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                  <text>Friday, August 4, 2006

www .m ydai lysentinel.com

Page BS • The Daily Sentinel

ALONG THE RIVER

LiviNG

Gallia County Fair Scenes, c;1

Classic Cape Cod:
·
Beaches, mini-golf, ice cream, sunsets, D1

'

tme -

·~

~

If you have a question or a ~omment, write: NASCAR This Week, c;/o The Gaston Gazette.

• Race: Allstate 400 at the Brick·

yard

1 Where: Indianapolis Motor

Speedway. Speedway, Ind. (2.5
miles). 160 laps/ 400 miles.
• When: Sunday. Aug. 6

l&lt;rll8lf 200,
11 p.m.. saturday
~

1Last year's winner: Tony Stewart

• Qualifying record: Casey Mears,
Dodge. 186.293 mph, Aug. 7. 2004
1 Race record: Bobby Labonte,

Pontiac, 155.912 mph, Aug. 5,
2000.

.

'

\

.

Pelt~ ~lYIN hi$ &lt;fOOt/\
. . -•
.~$rti\(the .

•

~~tle's\1011~.

• Not only IS Jeff GQrddn the
only men to win at lncb' four
times. but he'S also.Jile track
leader In poles with lhree. On
the Olher hand, he hasn't quel&gt;
llod In the top fMI in the past
six tllere.
·
• To~ Sl-rt's right to "driVe ·
other drivers the same way they

e1r1ve me.• n·s a wldesprfad rule
of thumb. Bul. Stewart needs to
tllke the edge off lils resent- ·
mont and stop taklnfl tt upon

• Last race: Den11y Hamlin. the
front·runner in the rookie-of.theyear race, dominated at Pocono

Raceway for the second time in as

many tries. He led 151 out of 200
laps and described the race after-

ward as

~ pretty

uneventful, for

once :· Hamlin climbed to eighth in
the Nextel Cup points standings
and increased the likelihood that a

rookie will make the Chase. Behind
him. though, th e Pennsylvania 500
was anything but uneventful. Tony
Stewart . whose own chances at repeating as champ1on rema in a bit
tenuous, played llis cards so wisely
that he caused a crash. apparently
shook his fist at driver Clint Bowyer
while doing it. cultivated a murder·
ous rage in another. Cart tdwards.
Oy firing a derisive gesture his way
. .. and fin ished seventh despite

being penalized a lap by NASCAR

for rough driving. Pocono has the
longest straightaways in the sport,

and for a good port1on of the day,

Hamlin, in a Chevrolet. led by the
length of One of them . His vast
edges were regularly erased via
caution flags. Kurt Busch finished
second in a Dodge, wllite Jeff Gordon took third in a Chevy.

• Race: Kr ager 200
•Where : O'Re1ly Raceway Par~. Clf'rl!lont, Ind.
(.686 n111~5 ), 200
laps/ 1?.7 .2 n~il e'i.

•When:

Satu· dr~~.l\l lf,.

5

•Last year's winner:
Martin True .. Jr.

200

• Where : O'Reilly Raceway P;uk, Clermont, Ind.

t.686 miles). 200
laps/ 13 1.2 miles.
• When: Fdday. Aug. 4

David Green, Chevrolet.

1.13.461 mph, Aug. 4,
1994 .
• Race record: Jimmy
Hensley, Oldsmobile.

• Qualifying record: Joe
Ruttman. Dodge,
111.843 mph, Aug. 2,
'2000.
fle, Ford, 88.704 mph,
Aug. 5, 1999.

wards drove a Ford to
victory in the Busch Silver Celebration 250 at
Gateway International
Raceway in Madison, Ill .

NEXTEL CuP SERIES

• Marshall looking
for improvement.
See Page B1

• Race record: Greg Bif-

96.923 mph, June 22,
1985.
.
•Last week : Carl Ed-

-- .......... r:s .s...?.
'
· - ./! .,.;:.::
.::::..=.J:. ..

No. 24

v
DuPoNT CHE:VROLET

E

R

.

l&lt;evln Harvlck.
1&gt; Kasey Kehoe's average finish,
In twO races at Indy, is 3.0. ..
• KnoW who won the pole, back
In 1994, for the firSt Cup race
at Indy? RICk ~ast. The first
NASCAR driver to attempt a

qualifying lap was the late H.B.
Bailey, who did not make the ·
fleld. The '94 Brickyard 400 was
also the 12Bth and last Cup
start tor the great A.J. Fo&gt;t
.., Jimmie Johnson's points lead

Is 97 over Matt Kenseth. That's
the Widest margin since Johnson led by 101 after the June
25 race in Sonoma, Calif.

• Nine men have raced in both
the Indianapolis 500 and t~e
(now) Allstate 400 during their
careers: John Andratti, Geoff
Brabham, A.J. FO&gt;\, Larry Fa&gt;t.
Robby Gordon, Jason Leffler.
Soot! Pruett, Tony Stewart and
~Sullivan.

• Next year the Allstate

400
moves to a ·new date. The

speedWa') announced last week
that the 2007 date will be Sun-

dlr;, July 29, marking the .first

time the race will be held in any

mont11 other than August.

• Who'allat- Jimmie John~

son has three more top-10 finIshes (16) than anyone else.
... Matt Kenseth has two more
lop-fives (10) than anyone.

• Who'enot
-Dele Earn-

hardt Jr. has
.fallen !Tom
third to 11th
In the points ·
standings In
a span ol twO

..-s....

llel'lny W8&gt;
lace has
tried and failed to quail!\' for
eqprt Clip races.

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.
- Workers at Century of
Aluminum 's Ravenswood
plant have approved a new
three-year contracl, the
company
and·
United
Stee!'workers union said
Saturday.
The agreemen _t, which
averted a ~ trike , cover&gt; 580
hourly workers at the aluminum reduction facility:
Century and the union hammered out the pact earlier in
the we.ek, alluwing workers
to vote on it Friday.

~-- ·.=,..__._...

himself to be jUdge-end jury for

been in every race are 'Stewart
the late Dale Earnhardt and

BY TIM HUBER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRI TER

• Last race: Jack
Sprague, in a Toyota,
won for the 26th time
in the series at MemphiS Motorsports Park.

the racing .cyles of. others.
.
1&gt; NASCAR's golden rule Is: "Dri-

ve unto others as Mark Martin
would drlve unto me."
1&gt; Only 11 driVers have competed
In eyery race at Indy since
NASCAR began racing there in
1994. Those 11 drivers have
won nine of the 12 races. The
only Indy winners who haven't

workers

SPORTS

•Last year's winner :
Dennis Setzer

• Quall!\'lng record:

)

JEFF GORDON

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

• Race: Power Stroke

Stewart

s
u
s

Edwards

.

It's the same as last week, sim-

Gordon, on.the hee·ls of Earnhardt, has won at Indy four times
Tony Stewart's victory in the Allstate 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in 2005 received a considerable
amount of attention, but the NASCAR
driver whose performances are most
visibly associated with the Brickyard
is Jeff Gordon.
.
Gordon, whose 35th birthday is on
Friday, has won this annual stock-car
visit to the world's most famous race
track an unprecedented four times.
He won the first , in '!994, and also
drove his No. 24 Chevrolet to victory'
lane in 1998, 2001 and 2004. Indy is the
site of Gordon career victories nos.
two, 35, 57 and 69.
Now, Gordon ]las 75 career victories. The late Dale Earnhardt had 76.
What better place to equal the great
Earnhardt for sixth place on
NASCAR's all-time list?
"That would be a huge honor," said
Gordon, a four-time series champion.
"I'm just blown away and overwhelmed that I've gotten to 75 (wins).
To me, Dale is the all-time great, certainly among those whom I have had a
chance to race against. I've never really had the chance to race against
Richard (Petty) or Darrell (Waltrip) in
his prime, or anybody else who's up
there. To me, Dale (Earnhardt) was
the best I've ever raced against. To
match up to something that he's done
and just to be one away from it is an
honor.
"The thing that· I admired so much
about him was the fact that he won
over so many different years (with)
cars changing, the sport changing, different drivers coming in and out of
the sport, and yet, he always continued to find a way to get to victory lane
and battle for championships. I think
when you look at the span of,time that
he was able to do that, it's very impressive."
Gordon missed the Chase last
year, and his position is pretty precarious as the regular season enters
its final five weeks. The trend is
strong, though , since Gordon has

ply because the hard feelings be-

tween these two drivers are difficult
to settle . Stewart admitted a crash

that collected EdWards at Pocono on
July 23 was his fault. but EdWards re-

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

mains reluctant to tully accept Stewart's explanation or apology. Edwards
was an innocent victim of the crash,

which greatly damaged his Chase

hopes. Stewart and Clint Bowyer
have appo:irently resolved their differences.

NASCAR This Week's Monte

.Dutton gives hlo take: . Edwards is a
fine young man, and the depth of hiS
differences wi~h Stewart was reflected in Edwards' unaccustomed behav·

ior. Like Stewart, Edwards was penal·

ized for rough driving at PocOno, but
wllen Edwards intentionally ran into
· Stewart's car on pit road. it was com-

pletely personal."

New book digs deep Into
stock-car racing's roots
All too few modern fans have any
knowledge of stock-car racing's
roots. An excellent way to remedy
that is reading MOriving with the Devil: so·uthern Moonshine, Detroit

Wheels and the Birth of NASCAR"
(Crown Publishers). Author Neal
John Clark,INASCAR This Week

Some have Sugested that Jail Gonion has ~wn complacent through the years. That rankles Gordon, who has been criUclzed lor several Incidents of aggressl¥e driving this year.

won two of the past five races entering Indy. In the current Nextel Cup
points standings, positions 9-11 are
occupied, in order, by Gordon, reigning champion Stewart and Dale
Earnhardt Jr.
Matt Kenseth said recently that
Gordon was "the face of NASCAR."
''I don't know if I totally agree with
that," said Gordon. "I think Dale Earnhardt Jr. is probably more n!cognizable with NASCAR than I am. I see
Tony Stewart as the past champion, so
he's carrying the torch right now. We
certainly made our mark , and I'm
proud of what I've accomplished and
where I stand in the sport and what I
represent: my sponsors, the sport and
my team."

Gordon yearns for a fifth cham pi-

onship. Som'e have suggested that he
has grown complacent through the
years. That rankles Gordon, who has
been criticized for several incidents
of aggressive driving this year.
''I would call it determination," he
said. "I would call it trying to get ourselves back to where we need to be to
win races and championships. In some
ways, we have improved. We've been
down and out; and people have pretty
much written us off. I can tell by the
way guys race me.
"When I have a car that is capable
of winning or running up front, then
I'm going to be more aggressive with
it to get those good finishes."

Contact Monte Dutton at
hmdutton50@aol.com

Thompson goes back even before
there was sucll a sport as stock-car
racing, describing events of the

1930s and 1940s tna.t occurred long
before there was a NASCAR. He
writes about the giants of the sport's

early years - Raymond Parks, Red
Byron, Red Vogt, Lloyd Seay and Roy
Hall, among them - and tells why
the relationship between stock-car
racing and the illegal liquor trade is
more than a myth.

BY

INSIDE

Only one time in modern NASCAR
same race. It occurred at the first

Brickyard 400, at Indianapolis Motor
Speedway in 1994, when Geoffrey,
Brett and Todd Bodine allied at
least a lap . Jeff Gordon won that
race, and two of the brothers, Geof·

frey and Brett, tangled during the

The contract replaces a
deal that had been in effect
since 1999 and was extendell lor four years in 2002.
Workers at the Jackson
County plant melt alumina
powder into molds that are
processed into aluminum
rolls . Most of the plant's
product goes to nearby Alcan
Rolled Products where it is
turned into aluminum plates,
coils and sheet products for
the aerospace, aeronautical
and transponation industries .
Century Aluminum of
West Virginia is a subsidiary
of . Monterey, Californiabased Century Aluminum.

MICHELLE MILLER

MM ILLER@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

• Gallia County Junior
Fair market hog sale
results. See Page A2
• Local insurance agency
eams top designation.
SeePageA3
• Fairgoers compete
for camping spots.
SeePage·A3
• Local Briefs.
SeePageA3
• Investigators searching
for cause of roller
coaster accident.
SeePage AS
• Computer specialist
says university wrongly
fired him. See Page A6
• Former senator,
wife suffer minor
injuries in car accident.
SeePage AS

In 1994,·all three Bodines
led • lap at the Brickyard

history have three brothers led the

in the new conlract. ''We duel ion lines because of the
must explore every opportu- threalened strike. Resumi~1g
nity to con lain costs in order full production is cxpec1ed
for Ravenswood to remain to take up to three months ,
competitive," he said.
the company said.
Gov. Joe Manchin issued a
Dean said the a~ reement
statement calling the settle- will allow Century ~to inwst
ment good news for West in upd~ted technology and
Virginia.
"Century negotiate a new eleclric
Aluminum plays an impor- power contract to cut cosh .
tant role in our state's econoThe union said that.
my," Manchin said. ·;rm glad among other things. conto see thai everyone involved tract raise s wages and penin these negotiations contin- sion benefits for production
ued to work together and maintenan ce worker&gt;
throughollt this process to ,and continue!&gt; lhe currenl
achieve a positive result."
medical plan. which due s
Centurv had shut down not charge employ~c s
one of the plant's foltr pro- monthly premiums.

Robbery
suspects
charged

Tony Stewart
vs. Carl Edwards
~

United
Steelworkers
Local 5668-04 and Century
said they were pleased with
the outcome of the vote.
''I feel extremely good
about what we have been
able to accomplish for. our
members and their families,
Century Aluminum, the surrounding community and
Jatkson County," chief union
negotiator Tim Dean said.
Plant
manager
Ron
Thompson said the company is looking forward to
getting the plant back to full
protluction and finding
ways to cut costs to pay fnr
wage and benefit increases

• Reserve champion
hog. See Page A6

WEATHER

GALLIPOLIS Two
men who allegedly committed a roadside robbery on
Thursday
have
been
charged, the Gallia County
Prosecuting
Attorney's
office reported.
Charles Y. McDonald.
39,
Gallipolis.
was
charged with aggravated
robberv
and
William
Carter,
32,
Michael
Gallipolis,
has
been
charged with complicity to
aggravated robbery.
On Thursday around
11:19 a.m., Carter allegedly
used his vehicle to block the
car of Lewis S. Gillenwater,
and
Larry J.
63 ,
Gillenwater, 26, both of
Crown City. on Safford
School Road while the two
were on their way to
Gallipolis to make a bank
deposit of a "sizable amount
of cash."
. A car allegedly driven
by McDonald pulled up
behind the Gillenwater
car, blocking them from
the rear.
McDonald then allegedly
approached the vehicle,
identified him se lf as a
police officer, and ordered
the men .. out of the car at
gunpoint, where they were
handcuffed, robbed. and left
by the road.
The two victims were
able to free themselves and
go for help.
More· charges in connection with the .robbery may
be filed at a later date.

race. Brett still managed to finish
second.

Kevin Kelly/photo
Jackson Hewitt Tax Service of Gallipolis, owned t&gt;y Claudette Huggins. purchased the grand champion hog at the Gallia
County Junior Fair's 46th annual market hog sale Friday from Kristen Halley for $13 per pound. From left are Gene Brown ,
representing Jackson Hewitt, Halley, Jun ior Livestock Princess Michaela Drummond, Fair Queen Kayla Rose, Little Miss
Gallia County early Gilmore. Senior Livestock Princess Haley Angel, Little Mr. Gallia County Brody Sauer, and fair queen
secorid runner-up and Miss Congeniality Kaitlin Angell.

Gallia Fair~s grand champion hog
fetches $13 per ponnd at sale
BY

KEVIN KELLY

KKELLY @MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - Jackson Hewitt
: Tax Service of Gallipolis bought the
grand champion hog shown by
Kristen Halley of the Pairs and Spares
4-H Club at the 46th annual market
hog .sale of the Gallia County Junior
.
Fair on Friday.
Halley's 276-pound hog sold for
$13 per pound in opening bidding at
the sale, the only livestock sale o~ the

day at the fair that saw 451 hogs go on
With Lee Johnson and Josh Bodimer
the auction block:
serving as &lt;iuctioneers, the bidding
the reserve champion hog shown by was brisk as ring men shouted out the
Meghan Caldwell of the Pairs and prospective buyers' willingness to go
Spares club fetched a price of $8 per . higher on the price. The sale, which
pound from a partnership of L&amp;L Scrap began shortly after 9 a.m., wrapped up
Metal, April Rice-Oak Hill Financial around 5 p.m .
·
Results of the sale appear inside
Services and Oak Hill Banks.
today's edition. Results of Saturday's
The hog weighetl in al 2RO pounds.
Market steer, market lamb and lhe sales will appear in Monday's
fair's top JO tobacco proJ·ects were
auctioned off Salurday. Buyers had Gallipolis Daily Tribune . .
135 lambs and 97 steers to bid on.
Please see Hog. Al

Shrine Club's efforts a fair staple
BY

MICHELLE MtLLER

MMILLER@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Details on Page AS

INDEX
4 St:CIIONS- 24 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
Calendars ·
Celebrations
""'Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Regional
Sports
Weather

As
A3, As
C4

D Section
insert

A4
A2,A3
B Section
A6

© ooo6 Ohio Vulley Publishing Co.

GALLIPOLIS - With the smell o( fair
food, the whirling rides and roar of the demolition derby. it's easy to overlook the people ·
who statid out in the hot sun. taking tickets
and stamping hands.
_
For over 20 years, members of the
Gallipolis Shrine Club, their wives and widows have served as the Gallia County Junior
Fair's official ticket takers .
Working the fair gates serves as a fundraise r in whi ch all the proceeds go to benefit
burned and crippled children. The Gallipolis
Shrine rai ses funds for the Shri ncrs ·
Hospitals. thai treat severe(.w. bum~ or disab.led chtldren tree of charge tlirough Jts
annual distribution of a tabloid newspaper
describing the organization's charitable
.
efforts, especially the hospitals.
The fair is another way the local Shrine
raises money.
The Gallipolis Shline. which is affiliated
with The Aladdin Temple in Columhus. has·
over 200 members.
Between four and I0 members work each
of the four gates from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. all six
days of the. fair, which concluded Saturday.
Michelle Miller/ photo
For their w&lt;;&gt;rk, the group raises around Frank Petrie of Rio Grande, a 15-year member of ·the Gallipolis Shrine Club, stamps the hand of Travis
Sigman, 9, of GallipoliS, on his way into the fair.
$5.000.
••

..

'

�I

REGIONAL

&amp;unba~ «:ime~ -ientinel

GALLIA (OUN1Y jUNIOR FAIR
GALLIPOLIS - Re&gt;ulh of lhc
46th annual m.1rket hog -.t~le .n th~
G.lllld County Junwr Fatr, by
t.:Khlbttor club buvcr ,m(J pncc an.:
as lolluw'

Knsten Halle} Pmrs &amp; Spare!!
Jad:son Hcwlll ln~.:ome Tax Serv1ce
$11 Mcghnn Culdwcll P,urs &amp;
Sparos L &amp; L Smp ~1c1.1ls Oak H1ll
B.tnks Apnl Rtcc Oak H1ll Fman~.:tal
Servt~.:c"
$~
Brynn S,mndcr~
Tnang!t.: R,mJy W,llls M D $4 2"i
Zar: BC.I\a Pur' &amp; Spares Gallw
County Rcpullhc.m Olfi~.:choldcrs
$3 ~0 Hulce Myer~ Tnangle Ohto
Val h.-:) Ban~ $1 \ttorgan Foster
Tn.mglc Eastman s Foodland (Ohto
Valley Supcrrnarh:ts) $4, Rusty
Ferguson
R&lt;~ccoon
Rowdtcs
F.tnnr..:rs Bank &amp; Si:l\tngs Co $4
H.lle1gh C.1ldwell Golba Guys &amp;

Gals Wash: Management $3 25
Abb)
Wehb
Tn anglc
OBS
Colhsum Tony Mch ssa &amp; K~.:rr)
Ours $1 2'; Counnev Swarn Ga!h.l
Guvs &amp; Gals The Vvi:'!Cm,m Ageru:v
IrK $j 2:) Keg.m Angel Frem: h
C1ty Crusaders LJ Trcnchmg &amp;
Backhoe $2 7S Courtney Roath
Country Km:m~ SFS Truck Sales
Inc $4 Meg.m Foster Tnangle
Brent A Saunders attorney at Ia\\
$2 25 Oldy Cull G 1ll1a Guys &amp;
Gills Dr Lynden G.uncs Dr Jamal
lladd.td Dr R•ck St Ongc and Dr
Pntnck Muflky $2 Jov • Hmt
M1llenmum l~ orce Oh10 V.tlley
Bank. $2 Olrvra Rces Tnangle fopc
I um 1turc &amp; Lr fc Style Fm nnur~
$1 25 Tyler Eastm.w Tn melc
bshn.m s Food land t Oh10 V.rll c)

Supermarkets I
$'2 7.;,
Seth
WuoU\\oanJ Tmmgle Boh E\ans
Farms $3 Curtrs Holbrook Paus &amp;
Spare~ Phd B(Jwm m $2 Megan
Me.tdc Hayf\Ceds Stall' RqJ Cl\!..1~.:
Evans rm.l State Sen John C m:~y $:!
KOO} Rolx:ns Gallla County O.ur}

Club Stanh:y H.1mson ~2 R} 111
R1ch trds, G&lt;JII!a s Bam)ard Budd•r.:~
1 H:.~tle lt s M11l Ourler Inc, $2 Jarrr.:ll
M.1rtm Tnanglc, US Bank $2 7'
A l ys~.l Dray H1lhnp H11lbllhes The
W1scman Agency Inc $2
Stuc1c Cummuns Pmrs &amp; Spares
llolzer Clime
$2 I 0
Enul}
, Hammond Back Pm;kers Jackson
' Ht.:\\llt Income Tax Servtce, $1 80
~ Tumnu Burtrum New Honzun
Noms Northup Dodge $1, K1rsue
Bcm.un Pm rs &amp; Spares Galli!
Countv Local Board of Education
Terrv Halley Johnny Payne Mtke
Polycn Joyce Boolhe and Scott
W1lham~n $3 Kevm Back CTTC
' Country to the Core, Jackson Hewitt
; Income Tax Serv1ce Sl 80 Cod 1e
Lloyd Mercen !lie Compan10ns
The Feed Stop and the Gal !Ia County
Coon
Club
$ 1 80
Bnggs
Shoemaket RJO Hopefuls, Dr and
Mrs Ph1lhp Long $2 15 Jared
Golden Raccoon Rowdres, Tom and
Vicki
Kerns
$2 45,
Kact
Shoemaker R10 Hopefuls Sm1th s
GMC $2 15 Jdhun Swam, Pu~rs &amp;
Spares, OVB, $1 85 Danny Matney
Me(cen 11le Compamons
R&amp;C
Packmg. $2 L1ndsay Brown
Tnangle, The W1seman Agency Inc
$1 85 Jacob Chck, The Tnbo OVB
$1 80, Kayla Sanders, Raccoon
Rowdres Jason Thomas and Lon
Russell $1 85 Trem Holcomb
Tnangle Eastm.m s Foodland (Ohto
Valley SupermarkeiS) $2 20, Mandy
Foster TrianEie M1dland Co-op
Jackson and M1dland Petroleum.
$2 35, Ohvw Woodward Tnangle,
The W1seman Agency Inc $2 25.
Adnane Emlmun Tn,mgle Mark
CUrr) Certrfied Fmanctal Planner
$2 75 Zac hmv Roherts Pdlrs &amp;
Spares Mount Tree Servtce $1 75
Alcxts Williamson Putrs &amp; Spares
Pierceton Truckmg Co Inc • $2 35
Randy J,Jckson The Tnbe OBS
Col hsmn, Tony Meltst:oa ~md Kerry
Oms, $2 25
Genn.1
B.tker
Temperature Rt~Jng m memory ot
PJ ,md Barbnr.t Menzer $4 25,
Cod te Ward Hilltop HtllbJ!lJes.
Holzer Chmc PedJ.llntmns $2
Courtney Parsons R10 Hopefuls
S 0 S Elecmc $2 25 Bryce Dar')t
R1ver Valley All-slars H &amp; R Block
, $3 50 Brocbc Gll l Hope s Help1ng
Hands Aluzer Fam1 Supply :b2 2:'i
Greg B.tker Tem per lture Rt~mg
Action Pest Control Im: $1 25
Tr.tvts Roush Rl\er V.1lley All
stars llatTell s Mlll Oulkllnc $1 85
Ttmmy Kemper R1o Hopetub Bob s
, Market &amp; Grc~.:nhou~cs Inc. $l 80
Brady Curry Tmmgle Gr&lt;1ce M)ers
Excavating, $2 25
Jered Shaffer
Ptnneerll
S.Jundcr~
Thtvener
Insurance $3 50 Counncy Slm\-er
Gallm s Barnyard Ruddtes The Karat
Patch Dmmonds n Gold $2 25
Morgan Young Whtz K1ds GKN
Sm1er Mt::I;Jis $3 ~~~~~on Porter
Mnrgan R.udcrs G lll tpohs Hdrlcy
O"ners Group $2 Tt)lor Foster
Tnanglc
Josh
Bod1mer
$5 25
Vmcenl
Aucltoneenng
Brnwmng Eno Sail ttl Trt M H
Construction, $2 75
S.unantha
Sumnons KCK M1ch.1d McCreedy
and Elmer Dyer S l 8~ A,1ron
Carpenter R Jcconn Rowdt ~::-. Fnends
ol Ra&lt;.:cQOn Rowd1t:S 4 ll Club, $3
Megan Lunslord Gulha County
Dmry Cluh Acqu1~ tllons Fmc
Jewell)' Inc $2 2i H_olly C tnaday
Wh11. K1ds S nmdcrs lnsur,mcc
$2 25 N:.~than B miter P;ms &amp;
Spares Small Co Inc $2 05 Brook
Planll Bam Burner~ famu:n. Bank
&amp; S,tvmg~ Co $2 10 Lmdscy
Waddell SJdi.llcs N Spurs Fanuly
Oxygen &amp; Mcd1cal Equtptncnt Int
$3 25 Kalll yn Ruherb R.u.:wun
Vallc.:y, The \Vi..,Cilldll Ag~.:ncy Inc
$1 85 Jacoh McCounn.:k TtMngk:
Holzer Chn1c
$4 10
Brilt yn
S.tundcrs The rube JdLksun li t~\ Ill
Income Tc!X Scrvu;c $ 1 8'1 Wesky
• Hau.kn G,dh.t l:ht cum~.:c r~ L&amp;L
• Scr.tp Mr.:tah $2 li S.tnl Sh.twvcr
I~
Loon Ruwdtc s J tt.: kson Ht.:\\ tl!
me Tnx Sr.:n1cc $1 J.tcoh
111llll"e R!\ t:r Valley All ..,ltrs IJS
Bank. $2 95, J.mr.:l k Parsons
Mtllcnntum
ForLc
Rmlnner s
Grocery $2:1\0 Jo&lt;..h lkhm Morgan
Rwder~ Dr and Mrs Phtlhp Long
$2 50 Tommy G1b:-,on I lope s
Helpmg Hand~ Dr l) nden G.nncs
Dr Jamal Huddod Dr RICk S1 One
and Dr Pu1m:k Mulll~\ $:!
Ashlee S"artl Good Tunc ~
Holzer Chmc ~2 iO 8~.:th P.1ync
Raccoon Valle) H &amp; R Block $4
Ka; l.t Ham son R tm Rumer~ Dccl ~
Club Ptgs $2 CJ J-l&lt;trnson B&lt;1m
Bumcrs FHO Cum::tlL) Tr tdcrs. $2
Laura C.•ld\\-cll R.tccoon Rowdu.:..,
Ktng Kuucr II lm: ._, 1 ( hll..,lt
M.1rt1n Coun tr; Kulln ~ Boh,

PageA2

Markel &amp; Gtecnhou~L"~ Int.: $2 \5
Alit Saunder... The Tnbe Stanley
I Iamson $2 Dane Black. rn.mgle
OVB $2 25, Andrea Ruo.;scll Galli a~
B.trnyard Budd1cs Frcn~,;h C1ty
Fnods $2 10 Mary K Sheets For
H1s Glory Suret H Motel $2. L.wren
S&lt;1unders,
Rat.: coon
Ru" dJCs
Fanners Bank &amp; S J\-1\l~s Co $1 ~'i
J.1wh Crews ThL: 1 nhc Dr 0d\ ut K
Smnh $2 M uwh H1ll Stl\,_r
Slrco~k'i US Bank $1 l dlll"L'n RhKk
Tnang!e F umly Oxygr.:n &amp; McdiL&lt;~I
Equtpmenl Inc
~2 Vi
A.mm
Ph11l1p'-. R.Kcoon Rowdtes Nom ..
Nnr1hup Dudge Hod} Shop $1
Jonat han HoJiey G.JIIta Count)
Dmry Cl ub Ventcal Cont.: rei~ W.ilb
Inc $2 Halley Barnes Tn.mglc 1 ht.:
W1-.eman Agency Inc 5.2 7.., N.11h Ill
Co~ld"cll
Anoth..:r Gencr,tlll)n
Htlhor Htllhl lhc~ 4 H Cluh $~ Ala n
Shilltnglon Tratlbl&lt;tzers 4 H C Ilib,
Dr .md Mrs Ph1llt[l Lonl' $:! 25
Zack T.tdcll F.at.:r.:s ol the Future
Jackson Hcwm l nt.:otn~.: Td1\ S~.:1 VILC
$2 75 Courtn~.:) Rtu lcr Galh,t-:
Rarnv,1rd
Rudthcs
Bld\1.~11
H,Jrdwarc S2 50 Rcbw.;a SuH"an
He IriS &amp; Hand'&gt; Corner~ume
Con~.;lm t.: tlon $2 v; Ch ts~o: Caldwell
G.llh 1 GU) ~ &amp; G ti s M trshal l
Reynolds $~ 25 em .. ~ I Gtlmorc
Rt\r.:r V,liley All ..;t,lrs ArP CJ:.~\ m
Plant $2 "\S Ahh) tl.unlnond B tck
P.tckers G tl hpoh" V.mh Cn $2
Ash ley Cald'Aell S!l\-cr S\1\;:aJ...s
Kmg Kurter II Inc $2 W~
Sh 1un Meeks fh~; Tnht: Ohtll
V1lle) Pl1s1Lnn!! In c tnd L)llll
Angell $4 Bndgr.:t Su\r.:t Nc\\
llunznn Mount Trr.:e Sc1 \ILl' ami
Pt't)ple s B,mk ~ 4 52 2i Ja~.:kt~o:
Glasshum Sil ver Stre tb J u.:hon
lie\.l.llt Income Tax S.:tVH.:c $~
Hmndun Harmon H.tvsecds OVB
$2 Knnhcrly Beaver Thi\ C n~o:t
Ptllllt:l:r.-i Jt vtde n s Fam1 F.qtupmcnt
md John W Cl.~rk Otl of Ashl.md
Ky $2 75 Tyler Bullion Good
Tunes Sr.uc Farm Insurance and
John Sdmntl, $2 Dallun Malney
Macr.:ntlle Compamons Mrke &amp;
Manh 1 Caldwdl Tom Wade and
L.Jur.t Cald\\'ell. $2 Brenton Ftsher.
Gillha s Bamyanl Budt..ltcs The
Moore Bro1hers McCoy-Moore
Home,
E\ nns Moore
Funer i\
ht5urance and Rc.tl Estate $2 Clms
Roush R1ver Valley All sl.trs C C
Caldwe ll Truckmg $2 25, Oltvla
~cGovcm, Rto \\-r,mglers B1g Bend
Really, $3 75 Dustin Lee Beaver.
Good Tt mes Jackson He"' Itt Incomc
Tax Serv1ce, $1 85, Tyler Adkms,
Ga lha s Barnyard Budd1e'i Dr
Wilham B Thomas $2 25 Kayla
Srmth GrnxJ Tunes Sears Tom &amp;
Sk1p Meadows 52 Ausun Sheets,
R1 ver Valley All stars
Con me
Kttchen
Independent
Creatl\ e
Memones Cunsultant $4, Destree
Montgomel) Bam Burners. AEPGavm
Plant,
$2 50
Jess 1ca
Woodward, Galhpol1s FFA, Landstar
lnwa) Truck.mg, $6, Blake Hams
Tnangle Fosrcr Sales &amp; Dell\.el)
lnc $2 Austm Plulllps Ra~.:coon
Ro\.\.dJeS, Lawson Producrs Jack
Roderus Joe Roderus S2 75 Jordyn
Benson, Th1vener P1oneers Thomas
Do-lt Center $3, Holly Taylor,
Galha's Barnyard Buddies, ELM
Tille Inc $2 50 Haley Cox Good
T1mes OVB, $2 LJSa Cox Good
Ttmes Farm Credt1 Servtces. Da\ Jd
R Gable $2 Samuel Warren,
Tw11Jghcers, W1ll1s Funeral Home
$2 75
Ryan Ross, Waterloo
Wranglers
Bob's Market &amp;
Greenhouses Inc $2 Justm Rhode...,
Mtllennrum Force, Gal hpoh s Elks
#107 $2 10 Leshe N1day Galha
Guys &amp; Gals Burnett s Heatmg and
Coolmg
dnd
Shcc1
Metal
Fabricauons $2 85 Ka) l,t Jones
Hcans &amp; H mds Vcrtlt.:.tl Concrete
Walls lm; $2 Ev&lt;Jn Bowman. For
Ht s Glory Fnendly Mart of
Galhpolls .IIlLI R1o Grande $3 85
Tc~s1c Rtchards Galha s Barnyard
Buddtcs Scully's RV $2 25 Chelse&lt;~
Stowers Saddles N Spurs, Arbors at
Galllpohs $2 25 M) kah Waller
Galh.t Buc¢an.:ers, Frulh Pharma~.:)
#3 $.2 50 L&lt;~cte Woltnrd Hearts &amp;
Hands, Bob Ev,ms Fanns. $2 25
Dyanna Eggldnn R tecoon Valley
C C Caldwell Tmckmg $2 10, Jaelu
Cl.trk
Gund Tun e ~
Ve rltcal
Concrete W.ttl~ Inc $2 10 R1tk)
Jack/ion The Tnhe The W1sem.m
Agenq Inc 52 75 Bryce- Amos
lt&lt;nlhlazcr!-;
4H
Cluh
Montl:'omcry s B,ub~..:r Shup ~2 60
C.tdyG1lmurc R1verVallc; All stars
MTI $2 10 Mr.:gan hrgu~on
R 1ct:non
Rowd1es
Bodm1cr s
GroL:er) $:\ Ke' m D;Hne~ Rto
Hnpeluls S h,Jd~c.Ju F.mn R1ck &amp;
Terry Shaddcau. $2 25 CJ F1tch
P.u1~ &amp; Spares
The Wtscman

