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GARDENING .

.;

BY .Ln Rl:icn
Organic fenilizen are all
. the rage these days, and
with good reason. They can
provide plants with a long,
slow feed, and their manufacture :reuses waste products while putting Jess
demand
on
natural
reSOIIJ'CeS.

Many gardepers, though,
make the mistake of
approaching the use of
Organic fertilizers in the
same way.as the;r 'might use
a chemical fertilizer.
·
For instance, the other
day a gardening expert 110
the radio was toutmg the
benefits of guano, or . bat
1t10ppings. He was right
about guano being rich. in
nutrients. It has alniost 20
percent nitrogen in a form
that can be taken up quickly
by plants. And guano surely
is natural: lt' s merely
scooped .out' of caves where
bats luujg ·out. then ba!lBed
up t'or sale.
The problem is that guano
· · is not much different in its
effects on plapts . and soil
firom any quick-acting,
'chemical fertilizer. The
same could ·be said for
blood meal, poultry manure,
and othe.r concentrated,
quick-acting albeit
organic - fenilizers.

hold more .air and water,
making nutrients already
in the soil more available
to plants, and helping · ·
plants fight off certain diseases.
Bulky organic material
that is good for plants is
familiar stuff. Raw organic
materials include straw,
autumn leaves, sawdust,
h!IY, and manures. When
these raw, organic materials
decom~. they . become
such things as compost, leaf
mold, old manure, and
humus -all of them somewhat richer in plant nuttients than the original ~an- ·
ic materials that went mto
them
·
Noie that most of the
bulk associate4 with
manures. oomes from the
sawdust, straw, or whatever other material was used
for bedding for ·the animal. What comes out a
chicken, for example, •h as
little organic material and
much of its benefit to
plants comes fr0 rn tlie
woOd shavings or straw .
that is scooped up ·illo.ng ·
with the poop from ,.the. •
floor of the chicken
AP photo
house.
· Two dillerent fertilizels, offering about the same amount of nutri9nts (a shovel full of organic compost, ·left, is about equal
In fact, the more concen- to a amal trowel of ITIOil! concentrated fertilizer), are seen in New Paltz, N.Y. Organic fertilizers can provide plants with a
trated any organic fertilizer long, slow feed, ju$t as Mother Nature intended, and their manufacture can utilize waste products while putting lesS
is, the less bulky orgil~Uc demand on ~ _resources. Many gardeners, th!!!JQh, make the mil!l&amp;ke'OI approaching t!le u~ of organic fertilizers iri
material it offers.
the same .way as theV might use a chemical fertilizer..
·

Too mUd! at• pl)d

More concentrated fertil.,
do have their uSes.
izers
This is. DQt to say· that
The thing missing from
With
houseplants,
for .exam- .
all chemical fertilizers and plant growth cannot suffer
from concentrated organic from the ·Opposite ell.treme, pie, wbich have no room \II
fertilizers is bulky organic that of applying too much or oo ,their pots for bulky
matter. Yes, plants benefit · raw hulk lind not enough organic materials. And.
firom bulk in their diet, just actual nutrients. Raw organ- quii:k-.actjng, concentrated
ic materials low in nutrients, fertilizers are needed for
as we do.
Like the bulk in our diet, such as sawdust and straw, ., emet:geocy feeding pf
bulk' s benefits to plants cali cause temporary nutri- ·neglected plants.
are indirect. These benefits ent defiCiencies if mixed
A bajanring act
include getting soils to into .the ·soiL

Bulk up

l

I

tbiDg

Golf tournament
raises ftmds for
~~als on wheels, A6

Awarded for service, As

GARDENING:
Using organic fertilizers
the right ·way
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

'.

Snnday, Junt 22, 2oo8

The lesson ~~ere· is:
Generally, don't
out
the most .concentrated the "richest"- organic fertilizer. If you do use concentrated fertilizers, also regularly enrich your soil with
plenty of organic materials,
either digging them into or
just laying them on .t op of
the ground.
An alternative to ·haul-

,sea

A third alternative is tQ
ing all that bulky material
into your garden is to avoid any concentrate~
· grow it in place. Set aside fertilizer and annually give
· a different part of your your soil all the food and
garden each season, or bulk needed at the same
part of a season, in which time 'by spreading on toj:l
to
so called "cover of the ground an inc~
crops." These are plants depth of compost or rotted
such as oats, rye, or buck- manure . Make it a practice
wheat that you grow to fertilize with your pitch~
specifically to enrich the fork rather than your gran,
· soil with organic matter.
· u lar fertilizer spreader.

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,11(

I '-1" • \ol..)-. '\ o .

...! ~-

\ f(,"\D\Y .. Jl ' 'I .

SPORTS

tob

• Mtte putS Yankees
back on track against
Reds.~ Page 81

Bv BEnt SERGEHT
BSBlGENTOMYOAILYSENmELCOM

RUILAND - This sum'
mer the Rutland Volunteer
Fire · Department hopes to
start construction of a new
40-foot by 80-foot storage
building which will house
three trucks, including . its
concession trailer.
According to Danny
Davis of the RVFD, the new
storage building will be
erected on the fue department's propeny on College
Avenue on the site of the .old

The

:.! ; J ~ :!no1{

•

\ \ \ ''' · m~d a ii~M· ntirw l.,·um

d new addition

Rutland Grade School.
quickly or are covered in
property is located out of snow or affected by the
the flood plain and Davis weather in other ways.
said the department hopes
Currently the RVFD has
to one day build an entirely · seven trucks but only has
new flfebouse on that site.
two of them kept entirely
However, for now, Davis enclosed in the firehouse.
said the departinent is try- Davis said the remaining
ing to take care of the trucks sit outside though
equipment it has by con- under an awning. The
structing the storage build- department's squad and
in g. He said the departinent boat are. housed inside the
bas trueks valued at a total Rutland Civic Center.
of $100,000 that sit outside
The new storage building
all ' winter and this also will have three bay . doors
beilomes a safety issue if and one walk-in door and
the trucks are needed cost $31,600. The Meigs

County
Connmssioners house later this ~ear. The
have approved $20,000 · new storage buildmg would
towards the expense and as be on the liackside of any
·
for the remairung $11,600, new firehouse facility.
However, until Station
Davis said the ~nt
and its ladies auxiliary have Four can secure the funding,
Davis said reiterll,led its
already raised' the funds.
to take care of the
important
"They reallr, helped us
out wilh that,'. Davis said equipment the department
bas now which is why the
about the anxiliary. ·
, Davis said the department storage building is being
.has priced new . firebou&amp;es · buill [fall goes as planned,
which can go anywhere the building could be up
from $250,000 to $350,000 sometime this fall before
but he hopes to start seareh- .winter sets in.
ing fur fmancial 'J!raDis to · The RVFD currently has
help pay for that new fire- 43 members on its roster.

Army
Corps of
Engineers
.meeting ·set
STAFF REPORT
NEWSOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM .

