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lT
Reconnecting families,
one meal at a time, o 1

Gallia County Junior Fair 2010, Cl

unba!' .~imes -6enttne[
Homet~wn

l'rinted on 100%

News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

•

Srmday, August 8, 2010

R~cyclcd N~"~print

~

D.,-

$1.50 • Vol. 44, No. 32

Southern
health
center
·delayed

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Donald R. Cochran
• Helene Goeglein
• Timothy T. Klein, Sr.
• Anthony W. Petty
• Margaret L. Queen
• Donna Stambaugh

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Injured man
~eflighted
after wreck
BY AMBER

RACINE . The
Southern Local School
District hoped to have its
school-based health center up and running when
students arrive for classes later this month
though that plan has been
temporarily

GILLENWATER

MDTNEws@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CHESHIRE - A man
was life-flighted after a
motorcycle · accident
Friday afternoon along
Ohio 7 in Meigs County
near Cheshire.
Troopers from the
Gallia-Meigs Post of
the Ohio Highway
Patrol were dispatched
to the scene after
receiving a c~ll at 4:36
p.m. concerning a sin. gle-vehicle accident,
according to an OSHP
dispatcher
at
the
Jackson Post.
,
The injured driver of
motorcycle was
wn to Saint Mary's
1
dical
Center
in
ntington, W.Va.
The driver"s name or
· condition have not been
released. Law enforcement did not release any
other details.

Andrew Carter/photos

Olivia WOodward (second from left) stands next to Brian Unroe (left) of the Feed Stop, who purchased
Woodward's grand champion maket hog during the annual sale on Friday at the Gallia County Junior Fair. Fair
royalty is also pictured.

C

delayed

while awaiting approval
from
the
Health
Resources
Services
Administration (HRSA).
"This is only a delay,"
said Junie Maynard,
school nurse and family
nurse practitioner of
Southern Local School
District. "We are committed to make comprehensive health services
available to the students
and the faculty. The set
up continues as we are
moving in diagnostic
equipment and medical
supplies so we are ready
to start as' soon as
approval is obtained."

Please see Health, A3

Burglary
spree
plaguing
Gallia Co.

WEATIIER

BY AMBER GILLENWATER
MDTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM •

Christopher Brumfield (with red banner) won the reserve champion award at the 201 0 fair. He is shown with
representatives of JCM Landscaping and current Gallia County Democrat office holders, who combined to purchase Brumfield's hog on Friday. Fair royalty is also pictured.

.

Gallia Co. kids winners at hoQ sale

High: 90
Low: 63

•I= = = =
INDEX
4 SECTIONS- 24 PAGES

Around Town

A3

Celebrations

C4

Classifieds

D3-4

Comics

Ds

Editorials

A4

Sports

.

B Section

© 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.IIIli[ I!I!IJI~! 1!1!I!Ill I II.

BY ANDREW CARTER
MDTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - Market hogs
were the first animals to hit the
sale block at the 61 st annual Gallia
County Junior Fair. The sale was
held Friday morning at the fairgrounds.
The tobacco, market lamb and
market steer sales were held
Saturday, but results of those sales
were not available prior to press
time.
Jn the market hog sale. Olivia
Woodward's grand champion
entry sold for $7 per pound, a total
of. $1 ,904. The animal weighed in
at 272 pounds. The Feed Stop in
Gallipolis, represented by Brian
Unroe, purchased Woodward's
market hog. Woodward is ·a member of the Triangle 4-H Club.

According to records found in
the 20 10 fair book. the sale price
for Woodward's hog is the third
highest for a grand champion in
the hist@ry of the Gallia County
Junior Fair. Aaron Ruff's grand
champion entry nette $2,100 in
2002 and Clarke Saunders' grand
champion entry earned $2,050 for
him in 2000.
The grand champion's banner
was presented in memory· of Ann
Butler by Mark, Lois, Adam and
Melissa Clark; Jim, Jerri, Jamie
and Jessica Allie; and Nichole
McC01mick.
The reserve champion hog
entered by Chtistopher Brumfield
sold for $5.50 a pound, a total of
$1,540. His animal weighed in at
280 pounds. The purchasers were
' J.M.C. Landscaping and the cur-

rent Gallia County Democrat
office holders. Brumfield is a
member of the Pairs &amp; Spares 4-H
Club.
The reserve champion's banner
was presented in·memory of Mike
McCormick by Jim, Jerri. Jamie
and Jessica Allie. and Nichole
McCormick.
Hannah McCormick, also a
member of the Triangle 4-H Club.
had the highest-placing entry that
was born and bred in Gallia
County. Her 248-pound market
hog was the seventh-place animal
overall. Willis Funeral Home
awarded McCormick a $500 savings bond for having the highestplacing locally-born and bred animaL

In fact, seven of the top 10 mar-

Please see Hog, A2

Contact one of our lenders today!

(!!)

-

Fanners
Bank

Pomeroy- 992-2136
Tuppers Plains- 667-3161
Gallipolis - 446-2265
Mason 773-6400
Point Pleasant· 674-8200

'AI'R ,, Annual Ptrctnll~ Rllti !.I'R li ba,ea 0!1$1~0 000 1oan IllS 82:)%1\Xea lflbl!fll rat. tor S6QIT\QI'lth$ rtPii)'I'T'IInlttm\ llllnltVY p~tril tt ol
dQt· nQ(
of ta&lt;es and lnSIJnlilet prtmum
'M.bOQ!Ql\1! biC.aYM Q~IQ Ol real 4ilm W!ran~I)!Op&amp;rtyln5UntnC81 ~ell lht tc!aii!Wiat ctoargo Ql$tll9116 62&lt; "'""iel~ CllilrQ&amp;I$$.1.1H9
t.l~~&lt;IYiol1ll~aniOiial'll! Ol 8tl!l'ooi1Pllftl•!illdY8Ut uiCICIUtto lll'mBryll'lftf
occuplta telld4nce Ql'l'.t re:tncHont llllll~ Rate.11rtiOQI\tl111' 10! 60 cava lr0«1 ~~ eti\IIJ ep~t;a!IQ(I F11W\a\Q tt ~ll&lt;;t to CNdt amo'&lt;ll 111111 ~llltcttdtlrt&lt;~U~rta.nts TM aa-.t~tJS&amp;d r:1~ and APR art based on a~l'omlllic p~ent from •
F11rrers6aM CIIQci&lt;WIIJ MCQ~an&lt;l ctNrriiQUIItGae~I.II~JIQal lllhlllOI'SIWl &lt;'lner COifllllltt&lt;ei')OI"JIIt&amp;ryrasanUitrNi en lmllablli to ~IS llvltttevnotquol~ IIJC ~~ Aa.tt!ised me os!IJC llmillld-IT'e'Qnl~et\UlUi:ltctt? c:h•nge

GALLIPOLIS - Law
enforcement officials are
investigating a recent
breaking and entering at
a local store, as well as
several burglaries that
have plagued Gallia
County over the past
week.
Abie's Auto Parts
located on Indian Creek
Road in Rio Grande was
. broken into between 8:30
p.m. on July 29 and 8
a.m. on July 30. The suspect(s) cut a chain and
entered into a gate at the'
auto parts store. Ten aluminum wheels and five
· automotive transmissions
were stolen from the
scene. an estimated $250
worth of merchandise.
Several firearms were
, stolen from a residence
on Elliot Road near
Crown City last week.
The victim indicated
that he was absent from

Please see Spree, A3

�--~~--~~--~--~--~--~~ -F--~-~~------~------------------------------

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

___,.---- . .
{5&gt;unbap ~ime.S -~entinel • Page .A2

Hog from Page Al
TrianQie, Margaret Evans,
ket hog entries at the Representative, $2.50.
52. Carissa Gilmore, RV All Municipal Judge, $2.
20 10 fair belonged to
124. Timothy Cochran,
members of the Triangle Stars, Barb's Concession The
Kountry Kritters, Welsh Electric
4-H Club. In addition to Weinnie Wagon and Charlie's Inc.,
$3.
$2.50.
Woodward
and Salvage,
127. Trey Porter Ill, Pairs &amp;
53. Ashton Webb, Triangle,
McCormick, Triangle Thirty-one Gifts Amee Rees, Spares, Saunders Insurance,
members Morgan Foster $2.50.
$2.50.
(third place), Abigail
54. Allivia Runyon, Eno Sail
129. Lindsey Suver, New
Webb (fourth place), On, Bidwell Trustworthy Horizon, AEP Mountaineer
Plant, $2.
Katie Carpenter (fifth Hardware, $2.25.
130.
Tyler
Twyman,
55. Daniel Irwin, Raccoon
place), Halee Myers
Raccoon
Valley,
Huntington
Rowdies,
Call's
Tobacco
(eighth place) and Drew
Township Trustee Rodney
VanSickle (10th place) Plants, $3.25.
57.
Tyler
Eastman,
Triangle,
$2.25.
finished among the top Brent A. Saunders Attorney at Alderman,
131. Sarah Sydnor, Pairs &amp;

10.

Spares, Eastman's Foodland
(Ohio Valley Supermarkets),
$3.85.
132. Baylee Browning, Eno
Sail On, Bobs MarKet &amp;
Greenhouse, Inc., $2.
133. Kaylee Lambert,
Trian~le, Spurlock's Ag-Lime &amp;
Fertilizer, $2.25.
134. lsacc Moss, River
Valley FFA, Cross &amp; Sons ,
$2.85
135.
Garrett
Hill,
Trailblazers, University of Rio
Grande Coach David Smalley
Alliance of Jackson, $2.25..
64. Miranda Corey, Pairs &amp; Women's Basketball, $2.1 0.
137. Kayla Harrison, Barn
Spares, Charlie's Salvage,
Burners, University of Rio
$2.25.
66. Makenzle Brumfield, Grande Coach Dav1d Smalley
Pairs &amp; Spares, Dr. and Mrs. Women's Basketball, $2.10.
139. Lindsey Canaday,
Phillip Long, $2.50.
67. Bryree Harder Hope's Good Times, Ohio Valley
Helping Hands, Southern Bank, $2.
140. Brooklynn Plantz, Barn
Cabinet~. Inc., $3.
68. Vmcent Browning, Eno Burners, Welsh Electric Inc.,
Sail On, Serv Pro of Jackson $3.
141. Hannah M. Roach, Rio
and Gallia, $2.25.
69. Cady Gilmore, RV All Wran9lers, Blosser Concrete
Stars, LJ Trenching &amp; Pump1ng LLC, $3.35.
143. Breeanna Bevan, Pairs
Excavating, $2.60.
70. Meghan Caldwell, Pairs &amp; Spares, Farmers Bank &amp;
&amp; Spares, lrvins Glass Service, Savings Company.1 e Steger,
Barn Burners, Ohio Valley
$2.25.
71. Bryer Gage Williamson, Electric Corp Kyger Creek
Hearts &amp; Hands, Feed Stop, Plant, $2.75.
144. Jamie Steger, Barn
LLC., $2.
74. Savannah McCombs, Burners, Ohio Valley Electric
Kountry Kritters, Ohio Quick Corp Kyger Creek Plant,
$2.75.
Care, $2.
145. Riley Sanders, Early
75. Courtney Smith, Good
Birds, Willis Funeral Home,
Times, Shelly Liquid, $2.25.
76. Ashley Gilmore, Rio $2.35.
146. Lauren Swisher, The
Wranglers, Wai-Mart #2605,
Tribe, M &amp; G Polymers USA,
$3.
'
77. Layne Fitch, Pairs &amp; LLC, $2.25.
147. Dakota Williamson,
Spares, Southern Cabinetry,
Hearts &amp; Hands, Boggs Pest
Inc., $2.25.
79. Marinda Cook, Thivener Control, $2.
148. Darian Litchfield,
Pioneers, Saunders Insurance,
Hearts &amp; Hands, Welsh
$3.
80. Brea Stout, Eno Sail On, Electric Inc., $3.
149. Kansas Gardner, South
Brown's Market , $2.25.
81. Maigen Rainey, Pairs &amp; Gallia FFA, SFS Truck Sales,
Spares, Oflio Valley Bank, $2. Inc., $3.25.
150. Blair Simpson, Hope's
82. Bailey Ward, RV All
Stars,
Bodimers-Jim Helping Hands, Ohio River
Bank, $2.50.
Carpenter, $3.25.
151. Lisa Cox, Good Times,
84. Riley Roberts, Gallia
County Livestock Club, Farm Welsh Electric Inc., $3.
152, Hannah Brooke Roach,
Credit Services, $2.25.
88. Reece Thomas, Hope's Country Kuzins, D &amp; W
Helping Hands, Saunders Homes, $3.50.
153. Timmy Kemper, Rio
Insurance, $2.25.
90. Stacie Cummons, Pairs Hopefuls, Parson's Farms,
&amp; Spares, Connie, Tyler and $2.10.
154. Megan Cremeans,
Trent Holcomb in memory of
Gallipolis FFA, Josh Bodimer
Dale Holcomb, $3.
91. Dalton Jarrell, Triangle, Auctioneer and Realtor and
The Wiseman Agency, Inc., Farmers Bank &amp; Savings
Company, $2.50.
$2.85.
156. Garrett Burns, Triangle,
92. Christal Cochran,
Kountry Kritters, Gallipolis Elks Saunders.lnsurance, $2.75.
158. Tristan Janey, Kountry
#107, $2.25.
93.
Genna
Baker, Kritters, Welsh Electric Inc.,
TemP,erature Rising, Menzer $3.
159. Ramsey Warren, AVAil
Fam1ly In Memo.ry of PJ &amp;
Stars, Hogg Haven, $2.60.
Barbara Menzer, $3.75.
160. Madison
Burns,
94. Keyana Ward, RV All
Stars, Bob Evans Farms, Triangle, Saunders Insurance,
$2.85.
$3.40.
161. Courtney Parsons, Rio
95. Alexis Jade Henry, Pairs
&amp; Spares, Bob Evans Farms, Hopefuls, Ohio Valley Bank,
$2.25.
$2.
162. Ryleigh Caldwell,
96. Hannah Simpson,
Hope's Helping Hands, Ohio Triangle, Holzer Clinic, $3.50.
163. Nathan Taylor, Eno Sail
Valley Physicians Dr. Aaron
On, Barb's Concessions Barb
Karr, $2.50.
99. Sierra Bowman, Hope's Otterbacher, $2.1 0.
164. Lacy Lauder, Raccoon
Helping Hands, Bill and
Rowdies, AEP Gavin Plant,
Marilyn Kuhn, $2.
100. Caden Harden, Gallia $2.10.
165. Bryan Devin Kirby,
Buccaneers, Kuhner Lewis
Pairs &amp; Spares, Gallipolis Vault
Funeral Home, $3.75.
101.
Kayla
Sanders, Company, $2.10.
167.
Elizabeth
Allie,
Triangle, Dr. Saied Hojat,
Triangle, Dr. and Mrs. Phillip
$2.25.
102. Chase Caldwell, Gallia Long, $2.10.
168. Ashley Whobrey, RV All
Guys &amp; Gals, AEP Gavin Plant,
Stars, Larry's Body Shop,
$2.35.
104, Curtis Haner, Raccoon $3.75.
169. Austin Hill, Trailblazers,
Rowdies, L &amp; L Scrap Metals
Red's Rollen Garage, $2.25.
Recycling Inc., $2.25.
170. Michelle Aaron, River
107, Shi Cremeens, Pairs &amp;
Spares,
Kyger
Dental Valley FFA, Wesbanco Bank,
$2.10.
Associates, Inc., $2.
171. Kristy Newell, Silver
108. Jacob Stre~er, Gallia
Guys &amp; Gals, Shelley Streak, U.S. Bank, $2.10.
172. Tyler Fitch, Pairs &amp;
Company, $3.50.
109. Stanley Bowman II, Spares, U.S. Bank, $2.25.
173. Mark Brown, Pairs &amp;
Hope's Helping Hands, Bobs
Market &amp; Greenhouse, Inc., Spares, Phil Bowman, $2.60.
174. Phil Hollingshead, Rio
$2.
110. Carter Parsons, Rio WranglersJ. .. Skidmore Foster
Hopefuls, Spurlock's Ag-Lime Coal Co., ~.35.
176. Skylar Jones, Gallia
&amp; Fertilizer, $2.50.
112. C.J. Fitch, Pairs &amp; County Dairy Club, Valley View
Spares, Harold Montgomery Farm Richard &amp; Teresa Jones,
•
Candidate
for
County $2.10.
177. Cody Smith, Good
Commissioner, $2.
113. Zac Beaver, Pairs &amp; Times, M &amp; G Polymers USA,
Spares, Stan &amp; Doris Harrison, LLC, $2.10.
178. Jessica McGhee,
$3.
City Crusaders,
114. Alexis Williamson, French
Consulting
Pairs &amp; Spares, Pierceton Huffman
Companies, $2.75.
Trucking Co. Inc., $3.25.
179.
Caitlin
Watson,
115.
Kari
Campbell,
Gallipolis
FFA,
Smith Hayseeds, Bobs Market &amp;
Chevrolet, Buick, and Used Greenhouse, Inc., $2.10.
180. Ali Saunders, The Barn
' Car Superstore, $2.25.
119. Michaela Clay, Silver Raisers, Eastman's Foodland
Streak, Bob Evans Farms, (Ohio Valley Supermarkets),
$2.10.
$2.35.
181. Allison McGhee,
120. C.J. Nelson, Chain
French City Crusaders, Tri-Mat
Gang, Shelly Liquid, $2.
121.
Jacob
Watson, Construction, $2.50.
183. Derrick Gilmore,
Hayseeds, Bill Crank DVM,
Raccoon Rowdies, AEP Gavin
Inc., $2.25.
122. Brianna Sanders, Plant , $2.1 0.

Law and Harold Montgomery

Abby Stout of the Eno Candidate
for
County
Sail On 4-H Club fin- Commissioner, $2.75.
ished in sixth place in the
58. Jarrett Martin, Triangle,
20 10 market hog compe- Bryant Farm,~. Lawncare, and
tition. Jered Shaffer of Contracting, ~2.75.
59. Brooke Marcum, Rio
the Thivener Pioneers 4Hopefuls, Bobs Market &amp;
H Club placed ninth.
Inc., $2.25.
Fair officials said 248 Greenhouse,
60. Morgan Brumfield, Pairs
hogs were entered in this &amp; Spares,
Brown's Insurance,
year's sale. The average $2.50.
price paid per pound was
62. Zachary Roberts, Gallia
$2.5847.
County Livestock Club, Co201 0 Hog Sale Results
1.
Olivia
Woodward,
Triangle, Feed Stop, LLC., $7.
2. Christopher Brumfield,
Pairs &amp; Spares, Gallia County
Democrat Office Holders,
Sheriff
Joe
Browning,
Commissioners Justin Fallon,
Lois Snyder, Joe Foster, Pros.
Atty. Jeff Adkins and J.M.C.
Landscaping, $5.50.
3. Mor~an Foster, Triangle.
OBS Collision Tony &amp; Melissa
Ours, $3.
4. Abigail Webb, Triangle,
Thomas Do-lt Center, $3.
5. Katie Carpenter, Triangle,
Gallia County Republican
Office Holders, $3.75.
6. Abby Stout, Eno Sail On,
Moore Brothers representing
McCoy-Moore Funeral Homes
and Evans-Moore Realty &amp;
Insurance, $2.75.
7. Hannah McCormick,
Triangle, The
Wiseman
Agency, Inc., $3.25.
8. Halee Myers, Triangle,
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings
Company, $3.7~.
9. Jered Shaffer, Thivener
Pioneers, Vicky and Brian
Shaffer in memory of David
Shaffer, $5.
10.
Drew
VanSickle,
Triangle, Ohio Valley Bank,
$3.25.
16. Cory Call, Gallia Guys &amp;
Gals, Holzer Clinic, $3.25.
17. Cody ~all, Gallipolis
FFA, Bodimers-Jim Carpenter,
$3.5.
.
19. Grace Martin, Triangle,
Letart Corporation, $4.5.
20.
Seth
Woodward,
Triangle, lrvins Glass Service,
$2.75.
21.
Jordan
Johnson,
Country To The Core,
Steinbeck Show Cattle, $2.50.
22. Jacob Gilmore, RV All
Stars, Wesbanco Bank , $2.75.
23. Briggs Shoemaker, Rio
Hopefuls, Connie, Tyler, and
Trent Holcomb in memory of
Dale Holcomb &amp; Matt &amp; Christi
Johnson, Tim &amp; Pam Massie,
Gene &amp; Janet Johnson, Carl &amp;
Judy Clark, $4.
24. Teah Elliott, For His
Glory, Dr. and Mrs. Phillip
Long, $2.50.
25. Sara Rustemeyer,
Hope's Helping
Hands,
Thomas Blodgett MD, $3.
26. Kaci Shoemaker, Rio
Hopefuls, Eastman's Foodland
(Ohio Valley Supermarkets),
$3.75.
27. Eric Blevins, For His
Glory, Holzer Clinic, $3.50.
28. Hannah Brumfield, Pairs
&amp; Spares, Brown's Insurance,
$2.75.
29. Lindsey Johnson,
Hayseeds, Letart Corporation ,
$3
30. Kasidy Putney, Triangle,
Gary L. Jarvis, CPA, $2.25.
31. Grace Sydnor, Pairs &amp;
$pares, Wai-Mart #2605,
$3.50.
32. Jarod Myers, Triangle,
Grace Myers Excavating ,
$2.50.
33. Taylor Foster, Triangle,
Feed Stop, LLC. R &amp; C
Packing and Green Township
Trustee Jamie Graham, $3.25.
34. Lexi Stout, Eno Sail On,
John Carey for State
Representative David Daniels
for State Senate, $2.25.
35. C.J. Harrison, Barn
Burners, McGhee Insurance
All State, $2.25.
37. Grant Simpson, Hope's
Helping Hands, Co-Alliance of
Jackson, $2.25.
38. Joshua Brumfield, Silver
Streak, Wai-Mart #2605,
$2.50.
39. Dustin Hill, Trailblazers,
AEP Gavin Plant, $2.75.
40. Olivia Rees, Triangle,
Smith Financial Advisors,
$2.75 .•
43. Kirstie Bertram, Pairs &amp;
Spares, Ohio Valley Bank,
$2.25.
44. Maddie Deel, Gallia
County Livestock Club, Drs.
Michael Owens &amp; Laurel
Kirkhart, $2.75.
46. Luke Straiter, Gallia
Guys &amp; Gals, Norris Northup
Dodge Body Shop, $4.
49. Jaela Clark, Good
Times,
Gallipolis
Vault
Company, $2.25.
50. Kody Roberts, Gallia
County Dairy Club, Fred Deel
Candidate
for
State

