S A lor SI!JilS 7-30-07 T11 8·4·071
160 N 4 m1les past Korner

s1g

yard sale, Fnd- Aug
~,
Store to Morgan Center Ad 3rd, Chester on Bauey Ad '
Go 1 m1le to Sp1res Ad t 1us1 ott ot Te~eas Ad tallow
m1le to ya1d saleI Baby- stgns
adult d olhong, 89 KK 250 .,::--::.,-- - - . , . - dirt btke m1sc 9-5
F1ve Po1nts area m Crow
SlibdMSion Aug 3rd&amp;4th

r

4

YARD SAI..&amp;

I

PoMEROY/MJDoi...E •

1•t Annual Peoples for
People 10 Fam1ly Y•rd
Sale.Aug 3, Fr~ ~e OOam to
5 OOpm Locat1on Peoples
Bank
Parkm g
lot All
Proceeds w111 go to Coats for
Ktdsi Many Items for salelllll
2 yard sales front yard &amp; car·
port,
1st·4th
29081
Bradbt~ ry Ad , Middleport
3 fan)lly yard sate 35200
Wol f Pen Ad Pome roy
Aug 2nd &amp; 3rd 9am-4pm
3 tam1ly Aug t -2 3 Bam
4pm 405 Broadway Aac1ne
baby 1tems cloth1ng &amp; more
487 S 4tt1, Middleport Aug
2nd &amp; 3rd name brand k1d s
&amp; mfant clothing desk &amp; bed

-- ~

ePo=v~ I~.,l___

We have whM you are

looklnj) Iori
We oHer

Will babysit In my Letart
home, behind Coal Mme
Plant, all ages &amp; hours,
experienced State EMT &amp;
CPA certHood 304-682·3538

0 Full·t1me and Part·t1me
shifts avallabte

0 Up IO $8.50/hour +
weekly bonus potential
0 Paid training
0 Paid vacations &amp; pa1d
holidays
0 Medical, dental &amp; vision
Insurance
0 401(11.) retirement plan
0 Friendly, professional
work atmosphere

Join uoln making coMa

Galllpollo CoNOr College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740·446-4367,
1·800 214·0452
'*- ganlpoliseareernolloga oom

=~~:
~~=8~~=
and Sellools 127-40

l.teo

WANIID

ToDo

for major PoiRICII

A hard wOf'klng careg1ver
would like to take care of the
elderly 111 their homes I hava
Call today to IChedute an 10yrs 0'1' and STNA
Interview!
License In flva states 1 am
current on my CPR and
- 1-877-463-8247
First Aid Very dependable l
2341
would prefer to work days or
Need female, part·time Day evenmgs, no nights If InterReport Officer's assistant ested call Cetherlne at 740·
Duties wlllmclude seerch~ng 441 ·9323 or 740·208·9316
&amp; drug screemng female
All Types' Masonry, Brick
Block, Stone, Free Estimate
(304)773·9550
304·593
6421
between 8 am till 4 30 pm
25 h
k 11 S9 00 h
rs per w
r Caregiver with 5 yrs eJI.pen·
Send resumes lo Mason ence would like to care for
County Day Report Center, your loved one m the1r
124 H1ghland Ave, Po1nt home Ref available 446·
Pleasant
25550 before
•
7165 or 441 ·9232
8110107
Lawn-Care SerVIce, Mowmg
New Honzons Childhood &amp; Trimming Call (740)441 ·
Ennchmant
Center
1s 1333 or (740)645 0546
accepting resumes for an
afternoon teacher's a1de Odd Jobs wanted Deck
position Resume's can be bUIIdmg trash clean, pwnt·
sent to P:O Bow 706. mg. yard work I do many dlf
ferent types ol work, by the
Pomeroy: OH Deadline Is 8lob call Tim 304·882·8216
li'17=.0=7;;=;=;:;=:;:;o=""i1
Sales Position
Professlonall9
Clean.
Off1ce / House c l ean1ng
A
dl
Reasonable
Rates,
n ou11
a an ng oppor1u- R fe
740 446 2282
nlty lor the nght person
e rences
.
or 446-3881
Prefer some sales
Glq)erlenee
11 \\\ll\1
Offer 5 day work week
EKcellant benef1t pkg
Contact
Carolyn Murd()Ct(
Office Admin
Mon·Frl (740)446-3093.
•NOTICE•
9am-3pm
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
to schedule an Interview
recommends
lNG
No Walk·lns 'Piease
that you do busmess w1th
11=======.!1
people you know, and
security Officers needed in NOT to semt money
New Haven, WV $7 66 per through the marl unt1l you
hour, all shifts, FT &amp; PT
have 1nvost1gated the
organizational