POMEROY
-From
6:30 to 8:30 p.m. tomorrow
at the Pomeroy Library, the
Huntington District of the
Army Corps of Engineers
will be presenting a study
on water resource concerns
and opportunities in Meigs
County. The mee.ting is
beiq.·· -~ .. .by _ltural
' Action and'will be preceded
by a "meet and greet" with
representatives from the
Huntington District of the
Army Corps of Engineers.
from4-5 p.m.
Members of the. general
pliblic, as well as community leaders, resource professionals, and other stakeholders are urged to attend.
This meeting is part of a
larger study focusing on
watersheds in five counties
of southeastern Ohio,
. including Athens, Galli a,
Lawrence, Scioto, and
Meigs. This will be. an
opportunity to identify and
prioritize watershed concerns related .to flood damage reduction , ecosystem
,and environmental restora·
tion, as well as other issues
relating to watershed management.
For more infonnation
contact Tom Redfern or
Mary Steinmaus of Rural ·
Action, at 740-767-4938, or
email tomr@ruralaction.org,
or marys@ruralaction.org.
Meetings in four other

grow

LET OUR FAMILY

TAKE CARE OF Yours

OBITUARIES
The Middleport
Community

Pa&amp;eAS

. • Dow D. Gr'aham, 77

Association is

ever

closer than
to
its fundraisirlg .
goal of $6;b00 for
July 4 firBWOrka,
alter serving
"Lunch Atong the
River" Friday in
Dave Diles Pari&lt;.
Friday's evant was

INsmE
• Oil minister.

saudi wiiHng to
increase crude
output. See Page A2
• Chester High
alumni have reunion.
Sei:PqeA3
· • Wagner joins Holzer
CliniC. See Page A3
• Meigs Local
anllOI.nCeS honor roll.
SeePage AS
. • Bloodmobile visits
Meigs Senior Center.
See Page AS' .

a SUcCasS thanks
to the support of
.the community
and the volunteers
who provided food
and served it. The
association is

solely responsible
for the fireiNolils
display, and con·
tinues to raise
funds for it.
BriMJ. Rn..,._

• Area nurses'
educational options
expand. See Page A6

WEATIIER

'I nre-MnCI~~~oAJ

,•

.

I

Rio scholars
·finish work
atllocking

·I

'

'Shall We Gather At The River'
Christian·
celebrates fourth
Bv BEnt SERGENT
BSERGENT8MYDAILVSEl&gt;ITNEI-COM

SrAFFA&amp;oRr
NEWS8MYDAILI'SENTINEl.COM

INDEX
• SI!CI10NS -

t2 PAGFS

Annie's Mailbox
Calendars
•
Classifieds

If you ~ Mice to lewn about Dr. Schuster or the services provided by ihe Holzer
CenterforCaooerCare.plalealt: 740MU474or l.IOO.Ili.JI60

AJ
A3
83-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4
As
As

Movies
Obituaries
Sports
:Wea~er .

•

B Section

A6

RAClNE - Just as the
RIO GRANDE -Thirty- old Clirislian hymn asks for
two · students from the the faithful to come join in
University of J,Uo Grande fellowship oear the water of
recently completed their life. the FOurth Annual Shall
bachelor's degree programs We Gather at the River
after taking all of their
courses at Hocking College.
Rio Grande currently
offers three bachelor's
degree programs on the .
Hocldng (Allege campus. ·
Srudents are able to complete
associate's degree prog~a.n at
Hocking, and Ibm move easily into Rio Grande's bachelor's degree programs.
This program was created
to allow students familiar
with Hocking to continue
their studies on .the
Nelsonville campus, and
allow studeats living near
the college to take bachelor ·~ degree program classes close to their homes.

I
'·'

worshippers.

•

•

.

The event i~ organized
s trictly by volunteers,
including. but not limited
to , those from the Morning
Star,
Cannel
Sutton,
Bethany, East Letart and
Racine United Methodist
Churches. Carrie ~nn
Wolfe who attends Racme
UMC, said although the

...........
~
G It'

•

,I

event invites those of every
denomination to . gather
along the Ohio !u Racine to
worship this Sunday.
The event begins .at II
a.m., Sunday at Star Mill
Parle The worship servi~.
potluck, day of fellow~hip
bas drawn as many as 30i&gt;

~AI

So t m'llld plloto

The f:ourth Annta1 'Shall We Gather at the River' will be held at 11 a .m. on Sunday at Star
1 Mill Park. All denominations are walcrAIIe lnd a poluc:* dinner will follow the service .
'

.

�.PageA2

NATION • -WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Moncbiy, June aa, 2008

Oil minister: Saudi willing
to increase crude output
.

.

.

BY KRisTEN WYATT
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

·CENTREVILLE, Md. -For four centuries, they
were the ultimate pack rats.
Now a Maryland family's
massive collection of letters, maps and printed bills
has surfaced in the attic of a
former plantation, providing a firSthand account of
life from the 1660s through
World War II.
"Historians are used to
_dealing with political records
.aDd militacy'?rl'l"~' ,"

·Uicl·Adani GoodbCart. a 'hiS-

:1ory· professor at nearby
:washington College. "But
:llVhat they aren't used to is
political letters and military
.docUIIIeilts kept right along;side bills for laundry or
.directions for building a
: wJI$hing machine."
: Goodheart is working
with state archivists and a
-crew of four student 'interns
collect the documents,
:which were found stuffed
'into boxes, barrels and
:peach baskets.
: "Look at this: 'Negro
·woman, Sarah, about 27
:years
old,
$25,"'
Goodheart says, reading
:Crom a 19th .century inventory. "It was as though this
'f amily never threw away a
,scrap of paper."
:: The documents include
;maps, ietters, financial
:records, political posters,
'.even a lock qf hair from a
]etter dat~ Valentine's
pay, 1801. There's a love
JI&lt;?C:m from the 1830s (in
.which a younll man ·g raphi;cally tells hts sweetheart
~what he'd do if he sneaked ·
linto. her room oo a winter's
!night), along with war
.;accounts and bills of sale
:from slaves and crops.
• The papers come from
:several generations of the
:Emory family, prominent
10bacco and wheat farmers
iwbo settled here on a land
~t from Lord Baltimore
:mthe 1660s.
· The' former Poplar Grove
:;ptao!alion is still in family
:;hands, though the mansion ·
&lt;OOW is used only asa huntlodge. The documents
:were moldering in an attic
;until students touring the
started
sorting
.;bouse
:-through them this spring. ·
-: "I dOo 't believe 31}y of us
)new these papers were
:ibere,". said Mary Wood, .an
:Emory cousin whose son
:inherited the plantation in
. ;1998. "We didn't go there all
.'lhal often, and when you do,
&gt;you doo•t ~ up in people's .

ro

AHO MARCY SuGAR

:mg

aau

are

roc

· .'

¢bt.8alltpolts mailp Otribunt,

.''lbeseare~:lbatiJiu- ·
ally do not sw'Vive,"

~bt f)otnt ~lt~sant ~tgi~ttr

Papenfuse said, pointing to a
broadside bl~sting thenPresident·Martm Van Buren
for favoring voting rights.for
"every free negro." "After
the beat of a campaign, this
printed matter was thrown
out or put to other uses,
including the outhouse."
Not so at the Emory
house, where . even small

and The Dally Sentanel
have launched a new page e~ery
Friday caUed "Faith and Family".
. If you have a testimonial story,.
life-changing event about yourself
or, eren a poem that you would
'like to share please email to:

scraps of papec we~ kept
aiOilgside military uniforms
and other family heirlooms.

The collection also
includes nOtes on an aspect
of ~ historum bow
liUle about: the practice 'of
renting ' slave labor to
neighbors and plantations
fartlier IIIUth.
"Scholars have not paid a
great deal ' of attention to it,
but .this is ~ tbll
helps .recreate and draW baCt .
rogeth« die lives of ~
~and look around."
·people • wae :a rftNtd ,
~ Washingtott .~lleF ~ ±..: 1,~... ' l . J t .
:.tuld access !0 .. .c~
""'"• •
cuo:t'Ot- years, but "
ons ,_ bow , - 111i•ori:aid he assumed the papers ans w; · .
'
;in ·the auk weren't old or
"I"*"! td' WE they did:•it1JP~ldlm.
n't dnw dais ttuff out,"
!
't in ,aoy partie- Wood uid ·dlt a chuckle.
:·fo
__,_, and some
~~ ._._..,
n it's kind of weinl.
\11\K;I_
se-eaten ta s that It's fascinating, though. I
'
out of can't be~iCve that something
""'"' "
migbl oome out of it."

kkelly@mydailytribune.com
ofields@mydailyregister.com

hoeftich@mydailysent~nel.com
Limi~ your story to

are

500-750 words.