Agency Inc , $2 50 Carter Parsons,
Rto Hopcluls, Galhpolts Elks #107',
$2 75 Palnd. Bru\\11 ln.tngle.
Jt\ldcn s Fam1 EqUJprncnl and John
W Cldrk Oil of A&gt;hlond Ky $3 10,
ChGloe Wll!t,um RI\Cr Valley All
~ l "r" Gallla Count) Gun Cluh,
$1 75 Sar.1h Sydnor For Hts Glory,
Ills let Ltrms, $2 2'~ Mach son Bums,
Tn.mglc WJscnMn Real Eslate
Dav1d Wtse man $' 10 Brady
B~ttllllt::n l emper.1ture Rt..,mg OVB,
$2 10 Jarod M}ers Th1 vener
PIOneers Jnn ~ F mn E4urpmetll
$1 7'\ Derek Gib..,tm GooJ T1mes,
J.1chon lie\\ Ill Income Tax Servrce
$2 Kaylcc Rose RtH'r Valley All
si;Jf\ Nnhlc ~ Pamung $2 Sh)anne
La\\ 'iOn lle,trl' &amp; 11.1nds C C
C tldwcll Truckmg $2 Lauren
Kyger Tnangle Wt:;;eman Real
Eslale D,l\ 1d Wtscm tn $2 ~S M1ke
Wojtaszak, fw1ltg.ht Zone, Oak H11l
B.mJ...s $:!
Cnug McGmre Sundance Krds,
ln.m's Gla~s Servtt.:c $2 Laykm
Russ,
W,uerloo
Wranglers
Ch~:trt ngiOn
Moulton &amp; Evans
$2 I0 Haley Angel French Cny
Cmsc~ders The Feed Slop Beaver
CJttlc I ann and Th~: Part:-i Bam
$] 7'i
Corey Stmll
lh1vcner
P1onecrs MTI $2 50 Sar.1h Barr,
New Hont.nn Sm nh Supcr!-.lorc
Ch~.:Holct Utmk- Ponll&lt;JC1 $1 90,
Amy M~.:cb G 1lhpnhs FFA Fo~ter
F.mns $2 Antand&lt;l McGhcL Bam
Burners People ~ Ban!... NA ami
Mount Tree Sci\ 1ce, $2 75 Trey
Poner P.urs &amp; Srares Rt\erbcnd
Amm.JI CJmtc. $2 B1 tns~.:n B.trr
1\e" Honwn llughes Bcc1 &amp; D.lll)'
Fann ~2 05. AI.:~.: Skc~..:n~ W&lt;~lcrloo
Wranglers Rob Ev ms F.mn-; $1 K5
Ktlsllnc Bosu..:. Tn mgk Fann Credtl
Sc!\t ce~ D.n tel R Gdhle
'!!2 2i
Jc~s1c.t Burger Whtl. K1ds P.tt, Betsy,
K tic Gmgcr .md Holly C.m.td 'Y
rroud supporters ol the fmr $115
J.tcnh W.ttson Hayseeds B11l C'r.mk
DVM Inc $2, Katelyn Bu-chlleld
Morg,m Rmders, Spnng VJ!ley
Marathon $2 25 Seth Wollord
He.tns &amp; H,mds Bob Fv ms Fam1s,
$2 25 Bretton Stutes River Valley
All ~li.lrs Thom.J'i Do h Center,
$2 60 Logan Black Tnangle Fo:;ter
S.tles &amp; Dehvel') Inc $2 I0 Tr.\VIS
Potter Tratlbl.l7..ers 4 H Club SearsTom &amp; Sk1p Melldows and Fnendly
Mart of G,ilhpohs and Rm Grande,
$2 'iO Amber M1ller, X rreme
Dreams FHG Currency Traders, $2,
Mtchuelu Cluy Hearts &amp; Hands,
Gaii •P"J~&lt; Elks #107 $2 50 Terra
Poner Rtver Vnlley FFA Dr Demse
Shockley $2.50 Dalton Jarrell,
Tnangle Galhpohs Vault Co, $l,
Curh Wallenfelsz Rodney Rangers,
Sm1th Fmancml AdviMJrs, $2 75,
Robert Chapman, Galha Buccaneers,
R&amp;C Packmg $2 25, Thomas Cook,
Thnener
PIOneers.
Saunders
lnsumnce $2 50 Abb1e Bolyard, Pol
of Gold, Margaret E.ans, $2,
Damel Ours, Shamrocks Paul and
Jean N1day, $2 25, Samantha
Wallace, Hayseeds Parents nf Rto
Hopefuls 4-H Club members
Challenge to other 4 H clubs, $2,
Demck Beaver, Hayseeds, Grace
Myers Excavaung, S2 25, Sarah
Clonch Moonhghrers John C
Stevens Thermal SolutiOns Inc,
$2 10 M1chaela Hall Faces of the
Future Farmers Bank &amp; Savm.gs
Co , $2 15 , Amber Campbell,
Raccoon Rowd1es Burnett's Heaung
and Cool mg and Sheet Metal
Fabnca110ns $3 25, Btranda Green.
S1lver Streaks M&amp;G Polymers
\)SA, LLC $2 25, Anthony Polter,
Trmlbl.tzers 4 H Club Fanners Bank
&amp; Sa1 mgs Co $2 10 Cody Sm1th,
Good T1mcs OVB $2, Kauc Bosuc,
1nungle, Galha Countv Repubhcan
Olticeholdcrs, $2 25, Tyler Noble
Rtvt!r Valley All stars R&amp;C
Packmg $2 05, Jeremy Grace
1 nHihlazers 4 H Cluh, Hol zer
Mcd•cal CcniCr, $2 55 Shayne
Scarberry, R10 Hopefuls Paul and
Je.tn Ntday, $2 25, Adam Lew1s
Fn.:m:h C1ty C IU ~aders, Ted

Sunday, August 6, 2006

Local

HOG SALE RESULTS
Barbs Conces~mn fhe WCJnte
SLnckhmd ror gmt:rnor and County
Comnus~10ner
fred Dccl S2
Wagon and Charhe s Salvage, $2 10
Keyana Ward Kountrv Kntter~
R)an Eggleton Rrver Valley FFA
John C Ste\cns Thermal Soluttons SFS Truck Sales Inc , $2 20 Jesse
Inc $2 ::!5 Jesstca Sk.ecns Waterloo Jones, Rodney Rangers OVB $1 80
Wnmglers Um\ei'Sll) ol R10 Grande
M1cah Curfman Rodney R.mger.-.
Women s Basketb.lll $I 75 Greg Galhpolls Elk., #107 $3 25 Tessa
McGmms Hdhop H1llbtlhcs VFV.- • Reynolds H tyseed~ R&amp;M Fe~.:d
Post 4464 $1 85 lac h Cox Good
Store
Hdfley
Crouse
.md
Tnnes OVB $1 f!S Samantha Grandchildren L1ve'il lx:k $1 90
Pmge Sanders, Early R1rds O&amp;J
Brabh.un Raccoon Valley Roh1c
Tnulcrs S5, Mtchm!l.t Drummond
Cattle Co $2 25, N~&lt;k Wuold11dge
Hrlltop
Hlllbllhes
Caner s Tnanglc Foster Salco;; &amp; Dchvcl)
Inc $2 10 Roger H&lt;1a~ G,tllw
Plumbm~ Int.: $2 25 Jell Golden
Pamot Pride Mark K1rkhan ~.:andt
Raccoon Rowd1es LJ Trcnchmg &amp;
date for countv uudnor and Ju~lt n
BaL khoc $:!50 Demck Gthnore
Fallnn candidate for county commts
Raccoon Rowd 1es, James Henry
s1oner $2 Adnan Mlllt.!r The Tnbe
,lllomey al law, $ 1 85 Kavl.1 Payne
Wal Man #21i05 $2 05 S m111mha
Tnanglc Dr and Mrs Phtlllp Long
S2 flO, Kr) stlc Slegcr Th1vt:ncr McGutrc Gu lhpohs FFA Mass1e
ronccss10ns Tm1 and Noel M.tss1e
P1oneers Ron Campbdl $2 50
$1 95 Shahn Comer Gnllti.! ~
Davtd W.1lk Gallw But.:canecrs
Bamyurd Budthes, OVB $ 1 81
Sears-Tom &amp; Sk1p Meadows Sl 75
Ethan Tawney Saddlr.: ~ N Spurs
Ehzaheth Mtllcr X tremc Dreams
Famt!)
Oxygen
&amp;
Med1c ll
B&amp;M Fc!!d Store, Harley Crouse and
Equ1pmcnt lnL: , $1 Ri RtciMrd
Grand~,;hiltlrcn L1ves1uck Sl 85
Bm.. m,m For Hts Glory In memo!)
Bnttan)
Llo)d
Mcrcervrllc
of R1chard BO\\ man $1 25 Kate~:
Cmnpantuns
Gract:
Myer:-;
Ward Halltop Htllbllhes Vcrltt:;J/
E~r~cavallng $1 65 Ehz~.tbelh Ours
Concrete \\'ails Inc $2 50 Autm::e
Shamrocks Foster Furms $2
Ward H11ltop Htllhtlltcs Holzer
Lmdscy Crago Pmrs &amp; Spares
Clune Pedmtnuans $2 30 Nmh,m
Mount lrct: ServiCe $l Nathan
Holley Galha County Datry Cluh
Taylor Eno Sa•l-on Qalhpohs Elks
Boh Evans Farms $1 85 Chnsuan
#107 Sl 75 Ltndsey Suvcr New
Wtlkes Pa1rs &amp; Sp,1re;; LS Ban k
Honzon
Oak Hill Fm~.tnc1al
Insurance $1 75 Lyle RtchJrds R10 $1 85 Tiu Hemsley, Pot ol Gold
OVB $2 45 1oshl:l Alex.mdcr
Hopeful~ Insurance Plus Age nc1es
Kountry Knners Vietnam Vctcmn~
$] R.unsev Warren, Rncr Valley
Chapler 709 $ 1 95 Dcsun) McGh"
All-stars, Hamson H1lls, $2, Mtchacl
NC\\ Honzon Dr Tom Sktnnl!r
Ha.ts Galha P.tlnut Pndc SLanley
llam ...on $1 7'), Sh1 Cremeens, Pmrs Dentist $ 1 85 E11c Caldwell R1vcr
Valle) FPA Kmg Ku1tcr II Inc
&amp; Spare..., J E Cremeens $3 J() Ten
$2 75 Chmltne Woft.Jslck R1ver
Clagg Gallipolis Fl A Saunders
Valley FFA Red s Rolkn Garage
Insura nce $2 SO Todd S1mms
$1 85 Kaue Campboll R"cr Valley
Mtllcnnwm Force. Smnh s GMC
All stars B,trb s Concessions $1 8~
$2 2') Kelly HlHiy, Sll\er Stre.tks
Charlie s Salvage $2 10 Brett Seth Amos Tratlbla7..ers 4 H Club
Fanners B,mk &amp; S,1vmgs Co $1 85
Slcmher.:k Faces nl lhc Future MTI
Cohn Hill H1lhop H1llb•lhcs The
$2 Bnttan) Thevemr Silver Streaks
Wtseman Agency Inc $2 20 Teah
OVR $2 10 Josh Beck Tnangle
Elltolt Tht\cncr Pioneers, J E
Shelby R1chards General Contrdc1or
Momson &amp; Assoc1.11es $1 85 Encn
$1 90 Cody Cox RJVer Valley All
Caldwell S•her Streaks M&amp;G
stars Groom &amp; Kennel Shop $2 2:':l
Polymers USA LLC $2 15, Jdcoh
Kns
Lloyd
Mercerville
Kla1ber W,nerloo Wranglers AEP
Compamons Sh.1ke Shoppc $1 85
Moumamecr Pl.ml $1 ~5 Lac1
Kan C.1mphcll Saddles N Spuc;
Comer Gallm s Bam;ard Buddte..,
R1ver City Smokehouse and FamJI)
Oxygen &amp; Medtc.JI Eqwpmem Inc , M1ke and M1chael Warren $2 05
Kassandra Smtlh Th1vener Pioneers
$3 Charles Allbnght Sundance
Saunders Insurance, $2 2'i Mtc 1h
Kids,AEP MountameerPiunl $175
Cardwell, Pam &amp; Spares Judge D
Emily Sttes, Galha Buccaneers, L&amp;L
Dean Evans, $2 25 Zak Deel
Scrap Mewls, $2 35, Mallory Darst
Raccoon Valley. Burnett s Healmg
R1ver Valle) All-stars, J D Taylor,
tnd Coohng and Sheet Met.ll
Cheshrre Townsh1p Trustee $2
Fabncauons,
$2 35
Samantha
Matthew Owens, Moonlighters
Barnes Gallw Explorers Kyger
M1llenmum Force 4 H Club $1 75
Dental Assoc1a1es, Inc $3 25 Dexter
Mackenzie Hall, Faces of the Future,
Barnyard Buckaroos
Thaxton
F3rmers Bank &amp; Savmgs Co, $1 90
$1 85, Josh
Jesse Chapman, Galha Buccaneers, Sparkle Supply
Glassbum Barnyard Buckarom
Harold Montgomery for reelecuon
Reds Rollen Garage $2 05 Tyler
and Larry Betz for reelectiOn, $2, B1ll
Re) nolds Hayseeds, B&amp;M Feed
Angell, Th1vener Pwneers, Kmg
Store,
Harley
Crouse
and
Kutter Jl Inc $3 50 TraviS MasSie
Grandchtldren Ltvestock $1 65
Buckeye H1ll s FFA, Shelby
Da\ld Wooldndgc, Tnanglc Yauger
Richards-General Contractor. $2 75,
Fann Supply Inc, $1 81, Andrew
Ryan Jack ~on
The Tnbe
Steger Thtvener P10neers Burltle
Saunders Insurance, $3, RJ Garber,
Petroleum
$2, Megan Ours
Galha County Dmry Club, Grace
Shalflrocks,
M1ke's
Food Man 218
Myers Excavatmg, $2, Katthn
Angell Gallipolis FFA, Kmg Kulter $1 90 Carly Jackson, The Tnbe
Saunders Insurance, $3, Lmdsay
lllnc $3 50, Jordan Deel, Raccoon
Ward Bam Burners Dr and Mrs
Valley, Deel'&gt; Club P1gs $2 20
Phllhp Long $2 I0, Cory WeSifall
Lesle) Small, ThtVener P1oneers
Trailblazers 4-H Club, Fanners Bank
Small Co Inc $2 25, NJI&lt;ki Gwrett
X-tremc Dreams Chff's Auto &amp; Savmgs Co $2 Elite Bosl\c
Tnangle, Galhpohs Vault Co
Repau/Graham s Truckmg, $1 90
$2,Coi)'
Angell Tiu vener Pioneers
Dylan Saunders, Tnangle, Farmers
SFS Truck Sales Jnc $3 50 Enc
Bank. &amp; Savmgs Co, $1 85, Kasste
Bowcolt Rto Wranglers Kmg Kuller:
Shnver, Galha's Barnyard Budd1es,
$2
75 Brandon K"by, Tnungle
Smith F1nancwl Ad\ 1sors $1 95, Jay
HMC $ 2 50, Maranda Call, SoUih
Waugh Good Ttmcs, OhiO Valley
Galha FFA
Land~tar
ln\\oay
Ph)SlCt.tns $1 85 Slll:l) Crews The
Truckmg
$2
Megan
Dcel,
R.u;coon
Tnbo The Feed S10p $1 85 Bnttany
Valley, Man and Chnsu Johnson T1m
Elliott Rodney Range1s Foster Sales
and Pam Mass1e, Gene anJ Janel
&amp; Dehvcr) Inc $1 95 Megan
Johnson Carl and Judy Clark E\elyn
Cremeans S.1ddles N Spurs Dr
L;ndcn Gatnes Dr Jamal Haddad
Dr R1ck St Ongc unLI Dr Patnck
Muffley $2 30, Damcllc Colwell
Back P.Jt.:kers HMC $2 10 Jusuna
Taylor Hope s Helpmg Hands Josh
BOOnner Auctmncenng, $1 90 Cod)
,
Fulks Hayseeds, US Bank, $1 90
Jerry Colburn A:nolher Gener,mon

and Eugene Elhnll B1ll and Manlyn
Kuhn SJ M1randa Hammond Galha
Buccaneers, L&amp;L Scrap Melab $2
Kmtlll Smathers Good T1mcs
Lan d~tnr Inway Truckmg $1 85
Lauren Swtsher The Tnhe, James
Fanul) Funm Brent James.$~ Kay Ia
RO!&lt;it' G.tllla ~ B.tmyard Budd1es
S.mnde1s lnsuhuKe $3 10 Nu;:nlc
Chapman Galltu Buccaneers Dav1d
.md Ltsa Butlewn famtl} $1 95
TraVt!oi Fulks H.l) ~ccds US B;1nk
$1 80 Cudy Pulhns bcl!s of the
Future Cross &amp; Suns $~ Kayla M
Smtth Rt\er Valley All ~tars Glenn
and Sulte F1sher $2 W1ll Smtih
Rr ver Valley All stars Dr and Mrs
Ph1ll1p Long $1 95 Bnllany Black
He.u1s &amp; H.md ~ Bob Evans Farms
$2 OS Ttm T.tcken Faces of the
Fmurc HuiTcll s M1ll Outlcl Inc
$2 05 Sdnmnlha Hammond Gal ha
B~1ccaneer" L&amp; L Scrap Melitis $2
JT ( r~.:merms But:J...e) C Htlls FFA
hmn~.:1~ Bank &amp; S,Jvrngs Co $2
JarcJ Lester G 1lha Buccaneers Drs
MKh.Jel Owens ,md Laurel Ktrkhart,
and M.trk Kukh.Jrt $2 75. Dustm
Th.~xton French Cny Crusadl'rs
FosterS 1les &amp; Delivery Inc $1 95
Cody Walli.!r, Galha Buccaneers,
Kuhner Lcwts Funcr.ll Home. donal
ed to Greenfield Townsh1p Volunteer
Ftrc Department $2 30 Hannnh
Roach R10 Wr.mglcrs HMC, $3
Sle\ en C.tll , Hayseeds Farmers
Bun k &amp; Savmgs Co , $2 15 Ashlc)
M1ller X lreme Drcnms. Bob Ev,itns
Fanns $1 81, Fon Johnson, Good
T1mes Foster Sale~ &amp; Del1very Inc
$1 7i Valenc R1ch1e, Tnangle
Fosler Fanns S2 25 AJ McDamel
Hayseeds. Landstar Inwa; Truck1ng
$ 1 71 Brad.e Angell Gall1pol"
FFA SFS Truck Sales Jnc $4, Tyler
Holcomh fnangle French Town
Vetcnnary Chmc $2 30, Jtmmy
Cl.tgg Thrvenc1 P1oneers OVB
$1 75 Dustm Shepherd, Waterloo
Wranglers Cunsohdated Secunty
Servrces Dtsh Network, $1 65
Ashle) Hud~on Galha BucL:aneers
Holzer Chn1c $2, Dary l Jane
Barcus Kou111ry Kntters HMC
$2 05 Brylce Harder Hope's
Helpmg H.mds Bob Evan~ Fanns
$2 2'), Kendra Barnes G,tlha
Explorer!'! Shelly Co S2 85 TJ
Washmgton, The Tnbe, Reds Rollen
Garage, $1 85 Stacey Cox Good
Tunes Landstar lnway Truckmg
$1 75 Justm Ra) Hilltop Hdlbdhes
OVB $1 85 Kyla Woerner Cham
Gang Landstar lnway Truckrng
$1 75 Kyle H1vcly Silver S1reaks
Bnh Evans Farms, $2 25 Laura
Campbell R1vcr Valley All-stars,
Darsts &amp; Sm1ths, $2 05, Chaz
Russell, Galhpohs FFA, Hall1day,
Sheets &amp; Saunders attorneys at law,
$2 25 Lmdsey Thaxton, French Cuy
Crusaders Oak Htll Fmanc1al
Insurance and Apnl R1ce-Oak H1ll
Fmanc1al Serv1ces $ 1 85 Kevm
Smtth Good Times Landstar Inway
Truckmg $1 75, Dc s ~ree Lewrs
French Crt) Crusaders Bob Evans
Fa1 ms $1 90 Cod I Garretson
Waterloo Wranglers Bob Evans
Farms $ 1 75, Tyler Bass Galha's
Barnyard Budd•es M&amp;G Polymers
USA LLC $2 Adnan Wothe, Xtreme Dreams Clarence V K1rby
$1 85 Wyatt Patterson Galha
Counly Da~ry Club Galhpohs Elks
#107 $2 Cory Haner ChampiOn&gt;
Chmce HMC $1 95, Garrell J
Sheets Good Tmtes Mount Tree
Serv•ce and Consolidated Secunty
Sen tees D1sh Network, $2 Dallas
Craft Ram Burners, French Town
Vetennary Clime $2 75 M1chelle
Aaron Heans &amp; Hand~ Black Show
P•gs S I 90 Heather Ward Barn
Burners Qual H) Pnmung and Rob1c
Tratlers $2 60

EPSILON ENERGY OF LUDINGTON
MICHIGAN

18'ROUND-'1175
24' ROUND -'1355
12'X24' OVAL -'1679
15'130' OVAL - 1879
1

I have been leasing ground for production of
Oil, Methane and Natural Gas. I am working
in Clay, Ohio, Harrison and Guyan
Townships if you are interested in leasing and
I have not contacted you please call. Your
participation will enable you to share in the
profits of this venture. I can answer your
questions over the phone or meet with you
personally. My cell phone# is 740--213-0072
ask for Ronnie.

Our Comprehensive
Regional Center:
• Physlc1an off1ces for cardiology,
vascular medlctne, endocnnology
and d1abetology
• Cardiac and vascular testmg
• Penpheral artery d1sease rehabilitation

for Cardiovascular and Diabetes Care

• Cardiac and pulmonary rehabtlitat1on
• Diabetes and endocrme disease
diagnosis and treatment
• Diabetes education
• Climcal research

tOM lNG SOON:

V!Nl ON - The Ev,msMoore fn,tlrance Agency
Inc was recently tMmed
2006-07 P&lt;tcc,cllel A~cncy
by Motom1s Insurance
Group (Motonsls) for the
I01h consccuuve year
Th1s
deSignatiOn
ts
awarded 10 recogn11e the
agency's pHJfessJOn.tiiSin
profitability and w stomer .

a

~atJstctCllOn

MotortSI aw.trd' the
Pacesetler
deSi gn,lllon
only to lho"c mdcpendent
msurance ~tgencles 111 the
lop tter of 11s ugcm:y
fotce-lho,e v,ho dtsplay "
wmm1tmen1 to ptov1d111g
policyholders w11h lop
yuailty msurance produc11
and nulstandtng t:ustomeJ

Local Briefs
Correction

Fairgoers compete for camping spots

Report
incidents

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH®MYDAIL'rSENT1NEL COM

POMERO)
Some
people wtll do anythmg lm
a chance to get a he1te1
campmg spot at the Rock
Spnngs Fangrounds dunng
fmr week
The niles of the Fan
Board spec1fy that you c,Jn
reserve lhe same spot trom
year to yea1, bul II you
want to change your ~oca­
tton tt can only be done
when the f,ur secret,u y
opens her books on the second day ot the weekend
when entnes are accepted
Thai w,1s Saturday, and the
lime was 8 am
J un Chddwell of Chester
J un
Powell
of
and
Reedsville felt 1he1r campmg spots of p1ev1ous years
were too far from the hve
stock barns Smce some
spots closer to the actiOn
had come open, they dectded to try for a couple
They arnved tn the1r p1ckup trucks about 6 a m,
Fnday, parked nght at the
matn gate, pulled out thetr
chatrs, put up lhetr umbrel-

J1m Chadwell,
left, and J1m
Powell
camped out
from 6 am
Fn&lt;;tay to 8
am Saturday
mormng at
the gate to
the fa1r
grounds 1n
order to be at
the head of
the line for
the1r selection of campmg spots dur
mg fa" week
Charlene

Hoeftlch/pholo

las to shaue them from the
sun, and got out thetr snacks
and soft dnnks m preparauon for wa1ttng 1t out
Asked tf they were gmng
home to sleep Chadwell
satd "No, way," wtth Powell
addmg ''sleepmg wtll be no
problem, we· ve got these
&lt; cha1rs ,md our t1 ucks ·-They
also said they had plenty of

Hollow Road reponed the
theft ot a green FX b1cycle
t rom her property on
Tuesday

"''II

food wuh them and were
used to campmg out
Gettmg at the head of the
lme, whtch Fmr Board sectetary Debb1e Watson says
sometimes stalls at 4 or S m
the mornmg, was the
campers' goal, and Fnday It
was apparenl that Chadv,ell '
and Pov, ell were determmed to be lhere

POMEROY
Seven
guns reported stolen !rom
lhe Wavne Ervm res.dence
last week v,erc recovered
Wednesday, Shenft Ruben
Beegle reported T\\ o o1her
guns remam m1sstng
Warrants have been tiled
agamst two md1 vtd6&lt;~1s,
whose names are bemg y, tt
theld
pendmg
arrrest
Beegle satd lmestt ga1 1on
contmues
Roger St.trcher of Pme
Gro&gt;e Road reported thai
someone stole a 12-foot alu
mmum boat from hts farm
pond
somet1me
late
Monday or early Tuesday
Ltsa Kmg of Happy

MIDDLEPORT
M1ddleport
Pollee
Department w1ll begm a
stncl enforcement of ord1
nanccs regulatmg to htgh
grass on propert1es, lrash
&lt;~nd rubb1sh and unlicensed
\Chicles and velucles nol 111
runmng order. accordmg to
Police Ch1ef Bruce Swtft
Rcstdcnts who have prope•ty 01 veh1cles m vwlatton
of the ordmances are advtsed
to t&lt;1ke steps to couect the
Sltuauon or be charged tn
m&lt;~)OI 's court, Sw1ft satd

Board to meet
GALLIPOLIS - Galha
Counly Children Serv1ces
Bo&lt;~rd wtll meet will be held
Tuesda) at 8 a m at the
Chi ldren Serv1ces Offtce.
83
Shawnee
Lane,
Galltpolts, Board President
Katl Burleson announced

7

SP niN G VA ll E'Y
1\~

\•1, 1 J

L

,

L"

,

•

•

•d

~~I

ESTABLISHED 1895

The Ariel Summer Theatre Presents

• FREE 24/1 Technical Suppon

SHOWBOAT

• Instant Messaging keep your buddy 11tl
•10e-maladdre55e5WithWebmaiU

Aug. 25 &amp;26 8PM Nightly
www.arieltheatre.org

• Custom Start Page new! weather &amp; morel

Gallia County calendar

Enforcing
ordinances

rud

(!'; ~;: 6X ftlsterD
JUS/ SJ

morfil

Sign Up Onlln1! www Loc:aiNet ~

Community
events
Sunday, Aug, 6

1

f
'

'

POINT
PLEASANT,
W Va Rtbbon-cuttlng
ceremony and open house
for the new Mason County
Ammal Shelter, Fatrground
Road, 2 to 5 p m For mformatton, call (304) 675-6458
GALLIPOLIS - Waugh
reumon at Raccoon Creek
(0 0 Mcintyre) County
Park Bob~ htte Shellerhouse,
I0 am until dark
Monday, Aug. 7
GALLIPOLIS - Galha
County Veterans Serv1ce
CommiSSIOn will meet, 4
pm,
Galha
County
Veterans Servtce Off tee,
I I02 Jackson P1ke
Thesday, Aug. 8
GALLIPOLIS - G&lt;~lha
County D•st1tct Ltbrary
Board of Trustees, 5 p m ,
Bossard Met;nonal Ltbrary
GALLIPOLIS Free
Immumzatmns at lhc Gallta
County Health Deparlment ,
499 Jackson Ptke, 4 to 6
p m Ronald McDonald wtll
be on hand from 12 30 to
3 30 p m
Saturday, Aug. 12
BIDWELL- 98th annual Denney reumon , 4 p m ,
at the Hams Baptist ChUich
Shelterhou'e Meal will be
potluck

Hog
from PageA1
In the m&lt;~rket steer shtm
Thursday at the fmr, the top
I0 steer v,ere shown hy, m
order,
Aaron
Ph1ll1ps.
Courlney Swam. Sam
Shawver, Mall Hemphill
Sammy Hemphill. Cody
Call, Ndthan Cummons,
M~ghan Call, Cmy H,tnel
and Nathan Bamler
The overall top I0 teede1
calf at the t,ur were shown
by, m order, Luke Pullins
Lalli en Saunders, Cu1liS
Waugh, Kathryn Hubble
and Sam Shawver

RIO GRANDE - 136th
annual Rm Grande Bean
Dmner, II a m until 3 p m .
Bob
Ev&lt;tns
Farm
Shelterhouse
Sunda~, Aug. 13
PATRIOT - Descendants
of the late John Wilham and
Mary Polly Fraltx Myers
will gather for thetr 88th
famtly reumon, noon, Fox
Fatrvtew Chnsttan Church
SpeCial s111gmg by Rtchle
Dtllon and Forgtven 4 A
love offenng w1ll be accepted For mformauon, comact
Henry L Myers al 379
2352

GALLIPOLIS - Rubv
McGhee wtll celehrale he1
92nd bnlhday on Aug 22
Cards may be sent to her at
Holzer- Wyngate,
300
Drtve.
Bn&lt;trwood
Galltpolls, Oh1o 4563 1
GALLIPOLIS
The
'Maym ol M1II Creek ' wtll
celebrate her 85th htrthday on
Aug 6 Cards may be sent to
her at 3259 Mill Creek Road,
Galhpolts, Ohto 45631
GALLIPOLIS - . A Slll puse c,trd sho\\et 1s bemg
held tor F1 ank ,md M,u y
Mah,m, wh(\ will cclebralc
the 1r 57th wedlhng 1111111\et
sm) on Aug 6 Send c,u ds
to Mr ,tnd Mrs Fr&lt;tnk

Mahan, Gallta Manor
Apartment 301, 138 Buhl
Morton Road, Galltpohs,
Ohto 4563l
BIDWELL
Glenna
Rothgeb wtll celebrate her
89th btrthday on Aug I0
Cards may be sent to her at
Holzer Semor Care, Room
I 13-A, 380 Colomal Dnve,
B1dwell, OhiO 45614
BIDWELL
Mary
Parks wtll be celebralmg
her 87th bmhday on Aug
22 Cards may be sent to her
at Holzer Semor Cme
Center, 380 Colont&lt;tl Dnve,
B1dwell, Ohto 456 14, or
c,dl her at 441-0834
THURMAN - Henrietta
Terry wtll celebrale her 90th
btrthday on Aug I 2 Cards
may be sent to her al Box
54, Thurman, Ohto 45685
OAK HILL
The
Wmston twms' 80th btrthd&lt;~y ts Aug 13 Cards can be
sent to Gladys Wmston
Craddolph at 2533l State
Route 93, Oak H11I, Oh1o
45656, and Glenna Wtnston
F1ggms at 2252 State Route
93, O&lt;~k H1ll, Ohto 45656
E-mail community calendar rlems lo kkelly@mydai·
lytribune.com,
Fax
an11ouncements to 446·
3008 Marl rtems to 825
Third A1·e., Ga/lipo/rs, Ohio
45631
Allnoul!cemellls
may also be dropped off at
the Trrbune office,

The top mat kel s1ee1 ho111
,md •msed 111 G,tlll ,t Coumv
W&lt;ls shown b) Adlon
Phillips
In thiS ye,tr's lecde1 c,tff
,md steer showm&lt;~nshtp
Sam Shdv. ver w~ts \.\ lllllt::r
ul the past sho\\ ll1dllsh1p
honor In Ihe I7 18-year-nJJ
c,llegorv Holly Cmad,ty
was llrst Andrea Rul'ell
placed second and Curt1s
Waugh W&lt;h tlmd
Pl,tcmg hrsl 111 Ihe I'\and-16-yeat-o ld ( ,neg01 y
wds Btltl,;tny El1101t \lllh
Tesste R~eh,ncls cummg 111
second and Wh11le) S1gm,u1
thml In the I1-14-ye,u-old
d1v1ston f,tsmme W.1Ugl1
v,as fnst. Bretl Slcmbcck

second
and
C11 h
W,tllentelsz thtrd, 11-12yeur-old Meghan Cdl v.,ts
hrsl Rowel) Wh1te second
,md Col) Haner thtrd and
8, 9 ,md I 0-yc,tr-old,
MacKenzie Hall Wds fmt,
J,tcob Kla1ber s~cond ,md
Shelby Sanders th1rd
01 era II 10p I0 market
lambs 111 mder were shov. n
by Corey Snull Samuel
Wa11e11,
N,11e All1son
K,ntlyn Roherts Lchanna
Cl,tl t Belhan) Bc,ner,
Shalu1 Comer Magg1e
Cl&lt;~gg D&lt;1v1d S,nmdel s ,mel
J1mmy Cl.1gg
Cmey Sm,tll h,td the lop
mat kct lamb bot n and
1,11scd 111 G.tlhd County

Card shower

The Ariel-Dater Hall

~·

428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, OH
740-446-ARTS (27B7)

Loc:a/Net

"Healthcare in Your
Own Backyard"
Augu1t 7 • 12 at lhe Ma&amp;ort County Fau·gfOUnds Look ror the Holzer Medical Center We!lnesa Wegon where tree scr9enmgs and health
lnfo1mallon wilt be pro\'Jded dunng the Far Scl'ledu!MJ w11 00 posled dati)' For more lnforl'TII~Ot'l pioN can the HMC Com'Tlumry Heallh
smf W~86 Departmental {740) 448-5879
Yondly, August 1 from 10 30 am until11 30 am at the Holzer Medical Center Education &amp; Conference Center Room AB 1n Gallipolis
An acldlttanal lllppon group m.ttlng wlll 1110 ~ hel4 1t 8 30 pm for those who are unable to •ttend thl mDmtnlif aalsion
For mor&amp; 1nforrnat!OI"'

pleese ct~111740)448-512!1

MDnday, Atigutt 7 fl"Qm 5 30 pm 6 30 pm at the Holler Medtcal Center Edu~llon &amp; Con~nce Ceflter Room AS If! Gall pols
If ~01.1 ar. oont~mplal!tlg gastric bypass surgery you are enCOIJraged to attend thtS '"~lf18honal see110r1 to le-'rn about ~etghlloss surgery
altho Holzer Center for Comprehensive We~ghlloss Asupport group of th~ Cenh:lr oeg ns afttlr lhe lflfofmet!Qnal rneeMg a\ 6 30 om
wtlere poler(i!H pat1ents can hear le~llmon 1alslrum patient! who have had me suroery For more 1nfoonatlon J)lhse call (744) 446-$12!1
MOndly, August 1 from 5 30 pm 8 00 pm Ill the Holzer Med cal Ce!'Mr Jack.on Dav1&amp; Conference Room IOCB!ed at 500 Bur11ngton
Road m Jeckl(!n Otno Top1cs dltcvse.ed ntiude pam control exertlw relaxatJon fatigue de!lrus1on and doctor/paltent relstjonship
F01 I'I)Ore tnformatiorl or to regtaf&amp;r plea$e call thi Holler Mad, cal Cemer Jm;ktion Therapy SeN leas Department ;U (740~ 30W367
Mondly Auguat 1 at 6 ClO pm at the 1-!MC Jac«son .Commumry Educadon Room localtle'f at SOO Burttngton Road rn Jachon Otno
All are we-lcome to attend lht&amp; 8 week 51nokjng ceusatron prDgram daveiaped by tl1e Amem::an Lung Aaaoc!atlan
Call (110) &lt;Wt-5$.40 to r&amp;91f!er or for more Information
Blpgd

Pdve - 1n le'*'en

Tuet.t!ly: Auguet 8 from 12 Noon 6 00 pm
fit

11'1 Ihe CommiJntty EdtJCat on Room at Holzer Medical Center Jackaon located
500 Burl noton R081d n Jac-.lfOn Oho F&gt;:Jr morl'l mlounat!Of\ or.to tf!QISier pleaaa caH (740~ 395 8353

FretMm From l!imldng • C\eseloo ' • Tbt New Yoy • lo pgmemy
Tuesd~y August 8 at 6 00 pm at Ihe Me gs Counl~ CounCil on Ag ng alld Sen1or Cil zens Center at 112 E Memonal Ollve In Pomero)l
Ofllo Se5s on Fve .,.,,11 cw~:r stress m~tn~~nt and we!Qht conrrol Ft.;lltrll101"1 lor this program 11 currently closed Thast who
•• pr.-nrglattrH ar. welcome to ttttnd Fo1 mo1e ln!brmabon about upcomtng Freedom From Smo~ung classes c:alt (140) .W6·5140

Hpjzer Heep!st Dinner wllh friend•

IQ

Geltlpp!L1:

Tt!ur.dly Augu&amp;t 10 ar 6 00 pm at thP. Golden
tOll/roo at1-800.SOG..-50

Corr111

t1

Gall pOlls For more 1nforrna1~

CBIIIOCUIIy

at (140) .W&amp;-!5074 or

Jtpmmuni'Y Cgttu ~ m Ge!«pnha
Fr'dt)' Augut111 from 8 DO am • 9 00 am 1n the t-IMC Educalior~ • )(J Conlt:~ rence Ctllllef Holtl;lr MadiC81~nter mvr\es t~il to an 1t1lvrrnal
and ongo•ng commun ty coffee pron1011ng conwersat1on between area leader! n buSiness commun,ly scrv &lt;:e educ::JI!On gooemmem a11d
pfl\late e-!llerpnse SponsorW by \he HMC Che~pla ncy Serv!t:e!i Department Fo r more nformal1on olea5e callj140) «6 5053
0!1 Cer Sbgw

lq

(J•UJgglla

Saturday Alftu.t 12 from t2 JO pm 10 4 00 pm tn the Gallipolts Ctty Parlt Look forth&amp; Ho!zer Mao1c:a1 Center WolfMSs Wttgof'll
Free screoomgs and hMIII11nforma~on Will De pro~ded For more ntormabon cell ('140) 446·5E!79
pJabtrll Sugeert Group In Q•«W•

Sunda)' August ,3 from 2 00 pm
or lor more nJormabon

4 00

pm mltlt' Motzer Med a~! Cenlet French 500 Room

C~U

(740)446·5SI71 to regr:s\er

Me;pt Cgyntx Fan In Pomtrpy

August 1• 10 at lhe M_,JUS County fa rwrounds look for tne Holzer Med1cal Ctmter Weilne::ts WaQon 1 Free screen~r1ys and he&amp;Hr.
nformatiOn W!ll be pfUVlded llunng the F.a!r Schedules Will~ posted da 1y For more nfarmalor plea &amp;I! caJI(74G) 446-!5679
t.nnyt( Kid&amp; fotr In GaJIIMhl
Mond1y Auguat 1• fi"''m 10 00 a!Tl 2 00 am 11"1 the HosP•l&lt;tl s French 500 Room This years "'Hawa ~n Lt,au• theme will
gatnf:ls crafts lefre!ihrT'lents anCI door prizes Fbr OlOI'e mlonna110n cslllhe Ped1ah ell Department a1 (740) 448·5075

foatvr~

d sp\a)'S

FrudQm Etpm SmgkJoq Snwpn 1 ·On The Bpad tg Frndgm in .hpclrlgo
Mooda&gt;y Auuu5t 14 &amp;t 6 00 prn i:ll !hu Holzer Med,cat Center Jac~ar(Cornff un1ty Elluc,llliJ Room lorut~ at 500 Bur1 ng1or Road
Jackson Oh;o Sesston 1 Nill cover the smolmlg habtsnd bUIIt:l!ng mollvat on For moro nform.J t on about this seven sess on ser es
developed by the Amer1can Lung Assoclallo" ca8 (7.&amp;01 446-SUO

'l

Ptrtpl! WM Heyt lmt e Cb!!d !hueut qmyp • kt Qelllp(lffs
Mondty, August at 1 00 pm Pl&amp;aiWI maet ln the Holzer Mecha~ t Center Frorrt Lobby 10 Galhpol s The meet ng wal b&amp; "''eld 1r
Conference Room C olll)e Hospttal s t.ducet•on &amp; Con1erttnce Center Open to the pobl&lt;( Fac 1tatad br Nancv Childs an&lt;l Jsckttt Keau.:v
If roo art lnternttd In Mtendlng plttt" call priOf" to tht meetmg For more mforn"~Atr Ol' Cdll Ja~ ~e Keatley 11 (140) 446 2700

1•

.,

~

We can help give you peace of mind,
We can he lp you create a plan fo1 your future and ret,ement years
Call us !odily and d1scovet whv Vl.e ate leade1~ 111 planntng for lite
~CU!!IIelllf!tl!d IM).Q"o

Oan Cofflll
Hnnnc tall\dvt~~

1 KJI'&gt;

lotllle&lt;l at Ptaplu 8;d

•

Sunday,August6,2oo6

'en tt:e
Thts group of compames
Motm "t welcome&gt; the operules m a market of
E&gt;ans Moore Agency 10 more than 32 million people
MIDDLEPORT
th" elne group of mdustry through a network ot more
Middleport
Community
leaders
than 3,400 mdependent
Assoc1atton
not hold a
The Motonsls Insurance agenc1es
Bear
Basket
Bmgn
game 111
G10up headquattered m
The
Ev,ms-Moore
Columbus, " a maJOr Insurance Agency Inc , 16j August as reported 111
'egwual msurcr, offenng Mum St, Vmton, has served- Thursday's Datly Sentmel
The assocatton s evenh
complele lmes of property, soulheastern Oh10 for 40
comml!tee
w111 meet l&lt;~l e l
"""w il y and hte msurance ye,trs
th1s month to plan the nexl
bmgo event to be held some
IJme 111 late October
Prestdent Brenda Ph,llm '"'d

Low-risk d1agnost1c card1ac and vascular
catheteriZation laboratory •

•

PageA3

REGIONAL
eams

iunba~ lime~ -ientintl

(877) 376-7576
(304) 675-8130

l!i\niQNlJ JA!tl£5
~l[

\1

11..,11 ~-. !