8 00-? Baby clothes

~~~::::~g~~==:

:w.TOiANIIDtiBiiuviioo-·

s

ding, curta1ns, home decor, -'14:.::3...:olf:::...c.At:..:7.:__ _ _

Bryant. Womens 6 20,
Antiques, Bathroom tlems,
Furniture, kitchen Items,
Longaberger
Chnstmas
dtshes, shoes, purses CO's,
Surround sound, StuHed
an1mals. VCR
Wed·Fn,
Sat?, 7am-6pm, Aug 1 2,
3rd, 1/4 mile past Buckeye
HillS School on Right 740·
_
245 5785
- - - -- - - Sat 8/4 Slss lon Ad Btdwell
Gently used baby stuff, adult

www.comJca.com

5 family carpo&lt;l sa~. Libby
Fishers
Racme off Garage sale. Aug. 2-4, 9am ?, Rt 7 above Eastern HI
Yellowbush Ad • on Johns
School, maple bedroom
Ad Aug 3rd &amp; 4th Frl &amp;
sull e, twin, full &amp; queen slze
Sat , clothes aU s1zes.
beds w/mattresses, maple
princess youth bed, baby endtables, 10 pc. set ot
swing. seat toys 2 tw1n mat- wrou!1lt JIR!1 patiO furnitUre,
tress, k1ds truck (battery), housawafe"l, kids clothes &amp;
Clib Cadet ridi ng lawnmowtoys, ladles' &amp; men's brand
er bed liner 2 porch chairs.
tread mill, 2 motorcycles hel- name cloth ing, designer
mats, 30 gal. llsh tank &amp; handbags, shoes 8 jewelry
stand, miCrowave
- - - - -- - - Garage Sale-172 H1ll t,
Rutland
August
34
6
family
Jr ·Adult
'
• '
clothes Mise House beSide antiques, furniture, tovs, too
Alligator
Jacks
813· much to list, 8am·5pm,
(740)742-1092rainorshlne
814 Furnlture&amp;Ant~ques

Garage Sale, 1165 StAt
588 , Aug 2, 3 4 , 8 00•3:00• Aug. 2'3•4 9 00 -1 1st II me
Kitchen table w/cha1rs, bed- yard sale 1 2 of a m11e out

===.:::.::::...___

Need 1 GREAT Job?

ext.

?,.....~

G1veaway Cats &amp; Kmens to 3 Families, Fn Only 4 mYes
goocl home 304-675 6720
out SR 160 on nght Brand
nama boys &amp; girls clothes
Living room sofa In good
shape Floral pnnt 446-2805 _
m_•sc_
•Iem
_ • _ __ _ _

4r4's Fol Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement .......... .............. ..... .. ........... 030
Antlques ........ ............................................... 530
Apartments tor Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Marlcet .............................OBO
Auto Parta &amp; Acce. .orlea ......................... 760
Auto Repalr.............................. ...............770
Autos for 5ale ...........................................710
Boola &amp; Motors for Sale ........................... 750
Building Supptl........................................ 550
Business and Bulldlnga ............................ 340
Business Opportu'nlly ................................. 210
Bltolneso Training ....................................... 140
Campen &amp; Motor Honiea ......................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cordo of Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190

'

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publ'-hlng lftii'VII the right to edit, rajKt, or cane.! en~ .ct .t any time. I!~ mual btl raported on
TrlbUn•Sentlntl-Regllttr wiiiiM l'eaponllblt tot' no more INin tht eott of thl ·~ OOGupltd br the tn'OI' r.nd ontw tfM llrtt lnHrtion.
1ny 1011 or expMtll thlt '"'*'from thl INbllcltlon or omlulon of en actvertJHIMftt, ConfttiOn wm be mtctt In tht tlrll avtl..bla tdiUon. • Box
,,. alwaya eorTftct.rrtW • Currwd m:a c.rd appllet. • All rHI "~ ld\l«tl...,.nta 1ft 1~ 10 rhl ~ Fair Houtlng Act of 1111 • Thle
accept. only
.cia mMIIng 1!01! stllndMdt We will not knowk\gfW accept eny lldv.rtiHig In vloaatlon or the llw

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

rro:

LOSTIGotden

'
Ate you a relatiote of JACK
STRODE ? II so, please call
LOIS STRODE at 304-7277556

Thuraday for Sunday•

• All ada must be prepaid'

-~------

began the season at Class-A game, Acta was asked what
Potomac but steadtly moved he'd hke to see from
h1s way up, level by level, Lannan against the Reds.
until getting his first chance
"I just hope that he has a
fromPageBl
to pilch for the Nationals at quality outing," Acta said.
the Philadelphia Phillies on "There's been so much said
tn 2007 agamst the weak- Thursday.
about what happened in the
hitting Nationals, Arroyo
It was an OK outing that first outmg. He wants to
has allowed 13 runs in 3 2-3 turned downri~ht odd in put it behind."
mmngs, a 31.91 ERA.
the fifth inmng , when
Consider it done.
Quite a contrast from last Lannan hit Chase Utley Notes:
Zimmerman
season, when Arroyo tossed who later turned out to made two errors in a game
16 shutout innings against have a broken hand - and for the first time s1nce
Washington.
then Ryan Howard.
Sept. 8, 2006 - a fielding
Lannan, meanwhile, went
Lannan was immediately error in the first and a
5 2-3 inmngs Wednesday, tossed from the game, as throwing error in the sev-·
allowing two runs and fiVe was manager Manny Acta enth . That gave him 17
singles. The rookie left-han- for arguing about hts pttch- errors in 2007, two more
der left after giving up RBI er's ejection. The Nationals than ~n all of 2006. . .
singles to Griffey - whose were losing at the ttme, but LHP Phil Dumatrait will
h1t snapped an 0-for-14 came back to win, while be recalled from 1'riple-A
drought - and Dunn m the Acta and Lannan watched Louisville on Thursday so
on TV in the clubhouse.
he can start that night for
sixth
Before
Wednesday :s the Reds
The 22-year-old Lannan

In Next Day•• Paper

Dacrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Jndude Phone Humber And Addrtll When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Dlyl

*POLICIES*

All Dleplay: 12 Noon 2
8u81n.aa Day• Prior To

Sunday ln..Column: 1:00 p.m.

AD. • Start Your Adl With A Keyword • Include Complete

\\\111 \l I \I I \ I "'

Now you can have borders and graphics ·
~
addedtoyourclasslfledads
(.~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!i4
Graphics 504 for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

Dally Jn•Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Jn•ertlon

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

StubHub to become ofti,cial resale S·teelers seek 'to.:disguise defense
source for Major League Baseball
sruq),
.
..

Oeo.rl~ir~

Absolute Top Dollar U 5
Silver and Gold Coins,
Proo1sets, Gold R1ngs, Pre·
1935
US
Currency,
SotltBJre 01amonds- M T S
Com Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, GaiMpolls. 740-4462842

w..

Ball Perfect Mason 112 pint
green Jar, wllh #13 on the
bottom, standard screw top
l1d, will buy or tr'ade some
nice guns for it, please don't

call unless you have thiS
particular J&amp;r (740)533-3870 Job opening Pan time to
- - - - -- - - F u l l ttme Heating/ Cooling
Wentlngtobuy 10X10Large Helper
Ellperlenced
GARAGE SALE Aug 2,3,4 dog kennel with reasonabte
at 40938 Laurel Cliff Ad
rt 740-645 753t
Preferred but not necessary.
P ce
•
Will lra 1n Send resume to
watch
for
signs 9'00·
SOOpm,raln or shine
CLA Box t 03 c/o Gallipolis
Tnbune, PO Box 469,
Heritage Chrlstlan Academy, mll"'"_ _ _ _ _., Gallipolis, OH 45631
300
Elwood
Street ·
Rallflnswood WV, 26164 ,
'lbl.2 WANIDJ . LPN's A(ld(spnngs Nursing
Huge inside sale, all money
Nursmg and Rehabilitation
foes to SChool, August 2-4, A
CELEBRATION
OF Center IS looking lor a few
k C
8 30am-3 OOpm
dediCated people to become
LIFE 0 verbroo
enter
Sat Aug 4th, 1/4 mileS of located at 333 Page Street a pan of our team We are a
Tuppers Plains,
house
100 bed skiMed tacY1ty localMiddleport OhiO IS pleased ed 5 m1les from Pomeroy
01
behind Church
Chr~st to announce we are accept· ThtS IS a 20 minute commute
mulll·famlly, woman's, Infant IOQ appltcahons lor the lol· from Athens and Albany We
boys and girtS. great mater- towing positiOns to JOif1 our just recently 111stalled a state
nity. home decor, details call fnendly and dedicated stan of th8 an on line documents·
(740)667-6248
-Full Time and Part T1me
STNA S and Part Time t1oo system ror the nursing
Sat Aug 4th, 9am·4pm, LPNS A h 1 n
st ass1stants which reduce
Drake reSidence. 3 m11es on
PP CSIO 5 mu paper work lime consider·
be dependable team play·
Eagle Ridge. l"'irls -'~thes
w·
'l,;tU
e s wtlh poSitive' anlludes to abfy We are a low lift fa.c1111y
household 1teme, books, r
wh1ch has reduced our bat*
sewing suppiJes
JOin us In providing outstand- lnJlitle&amp; to almost 0 Stop by
1ng, quality care to our reSI· and 1111 out an appllcat1on
Yard &amp; garage sale, Mason. dents Stop by and fill out and recEMve an mtervtew
4th Street, 9am·5pm, Aug an ApplicatiOn or contact Monday through Friday
1, 2. 3, "Cheap", camper. Hollie Bumgarner. LPN between 9 AM and 4 PM or
gun &amp; lots more
Staff
Development
f
D bb
' - - - - - - -- C d1 at @ 740 _992-64 72 call and ask or e 1e
Yard Sale 957 Broadway St ,
oor n or
Wayland
Statfmg
Middleport, OH
Fnday and come see tor yourself CoordlnatOI' Rockspnngs tS
the difference you can make
On ly Ram Cancels
Ov rbrook" '
A an
equal
opportunity
=~~-~--., at e
employer
PrYi\IIIJ.I'IEs.oo'SALE
-~
Parhctpant of the Dno~g- Free - - - - - - - Work Place Program
McCiures Restaurant (

·------,.1

I-----

litO

r

I

EOE&amp;

-------An Ellcetlent way to earn
Clean Multi family yard sale
Th N A
money
e ew von
Sat 8/4 Sun 815 Across Call Manlyrt 304·882·2645
from
Farmers
Bank
(Pt Pleasant) 9·5 both days AVONI All Areasl To Buy or
Sell Shirley Spears, 304·
Garage Sale GPS electnc
wrench costume jewelry, 675· 1429
tools,

camera , f1Sh1ng
kmves, lots more Thurs Fn &amp; Classii1C8110n of Ad 045 ·
Four fam1ly garage sale, 813 Sate-? 6 Stoneybrook Est 3 Help Wanted
Homt
9am-4pm, g1rls clothmg 3T· mllesoutSandh~l
Health Ald11. Sign On
5T. boy s ciothmg
mos - - - -- -- - - Bonus Home Health Cere
14 many nam e brands Multi Fam1ly-Ne1ghborhood ol SE Oh1o IScurrently hiring
(G ymboree Tdmmy, Lev1, Yard Sale PI Pleasanl, Staff home health a1des- compel·
Polo, OICI Navy, ETC) House
Ad ,
(near 1t1ve wages Call 74Q-662·
women s clothing, Kenmore Fairgrounds) New wood 1222
dryer, toys, m1sc, 31384 wort.:rng tools (large selec- - -- - -- - Noble
Sllmmll
Ad • tlon), furnitu re, m1sc clothmg oa 1ryman needed on Letart
Middleport, Durst Res
(children &amp; adlllts) Fn &amp; sat, Da 1ry Farm send Resumes
_ _
A_:
ug:_3_rd_&amp;_4_th_~.:.·_
3 _ _ _ to Box TSC -26 c/o Potnl
_
9 5 00 3
:~~~y~nhques.flshlng gear New &amp; Used Sale 10 AC Pleasant RegiSter 200 Ma1n
St Pt Pleasant WV 25550
clothes.&amp; etc 255 Adams bOIIdmg 6 m1les out Jerrys
•
St Mason WV
Run Road Apple Grove Alig
1 2 &amp; 3 g.? 304·576-2635
POST OFFICE NOW
Garage Sale ram or shine
HIRING
Augusl 2 &amp; 3, F1ve Pomts Yard Sale Apple Grove Fn &amp;
Avg Pay $20/hr or
area Pomeroy, Wtpple Ad Sat 8-" 5 Fam1ly, 220 Brown
$57K annually
(740)992·2475 name Orand Lane baby &amp; Children name tncludmg Federal Benefits
JUntors s1ze 0·6 women's brand clothing toys game
and OT,PaldTralmng,
size 14 &amp; 16, Chevrolet truck boy 2, !urn , tools, computer,
Vacat 1ans·FTIPT
112-3/4 ton 1990·95 bucket Kenmore shampooer, lots of
1·866·542·1531
m1sc
USWA
seats pius mtsc 1lems

2..,

--- - ·-----~---------

Gallipolis Only) now hlnng
part &amp; full t1me - dayst11ft
avai lable Apply between 10
and
11AM Monday •
Salurday
-------NURSING ASSISTANT AD
Rockspnngs Nursing and
Rehabthtahon Center ts
looking fOI' a lew OOd1cated
people to become a part of
our team We are a 100bed
skrlled fac1111y located 5
m1les tram Pomeroy This IS
a 20 mtnute commute from
Athens and Albany We JUSt
recently Installed a state ol
the art on hne documents·
tlon system Jor the nursmg
asSIStants wh 1ch reduce
paper work 11me conSiderably We offer competitiVe
rates, health dental and
VISion Insurance as well as
a 401K plan We are a low
lift facllty whiCh has reduced
our back lnJunes to almost 0,
Stop by and fill out an apph·
cauon and receive an Inter·
VIew Monday throuon Fnday
between 9.AM and 4PM
Rocksprings IS an equal
opportunity employer

co

Must have clean record,
pass a drug screen and
background check Call 1·
800·275·6359, M F 8 30 to
5 00 EOE MIFION

----""'C'C
Secunly Officers needed 1n
New Haven 'IN $7 66 par
hour, atl sh1fts, F T &amp;P T
Must have clean record,
pass a drug screen and
background check Call 1w
800·275·8359, M F B 30 lo
5 00 EOE M/FIDN

Temporary
Home
Supervisor, DI!Ues mclllde
Prot 1c1ent 1n Microsoft Word
and Excel with good organlzational skills BS 10 Human
SeMces t1eld a plus
Aesponsrble lor schedul,ng
of staff and coordmatlng
d 1ent lnances for a caseload of 35 adults m a MR/00
ReSidential sett1ng
11 you would like to take
advantage of this opportuOI·

:o:"~":'n:g::;:;;=~

j

~

MoN~'Y
TO WAN

Borrow Smart Contact
the Ot11o Division of
Financ1al
Institution's
Consumer
Office of
AffairS BEFORE you raft
nance your home or
ob1aln a loan BEWARE
of requests lor any large
advance payments of
fees or Insurance Call the
Off1ce ol
Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1·866
278-0003 to learn II the
mortgage
broKe r or
lender
IS
properly
l1censed (Th ts IS a publ1c
service announcemenl
from the Oh10 Valley

I,P=u~bl:";h•:ng:C:o:m:pa:n:y)=~

ty, you may apply at 8204
Carla Onve, Gallipolis Oh10 11'1
Mooday thru Friday 8 OOam·
PRo•B.~ONAI
4 OOpm
Am
Equal
SEKVICEi
Opportunity
Employer t..-.,;iiiiiliiiiiiiiio-r

VIM/ON
-------Umverslty of Alo Grande IS
lookmg for expe r1enced
cook , With lull hme hours
and
benef1ts
$9 30·
10 15/hr Please apply at the
caletena

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Wml
1 BBB 582 3345
IU \I I 'I \II

H011m;
toR S\1£

Want1ng someone to ca re
for small dog, In PGi nt
Plea sant area while on 0 Down even with less than
vaca t1on ~phone 304-675· perfect credtt rs available on
2749
thi s 3 bedroom 1 bath
home Corner lot firepla ce
modem krtchen 1acuzl1 tub
Payment around 5550 per
month 740-367 7 129

;;--'--..,.;-;::=-:--,

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

------------ - .- -· - -

�Thursday, August 2, 2007

Thu~a~August2,2007

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydallysentinel.com

ALLEYOOP
&amp;Maher Mower lor on AT'I

104

Tatum

Or.

New Ranch Style llrid&lt; Home. 2
Hawn.WV 3b&lt;l'2ba. Ranch, bedroom~ 1 bedroom axtra
lg.aunroom. 2 car gar. oraat largo, 2 lull baths, on 2 112
area. D: 304-675-3637 E: acres , 3 miles from Point
304.a82·2334
Ple1118111. Owlll!r reloCating,
Mu01 sell. PhOtos/details
3 Bedroom House wt1h bo111, located
online
at
partly furniShed Leon area. www.C&lt;Yb.com (code 17137)
$24,000. Phone 304-674· or call304-675-4235 as!Ong
0132
$128,000

Ranch, 2 K~cllens, FuM - - - - - - Buement, 9+ Acres, 2 Car
2007 Doubiewida
Garage, Pool. CIA, 16x30
3BR, 2BA,
Dolacllod Garage, 3 Types Dalivered &amp; Sot $39,999.
of Hooting, 20 min S 01
The Home Sho•.
Ashland Ky
Gallipolis, 30 1o WV on Rt 7,
Tot~ free 888-92B·3426
$165.000. (740)266-6546
90 Clayton M.H. Newly
31!11 IBA in New Haven. remodeled, all electro, 2BA.
Many updalas have bsen 2 tun baths, sifting at 157
75000 304
rrwde. AaklngS
·
• Green Terrace, FT &amp; BK
882-3713 for details.
Porch, 2 metal Buildings,
$17,900.00. Call 741l-645·
• BR,house, 2·5 balhsebo, 1296, can leave on rented
acre, car garage, gaz
,
motor home hookup. lot or move, must see.
Morning Star Ad In Racine. - - - - - - - Aaklno s135,000 . Call 225- Great used 2005 3 bedroom
16x80 with vinyl/shingle.
264•1055
Must sell. on•· $25,995 wi1h
~AAA
dell
Gall (740)385-:4367
''
"'""' SQ. ft., brick ranch, 8,
very.
·
room~ 2·~11. 2 1r.1 ·blh, 2· ~-~~!'!"!!"!!~-·
~-s. 2·flra places, large
-··~
patio w/awnlng, Middleport
c&gt;ut of. nocld plano, qutot
nel~ood. details call
NEW
4 Bad
(740)992-4197
.,..
Sbd
2ba
GeiHpollo
Faracloourel Buy lor
... 111111111
SM,IOOI
5%dn,
_
20yre08%. More homoo
·lrvm $11t/mol For loco!
. . .lU.1212111
109
::::::- call 80CH59-4
mymldwoo11\onro.com

·HUIE
2008

•••,988

$213.

4 bedroom. 2 S1ory hOUse,
very spacious &amp; clean, new
carport, large bedroqm, eat·
in 1&lt;11Chen wi1h new cabinet&amp;,
$635 per month, (74019492303

Attlntionl
Local company offering MNO
DOWN PAYMENT" programs fol' you 10 buy your
home Instead of renting.
···100% flnancing
• Less than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment caul~ be the
same as rent.
Mortgage
Locators.
(740)36Hl000

Gt

All NII..W.Idvertlllng.
In thll newepaper 11
IUbflct to the Flderal
Fllr HOUIIng Act of 1i88
which mllkel "ltltglil to
.,.,.... ".ny
pNfelwnce, llmhltlon or
dl10rimlnadon IHIMd on
1110e, color, reiiSIIon, MX
famll•l.utu• or .,.uonlll
origin, or •ny Intention to
n.Q lny IUCh

New 3 Bedroom homea from
$214.36 per month, Includes
many upgrades. deiNery
&amp;
·
sat-up. (740)385-2434
Nice used 3 bedroom home
vinyVshlngl•. Will h~p With

,..

dslivery. 740·385-4367
OBC Modular (LXM803)
special
order
only
52,840.00dellvered to your
location. Colt'l Mobile
Homoo 4 miles east of
Athens on Rt 50132. PH :
800·466-4687 or 592·1972.
• 87 s
9 10 4
M·r,
·
"Wh · · at.: 1
ere you ge your
money's worth~
OWNER FINANCING
Nice ll2 singlewldaS
From $1,800 down
payment
Gary (7401 828·2750

Ell"' VIew
Apartments

::;c:.;..._____

4 sate or rent, 5 mile lrom
Centenary or 7 from Rio
Grande. 3 Bedroom, Patriot,
Cap. &amp; No Pels. (740)3792540
-------AttanUon1
Local company olfering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro· ·
grams lor you 10 buy your
.•
.
homelnsteadolrenllng. '
• 100% finencinQ
• La&amp;&amp; than partoct credn ::--:---:-:----accepted
Gracious Living 1 and 2
A
• Payment could be the·~ 8 ectroom pta. at Villag e
·same as rent.
Manor a~ Riverside Apts. ln
Mongaga
Locators. Middleport, from $327 to
(740)367-0000
$592. 74G'992·5064. Equal
Housing "-··~ ·nity.
Duplex-2BR •
downtown
v"""'w
tocatio.n. $420/mo plus dop. Immaculate 2 bedroom
N
.Call8am·5pm 446-o332
apar1men1 ew carpet &amp;
cabtnals, rroshtv patmed &amp;
House for Aentr'Sale, 3 BA. decorated, WID hookup.
1 BA, 112 basement, Spring Beautiful country setting.
Valley Area. $550hno, HUO Mul1 see 10 appreciate.
Accepted, (740)441·9650 or $400/mo. (6141595-7773 or
(740)709-6337
1 ~ 79 •••••

e

·

t

~
----.,...---- r10
HUD HOMES! 3bd only
$21,900.
Mora
1·4bd
haines ovollablol lrom

;=::;;::===~
llol.m
FOR RENr

L.,--oiiliiiiili;;.,_,J

1 possibly 2 Br House in
New Haven. 5325 /month,
$J 25Jdeposit No Pets.
(3041 B82.3652
- - - - -- - 2 bedroom executive house,
new construction, fully furnished, new refrigerator,
stove. dishwasher. washer &amp;
dryer. large wrap around
porch, full basement, 1 car
garage, · total electric with
central air, very specious.
private drive with parking,
$1,t00 per month. serious
calls only (740)949·2303

2BA house. Kit, DR, FA
$400/mo. tBR mobile home
$250/mo. Oplion to buy, land
contract. 256·5816

New home in Gallipolis. 2br,
2 bath w/whi rlpool tubs,
large LA on 3 acres mil,
$87,500. 740-446-7029

In Pomeroy Houoo tor rent! 3
Bd .•2 bath, newly remod·
aled, total electric. 740-843·
5264.

" •• -

r

=~~

br. lurnlshed apartment, r$800eally
old
9':'11\s
FOR RENr
• deposn &amp; relerenc... no '::-:~-:-~:-3_
~-:-pels, (740)992.0165
CKC Toy Rat Terriers, Clloc.
2 bedroom mobile hOme In
&amp; Wh~e. 181~ docked, cur·
New 2BFI apartments.
Middlopo~. $325 per monfh, Washer/dryer
hookup, rent Bho18, $250. 740-645$325 deposit, no pets, 1
6857 or 379·9515.
etavelrefrigarator Included. - - - - - - - year lease. no cells after Also, unlls on SR 180. Pels German R011wollers. 3 f, 1
740
50_39_ _ _ WeiOomel (740)441·0194.
_
gp_m_l_
_ 199
_ 2_._
11
· 1st
m. 8 coma
serw, par2 BR, 1 BA Mobile Home, all Nice 2 Bedroom Apartment ants on premises, $150m. &amp;
elactr~. $3-n; deposit/ $375 In Point Plsesenl wnh al $180 I, (740)992.0219
month. NO PETS! 304-674• kitchen appliances. gas fur· Golden Pheasants, red
4633
nace,A/CandWasherDryer hens, $15 each, yellow,
3 BR, 2 BA, Dou~ewide, No hookup, $325 + $200 males $15 each: Csll dUcks,
Pots,
$47Simo,
$475 Deposit 304·675·6375 or $5 aach: Rudy shell ducks
deposit. Close to RVHS. 804-Sn-8621
male $45 or trade for pair of
(740)367-7025.
Tara
TownhOuse mandarins, (740)985-4202

':==;,;;::==:
H&amp;H

'---'=~-=~---

,

r

VFREG~e~~
LUU&gt;OAO&gt;

•

2 becl'oom apt in downtown
Pomeroy, elc., gas &amp; water
paid, $375 month, no pets,
$300 dep., (740)42 3-- 1234

h

G/.OIALIZATioN

EV~Il IN~NT

..,.,.;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.
by

Sunnybrooksleeps
30ft 6,
camper.
Froni1Mng,
queen
bed, many extras. Excellent
condition. 304-882•3922,
evenings or woekonds.

1993 29' Jamboree motor
home by Fleetwood, EKe
Cond, Low miteage, sleeps
6.8 people, vary good condl·
lion, AIC, Awning, generatpr
&amp; much more, $"13,SOO
- 1
"'' ·
2
080

· (330) 34o- S~, ,,\;
·-19jl5 301l .Fieatwood Tirry,.
very good condi11Qn •. ~c.
heater , queen si~. bed,
stove, fridge, micrpW8~ 1 ·
stereo, flat sere~. TV.
Sleeps &amp;-8, comes ' wllh 3
day·weekend at
Forti ·
Lake In Hillsboro, Ohio tot
Labor Day -~- Aaklng
$7300. 740-266·8729

.

~!~
8·2

'•

BARNEY

'

WELP ...

YORE WoRRIES
ARE OVER II

Marca• Coatrucllon

YOUNG 'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

and len•al ContrHIIDg •'
•
St. Rt. 248 Cheater, Otllo
Mike W. Marcum, Owner

\I

'\1"

V.C YOUNG Ill
l!iJ,' ,, ;

i'
I

&gt;11• I I \

11 '

I I I I 1-..

I " 11 " 11

IH 111111

\ !It\ I "11 ln1 ~
lll llt tnl 1 ~ 1 111

740-985-414~

()'II(

'\&lt;

THE BORN LOSER

( , II , I . ' I -..

";o c.Lto-.1:1'0, t'fo\ ~~!
W~':&gt;

cl1 hll _

•

'J&amp;L
Construction
• VInyl SldlnQ
• Replacement
Windows
• Roaftng

• Decks
•Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:

JamesKeaaeell
742·2332

r~;;:;;;~;.::5
$3SAScoop

l'·Post 6ft. $3.29
Wide Variety of

Lawn Seed,
Fertilizer and
Showmaster Show

Feeds

t&gt;ltM.lZ-1 _ _,

t'fo\ '5TNt\fi~C.!

Residential &amp; Commercial

1':&gt;

11! 'I •

I I I II

.....," '' I h11t~t ...

WV038725

I

~~

~ •

••

RooflnSIA Gutterw
VInyl Siding I palnUng
Plllo 11\11 Porch Deck•

I

M·CAMmRsOTOR
..

~~.

ANYwttelle.

Trimming
.
&amp; Removal

NwG•r•gee
EIRtrtcll l Plumbing

miles
since new,price
$19,000 OBO cau lor

Crook

.I'Vf NfV~Il INO#lf&lt;l~l&gt;
AIOIJT MY JOt
1
GOING OVfllSeAS ••• ~~~·
/ NONf OF MY JOBS . ! ,

/..ECTU~E:

Rernoct.tlng

2005 H.D.Fat Boy cus1om
maroon
w/embossed
flames, t of 200 made, BOO

Sunsat

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

·ToNIGHT'S

Room,Addition• &amp;

1996 Chevy S10 Blazer LT,
4ic4, Leather, Air, PW, PS,
Keyless entry, 4.3L, 149,000
mllas, $3,000; 4M8 Trailer,
Alum Toolbox. Diamond
Plato Dec!&lt;. $500 (740)441·
1660 .
--------98 Ford EXj)odHion. Ieath.,.,
3rd row seat, Great con.
Please caii«S-9664.

06

Opening lead:

Call Gary Stanley @
740· 742·2293
Please leave messa e

FOR SALE
..__ _iliiiiiiiiiiioo.

·r

740-992-5929 .
740-416-1698
~~~:;;;;~;;~=====

Office

"i'll~ ~ &lt;.0011.1~

,._ ~T I&gt;U. 1».'&lt;! ,__.-,

W~1"51E .,

;;ww.E.TI~
$COLI&gt;(',() l)'f

IF~TTO

t

AA"&lt;~rn'l' 1

740~416-1834

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

'TI6E IT IS I-lOW!

TU~TI\E

OIJE.~OO!

tract.

O

Astro.Graph

(740) 742·2377

we Deliver To You I
PEANUTS
MAVBE '(OU SHOULD GIVE VP THIS INSANE LOVE
AFFAIR. .. JVST LET THINGS HAPPEN ..THAT'S WI-IAT
I'VE DONE WITI-I M'( SWEET eABBOO .•.

I'M NOT VOUR
SWEET BABBOO!

RoCkY

r

ilr------.,I

::-:=:..:_=:....___

r10

David Lewis
740-992-6971

HOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

ComlrHKC,.IA RNifMnll•l

Yourlocltl Term"- a
Pelt Control Compeny
(740) 682-6244
740 418-7509

SUNSHINE CLUB

Hill's Se ll
Storage

ROBERT
BISSELL

29670 Bashan Road

IINmUCTII

Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

00... 1~-~f.RE.'S .AJST QfJI;

.SIL:E AOO ~'.s BIAS

PUBLIC NOTICE
withdraw the above
NOTICE: lo hereby collateral prior to eale •
given that on Saturday, Further, The Farmers
Auguat4,2007 8110:00 Bank and Savings
a.m., 1 public eale will Company reearvea the
be held at 211 W. right to re)act any or all
Second St., Pomeroy,. bide submitted.
Ohio. T1111 Farmers The above described
Bank an'd Savings · collateral will be sold
Company Ia seiiing lor "aa. ls·where Is", with
cash In hand or certl· no
expressed
or
fled check the follow· Implied
warranty
lng collateral:
given.
1983 Harley Davll!son For further Informs·
1H01BGK29DY016239 lion, or for an appoint·
The Fanners Bank and mant to Inspect collat·
Savings
Company, eral, prior to sale date
Pomeroy,
Ohio, contact Cyndla, Ken or
roaerves the right to Randy at 992·2136.
bid at this sale, and to (7) 31 (8) 1, 2

2 BA house in ,Kanaug a
$375 + Dep. Water/Trash Pd.
740-388-0173 or 367·7015.

,

~OIHER .