.years. During this ti~e. I
llave been foUowed by detec)ives, watched by her friends
1llld had some of my employees paid by my wife to "keep
.an eye" on me. I have been
·investigated by her children
and am not welcome at her
:family functions.
·
: My wife has called and
.'vi.sited my old girlfriends
.:and checked. with my ex-wife to see if I am stiU in
::COntact with them. I've had
:my computer examined and
;my wallet gone through.
·There are times when she
.:Ciai ms someone has been in
:our bathroom because the
:towels· were out of place.
• Annie, absolutely nothing
:is · going on.. I have been
. faithful since the day we met.
I want to spend every
moment with her. Her
actions have. been very
.painful, but I loveher, so I've
put up with this abuse, hop.mg time will cure her ills.
She recently filed for
divorce. However, we still
,live together as man and wife
and here's the real twist: Now
she tiusts me and is com·pJetely at case with our relationship. Slle says because
we're getting divorced, it no
longer matters what I do. She
·wants us to live together, and
if we decide to get married
again, we can.
Afttor all the detective worlc,
wouldn't you think she'd real-.
1ze there's ·~ to fmd1 Is
this some kind of mental ill.ness11 know she won't go to
·counseling because I've
. asked. I would like to understand her better. - Soul·Searc:bina in Florida
Dear Florida: Your wife
sounds para:noid, which is
indeed a form of mental ill·ness. Is your reputation with
·women so abysmal that you
aren't trustworthy? Have
other men cheated on her so
often that she can't believe
any man could be faithful?
We're not sure what you
love about this woman. but
we don ',t recommend remareying her without counsel·ing. Frankly, we bope you
have your bags packed so
you can get away quickly. ·
Dear Annie: My daughter
'leaves for college in the fall.
Many years ago, you print·
ed a lovely poem called
"Hold Fast the Summer."
Can you repri'nt it'! Carmel, Ind. · ·

Public meetings
Monday, June 23
RACINE
- Sou th ern
Local School Board, regular
meeting, 8 p.m., high school
media room. ·
POMEROY . - Meigs
County Public ~ibrary reglilar board meeting, 3 p.m.,
Pomeroy Library.
Thursday, June 26
POMEROY -·
Meigs
Soil and after Conservation
Districi
Board
of
Supervisors, II :30 a.m. at ·
the district office, 33101
Hiland Rd., Pomeroy.

Clubs and

organizations ·
.Thesday, June 24

•

Daniel Buckley

•

Joel

Katherine Hayman

lynch

Morgan Werry

Chester High alumni have reunion

CHESTER - Reunion the 50th anniversary class
classes were recognized, last year.
Alumni
Phyllis
Dill
scholarships aw3rded, and
veterans acknowledged at Bearhs. class of 1948, and
the annual Chester High her sister Doris Dill
School Alumni Association Spurrier of Alaska observ·
banquet held in the eastern ing 56 years. Kathryn
cafetorium.
Wmdon read the list of
More than 130 alumni those who have died since
and guests attending the last years and read a poem
reunion were greeted by in their nteQ10ry titled "Life
Roger Epple followed by is Eternal" followed by
group singing of God Bless prayer for tbe eight
America led by Marilyn . deceased.
Scott Mason with Chris
Reunion classes were recKuho at the piano. John ognized with the first one
Riebel ,-sr: guve the blessing listed spealting on behalf of
before the baked steak din- the class: 1933, no one
ner was served. It was pre- attending; 1938, two, Arthur
pared by the Eastern cooks Rose and ViL1or Bahr both
and served by the Pioneer of whom sr.&lt;?ke; 1943, three
4H Club.
.
Bill
Williams,,
Opal
The school colors of blue Eichinger and Ruth Karr;
and white in streamers and 1948.
six, . Kathleen
balloons decorated the cafe- Torrence Morris. Phyllis,
torium.and baskets of flow- Bearhs,_J\vis Bing, Howard
ers prepared by Barbara Wolfe, James Bailey and
Mora and Linda Blosser Grover White; and 1953.
decorated the speaker's eight.
Zetha · Buckley
table. Old -class pictures McCain, Luella Riebel
were on display.
Thomas, Mary Petty Harris.
Officers' repons were Louise Bigley Frdnk, Emma
given by June Epple, secre- Ritchie
Rhodes.
John
Dear Annie: .This is for tary, and Roger Keller, trea- Ginther and Virgil Windon.
"Isolated Wife," whose bus- surer. Epple recognized the
The number of alumni
band stopped drinking. I once veterans and commented on · att,ending from the other
had an alcohol cowtselor teU their service to our cowttry. classes were: 1930, none;
me that when my husband He
thanked
Ernie 1931 : one; 1932, none;
and I quit drinking on our Whitehead for the gold 1934, one; 1935, one; 1936.
own and became reclusive charms and key charms two; 1937. ooe; 1939. one;
like''lsolated's" husband, we which he had provided for 1940, none; 1941, five ;
had not only dried out but we
had dried up. He said .if we'd
gone to AA. we would have
received the support we
needed. Your advice was
right on. -A Reader
Annie's Mtzilbox is wrii- ·
un by KDtlty MiJcluU and
Mlli'Cy S•gar, ·longtime editors ,of tile Ann Landers
collmtn. Please e-fllllil your
qaestioas to annusriUI~l­
bo:c@co'!fC.ast.n~ or wrlle .
to: Anrue s M~:c, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL ·
60611. To foul out IIWTe
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read felltfl!'es by o!l'er
Crea4Jrs Sytulicale wruers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creator~ SyndicaJe Web
Chartes E. Wagner, Jr.
page aJ w.ww.creators.com.

1942. one; 1944, three; class of 1956. He will he
1945, twe; 1946, two; 1947, attending Hocking College
·eight; 1949, four ; 1950, where he will study police
two; 1951. four; 1952, five; science. ·
The Chester AI umtti
1954, none ; 1955, two;
1956, eight; 1957, five.
Scholarship of $500 was
The president thanked awarded to Daniel Buckley.
Bill and Wilma Williams, grandson of John Riebel,
Karr Contracting. Pepsi Sr. ,. cla~s of 1956, Darlene
Cola, for scholarships of Bailey Buckley. clas~ of
$500\ each; the Chester 1956; great grandson of
Alumni with Baum Lumber · John Bailey, class of 1931.
Co, Farmers Bank &amp; the late Roger Buckley,
Savings. Co. and · Racine class of 1955, and the late
Home National Bank for an Dorsal Riebel , 1929. He
additional $ 500 scholar- will be . attending OU this
ship.
into
fall
going
The Kair Contracting Environmental Science.
scholarship was awarded to
Hanging baskets providMorgan Werry, daughter of ed by Bob ·s Market were .
Ray Joyce Werry and grand- awarded toVirginia Pooler.
mother of Dorothy Koenig Anhur
Rose,
Betty
Myers, class of 1953. She is Chevalier, Mary Sordan.
going to Ohio State Doris Spurrier, Joel Lynch.
University where she will Ray Werry and Edna
study biology as a pre-med Wood .
The officers for 2009 are
student.
The Bill &amp; Wilma ' Harold Newell, president;
Williams Scholarship of Kathryn Windon. vice pres$500 was awarded
to ident; Starling Massar, secKatherine Hayman, daugh- ond vice president; Maxine
secretary;
ter of Greg Hayman great- Whitehead,
granddaughter of the late Francis Reed, secretary:
Guy Hayman, class of 1933. Rosemary Rose. treasurer;
She is going to attend Roger Keller, assistant trea· Muskingl}am College to surer. ..Named to the decopursue .a degree in educa- rating and nominating committee were
Howard
tion.
Pepsi Scholarship of $500 Larkins, Donald Mora.
went to Joel Lynch, grand- Donald Van Meter and John
son of the late Roger Riebel Ginther.

KUBOTA BUILT.
KUBOTA UALITY.