184. Gretchen McConnell, Dog Services, Triple D Chain Gang, Judge Thomas S.
Rodney Rangers, Deel's Club Trucking, Ron Layman Inc., Moulton, Jr., $2.
$2.75.
Pigs, $2.60.
279. Cory Caldwell, Sliver
237. Colin Hill, Hilltop Streak, Saunders. Insurance,
185. Jordan Swisher, The
Tribe,
Darla
Saunders Hillbillies, The Wiseman $2.
Candidate for Gallia County Agency, Inc., $2.75.
280.
Dakota Wroten,
238. Kendra Hill, Silver
Auditor, $2.1 0.
Mercerville
Companions,
187. Haleigh Caldwell, Streak. VFW Post 4464, $2.
Construction,
239. Kelsie Gillispie, Chain Edgewater
Gallia Guys &amp; Gals, Call's
Gang, Ohio Valley Bank, $2.
Tobacco Plants, $3.50.
$2.70.
•
240. Wyatt Sipple, Hope's
189. Kennedy Nunn, RV All
281.
Kalob
Watso
Helping Hands, Co-Alliance of Hayseeds, Brett Boothe Gallia
Stars, Shake Shoppe, $2.10.
190.
Jordyn Benson, Jackson, $2.25.
County Engineer, $2.25.
241. Carly Shriver, Gallia's
Gallipolis FFA, Sparkle Supply,
282.
Tyler
Massie,
Barnyard Buddies, Country
$3.
Mercerville
Companions,
Ohio
192. Brittany Black, Silver Crane Service and Fred Deel
for
State Valley Bank, $1.95.
Streak, Bob Evans Farms, candidate
286. Paige Sanders, Early
Representative in me~ry of
$2.10.
193. Katelyn Birchfield, Roger Deel, $2.50.
Birds, Carquest Auto Parts, $2.
242. Ashlee Huffman,
Good Times, Halliday, Sheets
287.
Chase
Skeen,
&amp; Saunders Attorneys at Law, Kountry Kritters, Brown's Twilighters, Mike's Food Mart
Market, $2.10.
$2.50.
218 a.nd Jividen's Farm
243. Bill Angell, Gallipolis
194. Dalton Rose, Whiz
Kids, C.C. Caldwell Trucking, FFA, King Kutter II, Inc., $2.75. Equipment, $2.05.
244. Joshua Henry, Hope's . 288. Ashleigh McGuire,
$2.25
195. Ciera Roberts, Silver Helping Hands, Farmers Bank Kountry Kritters, Saunders
Auto LLC, $2.05.
Streak, A.K. Ready Mix, $3.25. &amp; Savings Company, $2.25
245. Precious Lynch, Good
196. Cheyenne Shafer,
289. MaKenzie Barr, New
Country Kuzins, Tri-Mat Times, AEP Gavin Plant $2.
Horizon, Hughes Beef &amp; Dairy
246. Ramsey Sites, Gallia Farm, $2.
Construction, $2.25.
198. Tabitha Estep, Pairs &amp; Buccaneers. L &amp; L Scrap
290. Eli Hudson, Gallia
Spares, Smith Chevrolet, Metals Recycling Inc., $2.
Buccaneers,
L &amp; L Scrap
247 Emily Sites, Gallia
Buick, and Used Car
Buccaneers, L &amp; L Scrap Metals Recycling Inc., $2.15.
Superstore, $2.20.
291.
Carrie
Watson,
199. Miranda Massie, Metals Recycling Inc. and
Hayseeds,
lrvins Glass
Mercerville Companions, AEP Wesbanco Bank, $2.
248. Travis Polcyn, Country Service, $2.25.
Gavin Plant, $2.
200. A.J. Woodall, Hope's To The Core, Charlie's
293. Caleb Henry, Hope's
Helping Hands, Scenic Hills Salvage, $2.
Helping Hands, J. E. Morrison
249. Josie Rankin, Chain
Nursing Facility, $2.05.
&amp; Assoc., $2.05.
201. Ashley Wickline, Hilltop Gang, Marvin's Farm SSfVice
294.
Allison
Meade,
Hillbillies, Dr. and Mrs. Phillip and Ross Club Nubian Goats,
Hayseeds,
Bob
Evans
Farm.
$3.50
Long, $2.85.
251. Christian Wilkes, Pairs $2.
202. Haley Rosier, Rio
&amp; Spares, Bob Evans Farms,
296. Beau-Allen Thomas,
Wranglers, Bob Frulla, $3.25.
203. Ashley Caldwell, Silver $1.95.
Sundance Kids, Farmers Bank
252. Myria Blain, Country &amp; Savings Company, $2.05.
Streak, SFS Truck Sales, Inc.,
Kuzins, SFS Truck Sales, Inc.,
$3.
298. Caitlin Roach, Country
204. Mikayla Poling, Pairs &amp; $2.50.
Kuzins, D &amp; W Homes, $3.35.
254.
Bretton
Stutes,
RV
All
Spares, Yauger Farm Supply
299. Megan Clonch, River
Stars, lrvins Glass Service,
Inc., $2.25.
Valley FFA, Ohio Valley Bank,
205. Halley Barnes, Gallia $2.75.
255. Justine Bowers, $2.35.
Guys &amp; Gals. Thomas Do-lt
Hayseeds
Farm Credit
300.
Ethan
Mays,
Center, $3.
208.
Todd
Simms, Services, $2.75.
Trailblazers, Holzer Medical
256. Aubree Ward, Hilltop Center, $2.50.
Millennium Force, Holzer
Hillbillies,
Holzer Clinic
Clinic, $2.25.
301. Katee Ward, Hilltop
209. Colton Fallon, Hope's Pediatritians, $2.35.
Hillbillies,
Holzer Clinic
257. Molly Carroll, Triangle,
Helping Hands, Farmers Bank
Pediatritians,
$2.75.
AEP Gavin Plant, $2:
&amp; Savings Company, $4.25.
302. John Anthony Sipple,
258. Haley Cox, Good
21 o.
Kaitlyn
Roberts,
Hope's
Helping Hands,
Raccoon Valley, Ohio Valley Times, Foster Farms, $2.
259. Nathan Michael, Silver Wiseman Real Estate David
Bank, $2.50.
211. Kari Crance, Gallipolis Streak, Wesbanco Bank and L Wiseman, $2.35.
FFA, Eastman's Foodland &amp; L Scrap Metals Recyclipg
303. MacKenzie Hall, Faces
(Ohio Valley Supermarkets), Inc., $2.
of
the Future, McGhee
260. Christopher Taylor, Eno
$2.20.
Insurance
All State, $2.70.
212. Josh Glassburn, River Sail On, Ohio Valley Bank, $2.
304. Rebecca Sullivan,
261. Jenson Brumfield.
Valley FFA, Dairy Queen,
Hilltop Hillbillies, French Town Hearts &amp; Hands, Ohio Valley
$2.25.
Physicians Dr. Aaron Karr,
214. Courtney Haner, Veterinary Clinic, $2.1 0.
262. Cory Angell, Gallipolis $2.50.
Raccoon Rowdies, Call's
FFA, King Kutter II, Inc., $2.75.
Tobacco Plants, $2.25.
305. Danielle Colwe'
263. Lacie Wolford, Silver Hearts &amp; Hands, Farme
215. Kierstein Casto,
Streak,
Pat,
Betsy,
Kate,
Triangle, K &amp; L Catering, $3. .
Bank &amp; Savings Compan
218. Hailey Burris, RV All Ginger, and Holly Canaday
Stars, Shoemaker &amp; Gilmore proud supporters of the fair, $2.75.
306. Zandra Johnson, Chain
Club Pigs and S&amp;M Tax, $2.50. $2.10.
264. Justin Kiser, Gallia Gang, Wayne &amp; Christen
219. Amanda McGhee,·
French City Crusaders, County Dairy Club; Southern Bennett and Larry M. Betz,
Riverbend Animal Clinic, Cabinetry, Inc., $3.
County Auditor. and Glassburn
265. Janelle Parsons, Farms, $2.50.
$2.50.
220. Norman Shafer Ill, Millennium Force, Graham's
307. Chelsea Watson,
Country Kuzins, Ohio Valley Towing and Auto Repair, $2.
Hayseeds, Family Oxygen &amp;
266.
AUison
Porter,
Morgan
Bank, $2.
221. Kelsey Pugh, Early Raiders, AEP Mountaineer Medical Equipment Inc., $2.50.
308. Chase Shriver, Kountry
Birds, Darla and Steve Plant, $2.
267. Bethany Bush-Wroten, Kritters, McCormick's Custom
Saunders In memory of Gabe
Mercerville
Companions, Meats and McCormick's
Saunders, $2.
Construction, Extermination Inc., $4.
222. Kallie Birchfield, Good Edgewater
Times, Joe Foster-Gallia $2.85.
309. Hannah Painter,
268. Johnathan Painter,
County Commissioner, $2.25.
Sundance
Kids, Gallia County
224.
Brody
Thomas, Sundance Kids, The Wiseman Local Board of Education Mel
Sundance Kids, Cherrington, Agency, Inc., $2.
269. Jill Carroll, Thivener Carter, Mike Polcyn, Scott
Moulton &amp; Evans, $2.
Williamson, Terry Halley,
227. Logan Rosier, Rio Pioneers, Nuko Inc.. $2.50.
270. Piccola Waugh, Pairs &amp; Brandon Twyman, $2.25.
Wranglers, Bob Frulla, $3.50.
228. Trey Noble, RV All Spares, lrvins Glass Service,
312. Calyssa Mayes,
$2.05.
Stars.~. The Wiseman Agency,
Sundance Kids, Gallipolis
271. Cory Haner, Raccoon Lions Club, $2.25.
Inc., ~2.25.
230. Cliff Chapman, Kountry Rowdies, Nolan Excavating,
313. Chris Elliott, Gallipolis
Kritters, Holzer Medical Center $2.50.
FFA,
Saunders Insurance,
272.
Payton
Halley,
and Brent A. Saunders
Barnyard Buckaroos, Green $2.50.
Attorney at Law, $2.25.
314. Jacob Click •. The Barn
231. Peyton Browning, Eno Tire &amp; Exhaust, $2.35.
273. Samantha Wallace, Raisers, Quality Paintin.
Sail On, Terry and Rochelle
Halley Jesse Halley and Hayseeds, Bill and Marilyn $2.25.
Timber Halley in memory of Kuhn, $2.25.
315. AJ Mays, Trailblazers,
274. Brooke Pasquale, Pairs Ronald
Dustin, $2.
Slone
Harrison
232.
Chayse
Casto, &amp; Spares, C &amp; C Grocery, Township Trustee and Ray
Triangle, ·Farmers Bank &amp; $2.60.
275.
Rory
Twyman, Slone Clay Township Trustee,
Savings Company, $3.10.
233. Sarah Barr, New Raccoon Valley, Triple "T"' $2.50.
317.
Derik
Brace,
Horizon, People's Bank NA Farm, $2.75.
276. Caleb Patterson, Hayseeds, Nuko Inc.. $2.60.
and L &amp; L Scrap Metals
Kountry Kritters, M &amp; G
Recycling Inc., $2.25.
318. Zachary Meade,
234. Chase Kemper, Rio Polymers USA, LLC, $2.35.
Hayseeds, Bob Evans Farms,
277.
Tristan
Crouse,
Hopefuls, Eric Mulford Attorney
Raccoon Valley, Lynn Roberts $2.75.
at Law, $2.
319.
Bryan
Benson,
236. Bryce Nolan, Pairs &amp; in memory of Dwltt &amp; Mildred
Thivener
Pioneers,
Pleasant
Spares, Independent Haulers Roberts, $2.85.
278. Chelsey Woerner, Valley Hospital, $2.60.
for Shelley Liquids Division Big

1

�~------~-----------------

PageA3.

iunbap ~imes -ientinel

Sunday, August 8,

Gallia County calendar

2010

Local Stocks

....
Sunday, Aug. 8
PATRIOT
92nd
annual
reunion
for
descendants of the late
John William and Mary
y Fralix Myers, noon,
Fairview Church
ng . covered dish.
Reunion president Henry
Myers, (7 40) 379-2352.
Tuesday, A~:Jg. 10
GALLIPOLIS - River
Cities Military Family
Support Group, 7 p.m.,
VFW Post 4464, 134
Third Ave., Gallipolis.
Info: 245-5589 or 4417454.
Thursday, Aug. 12
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Retired Teachers
luncheon, noon, First
Baptist Church shelter
house. Bring covered
dish.
Program
will
include awarding scholarships.
Info/reservations: Karen Cornell,
256-6846.
BIDWELL - Parents'
meeting for fall sports
athletes at River Valley

High School and River
Valley Middle School, 6
p.m., River Valley High
School gym. Parents
whose children plan to
participate in football, volleyball, cross country,
golf and cheerleading are
encouraged to attend.
Info: David Moore, 3677054.
Friday, Aug. 13
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
Soil
and
Water
Conservation
District
board meeting, 1 :30
p.m., C.H. Mckenzie Ag
Center, , 111 Jackson
Pike,
Suite
1569,
Gallipolis.
Saturday, Aug. 14 ·
UNDATED - Denney
reunion, 10 a.m., Harris
Baptist Church shelterhouse. Lunch at 12:30
p.m. Bring pictures and
genealogy.

Card Shower
Glenna Rothgeb will
celebrate her 93rd birth-

day on Aug. 10 Cards
may be sent to her in
care of Holzer Senior
Care Center, Room
1 13A,
380 Colonial
Drive,
Bidwell.
OH
45614.

Church Events
Sunday, Aug. 8
ADDISON - Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; evening
servrce, 6 p.m., Acdison
Freewill Baptist Church.
Pastor
Matt
Smith
preaching.
GALLIPOLIS - The
Gallipolis church of
Christ meets. at 21 ~
Upper River Road.
Sunday
services
include 10 a.m. Bible
study, with classes for
all ages, and 11 a.m.
worship. Bible study is
also held at 7 p.m.
Wednesday. The Web
site
address
is
www. ga IIi po lise h u rchofch r ist. net.
GALLIPOLIS - The

church of Christ in
G aII .rpo 1·IS meet s at 234
Chapel Drive. Sunday
meeting times are: 9:30
a.m., Bible class; 10:30
a.m., worship; 5 p.m.
evening assembly Bill
Mead Will be speakmg.
The church meets at 7
p.m. Wednesday for Bible
study.
Web
site:
. II h
WWW. C h a p e I h I C U r •
chofchrist.org. ·
Wednesday, Aug. 11
ADDISON - Prayer
meeting, 7 p.m., Addison
Freewill Baptist Church.
Rev. Matt Smith preaching.
·
Thursday, Aug. 12
ADDISON - Ladies
aid meeting, 7 p.m.,
Addison Freewill Baptist
Church.
Friday, Aug. 13
GALLIPOLIS
Gospel in the Park, 7
p.m., with the Shafers,
New Touch, Amy Ours
and Lisa Kemp. Bring a
lawn chair. Canceled in
case of bad weather.

.

.. I

eleigs County Calendar

,

Sunday,Aug.8
ALBANY
86th
Hayes-Young
and
Holiday School reunion,
1 p.m. potluck dinner, at
the old Holiday School
grounds, Gilkey Ridge.
Bring photos, genealogy
information, entertainment.
RACINE
37th
Annual Charles and
Alma Snyder Reunion,
noon, Star Mill Park.
GALLIPOLIS - Aarron
Fry Family Reunion, dinn~r at 1 p.m., 1678
Jackson Pike.
Monday, Aug. 9
RACINE - Southern
Local
Board
of
Education, special session to hire personnel for
school year, 8 p.m.,
school media room.

POMEROY
Big
Bend Farm Antiques
Club, regular meeting,
7:30 p.m.,
Mulberry
Community Center.
POMEROY - Meigs
Band Boosters 6 p.m. the
fair booth on the fairgrounds.
POMEROY - Meigs
County Republican Party
Central Committee, 7:15
p.m.,
Meigs County
Republican
Party
Executive Committee,
7:30 p.m., Meigs County
Courthouse.
Tuesday, Aug. 10
POMEROY
Salisbury
Township
Trustees, regular meeting, 6:30 p.m., home of
Manning Roush.
SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club,

6:30p.m. at the Syracuse
Community Center. Janet
Bolin to present program
on floral arrangements
appropriate for the fair
flower show.
POMEROY
Tea
Party meeting, Mulberry
Community Center, 7
p.m.
sludy
of
Constitution, planning for
fair booth, reports of
committees.
POMEROY - Meigs
County Chamber of
Commerce,
businessminded luncheon. noon,
Pomeroy Library, Meigs
County
Economic
Development Director
Perry Varnadoe speaking, Pizza Hut catering,
RSVP at 992-5005.
Thursday, Aug. 12
WELLSTON - The

·Health from Page AI
According to Maynard, HRSA provides oversight to Federally Qualified
Health Centers which is operating the
program through River Valley Health
and Wellness Center and provides funding as well liability insurance to the
operating agency and individual
employees.
Maynard also reported HRSA
approval of the site is also necessary
before c;tate Medicaid can be billed for
services as well as the being ability to
provide free or reduce fees for those
who are uninsured. The other issue
that it affects is the eligibility to purchase discounted drugs for patients
through the section 340B Pharmacy
which is a great benefit to all who use
the center.
Normally, this is a six-week process
but Maynard said because of the
numerous stimulus funding opportu&amp; ies, there have been an excessive
Wmber of requests for new services
and sites which has extended the
timeline to a 12-20 week process. In
short, this means the Southern School
Based Health Center (SBHC) now
has an opening date of January. 2011
though approval should come some
time this fall.
·

"Again. the clinic has not been canceled, just delayed," Maynard reiterated. "We \Vill use the extended time to
enroll students into the program, provide training on the electronic record .
and promote the awareness of the serVIcec; that will be provided."
The SBHC will eventually open its
doors to students, st~f and even families of the Southern Local School
District on a sliding fee scale and oe
operated out of the elementary
school. Maynard said priority will be
given to staff and students though
community members can also take
advantage of the center. Community
members will be required to sign in,
wear a visitor's badge and go through
other security measures when VISiting
the center to keep the environment
safe for everyone.
Maynard said the biggest benefit of
having the SBHC up and running will
be a focus on preventative care, including sports physicals. immunizations,
visits from a dental unit, etc. She added
the center will also provide refenals for
those without primary care physicians.
"Our main goal is preventative care
and collaborating with area health care
providers," Maynard said.

SpreerromPageAl ·
his residence during the day on July petrators to carry the items from the
29 and, upon returning home, he residence. The value of the stolen items
found that his shed and home had totals over $1.300.
A residence on Cora Mill Road near
been broken into. Tools were taken
from the shed and several fireanns Rio Grande was also burglarized somewere taken from the residence. The time during the month of July. The vicstolen items include a two gallon air tim repo1ted being absent from his rescompressor, a three drawer wheeled idence for approximately one month.
tool box and tools, two 12 gauge shot- Upon his return on Aug. 3, the victim
guns, a 16 gauge shotgun and ammu- found that his residence had been bronition, among other items. The victim ken into.
The
perpetrator(s)
reportedly
reported seeing a suspicious late
1990s model black Dodge Dakota . attcmptcu to pry open the side door of
near his home prior to his leaving on the home but, when unsuccessful, they
y 29. Reportedly. the driver of the attempted to break into the back door.
icle was a white male in his 20s. However. the back door could not be
• ~ msible fingerprints were taken from opened either. The burglar finally threw
a brick through the glass of the door
the scene. ·
A burglary on Tyn Rhos Road in and unlocked the dead bolt.
The more than $400 worth of items
Thurman also occurred in the afternoon
on July 29. The victim reported that rep01ted stolen were a folding work
someone Jiad pried open the rear door bench, a table saw and a miter saw.
No word has been released about
of his residence and had taken several
items. The victim reported missing sev- whether the recent string of thefts in the
eral pieces of jewelry, two pocket county are related. Gallia County
knives, a Playstation and games, 15 sil- Sheriff Joe Browning has asked for
ver dollar coins, three $2 bills, a jar of anyone with information about these
change, along with a two-pi~ce luggage cases to call the sheriff's office tip line
set that may have been u.sed by the per~ at (740) 446-6555.

AEP (NYSE) - 35.98
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 60.58
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 51.76
Big Lots (NYSE)- 32.11
Bob Evans (NASDAQ)- 25.72
Borgwarner (NYSE)- 47.01