I

•New Homes
• Garages

Glblon
5 Kind of
27 Blame
1tove
:10 Gnnola kin 6 Junatrau

(Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -

25 Lox IQUrcl 49 Poyche

- tree

28 Sporty

truckl

7 Fulfftlod
8 Ught tan

32 C'lndn
carrier
33 UnderII Gift for Dod
handed
(2 wda.J
37 - Paule&gt;
12 tlblots
40 Eggy drlnkl

17 - de guerre
20 Tuna salad
Ingredient .
people
21 El Greco' a
T1n
city
--.
22 Be grouchy
Oola'o guy 23 RK wrlte.W
Evereot
org.
lighting
24 U11 bath
Really .,gry
powder

home
39 Enerilatlc

..-.a

50

~Ill

52 Volleyblll
1llad
54 Night flyer

1~ k':"t.:~:•

38 Shoal'o

45
46

51

29 Clll!lr
31 Kind of

41 Damascus
I&lt;&gt;CIIe
42 llobvcrilgo
43 Long otory
44 Rualon
name
47 MIIICIIculotsa
48 Plnbal
no-no

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lule Campoe

-In q-"',_,- ·""

CtloOityCipht&lt; coypk&gt;gmiOJ ..... Irom
Eactl
llle clpl'llt .... tor IIIOfllt

onlll-'

Todlr/s dUf: Cllip0/8 Y

," M' J 0 X X M Z B 0 H D V, DB L 0 0 E lrl Z A
WOZAGVDIU
FOZWU

PGOEDZU DIR DB RFG

DB BDDXU. XGR'U UROVR

PMAF RCEGPVMRGVU."

• BVOZL X ,

PVMAFR
P~EVIOUS SOLUTION - ·sc~nco is an edged tool, wnh l&gt;!lich men play like
children, and cuilheir own fingers." · Physicfsl ArthurS. Eddington

T=~:~~T S@·ll-~lA-cZ£~s·

WOIO
lAIII -

- - - - - UIIMI ., ClAY I . POt+AN
•

Rearrange ltrttrs of tMe
four

!Crambitd worcio b•

low to form fovr 1lmpl'e words.

S LU J TY

IIII1

edge.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - leave
nothing to chance, and you wil have tittle
trouble managing a s iluetlon fer yourael:

or another th8t has been problematic.for
everyone else • • '(Qur reeuils will be
impressive. .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - You can
usually handle situations be Her when
you act lndependendy of others, yet all of
your greatest successes are likely to
come abou t through partnership

I

CAB I S
" ·Grinning a fellow told
I

..
I I' I I "

One of

redecorating a room.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - If there Is an
Important matter that needs negotiating
Or delicate handling, you're the person to
oversee lt. Instead of, depending upon
another to do so, use that dip!omacy you
posseS&amp;.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - What
_ lnspir8s othere to slap forward and exert
some eHort on your behalf is the considerate and solicitous manner In which
you've treated them. Keep up the good
attitude.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23· Dec. 21) You're a quick study, sa check out that
information or know ledge you need to be
able to acquire something big. Bits of
wisdom you possess will give vou the

1

0

colleague, "On payday we alweys
start our gounnet dinner with

I

A B R E RL

·

·j

cream of -·-· soup."

t-.,,Ms~,~T~..;;...~r'-'11-;6-J G) Co~plere

tho chuckle . quoted
by hilln~ In fhe ml,.lng W&lt;Jrds
t...._...-t-..L....J-...__, ygu diVtlop from ltlp No. 3 below.
_

A

~

•

•

.

_

_

NUMBERED LElTERS IN
THm SQUARES

PRINT

UNSCRAM6LE ASOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWtR

8 ~ 1- 0 7
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
lieroic - Grass - Fjord • Unwell· WHEN it GOOFS
I have decided lhat this country needs a computer that
will shed tears WHEN it GOOFS.
ARLO &amp;JANIS

arrangements.

•Complete
Remodeling

M0·•2·16J1
Stop &amp; Compare

GARAELD

Manlav'a
Recycling

..

Qj,!, GRE:A'I'.

A &amp;AU. OF
I,IARN I-lAVlNG'
AN 1Pel'l'l'l1tr'
CRI515

.',

Advertise
in this
space
for
$60 per
month

~Y..tr'S

ALWAYS

SIDE.

For

ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!

26 Gracaful

your better assets will be yoor uncanny
ability to upgrade or transform those
things that are outdated. TheY co uld be
anything from improving e relationship to

· 70 Pine Street • GalllpoUs
446.()()()7

I \

I "Columbo"
llmHI
star
16 Concluda
2 DII{IUIIIng
18 Lerilon
3 Dalal
It Buttonhole•
Lama'o city
23 Augment
4 Brooko or

pleasurable pursuits than you previously
~ve. One of the reasons will be the big
in-1provement you'll see In your financial
pk:tura., wtllch adds to your blithesome
spirit.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - If you know or
unden~ta nd ·something better th11n those
with who m you're deaNng, don't hide
your light under a bushel. Your knowl·
edge will be greatly appreciated . and
rewarded.
VI~GO

~ •""~t)PI:"i.,111'!ij"'!lj•:....

IS The -the

You're likely to enjoy much more time lor
·

• Home Oxygen
·• Portable Oxygen
• Homeml System
• Helios System .

DOWN

By Bernice Bede 0101

" DIED I'IA't' '1"",
l'l'l&amp;." · ·

Reliable &amp; Experienced
Call Dennis Bryant

$180: Sofa &amp; Loveoeal sols, i&lt;teler Built· Vlllley·Bison· 99 30ft 'Sunnybroo~ lrallor
$400; Drive a little· save a Horae
and
LivestoCk

. . ._. .-.,

-'llrllldlr:

Fridoy, Aug. 3, 2007

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

loamper, .12ft olde out. Good
lot, Mollohan, 202 Clark Trelf_...
Loadmax· cond. 740·446·.8759 H no ·
Chap~ Rd, Bidwell. 3ae. Gooseneck, Dumps, &amp; answer leave a message
a173
Utility· Aluma Aluminum
'- I I J( I ....
2 BR in ROdney, WID, r!:lr~~
Troll.,.. B&amp;W Goosenad(
fridge,stove,water/sewerltra
~~r!:S
Hitches·
Trailer Parts. iii~;;;~~;;;-.-, 26 Years E•perleilce
sh included. No Pets. Dep ...._ l'fJ.r.A'-'nt·lll ..uax.
Carmichael
Trailers.
lloME
req. 446·1271 or 709·1657
1740;446•2412
IMI'RovEMENl1!
5 Rm &amp; Be
$500 Coupon
t.,.,.;iitiiiiiiiiiiii•
s
th, Kanauga
BASEMENT
$450, waterfTrash Pd. 1 BR
Hotl\lb Outtetll
LivmocK
·n
Port
1
'dg
stov
1
.
1iop
Cueity!W
.
arran!•
Ml~on
WATERPROOFING
t
er, n e,
a urn.
,
Water~rash
Pd $350 ••• Flea Mkl SIS 606-326-0777
Unconcfttlonal lifetime guar·
1
"
•
• .;IOQ"
6 year old paint horse mare. antee. local references fur·
01
7
0 367 70 15
3
.,._ _ _r__:__._.:;_:__ _ _ 3 s'eiko watches, greatcon· white with tan markings,
LADY BUGS
nlshod. Es1abllshed 1975.
Accepting applications for 2 dition; radar detectors; tela· some black In mane and tall,
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446- BUGGING YOU?
BR, t BA apt, Slave, fridge, phone~ boom boxes; pi\Js very pretiy, nice rider, kid
0870, Rogers Basement
WID included. Water &amp; other misc. electronics; safe, $700 OBO. Yeanlng
h's !hat time ol yearforlatl
Waterproofing. ·
Garbage paid. No pets, very priced fair, {740)992-3176
treatment service good for~
mare paint, standard bred
days. August thru October
dark brown color. Calm and r--nice,
$500/ clean &amp; attractive.
$500 Hard to 11.nd • 20 &amp; • 2
Treatment lor ladybUgs,
halter
broke,
pretty
in
mo, l.st mo +
Griswold SkNiets, Excellent,
spiders, anls lit wa&amp;P.J.
Sec.dep. required. Available $t100; Also have a "Keen motion. $200 OBO. Call Bob
7116107· Apply w~hin. 1743 Kutle( push I.Wn mower, a1 379·9445 or 645-6829
McCormick's
Centenary Rd, Gallipolis. No very rare, nice, $295. 7 AQHA Registered Quarter
Extermination
Inc.
_
P_
ho_n_e _
c_
al_ls~P_Ie_a_
se_._ _ (740)533·3870
Horses lor safe or trade. Gall

Norman Fischer, 1 poet and Zen
Buddhist priest. said. 'We all need to
have a creative outlet - a window, a
space - so we don't lose track of ourselves."
· Bridge Is a.creative outlet, but hcan also
be a fonn of ooca~sm. You ge1 sci lo81 1n
the deals that you lorget abou1 ths real
world.
Wh~e you are a defender In that dream·
land, do not forge11o keep cloeo track 01
declarer's hlgh·card ponls. This Is, 01
course, much easier If he h&amp;f made a
quantitative bid, like a one·nc-tru.mp
opening. But even wnhout !hal banolh,
you can usuany gsta roBSQn&amp;bleldoa of
his hand strength.
Agalns1 three hearts, WoSI loada tho
spade ace: lour, nine. three. West ca&amp;h·
oa1he spade king: live, aiK, oeven. How
should West confinua1
Ills not normally rigll1to rabid o five-card
oul1, but Weal's spades loof&lt; Ike a six·
bagger.
To defeat 1ho dodarer, Eao1·Wo81 mu01
"'n five lrlci&lt;s. East's high-low In spades
showed his dou~eton. Sci, Wsel can
take a third spade trick and has the hoan
ace In tho background, Whora iolho fifth
winner?
·
·
11 South's two-haart advance ~ sane,
East Is (almost) daslhu1e. WsSI's only
raallslic hope lor success Is h~ singleton
dls,rnond . At !riel&lt; throe, We81should shlft
tb tho diamond three.
Declarer wins ln his hand with the queen
and plays a low hsart, bul Wort rushes
In w~h !he ace and leads the ape,de j8ck.
East should see what is required. He
ruffs 1ha lr~ (assuming ho sla~od wllh
two trumps!) and returns a diamond,
alloWing Wos11o ruff and dofeet !he con·

r.!t~

13 Add oppoolle
14 Draomol

42

4 A ·

Keep tracking those
high-card points

QIG NATE

58

36 Bleachers
level
37 Put down
turl

West North East
18
2t
Pass
26
3. All pass

All iypes of concrete
Owner- Rick Wis\'.

~~~:::~~vailable!

iiiF~:;:;:;4x4~=~.,

~-lls-740-949·2217

JOR

Wise

t d Q al'
mp .an
u lty
Work
•Reasonable Rates
•Insured

Pure breed Lab puppies

Ir
5639tor~.:_~
. ~.., I.._.......... ~
r ,...~RFNr

·-

~ry-tale

35:::.1111

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: Both

•Pro

05 Expedition, XLT Sport
whl18/gray Int. 4WD, 3rd
row•seat,Ex·Cond 41 ,000/m ,
-675-4066
19 500

304·895·3274
::--,-'-:-:--,-,:--,Re9·1stered Fawn p ugs
' 9
·
1h
u
ld
ks
wee o tn e 1¥18900 area
$550 Coli (443(350-4011

740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

.

SUVs
co .....
~, · -"'FOII.iliiii&lt;J~U£iiiiii--r

$400: all AKC &amp; vel ri404 WMOTOIIHEIURSCYOBJ/
,
cf\ocked, (740)696·1085

Gallipolis

suo~ ::=:
~~ ~=::!!===~~~~~~~=~: ~
~==~===·

-o

Hartlord, deplref required, Twin Rivers Tower Is accept·
No pelS $350/mon1h 304· ing applicalions lor waiting
p76-4037
list for Hud-subslzed, 1· br,
Mobile Home tor Rani, 2 BR, apartment, tor
the
PJC, HUD Approved, T01al elderly/disabled call 675·
Electric, Rent InCludes trash, 6679
Equal
Housing
water &amp; sewer, $325/mo, Opportunity
$325 deposn, Call (740)992·
FOR"-RENr·~
""'~

Street •

· Seamless Gutters
Rooling, Siding, Gutters
In -• &amp; B··~
7'"653 9857

••--~.,...--.,

~ot
pu~les,
u 'dan Retrl-·er
....
r-r
MIF, $400·, Doberman
Pinscher puppies. 2 malesblack/rust, $400; Blchone
Fr~o puppies, M/F all whne,
$350; small Pocx;lle puppies,
MIF, black, black/while,

55 Century

32 Dlnnerwn
34 Numb, II I

• 87 3
•Jl0 765
• Q4
• AK 2

I Stanley Tree-

.

Apanmen1S, Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2
Bath, APult Pool &amp; Baby
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
No Pals, Lease Plus
security Deposit Required,
Clean, 2br, 1ba, AC In (740)446-3481 .

-Beautiful River View in
Kanauga· Ideal for 1 or 2
people, references, No pets,
Lac. 5 mi. from Gavin.
(740)441.0161

South

GuHer1ng
•

4x4, 8"1111, 35'11rea. Call 740441 149

r

MONTY

r

m•les, wnne and 8/p. 6 wks.
Roomy 2BR
balh, Mlddlopo~ . Beech Sl., 2 br. UTD on ahols and _ , .
attached garage·no pols, furnished apartment, ulll~los lngs. $350. 740"787-4875
quiet area. $425.1ilo. Ref &amp; paid, deposn &amp; references. AKC Y&lt;&gt;&lt;klo puppies, 3
Deposl required. 446-2801 no pels, (710)992·0165
temale, 14wks $800, 3 sm.
Mlddlepon, Nor1h41h Ave., 2 males, (I ) 11 wks, $800 2 99 SilveradO 1500 Eltl cab,

'
$174/mol Buy 3bd HUD
$199-1
5%dn, homel5%dn, 20yrs o 8%. New Haven 1 Br. Furnished Pole Bams 30x50x10 after 7pm. 740·256-6003
20yro08%. For llotlngo For Millings 800-559-4 109 Apt., has WID. No Pels, Dep. $ 6,495
Frse
Delivery
I00-55t-41Dt xF144
KI70B.
&amp; references. 740-992-0165. (937)718·1471
In Syracuse - 2800sq.ft .
quality built multi-level brid&lt;
home, maintenance free.
Nice quiet neighbomood. 34 bedrooms, 2 112 bath with
hardwood trim throughout.
U.shaped kitchen wl1h 40' of
cabinets. Wood burning fireplace. 2 112 car detached
garage. Nicety landscaped
.60 aaes lot. Immaculate
condition. Low utilities.
Selling price $219,000. Call
740·441·5171 . Shawn by
apptonly.
-------Land Contract: (2) 3
Bedroom homes. Payment
about the same as rent,
10% dOwn. 603 Brownell,
Middleport· $49,900; 152
Gavin St, Rodney· $57,900.
Will work with you on Oown
payment. (740)446-4543

Fl'tl8 Eetlm81es

740-367.0536

.,
2002 Csdlllac Esc8iado
EXT. Stiver Sand, ' only
11900 mlloo, all w!leol drive
fully loaded Olcludlng sun·
roof, AM/Frn/CD/caseetto.
SeriOus lnqulrea. 446-7529
daytime,
446-6748
evenings.

•--•Gooo;iiiiiii-•

OOuble/Single trailer lot for
rent off 554, Close to new
HS, $150/mo. (740)388·
B5Q8

740-367:.0544

..__ _FOII.iiiil.""""'iiiiiji.-·;,1

I

Grande on private dead end
road· $29 •900 080· Call
245-5197

TiuJacs

[15

r

- - - -- - - 5 Acres MIL along Old
Covered Bridge Ad. Located
in. Ewington, Vinton, County,
OH. Call806·353-0990
BEAUTIFUL 5 acros atop hill
with mature pine and oak
rreesl Gallia water tap
Installed and 2006 septic
permit. 5 mites from Rio

Local Contractor

~;p-~~---"'i·
w

rio .

Ranch Stylo house wnh 4
bedrooms. living roam, din·
ing room, kitchen, large fam ·
ily room, central air, gas heat
and 1 fireplace. Addition of a
largo Florida room comp\elely cedar opens onto
patio &amp; pool area. Heated in
ground pool enclosed by 11'1·
vacy lenclng and lalf"d~
scaped. Finished 2 car
garage at1ached to house
and linished &amp; heated 3 car
garage
unattached.
Excellent condition ready to
move in. $255,000.00, Call:
(740)949·2217
-------House on Mason Street,
Clifton, WV Call 740-992·
2090 Monday through Friday
for information

Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

70 ·Pine

118-112-0'1

10 54

• K Q4
t A K J 10 8
• 83
\\ ~ st
E1st
• 9 6
•A KQJ2
• A92
• 8 3
• 3
·•
• 97652
•Qt0' 95
.,J164

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

.

Roofing, Siding,
.. Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,

304-693-0544
or 304-593·
132 6

IZ'lll""'--::-.-;.....-.,

o.._

••

96 Neon. runs and looks
g(eat, low proflfe tires and
rims, ground oflects kit, nice
stereo, must sol $2000. Csll

t.op

•

~···ttidH:•

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

95 Bulc:f&lt; Riviera, Lt. Blue,
"
Loaded, Lea11\er, Heated
1
7wk female CKC Yorkie. Seal, Sunrool,
41 ,000
Shots, wormed, tall docked, mites,·Supar Charged, Nice,
dow cl...ed, POP, $700. Clean, Must Sea. $3j00.
(740)441·7867
(740)208·96731ocel call.

Commercial building "For
_
Renr 1800 square teet, off Canning tomatoes, bell &amp;
diiiCI'Imln•tlon."
Trailer for sale, $2.000,
(2) Furnished Rooms tor ·atroet parking. Great loco· hoi peppers. picked, bring
(740)992·5858
Rent $75 per week 304,.895- tlonl 749 Third Avenue In containers, Rowe Farm,
Tht. .....,.per will not
knowingly ~eeept
Why Pay rent???
3185
Gallipolis. Ren1 $325/mo,
lldv.tiMmenlll for rul
I \In I "I 1'1'1 II"
Clayton Single Wideslll
Call Wayne (404)458-3802
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apanmants
•tltll which I• In
Starting at $225.00
,\ I I\ I " H H I,
for Rer.rt, Meigs County, In Prime commercial space tor
vlalltlon of the l1w. Our
per momh W.A.C.
......... hlreby
town, No Pets, Deposit rent at Springvelley F'taza.
Callladaylll
tO
,..~F-ARM_
lnformed · th~t •II
Required, '(740)992·5174 or Call645·2192.
1·B88·928·3426
~armuu
dwelllnQI•dv•rtiHd In
(740)441.0110.
. ------Trailer space $200 month,
tl'lll ntWIIMIPff .,.
1 and 2 bedroom apart· water turnlshed, Ohlo Aiuer 0'11 Financing· 36 Mos.
IYIIIIble on In eqUIII
ments, furnished and unfur- Road, P1. Pleasen1 Cl1y lim·
GPI&gt;Orlunlty-o.
available now on John
AND BUILDINGS
nished, and houses In its (304)776·5656
Deere Z Trak Zonllllmo &amp;
Pomeroy and Mlddlaport,
\IIIU II\ \ill' I
5.99% Fixed Rate on Jom
For sel011and oon~act. 3 BA 32X48 Metal Bldg. lor rent,
house in Galiipolle, WID across from the new SGHS. security daposn re(Jllre&lt;l. no ~~~::---;....;;;~ Deere Oalo" Carmichael
Equipmenf (740)448-2412.
-99:::2:.·.::22:.1:::8·:..___
Jlovsmow
connection $1500 down $500/month. Csll 740-256- o;pe:::ts::..:..740:.:....:
$400/mo or ren1 $475/mo.
•-~~~~~-.,
1 bedroofl&gt; furnished apt. In
Caterpillar 0 ·5 Doze;r '73
Also 1 BR In Gallipolis $750
~
downtown Pomeroy, ale. r '
with Cargo F-50 winch with
down $200/mo or rent
gas &amp; water, cable paid, Berber Ca1pet. _$5.95/yd; manual transmission 12'
iiio-rl $350 per month, no pet; Vinyl, $4.95/yd, Drive-a-llt11e anglo blade can be seen a1
$250/mo.Call Wa~ne 40.4.· · - - ·
456-3802 lor info.
'
$300 dap, (740)423-1234
Beve alot, MollOhan Carpal, Old Farms, Sla1a Rou1a 62
10 acres for sale located on
·
House for sale in Racine Broad Aun Roac:l. i1 New 1 BR Apts. 2 locations. Ref &amp; 76 Vine St GallipoliS. OH. Ohio River Road, Pl.·
Ploasan1 Serial 94J2036
area. Approx. 4 acreS, all Haven,
wv
$34,500 Dep. required. No pets. 740· (740}446-7444
professionally landscaped. (304)773-5881
~44:-6-_29:-5_7_ _: - : - - - Full Size MaHrotS &amp; 8/S, $25,000 304·776-5656
p,.,.renceo, llmltltlon or

I

·----~~Swl--_.1

AKC Boston Terrier Pupa. 14
wka old, male. Parents on
d
prom. wHh pe lgraa, vel
chkd, 2nd shols, wonmed.
"tV'
7'"368·9325
AKC German Shepherd.
pupa.
bloodline, Ja·••
breed both parents on prem·
iseo, $3SO!IIrm (304)il7S·
5724
AI&lt;C Mini Schnauzers, all

RENTALS •'SALES
SERVICE •.FREE DELIVERY
MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

I

ilr---=-...--.,
-:::-:----~---

North

I

omo

~ ~.

:.:..:...c:.:..._____

Rental Property fe1r sale,
1970 12&lt;60. 2 bdrm., all
elec., central air on 50'x248'
lot In Harrisonville. Currently
rented, new lease signed
711/07. well maintained,
$12,000 OBO, (740)742·
4011

rJ;~~li:riii"l

53 Hat

1 Thin coating
J)lanta
5 Yawned
56 Eddloa
10 Parfumed 57 "Boating"
12

fr"""•;

------,--- 1-------· ~ _MOBILE lloMEs I
8011 WilloW Lane Racine 31o
4 Bd•. 2 both wal~ng dislance to scllooi.Cuiol neighborhood.$65,000.740·949·
2651 or 418-4379.

Phillip
Alder

Eo-.

7906
c..:.:c.:._______

888-92fl.3426

ACROSS

rio

3 Bedroom House in
Syracuse. $500/monlh +
dell08it No Pela. (304)6755332 weekendS 740-591 ·
.:;02~65------:Burdone Addn. srn 2 br
30
House, new carpel &amp; paint
$42S month + depo&amp;U No
PelS Rei required 304-675-

3 br., 2 !ull bth., 20x38 great·
room, cia, blacktop driw, lg.
pamng area, all new wfn. .._____
dowsldoors/rool &amp; septic, .
laminated hardwood Mora
,2007 Clayton
11\roughoul, 24' aboVe
•&amp;oM••
~~~ . 20005Q. F1.
ground pool, additional spot
Slarting at $33.00/sp.ft.! .
lor mot;le home, on 1 aero. NO DOWN Po\YMENT
10&lt;
S
only 115,000, near St.
to qualified buyers.
Rt 143 &amp; St. Rt. 7, (740)696The Home.ShoW
.1227
. Alhlend, KY