Sunday, June 29
RACINE
- Fourth
Annual Shall We Gather at
the Ri ver, 11 a.m., Star Mill
Park, worship . service and
potluck to follow.

n

•

n.eumons

Sunday, June 29

De~~=:~~· ~~a.a-nd
Melvina Birchfield annual
reunion at the Henderson
Community
Building.
Basket dinner at noon.
,

Other events

Wagner joins
Holzer Clinic
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Clinic
announces
that
Charles E. Wagner, Jr.. DO,
Board Certified Internal
Medicine physician has
joined the clinic's team of
skilled professional•.
·
Dr. ,Wagner received his
Doctor of Medicine from
the Ohio University Colle~e
of Osteopathic Medicine m
Athens and completed his
residency at Youngstown
Osteopathic Hospital in
Youngstown. He_ will pmclice internal medicme at the
Holzer Clinic Athens on
Columbus Road .
Holzer Clinic is a multiple discipline health care
system of over 130 board
certified phystctans provtd·
ing care in more than' thirty
areas of expertise in nine
locations.
.
For a complete list of ser·
vices or
sc/U'dule a11

23 HP
3-CYUNDER
UQUIO.COOLED
DIESEL ENGINE

Friday, June Tl
MIDDLEPORT - Free
community dinner, 4:30-6
p.m.. Middleport Qmrch of
Ouist, Family life Center..
Menu of twtey hot dogs with
sauce and cheese, potato
salad, cole slaw and dessert.
appointmenij

to/

· Church events

ftfth grade.

Birthdays

Saturday, June 28
The
Sunday, June 29
-:Wilkesville Presbyterian
SYRACUSE
- Virginia
:,Oturch will feature David ·
"GinnyH ·Hedrick
will
~tiffier, Jr., singing gospel
:Utusic, 6 p.m. Public in~it­ observe her . 86th birthday
·e.I. FOr- more informai'Jon today, cards may be sent to
PO Box 424, Syracuse.
~669-6920.
~ WILKESVILLE -

..

•

Hold fast the summer. It is
the beauty of the day and all
it contains.
The laughter and work
and finally the sleep. The
quiet.
Oh September, do not put
your weight upon my mind.
For I know he will be
going .
This son of mine who is
now a man - he must go.
Time will I ace my
thoughts with joyous years.
The walls will echo his
"Hello." His caring will be
around each comer.
His tears will be tucked
into our memory book.
Life calls him beyond our
reach- to different walls.
New faces, shiny halls,
shy smiles, many places.
Greater learning - he
must go.
B.ut wait , before . he
leaves, he sure he knows
you love him .
Hide the lump in your
throat as you hug him.
He will soon be home
again - but he will be dif·
ferent.
The little boy will have
disappeared.
How I wished I could take
September and shake it, for
it came too soon.
I must look to the beauty
of each new day, and silent·
ly give thanks.

RACINE - The Racine
Are!!
Community
Organization will meet at
with
Dr.
Wag11er, please cal/740-589·
6:30 p.m. at the Star Mill
3120 or 1•isit us 011tlll' web aJ
Park building. Potluck meal
W»wliol~e rdinic.com.
to be served. New members
-welcome. ·
Monday, June 23
.
Thursday, June 26
RUTLAND Oasis
Christian
Fellowship
· TUPPERS PLAINS
· Eastern Music Boosters Vacatiorr Bible School , 6planning p1eeting, 7 p.m., 8:30 p.m .• through June ~6 • .
:band room . Officers meet at ·Rutland Church of Christ,
Power Lab is the theme, for
:tJ p.m.
children ages three through

I

Please i~clude a phone number
in your email. ·

.......

HoJd Fast the Sllllliner
· by Mary W. Abel

·Community Calendar

::

...

. Dear Annie: My wife and
;I have been -together . four

Dear Carmel: With pleasure. Here it is:

Youth events

'

1

-rileY.

indications the country
would not go beyond that
figure.
British Prime Minister
Gordon Brown echoed U.S.
offiGials' calls for cominitmeots of specific produ~­
tion increases. Such acuons
would help ensure that
"instead of uncertainty and
unpredictability, there is
llreater
certain~,
and
mstead of instabihty, there
is greater stability," he said.
But he and Bodman also
urged consuming countries
to increase energy efficiency and invest in alternative
sources of fuel. Brown said
the high prices - what he
termed an "oil shock" -leave industrialized countries with few choices bQt
turning more to nucle¥
power and lowering energy
consumption.
A joint statement issued
by participants also urged
countries to improve energy
efficiency. The vaguely
worded statement also promoted investment in spare
capacity and called for
improved transparency and
regulation of financial markets, but provided few
specifics- again highlighting the confusion and disagreements over the core
causes of oil's pri~;e surge.
Abdullah called for the creation of a $1 billion energy
initiative to help poor countrjes combat fuel prices and
said Saudi Arabia would conuibute $500 million to provide loans to finance development and energy projects.

The familykqtDctju&amp;t~~
iGnal letters. ' IIJllt pO!iprai
posters abouube (Q!flifL

Frankly, maybe
shes just paranoid

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

United States over the core than 35 countries thronged a
It remained unclear if
factors driving steep price large hall where he spoke.
Sunday's
announcements
bikes.Oilclosednear$l35a
King Abdullah also said wouldhaveanygreatereffect.
barrel on Friday -. almost Saudi Arabia is not the culpr#.
At least one analyst said
double the price a Ye&lt;ij' ago.
The king cited several he thought they would only
The cost of gaspline also factors driving "the unjusti- spur prices higher.
"You really get a sense of has become a sore point in the fi¢, swift rise in oil prices"
The oil marlret has been in
the range of America U.S. presidential race, with ·including "speculators who a holding pattern 'to see if
through these papers," said President Bush and presumed play the market out of self- Saudi Arabia would take
Edward Papenfuse, director Republican nominee John tsh interests," plus higher more aggressive steps toward
of the Maryland State McCain calling on Congress . consumption by developing boosting output, said Stephen
Archives, which will even- to lift its long-standingbanoo countries and higlier· taxes Schorlc, an oil rnarl&lt;:et analyst
tually house them.
offspore 'oil and gas drilling. in some countries.
and trader in Villanova, Pa.
Perhaps most strikingly, Barack Obama, the presump- . U.S. Energy Secretary 1he llllltket's likely to view
. letters ten of a familY's tom live Democratic nominee, has Samuel Bodman, however, the announcement as a sign it
allegiances during the Civil said such moves will do ooth- ·said earlier that U.S. officials will not, he said
War. The EIIIQC)'s li\'ed on · ing to ease 'American ~XJD- had found no evideoo!; spec- . "We don't know anything
Maryland's Eastern Shore, sumers' pain short-tenn.
ulators are driving up pnces. · .more today that we didn't
across~Bayfrom · Tbe U.S, anli otlier
Saudi officials have con- · 'know Friday," said Schork,
Baltimore, where the planta- nations argue that oi,l pl'O'-. sist~;ntly said the country who predicted "$150 (a bar- ·
lion economy of the South duction has not .kept up with would provide eniJI)Idl oil to . rei)' here we come."
ended and the abolitionist increasing demand, espe- .supply the market..The kingLinda Rafield, . senior oil
.iadlurria1 NOIIb ~: : .
~'!:!xu OJina IDdia and- dOJp llllllOilllCCd a 300,000 analyst at ,.energy trade pub' n was a i:onlW:i' 4be the' tliddle East. But Saudi · bilrTel per dlty pl'Oduction Iication Platts, said she
Emorys catalogued, anti- Arabia ancl · other OPEC increase in May and said expected the reaction to he
slavery petitions · stacked ' countries say there is no before the start of the Jiddab less.dramatic.
alongside records of slaves shortage •of oil and instead meeting that it would add
"I don't see prices going
sent to Natchez, Mis~ .• ~ blame financial speqdation anotQer 200,000 barrels per into freefall at the start of
a packet of letters, still tied and the falling U.S. dollar.
day iJi July, raisin~ total daily trading this evening, but I
in silk ribbon, ·titled, · Saudi Oil Minister Ali al- output to 9.7 million barrels. don't see the bulls being
"Correspondence with W.H. Naimi said the kil\gdom is
Both .annowtcements ·bad given any reason to bid
Emory and wife in regard to willing to produ~;e more already been factored into prices back up to the $140
. his resignati,on from U.S. than.the 9.7 ~on barrels oil prices before Sunday's level," she said.
Army, 1861. ·
·
of oil a day 1t had already meeting - and' neither did .· Bush has visited Saudi
The · Emorys owned · planned to produce in July much to stem their rise. :Arabia twice this year to push
slaves, but .~ signed an - if the market requires it. Total worldwide crude pro- the country's king to increase
1.832 ~titioo to the
· But the Saudi oil minister duction is about 85 million oil pmduction but has little to
Maryland leJislature ~~g al~ blamed speculators and barrels per day. ··
Show for the effort.
foe the gradual .endicatJ.on asierted supply is not the
The Saudi output increase
To address long-term conof llavery.
·problem.
is "going to help a little bit, cems about suppfy, .al-Naimi
One family IDFmber,
"lri today's environment, I maybe reduce prices just .a said Saudi Arabia also is
William H. Emory; was a am convinced that supply little," New Mexico Gov. willing to invest to boost its
colonel 'in the U.s·: Army and demand balances and . Bill Richardson, a Democrat spare.Oil production capacity
when the Civil War 'b egan. auc1e oil production levels and fomier President DiU .above the current 12.5 mil·
He wrote out..a .-esit~!tion '
not the primary drivers of Clinton's energy secretary, lion barrels per day planned
of his post, 'then c
ged .thecurrentiiilllket situation,". said on CNN's "4te fortheendof2009-again,
his mind and fought for al-Naimi said. Officials and Edition" program. "It won't if the ll13rlret requires it.
the Union.
energy executives from mole he significant." ·
. That .re~ersed previous
' l'wo SODS also fOUiltt in
.the Civil War -ooe
the
Unioo,
one
1W · the
Confederacy. Bundles of 1fttersfromallr.mlly members
detail their di~ feelings. ·