I u! PI~

:111

$. "'~A ~
..!.« "'.1-.
!
~·~ill~

.

It's Mason County, WV Fair Time!
August 7- 12
Holzer Med•cal Cente1 s Wellness Wagon will be there
prov1d111g free screen1ngs and health •nformaiiOn'
Schedules posted datly

For more Information, call (740) 446-5679.

�OPINION

i9uubap limes ·.itntlnel

PageA4

•

Sunday,August6,2oo6

Sunday,August6,2oo6

825 Third Avenue. •.Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 446·2342 • FAX (740) 446·3008
www.mydallytrlbune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publis~er

Kevin Kelly
Managing Editor

Diane Hill
Controller

/.crtcrs to rhc l'dltor lll"l' 1relcome. Tltey should he le.'f.\'
than 300 mm/s. All leuer.\· on.· suhject tu editing and nmsr
he q'gncd ami inl'll/(11' cu~clre.~·s and ttdephotrt! nu.mlwr. No
unsignetl ll'ltt'rs 11'i!l In' Jm h fi.\·hed Ll~llers ·should be in
good w stl'. wldn ·u i11g is.\ IU' S. not per.wnaliries.

TODAY IN HISTORY
.
'lod.ly i.s Sunday. Aug. 6, the 218th day of 2006. There
are 14 7 days ldt in the year.
Tuday's Hi ghlii!ht in Hi story: On Aug. 6, 1945, during
World War II. the United States dropped an atomic bomb
&lt;ln Hir&lt;~s hima . J&lt;tpan . killing an estimated 140,000 people
in tile riN use of a nuclear weapon in warfare.
On this date : In 17R7. the Constitutional Convention in
Philadelphia hcgan to debate the articles contained in a
uraft of the Un ited States Constitution .
In IgQ6, 200 'years ago, the Holy Roman Empire went out
of ex istence as Emperor Francis II abdicated.
In Ig2.\ Boli via prod aimed its indep~ndence from Peru.
In I X90. convicted murderer William Kemmler became
1hc fiN person to be executed in the electric chair as he was
]Hit tL&gt; death at Auburn State Prison in New York.
In 1926. Gertrude Ederle of New York became the first
American woman to swim the Engli sh Channel, arriving In
K i n ~ sclown . England. from France in 14 l/2 hours.
In 1926. Warner Brothers premiered its Vitaphone soundon·di sl' movie system in N&lt;!W York with a showing of "Don
Juan" featurin g music and sound effects.
In 1962. Jamaica became an independent dominion within the British Commonwealth.
In 1965. President Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act.
In 1978, Pope Paul VI died at Castel Gand0lfo at age 80.
In 1986, William J. S&lt;:hroeder died after living 620 days
with the Jarvik-7 artificial heart.
Ten years ago: Officials announced the Air Force had
punished 16. officers in connection with the crash that
killed Commerce Secretary Ron Brown and · 34 others in
April 1996. ·
Five years ago: Ending months of speculation, former
President Clinton said he would write his much soughtafter memoirs for publisher Alfred A. Knopf. Gen. Duong
Van "Big'' Minh. who was the president of South Vietnam
for just a few days before the country fell to Communist
invaders in 1975. di~d in Pasadena, Calif. , at age 86.
Brazilian author Jorge Amado died at age 88.
One year ago: Anti·war activist Cindy Sheehan, whose
soldier-son, Casey, was killed in Iraq, began a weeks-long
protest outside President Bush's ranch in Texas. Former
British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook, who quit Prime
Minister Tony Blair's Cabinet .to protest the Iraq war, died
in Inverne ss. Scotland. al age 59. A Tunisian airliner
plunged into the Mediterranean while trying to make an
emergen~y landing in Sicily; 16 people were killed.
Today 's Birthdays: Actress-singer Abbey Lincoln is 76.
Jazz musician Charlie Haden is 69. Actor·director Peter
Bonerz is 68. A•tor Michael Anderson Jr. is 63. Actor
Dorian Harewood is 56. Actress Catherine Hicks is · 55.
Rock singer Pat McDonald (Trmbuk 3) is 54. Country
musi~ian Murk DuFresne (Confederate Railroad) is 53.
Actress Stepfanie Kramer is 50. Actress Faith Prince is 49.
Rhythm·and-blucs singer Randy DeBarge is 48. Country
singei·s ·Peggy and Patsy Lynn are 42. Actor Jeremy
Ratchford is 41 . Country singer Lisa Stewart is 38. Movie
writer-director M. Night Shyamalan is 36. Actress 'Merrin
Dungey i&gt; 35 . Singer Geri Halliwell is 34. Singer-actor
David C.unpbell is .13. Actress Ever Carradine is 32.
Actress Solei I Moon Frye is 30.
Thought for Today : " A successful lie is doubly a lie; an
error which has to be corrected is a heavier burden than
the truJh. " -. Dag Hammarskjold, U.N. SecretaryGeneral ( 1905- 1961 ).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the ~ ditor are welcome. Thev should be
les.\ than 300 \l'ord.1·. A'/1 leiTers are subject to editing,
11111 .11 be si!illed, and i11clude address and telephone
11/llllha No 111tsig11ed leiters will he published. Letters
should be 111 good taste. 11ddressing issues, 110t persmwli!ies. Le11ers of' thanks to mgani:orions and indi·
1•idua/.1· H'il/not he accqJiedfbrptiblicorion.

·I~unb-ap ·~imes -~enttnel
Reader Services
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I

' - --

----·--- ... ·--- -

Liberal Jihad
Perhaps the biggest reason
why
so
many
Americans are · confused
about the chilling dangers
posed by Islamic fasci sm
is the reportage of the terror war by the liberal print
press. Day after day, committed left-wing newspa·
pers frame their coverage
with an emphasis on the
inadequacies of the Bush
administration or Israel,
not the aggressive world·
wide jihad that seeks
nuclear
weapons.
Routinely, those who act
confrontationally against
the fascists are marginal ·
ized and sometimes personally attacked. Rarely
do the left wing dailies
give a fair hearing to both
sides of the terror war con troversy.
But, of course, the journalists toiling at the committed liberal papers don ' t
see it that way. In a recent
appearance on National
Public Radio, Los Angeles
Times
reporter
Tom
Hamburger presented a.
point of view that is anything but rare in liberal circles: "Targeting the mainstream, even establishment
media ... as having a liberal
bias, has been one of the
most successful campaigns
that's been organized by
the conservative right. And

Bill
O'Reilly

it's made editors and .
reporters cautious about
what they say,"
According
to
Hamburger. his paper and
others like The New York
Times, are not liberal at all ;
their images liave been distorted by the right. ·Well ,
let's examine the facts.
The New York Times has
four Uber-liberal op-ed
columnists whom, within
the last 18 months, have ·
written more than 150
columns about the Bush
admini stration . None of the
columns were positive - ·
not one. The Times has no
pro-Bush columnists.
In addition , the TV
columnists for the Times,
its business media writer,
and the lead film critic,
A.O. Scott, are also committed liberals, as is sports
columnist William Rhoden.
I don't know about the
head obit writer.
And it's the same thing
at most of the other left-

wing papers - the deck is
stacked with liberal writ ers. not only on the editorial pages, but also in every
other section of the paper.
The result is a constant
barrage of negat1v1ty
towards those who believe
we are fi ghting World War
III , and we'd better get
serious.
The Fox News Channel
generally takes a stron g
anti -terrori st position . and
it is not well received hv
the print press. I get a clip
fil e every day from newspapers around the country
and the coverage of FNC.
and my program "The
0 ' Reill y
Factor,"
is
relentlessly negative. Yet
every day American s
somehow overwhelminglv choose us over our
c"ompetition ; so at least
there is some balance in
t11e medi a.
Truthfully, this nonsense
about
"conservatives"
fal , ely describing the
newspaper industry as predominately liberal is flatout dishonest. Even a
recent media study done by
UCLA professor Tim
Groseclose and University
of Missouri professor
Jeffrey Milyo came to· the
conclusion that "almost all
major media outlets tilt to
the left."

And the ti It becomes a
freefall when President
Bush's name come s up.
The liberal newspapers
generally consider him an
inarticulate bumbler, too
unsophi sticated to deal
with complicated issue s
like stem l'ell research and
global warming. The committed left editors remain
furious Bush defeated AI
Gore in the Supreme Court
and are crazed that many of
them bought into the Wlv!D
threat in lrc~ q .
Thus. no matter what the
President does n0w, and no
matter how much danger
nations like Iran present to
the world , the liberal
dailies are not going to play
it strong. The big story is,
and will remain, that Bush
is an idiot.
That kind of narrow
media groupthink is dangerous.
Granting
Hezbollah moral equivalency with Israel, putting
forth that America is a
nation of human rights violators. and labeling Iraq a
failure before the all the
dust has settled - all these
things . absolutely makes
life easier for the jihadists .
That may not be the
intention of the left-wing
press , but that· very well
may be the result of their
own jihad.

.

\

ANNIE '.S MAILBOX

'

i&gt;unbap tltime~ -&amp;tntinel

Telling white lies won't solve problem
BY KATHY MtTcH'EU.
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: 1 have a
problem with my sister,
"Eva ." She is my only sibling, and we live a half· hour
away from each other. !love
her, but she wants to spend
way too much time with me,
niy family and friends.
Eva is a good person , but
she has an obnoxious per·
sonality. She interrupt s
constantly, has terrible
table manners and butts
into every conversation.
She has a way of inviting
herself over frequently . If I
don't have specific plans,
she sees no reason why we
shouldn't do something
with her and her husband.
Sometimes I am forced to
lie simply because I don't
want to be around her. We
recently purchased a summer cottage, and now she
has somewhere · el se to
invite herself. She sees no
reason why we shouldn't
share the cottage.
Eva has friends of her
own but prefers to hang out
with mine. While my
friends are gracious and
don' t complain, it"s very
uncomfortable for me. Even
our own parents avoid her.
I don't want to hurt Eva's
feelings, since she can't
change who she is. On the

other hand, my stomach is
in knots whenever l have to
spend time with her. · And
she drives my husband and
kids crazy.
r am becoming less tolerant as the years go by. I
work very hard and cheri sh
my free time. I want to
spend it ,with people whose
company I enj9y, not with
someone who annov s me
and . expects me to wait on
her. I feel guilty and hate
lying, but I' m losing sleep
and patience. Any advice·&gt;
- Going Crazy.
Dear Going Crazy:
Unle~ s J OU want to tell E;va
that she is obnoxious. intrusive. annoying and you
don' t want her around, you
will have to continue to tell
little white lies in order to
spare her feelings. You can,
of course, be a bit more
honest and let her know you
want private time with your
husband ·and children and·
you hope she will understand and respect that. But
there's no reason to feel
guilty about saying, ''Sorry,
we ~ re busy. Maybe another
time.'' Repeatedly.
Dear Annie: I cannot
. believe the number of people who clip their nails in
public. I have seen this done
in airplanes and at church.
Is it because one can buy a
nail clipper attached to a

keychain, and thus always space. Divide the shared
have
one
at
hand? space by six to give each
Yesterday, in a coffee shop, girl the same square footage
a woman clipped her "ownership"' of common
school-age child 's toen;Iils space. Measure each · bedwhile the child lay on a · room . In the shared room,
bench. Please remind peo- each girl gets half the bedple that this is not OK . room space. Add each girl's
Appalled in Connecticut.
bedroom space and proporDear Appalled: This is tio mue share of common
NOT OK. It is gross and space together to get each
disg usting to clip your nails ·gi rl's total space. Multiply
(or an yone else 's) in publi c, each girl's total space by the
anJ particularly so in a cm.t per square foot , and
place whe re people are eat- that is each girl's share .of
ing. We bet that sa me the rent.
wo man would have had a fit
Diffi cult ? For . today's
if someone el se's toenail hi gh sc hool graduates.
had bounced into her child's maybe . For those born in
scrambled eggs. That coffee the first half of the last censhop
didn ' t
have
a tury. the calculation would
restroom? Please . people , be third-grade math. Love
personal grooming is best your column. - Cart.
done in private.
Dear Carl: Thank you for
Dear Annie: This is for making us feel young. Our
"Cramped and Poor in brains arc spinning.
Ohio," who is sharing a . Am1ie 's Mailbox is writroom while four other girl s ten by Kathy Mitchell and
have their own. College stu- Marcy Sugar, lm1gtime editors of the Ann La11ders
dents need to learn math .
Each girl should pay for co/um11. Please e-mail your
the square footage allotted questions to anniesmailto them . Measure the square box@comcast.llet, or write
footage of the entire house. to: A1111ie's Mailbox, P.O.
Divide the cost (rent. utili· Box JJ8190, Chicago, IL
ties, etc .) by the square 606 JJ. To find out more
footage. The · result is the about A1111ie's Mailbox,
cost per square foot. Then· a11d read features by other
measure the commo)l space Creators Sy11dicate writers
(entry, halls, living room. a11d cartoo11ists, visit the
dining room , kitchen, bath- Creators Syndicate Web
rooms) to determine shared page at www.creators.com.

Meigs County calendar
... ANDTHE WOLF

5AID, 11 YOU MIGHT AS
WELL LET ME BLOW
IT DOWN 1 IT'S
gEEN ON THE.
MARKET OVER
SIX MONTIIS.''

Youth events
Monday, Aug. 7
. RACINE-. Southern High
school cleerleading clinic,
grades 9-12, 9 a.m. to l p.m.
Aug. 7, , 8 and 9, Southern
Elementary gym. Attendance
mandatory to learn tryout
requirements.
Call Jodie
Harrison, 949-4112.
POMEROY -Eastern
·High School golf team to
meet and begin practice, 9
a.m., Pine H11ls Golf
Course.

•

Church events
Mo!lday, Aug. 7
MIDDLEPORT
Vacation Bible school wil be
held 6 to 8:30 p.m, through
Aug. II at the Middleport

Growing old with Dave
Call me a wild and crazy
guy if you want. but recently, on a whim', I decided to
- why not? - tum 48.
It's
not
so
bad.
Physically, the only serious
probl~m I've noticed is that
I can no longer read anything printed in letters
smaller than Shaquille
O'Neal. Also, to read a
document, I have to hold it
far from my face; more and.
more, I find myself holding
documents - this is awkward on airplanes - with
my feet. I can no longer
read restaurant .menus, so I
fake it when the waiter
comes. around.
ME (pointing randomly):
I'll have this.
WAITER : You'll have
your napkin?
ME: I want that medium
rare.
. It's gotten so bad that.!
• can't even read the words
I'm typing il1to my computer right now. If my fin gers were in a prankish
mood, they could type an
message
embarrassing
right in ihe middle of this
sentence HE'S ALWAYS
PUTTING US IN HIS
NOSE and there is no way
I'd be able to tell.
I suppose I should go see
an eye doctor. but if you're
48, whenever you go to see
~ any kind of doctor, he or
she invariably decides to
insert a lengthy medical
item into your body until
the far end of it reaches a
difff rent area code. Also, I
am'-frankly fearful that the
eye doctor will want me to
wear reading glasses . I
have a psychological hangup about this, ~; ~used by the
. fact that, growing up, I
wore eyeglasses for 70,000

tain chemical ingredient pie, the other day l was in
found in thin mice. then my office, trying to perinjected it into fat mice; the form a fundamental jourfat mice lost 90 percent nalistic function, namely,
more weight than a control fill out an expense report,
group
of fat mice who were and I needed to divide · 3
Dave
exposed only to Richard . into a number that, if l
Barry
S inunons. The good news recall correctly (which I
is that this same ingredient don't; that's the problem)
·could produce dramatic was $125.85 , and I couldweight loss in human n't remember how to do
years. And these were not 'beings; the bad news is long division. I knew I was
just any eyeglasses: These that. before it becomes supposed to put the 3 into
were the E;l Dork-O model, available, it must be the 12, then bring somethe ones that come from the approved by the Food and · thing down , but what? And
Administration how far down'l And would
factory pre-broken with the Drug
white tape already wrapped (motto: '"We Haven't Even r need the "cosine'"?
I was starting to panic,
around the nose part. As an · Approved Our Motto Yet").
adolescent. I was con· So it 's going to take a when all of a sudden vi.nced that my glasses while. If you ' re overweight this is why you youngsters
were one of the key reasons and· desperate to try this 'hould pa.y attention in
why the opposition sex did miracle ingredient right math class - my old trainnot find me attractive. the away, my advice, as a med· ing came back to me, and I
other key reason being that ical professional. is to get knew exactly what to do:
I did not reach puberty hold of a thin mouse and Ask Doris. Doris works in
eat it. It can' t be any worse my offic&lt;!, and she has a
until approximately 35.
calculator. I guess I should
Anyway. other than than tofu.
I
,
But getting back to aging: start carrytng
one aroun d,
being functionally blind at
close range. I remain in Aside.from the vision thing, along with some kind of
superb physical condition and the weight thing, and device that remembers (a)
for a man of my age who the need tq take an after- people's names, (b) where I
can no longer fit into any of noon nap almost immedi- put th~ remote control and
his pants. r have definitely . ately after I wake up, and (c) what I had planned to
· been gaining some weight the fact that random hairs do once I got into the
in . the midriff region. - I'm talking about long kitchen . other I han ' stand
wearinnb a vacant
despite a rigorous diet regi· hairs. the kind normally · around
.
men of drinking absolutely associated with Cher - · expression normally asso·
no beer whatsoever after I occasionally erupt from ciated with fi sh.
But so what if my memo- ·
pass out. The only lower- deep inside my ears bodJ garments I own that .aside from these minor ry isn't what it used to be'!
still fit me comfortably. are problems, I a$. a SlJperb My other mental skills are,~~:
towels, which I find myself physical specimetl easily as sharp as ever, and l'nf
cont1dent that I can continwearing in more and more mistaken for Brad Pitt.
Not only that, but I have ue to do the kind .of astute
social settings. I' m thinking of getting a black one the mind of a steel trap, Of analysis and in -depth
course , very few things in research that have charac·
for funerals .
Because of my midriff the world - and I include terized this column over
Home
Shopping the years, which is wh y
situation I was very pleased the
to read recently about the Network in this statement today I want to assure vou
new Minic\e Breakthrough - are as stupid as a steel the readers. that : tn);
Weight .Loss Plan For trap. What I'm saying is, I advanl'mg age will in no
Mi"e, In case ym1 missed )l;JVe definitely detected a way ~hflnge · the fact that
this, what happened was. decline in some of my MAINLY HE SCRATCH scientists extracted a cer· mental facilitie s. For exam- ES HIMSELF

~unbaJ? IEimt!l ·~tntinrl

Pomeroy ~ Middleport • Gallipolis

Church of the Nazarene,
General Hartinger Parkway.
Jheme, "The Quest for
God's Ten Commandments."
Call Sue Stewart for more
infonnation, 992-2892.

Wednesday, Aug. 9
POMEROY Meigs
County Board of Health, 5
p.m., conference room
Meigs County Health
Department.

Public
meetings

Clubs and
organizations

Thesday, Aug. 8
Monday, Aug. 7
TUPPERS PLAINS
POMEROY Meigs
Chamber
of
Tuppers Plains regional County
sewer district will meet at 7 Commerce luncheon, Ohio
of
p.m. This is a cha'nge from Department
Transportation's George
the regular meeting time.
SYRACUSE -Sutton Collins, Stephanie Filson,
Township Trustees, regular performance by River City
meeting, 7 p.m., Syracuse Players, noon, Pomeroy
Library, RSVP 992-5005.
Village Hall.
Thursday, Aug. 10
1\Jesday, Aug. 8
.CHESTER
- Shade
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Board of Elections, River Lodge 453 will meet
at 7:30 p.m. at the hall.
8:30a.m., regular meeting.

ASSOCIATED PRESS llfRITER

DAYTON
Darrell
'Ferguson wants to die for
his deeds. And Ire's done
just about everything he can
to make it happen.
Ferguson stabbed to death
and stomped with steel·toed
boots on a man using crutches. And he killed an elderly
couple the same way, snuffing out the life of a man weak
with cancer and a woman
who took meals to her wheel·
chair-bound neighbors.
The
28-year-old
Ferguson, a 230-pound former high school wrestler
who says he worships
Satan, admitted to the
crimes time and time again,
put up no defense and asked
for the death penalty. At his
sentencing, he taunted the
families of the victims. saying he enjoyed the killings,
had no remorse, and, if
released from prison, would
pick up where he left off.
Ferguson, whose nickname is "Gafur," is' on death
row and scheduled to be
executed Tuesday.
·
"If we are going to have
the death penalty in Ohio,
there is no other case and no
defendant who deserves the
ultimate penalty more ," said
Montgomery
. County
Prosecutor Mat Heck Jr.
Defense attorney Victor

Other events
Thursday, Aug. 10
RACINE - Registrations
of children entering kindergarten ill the Southern Local
School District are requesed
to be completed before Aug.
lO for scheduling purposes.
There will be kindergarten
orientation for these students
and their parents at 6 p.m. on
Aug. 10. All parents of 200607 ~indergarteners need to
plan to attend. Refreshments
wil be provided.

Hodge believes Ferguson's Ferguson into his home. and taken to his nearby
behavior may be a ploy to . King was later found home. He rented a western
avoid spending the rest of stabbed eight times and had movie for his father, who
his life in prison by commit· a bootprint-shaped bruise loved westerns, and the cou·
pie enjoyed a Christmas
on his chest.
ting suicide .
dinner
prepared by Cornett
After
the
killing.
"He just pulled the right
before
returning
home .
strings to make sure the .Ferguson went to a bridge
Cornett returned to his pargovernment does it," Hodge by the river to think.·
ents'
home Dec. 27 and
"I
tried
to
put
a
bread
bag
said.
found
their
bodies lying sidemy
head
and
just
do
over
Ferguson was convicted
by-side
on
the living-room
of aggravated murder in the myself in because I knew
Christmas Day, 200 I, death what I did was wrong," he floor. They had both been
stabbed, and the rings were
of Thomas King and the later told police.
missing from their tingers.
That
same
day,
the
deaths .of Arlie Fugate, 68.
and his wife, Mae, 69, the Fugates were picked up by Arlie Fugate had an impresnext day. The victims, all of their son , James Cornett, sion of a boot on his cheek.
Dayton. knew Ferguson and
let him into their homes.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ferguson grew up in
~
Dayton. He frequently wan- · ~
dered the streets and spent
-4
nights in warehouses and
~
-4
alleys. Ferguson satd at age 9
he began huffing - inhaling
chemical vapors to achteve a
feeling of euphoria. He start~
~
-4
ed drinking at 15 and usmg
crack cocaine at 18.
Ferguson left schooL in
~
-4
IOth grade, did some street
boxing to earn money, and,
-4
at one point, worked for a
~
~
vinyl-siding company.
~
-4
On Dec. 21 , 200 I,
~
-4
Ferguson ~ot a two-day
pass from the drug-treatment program in Cincinnati
he had been ordered to
attend as a result or a bur·
glary c,9nviction. He took to
the str~ts of Dayton, smok·
ing crack and huffing.
On Dec . · 25 , Kin g let

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lnsursnce With Someone You Trust

August 7, 8,9
6:30-8:30 PM
First Church Of
The Nazarene

1110FirstAve.
~ · Gallipolis, OH 45631
~

~

~·

Experience God's
Awesome

~

POWER!

~

~

BY

LISA CORNWELL

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Cumberland Cardiology
Cardiac Rhythm
Management Division

Cumberland Cardiology's
Cardiac Rhythm Management
..Division is now accepting
patients at their new Huntington,
WV office located at the
Highlawn Medical Building, 2828
1st Avenue, Suite 304.
Dr. John Van Deren and Dr.
Terence Ross will be staffing the
office beginning the week of
August 6, 2006.
Appointments are now being
scheduled by calling .
1-304-522-3906 or 1-866-524-3906.

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Sherry Fredericks

Investigators searching
for cause of roller
coaster accident

determination ha' been ·
made. Wilt said Friday.
"In order to move forCINCINNATI
An ward , we will allow Kings
independent engineer hired Island to take apart the ride ·
by the state will supervise where it was broken and
tests of a roller ·coaster that recon struct it under our
malfunctioned last month, engineer's supervision." she
injuring 27 riders, as offi. said. "That will allow us to
cials try to figure out what maintain .custody of any,
caused the problem.
broken parts and timbers
The Ohio Department of · and test their strength ."
Agriculture, which regu.
The park will then run
lates the state's amusement tests on the desig n itself.
parks, ordered the Son of also under state supervision
Beast ride at Paramount 's to assure that the tests fol Kings Island in suburban low commo nl y accepted
Mason shut down after pas· engineerin g practi ces. said
sengers ·were injured in a Wilt, who could not predict
rough ride July 9.
how long the proceS&gt; would
· "The engineer had made take or when the investigasome recommendations to tion would be completed.
us about how to proceed,
An initi al inspection
and we have sent a letter to revealed a cracked timber
the park laying out the on the track of the looping
steps they need to take for wooden roller coaster that
the investigation to move the park 's Web site says is
forward ," said Melanie more than 7.000 feet long
Wilt, department spokes- and features a 118'-foot tall
woman.
loop. The ride. which can
Most of the passengers top speeds of n mph, was
injured were treated for voluntaril y dosed by the
bruises, but one woman park before the state issued
suffered a broken sternum its order.
Park
spoke.swoman
and was hospitalized for
four days. Melissa Eberle. Maureen Kaiser would not
and her husband John . speculate on when the ride
Eberle, of Maineville, might reopen.
"We are in the prelimihave sued the park, claim·
ing that a combination of nary stages and doing what
improper
maintenance , the state has requested." she
inspection and operation said Friday. "We want to
caused the roller coaster to make sure that it is safe.'·.
Sandusky-based Cedar
jolt riders .
Investigators have nar- Fair LP paid CBS Corp.
billion
for
rowed the problem down to $1.24
Refreshments.
Paramount's Kings Island
three possible causes SYRACUSE
and four other theme parks
wood
strength,
maintenance
Wildwood Garden Club will
meet at 7 p.m. at the home or design - but no final in June.
of Barbara Koker. Members
to take an arrangement
related to this year's fair
schedule.

Darrell Ferguson to be executed for three murders
By JAMES HANNAH

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Consult the eye specialists ;H Ohio Valley Eye Phvsic ians.
Doctors George, Strickler and L1 zer perfor m Topical
Camrac1 Rcmov;11. For most patients, that me.ub t here
~reno shots, no stitd)t6 ~nd no patches, Jll &lt;•I which lcJd
to ll&lt;!rter vision faster. And best of c1 ll, they always ac.:ept
your Me&lt;licarc asSif,'llt11Cnt.

Call Ohio Vallev Eve Phvsicians tod,jv
and s&lt;;hedulc votir cataract examination.
No hospital admiSSion require.! With surgerv ,lt the
AAAHC certified Physician's Outparicnt Surgcrv Center.

r.8oo.7 s8.EYES
www.Ohic) Valley Ere .c.oin
)

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PageA6

OHIO

iunbap ltm~ -itntintl

Sunday,Augu8t6,2oo6

,

Computer specialist
says university
wrongly fired him
ATHENS (AP)- A computer specialist. fired by
Ohio University over a
series of electronic breakins to its records says he
was not responsible for the
problems and .lobbied for
mcreased secunty.
The
four . computer
servers affected by hackers
were not under his control
as the school's director of
communications network
services, Tom Reid said in a
statement Friday.
"To single me out as
being responsible for the
recent data thefts is simply
not supported by the facts or
by industry leading advice
on securing information at
large, research intensive
universities." Reid said.
Reid and Todd Acheson,
the university's Internet and
systems manager, were suspended in June and fired
Thursday after the school
detenni ned they should have
foreseen the computer system's vulnerabilities and
worked to bolster network
security, Chief Information
Officer Bill Sams said in a
letter outlining the dismissals.
Sams has already said
he would step down when
the university finds a
replacement.

.'

Inside
Local Sports, Page 82
Outdoors, Page 83
NFL Hall of Fame, .Page 84

&amp;unbap

Bl

Ql:tme~ -&amp;enttnel
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Reserve champion hog
Meghan Caldwell's
reserve champion hog
was purchased for $8
per pound by L&amp;L Scrap
Metal, April Rice-Oak Hill
Rnancial Services and
Oak Hill Banks during
Friday's 46th annual market hog sale at the Gallia
County Junior Fair. From
left are Sonya and Doug
Lester of L&amp;L S~rap
Metal, Caldwell, John
Cornett of Oak Hill
Banks, April Rice of Oak
Hill Rnancial Services.
Junior Livestiock Princess
Michaela Drummond, Fair
Queen Kayla Rose, Little
Miss Gallia County early
Gilmore, Little Mr. Gallia
County Brody Sauer,
Senior Livestock Princess
Haley Angel and Kaitlin
Angell, fair queen second
runner-up and Miss
Congeniality.

Since'April , the university
has discovered computer
systems were breached in
its health center, the alumni
office, . the training center
for fledgling businesses and
the department that handles
records for businesses the
university hires.
The university said initially the breaches exposed
about 36 7,000 files containing Social Security numbers, names,
medical
records and home addresses. Sams said Thursday that
about ·173.000 people's files
were affected.
·
The school made Reid
and Acheson scapegoats for
university-wide problems.
Reid's
lawyer, James
Coiner, said in a statement.
In a performance review
shortly before the data theft
was uncovered, Sams rated
Reid's performance as
exceeding expectations in
five of seven categories,
Reid said.
"l didn't know what I had
not been told when I wrote
the review," Sams said
Friday.
In June, the university's
board of trustees voied to
spend up to $4 million to
upgrade the university ' s
computer security system.

Sunday, August 6, 2006

returns to Gallia County Fair
Keener extends
points lead,
Bolen wins again
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS®M'!'OAILYSENTINEL.COM

· Ke•ln Kellyfphoto

Fonner senator, wife suffer
minor injuries in car accident
COLUMBUS (AP) Fonner senator and astronaut John Glenn and his wife
were to be released from the.
hospital Saturday after suffering minor injuries when
their car collided with another on the city's northeast
side, authorities said.
Glenn, 85. and his wife,
Annie, 86, were in fair condition Saturday afternoon ~~
Grant Medical Center and
were expected to be dischar~ed later in the day, said
nursmg supervisor Louis
Tejada. Hospital staff would
not comment on the extent
of the injuries.
Police on Saturday said
no further information was
available on the crash.
The driver of the other

Bryan Walters/photo

car, Amy Myers of suburban New Albany, told The
Columbus Dispatch that she
was driving east late Friday
night when Glenn, who was
driving west, tried to turn
left onto a highway ramp.
Myers, who was not
injured, said her car hit the
front of his.
Glenn was "very sincerely sorry," Myers said.
A message seeking cpmment was left at Glenn's ,
home Saturday afternoon.
Glenn, who served in the
Senate from 1974 to 1998,
first made headlines in
1962, when he piloted the
first manned orbital mission
of the United States. He
went back into space tn
1998, at the age of 77.

Shawn Williams,· last year's defending champion, drives his 2003 Dodge DakCita named "Out of Control" during the Ohio State Tractor Puller's Association
pull Friday night at the Gallia County Fair. Williams pulled a.distance of 296 feet, second to winner Arlene. Archer, who was driving Pioneer.

Bll-16.90

Monday night ...Partly
cloudy with scattered showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the mid 60s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Thesday
through
Wednesday... Mostly clear.
Highs in the mid 80s. Lows
in the upper 50s.
Wednes· day
night... Mostly clear. Lows
in the mid 60s.
Thursday and Thurs(jay
night..Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the
upper 80s. Lows in the mid
60s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Friday...Partly cloudy.
Highs in the mid 80s.

Bob Evans - 28.68
BorgWarner - 59.65
CENX ~ 3&amp;.19
Champion __: 7.93
Charming Shops - 10.26
City Holding - 38.92

Col- 52.62
DG -13.81
DuPont - 39.64
Federal Mogul - .36
USB- 32.31
Gannett - 53.89
General Electric -32.80
GKNLY- 5.10
Harley Davidson - 57.19

JPM -45.12
Kroger - 22.90

·Oak Hill Financial -

25.43

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·
AP photo
Marshall running back Ahmad Bradshaw speaks with reporters Friday during the football
team's mediCI day at Joan C. Edwards Stadium in Huntington. W.Va..
rurlnt'ng
back
Ahmad
quarterbac k was never rea II y process.
settled, with Morris and
"They have me out here at Bradshaw, will he pivotal for
.
N
·
Herd 1o
· b to t he Th un derrng
Jimmy Skinner alternaung
o. 1, so 1·1 ·IS my JO
·
1ose," Morn·s sa'd
Thursday
have success.
in and out every &lt;.ew senes.
1
• •
Snyder hopes that by nam- "All we have to do before
Bradshaw is expected to
ing a ~tarter early this sea- (the West Virginia game on get several more carries
son, some consistency will Sept. 2) is keep working thi s season becau se of his
· ·
"
be built in practice, especial- hard and 1t will pan out.
ability to see lanes without
ly since Mar~ hall' s out-ofSnyder said Morris' legs, looking at them ..
conference · schedule .does along with those of preseanot allow for feeling out the son all-Conference USA Please see Marshall, 8~

Reds outlast Braves, stop losing skid

Ltd.- 25.92
NSC- 41.93
OVB- 25.15
BBT- 42.67
Peoples - 30.07
Pepsico- 63.17
Premier - 14.65
Rockwell ·- 62.55
Rocky Boots - U.25
Sears - 142.74
Wal-Mart - 44.87
Wendy's - 60.47
Worthington - 19.99
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the prevloua day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Financial Advisors
of Hilliard Lyons In
GallliJOlls.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
(AP) - After a 4-7 season
in his first year as Marshalls
football coach, Mark Snyder
is trying to stay grounded in
his philosophies on the sidelines.
Even Snyder himself . can
get caught up in the moment
with only 27 days separating
him and the start of the 2006
After naming Bernie
Morris the No. I quarterback before camp opened,
Snyder
wasjunior's
less than pleased
with the
performance early in Thursday's
opening practice.
frustration
Snyder ' s
hinged on the portion of the
practice allotted for individual workouts where Morris
was out of sync. By the time
group workouts with the top
offense rolled around,
Morris was doing what
Snyder envisioned when he
gave him the top honor.
"We started doing things
with him that he can do,"
Snyder said Friday. "That is
going to be the experiment
with us as coaches and we
only have 27 days."
· While Morris' performance in Thursday's
· prach'
lice was shaky at limes. IS
offseason effort earned him
the
to
the lronman
hardest Award.
workergiven
in the
weight room over the summer.
The 2006 Seas-·on looms·
with several contrasts to
2005, changes Snyder hopes
will produce wins.
Last season, the starting

Local Stocks
ACI- 37.87
AEP -37.01
Akzo- 55.23
Ashland Inc. - 66.5o

Please see OSTPA. 86

...........................' .......
Marshall.looking for improvement ,~ ~t f/all'11fo!!,ra!

Local Weather
Sunday... Mostly sunny in
the morning ... Then partly
cloudy with scattered showers and thunderstorms in the
afternoon. Hot with highs
.around 90. South winds 5 to
I0 mph. Chance of rain 40
percent.
Sunday night... Partly
cloudy with scattered showers and thunderstorms.
Lows around 70. Southwest
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of rain 40 percent.
·
Monday... Partly cloudy
with scattered showers and
thunderstorms. Hot. Humid
with highs around 90.
Southwest winds 5 to I0
mph. Chance of rain 30 percent.