QrUy~(NAS[W:0-1121
Champron (NASDAQ)- 1.58
c:tanWlg Shops(NA$[)\Q) _ 4.14
City Holding (NASDAQ)- 29.65
Collins (NYSE) - 58.47
DuPont (NYSE)- 42.13
us Bank (NYSE)- 23.21
Gen Electric (NYSE) - 16.45
Hariey-Davidson (NYSE) - 28.00
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 40.44
Kroger (NYSE) ~ 22.20
Ltd Brands (NYSE)- 26.13

~~~~~0~
BBT (NYSE) - 25.20

Forecast

Peoples (NASDAQ) - 16.23
Pepsico (NYSE) - 65.90
Premier (NASDAQ) - 7.65
Rockwell (NYSE)- 56.12
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 8.26
Royal Dutch Shell - 57.83
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 73.23
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 51.79
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.35
WesBanco (NYSE) - 17.36
Worthington (NYSE)- 15.16
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for August 6,
2010, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member
SIPC.

1
•

•
'
'
•

.•'
,.

Internet

Sunday: Sunny, with a
high near 90. Calm wind.
Sunday Night: Mostly
clear. with a low around
63. Calm wind.
Monday: Sunny, with
a high near 92.
Monday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low
~round 64.
Tuesday:
Mostly
sunny, with a high near
94.
Wednesday: Mostly
sunny, with a high near
93.

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740·446·4665

1-888-488-7265

Reliable Internet Access Since 1994

GJMV
Solid
Waste
Management
District
Board of Directors will
meet in regular session,
3:30 p.m., district office,
1056 S. New Hampshire
Avenue, Wellston.
CHESTER - Shade
River Lodge 453, 7:30
p.m.
at
the
hall.
Refreshments following
meeting.

Card Shower
Ann Boso will celebrate
her 80th birthday on Aug.
10. Cards can be sent to
53507 Great Bend Road,
Portland, OH 45770.

.........................
••
• TT NTION

For mforlllat'oo contact the Adult Center a1
740-245-5334
www buckeyehJiscaree:center com

~------------------~------------~

'•

··~

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1.:
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I
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1- • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

••I

West Virginia Workers
Compensation Recipients! •••.
.

I

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•• If you receive West Virginia €ompensation 1
11 benefits for hearing aids please contact our 11 ·
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ffi
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A
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w
v·
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1
o tee. s expenence est trgtnta
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Compensation providers we will work hard to 11::
get you the best help possible!

.1:

:1••••••••••••••••••••••
1: ·
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Call (740) 441·1971 or
(800) 434-4194

I

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• For a free no obligation hear· 1.'
: ing. test and consultation :

••

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Advanced

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Hearing Center

•
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1122 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
1 mile from Holzer Medical Center

I

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Full time local office for over 15 years
• ¥ultiple lines of hearing aid technology
: • We bill for batteries and repairs
• • Visit us at H'WW.lt'orryfreehearing.com
•

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�PageA4

~unbap ~ime~ -$.entinel

~unbap ~imes -~entinel
825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 446-2342 • FAX (740) 446-3008

Sunday,August8,2010

Who owns the economy?

www.mydailytribune.com

BY FRANK KNAPP, JR.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Who "is to blame for the state-of
our national economy is a political football.
No one can argue that the recession that started prior to the
Obama administration was owned
by the former administration.
President Bush responded with
the Troubled Asset Relief
Program (TARP) that was pro
jected to be a $700 billion effort
to avoid a catastrophic collapse of
the banking industry. It is now
projected to have done its job for
less than S I 00 billion as many of
the loans have and are being
repaid with interest.
Then it was President Obama's
turn. Faced with a declining GOP
at a 6 percent annual rate and the
nation losing 750.000 jobs per
month. Mr. Obama pushed
through his stimulus package of
federal funds to rescue state budgets, keep people working and
hopefully create jobs. The state of
our economy. and the fear of a
jobless recovery, is now being
perceived as belonging to his
administration.
So what is the state of our economy today and what vvould it
have been without the eff011s of
Messrs. Bush and Obama'?
According to a new study by
Alan Blinder. former Vice-Chair
of the Federal Reserve, and Mark
Zandi. a past economic adviser to
Senator John McCain. all the
efforts to rescue the economy
helped stave off a depression. The
study's authors estimate that an
additional 8.5 million Americans
would have become unemployed
if not for TARP and the stimulus.
That would have doubled the
number of those who did lose
their jobs due to the recession.

Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher .
Diane Hill

Andrew Carter
Managing Editor

Cont~oller

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Con~ress shall make no law respecting atl
establisltmeut of reli~iou, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abrid~iug tire freedom of
speech, or of the press; or tlle,ri~ht of tile people
peaceably to assemiJle, attd to petition the
Govemmettt for a redress of gtiwauces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

GOP cautiously optimistic
BY LIZ SIDOTI
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The head of the Republican Party on Friday
urged members to step up their efforts for the fall
elections amid cautwus confidence about the GOP
winning several governorships and perhaps seizing control of Congress from Pres1dent Barack
Obama's party.
"We can't rest now." GOP chainnan Michael
Steele told the Republican National Committee.
"Everything we've been doing. and all that we
must do, needs to be ramped up and maxed out 1n ·
the next three months. ·•
"Sleep? What's that? We can't sleep until
November 3rd." he added.
Three months before the elections, it was all
business and little celebration as the 168-member
committee met this week to finalize Tampa. Fla ..
as the 2012 GOP convention city and set the presidential primary calendar that. wlll begin in
Febmary of that year.
Unlike in years past. no White House hopefuls
showed up. And Republicans attending the meetjng were sober about the GOP's prospects in
November: a single stgn said: "Playing to win in
2010."
Steele did. however. try to rile up the committee
and got a standing·ovation with calls to fire House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Wearing a red "Fire
Pelosi'' cap. he announced that the RNC would
sponsor a ''Fire Pelosi'' bus tour this fall.
"Get on the bus.'' he yelled as a cardboard bus
was pushed out onto the stage from which he
spoke. It said: "Need a job? Fire Pelosi.''
The mostly serious tOI.le of the meeting reflected the challenge Republicans have ahead of them
as they seek to take advanta&amp;e of conditions that at
first blush seem npe for a power shift in
Democratic-controlled Washington.
No one doubts the GOP will win some
Democratic-held congressional seats. The president's party nearly always loses seats during the
first midtenn elections of the presidency. The
GOP rank and file also is energized and jndependent voters are leaning toward Republicans.
The question is whether Republi~·ans have it
together enough to gain 40 seats in the House and
10 in the Senate to take control of Capitol Hill with less money than the Democrats, without the
White House bully pulpit and as tea party activists
expose a fissure between conservatives and moderates in the GOP.
Although less contident of emerging with control of Congress, committee members almost uniformly said they expected Republicans to have a
huge year in this year's 37 gubernatorial races,
with many suggesting the GOP will emerge from
the elections in control of a comfortable majority
of states.

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AMERICAN FORUM

Our economy appears noY. to more 'imall business lending in a
be stabilized and the GOP. count). the higher the employaccording to recent data. i.s grow~ ment rate...
It i-; clear that if we want
in~ again at 2.4 percent annually.
Blinder and Zandi give credit for move our economy out of this
this turnaround to the Bu&lt;&gt;h and stagnation and create more jobs.
Obama administrations' pro- we must solve the small business
grams.
lending crisis. That is why the
However. our economy is far Senate's failure to evoke cloture
from out of the woods and could last week on the Small Business
reverse course without more help. Jobs Act was so devastating to our
Economists agree that small economic future.
businesses must lead our recovery
There are too many great small
w1th hiring just as they have done business provisiOns in this bill to
in the last three recoveries. But to detail. No one appears to disagree
do that, they need access to capi- that the bill will result in more ~
tal - something that is seriously small business loans being made
along with other importar1t fealacking today.
"Making credit accessible to tures to promote the general fiscal
sound small businesses is crucial health of small businesses. This is
to our economic recovery and so exactly what we need to allow
should be front and center among small busines~es to lead us to a
our current policy challenges."' better economy.
Yet. every Republican Senator
Federal Reserve Chainnan Ben
Bernanke said recently in regard out of party unity voted against
to the small business lending cri- even debating the legislation.
Senator George LeMieux, Rsis.
A just released survey by the Fla .. who earlier had courageousNational
Small
Business ly voted as one of only two GOP
Association shows that a majority Senators to incluoe the crucial
of the small businesses that need- Lending Fund in the Small ,
ed access to capital said that they Business Jobs Act. is reported to
were unable to garner adequate have said. "Before I am •
financing. SBA loans have also Republican. I am a Floridian an
an American. and this bill is good
dropped~dramatically ~his year.
The relationship betweeh small for our country."
Mr. LeMieux and the other
business lending and job growth
is well documented. The NSBA GOP Senators may have one
report asserts: "Since 1993, when more chance this week to vote for
.NSBA began asking these ques- America and not for party. If none
tions. there has been a direct cor- vote for cloture on the Small
relation between access to capital Business Jobs Act. the state of our
and job growth - when capital economy going forward will be
by
Congressional
flows more freely. small business- owned
Republicans.
es l}dd new jobs."
(Frank Knapp. l!:, is the presiAlso making this point is a
·repm1 released by the National dent and CEO of The South
Small
Business ·
Community
Reinvestment Carolina
Coalition that found "a positive Chum her of Commerce. This artico1Telation between small busi- cle pre1•iously appeared in The
ness lending and employment; the Hill.)

•

o/

Time Magazine nurtur~s myth
women 5 liberation in Ajghanistan
'· Bv JASON

D1rz

ANTIWAR.COM

The continuation of the war in
Afghanistan. some nine years
after the US invasion, rests upon
endlessly redefining the goals and
purposes of the contlict. With the
WikiLeaks documents providing
growing evidence of the catastrophic state of the conflict, Time
Maglr:.ine has jumped in. as it so
often has. with a stOI)' designed to
convince Americans that the war
must continue.
The cover of the Am!. 9 edition
of Time Magazine features a
shocking photo of an I R-year old
Afghan woman whose nose was
brutally cut off by the Taliban.
The stories associated with· the
photo assure us that this will be
the fate of many. if not all, Afghan
women if the United States does
not contmue its occupation ad
infinitum.
Of course using the canard of
women's rights as the justification
for continuing this war is nothing
new. but with the war growing
more unpopular by the minute it
is forcing war enthusiao,;ts to
ratchel up the rhetoric. &lt;tnd scare
the American public, by hook or

by crook. into abandon1ng their
oppositiOn to the conflict in the
name of protetting human rights.
Ignoring for a moment the massive number of civilians. men
women and children. being killed
regularly by the 150.000 U.S.-Ied
international troops in the nation.
one must remember that while
Time has spun the photo as ''what
will happen if the U.S. leaves:·
the tragedy of young Aisha d1d
not happen in :-;ome fictionaL
future Afghanistan unfettered by
U.S. occupation. Rather this girl
has lived 9 years, half of her life.
in U.S.-occupied Afghanistan.
and the violcnct: against her happened
in
U.S.-oc..:upkd
Afghanistan.
· As Time Magldne \ staff tOUI"S
the TV talk circuit they are forevt:r claiming that the U.S. nulitary
can and must be the guarantor of
human rights, claiming para(Joxically that enonnous progress has
been made for women and
Afghanistan while publicizing a
photo which shows the fruits of
that nine years of "progress" as
something quite else enti~;ely.
This is just another attempt to
change the nmTative in the face of
the mass1ve number of U.S.-

int11cted civilian deaths. the full
view of which we are just tinally
beginning to see. and portray the
opponents of the cont1ict as mt;an
spirited and perhaps more than a
little misogynistic.
Yet when I see the picture of
young Aisha on the cover I don't
;;;ee a casus belli for the continuation of America's ill-conceived
adventurism in Central Asia.
Rather. I sec the ugly reality of
nine yeaf'\ of failed nation building. America's war has failed not
only the American people, it has
tailed the Afghan people. and perhaps none quite so much as Aisha.
Violence al!ainst women in time
of war is a ~ i11ual constant. and
the solution to this violence can.
not possibly be more of the same
war which has for the past nine
) ears fmlcd to accomplish this
goal, and failed to accomplish any
of the other goals for which it is
nominally b~ing fought. Before
\\C are cowed. onct: again. into
accepting the "necessity" of this
war, it is time to examine critically what we art: being presented
with.
(Jason Dir::: is 11ew,, editor at
AntnPal:com.)

�Sunday,August8,2oto

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Obituaries

Deaths

Margaret L Queen
Margaret
"Louise"
Queen, 84, Marietta, Ohio,
left this earth to join her
· husband, James W.
Queen in Heaven on
August 6, 20 I 0 at
.."&lt;4..·•~"" Rehabiliation
Louise was born January
24, 1926 at Bladen, Ohio.
daughter of the late Joe
and Jennie Ward Halley.
S.he was a loving and
aevoted wife and mother. .___..;.__ _ _ _ _---J
She is survived b'y four
sons and daughters-in-law, Jim and Debbie, Pomeroy~
Larry and Annette, Parkersburg; Lee and Ruth ,
Coolville; and JetTy and Lisa, Coolville; four daughters and three sons-in-law, Sue and Meredith Turley,
Crown City; Lynn and Roger Osborne, Fleming; Pam
Tatterson, Pomeroy; and Debbie and Roger Mason,
Parkersburg; 24 grandchildren and 41 great-grandchildren.
In addition to her parents. she was preceded in
death by one son, Roger Halley; two grandchildren,
Scarlett Annie Queen and Amber Louise Nitz, and a
son-in-law, Hoy Nitz.
Services will be l p.m., Monday at WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville, Ohio, with
Alfred Holley officiating. Burial will be in the
Providence Cemetery. Crown City, Ohio. Friends may
call at the funeral home Sunday from 6-8 p.m.
You can sign the online guestbook at www.whiteschwarzelfuneralhome.com.

e Donald Raymond Cochran

Donald Raymond Cochran, 60, Patriot. went home
to be with the Lord, Thursday, August 5, 2010, at his
residence. The Ironton, Ohio native was born June 10,
1950, the son of the late Wilburn and Jewell Kingery
Cochran. He is survived by his wife, Donna Jean Ross
Cochran, whom he married March 30, 1974.
Mr. Cochran attended Rock Hill High School. He
was a former construction worker for Ho-Lam
Concrete Paving and GLR Construction, retiring in
1992. ~e is a member of Trinity Freewill Baptist
Church in Willow Wood, Ohio and a member of the
Laborers Local 543. He enjoyed fishing and hunting.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death
by a sister, Elizabeth Turley; a brother, Kenneth
Cochran; and his father-in-law, Freddie Ross.
In addition to his wife, he is survived by his son.
Donald R. Cochran, Jr. of Patriot, Ohio; his son and
his fiance, Dustin R. Cochran and Barbara Plybon of
Patriot, Ohio; five brothers and four sisters-in-law,
Wilburn and Glora Jean Cochran of Coal Grove,
James Cochran of Ironton, Carl and Dorothy Cochran
And Larry and Judy Cochran, all of Kitts Hill, and
Rick and Jean Cochran of'Jackson, Ohio; a sister and
brother-in-law, Shirley and Don Asbury of Texas;
brother-in-law, Jim Turley~ a granddaughter, Izabella
hran of South Point. Ohio; his mother-in-law,
da Ross of Patriot. Ohio~ and a special friend,
nald Butcher of Scottown, Ohio.
•
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m., Monday,
August 9, 2010, at the Trinity Freewill Baptist Church
in Willow Wood, Ohio, with Bro. Roy Adkins and
Bro. Chris Johnson officiating. Burial will follow in
Aid Cemetery. Friends may call from 6-9 p.m.
Sunday at Phillips Funeral Home, 1004 South
Seventh Street, Ironton, Ohio. To offer condolences to
the family or view a video tribute. please visit
www.phillipsfuneralhome.net.

Anthony Wayne Petty
Anthony Wayne Petty, 38, Bidwell, Ohio. passed
away unexpectedly on Wednesday, August 4, 20 10. in
Mt. Carmel West, Columbus. Ohio. He was born on
February 4, 1972, in Gallipolis, son of Carol Ann James
Petty, Bidwell, Ohio. and George Petty, Rodney, Ohio.
Tony attended North Gallia High School and the
University of Rio Grande. He was a certified Level 1
HVAC (heating. ventilation, and air conditioning)
tech; a certified Asbestos Removal Tech; and a commercial roofer. At the time of his death, he was scheduled to re-instate his CDL License and to fulflll his
life long dream. He was a member of the Mt. Carmel
Baptist Church, Bidwell, Ohio, and he was always
ding a hand to help others.
addition to his parents, he is survived by his stepher, Alice Petty; daughter, Shaina Fillinger and
son, Anthony Wayne Petty II, both of Bidwell. Ohio.
Also surviving are his sister, Shelonda Petty, maternal
grandmother, Joanne Bass, both of Bidwell, Ohio; a
special loving friend, Shelley Walker, Rio Grande,
Ohio, who stood by him at all times; two special
nieces, Kaylee and Kelsey Jones; and several aunts,
uncles, cousins and extended family members.
He was preceded in death by his paternal grandparents, Jim and Ruth Petty and maternal grandfather,
John James, Jr.
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m., Tuesday,
August 10, 2010, in the Mt. Carmel Baptist Church
with Rev. Edward Buffington and Rev. Gene
Armstrong officiating. Burial will follow in the Pine
Street Cemetery, Gallipolis, Ohio.
Friends may call from 6-9 p.m. on Monday at the
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home. Vinton.

timothy ·Todd Klein, Sr.

Donna Stambaugh

SPC. Timothy Todd
Klein. Sr. (known as
Cowboy Sr and Big Todd),
of 908 Story's Run Rd,
Cheshire, OH 45620, died
on August 4, 2010 as the
result of a motorcycle
accident in Pomeroy. He
graduated from Meigs
High School in 1984. Then
he married his high school
sweet . heart Lisa J:
Whittington.
He served eight years in
the United States Army
serving in Desert Storm/Desert Shield. He served in
the 567 trans. company in Fort Eustis, Va. He was a
cargo specialist and a machine operator. After the
army he worked at SDR plastics in Ravenswood for
eight years. He currently worked as property patrol
in Colonial TeiTace Apartments in Marietta. He was
a member of the Moose Lodge, Eagles, VFW of
Waverly. He was well loved by everyone. He
enjoyed his family and he loved his grandkids. He
liked fishing, h:unting and riding his bike. Everyone
around him would always joke and say he had three
loves in his life, his truck, his bike and his wife. She
was his high school sweetheart and she was the love
of his life.
He will always be remembered. Cowboy we love
you and you will be sadley missed.
He is survived by his wife, Lisa J. (Whittington)
Klein, Cheshire; children, Lisa M. Klein (Brian
Hart), Cheshire; Timothy T. and Jessica (Lyons)
Klein, Jr., Marietta; Travis L. and Ashley (Hamilton)
Klein, Syracuse; Leslie S. Klein (Brooke Eaton),
Cheshire; Blake E. Klein, Cheshire; Marshal R.
Klein, Cheshire; and Lauren N. Crites; parents,
Lawrence and Patricia (Will) Klein, Pomeroy; grandchildren, Ni~kalas R. Klein, Hunter J. Klein, Papaw's
Little Fishing Buddies; Sylinia N. Bush Klein,
Papaw's little princess; Fisher M. Scott Klein,
Papaw's Littleman; Jordan S. Chaffin, Brody E.
Long; and two unborn grandchildren; brothers and
sisters, Robert and Tammy Klein, Pomeroy; Marry
Imboden, Pomeroy; LaiTy Klein, Pomeroy; Rodney
and Liz Klein, Middleport; Kimberly George and
Roger Jones, Racine; Angela and Mark Minshall,
Pomeroy: Penny Smith, Kevin Klein and Jason Klein
(his biker buddy); mother-in-law, Fraf\ces J.
Whittington, Middleport; father-in-law, Leslie L. and
Yvonne Whittington, Sr., Middleport; sister-in-law,
Teresa L. Whittington and Tim Ohlinger, Syracuse;
nephews, Preston Cook, Charles Cook and Nathanie
Cook, Bricyan Cook; nieces, Sheyane Ohlinger,
Natasha Cook; one great niece and one great nephew;
brother-in-law, Jeffery W. Whittington, Middleport;
and Leslie L. and Belinda Whittington, Jr.; special
friends, Dave and Ralph; several aunts and uncles,
and 20 nieces and nephews and several friends in
Piketon and Marietta; special co-workers in Marietta
Crew, Sandy, Mike, Julie, Chip, Garo1, Doug, Peggy,
Dale, Gene, Tammy, Rodney, Linda. Scott and VFW
members of Marietta. Long-time special friend Sally
Donaldson, Sam Buckley, and brother-in-law
Richard Cook.
He was preceded in death by an infant son Jacob
Klein; nephew, Ryan L. Lemley: infant nephew, Billy
Joe Klein; grandparents, Henry and Erma Will and
Harold and Virgie Klein; grandma Georgia Ruth
Fraley; and uncle Randolph Junior Fraley.
Services will be held at 2 p.m .• Sunday, August 8,
2010, at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy. Visitation will be held three hours prior to
the funeral service.
An online registry is available by logging onto
www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Donna Stambaugh, 54, Valparaiso, Indiana, formerly of Gallipolis, died Friday, Aug. 6, 2010 at the VNA
Hospice in Valparaiso.
Funeral serv1ces will be at 11 p.m. Tuesday. Aug.
10, 2010 at the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home.
Burial will follow at Mound HilJ Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 6-8 p.m. on
Monday•.Aug. 9.

Helene Caldwell Goeglein
Helene Caldwell Goeglein, 94, Pomeroy, passed
away at her residenc.e on August 6, 2010. She was
born on December 22, 1915, on the family farm on
East Shade Creek near Tuppers Plains in Meigs
County, to the late William Caldwell and Sophia
Koehler Caldwell. She was a graduate of Olive
Orange High School in Tuppers Plains, Class of
1934. She was a member of the Rocksprings
Methodist Church.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded by her
husband of 36 years, Avery Goeglein in 1997~ first
husband, Earl Leifheit; sister, Ruby Cole; brother,
Gordon H. Caldwell. ·
She is survived by daughter, Carolyn (Jon) Jacobs;
grandchildren, T~dd Cullums, Heather Jacobs; great
grandchildren, Erin, Eric, Alexandria, Danielle
Cullums; Braden and Dean Baker: great great grandchild, Dalton Hawkins; sisters-in-law, Maxine and
Mabel Goeglein; brother-in-law, Charles Goeglein;
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral service will be held at 10 a.m., Tuesday,
August 10, 2010, at Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy.
At Mrs. Goeglein 's request there will be no calling
hours.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to:
Holzer Hospice (Meigs Co. Branch), 100 Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis, OH 45631.
An online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Around Ohio
•

!bunbap \ttmeg -fbenttnd • Page As

Strickland,
Kasich agree· on
two debates

determined.
The debates will be
available for broadcast
on television stations
throughout the state.

OLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio Democratic Gov.
Strickland and
Ted
Republican challenger
John Kasich have agreed
to meet for two debates
in the run-up to this fall's
election.
The evening debates
will be held Sept. 14 in
Columbus and Oct. 7 in
Toledo. The exact locations have not yet been

Charity gets
$1 ,000 in coins
CINCINNATI (AP) An anonymous donor in
Cincinnati gave the
Salvation Army more
than $1 ,000 - in coins.
The charity says the
donor dropped off an oversized plastic Coca-Cola
bottle filled with pocket

change earlier this week.
It took workers several
days to count all the coins,
which totaled $1 ,092.06.
The money will go toward
social service programs in
Cincinnati.
The charity says the
donor couldn't find an
easy way to count the
coins and so gave it away.

Priest arrested
for sex crimes
COLUMBUS (AP) A Roman Catholic priest
who was removed from

Local Briefs
Shoe gift cards t~ go out
POMEROY - Gift cards for shoes will again this
year be given to Meigs County boys and girls by the
Pomeroy Cluster of Churches, Don Shaffer. chairman, announced today.
He said that the $20 gift cards will be given on Aug.
14 at Grace Episcopal Church. The doors of the
church will open at noon. The children will be treated
to hot dogs, chips and dri~s
·
Shaffer emphasized that children must be present,
that parents cannot just stop by and pickup the gift
cards. Last year the church provided gift cards for 320
pairs of shoes for children, elementary through high
school.

More sponsors of fair activities
POMEROY- The Meigs County Fair Board
has announced that in addition to earlier
announced corporate sponsors for events, two new
ones have been added. Kawasaki Motor in
Gallipolis 'will sponsor the ATV pulls on Saturday
night, and Walmart will sponsor the royalty contest
on Sunday and the youth garden tractor pulls on
Saturday night.

Craftsman Across America tour
GALLIPOLIS - The Craftsman Across America
tour will stop in Gallipolis from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. on
Sunday, Aug. 8. The event will be held at the Sears
store on Eastern Ave. The event features a Craftsman
lawn tractor that is being driven by Lucas Van Engen
across the U.S. from Santa Monica, Calif., to
Bedford, Pa. The Gallipolis stop is one of at least
eight events scheduled on the tour. Sears owner
Shelly Dale invites the public to attend. Hot dogs and
cake will be served.

Military family support group
GALLIPOLIS - The River Cities Military Family
Support Group will meet at 7 p.m., Tuesday, Aug. 10
on the second floor of the VFW Post 4464, 134 Third
Ave., Gallipolis. For information, call 245-5589 or
441-7454.

Retired Teachers lunch
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Retired
Teachers luncheon is scheduled at noon on Thursday,
Aug. 12 at the First Baptist Church shelter house in
Gallipolis. Bring covered dish. Program will include
awarding scholarships. Info/reservations: Karen
Cornell, 256-6846.

Fall· sports parents meeting
BIDWELL- A parents' meeting for fall sports athletes at River Valley High School and River Valley
Middle School will be held at 6 p.m., Thursday, Aug.
12 at the River Valley High School gym. Parents
whose children plan to participate in football, volleyball, cross country, golf and cheerleading are encouraged to attend. For information, contact David Moore
at 367-7054.

OOMPD board to meet
GALLIPOLIS - The regular board meeting of the
0.0. Mcintyre Park District is scheduled for 11 a.m.,
Friday, Aug·. 13 in the Park District Office at the
Gallia County Courthouse.

GJM board meeting
GALLifOLIS - The Gallia-Jackson-Meigs
Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental
Health Services will meet at 7 p.m. on Monday,
Aug. 16 at the board office, 53 Shawnee Lane,
Gallipolis. The board is currently seeking new
members to fill vacancies. Interested parties
should contact Ronald A. Adkins at (740) 4463022.

RVMS back to school meeting
BIDWELL - River Valley Middle School will
hold its Back to School/Parent-Teacher Conference
from 3:30-6:30 p.m. on Thursday, August 19.
Students who are going in to the sixth, seventh, or
eighth grades and their parents are welcome to
attend. Any questions contact David Moore at 4468399.

RVMS PTO meeting
ministry in Columbus,
Ohio, in 1993 for allegedly molesting a teenage
boy has been charged with
sex crimes in Canada.
The Rev. Phillip Jacobs
was arrested Wednesday
night at the Victoria airport
in British Columbia. He's
charged with
sexual
assault, sexual exploitation
and sexual interference.
A police spokesman
says ''numerous" alleged
victims have come forward. The 60-year-old
Jacobs served as a parish
priest in British Columbia
from 1998 to 2002.

BIDWELL - The River Valley Middle School
PTO will meet at 6 p,m., Thursday, Aug. 26 at the
RVMS library. Agenda items include the election of
officers and planning for the 2010-2011 school year.

'McCoJ-'Moore
Punera( 'Jfomes
Herb. lean. Jared. i\le!t:r.ra 6"' Toe .\loore - Direttors

Oli • (7.W) 446-0852

420 ist Av;nuc, Gallipoli,;,
208 Main Street, Vinton, OH

•(7~0)

388-8321

�.....

--..,.._------------....~---~--·-·-·-----·-,..._------------------------------

PageA6

j,unbap ~imes -ientinel

Sunday,August 8,2010

Amish victims of theft Gallia Co. woman facing drug abuse charge
Bv BRIAN

J.

I

REED

BREEDOMYDAILYSENT!NEL.OOM

WOLFE PEN - An Amish work crew building a log
home in nrral Meigs County retumed to their .worksite
Thursday moming to discover their tools had been stolen.
including their personal toolbelts and the items inside.
Sheriff Robert Beegle said his otlice is investigating that case and the breaking and entering of the