Nlonday,June23,2008

.A..NNIE 'S MAILBOX

BY KATHY MITCHEll.

..Md.
attic ~~~~:Il~~~::~~~
h £1antation
ds
'
,
,
.
0
400 .,1Viears
·
..
.
d
·
Of ()CUDleDts

BYTHE.BEND

.T he Daily Sentinel

BY SEftASTIAN ABBOT
JIDDAH, Saudi Arabia - .
Facing strong ·u.s. pressure
and global dismay over oil
prices, Saudi Arabia said
Sunday it will produce more
crude this year if the market
needs it. But the vague .
pledge fell far short of U.S. ·
hopes for a specific increase
and may do little to lower
'
prices immediately,
'
For Iiow, the current "oil
shock" leaves Western countries with little choice but to
move .toward nuclear power
and change their energy-consumption habits, Britain's
prime minister warned at a
rare meeting of oiJcproducing
and consuming nations.
Saudi Arabia the
world's top crude eiporter
called the gathering
Sunday to send a message
APpholo
that it, too, is concerned by
AP p11o1o high oil pri,;es ·inflicting U.S. Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman, right, meets Saudi King Abdullah in Jiddah, Saudi
. Documents that date back to the 1800's, recently disCov- economic pain worldwide.
Arabia, on Sunday. King Abdullah said Sunday that Saudi Ara~?ta was not t'! blame lor
ered in the once slave quarters at the former Poplar Grove · Instead, the meeting high- soaring oil prices and instead pointed his linger at specul";tors, high fuel taxes tn consum' Plantation are seen in ClinteMII8, Mil,, on June 10.
lighted the shaq:J disag~ Ing countries and lnoreased Gil oonsumptlon In developing ~om!es. The ~~Jng, wh,o .
'
·
meot between producers like opened a high-level oil summit in.the port city of J1ddah, sa1d h1s kingdom the ·wol1d s
largest oil exporter had already increased its production.

PageA3

•

Ftame mat 111M .....,....
~orprWHona
mug Of rt'IOLJM pllld.

•

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
ONE MILE WEST Of: ATiiENSON

\ '/ ~/TOUR 1\JF\ \T ~T LL•~ TI(~N.

RQIJf[ 50/ ~2

HI!S. RT. "90L'lli Of LANCASn·R
lANC,..;ll R. 0H
7-:J.28Z7

A'lli!,N5. Oil
740-S~/800-7l~U1 7

-v~r.ffVuJ.Iy Otdlloor Puu~tr f.qlt!Jmrt"fftmlll Tmr.fer Supt&gt;rtJto"'"

�.PageA2

NATION • -WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Moncbiy, June aa, 2008

Oil minister: Saudi willing
to increase crude output
.

.

.

BY KRisTEN WYATT
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

·CENTREVILLE, Md. -For four centuries, they
were the ultimate pack rats.
Now a Maryland family's
massive collection of letters, maps and printed bills
has surfaced in the attic of a
former plantation, providing a firSthand account of
life from the 1660s through
World War II.
"Historians are used to
_dealing with political records
.aDd militacy'?rl'l"~' ,"

·Uicl·Adani GoodbCart. a 'hiS-

:1ory· professor at nearby
:washington College. "But
:llVhat they aren't used to is
political letters and military
.docUIIIeilts kept right along;side bills for laundry or
.directions for building a
: wJI$hing machine."
: Goodheart is working
with state archivists and a
-crew of four student 'interns
collect the documents,
:which were found stuffed
'into boxes, barrels and
:peach baskets.
: "Look at this: 'Negro
·woman, Sarah, about 27
:years
old,
$25,"'
Goodheart says, reading
:Crom a 19th .century inventory. "It was as though this
'f amily never threw away a
,scrap of paper."
:: The documents include
;maps, ietters, financial
:records, political posters,
'.even a lock qf hair from a
]etter dat~ Valentine's
pay, 1801. There's a love
JI&lt;?C:m from the 1830s (in
.which a younll man ·g raphi;cally tells hts sweetheart
~what he'd do if he sneaked ·
linto. her room oo a winter's
!night), along with war
.;accounts and bills of sale
:from slaves and crops.
• The papers come from
:several generations of the
:Emory family, prominent
10bacco and wheat farmers
iwbo settled here on a land
~t from Lord Baltimore
:mthe 1660s.
· The' former Poplar Grove
:;ptao!alion is still in family
:;hands, though the mansion ·
&lt;OOW is used only asa huntlodge. The documents
:were moldering in an attic
;until students touring the
started
sorting
.;bouse
:-through them this spring. ·
-: "I dOo 't believe 31}y of us
)new these papers were
:ibere,". said Mary Wood, .an
:Emory cousin whose son
:inherited the plantation in
. ;1998. "We didn't go there all
.'lhal often, and when you do,
&gt;you doo•t ~ up in people's .

ro

AHO MARCY SuGAR

:mg

aau

are

roc

· .'

¢bt.8alltpolts mailp Otribunt,

.''lbeseare~:lbatiJiu- ·
ally do not sw'Vive,"

~bt f)otnt ~lt~sant ~tgi~ttr

Papenfuse said, pointing to a
broadside bl~sting thenPresident·Martm Van Buren
for favoring voting rights.for
"every free negro." "After
the beat of a campaign, this
printed matter was thrown
out or put to other uses,
including the outhouse."
Not so at the Emory
house, where . even small

and The Dally Sentanel
have launched a new page e~ery
Friday caUed "Faith and Family".
. If you have a testimonial story,.
life-changing event about yourself
or, eren a poem that you would
'like to share please email to:

scraps of papec we~ kept
aiOilgside military uniforms
and other family heirlooms.