3 6&lt; • Bed, 211:1 balh, Br~

4--.

80 Inch - · 13
112 HP, used very Uttte.
Apartment ror ·rent, 1·2
JET
Excotlen1 Condnlon 304·
Bdrm., remodeled, new carAERATION MOTORS
pel, stow &amp; trig., water, Repolrod, New &amp; Rabulft In 882-3421 or 304-682-2550
SBW8r, traah,pd. Mlddeport. StO\*. Calf Ron Evans, 1·
$425.00. No pelS. Ref. 800-537-9528. ·
jjij~;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;
reqwro&lt;~. 740-843-5264.
Al11Ui
Kllcllen Tol&gt;le 7 Chairs (4)
llMIIUful Apia, 1 1 . - new, single bed wlnlght ..__ _RllliiiiiS.iiiiU--,1
!52 Westwood o1Snd (,_), Rocliner and "
Drive, !rom' 1365 10 $560. Sola, Enter181nrnent c.-. 1989 ~~~ GT 5.0. Lots
740·446-2568.
Equal FUll Bed &amp; Drooser, Dryer o h -,- moiot-toappre·
Housing Opportunity. Th18 304-675-Q180
· cia18. ~ ·OBO. 740-256·
insiiMion lo an Equa,t
_
137S
Opportunity Pro~~lder ancr NEW ANO USED STEEL - - - - - - - Em~oyer.
'
Stool Beamo, Pipe Rebar 1997 Ford Eocort, . ou..-001.
• .-.,
For Con&lt;:rt1e
Angle cool air, 5opd, 4dr, gas
CONVENIE"!"Y ' LOCAT· Ch~ Fill Sar. &lt;$~ sever. 740-416-1265
EDa•-DABU!t
,
•
- ' "'1"
Grating
For·· Drillria, 2001 TO\'OIII Camery, V-6, 2
TownhOuB&lt;!
apenments. DrivOWiiya &amp; Walkwoyo."L&amp;L 1Dno color, engine ltart
and/or small houaas FOR Scrap Metalo Opeoo Monday,
,
RENT. Csl (740)441-1 11 1 TUeodav, Wednsedov &amp; remote control, cld charigar,
lOr application &amp; lnlormalk&gt;n.
8am· :30pm. Closed 8 dloc, very nlco, cloon
4
·-•
Inside, loo~ llko new,
Thuraday,
Sllltrmav · &amp; 130416!2-4635
'''
Surdoy. (7~7300
·
2002
Intrepid 94,000
Young wornena clothing fl1r mllea $5,800 304-593-3040
•2&amp;3 bedroom apar1men18 sale, Sizes Small, M, L, 2002 ........1 ·-~ GS. 2
•Csnfral heal &amp; AIC
Prices· $0.25·$3.00, Call
• ·•·· - ~"
•Wasllerldryer hoolwp
anyllmo (740)446-737511 no door, automatic, pciwer
Bn8WOr' leave massage.
steering &amp; brakes, looks &amp;
•Tenant pays electric
runs gres1 low mileage
(304)882-3017
PETs
$3.600 OBO 304-675-4144

3 bedroO'm hOuse In
Pomeroy, large &amp; very clean,
1 1f.1 bath, ale, hardwood
flooR, luH basement wfl car
garage, small bad( yard,
$635. 17401949-2303

NEA Cronvirol'd Puzzle

BRIDGE

GRIZZWELLS

TOCm. IT5 Tit-It:
''

'•

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Because
you'll respond willingly it someone aake
you to do something extra, you'll bG high·
ly thought of by your peers. But It's likely
to be the boss' praise that becomes so
valuable.
ARIES (March 21-A.pril 19) - If you've
got some peraonal business to conduct
with someone. take this person to lunch.
Being in Cot1\livial surroundings will help
Immensely in presenting your case to
him or her.
TAURUS
(April 20-Mey 20) Compensation for uns81fiahness could
be higher than usual. You can discover
this for yourse lf by doing what you ca n
lor others whenever you see a pe rson is
in need of help.
GEMINI (May 2 1·June 20) - Rays of
light began piercing the clouds yesterday, a llowi ng the sun to shine brightly on
all your affairs. New hope co~ ld dispel
what had loOked so bleak for you up until
now.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - What
motivates you won't be of the bread-end·
butler variety; it'll be more tike a chaco·
late cake covered with whipped cream.
Wonderful delights are promised for pos-

itive ectlon.

~ A~\\\~~ t.~~?o\-1

\lOIN \0 ~~~~
11'1. \1\E IJ'l\\.~..-

SOUPTONUTZ

I

--'I'OO'VE !rW.liT
A DOZE-t.l Ti/A€.5.

�Thursday, August 2, 2007

Thu~a~August2,2007

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydallysentinel.com

ALLEYOOP
&amp;Maher Mower lor on AT'I

104

Tatum

Or.

New Ranch Style llrid&lt; Home. 2
Hawn.WV 3b&lt;l'2ba. Ranch, bedroom~ 1 bedroom axtra
lg.aunroom. 2 car gar. oraat largo, 2 lull baths, on 2 112
area. D: 304-675-3637 E: acres , 3 miles from Point
304.a82·2334
Ple1118111. Owlll!r reloCating,
Mu01 sell. PhOtos/details
3 Bedroom House wt1h bo111, located
online
at
partly furniShed Leon area. www.C&lt;Yb.com (code 17137)
$24,000. Phone 304-674· or call304-675-4235 as!Ong
0132
$128,000

Ranch, 2 K~cllens, FuM - - - - - - Buement, 9+ Acres, 2 Car
2007 Doubiewida
Garage, Pool. CIA, 16x30
3BR, 2BA,
Dolacllod Garage, 3 Types Dalivered &amp; Sot $39,999.
of Hooting, 20 min S 01
The Home Sho•.
Ashland Ky
Gallipolis, 30 1o WV on Rt 7,
Tot~ free 888-92B·3426
$165.000. (740)266-6546
90 Clayton M.H. Newly
31!11 IBA in New Haven. remodeled, all electro, 2BA.
Many updalas have bsen 2 tun baths, sifting at 157
75000 304
rrwde. AaklngS
·
• Green Terrace, FT &amp; BK
882-3713 for details.
Porch, 2 metal Buildings,
$17,900.00. Call 741l-645·
• BR,house, 2·5 balhsebo, 1296, can leave on rented
acre, car garage, gaz
,
motor home hookup. lot or move, must see.
Morning Star Ad In Racine. - - - - - - - Aaklno s135,000 . Call 225- Great used 2005 3 bedroom
16x80 with vinyl/shingle.
264•1055
Must sell. on•· $25,995 wi1h
~AAA
dell
Gall (740)385-:4367
''
"'""' SQ. ft., brick ranch, 8,
very.
·
room~ 2·~11. 2 1r.1 ·blh, 2· ~-~~!'!"!!"!!~-·
~-s. 2·flra places, large
-··~
patio w/awnlng, Middleport
c&gt;ut of. nocld plano, qutot
nel~ood. details call
NEW
4 Bad
(740)992-4197
.,..
Sbd
2ba
GeiHpollo
Faracloourel Buy lor
... 111111111
SM,IOOI
5%dn,
_
20yre08%. More homoo
·lrvm $11t/mol For loco!
. . .lU.1212111
109
::::::- call 80CH59-4
mymldwoo11\onro.com

·HUIE
2008

•••,988

$213.

4 bedroom. 2 S1ory hOUse,
very spacious &amp; clean, new
carport, large bedroqm, eat·
in 1&lt;11Chen wi1h new cabinet&amp;,
$635 per month, (74019492303

Attlntionl
Local company offering MNO
DOWN PAYMENT" programs fol' you 10 buy your
home Instead of renting.
···100% flnancing
• Less than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment caul~ be the
same as rent.
Mortgage
Locators.
(740)36Hl000

Gt

All NII..W.Idvertlllng.
In thll newepaper 11
IUbflct to the Flderal
Fllr HOUIIng Act of 1i88
which mllkel "ltltglil to
.,.,.... ".ny
pNfelwnce, llmhltlon or
dl10rimlnadon IHIMd on
1110e, color, reiiSIIon, MX
famll•l.utu• or .,.uonlll
origin, or •ny Intention to
n.Q lny IUCh

New 3 Bedroom homea from
$214.36 per month, Includes
many upgrades. deiNery
&amp;
·
sat-up. (740)385-2434
Nice used 3 bedroom home
vinyVshlngl•. Will h~p With

,..

dslivery. 740·385-4367
OBC Modular (LXM803)
special
order
only
52,840.00dellvered to your
location. Colt'l Mobile
Homoo 4 miles east of
Athens on Rt 50132. PH :
800·466-4687 or 592·1972.
• 87 s
9 10 4
M·r,
·
"Wh · · at.: 1
ere you ge your
money's worth~
OWNER FINANCING
Nice ll2 singlewldaS
From $1,800 down
payment
Gary (7401 828·2750

Ell"' VIew
Apartments

::;c:.;..._____

4 sate or rent, 5 mile lrom
Centenary or 7 from Rio
Grande. 3 Bedroom, Patriot,
Cap. &amp; No Pels. (740)3792540
-------AttanUon1
Local company olfering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro· ·
grams lor you 10 buy your
.•
.
homelnsteadolrenllng. '
• 100% finencinQ
• La&amp;&amp; than partoct credn ::--:---:-:----accepted
Gracious Living 1 and 2
A
• Payment could be the·~ 8 ectroom pta. at Villag e
·same as rent.
Manor a~ Riverside Apts. ln
Mongaga
Locators. Middleport, from $327 to
(740)367-0000
$592. 74G'992·5064. Equal
Housing "-··~ ·nity.
Duplex-2BR •
downtown
v"""'w
tocatio.n. $420/mo plus dop. Immaculate 2 bedroom
N
.Call8am·5pm 446-o332
apar1men1 ew carpet &amp;
cabtnals, rroshtv patmed &amp;
House for Aentr'Sale, 3 BA. decorated, WID hookup.
1 BA, 112 basement, Spring Beautiful country setting.
Valley Area. $550hno, HUO Mul1 see 10 appreciate.
Accepted, (740)441·9650 or $400/mo. (6141595-7773 or
(740)709-6337
1 ~ 79 •••••

e

·

t

~
----.,...---- r10
HUD HOMES! 3bd only
$21,900.
Mora
1·4bd
haines ovollablol lrom

;=::;;::===~
llol.m
FOR RENr

L.,--oiiliiiiili;;.,_,J

1 possibly 2 Br House in
New Haven. 5325 /month,
$J 25Jdeposit No Pets.
(3041 B82.3652
- - - - -- - 2 bedroom executive house,
new construction, fully furnished, new refrigerator,
stove. dishwasher. washer &amp;
dryer. large wrap around
porch, full basement, 1 car
garage, · total electric with
central air, very specious.
private drive with parking,
$1,t00 per month. serious
calls only (740)949·2303

2BA house. Kit, DR, FA
$400/mo. tBR mobile home
$250/mo. Oplion to buy, land
contract. 256·5816

New home in Gallipolis. 2br,
2 bath w/whi rlpool tubs,
large LA on 3 acres mil,
$87,500. 740-446-7029

In Pomeroy Houoo tor rent! 3
Bd .•2 bath, newly remod·
aled, total electric. 740-843·
5264.