GALLIPOLIS - Super
Stock points leader Frank
Keener won, as did FWD
truck puller Bill Bolen, as
the Ohio State Tractor
Pullers Association stopped
Friday nigh ~ at the Gallia
County Fair in Gallipolis.
Keener, of Ashland, purchased Jeff Hirt' s former
"Running Bare" alcohol
powered Agco Allis over
the off season and he has
got the high horsepower
tractor dialed in very well in
the Columbus Diesel Super
Stock Tractor class.
He topped 2004 points
champion Roger Earley of
Sabina and his .Case/IH
7220 "All Business." It was
Keener's third win of the
season .
Bolen of Newark had
only one career win in the
SCS
Gearbox
Super
Modified Four-Wheel Drive
Truck class going into the
season. He has now won the
last two classes in a row. He
also won in . Piketon on
Tuesday night. Season
points leader David Pearce

' .'
Gallipolis 2I4.~ ~ &lt;~!&gt;lt'm N.Je.• !740J44&amp;-2407t

Miklleport lngek ~ltlc.lronks, 106 r-. 2r'&lt;J Ave.

A&amp;tthgrjmt klljlcn

Jacbon I"Jt('t~ f:l~&lt;:lronic s. 731
~d,f740i l6R· 10011

f Milin St

~

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(740l J:J92 2825

Tl'&lt;lone, 7J I. Humn St.i740) 266·9666

'C"* ~It imposn...tlliy1llllilterr Cntl~ Cl1arp II" 1111.1511 ilell i1e1r1J Cllb incunei II'"""''""""' ltoteiOll f'*;lllll- ftliUttn; StJie '"'F'*"'
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CD1'1111t1S nolllallabltin au..,., -lmoolllr.(Iller coodrtlllll! and "'tnctoos apply SeeC&lt;Illra&lt;t allll f!le ~" broch""lor dfla~s IJjJ ml3li a&lt;ti•atm '""'~"' £q111pmenl pr&lt;e ool
""''b1ltymay ,..., iJ! oarllt and may rd be iw;lat~C lnJm i~ o!lile!! Elly l e - Fe~ None ~tar&lt;~led inthe first :W d.,, ll&lt;•a~erlt 75 Sonle agents 1m1K1!t add~iooal lees.
Sails Ill t~kulated bMed"' """ol ull!!livated eq.;plllffll 11M C•t Pnci ot lloOa £tO~ before $!0 ~~~-" rellate calli aid ME~1 bundle~ - " 1 pac~aae 11199.99. f'lice of Pantecll
ClOO belore M£ckl bundle~ II'Oisagmg patla(e ~ 181!1'J.rna of SOIIthwtna3tO lleadset bolore 110 oail-111 rebate car&lt;!~ ll!.99.111ow IIH1weels f1lr rebate canl. Rebate canl not aiailable
~ all ~ions. loiJ1I 1e cus1olliOI lor :W011""'ti" d.,. Mu&lt;t be postmarloed bJ 9/Mlti. familtlalk is a r!(ISIO!d !!!Vice mill of llelawa~e V.lleyGell~ar lllp .• ., AI &amp;I Co•POJ)·1.,..,"""'
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lislp: 1110'1 min,..,olme llndoJ~nti unliRitell seMcos)CII ~hor""""' nelllorlll"l&gt;ffnet usaee·J dulinganytwo ~mtii! months!IC!td ~oftrft ~sue ~ll!!l.m C.~gu11r m!l at Its
opt"' terminate IOUrsert~ lleoy,..r Cllntuwed US! of~hercarriels' to&lt;er.ll',«change)'OIJr plan to"" lmposingusagecharl!s1or aflnet usap.!our otloet usap "'"''""II OIUOIIo the tosser ,
of ISIJ minutn or 10% ollh! Anytime m1nutes &lt;nctulledO!Ih IOU! Plat! C1006 Cmgular l'hretes&lt;~~ 11g~s reser.td.
·

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·-~

CINCINNATI (AP) Reds manager Jerry Narron
asked his players to show
more passion and Eddie
Guardado happily obliged.
. Royce Clayton hit his second homer in three gan1cs
and Guardado worked out of
a bases-loaded jam in the
ninth to preserve Cincinnati 's
5-4 victory over the Atlanta
Braves on Friday night, snapping a fi~e-game losing
streak.
Narron held a pregame
meeting and asked his players
to mix in some emotion, and
the usually fiery Guardado
was l'lenty defl\onstrative in
the mnth. 1'\tlan(a loaded the
bases with no outs before
Brian McCann flied out to

short lert field and letT
Francoeur grounded into a
game-ending double/lay.
Guardado stompe off the
mound and pumped hi s tist
after getting his seventh save
in seven opportunities since
being traded from Seattle on
July 6.
"I was facin~ the top of the
lineup, and it s a good lineup," said Guardado, who
made his first appearance in
seven days. "! got behind
both of the first two hitters. I
was trying to get the ball
down. and I did to the last two
batters."
. Edwin Encarnacion added
a tiebreaking two-run double
for the Reds, who looked listless for 1nuch of the game

against Atlanta starter Chuck the sixth inning. Clayton folJames. ·
lowed Ryan Freel's one-out
"We had a little wakeup walk with a two-run drive to
call." said Clayton. who was Iert-center on a full count tor
acquired from Washington as his second horner of the seapart of an eight-player trade son, tying it at 2. ·
on July 13. "(Narron) talked ."I told myself to be more
in the mocting aoout ·having "patient. ~' Clayton said. "If I
to play with a little passion work the count, he 'H have to
and emotion. We're going to come back &lt;!nd gtve me a
be tough to beat if we play prtch. He got that one up. I
with passion. It was a great wanted to m~c hun make
call by Jerry to address some quality pttches.
,
things. We kind o(' got the
Ken&lt;Gnftey Jr. then walked
emotion back. We needed and Rich Au nlr &lt;~. doubled.
th 1 "
chasmg James . t ro m the
aTh. R d
h . were held game. Encarnacwn 9reeted
. e e s, w
CHad Paronto wtth Ius two~.ttless. by Greg Maddux for run double to ut the Reds in
SIX mmngs m 3 3-0 loss to the
P·
Dodgers on Thursday night, ·
Please see Reds. 86
didn't get a hit off James until

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- HealthNet Aeromedical Services (1 - 6 run )
-Blood Pressure
- Body Fat
• Pulse Oximetry
_Blood Glucose
_FREE Balloons &amp; Promotional items·

:•
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:
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, •Wednesday (I p. m, 10-1 p.u1.1:
Complimems of lire We.wern Coullfi&lt;'s Cousonium
&amp; Agnes A. Enrico-Simon, MD
_Blood Pressure
• Height

•
:
•

-Body Fat
-Pulse O.ximetry
-Total Glucose

- Weight
- Total Clwlesterol
-Dental
(Children &amp; Adults)
- FREE Balloons &amp; Promotional Items

• •Wednesday (5p.m. to li J•m.):
-Blood Pressure
- Bo·'),
u · Fat
- Pul s·e Oxr'metrv.
- FRE E Hal loons &amp; Promotional Items
. .b d
o
, •1 urs ay (J fl.l/1. 10 ,, p.nu :
_Blood Pressure

- FREE Balloons &amp; flwm utionalltems

•

•• • &gt;Saturday r5 p.m. '" 8 I'· m.J:
• •ai®d llressure
•
•• ~ Blidy fat.
•
..... -Pujse Oximetry
• -FREE Balloons &amp; Promotional Items
••
•• A BIG "thank you " 1o the PVH Au..~iliary &amp;
•

,

(.;fUll. to 7: 30p.m.):
Comp/itiJ&lt;'tl/.1' of Plemanl Valledfmpilal
Diaheles Et!ucutimt

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• •Friday (5 p.m... u~ 8 p.m.):
-Blood .Pressure
- Body F~t '
• Pwse Oximctr~

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• •Ml'lnday r.i p.m. 1o II fUll.}:
- Blood Pressure
-Body Fat
- Pulse Oximetry
• FREE Balloons &amp; Promotional Items

-Body Fat
·Pulse Oximetry
-.Advance Directives
(Compliment! of the [' VNRCI
-fR EE Halloons &amp; Promotional Items

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(Jol) 675-~Jfo

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PageB2

LOCAL SPORTS

QI:tmes -~tnttnd

Sunday, August 6, 2006

3 record ,.,,.: won the OVAA liitle league
champion •.! "ahead of seven other teams.
. The tean , l,o captured the OVAA tournaCHESHIRE - The Kyger Creek little ment hel d"' 11iilwell, defeating Green in the
league team t1nished the season with an II - champi011,hip game.
STAFF REPORT

RtVER VAUEY VOUEYBAU
PRACTICE BEGINS MONDAY
CHESHIRE R1ver Valley volleyball
practk:e will begin on Monday, Aug . 7.
Sophomores, juniors and seniors will
practice from 9 a.m. until noon. Freshmen
will practice from noon until 2 p.m ..
All participants must have a physical in
order to part1cipate. Athletes shOuld bring
shoes for both outdoors and inside and a
Willer bC'Itlc

SOUTH GAWA VOUEYBAU
PHAC TICE BEGINS MONDAY
MERCERV1LLE - Practice for high
school ana jr. high volleyball players at
South Gallia will begin Monday, August 7.
All interested in playing must attend this
mandatory first day of practice, which will
be !rom 10 a.m. lintll noon. You mllst have
a current physical in order to participate.
Call coach Thomas at (740) 379-2962 is
yoli have any questions.

RIVER VALLEY GOLF
PRACTICE STARTS MONDAY

Submitted photo

In front from left are Jacob Gilmore, L.D. Halfill, Trenton Wolfe, Cheyenne Eblin, Lukas Wells and Jesse
Edwards. In back are coach Dorcil McCoy, Ethan Dovenbarger, Drew Spaulding, cOOy Wimmer, Dillon
McCoy, Jacob Brown and coach Bryan Hall. Not pictured are coach Bruce Gilmore and Trey Noble.

Indians win Big Bend Minor League

GALLIPOLIS - The River Valley High
SchOol gall team will have its first practice
on Monday, August 7, at Cliffside GoH
Club.
The first practice is scheduled tor 10:30
a.m., and all persons interested in playing
golf at AVHS this season should be in
attendance.
Any athlete wishing to participate in -golf
must also have a completed physical on
file altha hlgh school for the 2006 fall season.

MIDGET fOOTBAU I.EAGUE

Reserve seats for the general public Will
be available August 9 They may be purcl3ased in rha principal's olfica at GAHS
between 1he hours of 8 am. and 3 p.m

Super Boosters w11J be limited to a 10lickel purchase on 1he !1rst day of sales

After the first ctay, there w1MDe no limit on
the number of tickets that can be pur·
chased.

GAUIA ACADEMY SEVENTH
GRADE FOOTBAU MEETING
GALLIPI3L:IS - There will be an organi·
zational meeting 5 :30 p.m. Monday,
August 7 at Memorial Field lor all Gallia
Academy seventh grade students interested in playing football.
~~must have an OHSAA physical on file
ifr"the Athletk:s Director's Qff~e before
being permitted to practice.
Physical forms may be picked up in the
high school office between 7:30p.m. and
3:30p.m.

RIVER VAUEY CROSS COUNTRY
SETS ARST DAY DF PRACTICE
CHESHIRE - All 7- t2 graders interested in becoming a member of the River
Valley cross country team s.hould report
8 a.m . Monday. August 7 at the high
school.
If anyone should' have questions, please
call coach Ed Sayre at 441·0850.

RV JR. HIGH VOUEYBAU
PRACTICE BEGINS MONDAY
VII'\ITON - River Valley jr. high volleyball practice beg ins August 7-10 at
Vinton Elementary from 9·11 a.m.
Players must have a physical to partici·
pate

GALLIPOLIS- Any fifth and sixth grade
boys who are Interested in playing midget
GALLIA ACADEMY CROSS
football are to mail their grade, weight,
phone number, copy of birth certificate· COUNTRY SETS PRACTICE TIME
and a check made out to the Midget
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy cross
Football League to Winston Saunders at
country
practice will begin 8 a.m.
149 Woodland Driver, Gallipolis, Ohio
Monday, August 7.
45631 before August 30. .
It is for both varsity and junior high For any questions, please contact
runners
should meet In front of the Gallia
Saunders at 446-7224.
Academy High School gym.

GAHS FOOTBAU RESERVE
SEATS GO ON SALE MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Reserve seats for the
2006 Gallia Academy football season will
go on sale Monday, Augllsl 7 for Super
Boosters.
Parents of varsity and reserve football
players. band members and varsity and
reserve cheerleaders will be able to pur·
chase reserved seats on August 8.

OUTDOORS

QI:imts -ientinel

of Meigs County

Ghost towns

Kyger Creek wins OVAA titles. Sports Briefs
SPORTS@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

iunba~

GAUIA ACADEMY VOLLEYBALL
PRACTICE BEGINS MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS- Gallia Academy volleyball will begin practice on Monday,
August 7 in the GAHS gym.
Seven and eighth graders will practice
from 12:30-2:30 p.m. while those in high
school Will practice from 3:30 p.m. until

BIG BEND SOFTBAU lEAGUE
TO HOLD REGISTRATION
MIDDLEPORT- The Big Bend G1rls Fall

Softball League will be holding registration Monday August 7 and Saturday,
August12 .
The Monday registrations w1ll be held

!rom 6 p·m. to 8 p.m. and the Saturday
registratoo days will be held from 9 a.m.
to noon. All registrations witltake place at
the Middleport Park sheller house.
The teague Is beginmng its second year
and is open to girls ages 10.13 from
Athens. Gallia. Mason and Meigs coun;ties.
For more information, call Bryan Swann
at 41 6·3171 , Jeff Johnson at 378-6476 or
Bruce Nontngham at 882-2504.

Rto GRANDE BASKETBAU TO
HOST GOLf SCRAMBLE
RIO GRANDE - Both University of Rio
Grande men's and women's basketball
programs are sponsoring a GoH Scramble
to be held August 12 at the Cliffside Golf
Club in Gallipolis. The shotgun star.t is at
8:30a.m.
The event is a lour-person scramble .
Flight "A" will consist of a total team hand icap of 75 or bela~ while flig ht ue• will consist of a total team handicap of more than

75.
For reservations or more information contact Rio Grande Head Men's Basketball
Coach Ken French at (740) 245-7294.

PRACnCE, FOOTBAU MEETING
SLATED FOR. RV JR. HIGH
BIDWELL.,..... A meeting and practice for
River Valley Junior High football athletes
will be held at 5:30 p.m. Monday, Aug. 7 at
·Bidwell-Porter Elementary School.

HElMET ATTtNGS FOR RV/SG
JUNIOR HIGH
BIDWELL Helmet fiHing for River
Valley Junior High football athletes witt· be
6 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 8 at Bldweii·Porter
Elementary School
Helmet fitting fdr South Gallia Junior High
foo~all athletes will be 7 p.m. Tuesday,
Aug. 8 at Southwestern Elementary
School.

EIGHTH GRADE FOOTBAU PRAcTICE AT GAWA AcADEMY
GALLIPOLIS - Eighth grade lootba!l
practice at Gallia Academy will begin 8
a.m. August ·7. Players are to meet at
Memorial Field.

6:30p.m.

Hey brf!lher. can you tell
me how to get to Merrin'!
Well then , how about Ulric
or Hazael''
It's OK if you don't know
how to get to those places,
because they have pretty
much vanished. They are
among many forgotten communities that dot the Meigs
County landscape, and
indeed the entire landscape
of Ohio and West Virginia.
In a simpkr. bygo'Oe era,
these forgotten places were
healthy ~ettlements. strong
hubs of commun ity life in
their town ship&gt;: a church,
schoolhouse and a general
store were the basic .ingredients. Add a . few families
(they were larger back then )
and perhap s even a post
office, and presto you had a
community like Hemlock
Grove,
Burlingham
or
Dyesville . Also, a hundred
years ago, many families'
livelihoods were tied to their
property through farming
and the like. Orchards dotted
the countryside and people
were more self-sufficient;
they simply didn't need to
go outside their immediate
family and neighhorhood as
often as we do today. When
I think about these little
.communities I imagine lots
·o f young'sters crowding into
a small schoolhouse, playing
games like "Crack the
Whip" in the dust outside,
and people walking or riding
to church, dressed in their
"Sunday best" and talking

Mcl~in,ter,.

In the
: Open

Jim Freeman
and sharing local news afterwards. It is definitely a pastoral scene I visuali ze, like
something right out of a
Currier &amp; I ves print.
While "llllC COll1ll1LIIlities
like Bashan. Dexter and
Pageville linger on, others
like Rolandu s, Point Rock,
Nease Settlement and Flora
exist as littl e more th an a dot
and a name on the coLmty
highway road map. Other
country communities exist
today only as road names or
church names: Oak Grove.
Success and Kingsbllry ·
come to mind.
Some communities like
Welsh,
Midway
and
Co.ndeville no . longer even
appear on the map. and have
totally vanished exce pt from
some of the older maps.
They join Martinsburg,
Fayal, Eldon and Zeal.
Some town sites exist only
in a historical sense and I
was unable to locate them;
does anyone know where to
find
Barnard.
Calvin,
Dillsbury.
Ledlie s,

'

Stedmansville
or Sterling·&gt; I wonder if
these ever actually existed as
active c:ummunities.
My hypothc,is i~ that the
advent of the automobile
dealt a death blow to the
small hamlets. The change
did not happen overnight, as
the first automobiles were
considered novelties- and
weren't terribly reliable, and
the road' then left ITILich to
be desired; as dependable
anJ speedy transportation
became more commonplace,
it was easier for people to
leave the farm and sma.J)
community for employment
and goods that could only be
found in the "big towns' like
Pomeroy or Racine.
Perhaps the country store
was the first to go, unless the
proprietor s~ar ted selling
gasoline, and then perhaps
the post office was closed
and relocated to a hi gge r
town.
Improved
roads and
school bus~s made it mo(e
practical to .,c·nd children to
school in H:~rrisonville,
Portland and Chester. eliminating the one- and tworoom schoolhouses. and also
made. it easier fnr young
adults to start up their own
families elsewhere .
For years, even up until
the · 1990s, many of these
small settlements were regularly featured in the pages of
The
Daily
Sentinel.
Community writers known
as "country correspondents"

suhmitted news articles containing ~dbits like vacations.
visits, bmhdays, graduations
and the like, allowing people
from Forest Run, Laurel
Cliff and Wolf Pen to stav
connected to their community.
However, as the corre spondents aged, and people
no longer ·wanted to share
their news \Vith their neighbors, the flow of community
news slowed to a trickle and
then finally stopped. The
settlement of Alfred was the
last to go, and the passing of
the country correspondents
pushed many of the small
communities a little closer to
oblivion. Some of these little
communities seem in no
danger of passing; I think of
places "like Letart Falls,
Reedsville and Long Bottom
in this category. Tuppers
Plains is bucking the trend,
actually growing and developing. Many people are
proud of their small hamlets.
and perhaps that is the key to
their existence. When people
stop corrsidering themselves
as being from Minersville,
Danville, Hobson. Antiquity
or Salem Center, or any of
the other small towns, conceivably those communities
may ~!so cease to exist.

(lim Frcerwm is wildlife specialist for the Meigs Soil and.
Water Conservation District.
He can be contacted weelidars
at (740) 992-4282 or ·at
ji11Lfreeman@oh.IIGCdnet.ner)

.netcher and Salmons land big fish
Christopher
Salmons (11), left,
and Matthew
Fletcher (22), right,
recently caught a
65-pound catfish
out of the Ohio
River. Fletcher is the
son a.nd Salmons
the grandson of
Florence Fletcher.