The collection also
includes nOtes on an aspect
of ~ historum bow
liUle about: the practice 'of
renting ' slave labor to
neighbors and plantations
fartlier IIIUth.
"Scholars have not paid a
great deal ' of attention to it,
but .this is ~ tbll
helps .recreate and draW baCt .
rogeth« die lives of ~
~and look around."
·people • wae :a rftNtd ,
~ Washingtott .~lleF ~ ±..: 1,~... ' l . J t .
:.tuld access !0 .. .c~
""'"• •
cuo:t'Ot- years, but "
ons ,_ bow , - 111i•ori:aid he assumed the papers ans w; · .
'
;in ·the auk weren't old or
"I"*"! td' WE they did:•it1JP~ldlm.
n't dnw dais ttuff out,"
!
't in ,aoy partie- Wood uid ·dlt a chuckle.
:·fo
__,_, and some
~~ ._._..,
n it's kind of weinl.
\11\K;I_
se-eaten ta s that It's fascinating, though. I
'
out of can't be~iCve that something
""'"' "
migbl oome out of it."

kkelly@mydailytribune.com
ofields@mydailyregister.com

hoeftich@mydailysent~nel.com
Limi~ your story to

are

500-750 words.

.years. During this ti~e. I
llave been foUowed by detec)ives, watched by her friends
1llld had some of my employees paid by my wife to "keep
.an eye" on me. I have been
·investigated by her children
and am not welcome at her
:family functions.
·
: My wife has called and
.'vi.sited my old girlfriends
.:and checked. with my ex-wife to see if I am stiU in
::COntact with them. I've had
:my computer examined and
;my wallet gone through.
·There are times when she
.:Ciai ms someone has been in
:our bathroom because the
:towels· were out of place.
• Annie, absolutely nothing
:is · going on.. I have been
. faithful since the day we met.
I want to spend every
moment with her. Her
actions have. been very
.painful, but I loveher, so I've
put up with this abuse, hop.mg time will cure her ills.
She recently filed for
divorce. However, we still
,live together as man and wife
and here's the real twist: Now
she tiusts me and is com·pJetely at case with our relationship. Slle says because
we're getting divorced, it no
longer matters what I do. She
·wants us to live together, and
if we decide to get married
again, we can.
Afttor all the detective worlc,
wouldn't you think she'd real-.
1ze there's ·~ to fmd1 Is
this some kind of mental ill.ness11 know she won't go to
·counseling because I've
. asked. I would like to understand her better. - Soul·Searc:bina in Florida
Dear Florida: Your wife
sounds para:noid, which is
indeed a form of mental ill·ness. Is your reputation with
·women so abysmal that you
aren't trustworthy? Have
other men cheated on her so
often that she can't believe
any man could be faithful?
We're not sure what you
love about this woman. but
we don ',t recommend remareying her without counsel·ing. Frankly, we bope you
have your bags packed so
you can get away quickly. ·
Dear Annie: My daughter
'leaves for college in the fall.
Many years ago, you print·
ed a lovely poem called
"Hold Fast the Summer."
Can you repri'nt it'! Carmel, Ind. · ·

Public meetings
Monday, June 23
RACINE
- Sou th ern
Local School Board, regular
meeting, 8 p.m., high school
media room. ·
POMEROY . - Meigs
County Public ~ibrary reglilar board meeting, 3 p.m.,
Pomeroy Library.
Thursday, June 26
POMEROY -·
Meigs
Soil and after Conservation
Districi
Board
of
Supervisors, II :30 a.m. at ·
the district office, 33101
Hiland Rd., Pomeroy.

Clubs and

organizations ·
.Thesday, June 24

•

Daniel Buckley

•

Joel

Katherine Hayman

lynch

Morgan Werry

Chester High alumni have reunion

CHESTER - Reunion the 50th anniversary class
classes were recognized, last year.
Alumni
Phyllis
Dill
scholarships aw3rded, and
veterans acknowledged at Bearhs. class of 1948, and
the annual Chester High her sister Doris Dill
School Alumni Association Spurrier of Alaska observ·
banquet held in the eastern ing 56 years. Kathryn
cafetorium.
Wmdon read the list of
More than 130 alumni those who have died since
and guests attending the last years and read a poem
reunion were greeted by in their nteQ10ry titled "Life
Roger Epple followed by is Eternal" followed by
group singing of God Bless prayer for tbe eight
America led by Marilyn . deceased.
Scott Mason with Chris
Reunion classes were recKuho at the piano. John ognized with the first one
Riebel ,-sr: guve the blessing listed spealting on behalf of
before the baked steak din- the class: 1933, no one
ner was served. It was pre- attending; 1938, two, Arthur
pared by the Eastern cooks Rose and ViL1or Bahr both
and served by the Pioneer of whom sr.&lt;?ke; 1943, three
4H Club.
.
Bill
Williams,,
Opal
The school colors of blue Eichinger and Ruth Karr;
and white in streamers and 1948.
six, . Kathleen
balloons decorated the cafe- Torrence Morris. Phyllis,
torium.and baskets of flow- Bearhs,_J\vis Bing, Howard
ers prepared by Barbara Wolfe, James Bailey and
Mora and Linda Blosser Grover White; and 1953.
decorated the speaker's eight.
Zetha · Buckley
table. Old -class pictures McCain, Luella Riebel
were on display.
Thomas, Mary Petty Harris.
Officers' repons were Louise Bigley Frdnk, Emma
given by June Epple, secre- Ritchie
Rhodes.
John
Dear Annie: .This is for tary, and Roger Keller, trea- Ginther and Virgil Windon.
"Isolated Wife," whose bus- surer. Epple recognized the
The number of alumni
band stopped drinking. I once veterans and commented on · att,ending from the other
had an alcohol cowtselor teU their service to our cowttry. classes were: 1930, none;
me that when my husband He
thanked
Ernie 1931 : one; 1932, none;
and I quit drinking on our Whitehead for the gold 1934, one; 1935, one; 1936.
own and became reclusive charms and key charms two; 1937. ooe; 1939. one;
like''lsolated's" husband, we which he had provided for 1940, none; 1941, five ;
had not only dried out but we
had dried up. He said .if we'd
gone to AA. we would have
received the support we
needed. Your advice was
right on. -A Reader
Annie's Mtzilbox is wrii- ·
un by KDtlty MiJcluU and
Mlli'Cy S•gar, ·longtime editors ,of tile Ann Landers
collmtn. Please e-fllllil your
qaestioas to annusriUI~l­
bo:c@co'!fC.ast.n~ or wrlle .
to: Anrue s M~:c, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL ·
60611. To foul out IIWTe
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read felltfl!'es by o!l'er
Crea4Jrs Sytulicale wruers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creator~ SyndicaJe Web
Chartes E. Wagner, Jr.
page aJ w.ww.creators.com.

1942. one; 1944, three; class of 1956. He will he
1945, twe; 1946, two; 1947, attending Hocking College
·eight; 1949, four ; 1950, where he will study police
two; 1951. four; 1952, five; science. ·
The Chester AI umtti
1954, none ; 1955, two;
1956, eight; 1957, five.
Scholarship of $500 was
The president thanked awarded to Daniel Buckley.
Bill and Wilma Williams, grandson of John Riebel,
Karr Contracting. Pepsi Sr. ,. cla~s of 1956, Darlene
Cola, for scholarships of Bailey Buckley. clas~ of
$500\ each; the Chester 1956; great grandson of
Alumni with Baum Lumber · John Bailey, class of 1931.
Co, Farmers Bank &amp; the late Roger Buckley,
Savings. Co. and · Racine class of 1955, and the late
Home National Bank for an Dorsal Riebel , 1929. He
additional $ 500 scholar- will be . attending OU this
ship.
into
fall
going
The Kair Contracting Environmental Science.
scholarship was awarded to
Hanging baskets providMorgan Werry, daughter of ed by Bob ·s Market were .
Ray Joyce Werry and grand- awarded toVirginia Pooler.
mother of Dorothy Koenig Anhur
Rose,
Betty
Myers, class of 1953. She is Chevalier, Mary Sordan.
going to Ohio State Doris Spurrier, Joel Lynch.
University where she will Ray Werry and Edna
study biology as a pre-med Wood .
The officers for 2009 are
student.
The Bill &amp; Wilma ' Harold Newell, president;
Williams Scholarship of Kathryn Windon. vice pres$500 was awarded
to ident; Starling Massar, secKatherine Hayman, daugh- ond vice president; Maxine
secretary;
ter of Greg Hayman great- Whitehead,
granddaughter of the late Francis Reed, secretary:
Guy Hayman, class of 1933. Rosemary Rose. treasurer;
She is going to attend Roger Keller, assistant trea· Muskingl}am College to surer. ..Named to the decopursue .a degree in educa- rating and nominating committee were
Howard
tion.
Pepsi Scholarship of $500 Larkins, Donald Mora.
went to Joel Lynch, grand- Donald Van Meter and John
son of the late Roger Riebel Ginther.