Pageville store. A juvenile suspect in that case admitted to attempting to rob a Civil War-era grave in
Pageville in 2009 during questioning about the B&amp;E.
The thieves robbed the Amish volunteers of approximately $6.000 in tools. Beegle said the work crew
reported to the construction site on Grueser Hollow
Road in Salisbury 'Jownship Thursday and found the
items missing from the tool trailer parked there.
Samuel E. Shetler. Frederickstown. reported the following items stolen: three gasoline drills. a 14-inch Stihl
MS200 chainsaw, two MS 192T Stih1 chain saws. one
with a 12-inch bar and the other with a 14-inch bar.
Craftsman 150-piece socket set in a black case. two flexible shaft drills powered by a four-cycle Honda engine.
and a De.Walt miter saw powered by a Stihl chainsaw
engine. and several tool belts filled with tools of the trade.
Beegle asks that the community assist in identifying
the stolen items or providing infonnation that might
allow their return and the suspect's arrest by calling
992-3371 with information.
Four juveniles will be charged with the Saturday
night breaking and entering of the store in Pageville.
The B&amp;E was discovered last Sunday morning. A side
window had been broken. and money, cigarettes and
other tobacco, keys and beer were reported taken. On
Tuesday, items were recovered from lawns in' the
Scipio Township community.
Three of the juveniles were brought to the sheriff's
office Thursday and gave statements of their participation in the breaking and entering. Deputies are now
contacting the fourth.
Beegle said one of the juveniles admitting to participating in the Pageville case admitted to digging a
five square-foot hole in a grave in the Pageville
Cemetery because he had been told it contained gold.

CVS. located on Ohio mother, while the other Court on a drug abuse
160, a deputy spoke with bottle was unmarked. charge on Aug. 17 in
Clonch and, after receiv- The suspect allegedly relation to this case. In
GALLIPOLIS
ing permission from the told the deputy that she 2008,
Clonch
was
Deputies with the Gallia suspect. searched her was aware that it is ille- charged with theft ~.
County Sheriff's Office purse for stolen property. gal to carry pills in an allegedly stealing me
responded to an alleged No stolen property was unmarked
contuiner. chandise
from
the
shoplifting ' call that found by the deputy, The suspect also report- Gallipolis
Walmart,
ended in the seizure of however, two prescriped that she has a pre- however, the charge was
prescription medication
for
.the reduced to criminal trestion pill bottles were scription
at CVS Pharmacy in
One
bottle
passing as per a plea
Suboxone
tablets.
The
recovered.
Gallipolis on Tuesday.
contained
14
agreement.
Clonch wa~
drugs
were
seized
and
Crystal Clonch, 25,
further
charged
with
hydrocodone
tablets
and
the
suspect
was
later
Gallipolis. was allegedly
concriminal
trespassing
in
the
other
bottle
released.
acting
suspiciously
Clonch
is
tained
six
pills
including
~cheduled
two unrelated cases in
while in CVS pharmacy
at approximateJy 1:30 two Suboxone tablets . for an arraignment in the 2008 for trespassing in
Mumcipal the Gallipolis Walmart.
a.m. on Aug. 3. After Suboxone is used to treat Gallipolis
CVS employees and cus- addiction to opioid drugs
tomers observed the sus- such as, heroin and narLooking for a new career?
pect, they called law cotic painkillers.
The bottle of hyrenforcement authorities
to advise that the suspect drocodone was marked
in the form of a pre1-800-214-0452
was shoplifting.
accredtled Memller· accrlllltlnl CtaDCII for IDdlllelld!nt Conetes 11411 Scae11St2l48
Upon arrival at the scription to Clonch's

Bv AMBER GILLENWATER
MDTNEWS®MVDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

•.uallipoliscareercollege.edu

•

Possible""

New immunization requirements
for Ohio students announced
GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio Department of Health
recently announced additional immunization requirements for kindergarten and seventh grade students for
the 2010-2011 school year.
Students in seventh grade will be required to have the
addition of a tetanus, diphtheria and pertussis (Tdap) or
tetanus and diphtheria (Td) booster shots. Kindergarten
students will be required to have the addition of a second dose of varicella (chickenpox) vaccine and a final
dose of polio vaccine to be administered on or after the
child's fourth birthday for kindergarten entry.
The new Ohio requirements more closely reflect recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, Galtia County Health Department officials
said in a press release issued Frida~ The TdaQ vaccine has
added protection against pertussts, also known as whooping cough, which doubled in the number of cases in Ohio
between 2008 and 2009 and is currently on a rise. A second dose of varicella vaccine provides a child with 99 percent protection against chick~npox, which lessens the
amount of time a child may miss school due to the disea&lt;&gt;e.
Back to School Immunization Clinics
The Gallia County Health Department is offering
extended office hours prior to beginning of the school
year to help parents meet the new v~cination vequirements. The health department will be open until 6
p.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 10.
The health department is hosting a Back to School
Immunization Fair from 9 a.m.-1 p.m. on Saturday,
Aug. 14." There will be lots of activities for the children, including bean bag toss, face painting, go fish, ·
treat bags, coloring stations and _refreshments. All
children sh_puld have a current immunization record
and be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian.
The he-.alth department encourages parents whose
children do not have a current shot record to contact
the department prior to Aug. 14 at (740) 441-2950.

..

•
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1·800468-6682
www.ovbc.com

Text OSU to 94253 fer braldng news. sped~~ alfen, and tll:lusNt Buclllyt corant dellwrld 1D your wftless phone!

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PORTS

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Winebrenner stays on top in Riverside S~nior League
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF
' MDSSPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

DAYS

MASON, W.Va. Mick
Winebrenner of Racine, Ohio.
has a slim six point lead over Ed
Debalski of Ripley, W.Va .. after
five weeks on the second half of
the 20 I 0 Riverside Senior
Men's
Golf
League.
Winebrenner's total of 94.5
points is 16 points ahead of third
place Chet Thomas of Patriot,
Ohio. with his 78.5 total.
A-total of79 players were present for Tuesday's play. T.he
players were divided into 19
teams of four players and on
three-man team.
The 10\v score for the day was

56 ( 14 under par) and was shot
by · the
team
of
Mick
Winebrenner. Bobby Joe Roush.
and Butch Bookman.
The second low score was 59
( 11 under par) by the team of
Paul Maynard. Curtis Grubb,
Dave Shinn. and Ed Debalski.
There was a tie for third place
with scores of 61 (nine under
par) between the teams of Tom
Dotson. Buford Brown, Jim
Gordon. and Jimmy Joe
Hemsley. and Chuck Stanley,
Dave Seamon, Earl Johnson,
and Russ Holland.
The closest to the pin winners
were Buford Brown on the ninth
hole and Dick Dugan on the
14th hole.

2010

MEN'S SENIOR
LEAGUE STANDINGS

Mick Winebrenner •
Ed Debalski
Chet Thomas
Bob Hysell
Ken Whited
Bob Humphrey
Pat Harbour
Don Corbin
Paul Maynard
Kenny Greene
Rick Ash
Earl Johnson
Haske! Jones
Jim Gordon
Bill Arnott
Claude Proffitt
Willis Dudding

94.5
88.5
78.5
77.0
75.5
74.0
73.5
73.0
71.0
70.0
68.0
67.0
66.5
66.5
64.0
64.0
62.5

Bobby Joe Roush
Bob Stewart
Butch Bookman
Skip Johnson
'Dave Seamon
Dick Dugan
Ed Coon
Dave Shinn
Bill Winebrenner
Don Waldie
Bob Edgar
Pat Williamson
Frank Brown
Gary Minton
Tom Fisher
Curtis Grubb
Clyde Jarvis
Carl Stone
Siebert Belcher
Bill Yoho

Thomas
looks to grab
leadership
role

Bengals' DE
Odom back
. on line
GEORGETOWN. Ky.
(AP) - Antwan Odom
zips
around
the
Cincinnati
Bengals'
training camp on a twowheel transport. getting
where he wants to go as
fast as he can.
The Bengals hope the
same holds true when
he's back in the lineup.
The 28-year-old defene end has fully recovd from a torn Achilles·
don that ended his
ason after only six
games. He still finished
as the team's sacks leader
with eight.
Odom sat out practice
on Thursday with an illness that has bothered
him the past few days, ·
causing him to · lose a little weight. It's. unclear
\\-hether he'll play in the
preseason opener on
Sunday. the Hall of Fame
game in Canton, Ohio.
against
the
Dallas
Cowboys.
He wants to .get into a
game soon.
'T m
very eager,
· Odom said. "I can't wait.
I'm anxious. It's going to
be a great year for us.
We've got a lot of ke]
additions to the team.''
None bigger than
Odom, who has been
' injured each of his two
sons with the Bengals.
e defense finished
•
fourth in the NFL last
season without him, but.
struggled to get pressure
on the quarterback at
times.
.
"It's huge having
Antwan back," defensive
tackle Domata Peko said.
"That's what he does get after the quarterbacks.''
The. Bengals signed
Odom from Tennessee
before the 2008 season, ·
their major offseason
acquisition to help the
defense. He hurt his foot
during training &lt;.:amp and
was limited to eight starts
and three sacks.
Healthy at the start of
last season, he emerged
as one of the NFL's best
at getting to the passer.
Odom had seven sacks in
the first two games, an
NFL record. He was tied
A-, the league lead with
~t sacks when he tore
his right A&lt;.:hilles' tendon
on Oct. I8.
A sign of how much
the Bengals missed him:
• Odom 's eight sacks still
led the team at the end of
the season. ·
Odom was well into his
rehabilitation when the
Bengals lost to the Jets in

f

CLEVELAND (AP)
Joe Thomas is one of
the few peopl,e the
Cleveiand Browns have
been able to depend on.
Entering his fourth
NFL season, Thomas has
started all 48 games the
team has played since
Cleveland selected the
offensive left tackle with
the third pick in the 2007
draft.
Thomas, who has yet
to miss an offensive
snap. has been a rock of
consistency for a team
that has been plagued by
losing
and turmoil.
Thomas was one of the
Browns captains in 2009
and looks to assume even
more of a leadership role
this season.
"I feel like that's happening.'' said Thomas.
who has made the Pro
Bowl in all three seasons.
"Last year. \Vas my first
year as a captain. I f~el
like I'm starting to step
up in the locker room and
: meeti n!! rooms and.
hopcfufly. tr) ing to carry
that over for another year
' and improve on that.''
Thomas and his offensive teammates find
l themselves working with
1 yet another new· quarterback. Derek Anderson
and Brady Quinn shared
the duties the last three
seasons. Both are gone.
Jake Delhomme will be
this season's starter. with
Seneca Wallace and
rookie Colt McCoy in
reserve.
1
Getting accustomed to
working with Delhomme
is one of Thomas' top
priorities in training
camp. '
:.Getting with Jake and
1 trying to kind of get this
offense moving in the
direction that we want (is
important)."
Thomas
I said.
The Browns have com1 pleted one week of camp
and Thomas likes the
• routine that has devel~

.

Please see Odom, 83

62.5
62.0
61.5
60.0
59.0
58.5
57.5
56.0
55.5
55.5
54.0
54.0
54.0.
53.5
53.0
53.0
52.5
52.0
52.0
51.5

' Phil Masturzo/Akron Beacon Journai/MCT

Ohio University's Terrence McCrae pushes off of University Akron defensive back Manley Waller (left) during a
second quarter run at lnfoCision Stadium on Saturday, October 10, 2009, in Akron, Ohio.

Temple, NIU favorites in MAC race
BY RUSTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Expansion changed the
landscape of college
football this summer,
Yet the Mid-American
Conference holds fast.
nestled between the bigmoney programs in the
Big Ten. Big East and
Big 12.
Not even MAC commissioner Dr. Jon A.
Steinbrecher
knows
what's ahead.
"I can't begin to predict what the future
holds," he said. "We're a
stable conference. Would
any movement create an

opportunity for us? Time
will tell."
The pecking order on
the football field is also
difficult to forecast.
Temple has emerged as
a MAC power in just
three years in the confererKe under coach AI

Golden. Long a college
football laughingstock,
the Owls are now overwhelming favorites to
win the Eastern Division.
"This is our most talented team, but the best
players don't always
make the best teams,"
Golden told reporters
during MAC media say.
Ohio, last year's East
champions, has become a
consistent
contender
under
coach
Frank
Solich.
In
the
Western
Division.
Central
Michigan has been the
team to beat in recent
years, but it's a transition

year for the Chippewas.
CMU is replacing head
coach Butch Jones and
record-setting quarterback Dan LeFevour.

1

EAST

TEMPL£

Ke]

players: RB Bernard
Pierce, QB
Chester
Stewart. DB Jaiquawn
Jarrett,
DE
Adrian
Robinson. LB Elijah
Joseph.
Returning
starters: 8 offense 9
defense.
·
Notes: The Owls are
coming off first winning
Please see MAC, 83

Alabama is No. 1 in USA Today's preseason poll
TYSONS CORNER.
Va. (AP) - Defending
national
champion
Alabama is No. I atop
the USA Today preseason coaches· poll.
Boise State will begin
the season ranked No.
5. The Broncos, like
Alabama, finished last
season 14-0. They beat
TCU in the 1-'iesta
Bowl.
The Crimson Tide got
55 of 59 possible first
place votes. The other
four went to Ohio State.
which is No. 2 in the
newspaper's ranking.
Florida is third, followed by Texas. which
lost to Alabama in the
BCS title game in
January.
Virginia Tech was
sixth, followed by TC'U,
Oklahoma. Nebraska
and Iowa to round out
the top I 0.
are
Nos.
11-15
Please see Poll, 83

•

Alabama
coach Nick
Saban
holds the
BCS
National
Champions
hip trophy
beside Mark
Ingram,
right, in
Pasadena,
California
on
Thursday.
January 7,
2010.
Alabama
defeated
Texas, 3721.
Alabama
was voted
No.1 in the
USA Today
preseason
poll.
Michael
Ainsworth/
Dallas
Morning
News/MCT

1

oped.

"It's a good feel." he
said. "It seems like every
camp I'm in there's
always a good. positive
buzz going around and
everybody's very optimistic. I see that this
year. the same \vay."
While hardly a grizzled
veteran. Thomas has a
definite opinion on the
rigors of camp.
-;,I don't know if it ever
gets easier," he said. "I
think it just is \vhat it is.
You know what to
e:-;pect. so maybe things
are a Iittle bit easier
because you're maybe
Please see Browns, 81

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sports Briels
Gallipolis Midget
League Cheerleading

Eastern Fall
Sports passes
TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio
Eastern High School now has five
different fall sports passes available
for the upcoming 2010 season, which
are on sale at the EHS main office
from 8:30 a.m. until 3 pm. on
Monday through Friday.
* Senior Pass: A pass may be purchased for the 2010 fall sports season
for $20. You must have a Golden
Buckeye Card to purchase a pass and
you must be a resident of the EHS
school district. The pass is good for
junior high and high school volleyball and football.
* Volleyball Pass: An adult pass
may be purchased for the 2010 volleyball season for $35. The pass is
good for all junior high and high
school volleyball games. You must
be a resident of the EHS school district.
* Football Pass: An adult pass may
be purcha,sed for the 2010 footbaH
season for $30. The pass is good for
all junior high and high school football games. You must be a resident of
the EHS school district.
* Student Pass: A student pass may
be purchased for the 2010 fall sports
season for $30. You must be an
Eastern student to purchase a pass
and the pass is good for junior high
and high school volleyball and football.
* Adult Pass: An adult pass may be
purchased for the 20 10 fall sports
season for $65. You must be a resident of the EHS school district. The
pass is good for junior high and high
school volleyball and football.
Individual game prices for the
2010-11 school year will be $5 per
adult and $3 per student - for both
high school and junior high home
events at EHS.

Gallia Academy
Cross Country
CENTENARY, Ohio - Signups
for Gal1ia Academy Cross Country
will be held at 7 p.m. oon Monday,
Aug. 9, at the high school. Practice
for both the middle school and high
school will begin on Tuesday, Aug.
10, at 8:30 a.m. and run TuesdayFriday.

River Valley Summer
Ball Association
BIDWELL, Ohio - The River
Valley Summer Ball Association will
hold its end of season meeting on
Wednesday, Aug. 11, at 6:30p.m. at
the middle school.
Everyone involved with the league
in asked to attend.

Gallia Academy
Soccer Practice
CENTENARY, Ohio
Gallia
Academy soccer practice will begin
on · Monday, Aug. 9. Varsity and
junior varsity practice will be from 68 a.m. and from 6:30-8:30 p.m.
Junior High practice will be from
6:30-8 p.m. Both practices will run
Monday thru Friday.

GAMS Cheerleading
. Tryouts
CENTENARY,
Ohio
Cheerleading for Gallia Academy
Middle School will begin on
Monday, Aug. 9 with clinics from 810 a.m. and Tuesday, Aug. 10, from
9:30-11 a.m. Tryouts will be at 2
p.m. on Tuesday. Cheerleader candidates must be entering the 8th grade
at GAMS for the 2010-2011 school
year. Those interested. should rep~rt
to Gallia Academy Htgh School m
Centenary, Ohio, pn Monday.
For questions or more information
contact Chdsty Randles at 245-5810.

RVMS Volleyball
Practice
BIDWELL, Ohio - Practice for
River Valley Middle School volleyball will begin Monday, Aug. 9.
Practice is from 9-11 a.m. at the
River Valley Middle Schoo~. ~11
girls must have updated phystcals m
the office to participate.
For questions contact Harvey
Brown at 388-8586.

Gallipolis Midget
Football Signups
GALLIPOLIS. Ohio
The
Gallipolis Midget Football signups
are available at www.gallipolismidgetfootball.com or at Wiseman
Real Estate locafed on 2nd. Avenue
in Gallipolis, Ohio. The league is
open to any 4th, 5th, or 6th grader
who is 13 years old or younger as of
Aug. 1. Deadline for entry is Aug. 9
at 5 p.m.
~

Saying goodbye to our animal
friends is tough, personal

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - Gallipolis
A shovel bites into the
Midget League Cheerleading si~nups earth; the first stabs into
are currently under way. For mfor- the sod are tough. the
mation or to sign up visit www.gal- grass roots clinging
lipolismidgetfootball.com.
There together making for hard
will be a mandatory meeting on digging. The work: is
Tuesday, Aug. 10, at 6 p.m. at the done clumsily. mostly by
Gallipolis City Park for those wish- often-youthful
hands
ing to participate.
. inexperienced with digging, and often through
the distorted lenses of
tearstained eyes.
In a scene played out
countless times in yards
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio Gallia and fields throughout this
Academy 8th grade football practice land. a beloved pet, a
will begin on Monday, August 9, at family friend and loyal
the Memorial Field football locker guardian, a hunting comroom. All interested athletes need to panion, is laid to rest.
We have been through
have their physical completed by the
several
of these in the
opening day of practice, which will
begin at 8 a.m. For more information, past few years with the
contact GAHS 8th grade football passing of dear old famiJy friends and I am sure
coach Rick Howell at 446-4624.
you have too; r am certain you can recall your
personal
experiences
vividly with little to no
difficulty. My pet funeral
experiences
have largely
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio Gallia
involved
dogs,
but I
Academy 7th grade football practice
will begin on Monday, Aug. 9 at 8 guess the experience can
a.m. All interested athletes need to be the same with cats or
have their physicals completed whatever else passes for
before the opening day of practice. your favorite animal
There will also be an informational companion. Cats and
meeting for all players and parents on even a bird now rest in
Thursday, Aug. 5 at 7 p.m. at our pet cemetery as well.
Jp many cases a pet's
Memorial Field. Any player who
is an important
funeral
cannot attend the meeting must contact Coach Mike Canaday at 446- rite of passage, it is gen7538 or canaday_mike@yahoo.com erally a youngster's first
experience with death,
before Aug. 5.
grasping with Joss, with
the realization that something they loved is no
longer with them. These
events don't make it to
page A-5 ·in the Sunday
BIDWELL, Ohio - The 'River Times-Sentinel. Friends
Valley High School Volleyball pro- don't' stop by with covgram will begin official practice on ered dishes and they
Monday, Aug. 9. Freshman will have aren't attended by hunpractice from 3-5 p.m., while JV and dr.eds of people; nor
varsity will follow from 5:30-7:30 should they- the focus of
p.m. in the high. ~chool. gym. ~or a dog's life is his pack
questions or additional mformatwn (his family) and his terricontact the school at 740-446-2926.
tory (home).
To me it is a point of
honor that you have to
dig your own dog's
grave; and it has to be big

In the
Open

GAHS 8th grade
• football practice

GAHS 7th grade
football practice

RVHS Volleyball
Practice

GAHS Volleyball
Practice

CENTENARY, Ohio Galli a
Academy Blue Angel volleyball
practice and tryouts will begin on
Monday, Aug. 9, and is mandatory
for grades 7-12. Grades 9-12 will be
from 10 a.m. to Noon, and grades 78 will be from 6-8 p.m. All practices
will be at the Gallia Academy High
School Gymnasium. All girls must
have an updated physical on file in
the high school office prior to Aug. 9.
For questions contact coach Amy
Shriver at 740-446-7135.

Jim Freeman
enough and deep enough
to keep varmints out. The
work of digging continues and the hole gets
wider and deeper. The
larger clods are removed
by hand, and eventually
the task is completed to
satisfaction.
For Reggie I pondered
keeping his collar. but
Mary reminded me that
his collar was the one
thing he owned, he
earned the right to be
buried with it, not as a
sign of servitude but as a
badge of honor.
The burden, wrapped
in a blanket. is placed
gently into the waiting
earth. Rocks are placed
around and on top varmints again - and
· eventually the soil is
pl'aced back into the hole,
the sad body finally disappearing from sight, and
the remaining earth
mounded on top.
There are no fancy
stones or markers in our
pet cemetery, just a few
fieldstones or old bricks
to help ensure the resting
places aren't used again
when the exact location
is finally forgotten.
Reggie got a large, flat
rock placed on top there is no way to accidentally dig into that. It
often causes me to reflect
when I drive a tractor or
four-wheeler past the
spot. I remember I tried
and failed to turn him
into a hunting dog, and

Browns
fromPageBl

not as nervous. You've
got more expectations
about how things are
~oing to run, but it never
IS easy."
Left · guard
Eric
Steinbach signed with
the Browns in 2007 and
MYL Fall Ball signups has played alongside
Thomas for three years.
''I've been in the
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio The
Middleport Youth League will be league seven years and
holding Fall Ball signups for both obviously he's one of the
boys and girls - ages 5-16 - from better, if not the best,
noon until 3 p.m. on Saturday, tackle in the game right
August 14, at the Middleport ball now," Steinbach said.
"He's only been in the
fields.
For more information, contact league three years. My
first here year he was a
Dave Boyd at 590-0438.
rookie and he came in
and played right away.
He did a tremendous job.
Each year he's a consistent, solid player."
Thomas became an
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio
The instant
hit
with
Middleport Youth League will be Cleveland fans.
He
holding a co-ed softball league for bypassed the pomp and
boys and girls - ages 13-18 ctrcumstance of draft day
throughout the month of August. For three years ago to go
more information, contact Jackie Fox fishing. The 6-foot-6,
at 416-1261 or Tanya Coleman at 312-pounder co-hosts his
either 992-5481 or 416-1952.
own fishin~ .show O!l a
local televtston statwn.
Thomas
is
signed
through the 20 11 season
MASON, W.Va. - The Wahama so it's unclear whether he
Athletic Hall of Fame Board of
Trustees will conduct a meeting on
Tuesday, August 10, in the Waharna
High School cafeteria. Plans for the
inaugural H.O.F. football game and
banquet will.be finalized. All Board
of Trustees are urged to attend this

MYL teen co-ed
softball league

Wahama HOF meeting

will be in Cleveland
beyond that.
''I'm just taking it one
year at a time and when
the time comes to talk
about long-term, I'm sure
the Browns will come to
me," Thomas said. ''But
we're just trying to win
games and turn this team
into a winner. The contract things always take
care of themselves."
Thomas and the other
players get a break in the
routine Saturday when
the team holds its annual
scrimmage at Cleveland
Browns Stadium. The
players will break into
Brown and White Squads
and play four l 0-minute
quarters. Coach E.ric
Mangini wants to simulate game conditions as
much as possible.
''It should be fun,"
Mangini said. "I look forward to a big crowd
turnout. Rookies don't
understand how noisy it
gets at our place, but they
will soon enough."
The coaching staff has
divided up the teams as
fairly as possible for the
scrimmage. Delhomme
and Brett Ratliff, last season's third-string quarterback, will work wtth one
team while Wallace and
McCoy will play for the

how he would eat the
house to try to get in during thunderstorms, but I
also remember he always
tried to be a good dog. i1Jil1.
His friend Julie, theW
most recent addition to
the pet cemetery, lies a
short distance away
under a virtual cairn of
rocks and bricks. She
always made being a
good dog look easy.
These are small affairs,
attended by only a few
people, if that, but to me
they are emotional. I
remember these dogs
from the time they were
'puppies, and I occasionally think to myself that
is good they don't live
longer than they do, otherwise the pain of their
passing would be too
great to bear.
True, these are just
dogs, but they are members of our family, our
friends, and it is altogether fitting that we should
do ·this, . remembering
them this way. Unlike
most of us, our dogs ge.
to stay behind on the Jan
that comprised their
home, close to their people; I like to believe that
is how they would prefer
it.
On occasions like this
it humors me to think that
dogs were the inspiration
for the words in Matthew
25:23:
His
master
replied, 'Well done, good
and faithful servant! You
have been faithful with a
few tl~ings; I will put you
in charge of many things.
Come and share your
master's happiness!'

Jim Freeman is wildlife
specialist for the Meigs
Soil
and
Water
Conservation District.
He can be contacted
weekdays at 740-9924282 or at jimjreeman@oh.nacdnet.net

I

other.
Delhomme threw three
interceptions
in
Thursday's practice.
"I don't want any three
games,"
interception
Mangini said. "The
encouraging thing is the
defense is creating more
turnovers."
The Browns won't be
at full strength. Nose
tackle Shaun Rogers.
defensive lineman C.J.
Moseley and defensive
back Coye Francis are on
the physically unable to
perform list. Several
other players could miss
the scrimmage with
injuries.
Punter Dave Zastudill,
who missed the final
eight games last season
because of surgery on his
right knee (non-kicking
leg), left camp earlier in
the week to have the
knee examined. H.
returned Friday, but di
not practice. Mangini
didn't rule out that
Zastudill, who averaged
44.7 yards a kick last season, would have further
surgery.
"I don't think we've
drawn any conclusion
right now,'' Mangini said.
"I don't think there's
anything new as of yet.
We'll talk about it and
see where it goes."

Start Shogging Now!

me~ting.

Cheerleading and
Mascot tryouts
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
Point Pleasant Middle School cheerleading tryouts will be held on
Monday, Aug. 9, and Tuesday, Aug.
I 0, at 8:30 a.m. in the old gymnasium.

Point Pleasant
Football Practice
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Fall
practice for Point Pleasant M1ddle
School football will begin on
Monday, Aug. 9, at 8:30a.m.

·- -·--·-,-·- --..-- ·-

...

Sunday, August 8, 2010

..

Layaway
Hot Tubs
·For Chr-istmas!

':':'\

'

0 Areas Largest Selection!
0 Always In-stock
0 Ready for Delivery!

•atlliiiB8el Ceal•
-~~-------~

!!!!!!I

1412 Eastern Ave. • Galli olis • 740-446-6579

�Sunday, August 8,

2010

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Gay upsets Bolt in 100 meters in Stockholm
STOCKHOLM (AP)
- It turns out Usain
Bolt can be beaten.
From
Beijing
to
Berlin. it seemed that
Bolt and his long, turbocharged strides were
more than a match for
over 100 meters.
t Tyson Gay upset the
defending world and
Olympic
champion
Friday in a race between
the two fastest runners
in history.
'
Gay beat the Jamaican
at the DN Galan meet in
9.84 seconds. competing at the same stadium
where Bolt last lost a
race two years ago.
The American seemd
to be in com'plete control . against the world
record-holder. The pair
raced side by side in
lanes four and five and
as Gay. looking · comfortable, drew away.
Bolt was straining to
keep up and finished
second in 9.97.
'Trn really happy
with the win, even
th.ough Usain Bolt isn't
the best shape," Gay
d. ''It was very
portant to beat someone like that for the fans
and the sport.''
Bolt has run faster this
year, finishing in 9.82 a
month ago in Lausanne.
Switzerland.,
A sellout cr.owd in the
1912 Olympic Stadi urn
turned silent before the
showdown. And the tension . heightened even
further after two false
starts.
"I think it showed that
I wasn't in the best of
shape." Bolt said. 'Trn
not unbeatable. I can be
beaten and it showed
today."
·'This is my easy sea-

.t

·MAC

I

from Page Bl

season since 1990, first
bowl game since 1979 . .. :
Pierce being promoted as
serious Heisman Trophy
candidate. He rushed for
I .361 yards and 16 TDs
last year. . .. Stewart and
Owls were 111 th in the
nation in passing.
OHIO - Key player~:
QB
Boo
Jackson,
WR/KR LaVon Brazill,
DB Gerald Moore, LB
Noah KeHer.
Notes: Lost in MAC
title game to CMU 2010; haven't won league
title since 1968 .... Much
depends on· rebound of
Jackson, who·plliyecl just
two games because of
injury. ... Frank Solfch
has school's best coaching record (.508) since
Bill Hess left in 1977 ....
Bobcats passed for 23
and ran for nine.
•
ENT STATE - Key