" •• -

r

=~~

br. lurnlshed apartment, r$800eally
old
9':'11\s
FOR RENr
• deposn &amp; relerenc... no '::-:~-:-~:-3_
~-:-pels, (740)992.0165
CKC Toy Rat Terriers, Clloc.
2 bedroom mobile hOme In
&amp; Wh~e. 181~ docked, cur·
New 2BFI apartments.
Middlopo~. $325 per monfh, Washer/dryer
hookup, rent Bho18, $250. 740-645$325 deposit, no pets, 1
6857 or 379·9515.
etavelrefrigarator Included. - - - - - - - year lease. no cells after Also, unlls on SR 180. Pels German R011wollers. 3 f, 1
740
50_39_ _ _ WeiOomel (740)441·0194.
_
gp_m_l_
_ 199
_ 2_._
11
· 1st
m. 8 coma
serw, par2 BR, 1 BA Mobile Home, all Nice 2 Bedroom Apartment ants on premises, $150m. &amp;
elactr~. $3-n; deposit/ $375 In Point Plsesenl wnh al $180 I, (740)992.0219
month. NO PETS! 304-674• kitchen appliances. gas fur· Golden Pheasants, red
4633
nace,A/CandWasherDryer hens, $15 each, yellow,
3 BR, 2 BA, Dou~ewide, No hookup, $325 + $200 males $15 each: Csll dUcks,
Pots,
$47Simo,
$475 Deposit 304·675·6375 or $5 aach: Rudy shell ducks
deposit. Close to RVHS. 804-Sn-8621
male $45 or trade for pair of
(740)367-7025.
Tara
TownhOuse mandarins, (740)985-4202

':==;,;;::==:
H&amp;H

'---'=~-=~---

,

r

VFREG~e~~
LUU&gt;OAO&gt;

•

2 becl'oom apt in downtown
Pomeroy, elc., gas &amp; water
paid, $375 month, no pets,
$300 dep., (740)42 3-- 1234

h

G/.OIALIZATioN

EV~Il IN~NT

..,.,.;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.
by

Sunnybrooksleeps
30ft 6,
camper.
Froni1Mng,
queen
bed, many extras. Excellent
condition. 304-882•3922,
evenings or woekonds.

1993 29' Jamboree motor
home by Fleetwood, EKe
Cond, Low miteage, sleeps
6.8 people, vary good condl·
lion, AIC, Awning, generatpr
&amp; much more, $"13,SOO
- 1
"'' ·
2
080

· (330) 34o- S~, ,,\;
·-19jl5 301l .Fieatwood Tirry,.
very good condi11Qn •. ~c.
heater , queen si~. bed,
stove, fridge, micrpW8~ 1 ·
stereo, flat sere~. TV.
Sleeps &amp;-8, comes ' wllh 3
day·weekend at
Forti ·
Lake In Hillsboro, Ohio tot
Labor Day -~- Aaklng
$7300. 740-266·8729

.

~!~
8·2

'•

BARNEY

'

WELP ...

YORE WoRRIES
ARE OVER II

Marca• Coatrucllon

YOUNG 'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

and len•al ContrHIIDg •'
•
St. Rt. 248 Cheater, Otllo
Mike W. Marcum, Owner

\I

'\1"

V.C YOUNG Ill
l!iJ,' ,, ;

i'
I

&gt;11• I I \

11 '

I I I I 1-..

I " 11 " 11

IH 111111

\ !It\ I "11 ln1 ~
lll llt tnl 1 ~ 1 111

740-985-414~

()'II(

'\&lt;

THE BORN LOSER

( , II , I . ' I -..

";o c.Lto-.1:1'0, t'fo\ ~~!
W~':&gt;

cl1 hll _

•

'J&amp;L
Construction
• VInyl SldlnQ
• Replacement
Windows
• Roaftng

• Decks
•Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:

JamesKeaaeell
742·2332

r~;;:;;;~;.::5
$3SAScoop

l'·Post 6ft. $3.29
Wide Variety of

Lawn Seed,
Fertilizer and
Showmaster Show

Feeds

t&gt;ltM.lZ-1 _ _,

t'fo\ '5TNt\fi~C.!

Residential &amp; Commercial

1':&gt;

11! 'I •

I I I II

.....," '' I h11t~t ...

WV038725

I

~~

~ •

••

RooflnSIA Gutterw
VInyl Siding I palnUng
Plllo 11\11 Porch Deck•

I

M·CAMmRsOTOR
..

~~.

ANYwttelle.

Trimming
.
&amp; Removal

NwG•r•gee
EIRtrtcll l Plumbing

miles
since new,price
$19,000 OBO cau lor

Crook

.I'Vf NfV~Il INO#lf&lt;l~l&gt;
AIOIJT MY JOt
1
GOING OVfllSeAS ••• ~~~·
/ NONf OF MY JOBS . ! ,

/..ECTU~E:

Rernoct.tlng

2005 H.D.Fat Boy cus1om
maroon
w/embossed
flames, t of 200 made, BOO

Sunsat

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

·ToNIGHT'S

Room,Addition• &amp;

1996 Chevy S10 Blazer LT,
4ic4, Leather, Air, PW, PS,
Keyless entry, 4.3L, 149,000
mllas, $3,000; 4M8 Trailer,
Alum Toolbox. Diamond
Plato Dec!&lt;. $500 (740)441·
1660 .
--------98 Ford EXj)odHion. Ieath.,.,
3rd row seat, Great con.
Please caii«S-9664.

06

Opening lead:

Call Gary Stanley @
740· 742·2293
Please leave messa e

FOR SALE
..__ _iliiiiiiiiiiioo.

·r

740-992-5929 .
740-416-1698
~~~:;;;;~;;~=====

Office

"i'll~ ~ &lt;.0011.1~

,._ ~T I&gt;U. 1».'&lt;! ,__.-,

W~1"51E .,

;;ww.E.TI~
$COLI&gt;(',() l)'f

IF~TTO

t

AA"&lt;~rn'l' 1

740~416-1834

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

'TI6E IT IS I-lOW!

TU~TI\E

OIJE.~OO!

tract.

O

Astro.Graph

(740) 742·2377

we Deliver To You I
PEANUTS
MAVBE '(OU SHOULD GIVE VP THIS INSANE LOVE
AFFAIR. .. JVST LET THINGS HAPPEN ..THAT'S WI-IAT
I'VE DONE WITI-I M'( SWEET eABBOO .•.

I'M NOT VOUR
SWEET BABBOO!

RoCkY

r

ilr------.,I

::-:=:..:_=:....___

r10

David Lewis
740-992-6971

HOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

ComlrHKC,.IA RNifMnll•l

Yourlocltl Term"- a
Pelt Control Compeny
(740) 682-6244
740 418-7509

SUNSHINE CLUB

Hill's Se ll
Storage

ROBERT
BISSELL

29670 Bashan Road

IINmUCTII

Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

00... 1~-~f.RE.'S .AJST QfJI;

.SIL:E AOO ~'.s BIAS

PUBLIC NOTICE
withdraw the above
NOTICE: lo hereby collateral prior to eale •
given that on Saturday, Further, The Farmers
Auguat4,2007 8110:00 Bank and Savings
a.m., 1 public eale will Company reearvea the
be held at 211 W. right to re)act any or all
Second St., Pomeroy,. bide submitted.
Ohio. T1111 Farmers The above described
Bank an'd Savings · collateral will be sold
Company Ia seiiing lor "aa. ls·where Is", with
cash In hand or certl· no
expressed
or
fled check the follow· Implied
warranty
lng collateral:
given.
1983 Harley Davll!son For further Informs·
1H01BGK29DY016239 lion, or for an appoint·
The Fanners Bank and mant to Inspect collat·
Savings
Company, eral, prior to sale date
Pomeroy,
Ohio, contact Cyndla, Ken or
roaerves the right to Randy at 992·2136.
bid at this sale, and to (7) 31 (8) 1, 2

2 BA house in ,Kanaug a
$375 + Dep. Water/Trash Pd.
740-388-0173 or 367·7015.

,

~OIHER .

I

•New Homes
• Garages

Glblon
5 Kind of
27 Blame
1tove
:10 Gnnola kin 6 Junatrau

(Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -

25 Lox IQUrcl 49 Poyche

- tree

28 Sporty

truckl

7 Fulfftlod
8 Ught tan

32 C'lndn
carrier
33 UnderII Gift for Dod
handed
(2 wda.J
37 - Paule&gt;
12 tlblots
40 Eggy drlnkl

17 - de guerre
20 Tuna salad
Ingredient .
people
21 El Greco' a
T1n
city
--.
22 Be grouchy
Oola'o guy 23 RK wrlte.W
Evereot
org.
lighting
24 U11 bath
Really .,gry
powder

home
39 Enerilatlc

..-.a

50

~Ill

52 Volleyblll
1llad
54 Night flyer

1~ k':"t.:~:•

38 Shoal'o

45
46

51

29 Clll!lr
31 Kind of

41 Damascus
I&lt;&gt;CIIe
42 llobvcrilgo
43 Long otory
44 Rualon
name
47 MIIICIIculotsa
48 Plnbal
no-no

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lule Campoe

-In q-"',_,- ·""

CtloOityCipht&lt; coypk&gt;gmiOJ ..... Irom
Eactl
llle clpl'llt .... tor IIIOfllt

onlll-'

Todlr/s dUf: Cllip0/8 Y

," M' J 0 X X M Z B 0 H D V, DB L 0 0 E lrl Z A
WOZAGVDIU
FOZWU

PGOEDZU DIR DB RFG

DB BDDXU. XGR'U UROVR

PMAF RCEGPVMRGVU."

• BVOZL X ,

PVMAFR
P~EVIOUS SOLUTION - ·sc~nco is an edged tool, wnh l&gt;!lich men play like
children, and cuilheir own fingers." · Physicfsl ArthurS. Eddington

T=~:~~T S@·ll-~lA-cZ£~s·

WOIO
lAIII -

- - - - - UIIMI ., ClAY I . POt+AN
•

Rearrange ltrttrs of tMe
four

!Crambitd worcio b•

low to form fovr 1lmpl'e words.

S LU J TY

IIII1

edge.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - leave
nothing to chance, and you wil have tittle
trouble managing a s iluetlon fer yourael:

or another th8t has been problematic.for
everyone else • • '(Qur reeuils will be
impressive. .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - You can
usually handle situations be Her when
you act lndependendy of others, yet all of
your greatest successes are likely to
come abou t through partnership

I

CAB I S
" ·Grinning a fellow told
I

..
I I' I I "

One of

redecorating a room.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - If there Is an
Important matter that needs negotiating
Or delicate handling, you're the person to
oversee lt. Instead of, depending upon
another to do so, use that dip!omacy you
posseS&amp;.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - What
_ lnspir8s othere to slap forward and exert
some eHort on your behalf is the considerate and solicitous manner In which
you've treated them. Keep up the good
attitude.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23· Dec. 21) You're a quick study, sa check out that
information or know ledge you need to be
able to acquire something big. Bits of
wisdom you possess will give vou the

1

0

colleague, "On payday we alweys
start our gounnet dinner with

I

A B R E RL

·

·j

cream of -·-· soup."

t-.,,Ms~,~T~..;;...~r'-'11-;6-J G) Co~plere

tho chuckle . quoted
by hilln~ In fhe ml,.lng W&lt;Jrds
t...._...-t-..L....J-...__, ygu diVtlop from ltlp No. 3 below.
_

A

~

•

•

.

_

_

NUMBERED LElTERS IN
THm SQUARES

PRINT

UNSCRAM6LE ASOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWtR

8 ~ 1- 0 7
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
lieroic - Grass - Fjord • Unwell· WHEN it GOOFS
I have decided lhat this country needs a computer that
will shed tears WHEN it GOOFS.
ARLO &amp;JANIS

arrangements.

•Complete
Remodeling

M0·•2·16J1
Stop &amp; Compare

GARAELD

Manlav'a
Recycling

..

Qj,!, GRE:A'I'.

A &amp;AU. OF
I,IARN I-lAVlNG'
AN 1Pel'l'l'l1tr'
CRI515

.',

Advertise
in this
space
for
$60 per
month

~Y..tr'S

ALWAYS

SIDE.

For

ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!

26 Gracaful

your better assets will be yoor uncanny
ability to upgrade or transform those
things that are outdated. TheY co uld be
anything from improving e relationship to

· 70 Pine Street • GalllpoUs
446.()()()7

I \

I "Columbo"
llmHI
star
16 Concluda
2 DII{IUIIIng
18 Lerilon
3 Dalal
It Buttonhole•
Lama'o city
23 Augment
4 Brooko or

pleasurable pursuits than you previously
~ve. One of the reasons will be the big
in-1provement you'll see In your financial
pk:tura., wtllch adds to your blithesome
spirit.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - If you know or
unden~ta nd ·something better th11n those
with who m you're deaNng, don't hide
your light under a bushel. Your knowl·
edge will be greatly appreciated . and
rewarded.
VI~GO

~ •""~t)PI:"i.,111'!ij"'!lj•:....

IS The -the

You're likely to enjoy much more time lor
·

• Home Oxygen
·• Portable Oxygen
• Homeml System
• Helios System .

DOWN

By Bernice Bede 0101

" DIED I'IA't' '1"",
l'l'l&amp;." · ·

Reliable &amp; Experienced
Call Dennis Bryant

$180: Sofa &amp; Loveoeal sols, i&lt;teler Built· Vlllley·Bison· 99 30ft 'Sunnybroo~ lrallor
$400; Drive a little· save a Horae
and
LivestoCk

. . ._. .-.,

-'llrllldlr:

Fridoy, Aug. 3, 2007

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

loamper, .12ft olde out. Good
lot, Mollohan, 202 Clark Trelf_...
Loadmax· cond. 740·446·.8759 H no ·
Chap~ Rd, Bidwell. 3ae. Gooseneck, Dumps, &amp; answer leave a message
a173
Utility· Aluma Aluminum
'- I I J( I ....
2 BR in ROdney, WID, r!:lr~~
Troll.,.. B&amp;W Goosenad(
fridge,stove,water/sewerltra
~~r!:S
Hitches·
Trailer Parts. iii~;;;~~;;;-.-, 26 Years E•perleilce
sh included. No Pets. Dep ...._ l'fJ.r.A'-'nt·lll ..uax.
Carmichael
Trailers.
lloME
req. 446·1271 or 709·1657
1740;446•2412
IMI'RovEMENl1!
5 Rm &amp; Be
$500 Coupon
t.,.,.;iitiiiiiiiiiiii•
s
th, Kanauga
BASEMENT
$450, waterfTrash Pd. 1 BR
Hotl\lb Outtetll
LivmocK
·n
Port
1
'dg
stov
1
.
1iop
Cueity!W
.
arran!•
Ml~on
WATERPROOFING
t
er, n e,
a urn.
,
Water~rash
Pd $350 ••• Flea Mkl SIS 606-326-0777
Unconcfttlonal lifetime guar·
1
"
•
• .;IOQ"
6 year old paint horse mare. antee. local references fur·
01
7
0 367 70 15
3
.,._ _ _r__:__._.:;_:__ _ _ 3 s'eiko watches, greatcon· white with tan markings,
LADY BUGS
nlshod. Es1abllshed 1975.
Accepting applications for 2 dition; radar detectors; tela· some black In mane and tall,
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446- BUGGING YOU?
BR, t BA apt, Slave, fridge, phone~ boom boxes; pi\Js very pretiy, nice rider, kid
0870, Rogers Basement
WID included. Water &amp; other misc. electronics; safe, $700 OBO. Yeanlng
h's !hat time ol yearforlatl
Waterproofing. ·
Garbage paid. No pets, very priced fair, {740)992-3176
treatment service good for~
mare paint, standard bred
days. August thru October
dark brown color. Calm and r--nice,
$500/ clean &amp; attractive.
$500 Hard to 11.nd • 20 &amp; • 2
Treatment lor ladybUgs,
halter
broke,
pretty
in
mo, l.st mo +
Griswold SkNiets, Excellent,
spiders, anls lit wa&amp;P.J.
Sec.dep. required. Available $t100; Also have a "Keen motion. $200 OBO. Call Bob
7116107· Apply w~hin. 1743 Kutle( push I.Wn mower, a1 379·9445 or 645-6829
McCormick's
Centenary Rd, Gallipolis. No very rare, nice, $295. 7 AQHA Registered Quarter
Extermination
Inc.
_
P_
ho_n_e _
c_
al_ls~P_Ie_a_
se_._ _ (740)533·3870
Horses lor safe or trade. Gall

Norman Fischer, 1 poet and Zen
Buddhist priest. said. 'We all need to
have a creative outlet - a window, a
space - so we don't lose track of ourselves."
· Bridge Is a.creative outlet, but hcan also
be a fonn of ooca~sm. You ge1 sci lo81 1n
the deals that you lorget abou1 ths real
world.
Wh~e you are a defender In that dream·
land, do not forge11o keep cloeo track 01
declarer's hlgh·card ponls. This Is, 01
course, much easier If he h&amp;f made a
quantitative bid, like a one·nc-tru.mp
opening. But even wnhout !hal banolh,
you can usuany gsta roBSQn&amp;bleldoa of
his hand strength.
Agalns1 three hearts, WoSI loada tho
spade ace: lour, nine. three. West ca&amp;h·
oa1he spade king: live, aiK, oeven. How
should West confinua1
Ills not normally rigll1to rabid o five-card
oul1, but Weal's spades loof&lt; Ike a six·
bagger.
To defeat 1ho dodarer, Eao1·Wo81 mu01
"'n five lrlci&lt;s. East's high-low In spades
showed his dou~eton. Sci, Wsel can
take a third spade trick and has the hoan
ace In tho background, Whora iolho fifth
winner?
·
·
11 South's two-haart advance ~ sane,
East Is (almost) daslhu1e. WsSI's only
raallslic hope lor success Is h~ singleton
dls,rnond . At !riel&lt; throe, We81should shlft
tb tho diamond three.
Declarer wins ln his hand with the queen
and plays a low hsart, bul Wort rushes
In w~h !he ace and leads the ape,de j8ck.
East should see what is required. He
ruffs 1ha lr~ (assuming ho sla~od wllh
two trumps!) and returns a diamond,
alloWing Wos11o ruff and dofeet !he con·

r.!t~

13 Add oppoolle
14 Draomol

42

4 A ·

Keep tracking those
high-card points

QIG NATE

58

36 Bleachers
level
37 Put down
turl

West North East
18
2t
Pass
26
3. All pass

All iypes of concrete
Owner- Rick Wis\'.