Submitted photo

The Pomeroy Indians won the Big Bend Minor Le~ue championship with a 13{) regular season record.
In front from left are Gage Zirkle, Evan George, Mason Runyon, William Aleshire, Austin Thompson and
· Jake Swindell. In second raw are Wyatt King, James Fish, Tyler Fields, Jake Korn and Wes Reitmeir. In
'· back are the team's four coaches Brian King, Brent Zilllle, Terry Ftelds and Bracy Korn.
.

~~~ ~~~ ~~~. The ~eather is
'

HCJr ... arid so are our

Submitted photos

rates!
Ohio Fishing Report

9

COLUMBUS (AP) -

MONTH

ing
••ponof pro"dad
by Department
the Division of
Wildlife
the ' Oh io
of

•

1981

5

l$52"

'

Rqatta2
P11WR14 .

~~

.
· 75 008 Mile W.-ra~Y
10iional so.. ~-

Annual Percenti:lge Yield ·
This special rate is also available for IRAs.
THE ANNUAL PfRGENTA.GEYIElD IS A\A ILABLE AS OF 8Jt11!05 BUT IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE
THIS CO IS AUTOMATICALLY RENEWABLE AND REQUIRES IIM I ~IMLifA DEPOSIT OF $1 0.000 00
lHE ANNUAL PERCENTAGE'f,ELD ASSUMES INTEREST WILL REMAIN ON DEPOSIT.
~WITHDRAW A!. OF INTEREST WILL REDUCE EARNINGS

99
44
Republic Trill

5

Mll'k Radlll AP

OHIO VALLEY BANK.
420 Third Ave.

3035 St. Route 160

Gallipolis

Gallipolis

27 N. Coll,ege Ave.
Rio Grande

328 VIand St.
' Pt Pleasant

446-2631

446-2050

245-5373

675-8660

just Inside Food/and

Just Inside Wai-Mart Just Inside Save-A-Lot

Olllllpolls

GalllpaUI

PomefDy

446-2168

441-3575

992-2357

P205175R15 OWL

Mcltlol\al Slzn A¥iilab!t

•Due to lht illllure cl thle •te, ~o rain chec:kll.

·

NQ lnler&lt;st,No PaymentsFor 90 Days'

ll.t-p.tbhc
TiRE&amp;,.
1

· ~ '
•
r

{j~p,•lxn.an

APPALACHIAN TIRE PRODUCTS
426 V1and Streel • Pomt Pleasant WV

304 675-3930

We can help alleviate your pain.

.

:Cali Dr. Nick Robln.ron at Baclc to Health Chir'!Jpractic today/

··.:~~(.~·
'

-•
1'
J'IMHD'11
Cl/srDiflfHffLS
-

Been in a Car Accident?
~~Suffering from Whiplash?
:

T.

5100 Mmnnum Pu rdm~e Kc u1ra.l.
F! NAN_CE CIIARG:£:S &lt;ltX.~ from !he d:ne of purcht•se. and ~II accrued Rf:/1\NCE.CHARGES w1ll ~ adde~ lo JOUf Ao,:count for the eruire
pl\)motmnal penod 1f qual1lymg purc,liases arc not pa1d m 1~11 by lhe end ot the dderred payment petiod or 1f you fail tl&gt; make any required
u\ rm:nl 011 ·our Account when dl.l(. See below fur more details!
*With credit approval for purchase:; made on lhe Goodyear Carda I Your Participflling Goodyear Retailer. A~ of M~rth 1" .1Ul5. APR: Pun:hase
Rate 22.36c:t-; Default Rate: APR: 24.41J'k (rates may vary). Mm1mum l;mance Charge $150 . See cardhuld~tr a,ret:nlt'fll for detoib . Offer is for
. d" id I
b .
De
be 31 1005 C di '
.
b"
h '
.h

... ... •• • 4 .-_.

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.

~f{t!UJIJJ K£LIYI4JTIRES ~DVN-!ir ~~

!!!!!____

./

The weekly fish·

740.446.7460
•

Natural Resources.
SOUTHEAST. OHIO
Hanging Rock Ponds (Lawrence
County) - Bluegill in the 9-inch range
have been caught using red worms and
wax worms fished near underwater
structure at an 8 foot depth. Largemouth
bass up to 18 inches have been caught
on red shad, plastic worms, and buzz
bei)s fished in the early morning and
late even ing. Fqr catfish, cut bail or
chicken livers fished tight -line.
Clouse Lake (Perry County) - Late
night fishing for largemouth bass has
been the ... most etloctlve technique at
this lake . Anglers are using top-water
baits such as weedless frog imitations
and llnwelghted rubber worms skipped
across floating mats Ot vegetation .
Bluegill and other sunfish are being
· taken along the darn using small worms
fished below a bobber.
OHIO RIVER
Lawrence Countv - Channel catfish
are being caught using night crawlers.
shad, and minnows. Freshwater drurn
have also been hillinQ. Night angling
has been the most poplilar time for catfish anglers due to the high daytime
temperatu res.
· Scioto County - Channel catfish and
flathead are being caught below the
Greenup Locks and Dam tall-waters
using shad and skipjack herring fished
tight on the bottom . Fishing dunng tM
night seems to be th e best time to fish
for chann81 catlish and flathead catfish
The confluence of the Scioto River and
the Ohio Rivet has been producing
catches of flathead catlish . hybrid
striped bass and white bass as wen
Flathead catfiSh are generally caught
using live bait SliCh as shad and skip·
·' jack herring.
Gallia County - Fish tor catfish in
dOEip, s,low p'ools using cut bait or chick·
en livers. Hybrid striped bass have been
&amp;aught at the K.H Butler Ramp in the
early mornings us1ng any minnow-type
diving lures or live baits l1shed along the
boHom.
CENTRAL OHIO
Oetr Creek Lake (Madlaon, FeyeHe,
and Plckaway counties) - Use cut
shad or mght crawlers 1n the upper
creek channel when fishing for channel
catfish. Most Hsh will measure 12 to 18
inches. Channel cats and flathead catfish can also be caught in the tail water
below the dam . Hot weather lends itself
well to night fishing tor ·catfish though
they can be caught Quring the day. as
well. The rocky shorelines and drop-off
points in the upper end of the lake are
' good places to fish for largemouth bass.

PageB3

LJ•ttl · l•rl, b~·~ fish
1

LEFT: Now that's a big fish
to be caught by a little girl.
Tashia Richmond, 7. was
fishing in a farm pond when
she caught this 30 pound
catfish. She is the daughter
of Michelle and Heath
Richmond of Pomeroy. Her
father held the fish for the
picture.
Submitted photo

Sunday, A;ugust 6, 2oo6

ODNR announces
19 recipients of wild
school sites grants
BY THE OHIO ONR

COLUMBUS- Nineteen grants of $500 each have been
awarded to schools, libraries. and dayeare centers across
Ohio to create wildlife habitat improvement projects on
their grounds, accorqing to the Ohio Department of Natural
Resource s (ODNR) Division of Wildlife.
These WILD School Sites can be used to teach science.
math , English. history, art, and many other subjects.
"We are always hoping to "ec quality projects submitted.
and that's exactly what we get.'' 'aid Jen Dennison , wildlife
education coordinator for the division. "It's exciting to see
the level of student involvement and how well wildlife
habitat improvement projects mesh with today's school
. I um. "
cumcu
·
ODNR accepts applications for WILD School Sites
grants from January I through May 31 each year. Grant
apP.licatiorrs are available on the ODNR Division of
Wildlife's web P)lge at ohiodnr.com during the application
period. For more information about the WILD School
Sites grants or to receive information ·.on WILD School
Sites workshops, call 1-800- WILDLIFE.
WILD SCHOOL GRANT RECIPIENTS
SCHOOL
CITY
PROJECT
Amanda Clear-Creek Elementary .... Amand a
Butterfly garden
Columbus Montessori Ed. Canter .. , Columbus
... Tree planting, bnd feeding
Gahanna Middle School South
.. Gahanna
Prairie grass area
Ohio Wesleyan U., Early 'Childhood .. Delaware
Bird and buttertly garden
Mechanicsburg Library . .
Mechanicsburg .Butterfly/Bird Garden
Park Avenue Elementary .
Mt. G1tead
.B1rd Observation Blind
Our Lady "Lourdes School ....... Toledo
.Wildflower Garden
Beaver Local High School
LiSbon
.Bird Feeding Station
Campbell Middle School
Campbell'
.. Bird Sanctuary
CleallT"OOnt Elementary SchOol
.. .North Canton .
.Tree planting, butterfly garden
West Geauga Local Schools .
Chesterland
Planting bird habitat areas
. Wellston
.TreeS/shrubs. butterfly planh:i
Bundy Elementary School
Evan's Outctlor EdOOltion Center .
. .Jackson .
. . . .Hummirg!Jjlttobutteffly garden
Law rence Elementary School
.Marie tta .......Bird observation blind
0.0. Mcintyre Park District •..... , .. Gallipolis , , , ..•Plantings for habitat area
Roosevelt Middle School .
.Zanesville .....Streamfhabitat restoration
Union Scioto Elementary School .
.Chillicothe . . .. Courtyard plant1ng area
BeverlyN/ashington Co . library
.Beverly
..... B1rd ana butterfly garden
Cline Elementary School .
. .C enterville .... .Planting tor meadow area

at

Ohio state parks duck blind
lottery set for August 19
BY THE OHIO DNR

held at Deer Creek State Park
oftice) in Pickaway County.
Dillon State Park in
Muskingum County, and
Rocky Fork State Park in
Highland County, where the
lotteries will be held at 9 a.m,
and Indian Lake .in Logan
County where the drawing
will be held at 8:30a.m.
Each· hunter carr apply for
only orre duck blind permit
and no one can apply or draw
for another person. There is a
$50 .non-refundable permit
fee for lottery winpers.
Lottery winners have 45 day"
to construct their blinds and
all blinds must be dismantled
by March 15. 2007.
The dates of the 2006 fall
waterfowl hunting season
have not vet been determined
by the- .Ohio Wildlife
Cmmcil, but generally fall in
the later part of October. For
information about hunting
1-800seasons.
call
WILDLIFE or visit ohiodnr.com online.

COLUMBUS More
than 300 permits are available to hunters wishing to
hunt ducks and geese from a
blind at an Ohio State Park
this waterfowl hunting season. A lottery drawing for the
permits will be held at 18
state parks the morning of
Saturday, August 19.
Interested applicants must
appear in person at a participatirrg state park pftlce with
proof of a 2006 Ohio hunting
license, state wetlands stamp
endorsement in the applicant's name, and a 'igned
2006 or 2005 federal duck
stamp. Applicants under the
age of I 8 are encouraged to
have a parent or legal
guardian present to sign the
permit contract.
Participating state parks
include Ponage Lakes and
West Branch irr northeast
Ohio: Ea$t Harbor and Lake
Loramie in northwest Ohio;
Dillon in southeast Ohio;
Buck Creek, Caesar Creek,
Cowan Lake, Deer Creek,
East Fork, Hueston Woods.
Kiser Lake and Rocky Fork
in southwest Ohio; and Alum
A. W.
Marion,
Creek,
Buckeye Lake, Delaware and
Indian Lake in central Ohio . Auto-Owners Insurance
Applications will be taken
Life Home Car Business
beginning at 7:30 a.m. at ·
The
most parks, with the lottery
drawings at 8 a.m. ~tt the park
"No Problem People"
office, unless . otherwise
noted.
INSURANCE PLUS
Exceptions include Buck
AGENCIES, INC.
Creek State Park in Chu·k
County, A.W. Marion State
114 Court • Pomeroy
Park and Deer. Creek State
Park (both drawings will be

992-ssn ·
• ••

Green pumpkin tubS baits and shad pat·
tern crank bBitS are excellent baits to
try. T1ck R1dge is a favori te aren for
anglers se9kmg wl"1ite bass
· Hoover Reaervolr (Delaware and
Franklin counties)- Night f1shmg lor"
channel catfish is popular to avo1d the
~xtreme heat of the day Try the north
end of the resarv01r on 11ats using cut
bait or shrimp . Also. :iy fishing at nigllt
along the causeway tor wh.te bass
using a lantern to attract forage fisl\
Small jigs, spinners and llvo ba_its
should be suspended in the woody
cover along the shoreline. Use a slip·
bobber to check depths lrorn throe to 15
teet. Shady shOrelines E\re your best
chance for catch1ng blueg1ll as well
us1ng small worms under a bobber. Te n
horsepower lim1 t.
SOUTHWEST OHIO
.
Grand Lliilke Sl. Marya (Auglelzt! and
Mercer counties) - Channel catfis h
are be1ng caught by anglers usmg cut
shad. chicken liver. shnmp or night
crawle rs as ba1t. Fish the ba1t ofl ol the
bottom a·r tight-line along the bottom 1n
deeper water or·unoer a bobber in sh~·
low water that is about 2 1/2 feet deeo.
Keep the bait along the sides of underwater structure sucl1 as stumps. Use a

No . 210 and up 410 baitholdlng hook, Circle hook, or bass fishing offse l shank
worm hook to keep the bait in place.
Blueg1ll are be1nQ a caught by anglers
us1ng wax worms as bail. Keep the bait
under a bobber and near the bottom.
Fish the Mit along the shore, near any
type of structure including the rocky
areas and seawalls, and Into the channels. Crappie are be1ng caught below
spillway. Cast a small minnow and let it
drift down IillO the area along the rocks .
Cowan Lake. (Clinton CoUnty) Angle rs are fishing for crappie 8 to tO
feet deep. Use a minnow or jig as bait.
Bluegill are being caugh t by anglers
using wax worms as bM. From ttte
snoreline. !ish the bail oil of the bottom
1n 2 to 3 teet of wator and around struc·
ture Keep changing the depth until the
blu eg1ll begin to bite Use a No. 6 longshanked hook.

Tip.of the Week
Ta~e your k1ds f1shing at the Ohio State
Fair. The D1v 1sion ot Wildlife has kiddie
tish lfl9, a1chery. and BB gun range to try
your skills The Natural Rosources Park
is located m the southeastern corner ot
the fairgrounds

BEST DEAlS MR ON YOUR
FARMTRAC FAVORITES.
During Farrntrt~c rrenzy take advantage of thC'
industry·s best financ1ng and g,et the tractor
you've been drearwns aboltt. Lot of Bang .
Little Bucks And NO 1ntere--;t for 36 months!'

farmtrac .com

�PageB4

iunba~ Q!:ime~ -ienttnel

Class of 2006

HALL OF FAME
Deep, versatile field enters BOF

TROY AIKMAN
Quarterback
6-4, 219
1989-2p&lt;IO, Dallas Cowboys. 12 BIIBIOnl, 1&amp;!1 gamea.
Co wboys' tirsHound pick (No. I overall) in 1989 draft . ...
Earned All-Rook ie hono rs ... Led tearn to three Super Bowl
w1ns, was game MVP 1n 1993 .... Closed career w ith 94 reg ular-season wins , 1ncludmg 90 •n 1990s, making him winninge st sta rt ing quarterback of any decade .... Held or tied 47
Dallas pa ssing records. 1nclud mg career attempts (4 ,715) ,
co mple~i ons (2.898), pass1n_
g. ya rds (32,942) , touchdowns
( 165) and complet1on percentage (61 .5) .. .. Led Cowboys
from behind 16 t1 mes ir:~ fou rth quarte r, including six Urnes In
final two mmutes
Hi!; four 300-yard playoff passing days
we re th1 rd best m NFL his tory
Picked lor six Pro Bowls.·

HARRY CARSON
Linebacker
6· 2, 237
1976-88 New York Giants. 13 seasons, 173 games.
Giants' t o urt h~ro und pick in 1976 dmlt. ... Became Giants'
starting mid dle linebacker Milway throUgh rookie season.
Earned All-Rookie honors .... Led Giants defenders in tackles
five seasons .... Had career-high performance In 1982 vs .
Green Bay with 20 solo tackles and five assists. ... Ferocious
run stopper who se 14 career fumble recoveries ranks second
in team record book .. .. Made 11 career interceptions ... Was
a part of th e fam9d Gi ants' linebacker trio of Carson ,
Lawrence Taylor and Carl Banks . ... A big-play performer, his
1nterceptiqn and 12 tackles vs. Redskins in 1986 virtually
assured Giants of NFC East t1tle .. Made key goal-1ine stand
play in 1987 Super Bo wl aga inst Broncos Selected to play in
n1ne Pro Bow ls, including seve n straight (1 982- 1988).

JoHN MADDEN ·
Coach
1969-1978 Oakland Raiders.
Regular season record ol103-32·7 .... Postsea son record of
9·7
Seniors Committee nominee.
Led team to victory 1n
the 1977 Super Bowl. ... Began pro coaching career as
Ra 1ders assistant . 1967· 1968 . · Became one of youngest
t1ead coaches in h1otory whe n Raiders hired him in 1969 at
age 32 ... His .75 9 winning percentaQe during regular season
nlllks as highest ever among coache s with 100 career victo·
nes
Only Hall ol Famers GEorge Halas and .Curly
Lambea u reach-ed 100 (!;areer wins at earlier age .. .. In lirst
yea r. led the Ra1ders to 12- 1-1 record and American Football
Under Madden. Oakland
League Western D1vision titl e
never had losmg record and claimed seven divi sion titles and
had e1gl1t play off appear ances.·

WARREN MOON
Quarterback
6-3, 212
1984·1993 Houston Oilers , 1994-1996 Minnesota Vikings,
1997 ~ 1998 Seattle SeahawkS, 1999-2000 Kansas City
Chiefs. 17 seasons, 208 games.
Began pro career with CFL's Edmonton Eskimos ( 19781
1983). w1nning five straight Grey Cups .... Signed with the
Oil ers as unrestricted free agent in 1984 . .... In NFL career,
completed 3.988 of 6.823 passf;)s for 4~ . 325 yards. 291
to uchd owns. 233 interceptions ... . Rushed 543 times lor
1 736 yards for 22 TDs, givmg him 51,061 yards of total
At retirement. pass attempts. completions.
offe nse
yardage totals and total offense totals, all ranked third all·time
and 291 career to uchdown passes were lourth .. Holds record
for quart erbacks w1th eight straight Pro Bowl selections 1988·
1995. added ninth in 1997.... Had tour 4 ,000-yard pa_ssing seasons

REGGIE WHITE
Defensive End/Defensive Tackle

6-5, 291

'

1985-1992 Philadelphia Eagles, 1993-1998 Green Bay
Packers, 2000 Carolirla Panthers. 15 seasons, 232 games.
Selected 1n the fi rs t roUnd (fo urth player overall) ol 1964 sup·
plemental draft. ... Nicknamed "Minister pf Defense: joined
Eagles alt er two years w1th USFL's Memphis Showboats
Du nng eight seasons w1th Eagles recorded more sacks (124)
than gam es played (121 )... . In 1987, recorded 21 sacks. second most 1n NFL history at the time .... Became only player to
accumulate 20 or more sacks in just12 games ... . His 1.75
average sacks per game in that season was also a record ....
1r1 1993. went to Green Bay and recorded another 66 .5 sacks,
becoming Packers ' all-lime sack leader .... A dominant defen·
sive perlormer. at time of retirement his 198 sacks were NFL
record . ... Important contnbutor to Packers two Super Bowl appearances .... Chosen
the NFL Defens1ve Player of the Year 1n 1987 and 1998. _.. Briefly retired following ,
1996 seaso n. ... Signed witl1 Carolina Panthers for 2000 season ___ Elected to 13
straight Pro Bowl s .. . Picked AII ·Pro 13 of 15 seasons, including 10 as Urst-team
se lection .. Died Dec. 26, 2004 at age 43

R&lt;\YF.IELD WRIGHT
Tackle

6-6, 255
.
1967·1979 Dallas Cowboys. 13 seasons, 166 games.
Selected by Cowboys m seventh round of 1967 drat!.
Sen1ors Committee nominee . Used as 8 tight end, defen sive end and oHensive tackle du r~n g first three seasons .. In
1969, repl aced injured right tackle Ralph Neely in llneiJp .
First opponent was Hall of Fame defensive end Deacon
·Jofles. .. Performance ag ainst ,Jones good enough that
bel o re 1970 traming carnp, became starting right tackle .
On e seaso n later. he AII-NFL. . Known as ''81g Cat,'' picked
tor Pro Sow! six cons ecutive t1mes (1971 · 1976).... Helped
Cowboys to 10 dtvision titles . s1x conference championships
and two Su~er Bowl VIctories... . Played in l1ve Super Bowls.

Source: Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Past NFL Hall of Fame Classes
Members otllie Pro Football Hall of Fame by year of induction:
.
2006 - Troy A 1~ ma n. Harry Carson. John Madden, Warren Moon, ~eggie While ,
"
R a)•f1 eld Wright
2005 - Ben ny Fri edman. Dan Marino. Fritz Pollard, Steve Young
2004 - Bob Brown , C arl Eller, Jqhn Elway. Ba rry Sanders
2003 - Marcus Allen. Elvin Bethea , Joe Oelamielleure. Jam_
es Lofton, Hank
Str am .
2002 - Georg e Allen . Dave Casper. Dan Hampton. Jim Kelly, John Stallwor111.
2001- Nick Buoniconti. Marv Levy, MikFl Munchak, Jackie Slatet, Lynn Swann,
Ron Yary. Jack Youngblood.
2000- Howie Long . Ron nie Loll, Joe Montana, Dan Rooney, Dave WllcoK
1999 - Enc Dickerson. Tom Mack, Ozzle Newsome. Billy Sl1ew, Lawrance
Taylor
1998 _: Paul Krause . Tommy McDonald, Anthony Munoz, Mike Singletary.
Dw1g ht Stephenson
1997 - Mike Haynes. Wellington Mara. Don Sh llla. Mike Webster.
1996 - · LOL• Creekmur. Da n Die rdorf . Joe G ibbs. Charlie Joiner. Met Renfro .
1995 ·- Ji m Ftnks. Hen ry Jordan . Steve Largent. Lee Roy Selmon, Kellen
W inslow
1994 -Tony Dorsett. B ud Grant . Jtmmy Johnson, Leroy Kelly, Ja~kie Smith ,
R andy Whi te .
·1993 - Dan Fouls. Larry Lillie , Chuck Noll , Walter Payton, Bill Walsh .
1992 -Le m Barney, AI Da v1s, John Mackey. John Riggins .
·
1991 - Earl Campbell .- Jo hn Hannah, Stan Jones , Tex Schramm, Jan Stenerud.
1990 - Buck Buchanan . Bob Griese , Franco Harris, Ted Hendricks, Jack
Lambe rt . Tom Landry. Bob St. Clair.
1989 - Mel Bl ount . Terry Brad shaw, Art Shell , Willie Wood
1'988 - . Jack Ham, M1ke Di kt a , Fred Biletnlkoff, Alan Page
1987 - Larry Cso nka ,_ Len Dawso n, Joe Greene. John Henry J_ohnson, Jim
Langer, Do n Maynard, Gene Upsl1 aw.
1986 - P aul Hornung, Ken Holl sto n . Willie Lanier. Fran Tarkenton , Doak Walker.
1985 Fran k Ga tsk1, Joe Namatl1 . 1 Pete Rozelle ; O .J. Simpson, Roge r
Sta'ubach .
_.
1984 ~ Wtllle Brown . Mike McCormack, Charley Taylor, Arnie Weinmeister.
1983 - Boboy Bell . S1d Gillman, Son ny Jurgensen , Bobby Mitchell, Paul
Wail leld
1982 - Do ug AU'i 1ns . Sam Hurt , George Musso. Merlin Olsen.
1981 - Moms (Red ) Badgro , George B!and a, Willie Davis. Jim Ringo.
1960 - Herb A.ddetley David (Deaco n) Jones, Bob Lilly. Jim Otto .
1979 - D1ck Butkus , Yale Lary, Ron Mix .•Johnny Umtas.
1978 - Lance Alwo nh Weeb Ewbank. Alphonse {Tufty) Le emans. Ray Nitschke,
Larry Wilso n.
·
Hl77 - Frank Gilf ord·. Forrest Gregg, Gale Sayers , Bart Starr, Bill Willis.
1976 - Rav Flaherty, Len Fc1J, Jim 'fa ylor
1i75 - Roosevelt Brown. Georqo Connor, Dent e Lavelli, l en ny Moore.
1974 - Tony C an-adeo. 8111 Geo 1ge. Lou Groza, Dick (Night Tra1n) Lane.
1973 - Raymo nd Berry. J1m Parker, Joe Schrhidl.
1972 - Lamar Htm t, Gm o Marc hett i. Ollie Matso n, Cl arence (Ace) Parker.
1971 - J1m Brown . 8 11l Hewitt. Frank (Bruis er ) Kinard . Vince Lombardi. Andy
Aobus telli . YA. T1tt le . Norm Van Broc klm
1970 - Jack ChpstiMsc n, Tom Fea rs, Hu gl1 McE ihenny, Pete Pihos .
1969 - Gi en (Turk ) Edwar ds Earle (Greasy) Neale, Leo Nomel!lnl, Joe Perry.
Ern1e Sta,u t,ner.
1968 - Cl• lt Battles. Art Donov a: n. Elroy (Crazyleg sl Hirsch. Wayne Millne r,
Marion Molle~·- C ~ a rlfi!Y Tr1ppi . Alex Wojciechowicz
·
1967 - Chuc t.: Oedna.·ik Charlie B 1dw lll. Paul Brown . Bubby l ayne , Dan Reeves,
W: en Strvng. Joe Stvr:lahar Eml en Junnetl
1966 - 6 1!1 Dudley. Joe Guyon Arn1 e Herber. WaH Kiesli ng. George McAfee ,
Str ve Owen liugh iShOt!y) Ray_. C lyde (Butt dog) Tutne r.
1965 - Guy Charnbe rtam. John /Paddy) Drtscoll . Dan Fo rtmann. Ott o Graham.
S id Luckm an Steve Van Bure n. Bob Wat ert 1eld
1964 - J1mmy Cor1ze trnan , Ed Healy, Clark Hinkle. Roy (Lmk) Lyman. August
tMike) M1Cilal~k e Art Rooney. George Tratt9n .
1963 - Si:im-m y ~a ugh,· Bert Be ll , Joe Ca rr. Ea rl \ Putch} ClarK. Red Grange.
George Hala5 Mel Y&lt;'•n Wllou r !Pete ! He nry. Cal Hubbard. Don Hutson. Earl
(Curly) Lambe ~ u ftm M Ara. Geort,!(' P1 es ton Marshall. .Johnny (Blood) Mc Nally.
Bron ku- Ne~gJ 1-:-1;.1 E•ll•·.' N ffVor~. ,l1rn Thnrpf ·

NASCAR W

.Sunday, August 6, 2006

Aikman was the consummate team man. The first player from the position
BY BARRY WILNER
elected to the Hall, Carson led the
ASSOCIATED PRESS
man.
" After a career of really pulling renaissance of the New York Giants in
team accomplishment ahead of per- the t980s. Lawrence Taylor and Carl
Leaders and champions.
sonal achievement, I'm being Banks were in the spotlight. but
bestowed with one of the greatest indi- Carson was the guy the Giants rallied
Those are the defining characteris- vidual honors you could ever be around.
Carson played in nine Pro Bowls in
given," said Aikman, the top
tics of the six men who entered the
overall pick in the 1989 draft. his 13 seasons, but it took nearly two
Pro Football Hall of Fame on
"I ' m very proud of that. And I decades since he retired in 1988 for
Saturday.
.
think in there somewhere is a him to make the Hall. Two years ago,
Record-setting quarterbacks
in fact, he asked the voters to stop conlesson for young kids."
Troy Aikman and . Warren
·
Un Iike the younger Cowboy, sidering him.
Moon . Super Bowl-winning
They
didn't.
coach and television icon John
"He wasn't flashy like Lawrence
Madden. Impregnable blocker
Taylor and didn' t grab the headlines,"
Rayfield Wright. Versatile linebacker
Giants
center Bart Oates said. "He was
Harry Carson.
guy
in the middle who did his job
the
And Reggie White, the Mini ster of
exceptionally well , and he inspired
Defense. "
·
other guys to do their jobs well."
Quite a class.
Moon, the first black quarterback to
White was inducted posthumously.
make the . Hall, is the only one of the
The career sacks leader when he
six inductees not to win an NFL title.
retired in 2000, White, who suffered
But he captured five straight
from sleep apnea and sarcoidosis, died
Grey Cups for tl)e Edmonton
a little more than 18 months ago at age
Eskimos- and thi s is the
43. His wife, Sara, said of White's
Pro
Football Hall of
election in his first-year of eligibility :
Fame, of course.
"I know Reggie would be thrilled and
Undrafted out of the
honored to be in the company of such
University
of Washington in
great players and people."
part because he insisted on
White, Aikman and Moon got in on
sticking to quarterbacking
their first attempts. The two quarterrather than switching posibacks often felt the sting of a hit by
tions, Moon came back as a
White, who had 198 sacks and was a
free agent in 1984 and spent
two-time NFL Defensive Player of the
I 0 season s in the Houston
Year.
Oilers· run-and-shoot offen se. He also
"Reggie was someone you always
played for Minnesota, Seattle and
had to account for on the field .''
Kansas City in 17 NFL seasons and
Aikman said.
But White's influence extended far
ranked fourth in TD passe s, third in
beyond the game. An ordained mini sattempts , completions, yards passing
ter, White was very active in the comand total offense when he retired.
munity, making frequent visits to inner
"This just makes me feel like I
city churches and schools and camworked hard to get to where I am ~ight
paigning for the homeless.
now," he said. "I took a very uncon·
"He ministered to everybody, but his
ventional route to get to the National
first ministry was to his teammates,' '
Football League first. and re-establish
Packers teammate LeRoy Butler sa,id . Wright waited "forever" to get into the myself and .have a pretty productive
"Because he knew that if he could get Hall . He was chosen by the seniors career."
you to live right, the team was better committee 27 years after his last
Madden' s shot·t coaching career, 10
off."
game.
seasons, produced a I 03-32,7 record
The Eagles, Packers and Panthers
The offensive tackle made the Pro and a win in the 1977 Super BowL
were better off with White on the ros- Bowl six times and was an All-Pro Only George Halas and Curly
ter. His move from Philadelphia to four times. Wright was a key blocker Lambeau, both Hall of Famers,
Green Bay in 1993 as a free agent for the first five 1.000-yard ru shers in reached 100 wins quicker than
delivered a strong message, too: north- team history. In his 13 seasons, his Madden, who became Raiders coach
ern Wisconsin was a desirable destina- teams won seven division titles and when he was 32 in 1969.
tion. White's signing sparked the played in five Super Bowls, winning
A fear of flying and opportunities in
Packers' development into champions twice.
broadcasting led Madden to quit in
in the mid-1990s, and they won the
.. "In the 1970s, he was the stan- 1978. He has since become a pitch1997 Super Bowl.
man for a popular video game, trav"If he hadn't have come over,
eled the country in a bu s dubbed the
we never would have gotten
"Madden Cruiser." and when he
Bruce Wilkerson, Sean. Jones, ,·
joins NBC this season will have done
Ron Cox, Andre · Rison,
analysis on NFL broadcasts for all
Desmond Howard, all these
four major networks_
guys we won a champi· But. after being chosen by the
onship with," Butler said.
seniors committee, he heads to
"He changed us from a
Canton for his coaching exploits.
place nobody wanted to
"His records, are unparalleled,"
go to a place where, by
Raiders owner AI Davis said . "It's
the mid '90s, we had to ·
amazing that it comes now, his recogturn free agents away." ·
nition and his enshrinement ... it
Aikman, Wright and
should have been done a long time
Carson never became free
dard,"
' · ago. Of note, beside his record.
agents and never leti their
s a i d
· which is the finest record in the hisoriginal teams, a rarity
Calvin Hill,
tory of ihe National Football
nowadays in the NFL.
whose
four
League for coaches who won over
Aikman was the first
Pro
Bowl
I 00 games, he competed against
quarterback to guide his
appearances were
-. in which I call the golden era
team to three Super Bowl
earned
running
of coaches - I 0 coaches who
wins in four years (1993.
behind
Wright.
are in the Hall of Fame. Don
'94, '96). His 90 victo"When you thought
Shula. Tom Landry. Weeb
ries in the 1990s are the
about offensive lineEwbank. Hank Stram ... Bud
most for a quarterback
men, he was the guy
Grant-·· Chuck Noll.
in any decade.
· I, that you automatically
"We competed ·against every
The first of Dallas'
r J thought of."
one of them, and he had a bet·
Triplets ·
(Emmitt
1 And when you
~ ter record against every one of
Smith, the career
( thought about inside
~ them than they had against
rushing leader, and __...,
l linebackers in a 3-4
~him. Mind you, I 0 coaches iw
receiver Michael
. defense, Carson was the
1 the Hall of Fame . And h6 had
Irvin) to enter
J
to wait this long."
the
Hall, ,,. "
Reggie White
The wait ended Saturday.

f·

J.

I'

Call
Cory.~.

1·1ii·1~1·~~~1
DONWOODINC
. AUTOMOTIVE .

•W

-

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1!1ift, ~~ ~~l(ll ~~~

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John Madden

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Page Bs

EEKEND

Sunday,August6,2oo6

..,._,._..,._.;.o,.,........,._._..,._.

Weaving his wav through the pack

NUTEl CUP Series
Following raee 20 or 36

With his fourth consecutive top 10 finish in last Sunday's. Pennsylvania 500 at Pocono Raceway, Kevin Harvick moved up three spots
in the NEXTEL Cup standings. Top drivers heading into the Aug. 6, Allstate 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

.,,
... '
• · ·-...

Rk Driver

(

f
~
/._
4. Kyle
Busch
2,582
Finished
one race ~t
Indianapolis,
finishing 1Oth
last year; 1.2th
at Pocono
last week.

....

1. Jimmie
' Johnson
2,939
Only driver
with 16 top
10 finishes
this season:
has yet to
lead a lap at
Indianapolis.

2. Matt
Ken seth
2,842
Ranked in
the top five
since a win at
California in
the second
race of the
·season.

3.Jeff
Burton
2,621
Two top 10
finishes in 12
starts at Indy;
ranked 21st
in standings
at this point
in 2005.

5 . Kevin

H&lt;or vic k
2,jf-)

0 ne vic1c&gt;ry
(2003) and
ihree lop 1Os
tn five races

at Indy for an
8.8 average

finish.

6. Mark

7. Kasey
Martin
Kahile
2,515
?..:iS ?
~-· r-: ~: ,'· r..,.,JMost wins
: (- ,,, , iCf l (;~i
with four, but
in 2006; win· · fin ished 31st
at Pocono
less since
and dropped
Kansas last
one spol in
October, 26
the standings .
races ago.

8. Denny
Hamlin
2,514
Cl imbed from
12th to eighth
place in the
. standings with
a victory at
Pocono; first
race at Indy_

g_Jeff
Gordon
2,512
Ret~ined his
spot in the
standings: •
four DNFs
in2006, rrm
among drivers
in top 10.

SOURCE: NASCAR

10. Tony
·Stewart
2,477
Finished
seventh at
Pocono to
climb back
into the top
10 in the
standings .

20

2.842

3. Jett Burton

2,621

19
11
16
14
19
19

4. Kyle Busc_h

2,582

5. Kevin Harvick

2,563

6. Mar~ Man1n

2 :557

7. Kasey Kahn e

2,51S

B. Denny Hamlin

2 ,514

9. Jefl Gordon

2.512

10. Ton y Stewart

2 ,477

4
1S
16

AP

t?rlver standings
Points

4.

Kevtn Harvick
Carl Edwards
Clint B owyer
Denny Hamlin

5.

J.J. Veley

6.

Paul Menard
Kyle Bus ch
Greg B iff le

1.
2
3.

OOD·S

7.
8.
9.
10.

Johnny Sauter
Kenny Wallace
NEXTEL

3,437
3 ,11 9
3.050
3,007
2,826
2,563
2.556
2,510
2.484
2.402 .

CUP

Allstate 400
at the BriCkVBrd
Ind ianapolis
Indianapolis Motor Speedway

Track: rect a ngular oval, 2.5

BYJENNAFRYER

miles ,
tu rns

ASSOCIATED PRESS

9 degrees

banking in

Olstanc~: 400 r:niles, ~ 60 laps
Schedule: Saturday, qualifying
10 a.m. ; Sunday, race (NBC .2p.m.)

CHARLOTTE, N.C
Will Ferrell as a NASCAR
driver.
That was the simple pitch
for ''Talladega Nights: The
Ballad
of
R i c k y
Bobby" that
won over
executives in
boardrooms
stretching
f r o· m
1'/ASCAR's
Florida
headquarters
all the way
t

2.939

2. Matt Kenseth

Top 10 driv ers

itself in
Will Farrell's ' alladega ights'

Ferrell

Points Top 10

1. Jimmie Jol1nson

SOURCE NASCAR

AP

I SCARiam

Wka

In this photo provided by

Columbia Picture.s, NASCAR
driver Ricky Bobby, played
by Will Ferrell, holds a trophy in a scene from
"Talladega Nights: The
Ballad of Ricky Bobby."

Last year: Tony Stewart held
off a determined challenge from
Kasey Kahne to win the All state
400 allhe
Brickyard.

AP photo

0

Hollywood.
Wide-eyed from box office
receipts of more than $300
million for three of Ferrell's
more recent films, everyone
agreed the concept could be a
smashing success.
"When we pitched the idea,
the studios were lining up,"
Ferrell said.
Sony Pictures was at the go see a race now.' It's a comedy movie, so you want to go
front of the pack and will laugh at stuff that's involved
release "Talladega Nights" witn NASCAR and that sort ·
this Friday in theaters across .of thing."
the country.
Sarah Nettinga, NASCAR
Back in Florida, NASCAR director of film, television and
executives are keeping an anx- music, said NASCAR collabious eye on the reviews and
d
T 11 d
N' h
the reactions from its die-hard orate on a a ega 1g ts
from script development
fan base.
through completion. By sign·
In giving Ferrell the green- ing off on the film with a wiHIight, NASCAR allowed him ingness to laugh at · 1tself,
to J?Oke fun at their Southern NASCAR is banking on
hentage, the sponsor-fueled Ferrell to open the sport to a
culture, the rabid fans and new audience without alienat·
every other stereotype gener- ing its existing one.
ally associated with Am~rica's
"The fans will have an
most popular mcmg senes.
absolute blast at this movie,
Even the title .. character because as long as · they
could be offensive to some.
remember it's not supposed to
Ferrell plays Ricky Bobby, a be a dramatic representation
dimwit who grows up follow· h
· ·
11
f
in~ the edict his absentee oft e sport, It IS rea Ypo mg
fun at celebrity and having a
fat er once told him - "If Jot of fun with it," said
you ain't first, you're last."
Nettin~a. who is credited as an
Ricky Bobby lives by the execuove producer.
motto as he climbs his way
"I think it's good to laugh at
·from NASCAR crew member yourself and enjoy that you've
to chan1pion driver, and par- become part of the matnlays his success into newfound stream. That's one of the
riches, a hot blonde wife and a
.
)'
..
pair of horrible children biggest forms ot camp tment.
named Walker and Texas
Still, not everyone.was comfortable with the idea.
Ranger. He's such a star, Although Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Powerade has commissioned
him to thank its sports drink has a cameo in the film and
during a lengthy grace before proudly walked the blackdinner each nighL .
asphalt carpet at last week's
But when a French Fonnula Hollywood premiere, Jeff
One driver (Sacha Baron Gordon passed· on participat·
Cohen) invades NASCAR ing in the movie.
with the goal of dethroning
For Gordon, the four-time
Ricky Bobby, everything falls series champion who runs a
close second to Earnhardt in
apart for him.
Ricky Bobby is in a honible popularity, the industrywide
crash that leaves him too ms1de jokes were a little too
scared to race again. Then his close to comfort for the driver
wife leaves him for his equal- . and his sponsors.
ly dimwitted teammate and
"! think ir prevented me
best friend, proclaiming "f am from being a part of the.
a driver's wife. 1 DO NOT movie," Gordon said. "We
WORK" - a sarcastic line presented it to DuPont and our
that drew groans during a other sponsors talked about it,
recent industry screening of and although I think the movie
the film.
is going to be hilarious -and
Ferrell knew he was walk· l don't mind laughing at things
ing a tine line between within our sport - it wasn' t
comedic humor and offensive the type of movie that I could
jokes but believes he came up have been part of.
with a movie that allows
"I would have liked to, but
NASCAR to laugh at itself.
after seeing the. script, there
"I think they really kind of were some moments in there
know that they have such a that I questioned because of
strong footing and solid faun- the type of image I like to put
dation, that this is just some· out for myself and DuPont and
thing that's going to open up our sponsors."
Comedic .fodder aside, the
the NASCAR world to a
whole 'nother audience of ftlm is being lauded for many
people," Ferrell said- "We had of its on-track scenes.
fun with the sport, but we did·
Unlike "Days of Thunder,"
n't poke fun at the sport.
the 1990 Tom Cruise movie
"It's a mixture. We had a lot that was panned by the
of people in early screenings, a NASCAR community and
lot of our kind of colleagues in fans who found it stereotypHollywood ... who said, ical " and
unrealistic,
'Wow, you guys make the Talladega Nights took pains
sport look great, like I want to to avoid that.
·

i

1

Next race:

GRAND STANDS ... : Sirius Satellite
R adio at the Glen , ·
Aug. 13, Wa tkins G len, N.Y.
SOURCE: NA SCA_R

Yes, Ferrell does race his car
backward in one eyebrowraising scene. But for the most
part, everything else is deadon.
Andrew
Giangola,
NASCAR 's director of business communication, said
Robert Yates' mechanic shop
was rented out and relocated
\O Talladega, where it was
used to build 32 different
stock cars. Ten crashes then
were orchestrated at three difterent tracks, and Ferrell and
several co-stars also took
lessons at the Rit:hard Petty
Driving experience to learn
how to pilot a car.
''Durinn
traininQ
"' the
required before
getting behind~
the wheel, the actors were
qL1iet and apprehensive," said
driving instructor Chris

McKee. ''They were sponges
who wanted to absorb everything_ At one point, when we
were taking the van ride to get
the fed of, the track, I was trying to be funny. ·
"Will Ferrell said in a loud
and serious voice, 'Excuse
me, we're trying to drive seri-·
uus NASCAR stock cars
here!'"
Consultants also were used