players: RB Eugene
Jarvis. QB
Spencer
Keith,
WR
Tyshon
Goode, S Brian Lainhart,
LB Cobrani Mixon.
Returning starters: 8
offense. 8 defense.
Notes: Jarvis received
sixth year from NCAA
after lacerating his kidney (he was born with
only one) last season.
With
3,426 rushing
yards, needs 564 to break
Astron Whatley's school
record.... Golden Flashes
loaded at RB with
Jacquise Terry and Ore
Archer behind Jarvis ....
Keith, fully recovered
from shoulder separation, added 30 pounds ....
(53 catches, 5 TDs in
'09) best of bunch.

BOWLING GREEN
Key players: RB
Willie Geter. WR Adrian
~ges,
DE Angelo
knone. DB Adrien
Spencer.
Returning
starters: 4 offense, 4
defense.
Notes: Geter ran for
705 yards in '09. ...
Falcons must replace QB
Tyler Sheehan. who took
nearly every snap the last
three seasons. and WR
Prcddie Barnes who
caught NCAA record 155
passes last yea~

•

~unbn~ \!J:fmrSj-$rntincl •

Page B3

Goodell undecided on
possible Browns suspensions
BEREA. Ohio (APJ
- NPL... Commissioner
Roe.cr Goouell still has
n't~decided on the fate
of
two
Cleveland
Browns players facing
suspensions.
Shaun Rogers and
Robaire Smith were
arrested three months
apart when stopped by
airport security ·for carrying weapons.
.. Both cases are still
under review by our
staff," Goodell said
Thursday ouring his
visit with Browns players. coaches and fans. ''I
don't have any plans to
specifically sit down
with either one of
them."
Goodell is certain that
some penalty will be
enforced .
'Tm not going to
make any judgments

:Iii

about

it

o t h e r

than it's
a
clear
m i s take.'' he "
NOTEBOOK said. "It
is a vio- ··
lation of·"
law. It's the kind of ....
judgments that we have
to make sure we do a ·•
better job of avoiding."
Goodell
praised
Rogers for recently •
helping police stop a
motorist driving under ~
the influence through a ·
Cleveland suburb near •
the Browns' camp, but ,:
st9pped short of saying ,\
it would influence his ~
decision.
'
"'It's a great example.,
of a young man making
a mistake on one hand '
and then doing some- •
thing positive on the •
other." he said.
,•

----~-----------------------------

AP photo/Michael Probst

U.S. sprinter Tyson Gay, left, beats Jamaican Usain Bolt in the 1OOm race during
the Diamond League Athletics meeting in Stockholm, Sweden, Friday.

Odom

That ·s kind of what my ·:
whole life has been - .
proving people wrong. 1
r m used to that. It doesfrom Page Bl
n't bother me."
Odom has become a •
a first-round · playoff trendsetter in training
game. He made it back
camp. Last year. he
ahead of schedule, and
brought a personal transhas no limitations in
port to get from his dorm '·
training camp.
room to meeting rooms r"He looks good,"
and the practice field. ;
defensive coordinator zipping past teammates
Mike Zimmer said. "His on
two
wheels.
Achilles is fine.''
Quarterback
Carson
The defensive line got · Palm~r boug~t transports !
sapped by injuries last for hts offenstve linemen ,
season. Tackle Tank last Christmas, so there is
Johnson was limited by a lot more traffic around
p!antar faciitis in his the place.
•
right foot. which forced
''It's fun." Odom said.
him to miss two games "lt helps a lot. I think. It
and slowed him in others. saves your legs walking
Peko missed five games back and forth in the
with injuries to both heat. I think everybody '
knees.
should have them."
They're healthy now.
NOTES:
Coach
"Antwan is an explo- Marvin Lewis said WR
sive player, and we need Antonio Bryant won't
him out there," Johnson play on Sunday because .
said. ..Injuries or not. of his sore left knee. WR
I ·ve been able to play Terrell Owens and TE"
through stuff most of the Jermai ne Gresham are
time .. Being able to feel expected to play. Lewis
· good going into a ganie · declineoto say how long
rather than having to get his starters would play....
injections just to make Owens made a 29-yard
1 your~.elf feel good is a touchdown catch over ·
plus.
CB Adam "Pacman" ·'
The biggest question Jones during practice.:..
...vas whether Odom holding onto the ball
would be able to over- while falling in the end
come an injury that could zone. Later in practice, :
cost a player some quick- Owens ran the wrong
ness. He hasn't had any route and Palmer's pass
setbacks.
was
intercepted.
··when I get hurt. I get Palmer wore a protective
motivated," Odom said. brace on his left knee
, "Something comes over during practice, getting
me and l 've got this thing used to it again. Palmer
about proving people plans to wear it in games ·
wrong. People tell me 1 as a precaution. He tore , .
can't do something, I'm up his left knee during a ·
1 going to do cverytiling ·I
2005 playoff loss to
' can to prove you wrong. Pittsburgh.

son." he added. "If you
don't beat me this season it's not going to
happen next season
because next year is a
championship year."
The sprinters both
looked like they left
plenty in reserve when
they cruised through the
heats. and so it was for
Gay when it came to the
final.
Richard
Thompson of Trinidad
finished third in 10.1 0.
The race would have
had · even more star
power had Asafa Powell
of Jamaica not pulled
out Wednesday because
of a back injury. That
denied fans the chance

to' see the first race
between the world's
three fastest men.
At the 200R Beijincr
Olympics. Bolt mes~
merized all of track and
field in winning the 100
and 200
· becoming
the first man since Carl
Lewis in 1984 to sweep
both sprints at an
Olympics.
He then
stormed to another
world record of 9.58
last August at the world
championships
in
Berlin.
In other events. Darya
Klishna of Russia beat a
top field in the women ·s
long jump with a leap of
22 feet, 3 inches.

Brittney Reese of the
United States was second in 22-1. and
European silver medalist Naide Gomes of
Portugal third at 22-0?.
"I missed Barcelona
so this was something
special for me." Klishna
said. "I always like to
jump with the best possible field. It gives me
more motivation."
American Bershawn
Jackson set a stadium
record of 47.65 in the
400 hurdles. Javier
Culson of Puerto Rico
was a distant second in
48.50
and
Angelo
Taylo.r of the U.S. third
in 49.57.

Hodges was second on
team with 46 catches ....
· Five of first seven games
on road.
,

and switched defense to
conventional 4-3.

Wim:hester. who rushed
for 165 yards last season,
takes over for 1.000-yard
msher Brandon West. ...
Defense is being rebuilt.
including four new assistants. At least three
returning starters could
become backups.
TOLEDO
Key
players: RB Morgan
Williams. WR Eric Page.
C Kevin Kowalski. LB
Archie
Donald.
Returning starters: 6
offense, 6 defense.
Notes: Austin Dantin
has edge at replacing
four-year QB Aaron
Opelt after winning two
of three starts last season.
... Page was top freshman
WR in nation in catches
(82) and receiving yards
(I, 159).... Williams has I
nearly . 1.500 rushtng
yards in two seasons and
leads deep field of backs.
. . . Rockets' nonconference schedule includes
from Page Bl
Boise State. Arizona.
Purdue.
BALL STATE - Key· Oregon.
Wisconsin.
players: RB MiQuale Miami. penn Sta(e and
Lewis,
WR
Briggs Pittsburgh. They were
Orsbon. S Sean Baker. followed
by
LSU.
LB
_Davyd
Jones. Georoia Tech, North
R~_U.Jrmng. starters: I 0 Carollna, Arkansas and
offense. 6 defe~se.
Florida State. which
Notes: Lewts rushed 1
for school-record I ,736
yards in ·os. and NCAA
granted him an additional
year because of '07
injury that .forced him to
mtss last etght games ....
Lewis and Orsbon are
two biooest
~eo
• links from
.
Cardinals' record-setting
offense two years ago....
Raker projected as NFLcaliber FS.

WEST

MIAMI (OHIO) Key player:;: QB Zac
Dysert, WR Armand
Robinson. LT Brandon
Brooks.
Returning
starters: 8 offense, 9
defense.
Notes: Went I-ll in
first , season
under
Michael Haywood. exNotre Dame offensive
coordinator. Rt!dH awks
went outside the "Cradle
of Coaches'' for first time
in more than 50 years to
hire Haywood.... Opens
season at Florida: also
plays Colorado State.
Missouri. Cincinnati. . ..
Dysert threw for 2,611
yards. including 426
yards against Temple ...
Offensive ' line returns
intact.
BUFFALO Key
players: RBs Brandon
Thermilu~
and
Ike
Nduka, DB Davonte
Shannon. LBs Justin
Winters
and
Scott
Pettigrew.
Returning
starters: 6 offense. 8
defense.
Notes: ¥ff Quinn. who
helped devise spread
offense for Cincinna~i.
takes over as head coach
following Turner Gill's
exit to Kansas. ... QBs
unsettled following Zach
Maynard's abrupt offseason departure. Jerry
Davis, Alex Dennison
competing for job. . ..
Shannon is three-time,
first-team
All-MAC
selcc.:tion.
AKRON - Key players:
WR
Jeremy
LaFrance, QBs Patrick
Nicely
and
Matt
Rodgers.
LB
Brian
Wagner.
Returning
starters: 6 offense. 7
defense.
Notes: Rob lanello
takes over as head coach
after serving as assistaih
at Notre Dame. .. . With
JnfoCision Stadium as a
recruiting tool. Ianello
landed some top players
m his first class. ...
Nicely appears to have
edge over Rodgers. \Vho
tore knee ligament last
year.
Ianello has
installed a pro-style
offense - Zips averaged
19.2 points in 2009 -

NORTHERN ILLINOIS - Key players:
TB Chad Spann. QBs
DeMarcus Grady and
Chandler Harnish. S
Tracy Wilson. LB Pat
Schiller.
Returning
starters: 6 offense. II
defense.
Notes: Defense tops in
MAC. 30th in nation last
fall Wilson had team-best
93 tackles. ... Grady
topped QB depth chart
after spring. but battle
expected with a healthy
Harnish (143-of-223 for
1.670 yards. 11 TDs) ....
Spann rushed for I ,038
yards. 19 TDs in '09 ....
Sacks leader and DE
Jake Coffman. 2n-yearold
former
Marine.
decided to return to program in June after saying
in January that he was
leaving.

CENTRAL MICHIGAN - Key players:
QB Ryan Radcliff. RB
Zurlon Tipton. LT Jeff
Olsen, LB Nick Bellore.
Returning starters: 7
offense, 5 defense.
Notes:
Radcliff
replaces LeFevour. who
left with the FBS record
of 150 TDs nmning and
passing. ... Chippewas
also lost top RB and two
star WRs .... C~1U lost a
second straight head
coach to Cincinnati. New
man Dan Enos· was top
offcn'sive assistant and
rcnuitcr at Michigan
State. but hasn't. been a
head coach. ... Enos
plans to get rid of
Central's spread offense
and mix in pro-style
attack.... Lorenzo White
Jr.. whose father played
with Enos at MSU, is a
candidate to sta1t at CB.

WESTERN MICHIGAN - Key Players:
QB Alex Carder, LT
Anthony Parker, S Jamail
Berry.·· RB
Aaron
Winchester. Returning
starters: 7 offense, 6
defense.
Notes: Carder. more of
a runner. will have to
take big step forward to
replac..:e Tim Hiller, who
left program with every
major passing record....

..

Poll

will be without Bobby
Bowden as coach for
the first· time in 35
years.
Georgia is No. 21,
Oregon State No. 22.
Auburn No. 23 and
Utah and West Virginia
tieu for No. 24.
The coaches· poll is
part of the BCS formula
used to determine its
national champion.

•

~·
·
'

3-G EXCAVATING

.~xcavation work ,/~.
Includes...

EASTERN ·MICHIGAN - Key Players: LT
Bridger Buche. QB Alex
Gillett. DE Devon Davis,
S Latarrius Thomas.
Returning starters: 8
offense. 7 defense.
Notes: Went 0-12 in
'09 and had fewer than
70 players on the roster
during spring camp. ...
Coach Ron English says
Gilletl. starting QB as a
frosh last year. should
probably be starting at ·s.
... Defense allowed 38.2
points per game .... Am1y
might be EMU's best
chance al a win. in the
op~ner. ... Program has
new $3.9-million indoor
practice htcility.

~~

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-Ponds -TrenchingReclamation &amp;
much more
740-590-3700- Manuel
740-590-925"5- Danny
740-590-3701- Mlke

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�Page B4 • i5&gt;unbi1~' t£imr5 -$&gt;rntinrl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Will Power Tu~bling and
Trampoline earns awards
at 2010 Jr. plympic Games

Sunday, August 8,

2010

Kyger·Creek Rinky Dink
Baseball Tournament

Submitted photos
Submitted photo

Members of the Will Power Tumbling and Trampoline T~am Finished with Top
Awards at the 2010 Jr. Olympic Games held in Virginia Beach, Virginta. Team
members include (sitting) Katlyn Barber. Allison Barber, Jenna Burke, Janelle
McClelland, (standing) Laura Gheen and Amanda Jarvis. McClelland was first in
tumbling, second in double mini trampoline, third in trampoline. and third in synchronized trampoline along with Katlyn Barber. Gheen was second in tumbling,
second in synchronized trampoline with Jarvis, fourth on trampoline, and fifth on
double mini trampoline. Katlyn Barber was third on trampoline, third in synchronized trampoline, and fourth on double mini trampoline. Jarvis was second on synchronized trampoline, and sixth on double mini trampoline. Burke was fifth on the
double mini trampoline, eighth in tumbling, and ninth on trampoline. Allison Barber
was sixth on trampoline and seventh on double mini trampoline.

The Kyger Creek Rlnky Dink Baseball Association held its annual baseball tournament from July 9-11. This year's tournament included baseball level teams from
around the area. The Green Dodgers defeated the Addaville Bobcats in the final.
round of the tournament. The champion .Green.Dodgers included (front L to R) .
Ca1den Yoyng, Cooper Davis, Ryan Donovsky, Cade Roberts, Zch Workman, (mid- .
die) Josh Curry, Justin Wilcoxen, Jesse Chapman, Ryclee Sipple, Will McCarley;··
(back) Coaches Coby Davis, Terry Wilcoxen, and Rand Clark
:

Janelle McClelland earns
Gold Medal at Jr. Olympics
I

The second place Addaville Bobcats mcluded (front L to R) Derek Reese, Jared
Reese, Joel Horner. Zane Loveday, Gabe Loveday, (middle) Jordan Lambert.
Isaiah Reynolds, Cole Young. Colton Gilmore, Zacch Loveday, (back) Coach'
Mike Reese. Adam Loveday, Jay Lambert, and Buck Reynolds.
-

~-

- - -- ---

-

r-

River Valley Jr. Girls Softball
Team takes first place
Submitted photo

Janelle McClelland received first place at the Jr. Olympic Games held July 28-Aug.
1 in Virginia Beach, Virginia. She also won the Presidential Award for having the
highest score in tumbling at the event.

River Val~ey youth football
camp a success

Submitted photo

The River Valley Raiders Junior Girls SoftbaM Team finished their regular season
17-1 and went undefeated in the OVAA Jr. Girls Tournament, hosted by the Rio
Grande Ball Association, taking first place. Te team also participated 1n the Big
Bend game, playing a total of 38 games. Team members were Ramsey Warren.
Ashley Whobrey, Rachel Smith, Hannah Overstreet, Carli Dillion, Chelsea Copley,
Emily VanSickle, Lenae Pence, Ciaraa Layne, libby Leach, Bethany Gilbert, and
Kasey EbliA. The Raiders are coached by Gary and Dena Warren.

--------\

Submitted photo

A total of 62 students in grades 2-8 were in attendance for the 2010 River Valley
youth football camp hf?ld July 20-22 at the River Valley Middle School in Bidwell,
Ohio. The campers received instruction in both offensive and defensive techniques
during the three-day camp and were also given a camp t-shirt at the end of the
camp, which was headed by RVHS coach Jared McClelland and his staff.

WHS honors girls basketball team

Submitted photo
Smolo! Now you can own tho pocture of that unforgettable
moment captur~d in the ncwspap&lt;lr. Photos bocomo timeless
whon framed or prontod on o mug or mou50 pad

www.mydailysentinel.com • www.mydailytribune:com

•.I

l.

Pictured are the Wahama White Falcon Girls Varsity Basketball Team which was
honored at the recent athletic banquet held at the school. Pictured. from lett to
, nght, Taylor Hysell. Alex Wood. Karista Ferguson, Paige Gardner. Casey Gilbert,
Deidra Peters, Kelsey Zuspan·and Katie Dav1s.

\
1

�Sunday, August 8,

~unbap ~ittt:rn -f&amp;entinrl • _Page Bs

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2010

Servpro of Jackson and Gallia
counties hosts golf outing
RedStorm women add
South Point's Taylor
'a great slasher. Once
she improves going to
her right, I think she's
RIO GRANDE, Ohio going to be a dynamic
- The University of Rio player for us in our sysGrande women's basket- tem."
ball program ventured
Taylor has set forth
into Lawrence County very simple goals for her
for the third time during time at Rio Grande: "To
this recruiting season to get better every day and
land a player. This time bring wins to Rio.'' she
the stop was South Point said.
and
the recruit was
Submitted photos
Smalley talked about
where Taylor will fit into
From left to right, Tim Scites of Scites Insurance Tinesha Taylor.
Taylor. a 5-9 post play- the program. "We're
Agency in Gallipolis, Drew Dunkle and Jami Villadu
er,
is very talented and going
to
red-shirt
Doug Brown Insurance Agency in Gallipolis.
brings loads of athleti- Tinesha the first year.
cism to the court.
she'll get a solid underShe was pleased to standing of how our prohave her college choice gram works in the basbehind her. "It feels ketball world and it will
great to be going to give her a good. solid
school," said Taylor.
year to get comfortable
Taylor said she had m
the
classroom.'' ·
talked to some friends Smalley said. "Then a
about Rio Grande and year from now, I antici- ·
they were a huge help in · pate Tinesha having a·
making her decision to golden opportunity to
sign with the RedStorm. break in and get some
"Talking to (fellow quality playing time at
recruit) Janie Morris the varsity level.
(from Ironton) and just
''She's a tremendous .
thinking about. it, it athlete and we're excited·
helped," she said. "I to have her on board at
knew that my friend (the the University of Rio
late) Corey Taylor went Grande for women's basFrom. left to right, Norm Persin, Oak Hill High School there and he said that lie ketball.'' Smalley added.
basketball coach; Randy Rainer of Oak Hill, and Willie liked it a lot."
Tinesha is the daughter
Woodard, Servpro production.
She described her best of Jerry and Jeanetta
assets as a player and
Jamie Popp and Todd Servpro owner Travis also mentioned the area Taylor of South Point,
Ohio. She plans to purEberst. The next group Hughes announced that that she feels she needs
sue a degree in Physical
was Steve Pritchett of half of the proceeds of to improve on as she Therapy. ·
J on e s - S t e ph en s on · the winning team would enters the college game.
Taylor joins Hailee
Insurance, Joel Wood, go to the Jackson Food "I work hard at every- Swain of South Gallia
American
Family Program and Clothesline. thing that I do, but I need High School. Megan
Insurance, and
Brad
The winning team was to work on my handling Barnes of Hillsboro High
McCorkle. The last Matt
King,
David the ball,., she said.
School, Kasey Turley of
Rio Grande head coach Reedsville Eastern High
group included Travis Sheward. Pastor Rick
Hughes
and
Willie Christman, and John David Smalley is pleased School, Ironton Hi~h
Woodard of Servpro: Skidmore. They gra- to be able to bring Taylor School's Janie Morns.
Ryan Mapes. and Rick ciously donated all of the into the fold. ''We're Brooke Shaw from
McNelly, McNelly Gahm "skins'' game winnings extremely excited to Waynesfield-Gas hen
School,
Kate
Insurance in Jackson.
back to the Jackson Food have Tinesha in the pro- High
gram,"
he
said. Hammond of Greenfield
After giving each guest Program and Clothesline.
"Tinesha comes from a
a welcome gift and There were several door very solid program down McClain High School
and Chelsea Delong of
announcing the prizes prizes given away and at South Point.''
Coal Grove as the curand
·'skins"
game, three skill prizes.
·'She's a solid athlete, rent members of the
maybe one of the most 20 I0- J1 recruiting class.
athletic players that
Rio Grande flnished
we've had the opportuni- the 2009-1 0 campaign
ty to sign in recent with a 16-15 overall
years,'' Smalley added. record and went 7-7 in
"She's long, left-handed. the
Mid-South
runs the floor well and is Conference.
BY MARK WILLIAMS

SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL

Travis Hughes, Servpro owner, with the winning team
(from left to right) Matt King of Reed and Baur
Insurance Agency of Athens and Pomeroy; Pastor
Rick Christman of Good Shepard Wesleyan Church in
Jackson; David Sheward of Callahan Insurance in
Jackson and guest John Skidmor~.

From left to right, Love! Quinn, Servpro Marketing
Representative; Kelli Woodard, Servpro Accounting,
and Kelly Bryant, Servpro Marketing Representative.
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF
MDTSPORTS®MYDAILYTRIIBUNECOM

JACKSON, Ohio Servpro of Jackson and
Gallia counties hosted its
first local golf outing at
Fairgreens Country Club
in Jackson.
The teams consisted of
Carl
Knox.
Knox
Insurance Agency in
McArthur: Norm Persin,
Oak Hill High School
athletic director, and their
guests Randy Rainer of
Oak Hill, and Matt
bs. Next was Tim
Scites Insurance

Agency in Gallipolis:
Drew · Dunkle. Doug
Brown
Agency
in
Gallipolis: Jamie Viladiu.
Doug Brown Agency of
Gallipolis. The third
team was Matt King,
Reed and Baur Agency in
Athens and Pomeroy:
David
Sheward
of
Callahan I nsural)ce in
Jackson:
his guests
Pastor Rick Christman of
Good Shepard Wesleyan
and John Skidmore.
Jamie Slone and Angie
Sprouse of
Jackson
Insurance
Brokerage.

Woman in Pitino case
claims she had unfair trial

.

AP Photo/Charles Cherney

Cincinnati Reds left fielder Jonny Gomes makes catch on the Chicago Cubs' Geovany Soto to end the seventh inning of a baseball game on Friday in Chicago.

jeds beat Cubs 3-0, m~ve 14 games over .500
CHICAGO (AP) Bronson Arroyo threw
five-hit ball over seven
innings in another dominant effort against the
Cubs, and the ~incinnati
R~ds beat Chtcago 3-0
Fnday to move 14 games
over .500 for the first
time in 11 years.
The Reds got a tworun . homer from Ryan
Hanigan
off
Tom
Gorzelanny (6-6) in the
second, an RBI single
from Brandon Phillips in
the seventh and came
away with their seventh
win i~ nine games after
F~ancJsco Cor~ero surv1ved a shaky mnth.
At 62-48, they're 14
games over .500 for the
first time since they finished the 1999 season at
96-67.
The Cubs fell out of
long ago and
again couldn't get
anything going against
Arroyo ( 12-6) after
pounding Milwaukee 153 on Wednesday.
The right-hander held
them scoreless for the
second time this season.
striking out seven and
walking one. He is 5-0
with a 1.88 ERA in his
past six starts against
them, including a win

--- --J

last month in which he
went six innings.
Arthur Rhodes retired
the side in the eighth. .
Cordero came on in the
ninth and walked Aramis
Ramirez and Kosuke
Fukudome before barehanding Blake DeWitt's
high chopper and firing
to first to end the game.
That gave Cordero 30
saves in 36 chances the fourth straight year
and sixth time overall
he's finished with 30 or
more.
Gorzelanny
settled
down after a wild start
and held the Reds to
three runs and four hits
over seven innings. ' He
hit a batter and walked
four - all in the first
three innings. Rut he also
retired 12 straight before
a one-out single in the
seventh by Paul Janish.
who sc,ored from second
on a base hit by Phillips
that made it 3-0.
Hanigan supplied the
big hit in the second after
Jay Bruce's leadoff walk.
lining an 0-1 pitch to the
seats in left-center for his
third homer.
Arroyo did not allow a
hit until Ramirez singled
to deep short with two
outs in the fourth on a

ball that bounced passed ment in the young people
a sprawled out third we have and the type of
baseman Scott Rolen.
youno- arms we have Ramirez, who was you ~1ake three or four
slow to get out of the solid moves in the offbo~. moved to second on
season and your young
a smgle by Marlon Byrd guys keep developing,
before
Fukudome you're right back into a
grounded into a force to contending team."
end the threat.
Notes: ~Cubs pitcher
The Cubs had runners Carlos Silva is scheduled
on second and third with to have his heart examnone out in the fifth after ined on Monday and
back-to-back singles by might have a procedure
DeWitt and Geovany to correct a problem with
Soto and a wild ·pitch. his heartbeat. The Cubs
But Arroyo got out of it say the examination will
by
striking
out determine if he needs a
Gorzelanny.
retiring ·cardiac ablation to corTyler Colvin on a bloop rect the issue. Accorping
to short and getting to the Mayo Clinic. that
Starlin Castro swinging procedure
usually
at a 3-2 curve.
involves
running
a
For the Cubs, it was catheter from the groin
c;imply just another in a to the heart. It can also
long line of long days.
be done through openThey're 15 games heart surgery. ... Reds
under .500 and are in for manager Dusty Baker
a busy offseason. with said Russ Springer's
manager Lou PinieJla strained left hip is still
retiring. Even so. general sore and isn't sure if the
manager Jim Hendry reliever will wind up on
again insisted they're not the DL. Springer left
far from contending in after facing three batters
the future with promis- against Pittsburgh on
ing young players such Wednesday in his second
as Castro and Colvin.
appearance after being
"It's not some kind of a called up from Triple-A.
major rebuilding job.'' He signed a minor
Hendry said. "When you league deal with the
start seeing the improve- Reds on July 17.
\)

LOUISVILLE,
Ky. University of Louisville
(AP) - The woman con- Athletic Director Tom
victed of trying to extort Jurich said Pitino wouldRick Pitino said she did- n't be disciplined for his
Sypher
o 't get a fair trial because tryst
with
of the Louisville coach's because there was no
fame and power.
misconduct on university
Karen Cunag:in Sypher property.
Sypher blasted both
told The Courier-Journal
newspaper
that Pitino and the school for
Louisville is a small not firing him.
"If he can lay his head
enough city for any jury
to be influenced by down at night and sleep
well, then all I can say to
Pitino.
"I know now there is him is that he only has
no justice system. There one person to answer to
is no justice," Sypher and he knows who that is
said.
- that"s the good Lord:
Sypher was convicted above," Sypher said. . •
Several witnesses tes- ;
Thursday of extortion,
lying to the FBI and tified during Sypher's
retaliating against a wit- trial that she traded sexuness. Prosecutors said al favors to enlist several
Sypher demanded mil- people to help her extort
lions in cash, cars and a Pitino. Her ex-husband,
house from Pitino to stay longtime Pitino aide Tim
quiet about their one- Sypher. also testified
night
stand
at
a against her.
Earhart dido 't put any
Louisville restaurant in
witnesses on the stand.
2003.
Sentencing in the case but jurors heard Sypher's
is set for Oct. 27. Sypher words via videotaped
said she was "numb'' and interviews with two .
hasn't thought about a Louisville television stapotential prison sen- tions and a police intertence.
Sypher
said view.
Sypher said she rejectthere's additional evidence her attorney did ed several plea agreenot use at the trial, but ments before trial that
she would not say what it would have allowed her
to avoid prison.
was.
"That would mean I
"The story has not
was guilty," she said. "I
come out yet," she said.
Neither Sypher nor her can honestly say I've
attorney, James Earhart, never felt so calm in my
returned several mes- life, because I finally
sages
from
The was allowed to speak
Associated Press on after being duct-taped
over my mouth for so
Friday.
After
the . trial, many years:·

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
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..

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Page B6 • ·~unbap ~int£S -~rntmrl

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

NCAA gives basketball
coaches good grades
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Mark Cornelison/Lexlngton Herald-Leader/MCT

West Virginia head coach Bob Huggins watches the
action during the second half against Duke. Duke
defeated West Virginia, 78-57, in an NCAA Final Four
semifinal game at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis,
Indiana, Saturday, April 3.

year's final AP Top 25
basketball poll, including
all the 20 I 0 Final Four
teams, produced perfect
scores of 1.000 in 200809. the most recent numbers. Butler coach Brad
Stevens
had
three
straight perfect marks.
while
Duke's
Mike
Krzyzewksi. Michigan
Stat\! 's Tom Izzo and
Huggins all scored 1.000
two consecutive years.
"It's a. commitment by
the athletic department
and the university to supply the resources to help
the players succeed academically," Huggins said
in a statement released by
the West Virginia athletic
department. ··1 commend
our guys not only for
their performance on the
floor but in their academic work in the classroom
as well.''
Calipari also did better
than expected, topping
925 each of his final
three
seasons
at
Memphis. He had a 980,
1.000 and 960.
But Connecticut's Jim
Calhoun. whose program
is under NCAA investigation, had an 844 and
909 after scoring 981.
978. 889 and 941 the previous four years. Tim
Floyd, Southern Cal's
coach during the O.J.
Mayo scandal, had a Y4Y
in 2007-08. the year
Mayo played in Los
Angeles.
The
year
before. Floyd's score was

2010

Woods can't find range off the tee

BY MICHAEL MAAOT

Kentucky coach John
Calipari got mostly passing grades on his report
card.
West Virginia's Bob
Huggins did even better,
earning perfect inarks
each of the past two seasons.
The two men, often
criticized for their players' academic perfor~
mance, had better-thanexpected scores in the
NCAA's first Academic
Progress Rate for coaches. On Thursday, the
NCAA released coaches'
scores in six sports baseball, football, men's
and women's basketball
and women's indoor and
outdoor track - .from
2003-04 through· 200809.
Calipari and Huggins
both were satisfied with
their results.
"It's hard to argue with
our numbers,'' Calipari
said Wednesday on his
web site.
Some coaches had
complained they alone
should not be held
accountable for their
players· grades.
NCAA
Apparently.
officials agreed.
The NCAA did not
release average scores .
for coaches. in part. over
concerns about statistical
anomalies. For instance,
in academic years that
there were a coaching
change, both coaches
received the same score.
Calipari
and
Billy
Gillispie each received a
922 for 2008-09.
And none of the coaches will be penalized for
substandard
scores
because teams that consistently fall below the
mandated cutline. 925,
are already being punished.
Walter Harrison. ch,airman of the committee on
academic performance.
said the governing body
should not penalize
coaches based on the
scores. which NCAA
officials said are being
released primarily to help
provide recruits and their
families with more information about academics.
''With the release of
these APR portfolios. we