~~~:::~~vailable!

iiiF~:;:;:;4x4~=~.,

~-lls-740-949·2217

JOR

Wise

t d Q al'
mp .an
u lty
Work
•Reasonable Rates
•Insured

Pure breed Lab puppies

Ir
5639tor~.:_~
. ~.., I.._.......... ~
r ,...~RFNr

·-

~ry-tale

35:::.1111

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: Both

•Pro

05 Expedition, XLT Sport
whl18/gray Int. 4WD, 3rd
row•seat,Ex·Cond 41 ,000/m ,
-675-4066
19 500

304·895·3274
::--,-'-:-:--,-,:--,Re9·1stered Fawn p ugs
' 9
·
1h
u
ld
ks
wee o tn e 1¥18900 area
$550 Coli (443(350-4011

740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

.

SUVs
co .....
~, · -"'FOII.iliiii&lt;J~U£iiiiii--r

$400: all AKC &amp; vel ri404 WMOTOIIHEIURSCYOBJ/
,
cf\ocked, (740)696·1085

Gallipolis

suo~ ::=:
~~ ~=::!!===~~~~~~~=~: ~
~==~===·

-o

Hartlord, deplref required, Twin Rivers Tower Is accept·
No pelS $350/mon1h 304· ing applicalions lor waiting
p76-4037
list for Hud-subslzed, 1· br,
Mobile Home tor Rani, 2 BR, apartment, tor
the
PJC, HUD Approved, T01al elderly/disabled call 675·
Electric, Rent InCludes trash, 6679
Equal
Housing
water &amp; sewer, $325/mo, Opportunity
$325 deposn, Call (740)992·
FOR"-RENr·~
""'~

Street •

· Seamless Gutters
Rooling, Siding, Gutters
In -• &amp; B··~
7'"653 9857

••--~.,...--.,

~ot
pu~les,
u 'dan Retrl-·er
....
r-r
MIF, $400·, Doberman
Pinscher puppies. 2 malesblack/rust, $400; Blchone
Fr~o puppies, M/F all whne,
$350; small Pocx;lle puppies,
MIF, black, black/while,

55 Century

32 Dlnnerwn
34 Numb, II I

• 87 3
•Jl0 765
• Q4
• AK 2

I Stanley Tree-

.

Apanmen1S, Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2
Bath, APult Pool &amp; Baby
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
No Pals, Lease Plus
security Deposit Required,
Clean, 2br, 1ba, AC In (740)446-3481 .

-Beautiful River View in
Kanauga· Ideal for 1 or 2
people, references, No pets,
Lac. 5 mi. from Gavin.
(740)441.0161

South

GuHer1ng
•

4x4, 8"1111, 35'11rea. Call 740441 149

r

MONTY

r

m•les, wnne and 8/p. 6 wks.
Roomy 2BR
balh, Mlddlopo~ . Beech Sl., 2 br. UTD on ahols and _ , .
attached garage·no pols, furnished apartment, ulll~los lngs. $350. 740"787-4875
quiet area. $425.1ilo. Ref &amp; paid, deposn &amp; references. AKC Y&lt;&gt;&lt;klo puppies, 3
Deposl required. 446-2801 no pels, (710)992·0165
temale, 14wks $800, 3 sm.
Mlddlepon, Nor1h41h Ave., 2 males, (I ) 11 wks, $800 2 99 SilveradO 1500 Eltl cab,

'
$174/mol Buy 3bd HUD
$199-1
5%dn, homel5%dn, 20yrs o 8%. New Haven 1 Br. Furnished Pole Bams 30x50x10 after 7pm. 740·256-6003
20yro08%. For llotlngo For Millings 800-559-4 109 Apt., has WID. No Pels, Dep. $ 6,495
Frse
Delivery
I00-55t-41Dt xF144
KI70B.
&amp; references. 740-992-0165. (937)718·1471
In Syracuse - 2800sq.ft .
quality built multi-level brid&lt;
home, maintenance free.
Nice quiet neighbomood. 34 bedrooms, 2 112 bath with
hardwood trim throughout.
U.shaped kitchen wl1h 40' of
cabinets. Wood burning fireplace. 2 112 car detached
garage. Nicety landscaped
.60 aaes lot. Immaculate
condition. Low utilities.
Selling price $219,000. Call
740·441·5171 . Shawn by
apptonly.
-------Land Contract: (2) 3
Bedroom homes. Payment
about the same as rent,
10% dOwn. 603 Brownell,
Middleport· $49,900; 152
Gavin St, Rodney· $57,900.
Will work with you on Oown
payment. (740)446-4543

Fl'tl8 Eetlm81es

740-367.0536

.,
2002 Csdlllac Esc8iado
EXT. Stiver Sand, ' only
11900 mlloo, all w!leol drive
fully loaded Olcludlng sun·
roof, AM/Frn/CD/caseetto.
SeriOus lnqulrea. 446-7529
daytime,
446-6748
evenings.

•--•Gooo;iiiiiii-•

OOuble/Single trailer lot for
rent off 554, Close to new
HS, $150/mo. (740)388·
B5Q8

740-367:.0544

..__ _FOII.iiiil.""""'iiiiiji.-·;,1

I

Grande on private dead end
road· $29 •900 080· Call
245-5197

TiuJacs

[15

r

- - - -- - - 5 Acres MIL along Old
Covered Bridge Ad. Located
in. Ewington, Vinton, County,
OH. Call806·353-0990
BEAUTIFUL 5 acros atop hill
with mature pine and oak
rreesl Gallia water tap
Installed and 2006 septic
permit. 5 mites from Rio

Local Contractor

~;p-~~---"'i·
w

rio .

Ranch Stylo house wnh 4
bedrooms. living roam, din·
ing room, kitchen, large fam ·
ily room, central air, gas heat
and 1 fireplace. Addition of a
largo Florida room comp\elely cedar opens onto
patio &amp; pool area. Heated in
ground pool enclosed by 11'1·
vacy lenclng and lalf"d~
scaped. Finished 2 car
garage at1ached to house
and linished &amp; heated 3 car
garage
unattached.
Excellent condition ready to
move in. $255,000.00, Call:
(740)949·2217
-------House on Mason Street,
Clifton, WV Call 740-992·
2090 Monday through Friday
for information

Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

70 ·Pine

118-112-0'1

10 54

• K Q4
t A K J 10 8
• 83
\\ ~ st
E1st
• 9 6
•A KQJ2
• A92
• 8 3
• 3
·•
• 97652
•Qt0' 95
.,J164

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

.

Roofing, Siding,
.. Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,

304-693-0544
or 304-593·
132 6

IZ'lll""'--::-.-;.....-.,

o.._

••

96 Neon. runs and looks
g(eat, low proflfe tires and
rims, ground oflects kit, nice
stereo, must sol $2000. Csll

t.op

•

~···ttidH:•

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

95 Bulc:f&lt; Riviera, Lt. Blue,
"
Loaded, Lea11\er, Heated
1
7wk female CKC Yorkie. Seal, Sunrool,
41 ,000
Shots, wormed, tall docked, mites,·Supar Charged, Nice,
dow cl...ed, POP, $700. Clean, Must Sea. $3j00.
(740)441·7867
(740)208·96731ocel call.

Commercial building "For
_
Renr 1800 square teet, off Canning tomatoes, bell &amp;
diiiCI'Imln•tlon."
Trailer for sale, $2.000,
(2) Furnished Rooms tor ·atroet parking. Great loco· hoi peppers. picked, bring
(740)992·5858
Rent $75 per week 304,.895- tlonl 749 Third Avenue In containers, Rowe Farm,
Tht. .....,.per will not
knowingly ~eeept
Why Pay rent???
3185
Gallipolis. Ren1 $325/mo,
lldv.tiMmenlll for rul
I \In I "I 1'1'1 II"
Clayton Single Wideslll
Call Wayne (404)458-3802
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apanmants
•tltll which I• In
Starting at $225.00
,\ I I\ I " H H I,
for Rer.rt, Meigs County, In Prime commercial space tor
vlalltlon of the l1w. Our
per momh W.A.C.
......... hlreby
town, No Pets, Deposit rent at Springvelley F'taza.
Callladaylll
tO
,..~F-ARM_
lnformed · th~t •II
Required, '(740)992·5174 or Call645·2192.
1·B88·928·3426
~armuu
dwelllnQI•dv•rtiHd In
(740)441.0110.
. ------Trailer space $200 month,
tl'lll ntWIIMIPff .,.
1 and 2 bedroom apart· water turnlshed, Ohlo Aiuer 0'11 Financing· 36 Mos.
IYIIIIble on In eqUIII
ments, furnished and unfur- Road, P1. Pleasen1 Cl1y lim·
GPI&gt;Orlunlty-o.
available now on John
AND BUILDINGS
nished, and houses In its (304)776·5656
Deere Z Trak Zonllllmo &amp;
Pomeroy and Mlddlaport,
\IIIU II\ \ill' I
5.99% Fixed Rate on Jom
For sel011and oon~act. 3 BA 32X48 Metal Bldg. lor rent,
house in Galiipolle, WID across from the new SGHS. security daposn re(Jllre&lt;l. no ~~~::---;....;;;~ Deere Oalo" Carmichael
Equipmenf (740)448-2412.
-99:::2:.·.::22:.1:::8·:..___
Jlovsmow
connection $1500 down $500/month. Csll 740-256- o;pe:::ts::..:..740:.:....:
$400/mo or ren1 $475/mo.
•-~~~~~-.,
1 bedroofl&gt; furnished apt. In
Caterpillar 0 ·5 Doze;r '73
Also 1 BR In Gallipolis $750
~
downtown Pomeroy, ale. r '
with Cargo F-50 winch with
down $200/mo or rent
gas &amp; water, cable paid, Berber Ca1pet. _$5.95/yd; manual transmission 12'
iiio-rl $350 per month, no pet; Vinyl, $4.95/yd, Drive-a-llt11e anglo blade can be seen a1
$250/mo.Call Wa~ne 40.4.· · - - ·
456-3802 lor info.
'
$300 dap, (740)423-1234
Beve alot, MollOhan Carpal, Old Farms, Sla1a Rou1a 62
10 acres for sale located on
·
House for sale in Racine Broad Aun Roac:l. i1 New 1 BR Apts. 2 locations. Ref &amp; 76 Vine St GallipoliS. OH. Ohio River Road, Pl.·
Ploasan1 Serial 94J2036
area. Approx. 4 acreS, all Haven,
wv
$34,500 Dep. required. No pets. 740· (740}446-7444
professionally landscaped. (304)773-5881
~44:-6-_29:-5_7_ _: - : - - - Full Size MaHrotS &amp; 8/S, $25,000 304·776-5656
p,.,.renceo, llmltltlon or

I

·----~~Swl--_.1

AKC Boston Terrier Pupa. 14
wka old, male. Parents on
d
prom. wHh pe lgraa, vel
chkd, 2nd shols, wonmed.
"tV'
7'"368·9325
AKC German Shepherd.
pupa.
bloodline, Ja·••
breed both parents on prem·
iseo, $3SO!IIrm (304)il7S·
5724
AI&lt;C Mini Schnauzers, all

RENTALS •'SALES
SERVICE •.FREE DELIVERY
MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

I

ilr---=-...--.,
-:::-:----~---

North

I

omo

~ ~.

:.:..:...c:.:..._____

Rental Property fe1r sale,
1970 12&lt;60. 2 bdrm., all
elec., central air on 50'x248'
lot In Harrisonville. Currently
rented, new lease signed
711/07. well maintained,
$12,000 OBO, (740)742·
4011

rJ;~~li:riii"l

53 Hat

1 Thin coating
J)lanta
5 Yawned
56 Eddloa
10 Parfumed 57 "Boating"
12

fr"""•;

------,--- 1-------· ~ _MOBILE lloMEs I
8011 WilloW Lane Racine 31o
4 Bd•. 2 both wal~ng dislance to scllooi.Cuiol neighborhood.$65,000.740·949·
2651 or 418-4379.

Phillip
Alder

Eo-.

7906
c..:.:c.:._______

888-92fl.3426

ACROSS

rio

3 Bedroom House in
Syracuse. $500/monlh +
dell08it No Pela. (304)6755332 weekendS 740-591 ·
.:;02~65------:Burdone Addn. srn 2 br
30
House, new carpel &amp; paint
$42S month + depo&amp;U No
PelS Rei required 304-675-