KUBOTA BUILT.
KUBOTA UALITY.

Sunday, June 29
RACINE
- Fourth
Annual Shall We Gather at
the Ri ver, 11 a.m., Star Mill
Park, worship . service and
potluck to follow.

n

•

n.eumons

Sunday, June 29

De~~=:~~· ~~a.a-nd
Melvina Birchfield annual
reunion at the Henderson
Community
Building.
Basket dinner at noon.
,

Other events

Wagner joins
Holzer Clinic
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Clinic
announces
that
Charles E. Wagner, Jr.. DO,
Board Certified Internal
Medicine physician has
joined the clinic's team of
skilled professional•.
·
Dr. ,Wagner received his
Doctor of Medicine from
the Ohio University Colle~e
of Osteopathic Medicine m
Athens and completed his
residency at Youngstown
Osteopathic Hospital in
Youngstown. He_ will pmclice internal medicme at the
Holzer Clinic Athens on
Columbus Road .
Holzer Clinic is a multiple discipline health care
system of over 130 board
certified phystctans provtd·
ing care in more than' thirty
areas of expertise in nine
locations.
.
For a complete list of ser·
vices or
sc/U'dule a11

23 HP
3-CYUNDER
UQUIO.COOLED
DIESEL ENGINE

Friday, June Tl
MIDDLEPORT - Free
community dinner, 4:30-6
p.m.. Middleport Qmrch of
Ouist, Family life Center..
Menu of twtey hot dogs with
sauce and cheese, potato
salad, cole slaw and dessert.
appointmenij

to/

· Church events

ftfth grade.

Birthdays

Saturday, June 28
The
Sunday, June 29
-:Wilkesville Presbyterian
SYRACUSE
- Virginia
:,Oturch will feature David ·
"GinnyH ·Hedrick
will
~tiffier, Jr., singing gospel
:Utusic, 6 p.m. Public in~it­ observe her . 86th birthday
·e.I. FOr- more informai'Jon today, cards may be sent to
PO Box 424, Syracuse.
~669-6920.
~ WILKESVILLE -

..

•

Hold fast the summer. It is
the beauty of the day and all
it contains.
The laughter and work
and finally the sleep. The
quiet.
Oh September, do not put
your weight upon my mind.
For I know he will be
going .
This son of mine who is
now a man - he must go.
Time will I ace my
thoughts with joyous years.
The walls will echo his
"Hello." His caring will be
around each comer.
His tears will be tucked
into our memory book.
Life calls him beyond our
reach- to different walls.
New faces, shiny halls,
shy smiles, many places.
Greater learning - he
must go.
B.ut wait , before . he
leaves, he sure he knows
you love him .
Hide the lump in your
throat as you hug him.
He will soon be home
again - but he will be dif·
ferent.
The little boy will have
disappeared.
How I wished I could take
September and shake it, for
it came too soon.
I must look to the beauty
of each new day, and silent·
ly give thanks.

RACINE - The Racine
Are!!
Community
Organization will meet at
with
Dr.
Wag11er, please cal/740-589·
6:30 p.m. at the Star Mill
3120 or 1•isit us 011tlll' web aJ
Park building. Potluck meal
W»wliol~e rdinic.com.
to be served. New members
-welcome. ·
Monday, June 23
.
Thursday, June 26
RUTLAND Oasis
Christian
Fellowship
· TUPPERS PLAINS
· Eastern Music Boosters Vacatiorr Bible School , 6planning p1eeting, 7 p.m., 8:30 p.m .• through June ~6 • .
:band room . Officers meet at ·Rutland Church of Christ,
Power Lab is the theme, for
:tJ p.m.
children ages three through

I

Please i~clude a phone number
in your email. ·

.......

HoJd Fast the Sllllliner
· by Mary W. Abel

·Community Calendar

::

...

. Dear Annie: My wife and
;I have been -together . four

Dear Carmel: With pleasure. Here it is:

Youth events

'

1

-rileY.

indications the country
would not go beyond that
figure.
British Prime Minister
Gordon Brown echoed U.S.
offiGials' calls for cominitmeots of specific produ~­
tion increases. Such acuons
would help ensure that
"instead of uncertainty and
unpredictability, there is
llreater
certain~,
and
mstead of instabihty, there
is greater stability," he said.
But he and Bodman also
urged consuming countries
to increase energy efficiency and invest in alternative
sources of fuel. Brown said
the high prices - what he
termed an "oil shock" -leave industrialized countries with few choices bQt
turning more to nucle¥
power and lowering energy
consumption.
A joint statement issued
by participants also urged
countries to improve energy
efficiency. The vaguely
worded statement also promoted investment in spare
capacity and called for
improved transparency and
regulation of financial markets, but provided few
specifics- again highlighting the confusion and disagreements over the core
causes of oil's pri~;e surge.
Abdullah called for the creation of a $1 billion energy
initiative to help poor countrjes combat fuel prices and
said Saudi Arabia would conuibute $500 million to provide loans to finance development and energy projects.

The familykqtDctju&amp;t~~
iGnal letters. ' IIJllt pO!iprai
posters abouube (Q!flifL