are calling attention to
the success of coaches
and having transparency.
1 personally feel that is
right. that we should not
go further." Harrison said
on a conference call. ''I
personally think, for
some of. the reasons you
just mentioned. and the
fairness of it, there are a
lot of people responsible
for academics. so I· m
comfortable with where
we are.''
Most of the top men's
basketball programs had
little to quibble with.
Thirteen teams in this

Sunday, August 8,

804.
Former Indiana coach
Kelvin Sampson. who
left Indiana amid a major
NCAA scandal, had only
two scores topping 900
on the books. His low,
811. came in his final
season with the Hoosiers.
Twenty-four of the 25
teams in this year's final
AP Top 25 football poll
also topped 925. The
exception:
Brigham
Young. whose coach
Bronco Mendenhrul had
a 910.
Former Trojans coach
Pete Carroll. at the center
of another Southern Cal
recruiting
scandal.
topped 925 all six years,
including a 971 in the
2008-09. Nick Saban,·
coach of national champion Alabama, had a 972.
Mack Brown, whose
Texas team lost to
Alabama in the BCS title
game, had a 959.
All of it. Harrison said,
points to one conclusion.
"Some people say that
coaches don't care about
academics. That is not
true," Harrison said. ''I
know from our baseball,
men's basketball and
football working groups
that coaches feel very
strongly about their students'
academic
progress, and academics
is the first thing they
often ask about on the
recruiting trail or when
they meet \Vith recruits."

AKRON. Ohio (AP)Things got so bad for
Ti8er Woods off the tee in
Fnday's second round of
the
Bridgestone
Invitational that he had to
supply his own soundtrack.
"Get in the hole!" 'he
sneered under his breath at
an errant iron shot into the
par-3 seventh hole, repeatmg the cliched phrase so
often yelled by the loudest
of his fans.
·
Woods followed up his
worst round ever at
Firestone Country Club, a
4-over 74 on Thursday, by
matching his secopd-worst
round. a 72. When he left
the course, the seven-time
winner of the Brid~estone
stood 13 shots off me lead
- but just two shots out of
last!.Jace in the 81-player
fie] .
In his 261 PGA Tour
starts, he has played the
first 36 holes worse in
only four tournaments.
It wasn't just bad scores;
however. The biggest
problem is that WoOds has
almost no idea where his
ball is going off the tee.
He hit only three of 14
fairways in the second
round. A closer look
shows he hit seven tee
shots into the ri$ht rough
- sometimes rar, far to
the right - and three other
times he pounded the ball
into the high grass on the
left.
In other words, he was
all over the course, visiting
spots that the game's best
seldom see.
He bolted after his
round, walking away from
reporters after signing his
scorecard and then hustling to his waiting luxury
SUV. But on Wednesday,
he was asked about his driving.
"Of late I've been drivin~ the ball so much better.' he said.
He did not back that up
on the course. His play
speaks volumes about
where he is just a week

AP Photo/Tony Dejak ·

Tiger Woods tips his hat after finishing the second
round of the Bridgestone Invitational golf tournament
at Firestone Country Club, Friday, in Akron, Ohio.
Woods finished at 6-over-par after two rounds.

before the final major of
the year, the PGA
Championship
at
Whistling Straits.
Woods came into the
Bridgestone. ranked ninth
in the U.S. Ryder standings with the top eight
assu~ed of spots on the
team. He repeatedly said
during a pretournament
interview that he intended
to play his way on, instead
of forcing American captain Corey Pavin to select
'th
f h' d.
him
. wt .one 0 lS ISCreUonary ptcks .. :
. But W~s ts not s~o~mg that hts game IS m
shape with just I 0 days
rem~g until t~&lt;?se eight
automatl~ qualifiers. for
the U.S. st~e &lt;l!e finaliz~d.
Woods hit hts first dnve
of the day (on the lOth
hole) far to the right and
ended up bogeying. On the

next tee, he sl~hect the
ball far to the left, scattering the _gallery, but ende.
up making a P.ar.
After walkmg off the
second t~e, he turned back
to playmg partner Lee
Westwood. who was also
sprayin~ t~e .?all off the
tee, an&lt;;~ srud. So ~~ware
we domg so far. Both
.
laughed. . , .
. Woods d~dn t ~It a ~n":e
n~to the fatrway unt~l h1s
etghth . hole. about the
same tune a fan yelled,
"Welcome back, Tiger. to
your home away from
home." On the next hole,
he drove directly behind a
Jar2:e fir tree. He whacked
a 3°iron off the low-hanging branches. the ball
gomg across the fairway
and hitting another tree
there. He then chipped 12
feet past the hole and
missed the par putt.

)

Westwood withdraws fromPGA
AKRON, Ohio (AP) Just as he was closing in
on No. 1 in the world and
possibly his first major,
Lee
Westwood
of
England withdrew Friday
PGA
from
the
Championship with an
injury that even puts the
Ryder Cup in doubt.
Westwood. a runner-up
at the Masters and the
British ·open this year.
suffered a calf injury at
the French Open the first
week in July. It has
caused problems with
swelling in his right
ankle. and it reached a
breaking point Friday.
"I will be out for as long
as it takes to get better."
Westwood said in a statement. "I am just hoping
that it will be in time for
me to play in the Ryder
Cup."
Westwood, No. 3 in the
world, had a chance to go
to No. l in the ranking
with a victory this week at
the
Bridgestone
Invitational. He had his
ankle taped for the second
round and sputtered

around to a 76.
Asked after his round
what he could do besides
tape his ankle. Westwood
replied. "Sit on my back
side for six weeks, like
they keep telling me. It's
the only way to improve
it."
He withdrew from the
Bridgestone Invitational
later in the afternoon,
appearing to take that
advice.
"There's no strength in
it," he said. "I don't have
confidence in it. and then
on the way down l'm
finding it hard to hold my
weight
,, on it and then push
0 ff.
He will be replaced in
the . PGA Championship
by Kevin Sutherland.
Westwood won the
European Tour money
title la&lt;&gt;t year for the second time in his career, and
the best player without a
major has been closing in
on one. He came within
one putt of making the
2008 U.S. Open playoff at
Torrey Pines. and the
2009 British Open playoff

at Thrnberry last year. He
tied for third in the PGA
Championship a year ago
at Hazeltine.
His only victory this
year came on the PGA
Tour at the St. Jude
Classic, a week before the
U.S. Open. Westwood
suffered the injury two
weeks before the British
Open, but still managed to
finish second.
He ~as not played since
then, and is not sure when
he will play again.
''I'd like to be able to
play my best and work
my hardest. which l can't
do,.. Westwood said after
his round. ''I can't even
hit balls. you know? It's
evid~nt that I'm rusty
since the Open because I
haven't been able to practice. It's just a vicious circle. really.''
Westwood already has
locked up a spot on the
European team for the
Ryder Cup, leading the
standings in money and
world rankin~ points. The
Ryder Cup w11l be Oct. 13 in Wales.

-

252 Upper River Rd., Ga•pols
www.norrlsnorthupdodge.com
@8coo ...

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..Jeep

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· Cl
Sunday, August 8, 2010

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Proud sponsor of the.
· Gallia County Fair &amp; 4-H Scholarship

2010 Recipient

Janelle Parsons

Ohio
Valley
Bank
•...

Member FDIC

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i&gt;unbap mime~ -i&gt;entinel

Sunday,August8,201o

American Legion Scholarships

f

Submitted photos

American legion Lafayette Post 27 awarded scholarships to Melissa Stump and Kaytlyn Ross. The awards marked the first time in 15 years the post has presented
scholarships to local students. Above left: From left to right, Don Wright, Post 27 chaplain ; Larry Kemper, Post 27 commander: Melissa Stump and her parents Rebecca
and Bart Stump. Above right: From left to right, Wright, Kemper, Ross and her parents Junior and Jennifer Ross. This will be an annual scholarship award. Two scholarships will be issued to students in the four Galia County high schools annually in the month of June. Applications must be received by May 1 each year. Information
about the scholarships may be picked up at each school's guidance office.
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PageC3

~unbap m:tme~ -ientinel

Sunday,Augu5t8,20to

Vlystery and ro~~nce
6'
fo r lona6 eventnas

The See/If (1· Rain and
by Nancy
·
·ckard is the stoi)' of a
•
ealthy Kansas family.
f hc eldest son , Hugh-Jay
Linder. is shot to death one
stom1y night. and his wife
goes missing. The only
suspect is Billy Crosby, a
wife~beater and dmnk
with a gmdge against the
Linder&lt;;. Three-year old
Jody Linder is raised by
her grandparents and three
loving uncles.
Some 23 years later.
Billy Crosby's son, now
a lawyer. has gotten his
f&lt; ther 's ·sentence commuted. and he is returnng
home with his grudge
intact. The son. Collin.
beheved m his father's
innocence all these years
and set out to prove that
the prosecution withheld
evidence.
To complicate matters,
Jody Linder and Collin
Crosby have a "relationship.·· She has returned
' ome to teach elemenry school and live in
•
ner parents· old liouse.
A uthor Pickard has
won several awards for
her mysteries, and I will
read more of them. Think
you would like her style
and her character development.
She
writes
kno,vingly of the Kansas
-landscape, and she makes
it much more interesting
than it appears from
Interstate
70.
Just
remember. /11 Cold Blood
took place in Kansas. too.
for a change of scenery.
let's travel to North
Carolina's Outer Banks.
iann Ducharme has
written lovely description s of the area and its
o.;and dunes and sea grass
as it appeared shortly
1ghming

Beverly Gettles
after the Civil War. The
Outer Banks House is the
story of an unlikely
romance between pampered Abigail Sinclair and
a poor "Banker" fisherman. Benjamin Whimble.
When Abigail's plantation-owning father builds
a summer house on the
Outer Banks, the family
moves there for the summer. He enlists Benjamin
as a hunting and fishing
guide, then recommends
that his daughter teach
him to read.
There is a settlement of
free blacks living on a
nearby island, and the
preacher/leader
there
murdered his master and
mistress hefore fleeing to
the island some time ago.
The local Klan, including
Abigail's father. is trying
to locate this preacher.
There is suspense,
romance,
beautiful
scenery, and just enough
Southern charm in this
novel to please you. I
chose it because of its title
and didn't go wrong. We
spent a week on Ocracoke
in that area last summer,
and I hope it won't be our
last trip there. This summer I found myself there
again,
courtesy
of
Ducharme's novel.

Book Loyers Day is Aug. 9
''You know you'1·e read
a good book when you
turn the last pa~e andfeel
a little as ifyou hal'e lost a
friend" - Paul Sweeney

' Susan recommends:
•
I:ove
Inspired
Inspirational Books by·
various authors
Angie recommendo;:
•
1he
Mortal
For all book lovers out
Instrument~ series by
there, this is an emotion
Cassandra Clare
that many of us experience
• Clochvork Angel by
after finishing a great read.
Cassandra Clare
Aug. 9 marks annual Book
• Gone ll'ith the Wind
Lovers Day - a day near
by Margaret Mitchell
and dear to the hearts of
• Jane
Eyre
by
Debbie Saunders
·book lovers everywhere.
Charlotte Bronte
In celebration of this speKim recommends:
cial day. I have asked the
• Above the Line series
• A Distant Metod)' by
staff of Bossard Library to Sarah Sundin
by Karen Kingsbury
share a few of their "picks··
Barbara recommends;
Becky recommends:
as suggested reading titles
• The Gijt of Fear by
• The Secret Life of
for our community.
Gavin DeBecker
Bees by Sue Monk Kidd
Thorn recommends:
• Restoration series by
• The Postmistress by
• Brideshead Revi.\·ited Sarah Blake
Terri Blackstock
by Evelyn Waugh
• Poetry of Dorothy
•
The
Guemsev
• In the Spirit of Uterarv and Potato Peet Parker
Happiness by The Monks Pie Society by Mary Ann ,
• The Wisdom ofBees by
of New Skete
Michael O'Malley, Ph. D.
Shaffer
• Franny and Zooey by
The love of reading
• 'the Kite Runner by
J.D. Salinger
often begins at a young
Khaled Hosseini
Debbie recommends:
• A Thousand Splendid age, which is why it is
• My Name Is Mary Sum by Khaled Hosseini imp01tant to instill a love
Sutter by Robin Oliveira
• Marxaret Mitchell &amp; . for books and a love for
• The "'Jagic of John Marsh: The love learning in your children.
Ordinary Days by Ann storv behind Gone with As Former First Lady
Howard Creel
the · Wind by Marianne Laura Bush notes. ''A
love of books. of holding
• Paper Roses by Walker
Amanda Cabot
• Highest Duty: my a book, turning its pages,
• Spoken From the search for what really looking at its pictures, and
Heart by Laura Bush
• matters by Capt. Chesley living its t~1scinating sto• Everyone communi- "Sully" S!JIIenberger
ries goes hand-in-hand
cates, jew connect: \Vhat
• Sorry, wrong answer: with a love of learning.''
the most effective people Trivia questimts that e1•en You may be a parent who
do differently by John C. knol\•-it-alls J?ef wrong by has a child who does not
Maxwell
show an interest m readRod. L. Evans. Ph.D.

ing. Remember that the
key is to encourage the
child to read about a topic
in which he or she has an
interest - and Bossard
Library can assist you in·
making these selections.·
For example, as part of:
the local school system's :
summer reading program, ·
my
nephew
really .
enjoyed
reading
"~hooting Stars" a
biography on the life of
LeBron James, a timely
topic in today's headlines.
As summer winds
down. why not take some
time to read or re-read a
good book? Take a break
from the summer heat
and visit the Library to do
a little reading for plea.:;ure. Many people enjoy
the outdoors by relaxing '
with a good book while
reading by the pool. on
the front porch, in a hammock, at the park, or
wherever their favorite
cozy spot may be.
The staff of Bossard
Library hopes that one of
our suggested titles will
be a book that you enjoy.
so much. yotl' II feel like·
you've lost a friend when:
you turn the last page! (Debbie Saunders is the
director
of Bossard
Memorial Library ill
Gallipolis. On the Internet_
at w~VIv.bossard.lib.oh.us.):

----------

Travel

indu~try

(AP)
In Bali,
they're seeking guidance
from a spiritual healer. In
Rome, they're lapping up
gelato. And in India,
they're visiting temples.
Fans of Elizabeth
Gilbert's
best-selling
memoir "Eat,
PraY,
L9ve,'' have been fqllowing in her footsteps eveJ

courting 'Eat, Pray, Love' fans

since it was first published in 2.006. The book
describes a year Gilbert
spent living in Italy. India
and Indonesia on the
rebound from a divorce
and failed romance.
But the travel industry
is betting that the Aug.
13 release of a film version
starring
Julia

Roberts will inspire even
more
globe-trotting.
Hotels. tour companies
and even guidebook publishers
are
offering
everything from do-ityourself itineraries to
luxury trips.
The movie even has
"official'' travel partners:
Lonely Planet. which

created a website at
http://www.lonelyplan- .
et.com/eatpraylove with
recommendations
for
sightseeing and lodging,
and STA Travel, which is
advertising a contest for a
21-day trip to the three
countries.
·Naturally. it is. a trip
for one.

Stan ey Saunders
MONUMENTS
352 3rd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH
446-6352

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for your loved ones.
Many samples on Display
Pre-Need Consultation

Hours
Monday - Wednesday - Friday
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Call For After Hours Appointments
Lloyd Danner 446-4999
or David Tawney 446-1615

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rf- •tionsrtos. that m~e your ;oumey
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FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.
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Individual aolutlODJ from independellt advOON

Jay Caldwell. CFP
441 Second Ave: Gallipoli-,, OH

740-446-2125.800-487-2129

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PageC4

i&gt;unbap -~tmes -ientinel

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Rick and Cathy Edwards

EDWARDS
ANNIVERSARY
Rick and Cathy Edwards of Pomeroy celebrated
their 25th wedding anniversary on July 13 with a trip
to Oahu. Hawaii.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwards were married at the
Rutland Nazarene Church by the Rev. Lloyd
Graham. He is the son of Larry and Margaret
Edwards of Rutland and she is the daughter of Carl
and Sue DeLong of Pomeroy.
They are both employed by the Eastern Local
School District.

..

PASQUALEARTHUR
WEDDING
Kayla Elaine Pasquale and Walter Hayden Arthur were
rhatTied on July 17.2010, at The Our House Museum in
Gallipolis. Rev. Steven Stewart pertormcd the ceremony.
Kayla is the daughter of Bryan and Carla Pasquale
of Gallipolis. She is a STNA at Arbors of Gallipolis.
Walter is the son of J.R. and Edna Bowens of
9allipolis. He is a 2002 graduate of South Gallia High
School. an E-4 specialist in the U.S. Army National
Guard and is employed by CNE Poured Walls.
The bride was given away by her father, Bryan
Pasquale. Her maid of honor was Cera Pasquale of
Oak Hill. Kim McGuire of Oak Hill was her bridesmaid. Makayla Stewart of Gallipolis was the flower
girl. Ethan Stewart of Gallipolis was the ringbearer.
The best man was Matthew Atthur of Jackson.
Jonathan Arthur of Jackson was the groomsman.
Following the ceremony, the guests were offered a
complin'lentary tour of•The Our House Museum. The
reception was held in the courtyard and hosted by
docents of The Our House. Guests enjoyed finger
sandwiches, fresh fruit and vegetable and citms punch.
The bride and groom danced to "From This
Moment" for their first dance as a married couple.
The couple spent their honeymoon at Ravenwood
Castle in the Hocking Hills.
The couple will reside in Gallipolis.

Amanda Dawn Burlile and Leonard Galati

BURLILE - G ALATI.
ENGAGE M E NT
Robert and R honda Burlile of Gallipolis are pleased
to announce the upcoming maniage of their daughter.
Amanda Dawn, to Leonard Galati, son of John and
Catherine Galati of Macau, China.
Amanda is the granddaughter of the late M r. and
Mrs. John Burlile of Gallipolis. She is a 1996 graduate of Gallia Academy H igh School and earned a
bachelor's degree in marketing from the Fisher ·
College of Busines~ at Ohio State University in 2000.
She is currently employed in Rye, N.Y.
Leonard is a 1987 graduate of Mount Vernon High
School and served from 1990-99 in the U.S. M arine
Corps. He is the CEO and president of Techneto, Inc.,
of Ehnsford, N.Y.
The couple met while training for the St. Anthony's
I Triathalon with Team in Training. Leonard proposed·
to Amanda before the two competed in the 2009 Lake
1
Placid lronman Triathalon.
The wedding is planned for Oct. 15, 20 10, at Le
Chateau in South Salem. N.Y.
The couple plans to spend their honeymoon in Italy
and will then reside in Mount Vernon. N.Y.

Mason County
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Keller

Fair

KELL'ERSKINNER
WEDDING

AUGUST 9· 14, 2010
West Virginia's Largest County Fair

Carolyn Marie Skinner and Daniel Joseph Keller
were married on Aug. 15, 2009, at Graham Chapel on
the campus of Washington University in St. Louis.
Mo. Pastor Willard Meyer officiated at the ceremony.
Carolyn is the daughter of Thomas and Glenda
Skinner of Gallipolis. She is a 1996 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School, earned a bachelor of arts
degree from the University of Evansville in 2000, a
master of arts degree from Virginia Commonwealth
University in 2002 and a Ph.D. from the University bf
Louisville in 2006. She is currently an assistant professor of English at Ohio State University-Mansfield.
Daniel is the son of Pat and Connie Keller, of
Bethalto, Ill. He is a 1995 graduate of Civic Memorial
High School in Bethalto. Ill., earned bachelor of arts
and master of arts degrees from Southern Illinois
University-Ed\vardsville in 1999 and 2002, respectively. and a Ph.D. from the University
Louisville
in 2007. He is currently an assistant professor ·of
English at Ohio State University-Newark.
The maid of honor was the bride's sister. Bethany
Skinner of Indianapolis, Ind. The bridesmaid was
Anne-Marie Peterson of Long Beach, Calif.
The best man \vas Brian Cameron of Glen Carbon. Ill.
The groomsman was Jim Steward of Bunker Hill, Ill.
Allen Skinner. brother of the bride, and Kevin Jones
served as ushers.
Following the ceremony. a reception was held at the
James S. McDonnell Planetarium nt the St. Louis
Science Center.
The couple spent their honeymoon in Maui.
The couple resides in Mount Vernon. Ohio.

or

J.B. Nutter, Jr. and Riki Barringer

BARRINGERNUTTE·R
ENGAGEMENT
Riki Michelle Barringer and .J.B. Nutter. Jr., both of
Reedsville announce their engagement and approaching marriage.
The bride-elect. daughter of Rick and Debbie Ba11inger
of Reedsville. is a 1997 graduate of Eastern High School
and a 2000 graduate of Hocking College with an associate's degree in accounting. Sh~ is employed with
Physician Services Ll.C dba 4MOST Health Network,
Charleston, W.Va., where she is the senior accountant.
Her fiance, son of Polly Nutter of Rarvenswood,
W.Va. and J.B. Nutter. Sr.. also of Ravenswood.
W.Va., graduated from Ravenswood High School in
1995 ar1d is employed with Bargin Builders Outlet in
Washington. W.Va.
. The ~edding will be held on Aug. 14 at 3:30p.m.
at the Faith Full Gospel Church in Long B()ttom.

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Admission:
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hi &amp; Sat SKIXI per iJersl&gt;n (includ~s Cam1val)

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Celebrating special
days with you!

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• 1
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I'UJyn.f!\.5.16~tutf~rftt,to.Upnlh.,flhl .1~ ''

Sunday Tinzes-Sentinel

'Yn

Subscribe today • 446-2342 or 992-2155

.

••••••

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Call 740-446-11596 for
adtliliunal informaliun

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Thurs., August 12

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Tues., August 10

151 Second Ave. • Gallipolis (740)446-0332
www.to efurn lture.com

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E-mail celebrations to
mdsnews@mydailysentinel.com ar
mdtnews @mydailytribune.com

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PageCs

iunbap ~imes -ientinel

Generations ·

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Rio nursing students partner
with Rio Valley Stables
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF
MOTNEWS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Submitted photo

This photograph was taken June 201 0 when Beverly
Louden, Pat Klos, sister of Beverly, and Amy Louden, .
daughter of Beverly, traveled to Independence, Calif.,
to visit Norman and Jennifer Wilder and their children.
Jennifer Louden Wilder is the daughter of Beverly.
There are three sets of sisters, older and younger in
the picture with the younger sisters seated. Back row,
from left to right, Beverly Louden, Amy Louden and
Allison Wilder; front row, from left to right, Pat Klos,
Jennifer Wilder and Autumn Wilder.

ASK DR. BROTHERS

• Bad track record stops
him from getting in race
Dear Dr. Brothers: I
have become greatly
attracted to a woman who
just started working at my
job. She's really great,
and I want to ask her out,
but every time I think
about it. I stop and
remember the past. I'm
24, and I've never had a
relationship that lasted
more than six months! I
don't really see the point
of getting into yet another
relationship if it's going to
end in less than a year in a
flurry of drama. I keep
asking myself, ''What's
W1e point?" - L.K.
Dear L.K.: What's the
int? TI1at's a good ques. And the fact that you
stopping before you
into yet another shortterm relationship is a good
thing - it means you are
gaining some awareness
of a pattern you have fallen into, and that's the first
step toward turning things
around. So don't be too
hard on yourself. Just
make sure if you do decide
to go ahead that this is the
type of romance that is not
going to be problematical
for you, as well as possibly
short-lived. Dating someone at work has its own set
of issues - particularly in
these tough economic
times. You may want to
look down the road six or
eight months and figure
out how much of an obstacle to success a messy

Dr. Joyce Brothers
breakup with a colleague
would put in front of you
at work.
Setting that issue aside,
you have just discovered
the modem dilemma of
dating rituals. The fact is,
just about every dating
relationship anyone has is
eventually broken off with varying amounts of
time, money, emotion and
who knows what else
invested. While it seems
like all these short-term
adventures are meaningless or wasted, they do
help prepare you for
knowing the difference
when the right one comes
along. Still, they don't
have to seem like a waste
of time if you avoid the
drama by befriending people who are worthwhile.
By that I mean someone
you would choose as a
friend if you weren't looking for a girlfriend or wife.
(c) 2010 by King
Features Syndicate

Gallia Co. Fair
market goat results
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF ,
MOTNEWS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - The market and miniature
goat show was held Thursday, Aug. 5 during the
61st annual Gallia County Junior Fair.
Following are the results of judging in each category of the competition:

Market Goat (wether)

Meat Goat Wether - 1st, Meg~n Daines: 2nd,
Ashleigh Miller; 3rd. Chelsey Woerner.
Dairy Goat Wether - 1st, Issacc Moss: 2nd,
Michelle Aaron.
Angora/Fiber Goat - I st. Darian Miller; 2nd,
Paige Kiser.
.

RIO GRANDE
Nursing students from
the University of Rio
Grande and Rio Grande
Community College visited •the Riq Valley
Stables recently to work
with an innovative program designed to help
children and adults with
autism, development disabilities or cerebral palsy.
Hope Intervention, a
local non-profit organization
that
provides
resources and support to
families with children or
adults who have aHtism,
designed the program
with Rio Valley Stables.
The program, according to a release from the
University
of
Rio
Grande, allows individuals with special needs to
take part in therapeutic
horseback riding at the
Rio Valley Stables. The
therapeutic horseback
riding has numerous benefits, such as helping the
riders improve their balance,
muscle
tone,
strength, endurance, posture and coordination, it
was reported. In addition,
having success with tasks
such as putting the saddle
onto the horse or just getting onto the horse can
also help improve the
rider's attention span and
increase his or her confidence.
The riders also benefit
from having the experience of smelling the
horses, tack and feed.
They are able to improve
their fine motor skills by
working with the horses
in different ways and
improve their communication skills by working
with the staff and customers at the Rio Valley
Stables The Rio Valley
Stables is staffed by volunteers and provides
numerous services for
the community. and the
organization works well
with Hope Intervention
on this project.
.
One of the regular volunteers at the Rio Valley
Stables
is Michelle
Young, MS, RN, CNE,
who also serves as a
nursing instructor at Rio
Grande.
On Thursday, July 22,
Young took 23 of her
nursing students over to
the Rio Valley Stables so
that they could also
assist with the Hope
Intervention program.
Young explained that she
wanted the students to
take part in the program

Keeping Gallia &amp;
Meigs informed

Submitted photo

Rio students volunteering at the Rio Valley Stables to work with children with :
disabilities.

in order to help them
gain more experience
working with area residents with different
needs, and to help them
learn about the importance of community service projects. The day
was also a good way for
the students to learn
more about therapeutic
riding and other therapeutic programs that
they could be working
with as nurses.
Jack Howbert, a second year student from
Portsmouth who is in the
LPN to RN advanced
placement track program
at Rio Grande, said it
was interesting to see
how the riders gained
self-esteem and confidence from riding the
horses, and how it helped
them in numerous ways.
"You can see that it
works
well,"
really
Howbert said.

Young added that she
was proud of the work
her students did helping
out at the Rio Valley
Stables.
"The students have
been super," said Young,
adding that they learned a
great deal during the day.
"They have seen !he
importance of being
involved with the community and volunteering
their time and experience."
Donna Mitchell, director of the Holzer School
of Nursing, said she was
"pleased that the students
were able to work at the
Rio Valley Stables. "It
was an excellent opportunity for our students to
learn more about autism.
I· m very proud of
Michelle for putting this
project together for the
students."
Patti
Slayton,
owner/manager of the

Rio · Valley Stables, said
she was happy to have
the Rio Grande students
volunteering their time.
"I think they learned
quite a bit," she said, .
adding that she is proud
to work with Hope
Intervention on this program, and she is thankful
for all of the volunteers
who work at the stables
throughout the year.
"The
community
involvement is great
here," Slayton said. The
Rio Valley Stables currently has 47 horses, and
offers horseback riding
for people of all ages
and experience levels.
The Rio Valley Stables
offers several trails for
people to ride. senior·
nights, carriflge rides,
after-school programs,
summer day camps, riding lessons and numerous other programs for
the community.

SOUTHERN LOCAL VOTERS!

Thanks
For Your
SUPPORT!!!

Sunday TimesSentinel
Gallia • 446-2342
Meigs • 992-2155

Pd for by the
Southern Local Cam ai' n Committee Tricia McNickle, Treasurer

HealthCare of Leon-Buffalo
Welcomes Stephan Serfonteih, MD

Market Showmanship
Past Market Showmanship - I st, Megan
Daines; 2nd, Jacob Winters.
Senior Market Showmanship - I st, Michelle
Aaron; 2nd, Issacc Moss; 3rd, Tara Baker.
Junior Market Showmanship - 1st, Dalton
Queen; 2nd, Hailey Burris; 3rd. Ashleigh Miller.

Miniature/Pygmy Showmanship
Miniature/Pygmy Goat Past Sh'o wmanship l st, Kiristin Lively.