3 br., 2 !ull bth., 20x38 great·
room, cia, blacktop driw, lg.
pamng area, all new wfn. .._____
dowsldoors/rool &amp; septic, .
laminated hardwood Mora
,2007 Clayton
11\roughoul, 24' aboVe
•&amp;oM••
~~~ . 20005Q. F1.
ground pool, additional spot
Slarting at $33.00/sp.ft.! .
lor mot;le home, on 1 aero. NO DOWN Po\YMENT
10&lt;
S
only 115,000, near St.
to qualified buyers.
Rt 143 &amp; St. Rt. 7, (740)696The Home.ShoW
.1227
. Alhlend, KY

3 6&lt; • Bed, 211:1 balh, Br~

4--.

80 Inch - · 13
112 HP, used very Uttte.
Apartment ror ·rent, 1·2
JET
Excotlen1 Condnlon 304·
Bdrm., remodeled, new carAERATION MOTORS
pel, stow &amp; trig., water, Repolrod, New &amp; Rabulft In 882-3421 or 304-682-2550
SBW8r, traah,pd. Mlddeport. StO\*. Calf Ron Evans, 1·
$425.00. No pelS. Ref. 800-537-9528. ·
jjij~;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;
reqwro&lt;~. 740-843-5264.
Al11Ui
Kllcllen Tol&gt;le 7 Chairs (4)
llMIIUful Apia, 1 1 . - new, single bed wlnlght ..__ _RllliiiiiS.iiiiU--,1
!52 Westwood o1Snd (,_), Rocliner and "
Drive, !rom' 1365 10 $560. Sola, Enter181nrnent c.-. 1989 ~~~ GT 5.0. Lots
740·446-2568.
Equal FUll Bed &amp; Drooser, Dryer o h -,- moiot-toappre·
Housing Opportunity. Th18 304-675-Q180
· cia18. ~ ·OBO. 740-256·
insiiMion lo an Equa,t
_
137S
Opportunity Pro~~lder ancr NEW ANO USED STEEL - - - - - - - Em~oyer.
'
Stool Beamo, Pipe Rebar 1997 Ford Eocort, . ou..-001.
• .-.,
For Con&lt;:rt1e
Angle cool air, 5opd, 4dr, gas
CONVENIE"!"Y ' LOCAT· Ch~ Fill Sar. &lt;$~ sever. 740-416-1265
EDa•-DABU!t
,
•
- ' "'1"
Grating
For·· Drillria, 2001 TO\'OIII Camery, V-6, 2
TownhOuB&lt;!
apenments. DrivOWiiya &amp; Walkwoyo."L&amp;L 1Dno color, engine ltart
and/or small houaas FOR Scrap Metalo Opeoo Monday,
,
RENT. Csl (740)441-1 11 1 TUeodav, Wednsedov &amp; remote control, cld charigar,
lOr application &amp; lnlormalk&gt;n.
8am· :30pm. Closed 8 dloc, very nlco, cloon
4
·-•
Inside, loo~ llko new,
Thuraday,
Sllltrmav · &amp; 130416!2-4635
'''
Surdoy. (7~7300
·
2002
Intrepid 94,000
Young wornena clothing fl1r mllea $5,800 304-593-3040
•2&amp;3 bedroom apar1men18 sale, Sizes Small, M, L, 2002 ........1 ·-~ GS. 2
•Csnfral heal &amp; AIC
Prices· $0.25·$3.00, Call
• ·•·· - ~"
•Wasllerldryer hoolwp
anyllmo (740)446-737511 no door, automatic, pciwer
Bn8WOr' leave massage.
steering &amp; brakes, looks &amp;
•Tenant pays electric
runs gres1 low mileage
(304)882-3017
PETs
$3.600 OBO 304-675-4144

3 bedroO'm hOuse In
Pomeroy, large &amp; very clean,
1 1f.1 bath, ale, hardwood
flooR, luH basement wfl car
garage, small bad( yard,
$635. 17401949-2303

NEA Cronvirol'd Puzzle

BRIDGE

GRIZZWELLS

TOCm. IT5 Tit-It:
''

'•

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Because
you'll respond willingly it someone aake
you to do something extra, you'll bG high·
ly thought of by your peers. But It's likely
to be the boss' praise that becomes so
valuable.
ARIES (March 21-A.pril 19) - If you've
got some peraonal business to conduct
with someone. take this person to lunch.
Being in Cot1\livial surroundings will help
Immensely in presenting your case to
him or her.
TAURUS
(April 20-Mey 20) Compensation for uns81fiahness could
be higher than usual. You can discover
this for yourse lf by doing what you ca n
lor others whenever you see a pe rson is
in need of help.
GEMINI (May 2 1·June 20) - Rays of
light began piercing the clouds yesterday, a llowi ng the sun to shine brightly on
all your affairs. New hope co~ ld dispel
what had loOked so bleak for you up until
now.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - What
motivates you won't be of the bread-end·
butler variety; it'll be more tike a chaco·
late cake covered with whipped cream.
Wonderful delights are promised for pos-

itive ectlon.

~ A~\\\~~ t.~~?o\-1

\lOIN \0 ~~~~
11'1. \1\E IJ'l\\.~..-

SOUPTONUTZ

I

--'I'OO'VE !rW.liT
A DOZE-t.l Ti/A€.5.

�Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

.

w\Vw.mydallysentinel.eom

Thui-lday, August 2, zoo•i.

Bro~' Hickerson

pushes.·way jnto ·HOF

CLEVELAND (AP) D o u g • Brown has his theory Ol\
Long before entourages
Dieken, a. why.
,:
became fashionable, Jim
c I o s e
"We're human 'beings" he
Brown had his own personal
' friend and ·said .. "Sometimes we don't
bodyguard.
f o r m e r _see what's right in front of
Gene Hickerson protected
teammate our faces. It wasn't because
the Hall of Fame running
o
f of Gene's talent."
back from hann.
Notebook Hickerson.
His. long omission gnawed
Next time you watch any
" G e n e at the soft-spoken Hickerson,
tf :'l#&lt;lllfJIIr I old black-and-white NFL could run with any running whose health has deteriorated
footage
of
Brown, back, they d\~n't. have to slo~ in recent yearS.
Cleveland's great No. 32 down for htm to set up his
How_ever, }fickerson rarely
weaving his way toward the block. He could' also pass grumbled 111oud . about not
end ZOll!l on a long touch- block, but when he .got out making the Hall, sal.d his best
down run, there's a good there on t~e comc:r or down friend, Bobl)y Frankliri, a for:
chance No. 66 - Hickerson the field, tt was like one of mer college and
team:
-was out front or alongside. th?se smart ~bs.
mate, who wil present
"Gene w.as the leader of a
~~ defenstve back was Hickerson at the Saturday
great line," Brown said. "and toast.
.
. .
induction ceremonies·.
the·gre!ltest downfield block- . Drafted IIJ the stxth round
"Gene never said much but
photo ebralinl." the history of pro foot- 10 1957 - the same y~ar 1 know it really bothered hilTh
The broadcast voice of the Los Angeles Dodgers, Vin Scully, is shown the pressbox of
~levei!IDd .took Bro~n wtth He would usually make a
And f10ally, years, if not Its first ptck - Htckerson joke about it, though,''
Dodger Stadium before the start of their baseball game against the San Francisco Giants
decades after he probably proved to be one of the most Franklin said on the phone
and the Dodgers, in Los Angeles on Wednesday.
·
should have been mducted, durable players to ever snap from his home in Mississippi.
the 72-year-old Hickerson on an orange: helmet. He "Somebody would ask Gene
will be enshrined in Canton, played
behmd
former ' Wb
·
· ·
'
Ohio, an overdue tribute to Steelers coach Chuck Noll
en are you g~~l:to ~t to
the . Browns' pulling right for one season before taking the Hall of F~.e ·
~ ene
guard who blocked. for three over the startin~job in 1959. w~uld say, I m gomg f9
Hall of Fame backs,
He broke hts leg in the driv~ down ~ere. to~orrow.
Unusually quick for 1\is 1961 preseason opener, and
Htckerson s Jok}ng O}liY.
open-air booth two levels 'Closure, I was one of !hose si~. Hickerson, a country then re-hroke it later in ·the masked a de~p disappo\nt~
BY TIM DAHLBERG
/If' SPORTS COlUMNIST
above home plate. Cup of kids, thrilling to his calls of boy
from
Mississippi, season while standing on the ment he felt 10 not getting
coffee in hand, tie ·carefully Sandy Koufax E!tching a no:!' anchored Cleveland's offen- sideline. After sitting out two elected ' for so many years.
LOS ANGELES - The knotted and not a 1\air out of hitter and Don Drysdale set- sive line for 15 'seasons. games in 1962,- Hickerson Though a worthy candidate;
tribute was composed in the place, he settled, comfortably ting the scoreless inning Throughout the 1960s and never missed another game he W!15 often e~ged out
28 seconds it took Henry 1010 a -seat he has occupied record.
in~o the early 1970~. be~tirin'g in 1973. : . because of more hign-profil~
Aaron to round the base.s and for almost every home game
My kids listen to Vinny Hickei;'Son opened holes for . ·
rson W!15 .named an ~s·~n the ,ballot.
.
the roar to finally subside. since the stadium opened 45· now, and someday their ~ds Brown, Leroy Kelly, ·and ·A:Ilr . fiye s!fatght ye,rs
Hickerson s. ~5. years .of
L!sten to it today, _and it will years ago:
. · . might d'0 the same. 'He Bobby Mitchell- all HiijFof (lc~70) lind was .voted'.to . ~m .. C!il· eligtbility co~~
still make the barr on ·your
The hated Gi!IP-ts were iii shows n&lt;W'Cal signs of slow- Famers - who woulg lulve the Pi'o BOwl six consecutive e~ded wtlh spme o( (he ~port ~
arms stand up ·~-~ght. .
town, usu.ally a· series that ing down, even though he's ~er amassed.as many.yards. seasons 0966-7p. During ,grcr,tres.t· fl~ of F~41, claBSF.
Vm:Scqlly wasn t work!ng ·Scully rehshes for both the· the
anriouncer in base·
ilcclaim if oot fur his time m Cleveland, the e~; !\3ld tony qt-oss1 o( ~
fi:am notes. He had nothmg rival.ry and the history tha~ -ball
.· . ,
. . .· • : bone:Jarpllg •,Browns. never .had a losing . (CievelliJI.dl; r.lii!ll'J,l?e~et, ~.
Pf!lpared. because, ~ell, that goes back to when' he was• twi.ce
to fill.
, · . . • ,. . , , recOrd. . . ,
.. · 1Rall vo~r. .~twas. ti!U.~. fo/ ~
Dllght rum the magtc of•the hroadcastingfortheDodgers ' Ife
it with talk ' .
. ·
co!IC~~ · Bef6re f!\e.k!'~n:s IIJ!i¥~, :,~··to .get' Ill-! . ,. t(tpP. ~.
moment.
.
'•
in Brooklyn and the Giants about
been .!,'1\,:lQcPt •O!¥¥ severl·~bers 10 leag~J~ . Ttke8 of.
~~i/5 -, ili!if .·
HeletthecrowdmAtlll!lta we~play10g across, town at •ing '
speculation •30 years ag.o...• }lli~.' Bro~s htstol'}' ha'd· ,- ev~~ reacli~ . Pete Rozelle, , ~d
.~•; !11
tell part of the story. Then he the Polo Grounds.
·
about
who mll!ht be' teammate fnn Qouston. He 1,000 yards. In ,;his .first 1.0 the 1980s.
·.
., . ·
spoke fr&lt;!~ his ~eart about
But ~is night was differ- out
all ni'ghlWand had the ability:;l Gene W;as seasons, the ~pi!ns had a
·~any offensive ·lirieme ·
the magrutude of tt all.
ent. Thts series·was different.
. statlels, alway~ lo~ key ex:cepr\;\'1\!ln ·1,000-yard tu ; .l ~i!te tilnes of his •tim~ were !o~S# itlf!t · ,
"What
a · marvelous
Barry Bonds came to town That's
to others. Hlsjob tt carne tnne to protect ltm . and the league'.~ eliding rush" the pool of deservmg playert '
moment for baseball. What a with a chance to tie or .break is to entertain you for a Iew Brown . or Leroy . Kelly. 'er seven oceasibils.
who fe11 through ·the .Ctaclc.9&gt;
marvelous moment for Aaron's home run mark. If hours with what is unfolding Brother, he did that." '
· · 'He was an .exceptional And then the .wait becomei
Atlanta and the state of he did, Scully would be mak- before him, and he is a
At 6-foot-3, 248 pounds, athlete, and always on his even longer for that logjam td
Georgia. What a marvelous ing the call, 33 years after he believer in someone being Hickerson was small by feet," said Dieken. "You be broken lip."
.
!
moment for the country and did the same for Hamrnerin' innocent until proven guilty. today's gargll!ltuan standar~s . would ~atch the (game) film
Hickerson's long wait i~
the world," Scully told Hank.
.
. "I am not a judge or a jury. for an NFL hneman, but his and be m awe. He was the f10ally over, but ·because of
Dodger fans back home in
He wasn't Iookirtg forward It's none of my business," athleticism, balance and standard for what a pulling health issues, he can't appre•
Los Angeles. "A black man to it, but not for the reasons Scull~ said. "I just do foul speed allowed the Browns to guard is all about." ciate it as much as he would
!s getting a standing ovation you might think.
lines. •
utili~ the former high school . Yet despite ~at ~littering .have years earlier.
m the Deep South for break"It's nothing personal but
The game was now just a runnmg back on plays toward resume and testunoruals from
"It's going to be special,"
ing a re~ord of an, all-time I'd just as soon have the couple hours away, and the the stdehnes.
Brown and others ofhts wor- Franklin sllid. "But it's also a
baseballtdol. And tt s a great Aaron one and no$ a second first fans were coming into
'The Browns ran a lot of thiness to · be elected, sad time, too because Gene
moment for all of us and par- one," Scully said. "The the park. Bonds w;~s battling ' sweeps with Gene," said for- Hickers,on was bypassed by can't enjoy it as much .. But
ticularly for Henry Aaron, Aaron moment was so pre- cleanup, and Scully had mer arowns offensive tackle voters for 29 years.
·
he's in.
who is met at home plate not cious that if I got to do some work to do to make
only by every member of the another call it wouldn't be sure he had the right (acts
Braves but by his father and the same. It would just be the and stories for this night.
mother."
second one."
He had nothing prepared
Until now, Scully thought
The night before, 56,000 for Bonds, though, just as he
most people had forgotten fans ·jammed the stadium to didn't rehearse Aaron's hisa~ut.tt. A~ the age of 79, he w~tch the spectacle, many toric home run or Kirk
sun hves m the day-to•day wtth portable radios to listen Qibson's ·ninth-inning homer
world of play-by-play, where to Scully's broadcast. It's a in the 1988 World Series. It
~h~t y_ou ,say in the first tradition at Dodger Stadium, just wouldn't seem right if it
mrung IS htstory by the first where most nights you hear was in the ~an and, besides,
pitch of the second.
snippets of Scully's smooth the crowd would help out.
"Evel),'thing we do is sky- voice as you walk through
"To me the story is how
writing, ' Scully said. "It's the park.
the crowd reacts and it will
put up in the wind and it
He is as much Dodger ·be very interesting to see
blows away."
baseball as Sandy Koufax how the crowd will ·react
The wind couldn't scatter even more a part of the fab: here," he said . "There's
this call far enough. Through ric of the team than Tommy nothing I can say that will be
the beauty of the Internet, it Lasorda. He's the reason penetratingand incisive."
lives on for anyone savvy Dodger fans can arrive late
Dodger fans would disenough to use a Web brows- and leave early, confident· he agree. They know better
et.
will paint the picture for because they' ve listened to
He's had other magical them while they listen to the Aaron call, the Gibson
c.alls. Dodger fans would their car radios.
call and thousands of calls in
argue that it's magic everyHe's a modest man who between.
ti~e he sits in front of a still seems surprised when
They've heard magic on
mtcrophone and welcomes people tell him that, as kids, the air.
·them to a beautiful night at they'd fall asleep listening to
"('hey know that no matter
Dodger Stadmm.
htm on the transistors they what happens on the field,
Scully was doing just that would sneak under the cov- they have a treasure in the
Wednesday night. in his ers. In the interest of full dis- booth.

fro

In the booth, Scully doesn't judge,
just delivers the calls

O.t

:

en

11.1

I

Lunch Buffet

I

I
I
j

Once Again, The Daily Sentinel Will Have A
Special Meigs ·county Fair Preview Edition.
This Year's Edition Promises To Be One Of The
Biggest And Best Ever! Look For thi'S Special
Edition In Your Thursday, August 9th Paper.

. 1

Medium

: Specialty Pizza
1&amp; Medium
: 1 topping Pizza
I

I Coupon IXplm 9/05/07.

$1'699 ::::~~~n::: $1799
Specialty Pizza &amp;
.-:-:-::::-:""' : Large t topping Pizza
1

IMf$•79ll5toffoiC,..."""""""
""""'""'"'"
•IIPirtt
'-·- - - - ' · 1 Coupon

9/0S/07.

1

IMF$•46111

•

BE SURE YOUR BUSINESS IS
A PART OF THIS YEAR'S
FAIR EDITION ...
CALL TODAY!
''I
I

Call ·
DAVE or BRENDA
at 992-2155

'

., FOR MORE INFORMATION

The Daily Sentinel

Fund-raisin with Pizza Hut!
Dough for DollarS
Earn Dough for
your organization!

Fund-rai,ser Nights •

Call 1-866-912-3753

A Pizzo Hut Fund-roiser Night allows
your organization to raise money
doing something everyone loves to do
eat pizza with family and friends!

to find out more about this fund-raising
opportunity or visit
www .midlandfoodservice.com

Call 1-866-912-3753
for more details.

•

$ 99

�Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

.

w\Vw.mydallysentinel.eom

Thui-lday, August 2, zoo•i.

Bro~' Hickerson

pushes.·way jnto ·HOF

CLEVELAND (AP) D o u g • Brown has his theory Ol\
Long before entourages
Dieken, a. why.
,:
became fashionable, Jim
c I o s e
"We're human 'beings" he
Brown had his own personal
' friend and ·said .. "Sometimes we don't
bodyguard.
f o r m e r _see what's right in front of
Gene Hickerson protected
teammate our faces. It wasn't because
the Hall of Fame running
o
f of Gene's talent."
back from hann.
Notebook Hickerson.
His. long omission gnawed
Next time you watch any
" G e n e at the soft-spoken Hickerson,
tf :'l#&lt;lllfJIIr I old black-and-white NFL could run with any running whose health has deteriorated
footage
of
Brown, back, they d\~n't. have to slo~ in recent yearS.
Cleveland's great No. 32 down for htm to set up his
How_ever, }fickerson rarely
weaving his way toward the block. He could' also pass grumbled 111oud . about not
end ZOll!l on a long touch- block, but when he .got out making the Hall, sal.d his best
down run, there's a good there on t~e comc:r or down friend, Bobl)y Frankliri, a for:
chance No. 66 - Hickerson the field, tt was like one of mer college and
team:
-was out front or alongside. th?se smart ~bs.
mate, who wil present
"Gene w.as the leader of a
~~ defenstve back was Hickerson at the Saturday
great line," Brown said. "and toast.
.
. .
induction ceremonies·.
the·gre!ltest downfield block- . Drafted IIJ the stxth round
"Gene never said much but
photo ebralinl." the history of pro foot- 10 1957 - the same y~ar 1 know it really bothered hilTh
The broadcast voice of the Los Angeles Dodgers, Vin Scully, is shown the pressbox of
~levei!IDd .took Bro~n wtth He would usually make a
And f10ally, years, if not Its first ptck - Htckerson joke about it, though,''
Dodger Stadium before the start of their baseball game against the San Francisco Giants
decades after he probably proved to be one of the most Franklin said on the phone
and the Dodgers, in Los Angeles on Wednesday.
·
should have been mducted, durable players to ever snap from his home in Mississippi.
the 72-year-old Hickerson on an orange: helmet. He "Somebody would ask Gene
will be enshrined in Canton, played
behmd
former ' Wb
·
· ·
'
Ohio, an overdue tribute to Steelers coach Chuck Noll
en are you g~~l:to ~t to
the . Browns' pulling right for one season before taking the Hall of F~.e ·
~ ene
guard who blocked. for three over the startin~job in 1959. w~uld say, I m gomg f9
Hall of Fame backs,
He broke hts leg in the driv~ down ~ere. to~orrow.
Unusually quick for 1\is 1961 preseason opener, and
Htckerson s Jok}ng O}liY.
open-air booth two levels 'Closure, I was one of !hose si~. Hickerson, a country then re-hroke it later in ·the masked a de~p disappo\nt~
BY TIM DAHLBERG
/If' SPORTS COlUMNIST
above home plate. Cup of kids, thrilling to his calls of boy
from
Mississippi, season while standing on the ment he felt 10 not getting