to make the pit stops look realistic.
The end result. Giangola
said, should please true fans.
"The way the cars look, the
way the cars handle, all of that
is qLiite authentic," Giangola
said. "There's a lot thllt went
into making the racing action
and the wrecking look realistic, because we knew that .
would be important to fans_"

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$226
522.995 $340
06 FORO EXPLORER XLT 4X4 f13575 ~.ooo MLS BOFW AT ACTilTCRSE PW PL SPRT WHLS REAR AC 3RD SEA1'...............................
'
$20.995 $309
06 DODGE GR~NO CARAVAN SXT IJ1354316,000 MLS BOFW AT AC TILT CRSE PW PL PYffl SEATS STOW&amp;: GO SEATING EPA RATED 25 ~PG
06 CHEV COLORADO 4X4 CREW CAB 013345 PW PLAT AC TILT CASE PW PL SPRTWHLS 13000MILES BOFW EPA RATED 22 MPG..................... $21.395 $314
$26.900 $399
05 CADILLAC DEVILLE •13564 31,000 MLS BOFW AT AC TILT CRS£ PW PL PWA SEATS AND MORE... ...... ·-········""··-···············-···· ...............................
05 CHEV COBALT 1113558 7,000 MLS EPA RATED 32 MPG AC CO ......... ~ ...................-......_.._...................................................................................t'" "'" " "'""""" . $12.995 $t79
I
$12.995 $176
05 CHEV IMPALA 113528AT AC TILT CASE PW PL PWR SEATS CO MAG WHLS 3800 IJ6 EPAAATE030............ ....................................................................... .
$17,995 $259
05 MSSAN ALTJMA STK 113386 25,000 MLS BOFW AT AC llLT CASE PW PL PWR SEATS SPAT WHLS co EPA RATED 29 MPG....................... _........ ..
$18.975 $273
05 TOYOTA CAMRY LE •13479 CRUISE PW PL PSEAT 28000 MILES BOW 4 CYL AT AC TILT EPA RATED 34 MPG ......:.....................................................
$17.995 $259
D5 KIA AMANT! SEDAN 113349 CASE PW PL PWA LTHR SEATS PWR SUN ROOF SPRT Yt?1LS 25,000 MLS BOfW Y6 AT AC liLt-......................... .
113.920 $194
05 NISSAN SENTRA f1334219.000 MLS BOFW AT AC TILT CASE PW PLCO EPA RATED 34 MPG................_.......................................................................,
116,995 $242
05 MAZDA 6113314 16,000 MLS BOFW 4 CYL AT AC T1LT CASE P)N Pl CD EPA RATED 28 MPG ...................;,,,,.,,,,,.,,,.,.,,,............................ .. ..
111.815 $169
05 CHEV IMPALA 113312 AT AC TILT CRSE PW PL SPRTWHLS PWR SEATS C03800 ENG EPA RATED 26 MPG............................................................. .
113,500 $t87
05 CHRYSLER PT CRUISER 113318 AT AC PW Pl CO TILT CASE 19,CIXl MLS BOFW EPA RATED 32M~....................................................................... ..
121.295 $310
05 FORO EXPLORER XLT lf13481 AT AC TlLT CRtJI~E PW PL P. SEAT SPTWHLS28,000 NILES BOFW REAR AC :JRO SEAT EPA RATED 20 MPG
123.950 $354
05 FORO F150 4X4lf13493 TILT CAU-sE XLT PW PL 23,000 MILES AT AC EPA RATED 18 MPG ................- ............................................................................
120,995 $199
05 DODGE RAM 4X4 QUAD CAB *13295 25,000 MLS BOFW 4X4 AT AC TILT CRSE PW PL CD EPA RATED 17 MPG•................... ·---··
$19,395 $2?9
05 DODGE DAKOTA QUAD CAB ,4X4·lf13278 31,000 MLS BOFW EPA RATED 19MPG..........................................................................................................
m.'I9S $211
04 PON11AC GRAND PRIX GT 2 msn ~LVER AT AC llLT CASE PW PL PWA SEATS SPRT WHLS.. ,.•,___,.....-................:................................... .
512.995
$t94
04 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX GT 013576 AEOAT AC TILT CASE PW PL PWR SEATS CD Sl'RTWHLS..........................................................................
115.995 $247
04 PONTIAC VIBE 013563 EPI&lt;RATEO 31 MPG 22.000 MLS BOFW AT AC TILT CAS£ PW PL PWM SUN ROOF .:._...............-•.._..... :•..-·······--··"""""
111.995 . $282
04 NISSAN AlT1MA t13561 EPA RATED 26 MPG AT AC TILT CASE PW PL V6 SPAT WHLS.......................................................................................................
113.995 $t99
04 PONTIAC Gl'.! GP 013631 AT AC TILT CASE PW PL PWR SEAT SPAT WHLs CD EPA RATED 28....._... ,.................................... :..:................................ ..
s15,995 $247
04 V.W. JEITA GLS •13415 PW PLSPTWHLS TlLT CfUSE 26000 MILES BOFW 5 SPEED TRANS EPA RATED 31 MPG.....: ............................................ ..
$21.300 .$331
04 FORD EXPLORER SPRT lJIAC 4X4 013507 AT AC XLT CASE PW Pl CD ALLOY WHLS EPA RATED 20 MPG•.....·-···········-···························"""""
$12,900 St88
04 DODGE CARAVAN XLT VAN •13527 WHITE AT AC TILT CASE PW Pl. QUAD SEATING..-·-··-·······-·····""" "'""""""""' ..'...............................................
$24.995 $399
04 CHEV SILVERADO K2500 HD 4X4 0135611 AWD AT AC TILT CAS£ 2!,000 MLS BOFW CD CHROME WHEELS ............................................, ......... ..
122.395
$351
04 DOQGE RAM 1500 .13453AT AC TILT CRUISE CD PW Pl SLT QUAD CAB 4X4 AU..OY WHLS EPA RATED 18 MPG................................................ ,.
l16.m $254
04 DODGE DAKOTA CLUB CAB SPORT 013370 BEOUNER CD XM RADIO TOW PKQ VI AT AC TILT CRUISE SP WHLS EPA RATED 1B MPG
$18,995 S298
D4 TOYOTA TACOMA X.:CAB PRE RUNNER tt3357 PW Pl CD BEOUNERSPT WHLS ve XCA81AOSRSAT ACBALOf FACTEPI\RATED20MPG
06 FORO TAURUS SE 113473 PW PLALLOY WHLS DC 16lXXl MILES BOFW AT ACTILT CRUISE EPA RATED 27 MPG........................................................

06 FORD TAURUS SELIJ133372 PL PW PLEATHER SEATS PSUNROOF 25,000 MILES, BOFW AT AC TILT CRUISE EPA RATED 27 MPG .....................

.

Sl 5.995

M . . ... . . . . . . . . . . .. ..

Pa ym en~s figured with down pliJ'ffiBnt ol S1995 cash ortrade- plus taJI and title. 2005·2006 65mo. at6.25APA. 7 1mo. at 5.50 APR.72 mos at 6.75 apr, 77 mo- 6.75 APR. 2004 Be
m05 , 6.25 APR, 72 mo 6.75 . 75 mos B 39 APR , 2003 68 mo 6'15. 72 moa 6.30 APR. 200:166 mos 6.75 APR . 72 mo. at8.30 APR, 2001 60 mo • 6.75 A~R. 72 mos 8.30 APR

;zooo 60 moe 6.75 APR. 72 mo e 6.30 APR. t999 - 72 me&amp; 8.30 APR . Sae Saleetnln lor dataH1. No payments til 2006 w/uteet lendAra approval

.

AP

�ScoREBOARD

iunbap tttm~ -ientintl
. PRO BASEBALL
Amwicen Ltague
Eatt Dlvlllon
W L Pet
New York
65 41 .613
Boston
65 43 .602
TOf'OOIO
57 52 .523
Baltimore
49 61 .445
Tampa Bay • 45 65 .409
Central Dtvlalon
W L Pet
Detroit
73 36 .670
Chicago
64 43 .598
Minnesota
63 45 583
Cleveland
47 61 435
Kansas City
38 7'1 .349

Weat Division
W · L Pet
56 51 .532
Oakland
56 54 .509
·Te.:as
Los Angeles
55 54 .505
53 55 .491
Seattle

PRo BASKETBALL

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

1
g· ~

18

22
GB

8

g't,
25 '1&gt;

35
GB

2'11
3
4'1,

EASTERN CONFERENCE
WLPctGB
)1[-Conn~icut
23 6 793
)(·Detroit
20 9 .690 3
~~:-Indiana
18 11 621 5
x·Washington
16 14 .533 7'1.
Charlotte
9 21 .300 14'b
New York
8 21 .276 15
Chicago
4 25 .138 19
WESTERN CONFERENCE
WLPetGB
K-Los Angeles
23 8 .742
)(-Sacramento
19 11 .633 3'1:
Houston
17 13 .567 5'h
16 t4 .533 . 6'1%
Seattle
I P'hoeni~o:
13 16 .448 9
1 San Antonio
12 17 .4 14 10
9 21 .300 t3'rl
1 Minnesota

J

South
WL T Pet

I

Minnesota B. Kansas City 2

Texas 7, L.A. Angels 6, 12 innings
Friday's Games
Detroit 7, Cleveland 6

N.Y. Yankees 5. Baltimore 4
Chicago White 50)1 6, Toronto 4
Boston 3, Tampa Bay 2
Minnesota 8, Kansas City 5, 10 innings

Oakland 5, Seattle 2
Texas 7, L.A. Angels 3
Sunday's Games
Cleveland at Detroit, ~ :05 p.m
Chicago White Smc at Toronto, 1:07
p.m.
Boston at Tampa Bay, 1:15 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Baltimore, 1:35 p.m.
Minnesota at Kansas City, 2:10p.m.
TaKas at L.A. Angels, 3:35p.m
Oakland at Seattle, 4:05p.m.
Nallonal League
East Division
WLPctGB
New York
64 44 .593
Philadelphia · 53 55 .491 11
Florida
51 58 .468 13 1/2
Atlanta
50 58 .463 . 14
Washington
49 60 .450 15 1/2
Central Division
WLPctGB
St. Louis
58 50 .537
. Cincinnati
56 53 .514 2 112
Houston
52 57 .477 6 1/2
Milwaukee
52 57 .477 6 112
Chicago
45 64 .413 13 112
Pittsburgh
42 68 .382 17
Welt Divlaton
WlPctGB
San Diego
56 53 .51 4
Arizona
55 54 .505 1
Los Angeles
54 55 .495 2
Colorado
53 55 .491 2 1/2
San Francisc9 52 57 .477 4

Thuraday'e Gamea
lnd1ana 69, Minnesota 59
Connecticut 72, Los Angeles 63
New York 75, Detroit 67
Sacramento 87, San Antonio 69
Seanle 86, Washington 78
Phoenil( 1t2, Charlene 84
Friday's Games
Houston
Minnesota 73, OT
Detroit 76, Chicago' 49
Saturday's Games
San Antonio at Indiana, late
Chicago at New· York, late
Charlolte at Seattle, bite.
Wash ington at Sacramento, late
Los Angeles at Phoenix, late·
SUnday's Games
Connecticut at Houston. 6 p.m.
New York at Detroit, 6 p.m.
San Antonio at Minnesota, 7 p.m.

n,

Bahimore
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Pittsburgh

PFPA

0 0 0 .000 0 0
0 0 0 .000 0 0
0 0 0 .00000
000.00000
Nonh
W L T Pet

PFPA

000.00000
OOO

0 0 0 .000 0
0 0 0 .000 0
0 0 0 .000 0
0 0 0 .000 0

.OOODO

000.00000
0 0 0 .00000

0
0
0
0

TRANSACTIONS

Frtd•y'• Sparta Tranuctlont
BASEBALL
North
Pet
PF
'PA
AmerfGen
League
W L T
· BALTIMOAEOAIOLE5-TradedCJavy
~~ Ch1cago
0 0 0 .OOO o 0
1 lopez anct cash to Boston lor a player to
0 0 0 000 0 0
Detroit
.
o o . named or cash. Si!1ned C Chris Widger.
0 0 0
l Green Bay
.OOO
Placed RHP Kris Benson on the 15-day
0 0 0 .OOO 0 0
Minnesota
DL. retroactive to July 26. Activated RHP
West
LaTroy Hawkins from the bereavement
W L T Pet PF PA
list.
.000
0 0 0
0 0
Arizona
DETROIT . TIGERS---Agreed to . terms
San Francisco 0 0 · 0 .000 0 0
with LHP Andrew Miller to a four·yee.r
Seattle
0 0 0 .000 0 0
contract.
StLouis
0 0 0 .000 0 0
OAKLAND ATH LETICS- Placed SS
Sunday's Game
1 ~obby Crosby on the 15-day DL. retroac·
1 0 kl d
Phil d 1 h' 8 1 C 1
t t1ve to July 31. Purchased the contract of
Oh~ ~n vs.
a e p .ta
anon, i IFD'AngetoJimeneztromSacramentool
10 ' P - ~h r d , G
the PCL Designated lHP Randy Keisler
. u 8 ay 8 ames
lor assignment.
Cle_
veland at Phlladelphta, 7:30p.m.
NEW YORK ·YANKEES-Designated
OF Bubba Crosby for assignment.
1 lndJanapoltS at St., LOUIS, 8 p .m.
1
Friday 1 Games
Recalled RHP Jose Veras from Triple-A
Denver at 0 0,1011 7: 30p.m.
Columbus.
N.Y. Jets at Ti!onp~1 Bay, 7:30Pm.
SEAiTLE MARINERS-Activated AHP
Ne".' E_ngland al At.lanta, 8 p.m.
Rafael Soriano from the 15-day Dl.
N.Y. G1ants at Baltimore. 8 p.m.
Optioned A11P Emiliano Fruto ro Tacoma
Chicago at San Fra,ncisco, 10 p.m .
, of the PCL.
Satur~ay I Games
.
I TORONTO BLUE JAYS---Recalled RHP
1 Pittsburgh at Anzor;ta. 4:05 p.m.
Francisco Rosario from Syracuse of the
Jacksonville et Miami, 7:30p.m.
IL. Designated C Jason Phillips for
Buffalo at Carolina, 7:30p.m .
assignment.
New Orleans at Tennessee, 8 p.m
National League
Kansas City at Houston, 8 p.m.
COLORADO ROCKIE5-Activated INF
Dallas at Seattle, 10 p.m.
Omar Quintanilla· !rom the disa.bled list
Green Bay at San Diego, 1o p.m.
and optioned him to Colorado Springs of

I

I

PFPA
Denver
0 0 0 .000 0 0
1 t&lt;ansas City
0 0 0 .000 0 0
o o o ..000 0 0
Oakland
; San Diego
0 o o .000 o o
NAnONALCONFERENCE
Eatl .
WL T Pel PFPA
1 Dallas
0 0 0 ,(){)(). 0 0
NY Giants
o o o .ooo o o
Philadelphia
0 0 0 .000 0 0
Washington
0 · 0 0 .000 0 0
South
WL T Pet PFPA

I
I
I
I

&amp;unba!' ~ime• -6enthttl

Sunday,August6,2006

I

Weal
WL T Pet

K-clinched playoff spot
Thursday'• Gamaa
N.Y. Yankees 8, Toronto 1
Cle&lt;weland 7. Boston 6
Tampa Bay 2, Detroit 1

WL T Pet PFPA
0 0 0 .00000
Miami
0 0 0 .00000
New England 000.00000
N.V. Jets
000.00000

[ Houston
Indianapolis
Jacksonville
Tennessee

Atlanta
Carolina
New Orleans
I Tampa Bay

j

E11t

I
I Buffalo

Women'a NltiONII
Batketball AIIOCIItlon
GB

PageB6

i

•

the PCL.
NEW YORK METS-Ptacect C "ramon
Castro on the 15-day OL Recalled C
Mike DIFelice Irom Norfolk of the IL.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
DALLAS MAVERICKS-Released C
Pavel Podkolzin.
.
HOUSTON ROCKETS-Stgned G
j Kelenna Azubuike
MIAMI HEAT-Signed G Robert Hite.
PHOENIX SUNS-Signed G leandro
Barbosa to a five-year contract extonslon that begins after the 2007-08 season.
FOOTBALL
National Football Leagu.
HOUSTON TEXAN5-Piaced TE Ben
·Steele and CB Chris McKenzie on
Injured reserve . Re-signed RB Nick
Luchay.
Signed
CB
Earthwind
Moreland.
INDIANAPOUS COLTS-Signed AB
Tony Hollings and S Jammal Lord .
Placed S Antwan Marsh and TE COrey
Roberts on the reserve-left squad list.
NEW YORK JET5-Signed DB Bruce
Thornton. Waived DB Jovon Johnson.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES-Agreed
1erms with DT Brodrick Bunkley on a
six-year contract.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
PHILADELPHIA FLYERS-Acquired
LW Kyle Calder from Chicago for C
Michal Handzus .
PHOENIX COYOTES-Re-signed C
Mike Comrie to a one-year contract.

•

1

Sunday, August 6, 2006

to

PRo SoccER
Major League Soccer
Easlern Conference
W L T Pts GF GA
D.C. United
13 2 6 45 38 19
New England
6 6 8 26 26 26
New York
5 6 9 24 23 26
Chicago
5 7 7 22 24 26
Kansas City
6 11 3 21 22 28
Columbus
4 9 8 20 16 28
Western Conference
W L T Pts GF GA
FC Dallas
12 5 3 39 35 25
Houston
848323024
Colorado
874282529
CO Chives USA 668263228
Los Angeles
5 10 5 20 16 24
Real Salt Lake 5 10 5 20 25 29
NOTE: Three points lor victory, one point
lor tie.

Seturday's Game
MLS AII·Stars vs. Chelsea FC, late.
Thursday's Gamaa
I
Sunday's Game
Pittsburgh 3, Atlanta 2
· New England at CD Chivas USA, 7 p.m .
.Arizona 10. Chicago Cubs 2, 1st game
Wednesday, Aug. 9
Chicago Cubs 7, Arizona 3, 2nd game
Kansas City at New England, 7:30p.m.
San Diego 5, Houston 2
Los Angeles at Houston, 8 p.m.
Florida 4, N.Y. Mats 1
Real Salt Lake at Colorado, 9:30 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers 3, Cincinnati 0
Saturday, Aug. 12
Philadelphia 8. St Louis 1
FC Dallas at Houston, 8:30 p.m.
Frlday'a Games
CD Chivas USA at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
Pittsburgh 6. Chicago Cubs 0
Columbus at Kansas City, 8:30 p.m.
Philadelphia 5, N.Y. Mats 3
Los Angeles at Colorado, 9 p.f1'l.
Clncinnali 5, Atlanta 4
L.A. Dodgers 6, Florida 2
Milwaukee 4, St. Louis 3
Houston 6, Arizona 7
Washington 6, San Diego 2
National Football League
Colorado 5, San Francisco 2
Praaeaaon Glance

Paul "Bub" Williams of Gallipolis soars through the air on his motorcycle .
while spectators cheer him on during the Motocross event on Wednesday.

PRO FooTBALL

OSTPA
fromPageBl
of Mt. Gilead took the
"Stormer" to second place
at Gallipolis.
In the Crow's Hybrid
Seeds Modified Tractor
class turbines dominated the
class once again as they
took the top three places. In
first was points leader
Robert Sossion, Sr. and the
."Flying Machine" followed
by Ron Barga II and "The
Judge" and Don Deane's
"Plumbers
Nightmare."
Turbine engines sound I ike
jets-, but actualiy used to be
the power plant for military
attack helicopters.
Arlene Archer notched
her first win of the season in
the Jeff McPhearson TwoWheel Drive Truck class.
The classic 1937 Chevy

Reds
/

from PageBl
front 4-2.
Clayton's homer snapped
the Reds' streak of 15 1-3
scoreless innings dating to
Clayton's solo home run
leading off the eigbth inning
in a 5-3 loss to the Dodgers
on Wednesday. That was
Clayton's first home~ since

Marshall
from Page 81
"I need to talk to (an eye
doctor) about where he gets
that vision," Snyder said
Friday. "With his vision,
there is no reason in this
conference that he should
not be a 1.000 yard back.
He will be a I ,000 yard
back this year."
Talk after last seasoil ' s
disappointing · 4-7 record
surrounded the need for a
deep threat, and Marshall
thought it had received help
m that department with the
signings of Ridge Corbin
and Darius Passn1ore.
However, neither was in
camp Thursday.
Snyder said he wasn't
worried about it because he
is blessed with a healthy

Cl

"Pioneer" is powered by a
537 cubic inch Chevy
motor. Season poi'tlts winner Richard McPhearson
piloted the "Bean Bandit"
Chevy S-10 to second in the
class
Pulling on the Ohio State
Tractor Pullers Association
tour is sponsored by the
National Tractor Pulling
·Championships, Enderle
Mr.
Fuel
Injection,
Motorkote, Kale Marketing,
The Central Petroleum
Company,
the
Lorain
County Fair, R&amp;L Carriers,
The Rabo AgriFinance and
the Ohio Soybean CounciL
Saturday
night, the
OSTPA tour pulls into the
Champaign County Fair in
Urbana.
The Medina
County Fair in Medina
holds a pull on Sunday
night. The Ohio MidSeason
Championships
takes·pJace Tuesday night at
the Hartford Fair in Croton.
June 17,2005, for Arizona at
Cleveland.
"I'm used to those being
doubles in Washington,"
Clayton said.
Jam~s (4-3), making his
seventh major league start.
allowed four runs and two
hits. He struck out three and
walked three for the Braves,
who've lost six of their last
eight ~ames. The loss was
his thtrd in his last three
starts after four consecutive
wins.
corps of · experienced
receivers this season. Both
Emmanuel Spann and
Marcus Fitzgerald are back
after knee injuries forced
them to the sidelines much
of last season.
"We can only play with
who we have," Snyder said.
"(Emmanuel) Spann looks
like a completely different
person and we have the talent on the edge to be succef
ss .l"
u. .
Even with a stable of·
re,ceivers returning, Snyder
said aerial success will start
on the ground.
"If we establish a solid
running attack, it will force
defensive backs to play up,"
Snyder said. "We have fast
enough receivers with good
enough hands that once
those DBs are up, we can go
over the top. Then it is at
worst 50-50."

lb. P11YI(ti ttb£
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PRICING •
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'

JO POINT INSPECTION ON ALL USED CARS, TRUCKS AND SUV'S
/

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Almost a thousand animals and their owners made the fairgrounds their ·
home during fair week. "Memory Maker," a 7-month-old Pulled Hereford anCI
Angu·s cow. is portrayed here as she playfully· knocks over a shampoo bottle
while Bob Scott, left, of Making Memories Farms in Bidwel l.• and her DV!ner.
Cameron Scott of the Rio Wranglers 4-H Club, watch.

~... #n:~l

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MONT£ CARLO
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IM5 OIFIY

Joy Kocmoud/photos

Pictured here are, from left, Katlyn, Belinda and Kassie Bates as they take a ride on the carousel at dusk
during the Gallia County Junior Fair.

#IMIII

locl #111111

15,950

5

Call 422·075,
Toll Free 1·800·822·0417
VIsit us online at

Toko ~ 77 to R~toy
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lnttrchongo

(od 132) Tum NOI!Il
bn R\]Uto 2t,
Deal9rahip Is

3 milu on left

www~tompeden.com
Toxes, togs, title fees extra. Rebote Jndudad In sole price of new vehide listed where
opplkoble. On oppmad credH. On sele&lt;ted models. See 'llealer for detolls.·Not responsible for
lypagraphlcal
errors. Prices good August 4th through August 6th. .
.

-

'"
Jenny Dyer is shown here as she sings the Nat1onal Anthem belor£ an event.
Dyer was excited to perform after recovering from an infection caused by an
ATV accident ·in May.

Sheep, swine, and beef were the three cat€gories of animals featured during the fair's
Showmanship competitions. Here. Katie Saunders of the Gallia Explorers 4-H Club shows off
her market lamb, "Stacy," before a show.

475 South Church Street, Ripley • Monday- Saturday 9 am- 9 pm • Sunday 1pm- 8 pm
'

'

••

1

�YOUR HOMETOWN

iunba~ 'tmes -ientintl

-COMMUNITY (ORNER'Browntown' native makes tomato run
Tom Brown , Pomeroy
native who taught school
for years, entered the public
service realm. for the past
15 years has been mayor of
Port Clinton. and more
recently
became
an
ordained minister, was in
town last week for his annual '·tomato run."
Tom \vas joined by his
mqther, Nellie Brown, who
lives at "Browntown" that 's a couple miles above
Pomeroy - and Florida, for
the run . . He not only takes
back to Port Clinton his
own supply of Ohio River
tomatoes , but enough to
share with some friends.
He has a dual purpose in
coming "home" this time to pick his tomatoes and
attend the annual family
reunion which is being held
in Columbus today. His
brother, Fred, another product of Browntown, came in
from Florida for the
reumon.
Tom returns only occasionally to Pomeroy. but
when he does, one of the
. things he really likes to do is
sit down and reflect on his
years of growing up here .
It's always good to visit
with him because he loves
to "re member when" and
always shows such an
appreciation for the people
in the Bend and the difference they made in his life.
You may remember that
just after he was ordained a
yea'r or so ago, he came to
Pomeroy to preach a sermon at Trinity Church,
where the Brown family
attended when he was
growmg up.

•••

Eloise Adams, who just
completed 55 years and is
still working with State Auto
(Brogan-Warner Insurance)

()r my friend, Faye
Watson, who checks The
Daily Sentinel's list of those
over 80 having birthdays
and sends cards whether she
knows them or not. She also
keeps a record of the special
occasions of her other
friends and never lets a
birthday, or holiday pass
without a remembrance.
Such thoughtful people
bring joy to so many people.
Thank goodness they're
around.

Charlene
Hoeflich

was given special recognition in the company's
newsletter,
Persollally
Speaking, recently.
At 82 years "young,"
Adams says she enjoys her
work and has no plans to
retire. Eloise has many
memories .about her work at
the agency, all detailed in
the newsletter. and among
which is how she got hired.
Seems she was cleaning
an insurance office one
night , encountered a secretary who was having difficulty typing something for
her manager, and offered
assistance. The secretary
told her manager, who
shared it with another insurance person which led to
Adams being offered a job.
She joined State Auto in
1951, became a licensed
agent in 1953. has been
there every since, and is still
going strong.

...

Which brings me to
something that isn't going
to be around much longer.
The Skate-A-Way Roller
Rink is closing down on
Aug. 27 after providing
thousands of hours of fun to
hundreds of people over the
past 50 years.
The closing day will be
marked with a farewell
skating party from I to. 5
p.m. on the day the rink is
closed down. Meanwhile , it
is operating Friday and
Saturday evenings from
7:30 to 10 p.m. and is still
available for private parties.

•••

Today has been desi$ned
as Veterans and Milttary
Day at the Ohio State Fair.
Veterans and active military
are being admitted free and
are encouraged ·to share
their stories as part of a veterans history project being
prepared by the Governor's
office of Veterans's Affairs.

...

There are card senders
and then there are people
like me who have good
intentions of remembering
someone sick or _having a
birthday with a card, but
somehow never gets around
to sending one.
Now take Pat Noel, who
lives out on Snowden Road.
I'm told by her friend,
Marjorie Walburn , that she
is a real card sender, getting
out a couple of hundred or
so every year.

•••

This is also Friendship
Day. Celebrate that with a
visit or call to one of your
friends - maybe someone
ypu haven't seen for a
while. 'It will brighten the
day for. the both of you.
(Charlene Hoeflich is
general manager of The
Daily Sentinel in Pomeroy.)

PageC2

Summers family helped make organs popular
Bv

JAMES

SANos

At the tum of the century,
organs outnumbered pianos
in private homes by almost
2 to I and one of the most
popular organs in Ohio, at
least, was the Estey organ
made in Brattleboro, Vt.
These organs were mostly,
before 1900, reed orgatls.
Many of the Estay organs
sold in Gallia County from
1873 to 1900 were probably
from
H .C.
purchased
Summers. who was born near
Porter in 185l.lt was in 1873
that he began selling the
Estey organ door to door in
Gallia and Jackson counties.
According to the book
Jackson County: Its History
and Its People by Robert
Ervin, "At the age of 19, Hal
Summers started walking
through Gallia County with a
catalog under his arm, and
soon he was traveling on
horseback selling Estey
organs. After five years, he
acquired .a wagon and a sample organ. His theory was that
if the customer cannot come
to see you, you· go to see him
by mov(ng the showroom into
the living room. He would be
gom: from home a week or
·more at a time, and when the
weather was bad, he might
spend two or more days v.:ith
a prospective customer."
In , 1882, Mr. Summers
opened a music · store in
Jackson . By l919, Summers
&amp; Son Music Co. would
own six stores: Jackson,
Oak
'Hill,
Wellston,
Portsmouth, McArthur and
Washington Court House.
By then, Summers &amp; Son
sold 15 different makes of
organs' pianos and player
pianos , mcluding Sohmer,
Cable, Price, Temple and
Estey. They also sold what

were then called talking
machines made by Victrola,
Edison, Columbia and
Brunswick.
One of their ads slates:
"Even small musical instruments are sold. In fact. you
can find anything and
everything in the musical
·line at Summers except the
proverbial cat and her melodious yawl."
A son of H .C. named Carl
was born 1n Jackson in
1886. After graduating from
Jackson High School, he
was sent to Cincinnati to
learn how to sell pianos and
organs. He worked for the
Aeolian Co., which later
became the American
Aeolian Co. that made the
prest1g1ous
Steinway
pianos . He event4ally came
back to Jackson and joined
his father in the business.
Carl continued the growth
of the music business with
stores also opening up later
in Gallipolis, Chillicothe.
Athens and Columbus.
According to Ervin. Carl
had an interesting motto:
"Give a child a hom to blow
and he won't blow a safe."
While also selling pianos
and organs , Carl was a songwriter. According to the
Jackson Herald · of 1913:
"Carl would be one of the best
known songwriters in the
country if it were not for his
daily activity in piano selling.
He is considered by those
who know him as one of the
best and ablest player demonstrators in the Buckeye State."
Among Carl Summers'
best known songs were two
that were part of the Ziegfield
Follies, "I've Got the
Rumatiz" and "Hearts." The
former song was made
famous in 1919 in the
Ziegfield Foil ies by Eddie

Cantor. The song "Hearts"
says: "Spmewhere each heart
has a lovemate , always true, I
give you my heart and I'll
wail just for you. 1l10' from
my side you may wander, far,
far away, my heart is yours
with a love that endures, till
you come back to me some
day. Hearts are sometimes
fickle, as a wandering breeze,
sometimes they're glad,
sometimes they're sad, sometimes they only tease. Some
hearts keep you guessing ,
some will leave you blue ,
some hemts are gay. and
some hearts will stray. but·the
heart I give to you is tme."
One of Summers' songs
was used in the AI Field
Minstrel Show for · many
years. "Hoodoo Moon." In
1919, Summers wrote a song
that put to mus1c Eddie
Rickenbacker 's words at the
end of World War!, " I'm glad
to be back in the U.S .A."
And Summers also composed the Jackson High
School March Song in 1932.
· In regard to Estey organs,
they were manufactured
until 1960. though by that
time the firm was better
known for building and
rebuilding pipe organs. One
historian noted that. "While
the Estey organs were built
of excellent materials, they
were often so compact that
maintenance was expensive
and nearly impossible to
perform." Estey also offered
little choice as they concentrated on one model which
was a two-manual instrument. All other types were
considered a special order.
(James Sands is a special
correspondent for , the
Sunday Times-Sentinel. He
can be contacted by writing
to ,1040 Military Road,
Zanesville, Ohio 43701.)

GM~ndey, ~Hu~ust

J?l

2 l'PJ
}!"Me fr~neh 5l)t) 1\(")C)PJ
10

VPJ -

GALLIPOLIS
Recipients of awards in
Girl Scout judging at the
Ga/lia County Junior Fair
are as follows:

Trophy winner- Bailey
Harless for
Nutrition.
Trophy
sponsored
by
Crown Excavating and
Stone Yard.

Daisy

Cuitom &amp; Traditions
Rosette winners
Christal
Folklore
Cochran, first; Kaetlyn
· McCaulla, second . .
Needlecrafts
Alexandra Elliott.
Sewing - Kyla Coburn,
t]rst: Sierra Johnson. second: Whitney Terry. third.
Weaving or Macrame Bailey Harless, first; Molly
Markley, second.
Hooked Rug, Knittmg or
Crocheting
Natalie
Wilcoxon , first; Bailey
Harless, second.
Trophy winners- Molly
Markley for Weaving or
Macrame, trophy spon sored
by
McDonald 's
of
Gallipolis ami Rio Grande;
Kyla Coburn for Sewing,
trophy sponsored by Corbin
&amp; Snyder Furniture.

Rosette winners
Life Skills
Decorated Cakes
Jenna Burke.
Cookies or Candy
Bethany Purdum. first;
Kelsey Simpkins. se'cond.
Miscellaneous
Baked
Goods - None given.
Nutrition Bethany
Purdum.
Health and Safely
Bethany Purdum.
Trophy
winner
Purdum
for
Bethany
Nutrition. Trophy spon.sored by McDonald's of
Gallipoli s and Rio Grande.
· Customs &amp; Traditions
Rosette winners
Folkore
Bethany
Purdum .
Needlecrafts - Brianna
Birchfield.
Sewing- Jenna Burke.
Weaving or Macrame - .
Bethany Purdum.
Hooked Rug, Knitting or
Crocheting Bethany
Purdum.
Trophy
Wilmer
Brianna Birchfield for
Needlecrafts. Trophy sponsored by K&amp;L Catering.

''.

'.
I
'

.

RIO GRANDE - The Rio Grande. On average, earn degrees in certain proFast Forward program at the most students receive 13 . grams by only taking classUniversity
of
Rio credit hours.for their life and es on the weekends.
At Monday's open house,
Grande/Rio
Grande work experience.
In addition to saving the . area residents can learn the
Community College will
hold an open house on students time and lllOney details of the Fast Forward
Monday, Aug . 7.
through the college credit. program, the admissions
The open house will opportunities , the Fast and financial aid processes,
begin at 7 p.m. in 216 Bob Forward program also puts and about different courses
Evans Farms Hall on the the adult students into a of study at Rio Grande. A
Rio Grande campus. This comfortable environment question and answer session
will be the eighth afmual where they can ease into will also be held during the
Door Prizes -Crafts and Games - Kid Care IDs
Fast Forward Open House , college, receive individual open house.
Bike Safety- Tobacco Prevention- Help Me Grow
Fast Forward classes durand it will give area resi- attention and .take . classes
dents a chance to learn around their work and fami- ing the fall semester will be
Wellness Information - Dental Information
about how this innovative ly schedules.
held on Tuesday evenings
program can help them.
The Fast Forward pro- beginning at 6 p.m. on the
' The Fast Forward pro- gram offers it students assis- Rio Grande campus, with
gram is an accelerated acad- tance with financial aid, the first class being held on
emic program for adult stu- scheduling and even getting Tuesday,
Aug.
29.
dents at Rio Grande. The · used to being in school Registration for the fall
program is aimed at stu- again. 'In addition to setting semester will continue
MEDICAL CENTER
dents 23 years old and older, up the Fast Forward pro- through Friday, Aug. 25.
and features college credit gram for adult students, Rio
For more information on
for life experiences. Fast Grande has also expanded the Fast Forward program
Forward also offers conve- the number of evening · at Rio Grande or on the
niently scheduled classes , classes it offers, changed open house, call Whitt at
me&gt;t"~ inte&gt;fmtltfe&gt;r;~, c:~U.
and is set up to help non-tra- the schedule of some of the 245-7325 · or (800) 282ditional students ease their classes to better help adult 720 I, Whitt can also be
way into college.
students and .even created a reached bv e-mail at
. The Fast Forward pro- program where students can dwhitt@ rio .edu. ·
gram recognizes that adult
students have family and
career responsibilities , and
is 'designed to allow stu-dents to take classes around
their busy schedules. In
addition, the program
allows students to gain col lege credit for their life and
The gap between Wall Street and Main Street has gotten
work experience .
smaller. Jefferson Pilot Securities ~an bring you a world
The program begins with
a portfolio completion class
of investment opportunities with a local touch.
that integrates the students
into college life and assists
them in putting together
portfolios of their knowl·We'll work with you to develop a plan for maximizing your
edge and experience. The
financial future, regardless of your resources.
portfolios are turned in at
the end of the semester, and
a committee examines each
of them to determine how
each student's experiences
can qualify as college credit
hours.
Students in the Fast
~Comprehensive financial planning for individuals and businesses
Forward program can earn
in Ohio and West Virginia.
up to 25 percent of the credi1 hours they need to com• Stocks
• Bonds
•ETFs
plete their academic programs. which can save
• Mutual Funds
• Annuities
• Life Insurance
them time anclll. ..money.
Students in an ..rociate 's ·
degree program can earn up
to 16 credit- hours from
(earning from their life and
. Downing-Childs Insurance
work experience, while students· in a bachelor's degree
196 East Second · Street • Pomeroy, 0Ii45769
program can earn up to 32·
www.dowpihg-childs.org
, credit hours.
"It 's an exceptional-value." lll\~'\lllllll\\ 11111111Lll\.I,JI,Il ,'&gt;ill\ '-ll\1\.l'-ldlllldll\ \[,,, \ltl'-\\.1 111\, ~ll lllll \i\l~•lil\,lil '-\. l li.lll'.i ,, 1,/ l,j,IJ I'll •1\t.llllll~( '"I'''I.IIIIIJI \], llh,J \11'1
said Dale Whitt. director of
1) 111\llll'..' ( l!,lll\ l i l'-lll.l'llt ,llhll, ll ·l..,,11l l 11tll \l'llllllll'"( 111'•11111'1' .JI&lt; ll\'1 .11111 ilt1l
!he Fast Forward program at

Girl Scout Program
Rosette winners '
Girl Seoul or Women 's
History - None given.
Heritage
Brianna
Birchfield.
Photography - Bethany
Purdum.
Invention,
Science
Project, Career Ex pi oration
- None given.
Recycling- None given.
Troop Activity/Community
Service - Bethany Purdum.
Trophy
winner
Bri~nna
Birc~field
for
Hentage. Trophy sponsored
by Crown Excavating and
Stone Yard.
The Arts
Rosette winners
String, Wire, Yarn AZrt or
Jewelry
Bethany
Purdum .
·
Collage, Mosaic, Mobile
Kel sey ·
or Sculpture Simpkins.
Creative Writing
Bethany Purdum.
Puppetry, Toy or Game · Jenna Burke, first; Bethany
Purdum , second; Brianna
Birchfield, third.
Painting
Bethany
Purdum,
first:
Kelsey
Simpkins, second.
Trophy
winner
Brianna Birchfield for
Puppetry, Toy or Game.
Trophy sponsored by Red's
Rollen Garage.

Come to our Hawaiian Luau and enjoy...

j~LL ~ft~ ID"It~cJ.r

t'e&gt;e

(740) 446-5075

Nature
Rosette winners
Camping Out of Doors
Experience - None· given.
Animal Care - None
given.
Outdoor Project or Nature
Collection - Jenna Burke,
first; Bethany Purdum, second.
Small Carpentry ~ None
given.
Miscellaneou s Craft/ Art
Project - Jen;1a Burke.
trophy winner - Jenna
Burke for Miscellaneous
Craft/Art Project. Trophy
sponsored by McDonald's
of Gallipolis aqd Rio
Grande.

You've worked hard for your
money. Will it return the favor?

Brownie

]EffE.RSON PILOT

Life Skills
Rosette winners·
Decorated Cakes
Rebecca Houck. first; Molly
Markley. second; Brianna
McGui re, third.
Cookies or Candy .Sierra
Johnson.
fi(st;
Kaetlyn McCaulla, second:
Brianna McGuire , third .
'Miscellaneous
Baked
Goods ~ Allie Johnson ,
first: Sierra Johnson. second.
Nutrition
Bailey
Harless.
Health and Safety Lexie · Johnson,
first;
' Brianna McGuire. second·.

Sf( t'Ril l['S

Contact Steve Musser at:

(740) 992-3381
(800) 454-1096

1

1

'

COMMUNITY

Sunday,August6,2oo6

GIRL SCOUTS WIN RECOGNffiON AT GALLIA FAIR

'I .

Fast Forward open house Monday at Rio .

I

iunba~ It me~ -ientin.el

Sunday, Augyst6, 2006

PageC3

Girl Scout Program
Rosette winners
Girl Scou.l History or
Women's History - Molly
Markley.
Kelsey
Heritage
Purdum.
Photography - Rebecca
Houck.
Science
Invention,
Project. Career Exploration
- Molly Markle y.
Re cycling · Molly
Markley.
Troop Activity/Community
Service - Brianna McGuire,
flfst; Darian Miller. second.
Trophy
winner
Rebecca
Houck
for
Photography. Trophy sponsored by Red 's Rollen
Garage.
Extra Trophy - Molly
Markley for Recyc ling.
Trophy
sponsored
by
Michael and· Friends ·Hair
Care.
The Arts
Rosette winners
String, Wire, Yarn Art or
Jewelry_ Kelsey Purdum.
Collage, Mosaic, Mobile
or Sculpture Molly
Markley, fir st; Brianna
McGuire, second.
Creative Writing
Brianna McGuire.
Puppetry. Toy or GameBrianna McGuire.
Painting
Kel sey
Purdum,
fir st;
Bailey
Harless, second.
Trophy winner - Molly
Markley for Sculpture.
Trophy sponsored by The
Wiseman Agency.
Extra trophy - Brianna
McGuire
for Creative
Writing. Trophy by Graham
·
Upholstery.
Extra trophy - Darian
Miller for Troop Activity.
Trophy sponsored by Irvin 's
Glass Service.
I
Nature
Rosette winners
Camping or Out of Doors
Experience
Kaetlyn
McCaulla, fir st: Ryleigh
Caldwell, second.
Animal Care - Molly
Ma(kley, · first; Kaetlyn
McCaulla, second.
Outdoor Project or Nature ·
Collection
Bailey
·
Harless.
Small
Carpentry
Kaetlyn McCaulla.
Mi sce llaneou s Craft/Art
Project- Molly Markley.
Trophy winner - Molly
Markley for Animal Care.
Trophy
sponsored
by
Corbin &amp; Snvder Fumiture.
Judges Choice Trophy Molly
Markley
for
Miscellaneous Craft -folded
paper. picture. Trophy sponsored by Ohio Valley Bank.
Best Girl Scout-Related
Trophy
Brianna
McGuire
for
Mosaic .
Trophy
spo nsored
by
McDonald' s of Gallipolis
and Rio Grande.

Cadette
Life Skills
Roselle wi!Yiers
Decorated Cakes
Calyssa
Mayes.
first;
Janelle Parsons. second.
Cookies or Candy Cinnamon Broyles.
Miscellaneous
Baked

Goods - Jessica McGuire. Nutrition. Trophy ;pontirst; Janelle Parsons, sec- sored by Irvin', Glass
ond .
Service.
Nutrition
Jessica
McGuire, first; Janelle
Customs &amp; ·Traditions
Parsons, second.
Rosette winners
Health and Safety Michaela
Folklore None given.
. Flannery, l'irst; Andrea