Miniature/Pygmy Goat Senior Showmanship
1st, Abby Hammond; 2nd. Vincent Browning:
, Courtnee Woodyard.
.
Miniature/Pygmy Goat Junior Showmanship
- lst, Curtis Hane; 2nd. Jennifer Stump; 3rd,
Mikayla Pope Triangle.

•

Miniature/Pygmy Goat Classes

Miniature I Pygmy· Goat Production - l st,
Marzella DePasquale: 2nd, Olivia Glassbum; 3rd.
Mikayla Pope.
Junior Miniature/Pygmy Goat - !st. Mart~l!a
DePasquale; 2nd, Jennifer Stump: 3rd. Ohvm
Glassburn.
Senior Miniature/Pygmy Goat - I st, Sonja
Rankin; 2nd, Kiristin Lively: 3rd. Vincent Browning.

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�PageC6

junbap ~imes -i&gt;entine[

Sunday,August8,2010

Jared Roach/photo

The prettiest babies in Gallia County turned out on Friday for the annual Pretty Baby Contest at the Gallia County Junior Fair. Winners were selected in 22 categories
ranging in age from birth to 5-years old.

•
Gal,ia County's prettiest babies

showcased in contest at fair
\

Halley,
Leighanna
Williams.
Boys 4-6 months : GALLIPOLIS - The I st. Lincoln Milliron;
annual Pretty Baby 2nd, Jordan Neal; 3rd.
Contest was held Friday Lamarius Nichols
at the 61 st annual Gallia
Girls 7-9 months County Junior Fair. The 1st, Lillian Spaun; 2nd,
~vent was sponsored by
Ashlynn Johnson; 3rd.
the Gallipolis Junior Addison Marcum.
Women's Club.
Boys 7-9 months Winners were selected I st, Marta vi us Jennings:
in 22 age groups of girls 2nd, Patrick Murphy:
and boys ranging from 3rd, Joel Pearce.
birth to age 5.
Girls 10-12 monthsFollowing are the top 1st, Bryleigh Bing: 2nd.
three contestants in each Nadia Johnson: 3rd.
age group:
Taylor Johnson.
Girls 0-3 months Boys 10-12 months l st, Briella McFarland; lst, Hayden Saunders;
2nd. Hailey Johnson; 2nd. Keldon ~1ollohan;
3rd, Shelbie Carter.
3rd. Elijah Smith.
Boys 0-3 months Girls 13-15 months 1st. Hayden Barrett: Ist, Carey lee Murphy;
2nd, Colton Mills; 3rd, 2nd, Kendra Davis; 3rd,
(tie) Kainen Qualls . . Isabella Mulligan.
Boys 13-15 months Easton Merrill.
Girls 4-6 months Ist, Colton Reed; 2nd.
1st, Chloe 'sennett; 2nd. Gavyn
Davis;
3rd,
Olivia Clary; 3rd, Chloe Ayden Wolford.
.TIMES-S ENTINEL STAFF
MOTNEWS@MYDAJLYTRJBUNE COM

Girls 16-19 months I st. Kaylin Burger; 2nd,
Jaylynn
Bass; 3rd.
Nevaeh McCown, Ariah
Sinclair.
Boys 16-19 months
- I st, Landen Barrett;
2nd,
Li ncoln
Shamblin; 3rd. Cayden
Shadwick.
Girls 20-23 months
I st,
Leigha
Kingery; 2nd, Jacklynn
Richards: 3 rd, Gracyn
Clark.
Boys 20-23 months
I st.
Bray lin
Skidmore; 2nd, Andre
Gibson; 3rd. Lethaniel
Shafer.
Girls age. 2 - I st.
Cheyenne Waugh; 2nd,
Laella Mullins; 3rd,
Maddalee Wolford.
Boys age 2 - l st.
Rees Toler; 2n9, Kyle
Newman: 3rd, James
Qualls.
.
Girls age 3 - I st,
Kamryn Barnitz; 2nd,

Isabella Johnson; 3rd.
Megan Shuler.
Boys age 3 - 1st,
Brandon Booth; 2nd,
Elias Hatfield IV; 3rd.
Carson Mollohan .
Girls age 4 - 1st,
Lindsey Wells; 2nd,
Hannah Chapman; 3rd,
Kierstyn Unroe.
Boys age 4 - l st,

•

Steve n Dav is; 2nd.
Noah Gee.
Gi rl s age 5 - I st,
K ylie Pl antz; 2nd,
K rista Powe ll ; 3 rd,
Laura Diaz.
Boys age 5 - 1st.
Waylon Husk-Adki ns;
2nd. J ustin Stump: 3rd,
Kraig Leml ey, Hayden
Clark.

First-place contestnrHs each re'ceived a
b lue ribbon. Sec o ndplace finishers eac h
received a red ribbo n.
Third-place
c ontestants were each awarded a .white ribbon.
A II other contestants
received parti cipatio n
ribbons.

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\VIren I reached Arbors I was unable to :;tand.
PT and or started re:;toring my strength Oil day one.
After I 0 weeks I waJ al/oJved to stand.
Kelly Afet:.er ( PT} and Nicole Conno/ley (OT)
were waiting on me to return from the doctor
and helped me to take that fir~ I
tentative step that very day! Arbors of Gallipolis
provided me with a ~afe, caring place to heal.
/think I would recogni:.e excellent care becau'je
I have been a RN for the last 27 years.
Three of the Nurses Aides who made a difference
in my \Il l)' at Arbors by providing excellent care
atul emotional support were Anna Larson,
Annette Sherman and David Baker.

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Dl
Snnday, August 8, 2010

•

Reconnecting Families,
.......~-......

ea at
I

A delicious. easy to prepare dish the
whole family will enjoy.

• Get Them to Plug Into You. Make the experience as meaningful
as possible by designating the kitchen as a "technology-light"
zone. Have them use their laptop or Smartphone to access favorite
recipes, but no texting allowed. Th1s is your chance to simply cook.
connect and spend quality time together.
• Redefine Text(ing). Demonstrate the basics by cooking alongside
them. Start by teachmg them to read a recipe all the way through.
Show them the importance of paying attention to measuring and
the difference between ingredients. And, be sure to touch on the
1mportancc of food safety with hand washing and proper handling
of raw foods such as eggs, meat and poultry.
• Celebrate Success. Encourage and celebrate their culinary creations
and remember it's the effort. not the outcome that's tmportant.
Remember that even the simplest of time spent together ill the
kitchen can tum mto the best of memories ... and good food!

These easy-to-prepare recip~s. from Unilever Consumer K1tchens,
are designed to help families save time and money using quality
staples likely already in thCif pantries. For information and hspiration, www.TheFamilyDish.com has tips, time-saving family-friendly
recipes, and videos of real moms cooking with their families. Get
additional inspiration by following Anna Marie and Lauren on
Twitter @kitchcndishin.

Chicken &amp; Broccoli Alfredo

s

Afmnill"-pleasing dish that also delicious
with shrimp.
4 servings

Prep Time: 15 minutes
Cook Time: 15 minutes
3 tablespoons I Can't Believe It's
Not Butter! Spread, divided
pound boneless, skinless chicken
breasts, cut into cubes
112 cup finely chopped red bell
pepper
2 cups fresh or thawed frozen
broccoli florets
J 3/4 cups water
112 cup milk
.
I package Knorr Pasta Sides Alfredo
Melt I tablespoon Spread in 12-mch
nonstick skillet over medium-high heat
and cook chicken, stirring frequently. 5
mmutes or until chicken is thoroughly
cooked. Remove chicken and set aside.
Melt additional 2 tablespoons Spread
in same skillet over medium heat and
cook red pepper I minute or until tender.
Stir m broccoli, water and milk. Bring to
a boil over high heat. Stir in pasta sides
Alfredo. Return to a boil. then cook over
medium heat, stirring occasionally, 8 min- ·
utes or until pasta is tender.
Return chicken to ~killet: heat through.

f

'

me

Succulent
Chicken Parmesan

f busy schedules and digital distractiOns are getting 1.n the way of
family time, help is on the way. Unilever. maker ofman:y leading
food brands, recently unveiled The Family Dish, a program aimed
at helping busy families discover the joys of cooking together.
Anna Marie Cesario and Lauren Del\abella. experts from ti'e Unilever
Consumer Kitchens, agree that cooking is a great creative outlet, and that
the simple acts of mixing and measuring together can lead to amazing
conversations and memories that last a lifetime. Their advice is:

•

•

4 servings
Prep Time: I0 minutes
Cook Time: 23 minutes
1/4 cup Italian seasoned dry
bread crumbs
1/4 cup grated Parmesan
cheese
4 boneless,' skinless chicken
breast halves (about 1-1/4
pounds)*
1/4 cup Hellmann's or Best
Foods Real Mayonnaise
1/2 cup Ragu Old World Style
Traditional Pasta Sauce
1/2 cup shredded mozzarella
cheese (about 2 ounces)
Preheat oven to 425°F.
Combine breaa crumbs with
Parmesan cheese in shallow dish;
set aside.
Add chicken and mayonnaise to
large plastic bag: shake to evenly
coat. Remove chicken, then lightly
coat in crumb mixture. Arrange
chicken on baking sheet.
Bake 20 minutes. Evenly top
chicken with pasta sauce, then
moznrella cheese. Bake an additional 3 minutes or until chicken
is thoroughly cooked and cheese
is melted.
*For smaller portions, use an equal
weight of chicken tenders.

Peanut Butter &amp;
J elly Parfaits
Great for an after-school snack or a
fim dessert.

6 servmgs
Prep Time: 15 minutes
1/2 cup reduced sugar grape
jelly
1 114 cups nonfat \'anilla yogurt
1/2 cup Skippy Natural
Super Chunk or Creamy
Peanut Butter Spread
cup low fat granola cereal
medium banana, sliced
cup sliced strawberries
Microwave jelly at HIGH 30 seconds
or until melted. Drizzle I tablespoon
down sides of each parfait glass:
set aside.
Combine yogurt with peanut
butter m medium bowl. ~oon 1/2
of peanut butter mixture mto each
parfait glass. Top each with 2 tablespoons cereal. then 1/2 of the fruit;
repeat. Drizzle with remaining
jelly. Garnish. if desired, with
mint kayes.

�PageD2

iunbap 'Qeimes -ientinei .

SWlday, August 8, 2010

Ideas for what to do with summer's bounty
BY MICHELE KAYAL
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Right about now fam1ers market devotees start
coming home with more
than they know what to
do with, simply because
it's all so beautiful.
But an unusually good
crop of produce-centered
cookbooks offers inventive ways to use the
bounty to its best advantage.
Susie
Middleton's
"Fast, Fresh and Green"
injects your cooking with
a little "Huah!!" and
offers a strategy for
decoding and deploying
a greater variety of vegetables.
Built around foundation recipes for eight different cooking techniques such as grilling,
roasting ~d sauteing, the
book teaches home cooks
how to handle different
vegetables, and then
offers suggestions for
enlivening them. Roasted
cauliflower
gets
a
Moroccan feel from
orange zest and olives
and the simple sassy slaw
strikes a Southwest note
with lime, cilantro and
Serrano peppers (technique: No Cooking).
Great book for vegephobics or people stuck in a
steamed broccoli rut.
"Cooking from the
Garden" by Ruth Lively
features more than 200
recipes that aim to move
the greens from your
backyard to your table
with minimal fuss. With
the big, blocky look of an
elementary school textbook, the book offers
quick, comfy fare like
tomatoes in shallot-flavored cream (cooking
time about 5 minutes),
stir-fried shrimp with
asparagus, and chicken
pot pie with rosemary
biscuits. Home gardeners
will appreciate the section on turning your piles
of borage and lemon verbena into herbal teas.
To
answer
the
inevitable "But what do
you do with it?" that
comes after discovering
some new treat at the
market, Sur La Table's
"Eating Local'' ingeniously organizes recipes
according to ingredient.
Fava beans?. Toss them
with corn and bacon for a
smoky
succotash.
Kohlrabi? Saute with
butter and dill.
Enticing preparations
will also get you over the
hump of making the same
things over and over.
Beets join up with tahini
for a rich, creamy dip,
while their tops are
sauteed and served with
whipped feta. The book
gets a big dose of soul and a warm fuzzy feeling
about eating local - from
lushly
photographed
farmer profiles.
Thomas'
Cathy
"Melissa's
Everyday
Cooking with Organic
Produce" also is organized by ingredient, but
caters to broader tastes.
Created by Melissa's
World Variety Produce,
one of the country's leading distributors, recipes
such as chicken breast
with apricots and green
bean casserole hit a comforting note. Packed with
nutritional information,
tips on selecting and storing produce, and discussions of different varieties this is a handy, general guide for all things
fruit and vegetable.
Several single-st~bject
books let cooks plow the
produce into their passions. In "Tomato," heirloom guru Lawrence
Davis-Hollander showcases the sultry balance
of sweet and acid in summer's most eagerly
awaited fmit with more
than 150 recipes from
well-known
chefs,
including Daniel Boulud,
Alice
Waters
and
Deborah
Madison.
Standards like fried
green tomatoes and traditional marinara sauce
mingle with Middle
Eastern "pizza'' spiked
with allspice and rabbit

r----------------------•
SIMPLE, SASSY SLAW

es. Amid traditional
recipes for pies and buckStart to Finish: 40 minutes {10 minutes active)
les,
surprises like easy
Servings: 4
chocolate
cherry cup1/2 small head savoy cabbage, cored and thinly sliced
cakes
frosted
with choco3 tablespoons lime juice
late sour cream icing and
•
2 teaspoons sugar
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
chilled plum soup with
2 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro
sour
· cream give sum2 tablespoons finely chopped scallions, whites and greens
mer's candy a show-stop1 tablespoon sour cream
ping twist. With recipes
1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon minced Serrano pepper {optional)
2 to 3 tablespoons toasted pepitas (pumpkin seeds) (optional)
for petite salted caramel
apples and ginger pear
In a medium bowl, combine the cabbage, lime juice, sugar
skillet cake, the book will
and salt. Let sit for 15 to 20 minutes, stirring occasionally.
also take you into autumn
Add the cilantro, scallions, sour cream and pepper, if using.
Stir and let sit for 5 to 10 minutes.
and throughout the year.
Sprinkle with toasted pepitas, if using.
When you're feeling
Nutrition information per serving (values are rounded to the
whimsical and Italian.
nearest whole. number): 53 calories; 30 calories from fat; 3 g fat
"Recipes from an Italian
(1 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 3,mg cholesterol; 5 g carbohydrate; 2 g protein; 1 g fiber; 248 mg sodium.
.
Summer" is a massive
(Reci[:e fran SUsie Mict11.etcn's ''Fast, Fresh and Gtaen," 1
tome from the publishers
Olr:oo.i.cl.e, 2010)
1
of "The Silver Spoon."
----------------------~ The book conjures picpaella bursting with heir- salad of English peas and nics and countryside
looms. Tarts stacked with morels gets goosed up meals. A rustic vegetable
orange, yellow, red and with watercress and aged tart packs in summer's
green gems are the stuff sherry vinegar. And per- bountiful Swiss chard,
of bakery windows. An haps summer's most spinach, zucchini and
i.ondispensable guide for seductive salad is a gen- leeks, and a cold corn
tomato lovers.
tle cascade of lamb's let- and mozzarella salad
And lest you think tuce caressed by t1oral contrasts crunchy green
salad is boring, chef lychees and the fresh, peppers with springy
Andrew
Swallow's green essence of cucum- cheese and sweet corn.
As
with
most of
"Mixt Salads" offers bers.
innovative flavor and
For your sweet tooth, Phaidon 's books, head
texture combinations that "Farmers'
Market notes telling users what
propel the genre beyond .Desserts'' by Jennie to expect from each
a bowl of cold vegeta- Schacht offers more than recipe are absent, but
bles. Organized accord- 50 recipes for all those stick with ingredients
ing to season, a spring berries, plums and peach- you like and experiment.

LivESTOCK REPORT
GALLIPOLIS - United Produc~rs Inc. livestock report of sales from Aug. 4, 2010.

Feeder Cattle
275-415 pounds, Steers, $90-$115, Heifers, $80$109; 425-525 pounds, Steers, $90-$115, Heifers,
$80-$109; 550-625 pounds, Steers, $95-$109
Heifers, $90-$101; 650-725 pounds, Steers, $87~
$98, Heifers, $82-$95; 750-850 p6unds, Steers,
$85-$95, Heifers, $75-$84.

Fed Cattle
Choice, Steers, $88, Heifers, $0; Select, Steers,
$84, Heifers, $0; Holstein, Steers, $0, Heifers, $0.

Cows
Well Muscled/Fleshed, $58-$65; Medium/Lean,
$54-$58; Thin/Light, $44-$54; Bulls, $60-$74.

Back to Farm
Cow-Calf Pairs, $570-$1 050; Bred Cows, $480$670; Bulls, $860; Baby Calves, $45.50-$280;
Goats. $38-$135; Lambs, $100-$125; Hogs, $28.
Manure to give away. Will load for you.

Upcoming specials
Fed cattle sale, Aug. 11, 2010.
Direct sales and free on-farm v1s1ts. Contact
Dewayne at (740) 339-0241, Stacy at (304) 6340224, or Luke at (740) 645-3697, or visit the website at www.uproducers.com.

SUNDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

MONDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

'

•

�--

-~~-

Sunday, August 8, 2010
.

~.-:;

..

r-'

"-

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.

--..---- - -

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...

&amp;unbap ~~m~·&amp;tntfntl • Page 03

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

----------------------------------------------------------~
\!Cribune - Sentinel - 3aegi~ter
CLASSIFIED

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

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Sentinel
Your Ad,
40) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156
Call Today••• (7Or
Or Fax To
992·2157
Fax To (740) 446·3008

OllfreeM,~

"' r- HOW TO WRITE AN AD
•
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ..•

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Or Fax To (304) 675·5234

/Jead'41;,t!4

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Websites·
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POUCIE8· Ohio Ylllley Publlantnc roeorvH 1re rtght to fldn.. te)Oet. or cancel DrYf ad et any umo. ErTore mLm be repclf10CI on tne fret ctay ot puoncauon and thO
T'r1b~l"'llnoi-Regl01er v.1n b. r"ponelblo for no m&lt;Ho than tht cost or thO epaco ocwpled by tho.,. ror II"MS onty the ftrat ln!lei'Uon we ahon not be Utble tcw
•ny 10a or expenM that retR.~U• ''om 1~ pubUcauon or omraalon ot •n •&lt;:vtnl..mem Conectlon W1n btl medo In ttJ. nm avauaor• eciHion.. • Box numb« . , .
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2000

Automotive

3000

Real Estate
Sales

3500

Real Estate
Rentals

4000

Manufactu~ed

Housmg
Rentals

2BR Mobile Home
water, sewer trash pd.
No pets, Johnson's
Mobile Home Park
740·446·3160
5000 Resort Property

6000

Employment

Help Wanted·
General

Home Improvements

Money To lend

Garden &amp; Produce

SUMMER SPECIAL
1 Driveway Seal,
Coating &amp; Repair.
2 Gutters cleaned,
repaired &amp; installed.
3. Painting &amp; yard
work &amp; misc. odd
jobs.
Senior discount,
licensed &amp; bonded.
Home ph. 304-8823959
Cell ph. 304·8123004

NOTICE Borrow Smart
Contact
the
Ohio
Div1s1on of Financ•al
lnshtuhons Office of
·consumer
Affairs
BEFORE you refinance
your home or obtain a
loan. BEWA.RE of
requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or insurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
Afftars toll free at 1866-278·0003 to learn
if the mortgage broker
or lender is properly
licensed. (This 1s a
public
service
announcement from the
Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

LOCATION
your
own
earning
tomatoes
and· peppers. bell,
sweet banana and
hot, red, yellow &amp;
green. $4. bucket,
bring
y.our
own
containers or buy our
boxes for $1. each
Patriot Produce 62
Village Street Patriot
Oho
45658.
Directions
from
Ga lipolis, take St. At
141 approx. 11 miles
to Gage, turn left on
Gage Road, approx.
2 miles watch for
canning signs,were
in the town ot Patriot,
Closed Sunday.

Basement
Waterproofing
Unconditional lifet1me
guarantee Local
references furnoshed
Established 1975. Call
24 Hrs. 740·446·0870,
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.
Other Services
Pel Cremations. Call
740-446·37 45

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$1,800.
Please John's
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contact Tim Barnes Remodling,
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at 717·968·2876 to decking, plumbing,
discuss details. You electrical, ~ 30
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at mowing service 339www.barnpaintadvert 9593 or 367·0437
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740·
446 3825
Have you priced li John
Deere lately? You'll be
surprised! Check out
uur ust:u inventory at
www.CAREO.com
Carmichael Equipment
7 A 0-446·2412

!_o.

Merchandise

Want To Buy

Pictures that
have been
placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will
be
discarded.

Absolule Top Dollar •
r/gold coins, any
'4K/18K
gold
lry. d~ntal gold, pre 300
•
Services
1935 US currency.
IJroof/mint
sets.
dtamonds, MTS Coin
Shop. 151 2nd Avenue.
Financial
Gallipolis. 446·2842.
000
.. ,.

Recreational
Vehicles

FAST IRS

RELIE_I:

Do you owe over
Campers/ RVs &amp;
$10000 to the IRS?
Trailers
Settle Out Over Due
Taxes for Less
AV
Serv1ce
at
1-888-692·5739
C...·ntchaal
TrtJIICrs
140·446·3825

j

VONAGE

NEW
Pic~

Yard Sale

3000

Real Estate
Sales

Garage Sale Wed
Aug 11 . 9-5 lots of
school clothes sies For Sale By Owner
10·16 girls too! 6309
6 apts $158 000
STAT 588
rent $2030 mo. 7 40·
AKC
reg.
Boxer 446·0390
puppies.
tails
Houses For Sale
docked, wormed &amp;
shots g1ven DOB
5/18/10, $350 for
$400
for
fawns,
brindles.
740·9499114

For Sale: 2 houses &amp;
a
large
lot
In
Gallipolis City lim1ts,
$75,000. For more
mfo call 740-446·
after
6pm.
Aug. 12 &amp; 13, 822 1001
Johns Ad, Racine. 9· Serious calls only!
4, Phyllis Glasgo
land (Acreage)
residence.
Gallla Co. 5 acre
Recreati_oual
1000
home sites on SA
,
Vehicles
500
Education
218
$22,900
or
Meigs Co. 8 acres
$19,900. More @
Other
www.brunerland.com
600
Animals
Fiberglass cap for 8 or call740·441-1492,
ft pickup bed $400. we finance!
7
40-245-5130 • or
Pick
your
own
Pets
~~~--~~
canning tomatoes ,&amp; 7 40-590·954 7
land in Ma~on Co. 38
For sale
Engli~h papers @ $4 per
acres rd frontage
Bulldogs.
Automotive
bucket. Plepse bring 2000
good
hunting
or
Brindle/white.
740· your ·own container.
building
304-674·
612-0938
No Sunday Sales.
3627
Troyers
Woodcraft Classic / Antiques
Real Estate
171
lakin
Rd. 64 Chevy Impala SS 3500
AKC
Pekingese
Rentals
puppies $200 740- Gallipolis 9 miles 396-375 hp $13,000.
west
of
Gallipolis
on
256-1664
73 Chevy Nova SS
St Rt 141
396·37SHP $10,000.
Apartments/
73
Mrcedes
450SL
Townhouses
Free m gray kitten,
Hay, Feed, Seed,
Hard top and soft top ,; = =R-==A=P=T=c==s=e-=;;:to
liter trained, 8-9wks.
Grain
10
28
740-949-3408 leave
all origlanl $10 000· Holzer Hospital on SA
Hay
for
sale
$2.50
sq
77 Chevy truck all H.O CIA (740) 441·
message
inside C1S4
bales. 740·367-7272 custim1zed
and out over $10,000
Free
puppies,
Merchandise in engine sell for CONVENIENTLY
Boxer/Lab mix. m!f 900
$16.000. All prices LOCATED
&amp;
304-675-4156
are firm 740·256· AFFORDABLE!
1270 or 740·446- Townhouse
Collectibles
apartments,
and/or
7327
German
Shepherd
small houses for rent.
puppies,
top . Co lectibles for Sale.
Cal. 740·44,·1111 for
Trucks
bloodline,
large Baseball
cards
applicatiOn
&amp;
boned, both parents (over1/2 million) Auto 1998 Mazda ex cab 1ntormalion.
on
site.
$400 graphed
balls, truck 4cyl. 5 sp. runs
Heritage Farm 304- pictures
stamp· &amp; looks good 740- Free Rent Special
675-5724
singles. plate blocks, 709-1182
!!!
duck first day issue.
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
Civil
war
books, 2002 Ford 550 Super up. Central Air, WID
CKC
Rat Terrier plates,
flags, Duty, power stroke hookup, tepanl pays
puppies. Ready in 2 magazines, beanie 4x4, auto, air, pb, ps, electric. Call between
wks 304·675-4243
babies,
puffkins, deluxe interior, 11' the hours of 8A-6P
EHO
nascar caers, rocky high top mechanic
Ellm VIew Apts.
Free good home. M lane comics {85/87) bed, work '•te Inside
(304)882-3017
orange
flame videos, cds, books.• &amp; out. $12.500 740992·2478
point/blue eyes, 740· magazines
Twin Rivers Tower tS
949-3408 mess.
{hundreds). 740·446- --~------ accepting applications
4313
98 Chevy 3/4 ton
for wailing list for HUD
p1ck up, auto &amp; V·8. SUbSidized
1 ·BR
700
Agriculture
$1,200,
740·992· apartment
for
the
Furniture
2478
elderly/disabled,
call
675·6679
Farm Equipment
Like
new
navy
Vans
leather
Berkhne
STIHL, Sales &amp; Service recliner
$150; 93 Chevy custom
Now
Available
at
daybed van
Carmichael Equipment wooden
high
top.
w/mattress $75. 304- w/wheelchair lift, first
740-446·2412
675-1765.
$1,000,
740-9922br
apt
$450
Garden &amp; Produce
2478
Miscelianeous
mo. tdep. Kanauga
Tomatoes top quality
total elec. 740·339·
for canning or table Jet Aeration Motors
3224
new
&amp;
repaired,
$9 for 25# box,
1br apt. total ele.
rebuilt In stock. Call
Reedsville, call 740$350mo.+dep. Porter
Ron Evans 1·800·
378-6291
OH 740-339·3224
537·9528

~~~WWI)
Cc!IAII'rreM;*

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

ADT
Free Home
Security
$850Value
with purchase of
alarm monitoring
services from ADT
Security Services.
Call1·888·274·3888
400

LPNorCMA

Meal Transporter/
Custodial l\faintenance

Positions
.. Full-Time
Available
Competitive Salary
Great Workjng Environment
Send Resume To:

CREDIT CARD
~LJ~_I:
Buried In Credit
Card Debt?
Call Credit Card
Relief for your free
consultation.

Nice renovated 1 br
apts. 1n Middleport,
ref. &amp; dep. reqUired,
$400 per mo. water,
trash,
sewer
included.
740-416·
6622
Nice
BR
apartment,
appliances furnished.
$375 + deposit. Near
PPHS 304·675-31 00
or 307·675-5509

Apartments/
Townhouses
and
2
BR ..
apartments for rent
near downtown Point
Pleasant. All utilities
paid. No pets. Call
304-360-0163.
Houses For Rent
3 BR turn. house
close to power plant
in New Haven 304·
n3·9507.

Clean, efficient,
BR,
conveniently
located. Reference.
Deposit. No pets.
304·675-5162

House for rent. 3Br 1
Ba chillicothe rd
$475 mo plus dep &amp; ,
utilities.
Apartment
for rent 1Br 1BA
Springvalley
area.
Spring Valley Green
$389 mon plus dep. ·
Apartments 1 BR at
740-339-3046
or
$395+2 BR at $470
740·645-7661
Month. 446·1599
~----------

Card of Thanks
•

------------ ·,
Card of Thanks

.:=:=============:: •
Thank You

\'\le would like to thunk the local
communit) for y·our support. Our
Ja)Cie Byrd bad a rough start arrhing
6 weeb earl)·. but h now doing \\ell.
Included in our thanks are: co-workers
at Court Street Grill and :\teigs Local
School District, :\ludfork Blues Rand,
Hemlock Grove Church, those that
arrangNI, donated and attended the
benefit. and especially friends and
famil). It's hard to believe he is already
6 mopths old. We so appreciate all that
)·ou baH done, and continue to do for
u'!

·=======·
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

DIRECTOR OF HO~IE CARE
SERVICES
Pleasant Valley Hospital is current!)"
acceptmg resumes for a Director of
Homt: Care Services. Home Health
expenence reqUired. Experience in
supcrvisi,,n iulll management of -a Home
Care Agency preferred.
RN with Bachelor's Degree. Must
mamtam hcensun: in the states of WV
and Ohto. Applicants actively pursuing
a BSN will be considered.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Pt Pleasant. WV 25550
Or fax 30-'·675-6975, or apply on·
line at W\\ u .pyalley.or£!
AAIEOE

Ga!Jia County Counctl on Aging/ SchHJr

Financial

Financial Services

Apartments/
Townhouses

Family Healthcare, Inc.
c/o Wanda Edwards
306 North Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Fax: 740-992-0264
EOE

resource center IS CUITelllly acceptmg
applications fllr Meal Transporter/
Custodial Mnmtenan~c. ~lust have \alid
driYers license and insurable risk..Must
be able In read, write, ami foliO\\
dm.'l'twns. EEO Please till out
applicatinns at 1165 State Route 16U,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

•
Cook
Galli~'

County Council on Aging/ Scnror
Re~ourcc Center is cwrently accepting
appltcalions lor cook. Must have valid
drivers license and msumblc risk. Must
be able to read, write, and folfow

1~~~'1!FAMILY
HEALTHCAAE, INC.
·no~

Help Wanted

InfoCision is Now Off~ring
Work from Home!
:\take calls for conservathc political
organitations from the comfort.of
JOUr own home!
• Paid On Site Training
• Set Schedules • Full and Part Time
• Weeki) Pa) and Bonus lnct:ntives!
• Must meet minimum equipment

requiremenLs

EEO

Join our team and fipd out \\bat
Dl!Jkcs us one of Ohio '.s. best
!.'nt()loyers!

Please till out applkations at

Call Today for your appointment!
1-888-237-56-'7 EXT 2372

dlfCl'IIOn,.

No phone calls please

Help Wanted

1165 State Route 160
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Apply online at
htt :/(obs.infocision.com

�~--

Pag~

-

- -

04• &amp;unbap ~ime~-&amp;entintl

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

" A place to Call Home"
FOSTER PARENTS NEEDED
IN YOUR COUNTY!!!
$30·$45 A day for the care
of a child in your home.
Can be single, married, or
"empty nest''. Call Oasis
to help a child find a place to
call home.Training begins at
Albany
August 7. Call1-877-325-1558
for More information or
to register for training
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

GKN SINTER METALS

GKN Smter Metals. a wholf) owned
subsidiar) of GKN pic. is the world's
leading producer of preciston pnwdL·r
metal components and has over 7.000
employees in JO locations on five
continents. Om manufacturing facility
located in Gallipolis. Ohio, is increasing
sales and reaching new customers. We
are seeking moth a ted, skillL'd
Maintenance 'lechnicians.
GKN Maintenance Technician

Qualifications:
• Skilled at both c-orre-ctive and
preventive maintenance
• A working knowledge of Industrial
Electricity
•
• Experience with Allen Bradle) PLC
and servo systems
• Basic Welding and sheet metal
fabricatmn skills
• Ability to read and understand
hydrauhc system prints.

~~ -~--·- ~- --~~----:-.......-~~~----~~----------,...-~~-~........1111111

-. --

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

,Help Wanted

~

SceDicHma
s~

Nul"..ing &amp; Rd1ab c~nter
A V~le H~_:;c;..,_ny

Hi~ am Ctl!ll'nfly acC8pfing appliCG!ion~

for the followinf!,potitiunr:

S1N.Ns
All Shifts

·Competitive Wages
·Paid Vacations

$')l'

C~o

~?:;on

&amp; Holidays
Bonus}
·Full Benefits
by£'3 1;.~~5fllrt?i•~ •
Pad&lt;age
SfN~Po~riXfuttrirne
illJ5onM
·Tuition Reimbursement
·
App~ mpersoo: Scenic Hills
311 Bud&lt; Ridge Road, Bidwell, OH 45614
Or &amp;nail vhcjobs@vrablehealthcare.com
Or Online at:

www.vrablehealthcare.com
f'jUa/Oppcrtufiftt Emproyrr

This position will require the candidate
to pass a basic skills lest prior to
employmeill.

Help Wanted

GKN offers a comprehensive benefit
package to its employees. If you arc
qualified, motivated and looking for a
great growth opportunity and rewarding
challenges, we encourage you In pick
up your application at:
·
Gallia County Job &amp; f-amily Scr\ tees
Work Opportunity Center
848 3rd Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
I

Equal Opportumry Employer

Auction

4·

Auction

Estate Auction (i..

~riday, August 13th 6 pm ~
Located at the Amvets Building

108 Liberty Ave. Gallipolis, OH 45631
{From Pomeroy 12 mi S. to Riverfront
Honda, turn right. Jt'rom Pt. Pleasant, WY
Take Gallipolis exit, turn left 118 mi, turn
left. Watch for signs.
FURNITURE: 3 Pc. Livmg Room Suite. 4 Pc
Bedroom Suite, 2 pc BR suite, Dining Room
Table &amp; 6 Chairs. Chum Hutch, Treadle Sewing
Machine. Washer &amp; Dryer. End Tables. Oak
Lamps. chairs, TV. Oak Shelves. Washstand &amp;