coffee in hand, tie ·carefully Sandy Koufax E!tching a no:!' anchored Cleveland's offen- sideline. After sitting out two elected ' for so many years.
LOS ANGELES - The knotted and not a 1\air out of hitter and Don Drysdale set- sive line for 15 'seasons. games in 1962,- Hickerson Though a worthy candidate;
tribute was composed in the place, he settled, comfortably ting the scoreless inning Throughout the 1960s and never missed another game he W!15 often e~ged out
28 seconds it took Henry 1010 a -seat he has occupied record.
in~o the early 1970~. be~tirin'g in 1973. : . because of more hign-profil~
Aaron to round the base.s and for almost every home game
My kids listen to Vinny Hickei;'Son opened holes for . ·
rson W!15 .named an ~s·~n the ,ballot.
.
the roar to finally subside. since the stadium opened 45· now, and someday their ~ds Brown, Leroy Kelly, ·and ·A:Ilr . fiye s!fatght ye,rs
Hickerson s. ~5. years .of
L!sten to it today, _and it will years ago:
. · . might d'0 the same. 'He Bobby Mitchell- all HiijFof (lc~70) lind was .voted'.to . ~m .. C!il· eligtbility co~~
still make the barr on ·your
The hated Gi!IP-ts were iii shows n&lt;W'Cal signs of slow- Famers - who woulg lulve the Pi'o BOwl six consecutive e~ded wtlh spme o( (he ~port ~
arms stand up ·~-~ght. .
town, usu.ally a· series that ing down, even though he's ~er amassed.as many.yards. seasons 0966-7p. During ,grcr,tres.t· fl~ of F~41, claBSF.
Vm:Scqlly wasn t work!ng ·Scully rehshes for both the· the
anriouncer in base·
ilcclaim if oot fur his time m Cleveland, the e~; !\3ld tony qt-oss1 o( ~
fi:am notes. He had nothmg rival.ry and the history tha~ -ball
.· . ,
. . .· • : bone:Jarpllg •,Browns. never .had a losing . (CievelliJI.dl; r.lii!ll'J,l?e~et, ~.
Pf!lpared. because, ~ell, that goes back to when' he was• twi.ce
to fill.
, · . . • ,. . , , recOrd. . . ,
.. · 1Rall vo~r. .~twas. ti!U.~. fo/ ~
Dllght rum the magtc of•the hroadcastingfortheDodgers ' Ife
it with talk ' .
. ·
co!IC~~ · Bef6re f!\e.k!'~n:s IIJ!i¥~, :,~··to .get' Ill-! . ,. t(tpP. ~.
moment.
.
'•
in Brooklyn and the Giants about
been .!,'1\,:lQcPt •O!¥¥ severl·~bers 10 leag~J~ . Ttke8 of.
~~i/5 -, ili!if .·
HeletthecrowdmAtlll!lta we~play10g across, town at •ing '
speculation •30 years ag.o...• }lli~.' Bro~s htstol'}' ha'd· ,- ev~~ reacli~ . Pete Rozelle, , ~d
.~•; !11
tell part of the story. Then he the Polo Grounds.
·
about
who mll!ht be' teammate fnn Qouston. He 1,000 yards. In ,;his .first 1.0 the 1980s.
·.
., . ·
spoke fr&lt;!~ his ~eart about
But ~is night was differ- out
all ni'ghlWand had the ability:;l Gene W;as seasons, the ~pi!ns had a
·~any offensive ·lirieme ·
the magrutude of tt all.
ent. Thts series·was different.
. statlels, alway~ lo~ key ex:cepr\;\'1\!ln ·1,000-yard tu ; .l ~i!te tilnes of his •tim~ were !o~S# itlf!t · ,
"What
a · marvelous
Barry Bonds came to town That's
to others. Hlsjob tt carne tnne to protect ltm . and the league'.~ eliding rush" the pool of deservmg playert '
moment for baseball. What a with a chance to tie or .break is to entertain you for a Iew Brown . or Leroy . Kelly. 'er seven oceasibils.
who fe11 through ·the .Ctaclc.9&gt;
marvelous moment for Aaron's home run mark. If hours with what is unfolding Brother, he did that." '
· · 'He was an .exceptional And then the .wait becomei
Atlanta and the state of he did, Scully would be mak- before him, and he is a
At 6-foot-3, 248 pounds, athlete, and always on his even longer for that logjam td
Georgia. What a marvelous ing the call, 33 years after he believer in someone being Hickerson was small by feet," said Dieken. "You be broken lip."
.
!
moment for the country and did the same for Hamrnerin' innocent until proven guilty. today's gargll!ltuan standar~s . would ~atch the (game) film
Hickerson's long wait i~
the world," Scully told Hank.
.
. "I am not a judge or a jury. for an NFL hneman, but his and be m awe. He was the f10ally over, but ·because of
Dodger fans back home in
He wasn't Iookirtg forward It's none of my business," athleticism, balance and standard for what a pulling health issues, he can't appre•
Los Angeles. "A black man to it, but not for the reasons Scull~ said. "I just do foul speed allowed the Browns to guard is all about." ciate it as much as he would
!s getting a standing ovation you might think.
lines. •
utili~ the former high school . Yet despite ~at ~littering .have years earlier.
m the Deep South for break"It's nothing personal but
The game was now just a runnmg back on plays toward resume and testunoruals from
"It's going to be special,"
ing a re~ord of an, all-time I'd just as soon have the couple hours away, and the the stdehnes.
Brown and others ofhts wor- Franklin sllid. "But it's also a
baseballtdol. And tt s a great Aaron one and no$ a second first fans were coming into
'The Browns ran a lot of thiness to · be elected, sad time, too because Gene
moment for all of us and par- one," Scully said. "The the park. Bonds w;~s battling ' sweeps with Gene," said for- Hickers,on was bypassed by can't enjoy it as much .. But
ticularly for Henry Aaron, Aaron moment was so pre- cleanup, and Scully had mer arowns offensive tackle voters for 29 years.
·
he's in.
who is met at home plate not cious that if I got to do some work to do to make
only by every member of the another call it wouldn't be sure he had the right (acts
Braves but by his father and the same. It would just be the and stories for this night.
mother."
second one."
He had nothing prepared
Until now, Scully thought
The night before, 56,000 for Bonds, though, just as he
most people had forgotten fans ·jammed the stadium to didn't rehearse Aaron's hisa~ut.tt. A~ the age of 79, he w~tch the spectacle, many toric home run or Kirk
sun hves m the day-to•day wtth portable radios to listen Qibson's ·ninth-inning homer
world of play-by-play, where to Scully's broadcast. It's a in the 1988 World Series. It
~h~t y_ou ,say in the first tradition at Dodger Stadium, just wouldn't seem right if it
mrung IS htstory by the first where most nights you hear was in the ~an and, besides,
pitch of the second.
snippets of Scully's smooth the crowd would help out.
"Evel),'thing we do is sky- voice as you walk through
"To me the story is how
writing, ' Scully said. "It's the park.
the crowd reacts and it will
put up in the wind and it
He is as much Dodger ·be very interesting to see
blows away."
baseball as Sandy Koufax how the crowd will ·react
The wind couldn't scatter even more a part of the fab: here," he said . "There's
this call far enough. Through ric of the team than Tommy nothing I can say that will be
the beauty of the Internet, it Lasorda. He's the reason penetratingand incisive."
lives on for anyone savvy Dodger fans can arrive late
Dodger fans would disenough to use a Web brows- and leave early, confident· he agree. They know better
et.
will paint the picture for because they' ve listened to
He's had other magical them while they listen to the Aaron call, the Gibson
c.alls. Dodger fans would their car radios.
call and thousands of calls in
argue that it's magic everyHe's a modest man who between.
ti~e he sits in front of a still seems surprised when
They've heard magic on
mtcrophone and welcomes people tell him that, as kids, the air.
·them to a beautiful night at they'd fall asleep listening to
"('hey know that no matter
Dodger Stadmm.
htm on the transistors they what happens on the field,
Scully was doing just that would sneak under the cov- they have a treasure in the
Wednesday night. in his ers. In the interest of full dis- booth.

fro

In the booth, Scully doesn't judge,
just delivers the calls

O.t

:

en

11.1

I

Lunch Buffet

I

I
I
j

Once Again, The Daily Sentinel Will Have A
Special Meigs ·county Fair Preview Edition.
This Year's Edition Promises To Be One Of The
Biggest And Best Ever! Look For thi'S Special
Edition In Your Thursday, August 9th Paper.

. 1

Medium

: Specialty Pizza
1&amp; Medium
: 1 topping Pizza
I

I Coupon IXplm 9/05/07.

$1'699 ::::~~~n::: $1799
Specialty Pizza &amp;
.-:-:-::::-:""' : Large t topping Pizza
1

IMf$•79ll5toffoiC,..."""""""
""""'""'"'"
•IIPirtt
'-·- - - - ' · 1 Coupon

9/0S/07.

1

IMF$•46111

•

BE SURE YOUR BUSINESS IS
A PART OF THIS YEAR'S
FAIR EDITION ...
CALL TODAY!
''I
I

Call ·
DAVE or BRENDA
at 992-2155

'

., FOR MORE INFORMATION

The Daily Sentinel

Fund-raisin with Pizza Hut!
Dough for DollarS
Earn Dough for
your organization!

Fund-rai,ser Nights •

Call 1-866-912-3753

A Pizzo Hut Fund-roiser Night allows
your organization to raise money
doing something everyone loves to do
eat pizza with family and friends!

to find out more about this fund-raising
opportunity or visit
www .midlandfoodservice.com

Call 1-866-912-3753
for more details.

•

$ 99

�~plans

Brother and sister
graduate same
weekend;A7

Back to School
cnlsade,A2

•
Bids being.taken for Lincoln Hill/Heights water project

SPORTS
• Football two-a-days.
officially start.
SeePageB1

valves, service connections,
hydrant reconnections and
other miscellaneous pieces.
PO~ROY Bids are
Pomeroy was approved for
currently being accepted for a loan to complete the project
the Lincoln HiU Waterline at zero percent interest from
Replacement project estimat- the Ohio Public Works
ed to cost roughly $200,000. Commission. When the proThe project consists of ject gets started depends on
constructing 3,961 feet of the bids received and which
six-inch waterline, 226 feet options the contractor exerof two-inch waterline, CISe to undenake the process.
BY BETH 5ERGENT

BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL.CpM

Commissioners
'renew tourism
·contract with
chamber
BY BRIAN

Mayor John Musser said
the existing water line is
I00 years old, shows severe
signs of deterioration and is
difficult to maintain.
"It's just something that's
ancient," Musser said.
":There's no pressure on it and
for the protection of everyone
on Lincoln Hill and Lincoln
Heights we felt it necessary
to put in new waterline."

The bidding process was
begun on July 26 and will
close at 10 a.m. on Tuesday,
Aug. 21 when the sealed
bids will be publicly opened
and read aloud . at the
Pomeroy
Municipal
Building. Bidders must
comply with prevailing
wage rates on the project.
Requests for bid documents,
including . bid

Getting a head starl
~-------.-.,. ~~~------~~
'•

'

•'"

t:~'i ' ,.'~

:~..

. ·~

J. REED

BREEDOMVOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY Meigs
Commissioners
County
approved a one-year contract with the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce for
tourism services.
,
The $25,000 contract will
provide for the salary of
Tourism Director Michelle
Donovan, promotional materials and other efforts toward
Page AS .
attracting visitors into the
- Evelyn Mae ·Kems
county. The contract will run .
Freeman, 73
through July 1, 2008.
.
Fundin~ for the tourism.
prowam 1s donated by the
Me1gs County Community
,i;.·: .
lm(&gt;rovement Corpora:~ion,
.
. , ''"~,.~.~: '': , · wh1ch rents the
. :..f,l'•.terj)ria&amp; ~lrt:·~ • .DOJiartmem:""'f"'""· ··.·.
~a·s new location. . .
Transportallon gatage
m
Ohio 7 to American Electric
.See Page A2
Power. The funds are "dis' AHunger For More. . cretionary," according to
Cbmmissioner
Mick
See Page A6
Davenport, ·and have been
used to pay for the tourism
operation since the use of
Temporary Assistance to
,Needy Families funds for
tourism and economic
development efforts was
deemed unlawful.
The chamber's bid for the
service was the only one
received.
Meeting Thursday afternoon in regular session, commissioners approved bids and
opened others for projects to
be paid 'ihrough a $500,000
Community Distress grant
awarded to the Village of
Pomeroy. .Commissioners
· • Governor announces
awarded a bid to Jeffers
new plan for Ohio's
Excavating of Pomeroy, in
the amount of $76,779, for
public universities.
demolition of 12-15 conSee Page A8
demne9 houses in the village.
Bids were opened .yesterday for basketball court
equipment and fencing at the
WEATIIER
Mulberry
Comrnuni!Y
Center, also to be pa1d
through the Community
Development Block Grant
Community Distress program. Three bids were
opened for posts, backboards, nets and other equipment. Snider &amp;·Associations,
Inc., North Royalton, was the
apparent low bidder, with a
b1d of $2,294. Other bids
were received from David
Detallo on Page AS
Williams &amp; Associates,
Alliance, in the amount of
$3,430, and A&amp;M Outdoor
Concepts, Inc., Galena, in the
amount of $3,186.40.
Commissioners received
2 SECTIONS - t6 PAGilS
one bid for fencing for the
court, from Babcock Fence
Annie's Mailbox
A7 Co., Lowell, in the amount
A7 of $14,600. The. engineer's
Calendars
estimate for the project was
Classifieds ·
84-6 $20,000. Plans call for new
four-foot fencing along the
Comics
back of the court, and 12foot
fencing along the front.
Editorials
The fencing will be configured to allow for additional
Faith • Values
parking along the frmit of the
Movies
center, according to Grants
Administrator Jean Trussell.
NASCAR
The · Community Distress
project
also calls for paving·
Obituaries
of
streets,
sidewalk
B Section improvements and purchase
Sports
of new fire equipment,
Weather
AS Trussell said. ·
Please see Tourism, A5
© 2007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Hard to believe,
but the school
. year is just
around the corner, and for
those beginning
head start that
means It's time
to get a physical
and check shot
records. Here,
Kelll Burns, 3,
seems to be
thinking •you're
going to do
what?" as
Sherry Wilcox,
director of nursing at the Meigs..

OBITUARIES

INS.JDE·

requirements and contract
documents, should be sent
to ME Companies, Inc.,
5085 Tile Plant Road, New
Lexington, 43764 with a
non-refundable payment of
$60 per set.
Contractors will be
required to present evidence
of its experiences on projects of similar size and
complexity.

·

INDEX

checks her blood
pres~ure. Kelll
will attend
Bradbury's Heart
of the Valley
Head Start and
was one of
around 30 kids
who were given
physicals at the
health department for Heart
of the Valley,
Carleton School
and the Athens·
Meigs
Educational
Service Center.
Betti &amp;eraent/photo

Cooling program gets funding Middleport police
report arrests
STAFF REPORT

NEWS@MYO~LYSENTINELCOM

,.
. CHEsHIRE Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency has
received -an additional $23,000 to
assist residents with the 2007
Emergency Summer Cooling
Program.
Cust()J,Jlers are urged to make
their appointments as soon as they
receive their utility bills.
Emergency Services Director
Sandra Edwards said the program
will run through Aug.' 31 or until
the additional funds are depleted.
Income eligible persons must
make an appointment.
There are two types of households that may be assisted.and they
are the following:
( I). An income eligible household with a member who has a current qualifying medical condilion/breathing disorder verified by
physician documentation from a
medical professional will be qualitied to receive the following:
• One air conditioner, providing
they did not receive one in the last
three years (2004, 2005 or 2006),
and may receive one payment for a
current electric bill or PIPP,
whichever is more , but not to
exceed $175. (No disconnect
required).
•If they do not qtrolify for an air
conditioner, they may still receive
one payment for the electric bill as
described above.
(2). An income-eligible household with a member who is 60 or

older is eligible to receive ONE
payment for electric biiJ Up tO the
current bill or PIPP, whichever is
more, but not to exceed $175: (No
disconnect required).
Appointments can be made
between the hours of 8 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. each Friday by calling
367-7341 for Gallia County and
992-6629 for Meigs County.
· Eligible clients must bring:
I . Proof of income (income at or
below 175 percent of the federal
poverty guidelines).
2. Names, birthdates and Social
Security numbers of all household
members.
3. Current electric bills.
4. Medical documentation if
applicable.
·
5. New this year: Primary customer must have their birth certificate. Yout must bring documentation or you will not be assisted.
Annual income eligibility for
one person in the household is
$17 ,867; two persons, $23,957;
three people, $30,047; four people,
$36,137; five people, $42,227; and
· six people, $48,317. For house~
holds with more than six members,
add $6,090 per member.
Edwards said that applications
will be taken Monday through
Thursday from 8:30 to II a.m. and
I to 3:30 p.m. in the Gallipolis
Office, 859 Third Ave,;. the
Cheshire Office, 80 I0 Oh10 7
North; and the Middleport Office,
1369 Powell St.
No applications will be taken on
Friday.
"

"

'

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - A Pomeroy man and
Middleport woman were sentenced to jail
terms after an off-duty police officer witnessed them stealing a rim and tire from a
Middleport residence.
Travis Friend and Sierra ·Jackson were
arrested and charged by the Middleport
Police Department with theft of an aluminum
rim and tire from the Waylon McKinney
property on Beech Street.
According to Police Chief Bruce Swift, the
theft was observed by Middleport Officer
Ben Davidson, who was off duty at the time.
The two were charged with first-degree misdemeanor theft. They appeared in Meigs
County Court the same day and enten!d pleas .
of no contest to the charge.
Friend was sentenced to 30 days in jail and
three years probation, and ordered to complete 50 hours of community service. Jackson
was sentenced to five days in jail, three years
probation and 50 hours of community·service.
Jared Warner of Middleport was arrested
and charged with the July 28 theft of a credit card belonging to Sharon Warner, and the
theft of $340 cash. He was charged with
first-degree misdemeanor theft and was
released on bond.
Also arrested:
• Heather Mattox, Middleport, for criminal
trespassing.
• Timothy Lyons, Pomeroy, on a bench warrant for failure to comply with a court order.
• lanzoe B. Herman, Middleport, on a
bench warrant for failure to comply.
.
• Jpnathan Stewart. Middleport, for possession of marijuana.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="533">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9984">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="15568">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="15567">
              <text>August 2, 2007</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1739">
      <name>burns</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2966">
      <name>o'brien</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1235">
      <name>patrick</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