Trophy winner - Janelle Houck second.
Parsons for Decorated
Needlecrafts Krista
Cake. Trophy sponsored by Rocchi.
Red 's Rollen Garage.
,Sewing
Eli zahet h
Thompson.
Customs &amp; Traditions
Weaving or Macrame Rosette winners
Samantha Graham. fir st:
Calyssa Kimberly Hurt , second:
Folklore
Mayes,
first;
Janelle Kayla Purdum. third .
.
Parsons, second .
Hooked Rug, Knitting or
Needlecrafts -Jessica Crocheting
Kayla
McGuire.
Purdum.
Sewing
Jessica
Trophy winner - Andrea
McGuire, first; Janelle Houck for Folklore. Trophy
Parsons, second .
sponsored by Red's .Rollen
Garage.
·
Weaving or Macrame Janelle Parsons.
Hooked Rug, Knitting or
Girl Scout Program
·crocheting - None given.
Rosette winners
Trophy winner - Janelle
Girl Scout Hi story or
Hi story
Parsons
for
Fol.klore . Women's
by Michaela Flannery.
Trophy
sponsored
Corbin &amp; Snyder Furniture.
K~yla
Heritage
Purdum.
Photography - Michaela
Girl Scout Program
Rosette winners
Flannery, first: Andrea
Girl Scout History or Houck, second .
Women's History - Jessica
Invention,
Science
McGuire .
Project, Career Exploration
Jesska - None given.
Heritage
McGuire. first; Wendy
Krista
Recyclin g Wade, second.
Rocchi.
Photogr:iphy - Janelle
Troop Activity/Community
Parsons.
Service - Kayla Purdum .
Trophy winner - Kayla
Invention.
Science
Project. Career Exploration Purdum
for
Heritage .
- Jessica McGuire.
by
Trophy
sponsored
Recycling
Jessica McDonald 's of Gallipolis
and Rio Grande.
McGuire.
Troop Activity/Community
Service- Jessica McGuire.
The Arts
Trophy winner -. Jessica
Rosette winners
String, Wire, Yarn Art or
McGuire for Animal Care
Trophy
sponsored .by Jewelry -Andrea Houck.
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings
Collage, Mosaic, Mobile
Co.
or Sculpture -Jill Carroll.
first; Michaela Flannery,
The Arts
second; Kayl a Purdum ,
third; Krista Rocchi, fourth.
Rosette winners
Creative Writing
String. Wire, Yarn Art or
Jewelry - Danielle Mayo.
Krista Rocchi.
Collage, Mosaic, Mobile
Puppetry, Toy or Game or Sculpture - Cinnamon Michaela Flannery.
Broyles, first; Hannah
Painting
Michaela
Graham, second.
Flannery.
Creative Writing
Trophy
winner
Bergan Koch.
Michaela Flannery for
Puppetry, Toy or Game Puppetry. Trophy sponsored
Jessica McGuire.
by Ohio Valley Bank.
Painting Cinnamon
Broyles, first ; Monica
Nature
Broyles, second; Jessica
Rosette winners
Camping or Out of Doors
McGuire. third; Janelle
Experience ·Parsons, fourth.
Michaela
Trophy winner- Hannah Flannery, first; Samantha
Graham for Sculpture. Graham, second; Kayla
Trophy
sponsored
by Purdum, third.
Animal Care - Michaela
McDonald's of Gallipolis
and Rio Grande.
Flannery.
Nature
Rosette winners
Camping or Out of Doors
Experience- None given.
Animal Care - Molly
Carroll. first;
Jessica
·
McGuire, second.
Outdoor Project or Nature
Collection
Jessica
McGuire.
Small Carpentry
Jessica McGuire.
Mis cellaneous Craft/Art
Project - Jessica McGuire,
first; Karen Vanco, second.
Trophy winner -Molly
Carroll for Animal Care.
Trophy
sponsored
by
Criown Excavating and
Stone Yard.
Judges Choice Trophy Jessica
McGui re
for
Painting. Trophy sponsored
bv Central Supply Co.
-Best Girl Scout-Related
Trophy - Jessi ca McGuire
for Girl Seoul History.
Trophy
sponsored
by
Michael and' Friends Hair
Care.

Outdoor Project or Nature
Collection
Kri&gt;la
Rocchi.
Small Carpentry
Michaela Flannery, first;
Andrea Houck. second.
Miscellaneous Craft/An
Project
Michaela
Flannery.
Trophy
w1nner
Michaela Flannery for
Activities
throu gh
. Camping.
Judges Choice Trophy Kayla Purdum for Hooked
Rug . Trophy sponsored by
Siders Jewelers.
Best Girl Scout -Related
Trophy - Kayla Purdum
for Activities through
Camping. Trophy sponsored by Crown Excavating
and Stone Yard.

The Arts
Rosette .winners
String, Wire, Yarn Art or
Jewe lry - None given.
'
Collage. Mmaic , Mobile
or Sculpture - Racha.elFraser. first: Crystal Wade.
Life Skills
second.
Rosette winners
Creative Writing- None.
Decorated Cakes
give n.
Rachael Fraser.
Puppetry. Toy or Game Cookies and Candy
. None given.
Rachael Fraser:
Painting - None given.
Baked
Miscellaneous
Trophy winners - Rachael
G.o ods- None.given.
Fraser for Sculpture, trophy
Nutrition - None given.
sponsored by Graham's
Health and Safety Upholstery: Crystal Wade for
None given .
Sculpture. trophy sponsored
Trophy
winner
l;&gt;y K&amp; L Catering.
Rachael Fraser for Deorated
Cake. Trophy sponsored by
Nature
Graham's Upholste ry.
Rosette winners
Camping or Out of Doors
Customs &amp; Traditions
Experience- None given .
Rosette winners
Animal Care - None
Folklore- Crystal Wade . gi\'Cn.
Needlecrafts None · Outdoor Project or Nature
given.
Collection- None given.
Sewing- None given .
Small Carpentry - None
Wea'ving or Macrame - .. given.
Rachacl Fraser.
Mi scellaneous Craft/ Art
Hooked Rug, Knitting or Project- Crystal Wade .
Crocheting - None given.
Trophy winner - Crystal
Trophy
winner
Wade for Mi sce llaneous
Trophy moved to the Arts Craft. Trophy sponsored by
Graham's Upholstery.
category.

Senior

O'BJeness Memorial Hospital's
Resident Physicians offer
comprehensive family medical care
(or newborn to elderly patients.
Cynt11la McGowan. D.O.

Jtr~nifer

New location 444 West Union St.
Suite E • Athens, Ohio

Sr:tedlo...t!, D.O.

Junior
Life Skills
Rosette winners
Decorated Cakes
Samantha Graham, firsl:
Andrea Houck. second ;
Elizabeth Thompson. third.
Cookies or Candy Krista Rocchi.
Miscellaneous
Baked
Goods
Michael a
Flannery. first; , Krista
Rocchi , second.
Michaela
Nutrition Flannery. first: Kimberly
Hurt, second.
Health and Safety
Michaela Flannery.
Tropby
winner
Michaela Flannery for ·

Girl Scout Program
Rosette winners
Girl Seoul History or
Women 's History - None
give n.
Heritage - None given.
Photography None
give n.
Inven tion,
Science
Project. Career Exploration
-None given.
Recycling Crystal
Wade.
·
Troop Activity/Community
Sen ice- None given.
Trophy winner- Crystal
Wade for Recycling. Trophy:
spon,ored by Graham's
Uphobtery. ·

Open Monday - Friday

8 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Call (740) 566-~925
for an appointment.

..

Same day appointments available.

Ann.J Wright. 0.0

Wade 1&lt;1-lll!r, D.O.

www.OblenessHealthSystem.org

�iunba~ limes -ienttnel

PageC4

CELEBRATIONS

iunba, uti me~ -ientinel

Sunday, August 6, 2006

ON ·T HE BOOKSHELF

'·
·- 1'\

'"""'~ '

Chester and Emma Workman
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Tawney

GALLIPOLIS- On Saturday evening. July I , 2006, at
4:30 p.m. in a beautiful outdoor ceremony at Bob Evans
Farm in Rio Grande. Amy Elizabeth Parsons and Lawrence
Michael Tawney were united in marriage. The double rihg
ceremony was performed by the Rev. Michael Lynn.
The bride is the daughter of Jeff Parsons of Chtllicothe
and Leona Purson' of Oak Hill. The groom is the son of
Lawrence and Edna Tawney of Gallipolis.
Given in marriage by her father, Am~ chose for her day
a .white dress feat uring an eyelet trommed halter-style
bodice and chiffon overlav skirt. She wore .a shoulder·
len~th
veil and carried a cascading bouquet
of silk daisies,
b
.
yellow roses and ivy.
Sister of the bride, Jaimee Chaffin, served as maid of
honor. Bridesmaids were Randi Tawney and Andrea
Tawney, daughters of the groom. Tfieir dresses were floorlength yellow chiffon with matching scarves. They carried
bouquets of silk daisies, roses and ivy.
·
Flower girls were Payton Holsinger and Jaydyn Chaffin,
nieces oJ the bride. Their dresses were ballerina-length
while halter-style dresses with a chiffon overlay skirt featuring a yellow satin ribbon accent at the waist and a mini·
attached train . They wore daisy accents in their hair and
carried white sat in baskets of dai sies.
The groom was attired in a black suit . Serving as best
man was Bill Tawney, cousi n of the groom. Groomsmen
were Brian Keaton and Sam Davis. They wore white shirts,
black pants and tie. Ring bearer was Ethan Meadows,
nephew of the bride. He wore a black tux and carried a
white ring pillow with daisy accent,. ·
A reception was held immediately following the ceremony at the Elks Farm on State Route 588.
.
Amy and Mike wish to thank everyone who shared in
the joining of their lives together and for making their day
so special.

WORKMAN
ANNIVERSARY
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Chester and Emma L.
Workman of 117 South Park Drive in Point Pleasant, will
celebrate their anniversary at home.
This marriage has stood the test of time and continues
today. They were married Aug. 6, · 1938, in Gallipolis.
These 68 yems of marriage are a testament to the power of
love, trust and commitment.
. They have one son, Chester "Buddy" (Earlene); four
grandsons, Tim (S usan), David (Peggy), Mark (Penny), and
Stephen (Laura); 10 great·grand.children; and four great·
great -grandchildren.
Chester and Emma are active with church, home, pets,
flowers and gardens. Chester retired from Dravo Mechling
as chief engineer in 1985.

SMITH-EVANS
ENGAGEMENT
RACINE - Kenda Lynn Smith and James Allen "Jamie"
Evans announce their engagement and approaching maniage.
The bride-elect is the daughter of Becky Harris Dudding
of Racine and Terry Smith of Racine. She is currently
employed as the manager of Cremeens Funeral Home of
Racine, and Evans Lawn Care LLC, Racine.
The groom-to-be is the son of Gary D. "Denny" and
Linda Evans of Portland. He is self-employed as owner of
.
Evans Lawn Care LLC, Racine.
The wedding ceremony. is set for 5:30 p.m. Saturday,
Aug. 19, 2006, at the Community of Christ, (Lebanon
Township), Racine. Pastor Larry Fisher and Pastor Jim
Proffitt will be officiating and a reception will be held at
McCoy's Inn and Conference Center, Ripley, W.Va., imme·
diately following the ceremony.
·
·

Bv SUZETTE LABOY

Submlltod photo

In honor of Breastfeeding Awareness Week, observed Aug. 1-7, Cheryl Frazier, RN, IBCLC ,
lactation consultant at Holzer Medical Center's Maternity and Family Center. presents
Melody Shupe of Bossard Memorial Library with the children's book, Mommy Breastfeeds
Our Baby, as an addition to their library collection. For more information about breastfeed '
ing, contact Frazier at 446-5030.

READ MORE ABOUT IT

Library has more on steamboat history

Miami Beach backdrop
where skin is always in.
"Swimwear has evolved
into pieces that me really
good for layering ," said
Robert Verdi, host of the
Style Network's Fashion
Police and a spokesman for
Sunglass Hut.
At the Rosa Cha show, for
example, some of the pieces
looked like they'd be more
at home on the soccer field
than on the sand, though
they still incorporated sexy,
lingerie-like
touches.
Embroidery adorned a pair
of boy shorts and a hint of
lace lined some sporty
cover-ups.· .
Verdi said some of the
styles reminded him of the
1940s. That is "something
we have not seen in a long
time," he said.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MIAMI BEACH , Fla. -

Dare to wear this swi111wear

RANDOLPH
ANNIVERSARY

WOOD
ANNIVERSARY

'

SWimwear that goes
beyond the beach

Rev. and Mrs. Curtis Randolph

Ivan and Evelyn Wood

,

Jamie Evans and Kenda Smltb

HILLSBORO- The Rev. and Mrs. Curtis Randolph (the
former Ada Bissell) of 3989 State Route 247, Hillsboro,
will be celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary with a
reception on Saturday, Aug. 26, 2006, from 2 to 5 p.m. at
The. Church of the Nazarene, 8320 U.S.50 East, Hillsboro.
The Randol phs were married at Long Bottom on Aug. 30,
1956, by Revs. Edward Griffith and Freeland Norris. They
pastored Churches of the Nazarene since 1969 at Leipsic.
Kennard, Spencerville and New Hampshire, until their
retirement in 2002.
They currently serve as visitation pastor for the Hillsboro
Nazarene Church.

anywhere.
Think . high-waisted boy
shorts that can go from
beach to bar. Soccerinspired athletic pieces or
sailor-style tanks that can
double as cocktail-hour
corsets.
Of course, plenty of traditional tiny bikinis and
revealing one-pieces also
\vere on display this month
during the second annual
Miami Sunglass Hut S\)'im
Shows, showcasing 2007
cruise and beach wear. But
it was the pieces offering a
bit more coverage and versatility that stood out ~specially
against the

Wedding Bands tDfl
. Plain- Carved
Diamond

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CHESTER- Ivan and Evelyn Wood recently celebrated
tht!ir 50th wedding anniversary along with their children
and gra ndchildren .
They were married Aug. II , 1956, in Pomeroy by Pastor
Roger Bishop. Wood retired from the (AEP) Ohio Power in
1992 : his wife from the Kroger Co. in 1992.
They are the pmcnts of four children. Keith (Julia) Wood,
Bonnie (Gary) Warner, Rodney Wood and Lora (Jim) Bing;
and eight grandchildren. Jason and Andrea Warner,
Chelsey, Jordan and Olivia Wood, and Amanda, Lindsay
and Jonathan Wolfe. ·

_

i

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. . fi etlA&lt;ilvanc&lt;"lf
( APRN-C). hu.'
ined

s1.aff of Ohio Vulley PhysicianS. 420

BriU~e Plaz.a, Gallipn!is.
S he is a 2006 graduat~ of Mars hnll University i11
the MH~h.':r of ScierKe in Nursing. F~unily Nllrse
Pm(:titi o ner J MSN . FRP) clas s. She oi:Jtaim:lllll·r
nur5e p1:uctitioncr cet1iti cntion rhrougti the

Amcricm1 Nurse Crt-denti.aling Ct:ntcr. In

gles i&amp;ul"o l'l!' rlilicd

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a critical cart! RN . ;md is a

·m ember of AAC'N.
She n1HI her lw sba nd Jo hn and twn ,s&lt;lt1~ •. kmalhan
Hn(t Elijah. res ide at PulriuL and lJIIend Northup

Baptbt C hu rch.

•

See Sunday Puzzle on 20
•

The arrival of the
Mississippi Queen into
Gallipolis allowed us to look
at our community through
the eyes of a visitor - and
brought many of those visitors to our public library.
Bossard Library is one of
the largest public libraries
along the Southern Ohio
· River. Its genealogy and rare
book collection ·is unsurpassed in the area. Its audio
book collection is larger than
most. The availability of
computers and Internet and
e-mail, though not unique
for Ohio, is one of the lmger
selections. The library is one
of the few which offers wireless access for personal laptops or PDAs. The library is
within an easy walking tour
of the river park front.
Newspapers from the surrounding meas provide visitors with a sense of the comm'unities around us. Library
employees are more than
welcome to provide 4uick
tours of the library and its
collections. Reference staff
me available to answer questions posed by - and about
- our visitors. Information
about the Mississippi Queen
- and the companion boats
American Queen and Delta
Queen -is available on the
Web
site,
www.deltaqueen.com. The
Web site provides schedules
and fares for the ·various
trips. Another Web site,
www.lcruise .com/deltaque- ·
enlboatmq.htm, shows pic·
tures and floor plans of the
rooms.
Statistics
on
the
Mississippi Queen show it is
382 feet with 208 staterooms. Statistics on the popular Delta Queen show it is
285 feet with only 87 staterooms . The book Steamboat
Legacy: The Life 011d 1imes
of a Steamboat Family, is
based on 43 years of diaries
of Mary Loui se Miller
Heckmann, the wife of a
steamboat captain who navigated the Missouri River.
Stemwheelers On the
Great Kanawha River is full
of photographs, receipts ,
maps and hi story showing
the activity in the Gallipolis
mfa. Bossard Library has
several books on the Delta
Queen, including a fictionalized book written in 1960,
Delta Queen. The Story Of cr
·Steamboat. Our younger
readers can learn about the
life of John Fitch, the inventor of the steamboat in John
Fitch, Steamboat Boy.
Edna Ferber's Showboat
can be borrowed from another library through the statewide cooperative MORE.
Bossard Library's rare book

Betty
Clarkson

section holds a book called
River Steamboats and
Steamboat Men, a history as ·
.well as other titles which
provide a wealth of hi story
of riverboat travel.
On a lighter riote, the
book Steamboat In a
Camfield tells the true story,
written in an entertaining
poetic fashion, of a steamboat which ran aground in
the Ohio River north of
Gallipolis. Books by Samuel
Clemens as Mark.Twain are
the most widely known stories wh,ich highlight river
life. Readers can find more
titles, by theme, plot or character, with description and
reading level, in Novelist, an
on-line database accessible
'
through OPLIN.
Bossard Library also
owns a series of book s
called "WhM Do I Read
Next," which indexes current books published each

Sunday,August6,2oo6

Stephen King reflects about craft of writing

HMC DONATES VOLUME

PARSONSTAWNEY
WEDDI.NG

PageCs

year by subject, theme , geographic location, character
and character's occupation.
Library employees are
available to help guide the .
reader's semch. Whatever
the subject, theme or geo·
graphic location of interest,
the· Dr. Samuel L. Bossard
Memorial Library can help
find a variety of materials to
feed your interest. It's your
public library -a place
where learning grows.
(Betty Clarkson is the
Director of tire Dr. Samuel L
Bossard Memorial Library.
7 Spruce St., Gallipolis. The
library is open Monday
through Friday from 8 a.m.
to 9 p.m.; Saturday from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m.; and Sunday
from 1 to 6 p.m. Plume: 446READ Fax: 446-1701. Web
site: www.bossard.lib.olws.)

(In Writing: A Memoir of
the Craft is an unusual book
for Stephen King . It was
begun before his near-fatal
accident in 1999, and finish·
ing it served as therapy durBeverly
ing his recovery.
· The book, like Gaul, is
Gettles
divided into three parts. The
first tells of his childhood
and hi s early . interest in
writing . The second part
gives very succinct .advice shoulder blades."
on how to write fiction,
He began to write stories at
what to leave out, how to a very early age and was an
interest the READER . The avid reader. He stresses that
third section is about being ANYONE who wants to
struck· by a van while walk· write must also read. read,
ing along a rural road in read as much to find out what
Maine. having his leg NOT to do as what to do.
rebui lt and hi s long recuperKing met his wife in co lation, which included bouts lege, and he is filled with
of depression.
high praise for her support
Stephen King 's father left and influence. She is his
when he was 2, abandoning most trusted critic . She
also his mother and older pulled Carrie, his first
brother to a hard-scrabble novel , from the trash and
life. He says he lived "an told him she thought he had
odd, herky-jerky childhood, . a good story there. They are
raised by a single parent who still married and have three
moved mound a lot. " He children.
tell s of the terrifying experiKing advises writers to
ence of having his eardrums use adverbs sparingly. It is
pierced due to ear infections. all about the story. Don't
He says you know ,when a waste the , reader's time
doctor says this will "pinch a describing characters and
little" that you me in for scenes in extreme detail. He
some horrible pain.
does not · concentrate on
King relates the story of a · what his characters are
babvsitter who locked him wearing. He says if he
in the closet where he vom- wa·nt s to know about
ited all over his mother 's clothes, he' ll read a J. Crew
shoes. He missed nemly the catalogue. This all seems
entire first grade due to ill- very good advice. He is
ness. Finding himself with- encouraging while being
out bathroom facilities dur- quite honest about bad writ·
ing a walk in the woods, the ing . He added a li st of books
brother advised him tq wipe which have entertained him.
his behind on leaves. He dtd. Lots of mysteries there, but
some
Cormac
and it was poison ivy. He also
says he was bright red "from McCarthy. John Irving and
the backs of my knees t.o my Annie Proulx, some of my

favorite ~.

If you are co nsidering
writing fiction. you should
consult this . Wonder if they
use it in any creative writing
courses?
Love
and
Orher
Impossible Pur.w it s by
Ayelet Waldman is a novel
about a grieving young
mother (her baby daughter
has died of SIDS). struggling to cope with a bright
and difficult little ste pson
named William . Hi s mother,
a obstetrician, is still angry
about her divorce from Jack
and being replaced by
Emilia . Emilia struggle s to
like the boy, who thinks he
is
lactose
intolerant
(prompted by his mother),
and must always ride in a
booster seat. even when it is
nearly impossible to hail a
cab while Emilia is carrying
the awkward th ing.
The little famil y lives on
the . Upper West Side, and
Central Park is Emilia's
special escape . She tftkes
William there. where they
become lost and he pani cs.
He te ll s his mother every
mistake poor Emilia makes.
which does not further
endear him to her.
William has unceasing
. quc.stions, asks con stantly
about nis dead &gt;ister.. a~d
ge nerally makes Emtlta s
life miserab le . It is only
when she faces losing hill'
husband and her ltttle son
that she d1scovers how
much she truly mtsscs hrm
and loves hiQ1.
Written with honesty and
,humor, this novel gives us a
hint of how .difficult stepparenting .can be, for both
the child and the stepmother.

'End in Tears' eamsRendell fans' cheers
BY MARY CAMPBELL .

crafts a theme and varia- gone together to Frankfurt,
Germany. ·
Detective
tions for orchestra.
Two young women have Inspector Mike Burden
"End in Tears," By Ruth . been murdered three weeks thinks the trip was about
Rendell.
Crown, 323
apart. They men't of the drugs. Wexford thinks it
Pages. $25.
same class but they knew was probably something
After writing some dark, each other. And they had else.
disturbing · psychological
novels, could Ruth Rendell
return to write another
straightforwmd police procedural?
The answer is a resounding "yes."
But "End in Tears,"
another in her series featuring Chief Inspector Reg
Wexford ·
in
Kingsmarkham, England,
isn't an ordinary police
II you've bean taking at teaat 1500mg SBB lr you quality:
procedural because Rendell
ol Metlonnln (Giucophag~llor the last
writes beautifully. And she
2 months or more, you may be eligible o 18·80 years old
constructs her plot as effecto participate in a clinical research study o Diagnosed with Type2 ,J,• '""
tively as a great composer
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�Page C6 • &amp;unbap 'Orfmtti·&amp;tntiml

Sunday,August6,2oo6

Pomeroy • MiddJeport • Gallipolis

•

Dl

INSIDE
Down on the Farm, Page 02
Gallla County Fair Scenes, Page D6

GALLIA COUNTY JUNIOR FAIR

Sunday, August 6, 2006

Travel &amp; Destinations

Classic Olpe Cod
Beaches, nzini-golf, ice ere ant, sunsets
Bv SAMANTHA
CRITCHELL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

First place winners In Pretty Baby Contest

BABY (ON'I'EST
WINNERS NAMED
GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis Jr. Women's Club
has announced the winners
of the 2006 Prelly Baby
Contest on Friday at the
Gallia Cotmty Junior Fair:
0-3 Month Girls
.Gianna Johnson. first:
Hay lee Fitch, '\ second:
Abigaii 'Skeen. third.
0-3 M0nth Boys - lace
Bryan. first: Joshua Taylor.
second; Dylan Keefer, third.
4-6 Month Girls
Gracelynn Reynolds. tirst;
Brooklyn Jones. sewnd:
Zamara B&lt;lrden. third.
4-6 Month Boy s
Matthew Av~ry Gordon.
first; Brooks Tuff Keefer.
second; Reid Shafer. third.
7-9 ~ Month Girl s
first:
'Londyn
Tipton.
Aniyha Johnson, second:
Lindsev Wells. third.
7-9 · Month Boys
Jonathan Watson, first;
Colton Williams, second;
Elominick Young, third.
I 0-12 Month Girls Addisnn Glassburn , first:
Braik · ~athburn , second;

Bruoklynn Bryant. third,
I 0-12 Month Boy s Rylie Wolfe. first: Marshall
Evans , second; DaCoda
Griggs, third.
13-15 Month Girls Jacquelyn Harrison. first:
Dafney Clary, second: Kylie.
Birchfield. third.
13-1 5 Month Boys Mason Browning, first:
Kavyn Goad, second; Kory
Smith , third.
16-19 Month Girls Abigail Beaver, first; Micah
. Hu~hes. second: Laura
. Don1inguez, third.
16- 19 Month Boys Waylon Husk, tirst; Dawson
Saunders, second: Gage
Reece, third.
20-23 Month Girls Katy Cox, firM; Krista
Powell. · second; Taylor,
Fitch, third.
20-23 Month Boys Brady Fitch and Aiden .
Greene , tied for first: Galen
Bevan, second; Taylor
Warren, third.
2- Year-Old Girls - Asia
Griffin, first; Skyler Houck,

second; Kelsey Price. third.
2-Year-Old Boys
Isaiah Colley, first; Garrett
Burns, second ; Nolan
Johnson. third.
3- Year-Old Girls
Liberty North anu Melody
Donnett. tied for first;
Madelyn Moore, second;
Emma Shamblin. third.
3-Year-Old Boys - Isaac
Harold. tirst: Colin Mims,
second ; . Braiden Burnett.
third.
4- Year-Old Girls
Madalyn Jeffers, first; Abby
Childress arid Makayland
Evans. tied for second:
· Alexis Massie, third.
4- Year-Old Boys- Tyler
Roberts,
first;
Isaiah
Stinson. s!;'cond; Austin
Alban, third.
5- Year-Old Girls - Beth
Gilman, first: Jadelynn
Watson, second; Adrianna
Powell, third.
·. 5- Year~Old Buys - C.J.
Mayse·, ~ first; · Bryceton
Folden, second; Brady \'rice
and Nicholas Sheets. tied
for third. ·

Third place winners In Pretty Baby Contest

Keeping
,Gallia,,, Meigs .
. &amp; Masor.r •.:

informed

Gallia • 448-2342
Meigs " 992'2155

MaSQil. • ~75-13~ , :

'

. . .: . . '1

would like to welcome

RICHARD
NEAL
--Sales Consultant-Richard ha~ juinctl (&gt;til' top ~ale~!. pmfl'~Sinnal statT.
He has been in auto .;ale&gt; f•lr 6 112 year..
Stop jn 'md sec ~ichard for your autQmt.Jtivc -

, Sunday
Times-Sentinel

'

NORRIS NORTHUP DODGE

(740) 446-0842 or Toll Free: 800-446-0842
252 Upper River Rd. • Gallipolis, OH 45631

.

INTRODUCING
Be/tone

BELTONE RAISES THE BAR FOR BETIER HEARING IN NOISE!
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Wednesday AII!IIISI 16th

·--.------·

EAST ORLEANS, Mass .
- Ice cream tram Sundae
School tastes good any time
of year and on every sort of
occasion .
. Sundae School in East
Orleans, Mass., is one of the
must-stop joints on all my
trips to Cape Cod. Those
trips have occurred at the
height of the summer and
the onset of winter - and
most times in between. I
started visiting fhis hook of
land off Massachusetts'
southeastern shore when I
was a single college student
and my friends and I would
relax, go to the beach and
barbecue.
Now I go with my husband
and two daughters. We meet
up wifh friends, relax, go to
the beach and barbecue.
The beauty of a Cape Cod
trip is that it doesn't have to
change over the years. What
was fun then - the beaches,
the miniature golf, the fried
seafood - is fun now. Plus,
there's a feel-good sense of
wholesomeness fhat is rare in
a country full of theme parks
AP Photos
and mega-malls - neither of
· Patrons read the t~enu outside the Lobster Pot seafood restauwhich you'll find here.
And there are things to do rant. in Provincetown, Mass., on Cape Cod. Tuesday, June 13.
year-rouod. Of course,
drive-in?
Here's
your mated in 1986 and moved
choices are slimmer in the chance to recreate them. back from an eroding cliff in
offseason, but so are the
There's a dairy bar complete 1996. Visitors to the stillcrowds.
June
and with
burgers, ice cream and functioning Coast Guard
September are the happy
fl&lt;lats, a play- light can climb to the t9wer
root-beer
medium. The throngs of
tourists don't fully descend ground and a miniature golf and the observation deck fhat Isaiah Easley, 5, .of Hernando, Miss., runs along a path behind the Highland Light lightupon the Cape until schools course. Child-friendly films sits 120 feet above the ocean. house, in Truro, Mass., on Cape Cod, Monday. June 12.
are out (mid- to late June in often show up in the tirst of From this point. there's nothmost of New England), and the double-feature slots each ing between you and the Cape requires little more
the air and water tempera- night, with a tilm for more Portugal across the Atlantic . . than lemon for the fish and a
tures usually are the same in mature audiences afterward. There's also an "interpretive side dish of corn on the coh.
• Cobie's Clam Shack .in
September, in the high 60s. By day, the grounds fre- room," which offers a video
tracing
the
rich
history
of
the
quent!
y
host
Ilea
markets
Brewster. This is a '"joint," or
• &lt;;APE COD: http;;;www.capecodchamber.orgj or
For Cape Cod. where the
· ·
lighthouse, which has sur- as fhe owners call it, a shack,
888-332-2732.
water only hits the low 70s and art shows.
• Miniature golf courses. vived many hurricanes and if there ever was one. It 's not
in the middle 9f August and
• SUNDAE SCHOOL: 210 Main St., East Orleans;
fancy. the food .· is not
the air is only slightly Tons of them. Sure. there are shipwrecks .
http://www.sundaeschool.com or 508-255-5473.
• Art in Provincetown. gouflllet, yet I've never made
warmer, September weather serious golf courses on the
• CAPE COD HIGHLAND LIGHTHOUSE: Truro;
Provincetown
mixes kitsch a trip to the Cape without a
Cape
the
Ocean
Edge
· is pretty close to ideal.
http:/ /www.llghthouse.cc/highland/index.html or 508I've mostly explored the Resort in Brewster comes to at five-and-dime stores and pit stop here for a good juicy
487-1121. Open daily, mid-May to mid-October, 10
area known as the Lower mind - but for the more fine art, ranging from pho' burger, crispy-yet-slightly
a.m.-5:30 p.m. Admission: $4. Children must be 51
and Outer Cape, though casual vacationer, miniature tography to paintings, at greasy fries and a milkshake.
Inches tall to climb Highland Light.
• Cape Cod Baseball
surely many similar attrac- golf will do. It's an activity neighboring galleries. By
• WELLFLEET DRIVE•IN:
amateur
tions are to be found on the that takes about an ·hour, standards on the mainland, League. This
http:/;www.wellfleetdrivein.com. ·
perfect to till in the gaps both can be purchased at rei, league, established in 1885,
Upper arid Mid-Cape.
• GOLF: Ocean Edge Resort in Brewster Things not to be missed .. between a beach day and ative bargains, and the offer- shows off baseball in that
http;/fwww;oceanedge.com - for real golf; Pirate's
wholesome, idyllic way that
no matter which demo- dinner, or between dinner ings appeal to all tastes.
Cove
in South Yarmouth - http:/;www.piratescove.net .
• Roadside seafood stands. reminds you why it's
and bedtime. Kids and
graphic you belong to:
and
Cape Escape in Orleans - http:/ /www.capeco• A sunset at any of the adults can both play the There are plenty of restau- · America's favorite pastime. . drec.com/minlgolf/minigolf.html - for mini-goli.
western-facing Cape Cod game, and there's room for rants, but if your accommo- The games, which move
• PROVINCETOWN: http://www.provincetown.com.
-'
Bay beaches. Cape Cod is all skill levels. Pirate's Cove dations have a kitchen, from town to town, are
•
COBlE'S
CLAM
SHACK:
3260
Main
St.,
Brewster;
separated from fhe rest of the in South Yarmouth and Cape there's nofhing better than played by people who are on
http://www.cobles.com or 508-896-7021.
state by the world's widest Escape in Orleans stand out the fresh seafood you can the field because · they love
·
• CAPE COD BASEBALL LEAGUE:
cook yourself. The day's the game, not because
sea-level canal - it's 480 for their creative courses.
http:/ /www.capecodbaseball.org. •
• Cape Cod Highland menu largely depends on the they're being paid millions.
feet wide- so there's a sig• CAPE COD NATIONAL SEASHORE:
day·
~
catch.
Vacationers
in
Truro.
The crowd- a mix oflocals
nificant pink-purple horizon Lighthouse
http:/
;www. nps.gov;caco.
Originally built in 1797, the won't want to shop for a lot and tourists - is enthusiasfor the sun to dip behind.
• foiiCKERSON STATE PARK: Brewster;
• The Wellfleet Drive-In Highland Lighthouse is the of spices and condiments, tic. The food is supplied by
http;/
;www.mass.gov;dcr;parksjsoutheastjnick.htm.
but
the
good
news
is
that
a·
one
organization
or
another
Movie Theater. Remember tallest on the Cape. It was
the sce'nes in "Grease" at the reconstructed in 1857. auto- great home-cooked meal on trying to make a few bucks.

If You Go ...

We wouldn't ask you to do anything ...

We had not done ourselves I
In honor of World Breastfeeding Awareness Week, August I thro 7

Owen M. Young

r' · ~

Maternity &amp; .

farnil!:i Center

Hearing Aid Center
1312 .Easlem Ave.. lallilaiiS. DH

.........

Just a few of the OB nursing
staff at Holzer Health Systems
who breastfed their children.

�~

iunba~ Ql:tmes ·itntinel

GALLIPOLIS- Judging
results from the Gallia
County Junior Fair include:
FFA
WoodworkingNovice ( 13 and younger) Samantha Northup, first.
FFA
WoodworkingNovice ( 14 and older) Travis Roush. first: James
Montgomery, second.
FFA
WoodworkingTntermediate
Curiis
Waugh. first; Craig Romine,
second; .Brad Davie~, third.
. Shooting Sports - Jacob
Elberfeld. first; Jonathan
VanMeter,
second;
Lawrence
Wedemeyer,
third.
Welding-Novice ( 13 and
under) - Seth James, first;
Joshua Saunders, seco nd;
Cameron Scott, third.
Welding-Novice (14 and
older) Levi Stumbo,
first: Scott Ward, second.
Welding-Intermediate Jessica Willet, first; James
Montgomery, second.
FFA Welding - Jacob
Watson,
first;
Trent
Holcomb, second; Adam
Massie, third.
Exploring the Insect World
- Christian Leffingwell,
first; Alexis Henry, second;
Ethan Swain, third.
Ohio Birds - . Timothy
Huffman, first; Shelbie
Boyd, second; Amy Ours,
third.
· Gun Safety - Austin
Phillips. · first; .Jarrett
Martin , second;
Austin
Davies. Jackie Burns and
Jarred Northup, tie for third.
Play the Role - Sonja
Rankin, tirst.
Become a Puppeteer
Hali Burleson, first; Jeremy
Ward. second.
Set the Stage - Jeremy
Ward. first.
Bicycle
,AdventureBeginner. Amy Ours, first;
Abbey Loveday, second.
Bicycle
AdventureIntermediate
Daniel
Reed; first.
Discovering 4-H 1- Halie
Parsons, firs( Katie Bostic,
second; Tyler Cline, third.
. Discovering 4-H II -Josh
Slevins, first; TG Miller, second; Halie Parsons, third.
Discovering 4-H Ill Mykal Haner, first; Miranda
Hammond, second; Chance
Burleson, third.
. Rockets Away (Estes
Type) - Niles Elliott, first;
Tyler Stewart, second.
Radio Controlled Vehicles
-'- Kenny Martin, first;
Matthew Moore, second.
. Basic Bee Keeping
Amy Haffelt , first.
· Let' s
Explor~
the
Outdoors 1- Zach Stewart,
first; Sara Bailey, second:
Jarred Northup, third.
Archery
· Timothy
Huffman, first; Daniel Reed,

FARM

DOWN ON THE

Gallia County Junior Fair judging results
second; Brad Swisher, third.
Trapping Muskrats
Kayla Pope, first.
.
fishing-Beginners
-Mykal Haner, first: Jac k1c ,
Burns, second; Austin
Phillips, third.
Fishing-Intermediate Kenny Martin, first ; Tyler
Noble.
second:
Cody
Russell, third.
Woodworking- N ovicc
(ages 13 and younger) Jesse Edwards. first; Jacob
Gilmore. second: Jenson
Brumfield, third.
Woo.dworki ng-N ovice
(ages 14 and older) .·- .
Megan Wise. first; Patnck
Mulholand,
second ;
Michael Oliver. third.
Making the Cut- Briggs
Shoemaker, first; Will
Smith, second;
Brady
Brannen, third.
Nailing It \ogether Bryce Darst , first; Craig
James,
second: · Scott
Donnelly. third.
Finishing Up
Cody
Pullins, first. • ·
Exploring Energy
Savannah Forgey, first.
Exploring Animals
Madison Burns , fir.st;
Kennedy Nunn, second.
Exploring Me &amp; My
Home - Kimberly Hurt,
first; Miranda Hammond,
second; Hayley Bing, third.
Creative Writing-Junior
Alyssa Lucas, first;
Jenna
Rice,
second,
TChristine Dray and Sarah
Barr. tied for third.
Creative Writing-Se nior
- Johanna Jarvis. first;
Shay Crews and Ashley

Spencer, tied for second;
Ashley Miller. third.
Writing &amp; Reporting for
Teens - Ashley Spencer.
first.
Creative Arts-Junior (five
first place winners) - Ellie
Bostic. Christopher Gordon,
Janelle Parsons , Claudia
Skinuer
and
Nathan
Woodyard.
.
Creative Arts-Senior (five
first place winners) - Jon
Casto,
Kevin
Daines,
Dyanna Eggleton, Brittany
Hardway and Kari McFann.
Horseless Horse - Kayla
Franton,
first;
Adrian
Wothe, second; Stephen
·
Sprague, third.
The Normal AnimalVeterinary Science (Junior)
Kaci Shoemaker, first;
Haley Angel,
second;
Savannah Forgey. third.
Veterinary
Science
(Senior) (Animal Di'sease &amp;
Animal Health) - Kelsey
Huffman, first; Megan
Daines. second.
Electricity-Novice '(ages
13 and under) - Nathan
Woodvard, first; Chase
Simpson, second; Richard
Bowman, third. ·
Electricity-Novice (ages
14 and. over) - Timothy
Huffman, first.
Investigating Electricity
-· David Michael, first.
Entering Electronics .Craig James, first.
Lawncare -,Blake Arnott,
first; Amy Meeks, second!.
Crank It Up-Novice (ages
13 and under) - Drew
Shong,
tirst;
Andrew
Young, second.

Cows-Steady.
Well Muscled/Fleshed $50-$55; Medium/Lean $44-$49;
Thin/Light $1 0-$40; Bulls $60-$69.

Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pairs $725-$1 ,025; Bred Cows $425-$830;
Baby Calves $10-$285; Goats, $100-dn.; Lambs, $70;
Hogs, $40-$41.

Upcoming specials:
Fat cattle sale, 9 a.m. Wednesday, Aug. 9. Regular
auction at 10 a.m.
·
For more information, call Brad at (740) 584-4821 or
DeWayne at (740) 339-0241. Visit the Web site at
www.uproducers.com

BY HAL KNEEN

Are you planning to
reseed a lawn, hayfield or
pasture? Late summer·is the
best season in the year to
seed. The ~i I is normally
dry enough to prepare a
proper ~~edhed. Raking out
rocks a1id stkks is difficult
in wet spring conditions.
Warm soil temperatures
permit rapid root and shoot
growth, so the grass may be
well established before the
first killing frost. ·.
The grass root system will
continue
to
develop
through!,lut the fall months.
When the spring arrives the
grass plant can quickly produce additional tillers
(stems) to crowd out potential weed growth.
Start your new seeding,
hy taking a soil sample of
the area that needs to be
sown. Take a soil probe or
hand trowel and retrieVe I5
samples of soil approximately one inch· wide by
four to si~ inches deep per
one to 10-acre parcel. Mix
the soil together in a clean