Chest. CAR: 2004 Bukk Cemury. 32,000 miles.
VERY NICE GOLF CART· Ohio State Jackup.
Nice Wheels &amp; Tires Collectables: Bavari&lt;t
China Set Coflee Grinders, Wash Board. Large
Cast lmn O"al Roaster. Milk Crock. 10 .Stone
Jars. Teapots, Bra~s Spittoon. fea Set, E- Pern
Fenton, Green Basket, Carnival, Fenlon Fostoria.
Rainbow. Depression. Glass. USA McCoy.
rolling pins, Coke Clock, Buttons, Wood Planes.
Griswold Dampers. Mickey Mouse Windup.
Sears Robuck. Occupied Japan Hand warmer,
Jewel tea crute set, American Bisque Piggy
Bank. Rocket oil can. tools and much more!
This is just a small listing. Come and sec
everything we have!!
Pictures can be viewed at www~auctionzip.n'm
Auction n&gt;nductcd By:
•

Broken Spoke Auction Services
John VI-. Leach, Lie. In Ohio &amp; W~st
Virginia Cheshire, Oh C7401 367-0123
Tei'JTI. Cash or check with positive ID.
All sales arc ti nal. Not responsible for loss or
accidents. No smoking permitted. Food will
be available for purchase Announcements the
da; of sale take precedence over any printed
matenal. Viewing i~ Friday at 1:00 P~l until
start of sale.

Real Estate

Real Estate

Help Wanted

long Term Core I Home Core
Division
NEEDED lMl\oiEDIATELY •
ADtVIINISTRATOR
HOLZER SENIOR GARE CENTER
Holzer Semor Care Center, Gallipolis.
OH is seeking an Admmistrator. Th1s
position is responsible for giving
du·ection and guidance to department
heads and facility staff to achieve results
in prondlng excellent resident care.
good employee relations and an
acceptable bottom line. Assists VP of
Long Term Care/Home Care Services
wtth policy development, strategic
planning and problem solving. Gives
guidance in areas of budget preparation,
staffing. famil) and employee problem~
and the day to day operations of the
facility
Provides orientation to new
department h.cads and assists wllh hicmg
new personnel as needed. Insures that
facility is compliant with state and
federal guidelines and monitors progress
on sun·ey compltance issues when
delictencies are noted.
Reijuiremen_!L _include:
Bachelor's
Degree 111 Administration or equi\alent.
Must be a licensed Nursing Home
Administrator in the State of Ohio.
Holzer Senior Care is the ONLY five
star facility in southern Ohio. Quality
and satisfaction is of the upmost
importance. The facility is located along
the Ohio River and offers rnan)
opportunities to those interested in a
small town atmosphere.
Excellent wage and benefits package.
Please contact:
HOLZER SENIOR CARE CENTER
Barb Peterson-Manager of HR-HSCC
740-446-5001 or peterson@holzer.org
Visit us on the web at www.holzer.org
equal Opportuntt) Employer

Houses For Rent

Drivers &amp; Delivery

3 BR house for rent.
1block
from
·Washington
elem.
·Gallipolis
2BA.LR,FR,Lg
kitchen, laundry rM,
attached garage, off
st parking, fenced
yard. $700 mon +
dep -&amp; ref. Available
Aug 10th 740·33936:39

.Regional Dump an
Pneumatic
tanker
Dnvers. R&amp;J Trucking
Company in Marietta
OH IS searching for
qwlhf1ed applicants
must t1ave minimum
of 1 yr. of safe
commerical driving
expenence in a truck.
Hazmat !::erification,
clean MVR and good
job stability. We offer
competitive benefits
plus
401 K
and
vaction pay. Contact
Dennis at 1-800·492·
9365 to apply or go
to
www rjtrucking.com
EO.E

BR
For re,t
furnished tJouse on
Raccoon Ad $425.
+$225
dep.
Reference
required 740-446·
1759

=========-

House for rent. 3BR,
425 Jackson Pik,e, no
Help Wantedpets, ref required,
General
$675 mon + dep.
740·446-4051
Part-Time LPN to
monitor
behaviors
House for rent 2BR 2 and medical needs of
BA energy efficient a client. Must have
home wl utility room working knowledge
&amp; 20'x20' garage. of
current
Green twp. $600 medications.
Valid
mon + dep. 740-446- WV LPN license
0666
requir.ed, experience
preferred.
Position
3 BR 1 1/2 Ba house includes competitive
for rent. Ca•port. cntrl pay. Resumes will
air. $500 mon + dep. not be accepted Visit
also
1BR
1BA our
wevsite
at
remodeled
house www. prestera. orgljob
$450 mon + dep s or our 715 Main St
740-446·3481
by Pt Pleasant office for
appt
an
application.
Submit application by
2 br home lor rent on fax (304) 525-7893
by
mail
to:
Anne St , Pomeroy, or
$400 a mo. &amp; $400 PRESTERA
CENTER.
HRILPN
dep., 740-992-6385
3375 U.S. RT. 60E
Huntingon,
WV
Pomeroy- 3 br near 25705 EOEIAA
Super
Value,
stove/ref furnished.
Part-time companion
wid
hookl-up,
for elderly lady in
$500/mo, 740·992Point Pleasant area.
6886
Light duties. Please
reply ' to
Point
1BA $375/month in Pleasant
Register,
Syracuse. Deposit, Box 1o. 200 Main
HUD approved, no St. Point Pleasant
pets. 304-675·5332 wv 25550.
weekends/740-5910265
Grand Opening
Manufactu~ed
J &amp; J Industries is
4000
Housmg relocating its major
Melltcal
devioe
facility to Gallia Co.
Rentals
*1Q to 15 full time
For rent 2BR 2BA positions
mobile home. Spring *4 day work week
area.
No *6 hr shifts
Valley
smoking. no pets. '$14.25 to start
$500 mon $500 dep. '$450/wk
Customer
740-245-5087 after Clerical,
service, Repair
5pm
Must be neat ir
Nice, 3 Br 2 ba trailer appearance. Must be
for rent in Bidwell, all over 18 yrs old C~l.
740-446-3057
or
electnc. small porch
304-709-0016
certral a1r, $450 mon
$350 sign on bonus
+ $450 dep., '10 pets
miss
call740·446-4514. · Dont
opportunity!!!

Real Estate

Real Estate

6000

Ptup U,:WilJ&gt;a:l\. *What'. II I fOI me '

W«h ac~m hom• !rom KIIJ'f.t.11131t"
1Uo .::• EM !).'llur ID1. to a8 &amp;I:IJIJ1
;no \'/e ·~ dozen.sli de.s gn.s 'Mar1
wlh on~ ·~e'l v.ork wlh 'flO •o
c~\IDm zeMd :o"ll(flalzej: or ·.orre
m-,JU qe1 •-.;tlyY&gt;M1yoo wJit
CIJ.Silm tJJil MYOOA kll

4Se' e bee~ tJnklmg enrt.oo!.l I!Jme;
llt50veruo alldwe·,~·he~nlf
M )(ltJ-il'WtiJer on Ihe Utd~~"s' l•ho
gll81anleer.ltle Jructo1e ·1)1lu'
1eit' hOm~ llr L'l \tAR

Employment

Child/Elderly Care
ResCare HomeCare
Enjoy caring for the
elderly? Caregivers
needed
in
Point
Pleasant, Leon and
Pliny WV
areas.
Good pay &amp; benefits~
Flexible
hours.
Drivers
license
required.
866-7669832 or 304-766·
9830.
Clerical

'

AIJLTON'OJ

L

Legal
Needed,
submit resume to·
CLA Box 250 c/o
Gallipolis
Daily
Tribune, P.O. Box
469, Gallipolis. OH
45631

Liquid asphalt drivers
needed
in
Point
Pleasant area Must
be 21 yrs old or
older. Must have
Class A CDL
Hazmat
endorsement
and
TWIC card. Good
MVR
Local trips
800-598-6122

khov.

Pnhlk ,,otic~ in ~e~~~apeN.
Your Righi to Know, Otlimed Right lo Your Door.

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice Is hereby
given that sealed
bids will be received
in the Office of the
City Manager, City
of Gallipolis, 848
Third Avenue, Gal·
lipolis, Ohio, 45631,
for the paving of Mill
Creek Road from
Eastern Avenue to
the City Corporation
limits. State prevailing wages must be
•used on this project. Bid packages
will be available in
the Office of the
City Auditor at the

location above.
All bids shall be
sealed and marked
"Sealed Bid - Street
Paving." Any bids
received with tape,
etc. for the seal will
be rejected. Bids
will be received at
the above location
until 12:00 noon,
local time, Monday,
August 23, 2010 and
publicly opened and
read at that hour
and place.
Bids
should be mailed to
518 Second Av·
enue, Gallipolis, OH
45631 or delivered

Help Wanted·
General

Help Wanted ·
General

Are you interested in
a rewarding position?
PAIS is currently
accepting
applications for the
following
positions:Direct
Care A pari-time
position for Ripley·
WV
providing
community
skill
training
with • an
individual
with
MRIDD. Mon. Thurs.
Fri 9am-noon. Tues &amp;
Wed
7am-1pm
Direct Care Part·
time
position
for
Point Plea~ant WV
providing
residential/communi!
y skill training with an
individual
with
MRIDD.
Mon-Fn
vanous
day
and
evening sh1fts Direct
Care
Part-time
positions for Mason
WV
providing
residentiallcommunit
y skill training with
individuals
with
MRIDD.
Mon-Fri,
various day • and
evening shifts.
For all positions:
High school diploma
or GED reqUJred.
Criminal background
check reqUJred. Must
reliable
have
transportation
and
valid auto insurance.
Hourly rate starting
at $8-$9.50 based
on
experience.
online . at
Apply
IJttp./lwww.paiswv.co
rr or call 304-3731011.

Energetic person or
couple to assist with
operation of modern
dairy
to
include
milking,
calves.
heifers. and . crops.
Housing and utilities
part of package. Fax
resume to 304·3725385.

For Rent 2 moble .--S,.,_..,H..,.O..,.P,.-__,
homes 2 BR no pets
1)$425 1J$4oo + · CLASSIFIEDS
dep. 740-367-7025
Trailer
in
town
Racine, 2 bedroom,
•1 bath all electric,
carport, large front
porch.
Close
to
shcool,
library &amp;
park. $425 deposit,
$425 . per
month
wat~r
&amp; garbage
includ~d. NO Pets.
Availbale
for
immediate move in
Marv1n
740-949·
2217

Dominos Pizza now
h1ring safe, dnvers.
Apply m person all
locations.

Sunda~August8,2010

to 848 Third Avenue,
Gallipolis, Ohio.
The City of Gallipo·
lis reserves the
right to accept or reject any or all bids.
Any questions regarding these specifications should be .
directed to the City
Manager or Project
Coordinator,
Joe
Woodall, at 740-446·
1789.
Randall J. Finney
Gallipolis City Manager
August 8, 15,2010

Medical
Family
Medicine
offices in Gallia &amp;
Jackson Co. seek
Receptiqnistlback
office, FTIPT, skills
required
resume
only 740-441·9800
_ _..;;..._ _ __
Service I Bus.
9000
Directory

Law Enforcement
Home Improvement
The Village of Rio
Grande is accepting
applications
for
position of part-time
police
officer.
Applicants must be
OPOTA
certified.
Interested individuals
should pick up an
application at the Rio
Grande
Police
Department in the
Municipal Building at
174 East College St.
Rio Grande OH. This
completed
application
along
with
a
current
resume should be
submitted to the
Police Depart. by
Aug 23,2010. This
can be done in
person or by mail
sending to :Village of
Rio Grande Police
Department. P&gt;O&gt;
Box
343,
Rio
Grande, Oh 45674
Medical
Skilled
LPN's/RN's
needed for peditric
home care in the
Crown City area.
Night sh1ft availabe.
Trach
&amp;
G-tube
experience needed.
Email resume to
jwilliams@pcnsohio.c
om or call 800-518,2273

Tankless Hotwater
Heaters, For 3BA, 1
or 2 BA. Hms.
starting @ $300.
HAS REPAIR 740992-3061

NO MATTER
WHAT YOUR

STYlE. ..

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a

... THf
NfWSPAPfR
. HAS
SOMfTHING
FOR YOU!!

BULLETIN BOARD~
Trinity United Methodist Church
Vacation Bible School
Grades 1-6
6:00pm-8:00pm
August 9 &amp; 10
Weiner Roast: August 11, 7:30 pm

TRAVELTIME TOURS
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL
No~30-Dec.3, 2010
Ashville, N.C.· Biltmore House
Candlelight Tour, Lunch at Grove
Park Inn featuring Gingerbread
House Competition.
Pigeon Forge/Gatlinburg, TennAdmission to Dollywood/ Shows,
Holiday Shopping,'REserved
Seats for "The Miracle" and Smith
Family Dinner Theatre.
Tour Includes Deluxe
Motorcoach, Luggage Handling,
Hotels,
All Breakfasts, Dinners.
Price per person $750 Quad.
~795 Triple, $850 Double. $995
Single. Deposit $1 00 per person
by Aug. 20. Final due Oct. 1

Traveltime
Box 441 , Pt. Peasant, WV 25550
For info call Mary Fower

304-675-2305
River Cities Military Family
Support Group
Meeting Tues., Aug. 10
7:00pm
Upstairs Gallipolis VFW
3rd Ave.
·
Supporting Trocps and their
families since 2006
Questions? (740) 245-5589

441-7454

r

•

ATLANTIC CITY
GETAWAY

a-

October 22, 201
October 24, 201 0
$280/person
(double occupancy)
Includes airfare and hotel
accommodations at
Bally's Casino &amp; Resort
(On the Boardwalk)
Outlet shopping within
walking distance from
Bally's
LIMITED SEATS!
Must be 21 years of age
To make reservations
please call,
(304) 675-43:!1-0,
Ext. 1326

Gallia Meigs
Performing Arts
Ballet - Tap Jazz Pointe Baton Flag
Studios:
Gallipolis &amp; Middleport
Patty Fellure

7 40-645-3836
740-245-9880

•

�~~~~-------~--------------~-w·~------------~-~---------------------·--~----·-----~----~-~--~~--~~--~------------------

Sunday, August 8, 201 0

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

BLONDIE

Dean Young!Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

Mort Walker

THE SPOT WHERe
BcETLE WAS l-OAFING
15 STILL WARM

,,

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne

•

Z CAN'T/

IF MY SHIP CO~!:f
IN, Z t70N'T WANT
IOMIS51'f'/

HI &amp; LOIS

CROSSWORD .
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Sun-dried
brick
6 Attire
11 Wooden
rod
12 1945
conference site
13 Perspire
14 Man-made
fiber
15 Roman
attire
17 Gorilla or
gibbon
18 Decrease
22 Norse god
23 Prepares
veggies
27 Salad
servers
29 Backer of
the
Bulldogs
30Gumshoe
32 Circus
sight
33Key
players?
35Swindle
38 Meg of
movies
39 Kind of
switch
41 "-at the
office"
45 Cast
member
4601ympics
sleds
47 Skeptical
48 Espies

JOSEPH
DOWN
1 Commer·
cials
2 Market
indicator
3 Have
debts
4 Trouncing
5 Singer
John
6 Blood·
line
7 Singer
Charles
8 F1rst
name 1n
jazz
9 Halt
1 0 Rational
16 USO
audience
18 Ellipsis
parts

19 Revered
one
20 Lode
sett1ng
21 Getting
interesting
24 Pub
brews
25 Money
maker
26 Hardens
28 Prepare
vegg1es

31 Cow chow
34 Manicure
targets
35 Fossil fuel
36 Formerly
37 Jot down
40 Gift-tag
word
42 In the
past
43 Dog's doc
44 Road
curve

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! SCn!l $475 (checkim.o.) to
Thomas Joseph Book 1. PO Rox 536475 Orlando Fl 3?853·6475

. Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS
•

THe ONI..'Y '/IME "THE:

i"WIN5 WORt&lt; loG£1/'lfR
16 ON "'0-'eiR 131RIHPA't'.

MUTTS

&amp;un.bap tttm~ -&amp;entfnd • Page 05

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

.

LE.TS GO

': .. BOT TEACH A MAN TO FISH, AND HE'LL BE
BACK EVERY YEAR FOR NEW EQUIPMENT."

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

by

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"Dolly hit me on my SUNBURN!"

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

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' HAPPY BIRiliDAY for Monday,
Aug. 9, 2010:
lhis yeat; you have the opportunity
for a new beginning. This energy ,lliu·
ally emanates from your dett•rmination
to change certain patterns. You cner·
gize many people; they often follow
your lead. A change in your dnily life is
necessary, even if you don't like it! lf
you are single, you might di&lt;;covcr
how many people arc interested. Pull
back and do some soul searching.
Realize not all people can giw you the
type of relationship you want. If you
are attached, watch a tendency to
become too me-&lt;&gt;tientcd. Remc~ it
takes t\-.·o to make a relationship work.
Use care with a CAPRlCORN.
The Stan: Shaw the Kind of Dny Yo11 'll
Have: 5-Dpumric; 4-Positit~t?; 3-Atremge;
2-So-so; 1-DifJiadt
ARIES (March 21-Aprill9)
No one in hb or her right
mind would attempt to push you aside
or demand his or her way. You cle-arly
are on top of your game and heading ·
in the right direction. An innate in~
nuity emerges when dealing with
problems. Tonight Does any invitation
entice you?
TAURUS (April20-Mav 20)
If you C."ln work (rom home,
do. Plug extra energy into whntcvcr
you do. A new beginning is possible.
Have you been con&lt;;idcring a home
office? Intensity marks your thoughts.
Tonight Make it ea'&gt;)'
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
You find an&lt;;wcrs.
Extremes oome up when juggling your
"adult" life with a child and/or loved
one. You might dL'Cide to handk· c1 matter very different!): A partner or associate could become controlling. 'Ionight
Catch up on a friend's news.
CANCER Oune 21·July 22)
*'**Realize that you might be
overburdem.&gt;d by all your responsibili·
tics. You feel pn.'SSUred and become
reacth·e. Perhaps the best action you
can take is to sChedule a massage or
some other mini-luxury that will help
you mellow out Tonight Gnther your
bills.
•
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22)
*'**** ~rs might be reactive
.md, in some manner, n.'lllinding you
ofb~y bees running around Without n
thought. Stop and survey lht: imnwdiatc situation. Thm't say anything hurt·
fuL The damages could be long 1\.•rm.
Any decision you make has an extm

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*****

push with it if made todar Tonight:
Evct'playful.
vmco (Aug. 23-SL'Pt 22)
** If you don't fL&gt;cl up to snuff,
don't be surprised. Mudl is happening
quickly. You fL-cl as if you cannot
respond to the many n.·qucsts and, on
.1 person,1Jievel. "kct•ping up with the
}one.~." Delt'nninc what you need.
Sign up for a class, like yoga, to keep
you level. -ltmight: Vnnish.
UBRA (Sept. 23--0ct. 22)
***** L'.A'ro in on key ptindplcs.
Your ideas wuld lx• c1ll over the plare.
Don't act or fL&gt;cl]coparclized. 'v\'hat you
dL'Cidc on io; not only workable, it
could be a horne run! 'I&lt;might \\'here
the action is.
•
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
***'* Schedule a must appointment. Your msttncts tell you which
way to go with an authority figure.
Responsibilities ju.~ seem to drop on
you. A new beginning become-; fXh'&gt;ible wtth your work and I or a p&lt;~renl
lbnight: Burning the midnight oil.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
*****A meeting determines the
lay of the land. You could be touched
by SOIDL'-mc',; gc:;turc. Optirni-;m .;urrounds 11 cn•,ltivc idl~1. Don't let .1 call

t,, n child or new friend sit on the back

bumcr: lonight: Enjoy your.-.clf to the
m,lx.
CAPRICORN (IJL'C. 22-Jan. 19)
****If you' I\.' ft't'ling uncomfort·
nblc \'\'ith n work-1\.'latt..'&lt;i matter, create
::.orne spae~.' lx·hn'l.'n you .md the issue.
A hoffil' office might not be as successful as you would'fikc. Re\'iew your
options. Tonight Pu"h co!T\CS to !&gt;hove.
Walk away from :;tres.s.
AQUARIUS Qan. 2(}Fcb. 18)
***** Yourairy~tyle makes a
differencr. You ::.cern to be able to
absorb what might be dropped on you
out of the blue. Sort through mes:;agcs,
and priotiti7..1' them A new ~nning
becomes possible in ,, rclation-llip
Tonight: S.1y "yes" to an inVItation,
even if it is Monday night.
PISCES (feb. 19-M.uch 20)
***While others SL'Cf\l to squeeze
in time for socializing.. it .1ppcars you
nt.&gt;cd to buckle dmm .md tal-e a serious ]o.)k ,,t how }"&lt;lll juggle monC)~
You might be spcndmg more than
usu,ll. Consider getting an extra job or
putti~ in &lt;Wcrtimc. 'lbnight: A friend
scx•ms Jrritnble.
Jncquclille Rigar is 1111 tlu: Jntmri't

at lrttfr://l!'l('iO.jnrqul'l ine/l(~at:com.

•.mv~ailvsentinel.com~ •.mvdailvtribune.com

�PageD6

i&gt;unba~ ~imes -~entinel

Sunday, August 8, 2010

EXTENSION (ORNER

~...::lld"-. ...k
photo/D~an Fos rc
An assortment of Canadran n1ghtcrawlers work 1n a stand~rd compost p1le 1~ New Market, Va. Verm!culture or
worm composting requires a little more management than regular. compost1ng ~yt t~en the payoff rs greater,
too. Earthworms turn table scraps into a gentle, slow-rele~se fert1hzer ~hat has f1_ve t1mes the nitrogen, seven
times as much potash and one and a half times more calc1um than typ1cal topso1l.
.

.

.

.

.

AP

••h d
. b
· t•
Earthworms enriC gar en SOl 1s y compos lng
BY DEAN FOSDICK
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Here's a promising getrich-quick scheme for
gardeners: It's called ver~
miculture. or wom1 composting. and along with
super-sizing crop yields,
it cuts water bills, conditions soils and repels
troublesome insects.
··vermiculture is a step
up from working \Vith the
.standard compost pile,"
said Dorothy Benoy. who
with her husband, AI,
owns the Happy D Ranch
Worm Farm at Visalia,
Calif. "It takes a bit more
management, but the
returns are greater.''
Earthworms
spend
most of their time reproducing.
eating
and
excreting. \Vhich is where
-their "vennicastings," or
manure, comes in. Set
them up for housekeeping in homemade tubs or
specially made bins and
you have the structure for
a "wom1ery.'' where the
creatures will turn table
scraps into a highly
enriched organic soil
amendment
while
expanding their population many times over.
Worm castings con-

tain five times the available nitrogen, se.ven
times as much potash
and
one-and-a-half
times more calcium than
typical topsoil.
You can buy the product commercially (a little
more than $1 per pound
for castings and $15 per
gallon for worm tea. plus
shipping) or do it yourself. All you need is a
well-\'entilated container
and some moistened bedding - usually shredded
newspaper,
computer
paper or corrugated cardboard that can double as
food. Add a pound or
more of hungry worms
(figure a" much as $25
per pound, which works
out to about 1,000 earthwontls) and you're in
business.
''One pound of worms
can easily handle 3
pounds of waste per
week'," Benoy said.
\Vonn composting can
be fun and easy. but it's
not simply a matter of
digging up a fe\V' garden-variety
night
crawlers from your
backyard, she said.
"~ight crawlers tend to
be solitary and won't
reproduce
in
bins,"

Benoy said. "Red worms
(Wigglers or Eisenia
foetida) are hardy, easy
to handle and best for
compo!'ting."
Worm bins can be
placed in the home or
out, but do best where air
can circulate and temperatures are kept between
55 and 75 degrees. The
operation is odor-free,
but you can raise a stink
by overfeeding or adding
too much water. Worms
like their surroundings
about as damp as a
squeezed sponge.
"There shouldn't be
any smell coming from a
worm bin except like
from a rich, brown dirt,''
Benoy said. "The bin has
gone anaerobic (without
oxygen) if jt stinks like
rotten eggs. It's not properly draining. There s too
much moisture. The bacteria will die.''
Castings go farther
when brewed up as worm
tea. Scoop some into a
net bag or pantyhose.
drop that into a waterfilled conta1ner. add a
dollop of molasses to
nourish the bacteria, and
then mix it for a day or so
using an inexpensive
aquarium air pump.

Are you noticing large, gray elliptical objects in
tree!' around the yard and barnyard?
The beneficial but much maligned insect, the baldfaced hornet (Dolichovespula maculata), has
increased its nests to almost basketball size.
Taxonomically. baldfaccd hornets aren't true hornets
(genus Vespa); they arc lumped in with yellowjackets
(genera Vespula and Dolichovc!'pula).
However. baldfaced hornets practice an unusually
devastating stinging behavior that is shared with only
a few other· species of yellow jackets. Rather than
landing and stm~ing, the hornets tly full speed at the
source of their trritation and just before they reach
their target, they tuck their abdomen under their body
so their stinger is pointing forward. They literally hit
their target driving their stinger into their hapless victim. This is why people often describe a hornet's sting
as feeling like they were hit by a bullet!
Baldfaced homets do share similar their nesting
behavior with other yellowjackets, as well as with
paper wasps. They construct their paper nests by
usmg their powenul mandibles to tear scrap fibers
from exposed wood and then mix the fibers with their
1 saliva. The resulting paper extruded from their
mouths is Jight weight but strong and water repellent.
1 The paper may also be multicolored reflecting multipie sources of the wooll fibers.
Baldfaced homet colonies last only one season.
nests will not be reused the followin•• year. New
queens are born but leave and hide ove.;,·inter under
wood and stone to restart building new nests next
year. Their remaining sister workers stay behind in
the old nest and eventually they freeze to death.

rr~:~r~~~~~)\~~~~~~~n~~~1~.fi~1a~~n other pesky insects
•••

"Worm tea is the
Are you interested in grazing cattle?
strongest organic fertilizPlan to attend the Athens Area Grazing Council
er there is,'' said Curtis meeting/pasture walk, hosted by Rex Whited on his
Thomsen, program man- fann located at 4636 Brandeberry Road in Troy
ager for the Los Angeles Township, southeast Athens County.
,
County Smart Gardening
The meeting will be held on Thursday, August 26.
Program. ''It has a ton of beginning at 6:30 p.m. Rex has a herd of Angus cattle
good uses. but primarily and practices rotational grazing, utilizing eight padas fertilizer, herbicide docks on his farm. A highlight of this meeting will be
and compost. Worm the water system.
compost and worm . tea
Rex has installed a solar powered water pumping
are a great one-two system that delivers water from a spring to water
punch. They add bacteria tanks located in all eight paddocks on the fann. Water
to the soil. aid in root is pumped throug~ approximately 5,000 feet of pi~e
development. help get rid to provide water 1n each paddock. Learn about hts
of fungus and mildew, pastures, crop rotation management, planning for
enable you to cut back on winter feeding and of cour:-;e, Angus cattle. Anyone
watering, and get rid of with an interest in beef cattle and/or pasture managepests like aphids and ment is invited to attend.
black flies."
Call my office 992-6696 for more . information.
Worm castings and Directions: ·n1ke SO E/SR 7 past Coolville (look for
worm tea can increase the Cool Spot gas station). After passing the intersecgarden productivity any- tion of SR 144, look for County Road 59. Tum left on
where from 20 percent to to CR 59 and stay on CR 59 until Brandebei1J': Road.
200 percent, Thomsen Tum right on to Brandeberry Road and contmue to
said. "1 've personally the Whited farm. Watch for ''Grazing" signs.
seen 12 tomato plants
•••
grow to a height of 12
M hundreds of half inch gmy-brown colored
feet and produce 200 eating your squash, melons and pumpkin vines and .
Young ones are called nymph~ and are green w1th
pounds of tomatoes per
bush," he said.
red heads. A gardener came to my office with a p1as(0nlille: For more tic bag full of squash bugs. The squash bugs feeds on
about worm composring, the leaves and fruits of curcurbit plants. As they eat.
trv
this
Smart they inject a toxjn into the vine plant that causes the
Gardening
resource • vine to collapse, anasa wilt.
from tlze County of Lm
They overwinter as adults in plant debris but lay hunAngeles Departmem of dreds of eggs in late spring. These have hatched and
Public
Works: now eat the next six to eight weeks. They like to eat
http:lldpw.lacounty.govl together so lay down shingles, boards or carboard near
epdh;g/wc.cfm.)
your affected plants. ln the morning you should find
hundreds of squash bugs under the shelters. Destroy
the young by stomping on them. Sprays of rotenone,
carbaryl and thiodex can also be he.lpful. Some squash
varieties are resistant to the bug like summer crookA tolerance for shade necks. butternut. ~reen hubbard, acorn, and others.
and poor soil also makes Look at their dcscnptions for squash bug resistance.
it a good choice for stabiEnjoy the summer vegetables and fruit, Buy locally
lizing eroding hillsides grown produce .and help your neighbor!
d b k.
(Hal Kneen is the Agriculture &amp; Natural Resources
an''L~~~ ~f people use , Edt!cator for ~eigs County lflld Buckeye Hills EERA
these blends at cabins or . Oluo State lllll\'erstty Exteii.HOII.)
second homes where
they'd rather fire up their
grills when they arrive
than their lawnmowers,•·
Diboll said.
(Online: For more
about low maintenance
lawns. see this Uni\·ersity
of Minnesota fact sheet:
http://www.extension.um
n.edulyardandgardenlyg
bn efsl h 3 2 51 awn-/ owmain t.html.)

lawns can be a low-mal•ntenance opti•Qn
Fl·ne ~escue
1
1

BY DEAN FOSDICK
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Lawn lovers looking
to do less yard work
might consider convel1ing to fine fescue grass.
Proven blends require
little or no mowing,
scorn fertilizers, defy
drought, thrive in shade,
remain green through
the growing season and
provide a comforting
cushion for bare feet.
"This is not the result
of developing a new
hybrid. It's done by using
different combinations of
native grasses,'' said Neil
Diboll,
a
lanllscapc
designer and president of
Prairie
Nursery
in
·Westfield, Wis., who
began marketing an
assortment of six "No
Mow'' fescues about I0
years ago.
"It's a bit more expensive than your typical
lawn seed, but you'll
save in the long run
through less maintenance
and upkeep," Diboll said.
"Jt's great in sand and
:rocky soils and it's a lownutrient feeder. The best
way to kill a fescue lawn
is to fertilize it."
: Early fall is the optimum time to give your
lawn
a
facelift.
Concentrate
mi soil
preparation if you're
using fes~.:ucs, though,
because they don't compete w~ll with \Veeds,
which grow much faster.
''Eliminate all the
existing vegetation on
the site to eliminate competition before you put
any seed down," Diboll
said. ''Otherwise, it's the
same planting method as
for any other turf. Rake

the area, scatter the new
seed and then water it.
It's better just to drop
seed onto the dead grass.
the stuff you· ve killed,
than till up the ground.
which also brings up the
weeds."
Word is getting around
about these natural-looking,
low-maintenance
turf grasses, said Miriam
Goldberger. co-owner of
Wildtlower Farm in
Coldwater,
Ontario.
where she helped develop a fine fescue mix
dubbed ''Eco-Lawn."
"A combination of factors has caused the
awakening.'' she said.
"More and more people
are uncomfortable about
usi n~ chemicals. Many
me t1red of all the time it
takes to mow lawns.
Some feel pressured by
water
conservation
issues. All kinds of
stakeholders are getting
into this."
Yet fine fescues are not
the easy-care lawn solution
for
everyone.
They're a cool-weather
grass, and don't do well
in the hot, humid growing t:onditions of the
Deep South.
1
They also dislike damp
soils. "Heavy clay is not
a good medium," Diboll
said.
Fine fescues don't care
much for heavy traffic.
either. "If you've got
three kids and two dog~.
don't buy it," said Bill
Sloey, a retired botany
professor
from
the
University of Wisconsin
Oshkosh. ''It won't take
that kino of punishment
on a quarter-acre lot. If
you have a place that

doesn't get &lt;f lot of use,
then great."
Sloey said he convel1ed 90 percent of his yard
into one of Diboll's fine
fescue combinations a
little over a decade ago.
and the grass is still
doing beautifully.
"I cut it a couple of
times a year, and some I
haven't touched in 10
years,'' he said. "The
only thing I do lS take my
weed whip out and
whack it off when the
seed heads come up.
Other than that. it's mce
and soft and lays down
nicely."

WEARE
DELIVERING

•

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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            </elementText>
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        </element>
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      <name>queen</name>
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      <name>stambaugh</name>
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