container
and
label.
Remove 1-1/2 cups of soil
after it air dries. This can be
used as a representative
sample of the land parcel
you are intending to pl(lnt.
· Send the sample off to a
soil testing laboratory. Test
results will instruct you as to
the nutrient requirements

ACROSS

I Tutor
8 A httle ilisreputable
Bioi
16 Kind of Iiili or helmet
21 Oellate
22 Nonhero duck
23 Venomous snake·
24 A Marx brolher
25 Femme fatale
26 Bedouins

11

27 Held sway

28 u- showers .•
29 Unksitem
30 Tropical resin
31 FuJY
32 Oevllkin
34 Additicn word
~5 One ot the Seven
Dwarts
38 Chuckle .
' 40 On the house
41 You bet!
· 42 Tall grass
44 .River in France
45 S.P!&gt;ement
(wilh "OIJI")
47 Toll;ily
49 l.ealher
tor sharpering
52 Dirt
54 Chewed on

56

126 Chlmp'srousin
128 Ardent

132 Mineral

68 First light ol day

69 Japanese stalesman

70 Whitney or Wellach ·
71 Succulent plant
72
73lmpenedllower
74 Oomeslicaled .
76 EmotiOnal Slrain
78 Job
79 Road divislen
BO -French dep8rtmenl
81 -Arbor

82 Essential pan

to help you lmiM the home of your dreams.

83 Pack arimat

64 Quantity (abbr.)
65 Be in store lor
68Qnly

940fpper
95 Place
96 Tear doWn
97 Simon or Armstrong
98 - oflhe lard
99 One of the Gabors
100 Seasoning
102 Whey·laced
103Rayttower
104 Spanish cry
105 Sailing race

· 117 Snake
118 Com breac!
119 Simple toy (hyph.)
121 Brooksor Gibson
124 Desktop picture

Summ~

Fl.

89 Car with a meter
90 Cargo

114 Was OVeJfond
115 Zeta's follower

67 Servant

At Jim Walter Homes, we have expanJe,l our financing option•

•

h&lt;MJ l.Jol'l"l "'-kJI:'ll

•

(.Ill

•

f&lt;.)' (:-Jfl•Q ::'•On tiK. ~!ICf )'.· rtl, I fllitl l~&gt; •; ~ •IOC! IU U!a' l(J(l ,¥'1\!' j IT I'IH1Il1l
4 -71X'ii, ll !l W~ht&lt; lle :!'W-., l•w i"'' l ''f'l(l!'ll W~:r...- f;ll lf~ll l;e-!1

.,

__

,,_

Mondav t:hru , Friday
8:00 a.m. t:o 5:00 p.m.

r.'!!*!!!P~O~L~I~CI~E~S!!!!*~
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves

133 Aavanced degree .
134 Soon
135 Odor
139 F19&gt;!1ess bird
140 Charley horse
142 Root pari
144 Moby Dick. e.g.
145 Ofscald
147 Meoo &lt;IMlling
148 Think
149 Certain racer
150 Kitchen item
1Sl Mountain ridge

152 Aeries

153 Aquatic mammal
154 War horse

t Throws

2 Bay v.indow
3 See cye·to·oyo
4 Pool slick
5 Fann bird
6 Close
7 Put on 1t1e payroll
BFirst man
9 lnirmliy
Tlme periods (abbr.)
11 Sl&lt;inny animal
12 Annealed
13 Competent
14 Wralh
15 Low point
16 Place ol worship

10

17 Kood&lt;
1BDress in linery
19 Bacl&lt;bone

20 Conlains
30 Hole in a neede
31 Regret

33 Clras~ard
36 Clod of love
37 Energy

39 Cigar residue
40 Not veJY many
43 Clergyman
44 Coorch calel1dar
46 Aletter
46 Fond du491cy rain
so Data in rows and

'--- 127 Rowers

colUIMS

51 Batman's sidet&lt;ick

53 Poker slake
54 Fortitude
55 Sidestep
57 Ring
58 Un~ of lenglh
59 Oeslroy gradually
61 Beauty shop
62 Gear posrllon
64 Premature _
66 Most dm
fJl Make pulpy
68 Sard hill
72 Sticky fruit
73 Island near Java
75 - Spumanle
nJib .

129 "20,000 Leagues·

aulhor
130 Pi~ure
131 Tricked
· 134 Rara :...
136 Horse-drawn vehicle
137 If not

138 - ·do-well
141 Eraxrntered
143 Mimic
1« Apronoun

·145 Upperclassmen
(abbr.!
146 Feline .

1a t.ean

79 De - (sumptuous) .
82 Sulk
83labyrinlh

84 Come to be

----- -- - - - 1-------·--· '-·-"- -

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED
Now you can have borders and graphics
"-'
added to your classified ads
{I~
~
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graph ics 50¢ for smaU
$1 .00forlarge

Ad§

RaCine/Letart area. Family schedules. insurail ce avail -

7 puppies, Beagle/Boston pet- please call 304-988· able. uniforms provided. For
Terri er. LooK like Boston 9182
Terrier. (740)256-9256
Lost

Btack!Tan German
4yrs-old,
blooded, no papers. Call Sp illman
Rd
West
(740)742·2855.
Colu mtua
Needs heart-

6 month old Weimaran er, lull Shepherd.

ny loss or expans

worm Medicine. the
)
Beautiful week old female (
.
304 593 2297
kiity, unusual multi -c olored

a

ubllcatlon or oml
ion ot ah advertia
ent. Corrections wll
made In 1he. tlrs
vallable edition.

marking.
adorable.

0145.

lways conrldenllal.

»All Reel
dvertisements ar
ubj0&lt;11o 1he Fodera
air Housing Act

968.
)&gt;This
newspape
ccepts only hel
anted ads meelln

OE standards.
»We wilt not knowing
y accept any adver
isement In violatlo
f the law.
I~

i"J.:RSONALS

ey;·

1

rro

yARD SAu:

r

YiiRDSALE·

o

AHAMA grad Email
restoncash@yahoo.corn
m ortant.

interviews pick up applica·
lions at 65 Upper Ri'ler Rd.,
Gallipolis OH.
-~-----Carpellter wanted· only exp
person
need
apply

4\tl(,7~40::1_44~6~
·7..:.03:..:9_.- - - - ,

r

©I!D!.

·-----·

GALtJPOLIS

John Deere tractor model
212. Needs repair. (740)446- Huge Garage Sale Fri ./Sat.
8/11·9112, 8:00am· 2:00pm.
7738
Lots of name brand women,
Once unwanted and/or men, boys clothing sizes 6abandoned, rescued k1ttens 16(husky). Hewlett Packard
and adult cats need loving co mputer
sYstem
fully
humans. Spayed, neutered. updated. Many household
vaccinated .
Approved 1tems, furniture, Playstation
games
homes only. Cal1441·1647 . two/Gamecune
much more. 12 Vm\on
Perennial Cat Shelter
AvenUe. Rainlstline .

Current rate car
ppllea.

an

Liller
trained ,
Call (740)441-

Free Kittens Call (304)6753'795. They are Cute! !I

)&gt;Box number ads ar

:

GIVEAWAY

2yr ·aid Cat 112 Siamese. Jack Russell with leather Bu rger King of Gallipolis
declawed s. filled to gOod colla r. and fa)( ta gs_ Last now hiring all shifts.
home (304)675·2308
seen on
Bi2J06
near Cpmpetitive wages, lle)(ible

hat results from th

Moving sale Fridav Aug. r1 .
9·? @ 1136A St. At. 850.
RtJdney. NSw lg. mobi le out·
door stone fireplace. gator.
bike, wagOn, toys . .tent ,
Kenmore stoVe , shelves,
ridge vent. boys 2·3T, furni·
"Patches"
(pictured) lure, complete B/VV dark"Scooter" and "Leo" have all room set , misc.
been at the shelter for over 1
year. Please rescue them . Yard sale 310 Neighborhood
All 3 spayed and ne utered. Rd. Fri &amp; Sat. AUg 4th , 5th.
Bam·Spm. Cheap, ch 1ldrens
Pick up free Pallets at the
clothes.
Gallipol is OaUy Tribune ,
6
825 Third A've . in the
YARD SALE·
back of building.
Pi.PUASA~T
Small brown Male dog, good Annual Yard Scile Aug 4th &amp;
kids, w/collar (304)675- 5th. 9am-?. Crab Creek Ad.
7628
5th drive on left
Great
Items, ChEla Prices!

" • NO EXPER!E'~CE f~ECESSARY
' FULL·TIME CLMSES
• COL TRAIN!NG
' FINANCING AVAILABLE
• JOe PLJlCEMENT
' ENROLLING NOW

4:x4's For Sale .............................................. _
725
Announcement ............................................ 030

Antlques .................................................... ... 530
Apartments for Ren1 ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market .............................OBO
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ...................... :••. 780
Auto Repair .................................................. no
Autos for Sale .............................................. 710
Boats&amp;: Motors for Sale ................ ,............ 750
Building Supplles ............. :.........................:sso '
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Busln~os Opportunity ................................ 210
Business Tralnlng ....................................... 140
c,mpers &amp; Motor HoiTies ........................... 790
Camping Equlpmenl ................................... 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
ElectrlcaiiRetrlgeralion.,., ,...... ,................... 840
Equipment for Rent .....•.................•....... ...... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpmen1 ............................, ............. 610
Farms for Rent .............................................430
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
For Leasa ..................................................... 490
For Sale ........................................................585
For Sale or Trade .........................................590
Fruits &amp; Vagetables .....................................sso
Furnished Rooms ........................................450
General Haullng ........... ,...............................BSO
Glvoaway........................... :..........................040
Happy Ads................... :................................ 050
Hay &amp; Graln..................................................640
Hotp Wanted ................................................. 110
Homelmprovementa.... ............................... 810
Homos tor Sale ............................................ 310
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houses for Rant .......................................... 410
In Momortam ....................... :........................ 020
lnsuti,.,. ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Gordan Equlpment ........................ 660
Llvaatock..............................................,.......630
Lo.ot and Found ....:...................................... oeo
Loll &amp; Acreage ............: ..............................:350
Mlscettaneoua .............................................. 170
Miscellaneous Marchandlse......... ,,,,,,,,,, .... 540
. Mobile Homo Ropalr ....................................860
Mobile Homea for Rent ............................... 420
Moblla Homoa for Sale ................................ 320
Money. to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheolars ..........................740
Muotcallnatrumenta ................................... 570
P,raonala ...................................... ,.............. 005
Petalor Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heallng .................................... 820
Professional Sorvlcea ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Ropalr .... ,.......................... 180
Real Eltata Wantod ..................................... 380
Schoolalnatructlon ... .................................. 150
Seed, Plant &amp; Fortlllzar .............................. 650
Sltuotlonl Wanted ....................................... 120
Spacotor Ront ............................................. 460
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
SUV'tlor Sate ..............................................720
Trucks lor'S ala ............................................ 71 5
Upholotery ................................................... 870
Van1 For Sale ...............................................730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted 10 Buy- Farm Supplies .................. 820
wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Rant ....... :.................................... 470
Yard Sale- Galllpolla .................................... 072 .
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middlo ......................... 074
Yard Sat•Pt. Pleaoant ................................ 078

1110

110
1110
1
HFLP WA~TE!l ' ~.__".E.lJ'·'·"'·-\:·\·T·.ll_.J -·fu-:JJ'_W_AN_l'ED-,.1

HF.u•W,wrm

1.,.

i

Al!Cl10N AND

Fl.EA ~URIG;T

cross Creek Auction Buffalo
Auction Saturday 7prn . Little
Dave With Cakes anct Pies
Building is full as always. Air

conditioned

Site Trucks, CDL preferred ,
Pan
Operators,
Dozer
Operators. All operators
need !me grading minimum
2 years experience. Pay
comparable with e•perl·
ence. Please contact Patti
(740\388"9515 or preferably
fa)( resume to (7"40 )3 88·
9530 . EEO 'Employer.

ASSISTED LIVI~G
- G ALLIPOLIS-

tiotzer Assisted Living·
Gallipolis has Employment
Opportunities to r Full time,
Part lime and as need8d
Resident Assistants. Prefer
e)(perienced STNA, but not
required ~?lease app'y in
person or se nd resume to
anention: Diane Camden

AN, DON.
EOE.

Suzuki Motor Magic Years Day Care
Sports in Gallipolis is look· Center has substitute posii_ng for Certi fied &amp; quaUf1ed lion opened Send Resume
Mechanic~ . Must fu rriist"l to
201
High St. Pt.
resumes &amp; references 101 Pleasant.VN 25550
consideration. Othe r positions available . 4367 SR Now Hiring- Kitchen help. all
160, .Gallipolis. Ohio 45631 evenings, part-tim!! &amp; lull·
(7401446-2359
time, apply after ·4pm . D&amp;M
· Ptzza &amp; Sun, Syracuse, Oh.
Closed Fair Week till Fr iday
-------Ohio Valley Home Health.
Inc. h1ring tor Part Time and
Full Time CNA, STNA,
CHHI\. PCA. Competitive
Wages and Benefits including health in surance and
Mileage . Apply at 1480
Jackson Pike. Gallipolis or
2415 Jackson Av~:~nue. Point
Pleasant WV o,· phone toll
free t-866 ·441 -1 393 .
- - -- - - - Ohio Valley Home Health .
Inc. hiring for Full Time RN .
Full Time and Part Time

CNA, STNA. CHHA. PCA

Billing Clerk
TRACTOR-TAA\LEA
TRAINING CENTER$
WYTHEVILLE, VA

1-800-334-1203
Domino's Pizza Now Hiring
Safe
Dr1vers.
Point
Pleasant.
Gallipolis
&amp;
Ppmeroy locations Apply in

_P_ers_·o_n_ _ _ _ __

Opportunity
Holzer Sonier Care
Center IS lOoking lor a
full-time billi ng clerk.
Experience
with
Medicare and Med1ca1d
electronic billing is pleferred . Must be able to
work in a mul t Has~ position and have good com munication skills.

Jl interested please stop

Drivor
Flatbed
Owner Operators
•Avg. $1.77 gross· loaded
m1le
•Avg. $.38pm fuel
surcharge
•SSOO Orlentatlon Pay
•Insurance Available
•Flatbed Tffiiters Available
6 mo OTR exp. required
•Ask about our Dedicated
Runs

· 866-7t3-2na
No experience?
Call 800·913·2n8
www.malonecontractors.c
om
Drivers &amp; Owner
Operators· Home throlJgh
the wee K and all
weekendS! Leasel

by and see us at 380
Colonial Drive, Bidwell,
Ohio or give Teresa
Wilson, Business Office
Manager a call at
(740)446·5001

Wanted

·. "Notice of Position Vacancy"

Looking For a
New Career?

PLEASANT VALLEY

HOSPITAL

lnfoC1sion has beon·
offering stable positions
in tile Gallipolis area lor
over 5 years!

Pleasant Valley Hosp1ta l
Pnvate Duty is recr uit·
ing LPN '~ to r private
duty home r.a1 e cases
in Meigs Coun ty.
Excellent pay, flexible
scheduling and excei·
lent work 'environment
Fo r more
1nformalion call Trlna at
(304)675-7400 or
. 1 ~ 800·746·0076

Call for Conservative
Political Causes!
Secure your 2nd
Amandmen1 Right!
Equal Opportunity
Employer

We offer·
,;Paid Tra1r1ing
-.I Paid Vacatiors
-.I Paid Holidays
-/Weekly pay
-t Full benefits
..! Professional
environment

HEALTH .AIDES

SIGN ON BONUS Home
Hea lth Care of SE Ohio is
currently hiring home aidescompetitive wages. Ca ll

740·662·1222.

purchase prgm. 3yrs.
exp, Hilltop Trans.
Keith: 800•282 _1437

Building We
gladly accept Visa and -=~:..:..-'---­
MasterCard (3041937-2118
- 'n'n'r ~ 'n·h 'r ·:'n'c'r~
or (304)550·1616
"'r .bt ,, ,, Y.t
Stephen Reed ld 1639
~-'r -~'r ;\-

r

Rocksprings Rehabil itation
Center is looking lor dedicat- .
ed compassionate State
Te sted Nursing Assistants.
Competitive wages. health
and dental benefits and
401 K available . We take
pnde 1n our facrfily and resi·
dents an d ne ed great team
players to join us. If you have these qua!ilica!IOns ·please
We olfer a, COMPETITIVE·. apply
to
Rockspr ings
SALARY SCALE. an excel- RehabilitatiOn Ce nter, 36759 '
lent ben efi~ package and a Rocksprin gs
Road ,
supportive work en.-i ron · Poml;iroy. Oh10 45769.
rrcnt. Interested. candrdatAS Extehdir.a re ·
Health
should
·apply
to Ser'JICes. Inc .. IS an equal
Rockspr ings Reh&lt;JbilltcttiO'i opportunity emp loyer that
Center 36759 Rockspn'1gs encourages
workplace
Road.
Pomer oy.
Oh10 diversity. MIF D'V
45769. Extendicare Health
Serv1ces Inc. is an equal
opportunity employer thiit
encou rages
workp lace
Res Care/Middleton Estates
divers1ty. ~/F ON
wil l be hinng a full-tim e
Admtn1strative positron . Must
be proficient in Mi crosoft
aM
Excel.
Word
--~----­ Applications will be taken at
Wanted Experience Grill 8204 Ca rla Drive .. 8:00-4:00
Cooks an d Wait Staff. M- F.
Knickerbocll:ers
2407 Res Care. is an Equal
Jackson Ave. P! Pleasanl Opportuflity
Employer
304 _675 . 5706

;::::=====;;;;;...:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;·

free t -866·44 1·1393

58/hour + bonuses

HOME

Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Cemer provides residents
w1th outs tanding nurs1ng
care and rehabilitation service!'j helping them re1urn to a
lite of Independence at
home. We cu rrently have
opportunities for "RN's and
LPIIJ's at our facility located
in Pomeroy. Ohro.

and Per Di em OT. ST.,
Accepting appl_ica tions for
LPN's. Competrtive Wages
and
BenefitS
mcl u?mg
health
msurance
and
Mileage. App ly at 1480
F/M1D/V.
Jackson Prk~, GallipoliS or
2415 Jac~son Avem.le. Po1 nt - - - - - - - Pleasa nt, WV 01 phone toll
Help Wanted
Help

tiolzer Senior Care
Cenler

ALLIANCE

w

CLASSIFIED INDEX

I-laPWo\I'&gt;TED

Heavy ·Equipment Operator. Kawasaki

___

he first Insertion. W
halt no1 be liable to

1 : 00 p : n1 .
Pap•r

t,_o_lli:J_·_y_~_·Al·Nl-·E_D.I t10

tr.o.,uND.AN·D-·...I ..

Today 1·866·290·7373

eglster will b
espon51ble. for n
ore than the cost o
he space occuple
y the error and onl

r

I

1•~-~:~~':,~;'.

o

Buelne•• D•v• Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dl,.plav; 1:00 •..;:::: ...
Thur•day for Sunday•

• All ads must be prepaid•

r ANNOUNt~f}:NfS ,.t_...
r

ad at any time.
Errors Must B
eported on the firs
ay o1 publication an
he Tribune-Sentinel

\\\lit\( I \II\

Sund••Y

Spending more than $200
on Rx? We can help! Call

the rtght to edt~
reject or ~neal any

Gallia • 44&amp;2342
Meigs • 992·2155
Mason • 675-1333

85 Watchful
. 86 Sway to and fro
87 5aying
88 Spread open
69 SoH mineral
90 Plucky
.
91 Take maliCious deighl
92 Reduce by 50%
93 Woolen labr~
96 Drizzle
97 Neck part
101 /~!&gt;pend
102 Advocate
103 Lady of rank
106 Always
107 Goddess of lhe dawn
108 Unlikely success
(2 was.)
· 109 Oesbtute
112 Tin
113 Chili - carne
.114 Tlnl
!16 Drink liquor
116 S~llet
120 Frequently, poetically
121 Coffee variety
122 MiSiake
123 Depart
125 • - - a Grecian Um'

675-5234

All Dl•play: 12 Noun 2

Sunday 'limes-Sentinel

DOWN

Oecu/IJ;,uo••n•av

Oftfce lloar-.r-

Keeping Gallia, ·
Meigs &amp;Mason
informed

See Sunday Puzzle Answer on 4C

•

Or Fax To (740) 992-2157

(Hal Kneen is the Meigs
County Agriculture and
Natural
Resources
Educator, Ohio State
University Extension.)

• 2. 3 and 1/JR mod~Js
• ln-hou•CJ f;udndng
• Built on 110ur /.,,J
,, •.Lu..J anj /rome fi,mrd"!l available
tkroug/r Waft...,. Morlgai}" Crmrpa"!'

~)rtte ij ~ ISI I _.r~)ll:'; ITI.iioV 11"'&lt;':!1 ~:lfl ~"!llli'N 'r: ilfl~ ~)('l'. (l I ,

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PL
V
LINE
To Place
m:rtbune
Sentinel
1.\egt!.ltet
Your Ad,
Call Today••• (740) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

•••

Home gardeners, share
the bounty of your garden
with
your
neighbors.
Whether you have flowers,
fruits or vegetables It IS a
shame that so much goes to
waste. Do your part and
give to the less fortunate.
Perhaps you may start a
neighbor on his or her road
to develop a greater interest
in growing plants.

Are you a goat producer
or want to be? A new Web
site
resource.

111 Mogul
113 Celestial body

63 Coo[Xlll's cousin
65 Fade away
861pso-

.

'

IS
Ohiomarketgoat.com,
available for the commercial goat herdsman through
the efforts of the Buckeye
Meat Goat Marketing
Alliance. Learn about' the
latest goat research being
done at Ohio State
University and neighboring
state universities. Receive a
goat newsletter that is filled
with tips for a healthter
goat, how to market goats
and why grow market goats.

•••

107.Stoltz or Idle
108 Expire
109- the way
11 0 Card with three spots

61 Uke a bead\

.

your land requires. Low pH
soils and inadequate levels of
phosphorus .and potash are
primary reasons why grass
and alfalfa plantings fail.
Extension factsheets are
avail.able to assist you in
choosing the correct lawn
grass seed. Fine fescue, better known as creeping· red
fescue, is great on our welldrained sandy slopes or clay
soils. It even does well in
partial shade.
For hay or pasture reseeding recommendations. look
at Ohio State University
Extension Bulletin, 472,
Ohio Agronomy Guide.
· Remember to take into
account what animals you
wish to feed and what their
feed needs are.
Livestock and pets are
especially susceptible to
extremes in heat. Provide
plenty of clean, cool water
24 hours a ·day. Provtde a
shady place for the animals
to escape from the hot afternoon sun. Make sure there
is plenty of air ventilation.
Expect feed intake to slack
off and in livestock a resultant ·Joss in milk and meat
production. OSU research ·
shows a correlation between
a reduction in conception
for beef cattle and excessively high temperatures.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

62 V&lt;:lim

'

m:rtbune - Sentinel - 1.\e ilter
CLASSIFIED

Sunday, August 6, 2006

•

60 Neighbor ol Thailand

.... ,_,_

'

Late summer is time to seed lawns, fields

GAWPOUS - . United Producers Inc. rmuket report
from GaUipolis for sales conducted on Wednesday, Aug. 2:

275-415# St. $100-$141 Hf. $95-$131 425-525# St.
$100-$135 Hf. $95-$125 550-625# St. $100-$124 Hf.
$95-$110 650-725# St. $98-$116 Hf. $90-$105 750-850
St. $95-$105 Hf. $85-$95.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

EXTENSIO-N CORNER

LIVESTOCK REPORT
Feeder Cattle-Steady

PageD2.

AA/EOE.
Truck
driver
needed.
H9nderson. WV ba'sed. COL
License &amp; 2 years experi ence. MVR requi red . Call
{304 )675·7 434

Position: Rc gi~ tcred Dietitian/Licensed
Dietit ian (lr Dictetk Tt:l·hn ii.'ian for Wt'C
Type-of' PositiOn: Pmttime
Minilllum rcqui~ments: Bucheh,r"s Jegree
in D1e tetics: A:'~S~ l,; iate ·~ Deg.ree .in Dietetic•
rechnoiO!!Y Computer experience. good or.tl
:md .wnttcn cnmmuntcation ski !I~ . Mw.t liuld .1
\·a lid Ohin clriv~r's license.
Datt• available : Scpknrh~ r ~ . ~ OOfl
Jbte of Pay and Benefits: \VIC Lic:' n ~.;: J
Dic ririan: Dietetic Ted111ieian pay rate as per
Gal!ta, Cou nt} He,ilth Department salary
struL·ture. See \VIC Director for starting rate
and hendi!.....
Date of Posting: :\ugu~t ), 2006
Lkad linc for i.ll'Leptance of applic &lt;~tion wit h
resu me : Close of busi riess A u_g mt I X. 2(~ 16.
Su bm it to the WIC Dirc~.· t or.
Galliu Count~· Health Departnu:nt
499 Jackson Pike. SuiteD

Gallipolis, OH ~5631
Count} He:tlilr Depart1:1ent 1.~ &lt;111
l:!lJU&lt;l l opportu 11 1t) cmplo;.c-r &lt;llld
~L'I"\"Kt:

The

(Jall i~l

providl.'r

WANn:U

Drivers:
Take back your home t1me1
Plus great benefits &amp;
bonuses! Regional. runs·
Absolute Top Dollar : U.S.
1 yea r tractor trl exp. req.
ilver and Gold Coins.
prootsets, Gold Rings , Pre·
866-293-7435
~ ~ :'c.i
U .S.
Currency,
1935
ol ilaire Diamond~- M .T.S
:'r ~ i l ~ '. 'r )-{)} y'f
oin Shop, 151 Second
1'r \i ~'.- \~ 1 iU*q 1-h'r '
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740 -446 -

lOHcY

s
s

Requires 3 years experience w / repair &amp; maintenance on
diesal trucks(lnlematlonai/ Mar:k pmferred} , equipment &amp;
relat&amp;d components. familiarity w•th the use of repair
manuals , wiring (electrical) diagrams &amp; schematics, relevant
license or certifications (or-6btain wlln 90 days) &amp; own tools.

c

2842.

------Dump TO-Asphalt E_)(p, 4023

I

wm

buy

J!.mh

~- Call OhiO River Rd, Huntington

I740)388·9303.
Want to

Tire 1-.chnlcian PM shift

or resume to PO Box 3105.
Huntington, WV 25702

Position handles fleet inspection , tire mourlting I dismounting
1 repair &amp; l"ood~ lcJe repair. Requires a valid driver license , tire
service experience and ability to lift I move h_
e avy truck tire .

buy Junk Cars

Early Head Startl Head
Start Program accepting for
Positions..
Applications
Wanted: Ca rs\ Any condlavailable at 5.40 5th Ave
on. (740)388·8.228.
Huntington, WV 2~701 until

I304)773·5004

"

1 \ll'l~l)\ 11 •'\1

"I U\ II I "'

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts,
wood Items.

To $480/w&lt;
Ma1eriais provided.
Free intormatiOn pkg 24Hr
601 -'428·4649 .
-----:-;--;-:A 9 year company is looking
for 8 well motivated HVAC
mdividual . Must have a least
1 year hands on e~perience
In Installation. -Pay Is based

Coma In and apply anyUme Mon-Fr1, Bam- 6pm: ·

8·15·06 EOE
Electrician s
Immediate j:)osltions available tor Journeymen &amp;.
Apprentice. Must have cur·
rent
Electrical
license.
Competitive wages &amp; bene·
fits.
Fax
resume
to:
(304)366·5330
or
call

13041363·2461.
OH and WV Coal
Miners needed!
Send
resume to David Stanley
Consultants. Coa t Miner,
152 Roush Circle. Fairm ont.
.wv 26554 or Fax to 304534·3917 or go to DSCLLC com tQ apply Online

EXP.

on- e•perience . 11 interested
call (740) 44 H 236 and

FEDERAL

leave message wilh recap·

POSTA!--J'OBS

$15.67-$26.19/hr., nOW" hirIng, Fo r applicatiQn and tree
An Excellent way to earn governement jab info, call
money. The New Avon.
American Assoc. of Labor , Call Marilyn 304·882·2645
913-599·8042. 24/hrs. emp.

t1onist.

----------~~
Are YQU 55 or older? Paid :..:•e~~----------~
employment training tor
Individuals.
interested
Cle rical, food service and
driving positiOns available.
Call the Senior Employment
Center (866)734-2301.

· Great Pay &amp; Be118fllsl

Palls Salesperson wame.d.
Computer experience and
knowledge of farm equip·
ment
preferred. Salary
ne gotiable depending on
experience.
. Health
Insurance pt OIJided . Send
AVQNI All Areas! To Buy or res ume to: CLA Bo11 .5..69. c/o
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304· GallipoliS Tribune. PO Bo~
.675-1429.
469. Gallipolis, OH 45631.

Rumpke ·
B-h Hollow
28 AW Long Rd, WeU-, OH 411892

Help Wanted

letltla.pleaaa-rumt*a.oam

SAFETY
COORDINATOR
Mason County, WV
American Electric Power
40 Hours per week w / overtime
as required. Four Year degree:
Knowledge in OSHA
regulations a plus. Entry level
salary approx. $40,300 I yr.
Benefit package.
Interested candidates are to
submit resumes by August 14
to:
Human Resource Dept.
P.O. Box 1051
New Haven, WV 25265-1051

'

Help Want~d

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

FREE TRAINING AND JOB PLACEMENT
Home Health Aide/ Homemaker Training
Program
To Be Held :It
The .11ulberry community Center
Pomeroy, OH
Th!! Area Agency &lt;;8 Aging i~ currently accept in~
1ppl icn1 ion:-. for their Home H ~:a l1l1 Ardc/Homemalo..e r l mi n1ng Program.
The program b free to the p.1rticipams Up~_) n _g.r:.~duating. panic1pant
will be us~i~ l ~d \\ilh jtJb pkKement. For morl!'_ lllf0rmat10n cl)ntact the
. Area A~~lh.") on ·Ag1~1 ~ at 1- SD0 ~ 3J I ;264~ .
An Equal

Opportunity E mployer.

,

To sche dule an intentiew call M eigs Senior Center at 740·992·2 1 ~1

,...,
-" .-\n·,, AgN1tr un A"m"

VL

An Equal Opportunity Employer··

M/ FID / V
-- ·-

-----..

~-··-

·,

-

-

��·Page D6 • 6unbap «itnn~-6tntintl

Sunday,August6,2oo6

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Volunteer honored
for 25 years of
volunteer service, A3

GALLIA .· CouNTY FAIR ·ScENES
Does your present hearing aid:

Say Goodbye_
to that "Echo Chamber'' or
"Plugged Up" Sensation
~

• sound like you're in a barrel when
you speak?
• sound noisy when you chew?
• whistle when you talk on the phone? .

. ~ AOVANUO HEARING

We can help!
Call us and find out how!

Braves too strong
for Reds, Bt

0

•

CENTER

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

.

"'0 CENTS • Vol. ;;:1. No. :.q•J

1122 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis, OH

SPORTS

Call (740) 441 -1971 or (800) 434-4194

• Landis backup test
positive. See Page BI

"" 11 . m)·tl:~ilvwnti•u·Lmm

MON I) A Y, A lJG UST 7, 2006

Color palette selected for downtown Middleport project
Bv BRIAN J. REED
palette is designed to create
BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL COM · a unified appearance in the
downtown shopping district
MIDDLEPORT
and emphasize the historic
Middleport's design review value of the buildings in lhe
board has selected a co.lor area.
palette of Vi ctorian and hisLaurie
Reed,
a
toric colors to coordinate Middleport-based interior
improvements to buildings decorator and member of lhe
in downtown Middleport.
design review board, develMeeting Friday, the board' oped the color palette for the
adopted a selection of board:.S approvaL She said it
approved colors for building is ,designed to offer building
facade improvements. The owners a wide selection of
0

•

colors while ass uring th at all
building
improvements
made as a part of the project
complement each other.
She said all colors are
included in the palette, neutral base colors and varying
shades of yellow. blue ,
green. red , purple and other
trim and accent colors.
"If a building owner
wishes to include a particular color on hi s building . it
will be in cluded in lh e

palett e,"
Reed
said .
"However, there are specific shades of those colors
that will be approved for the
downtown district.':
Brenda Phalin . a member
of lhe review board . said she
was ple ased that · the
approved palette includes so
many choices.
"The palette is not
designed to limit anyone.
and there are so many colors
and shades included in it that

•

Racine woman wall&lt;.s 1,000
miles without leaving town
BY BETH SERGENT

OnnuARIES
Page AS
• Faye Brown
Harper Napper
• James E. Quails
• Delores WhitloCk

INSIDE
• BP shuts down the
nation's biggest oil field.
See Page AS
• Snedden top loser.
See

P.o~ge

A3

Katie Fisher is pictured here 11,1ith her Tennessee Cross Horse, "Storm." during
the Horse Costume Contest where they were named the Best Executed for their
nifty zebra disguise.

, Joy Kocmoudfphotos

These children are testing their teamwork skills during the Water flalloon Toss at the Kiwanis Youth
Program held on Thursday. Other contests included Bubble Blowing and Watermelon Eating.

AMtlltlmts lnsurat\Ce Jlacesen.l!r
agency can help you with all of your
home{l\vner insut.mt.:e needs. And
thrre ts one in y{mr hnmcwwn!

• Officials worried about
rule being tested in
special elections.
See Page A6

. I~S noll"ilSV to ram the Puc"~'lll'r
design:tlton. Agcms rtcccl to know
how \u cuslomiz:e vour hvmt''""""('f
insurant&lt; ""d'"'l~ickly. easli)'.
and exp&lt;ttly. Th&lt;n, they follow up
With tht best sef\'lCe m the mdustry
when you nc.;·d it tm.\ il

,F

Talk to a hll11lt?O\\llt' r in5ur;mrc

l

rxpcr1 m }'Our hllmelt)Wn l ndt~ y

Above: Lemonade is a refreshing, all-natural beverage that
cooled the crowd as temperatures hovered near one hundred degrees for most of fair week. Here, "Wolfman" grins
as he shakes sugar, lemon, and ice together in one of JJ's
Lemonade Stands, which · have been at the Galli a County
Junior Fair for the last 48 years.

And don) forget to •sk ab&lt;&gt;Ul
Mototlsts' l'ttmier Client ·Rewards.
This program could save you
up to 15 ptr~ent on your auto
insurance and Jj percent on your
homeowners insurance premium!

WEATHER
lnsuNnce

,

. 388-811,1

Real Eatllte
441-1111

Left: Jenzo the Clown smiles as he twists balloons into a
yellow flower for an anxious little girl. Jenzo and his partner,
Lucy are profess ronal clowns from Huntington , W. Va.
Details on Page A6

.

'

~MASSEY.
&lt;f::'\,...
~

~'

.

-~&lt;""

···~-""'

•

FERGUSD
' "'
.... ' ·t

t;; "

'-of

'·

'

. ', '

-

'

Buy, Sell or l'rade New &amp; Used Far•m &amp; Industrial Eq1ulp1mt~nt

Jim's Farm Equiplllant, Inc.

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

2 - Ep*+a lnaae (IL It 7) • leDipoU., 01111

.(748)

• (740)

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

12 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox A3
· Calendars
A3
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
... , Obituaries
As
Sports
B' Section
Weather
A6
·, © aoo6 Obi~ Valle)' Publlshing Co. ·

Pfease see. ProJect. AS

Bag of used
•
syringes
found in
Syracuse

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM
The ferris wheel is a staple of every fair. It provides a romantic ride for couples and a . unique perspective for fairgoers wishing to observe the bustling
commotion below.

nobody ·should feel restricted or limited by it," Phalin
said. "It will, though , give
some consi stency to the
area's appearance."
Both
King's
Ace
Hardware
and
Valley
Lumber stock the colors
selected for the palette, but
lhey can be color matched
anywhere. Reed said.
· The
Middleport

RACINE - We've all heard the saying "walk a mile in someone else's
shoes," well how about I ,000 miles in
the shoes of Betty Sayre, 82 ; of
Racine?
Sayre is proud of her age and grateful she can still walk two to five miles
a day, tive days a week at the Racine
First Baptist Church's Christian
Outreach Center with its indoor regulation size basketball court that doubles
as a walking track .
It has taken a little over a year but
Sayre has now walked I ,017 miles on
the track. That is only 275 miles short
of walking from Racine to Houston ,
Texas, and Ill miles past Dover,
Maine if you slaned in Racine.
Sayre says some people will s~y an
82-year old woman has no business . .
doing what she's dolng but she feels as .
long as she's able to stay active , she
will.
"I want to die feeling good." she
laughed. " I think walking is a big part
of why I feel good."
Sayre has no goals as far as how
many miles she wishes to reach, she
just takes it one l~p. one day at lime
and sometimes she'll even run a lap or
lwo round the track just to prove she
still can.
"On my birthday I ran two laps
around," she said , explaining that others at the Christian Oulreach Center
didn't believe she could .."They let on
like they didn't believe I could do it so
I had to prove it to them."
On the day of this inlerview she ran
another lap, proving to this reporter
that she puts her money where her
mouth is, and is a good sport about it. .
Sayre , who has been a widow for
Beth Sergenl/photo
the last 35 years says she also enjoys
Betty
Sayre,
82, of Racine has just wa lked 1,017 miles at the Racine firSt
the fellowship at the outreach center
which often follows her walking rou- Baptist Church's Christian Outreach Center. Sayre walks two to five miles a day,
five days a week and has even been known to run a lap or two around the centin~ every morning, as does a cup of
coffee and some cookies with friends. ter's walking track.
"I miss that if it doesn't happen," Racine Dru~ Store.
Thursdays . From 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. on
she explained.
·
The Chnstian Outreach .Center is Tuesdays the building is open for
Sayre is a graduate of Racine High open 7 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. , Monday young people lo play baskclball or
School and worked for several years at through Friday, 5:30p.m . to 7 p.m. on · many of the other games on the second
the Racine Department Store and Mondays, 5:3b p.m. to 7 p.m. on floor.

BY BETH SERGENT

BSEAGENT@MYOAILYSENTINE!-COf.l
SYRACUSE - A bag
with 18 used syringes,
spoons for cooking drugs
and two tourniquets was
recently found in Syracuse
along Ohio 124 in broad ·
daylight , perhaps a sign that
the county's drug problem
isn 't relegated lo the larger
villages.
A resident who was out
weedeating along Ohio 124
found the bag and like most
people opened it up. The
re sident
was
luckily
unharmed by the bag's contenls and phoned ·the
Syracuse
Police
Department.
·
.
Syracuse ,Chief of Police
Ryan Hill said the bag was
made of heavier malerial,
like that used for bank
deposits, so the needles diu
not penetrate through,
though il was obvious what
they had been used for with
the spoons turned black on
the bottom from cooking
drugs. ·
Hill said one of the more
troubling aspects of finding
such a package is that it was
left 50 to 75 yards from the
London Pool which is fre- .
quented by children and
teens. For this reason Hill
wants the public to be aware
of this new hazard and for
parents to inform their children ·of the. danger.
For Hill , getting a call
that 18 used syringes, cooking spoons and tourniquets
had been found in the village was a first, &lt;1nd one that
he said shows that the drug
problem is not confined to

Please see Syringes. AS

OSU students Middleport commission likely to approve downtown car lot
develop plan to
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
battle colon
MIDOLEPORT
- In
cancer in Meigs another
test of Middleport's
Bv BETH SERGENT
efforls to enforce zoning
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM . Ordinances and . revitalize .
the downtown shopping disPOMEROY
With trict.
the
Middleport
Meigs County's colorectal Planning Commission will
cancer diagnosis and mor- likely allow a used car lot w
tality rates higher than locate on North Second
statewide rates and no med- Avenue .
ical facility to provide
Roger
Manley
met
colonoscope s for preven- Thursday with lhe village's
tion, the Meig s County planning commission to disCancer lniliati ve (MCCI) cuss his purchase of a
turned to Ohio State vacant lot. adjacent to the
University for help in Citgo service slalion , for
reversing these slalistics .
use as a car lot. He will
OSU responded by send- meet with the commission
ing graduate students from agai~ Mond~y to present
its School of Public Health drawmgs of ht s plans for the
back in April to work within · lot, which incluct.e a manuthe county. including with factured mob1le off1ce .
MCCl , to develop a colon
Manley. a fot;mer Village
t;ancer screening program Counc1l member, earlier
for the community.
purchased a lot on South
Back in March , Mira Third Ave nue for hi s busiKatz, assistant professor ness, Econom y Auto Sales ,
with the OS U S.chool __of. lli!t was furced to re -sell it,
Public Heallh, said her slu- he said, becau se of opposi-

Piease see Cancer, AS

. Please see Car lot. AS

T

-

-

Brian Reed/photo

'· '

Roger Manley works on a lot in downtown Mi ddleport where he plans to locate a car lot if
he secures perm ission from the Middleport Planning Commission.
·

.,

•

•

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