Frankly, maybe
shes just paranoid

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

United States over the core than 35 countries thronged a
It remained unclear if
factors driving steep price large hall where he spoke.
Sunday's
announcements
bikes.Oilclosednear$l35a
King Abdullah also said wouldhaveanygreatereffect.
barrel on Friday -. almost Saudi Arabia is not the culpr#.
At least one analyst said
double the price a Ye&lt;ij' ago.
The king cited several he thought they would only
The cost of gaspline also factors driving "the unjusti- spur prices higher.
"You really get a sense of has become a sore point in the fi¢, swift rise in oil prices"
The oil marlret has been in
the range of America U.S. presidential race, with ·including "speculators who a holding pattern 'to see if
through these papers," said President Bush and presumed play the market out of self- Saudi Arabia would take
Edward Papenfuse, director Republican nominee John tsh interests," plus higher more aggressive steps toward
of the Maryland State McCain calling on Congress . consumption by developing boosting output, said Stephen
Archives, which will even- to lift its long-standingbanoo countries and higlier· taxes Schorlc, an oil rnarl&lt;:et analyst
tually house them.
offspore 'oil and gas drilling. in some countries.
and trader in Villanova, Pa.
Perhaps most strikingly, Barack Obama, the presump- . U.S. Energy Secretary 1he llllltket's likely to view
. letters ten of a familY's tom live Democratic nominee, has Samuel Bodman, however, the announcement as a sign it
allegiances during the Civil said such moves will do ooth- ·said earlier that U.S. officials will not, he said
War. The EIIIQC)'s li\'ed on · ing to ease 'American ~XJD- had found no evideoo!; spec- . "We don't know anything
Maryland's Eastern Shore, sumers' pain short-tenn.
ulators are driving up pnces. · .more today that we didn't
across~Bayfrom · Tbe U.S, anli otlier
Saudi officials have con- · 'know Friday," said Schork,
Baltimore, where the planta- nations argue that oi,l pl'O'-. sist~;ntly said the country who predicted "$150 (a bar- ·
lion economy of the South duction has not .kept up with would provide eniJI)Idl oil to . rei)' here we come."
ended and the abolitionist increasing demand, espe- .supply the market..The kingLinda Rafield, . senior oil
.iadlurria1 NOIIb ~: : .
~'!:!xu OJina IDdia and- dOJp llllllOilllCCd a 300,000 analyst at ,.energy trade pub' n was a i:onlW:i' 4be the' tliddle East. But Saudi · bilrTel per dlty pl'Oduction Iication Platts, said she
Emorys catalogued, anti- Arabia ancl · other OPEC increase in May and said expected the reaction to he
slavery petitions · stacked ' countries say there is no before the start of the Jiddab less.dramatic.
alongside records of slaves shortage •of oil and instead meeting that it would add
"I don't see prices going
sent to Natchez, Mis~ .• ~ blame financial speqdation anotQer 200,000 barrels per into freefall at the start of
a packet of letters, still tied and the falling U.S. dollar.
day iJi July, raisin~ total daily trading this evening, but I
in silk ribbon, ·titled, · Saudi Oil Minister Ali al- output to 9.7 million barrels. don't see the bulls being
"Correspondence with W.H. Naimi said the kil\gdom is
Both .annowtcements ·bad given any reason to bid
Emory and wife in regard to willing to produ~;e more already been factored into prices back up to the $140
. his resignati,on from U.S. than.the 9.7 ~on barrels oil prices before Sunday's level," she said.
Army, 1861. ·
·
of oil a day 1t had already meeting - and' neither did .· Bush has visited Saudi
The · Emorys owned · planned to produce in July much to stem their rise. :Arabia twice this year to push
slaves, but .~ signed an - if the market requires it. Total worldwide crude pro- the country's king to increase
1.832 ~titioo to the
· But the Saudi oil minister duction is about 85 million oil pmduction but has little to
Maryland leJislature ~~g al~ blamed speculators and barrels per day. ··
Show for the effort.
foe the gradual .endicatJ.on asierted supply is not the
The Saudi output increase
To address long-term conof llavery.
·problem.
is "going to help a little bit, cems about suppfy, .al-Naimi
One family IDFmber,
"lri today's environment, I maybe reduce prices just .a said Saudi Arabia also is
William H. Emory; was a am convinced that supply little," New Mexico Gov. willing to invest to boost its
colonel 'in the U.s·: Army and demand balances and . Bill Richardson, a Democrat spare.Oil production capacity
when the Civil War 'b egan. auc1e oil production levels and fomier President DiU .above the current 12.5 mil·
He wrote out..a .-esit~!tion '
not the primary drivers of Clinton's energy secretary, lion barrels per day planned
of his post, 'then c
ged .thecurrentiiilllket situation,". said on CNN's "4te fortheendof2009-again,
his mind and fought for al-Naimi said. Officials and Edition" program. "It won't if the ll13rlret requires it.
the Union.
energy executives from mole he significant." ·
. That .re~ersed previous
' l'wo SODS also fOUiltt in
.the Civil War -ooe
the
Unioo,
one
1W · the
Confederacy. Bundles of 1fttersfromallr.mlly members
detail their di~ feelings. ·

Nlonday,June23,2008

.A..NNIE 'S MAILBOX

BY KATHY MITCHEll.

..Md.
attic ~~~~:Il~~~::~~~
h £1antation
ds
'
,
,
.
0
400 .,1Viears
·
..
.
d
·
Of ()CUDleDts

BYTHE.BEND

.T he Daily Sentinel

BY SEftASTIAN ABBOT
JIDDAH, Saudi Arabia - .
Facing strong ·u.s. pressure
and global dismay over oil
prices, Saudi Arabia said
Sunday it will produce more
crude this year if the market
needs it. But the vague .
pledge fell far short of U.S. ·
hopes for a specific increase
and may do little to lower
'
prices immediately,
'
For Iiow, the current "oil
shock" leaves Western countries with little choice but to
move .toward nuclear power
and change their energy-consumption habits, Britain's
prime minister warned at a
rare meeting of oiJcproducing
and consuming nations.
Saudi Arabia the
world's top crude eiporter
called the gathering
Sunday to send a message
APpholo
that it, too, is concerned by
AP p11o1o high oil pri,;es ·inflicting U.S. Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman, right, meets Saudi King Abdullah in Jiddah, Saudi
. Documents that date back to the 1800's, recently disCov- economic pain worldwide.
Arabia, on Sunday. King Abdullah said Sunday that Saudi Ara~?ta was not t'! blame lor
ered in the once slave quarters at the former Poplar Grove · Instead, the meeting high- soaring oil prices and instead pointed his linger at specul";tors, high fuel taxes tn consum' Plantation are seen in ClinteMII8, Mil,, on June 10.
lighted the shaq:J disag~ Ing countries and lnoreased Gil oonsumptlon In developing ~om!es. The ~~Jng, wh,o .
'
·
meot between producers like opened a high-level oil summit in.the port city of J1ddah, sa1d h1s kingdom the ·wol1d s
largest oil exporter had already increased its production.

PageA3

•

Ftame mat 111M .....,....
~orprWHona
mug Of rt'IOLJM pllld.

•

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
ONE MILE WEST Of: ATiiENSON

\ '/ ~/TOUR 1\JF\ \T ~T LL•~ TI(~N.

RQIJf[ 50/ ~2

HI!S. RT. "90L'lli Of LANCASn·R
lANC,..;ll R. 0H
7-:J.28Z7

A'lli!,N5. Oil
740-S~/800-7l~U1 7

-v~r.ffVuJ.Iy Otdlloor Puu~tr f.qlt!Jmrt"fftmlll Tmr.fer Supt&gt;rtJto"'"

�/

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, June 23t 2008.

BrOonull

ecooomy is "Dol just bad, i( unemployed and the ·eOOno.is run-fo.--4he-hills tenible." my was shrinkiqg, is patent·
The polling numbers 011 ly absurd.
WASHING1UN - An
As for any comparisons to
unlikely,
man-bites-dog consumer confidence are
now the lowest in ~ recent recessions, one need
Stol}' recmtly appeamj 011
tbe front page o( One of our decades. Gallup's surveys go back: to the spring of
natioiJ 's most libel'al news- find that the number of. 1980 wben Jimmy Carlter's
papers, as~g that the Americans who lhink the . .economy was heading soulh
U.S. economy is not as bad ooonomy is getting worse and lhe unemployment rate
has risen to 87 peroent. had risen to 7.5 peroent and
as
le think..
~Washington Post, a Uberal Democrats, Wall infiation was 14.4 peroent.
left -leaning newspaper dlat Street aitics of the adminis- The natiomd jobless ate
persistently
paints
a tration aDd eoooomic blog- . today is · 5.5 per&gt;cent
gloomy pictDre of the ' gers on the Internet routine- (between 4 peroent and 5
country's economy, even ly ll1llke comparisons ro that peroent in many states} and
before its descent into the mammoth economic disas- inflation is at 4.2 peroont,
subprime debacle, under• tcr of the 1930s, .the Great with the core rate (minus
· volatile energy and food
went a conversion of sorts Depression.
"But lhe reality is differ- prices) at less than 2 perlast week. It decided to
tak:e a fresh look at die fun• ent. According to the most cent. ·
The dec'line in bousing
dament3Is of our economy broad measures of how the
and concluded that com- economy is doing. it's oot values is perhaps the
parisons to past recessions all that grim." Irwin states biggest culprit malting
increasingly
and depressions were flatly. He's right. Yes, ,the . Americans
economy
is
soft.
Yes,
the
pessimisticabouuheeoonoexaggerated, if not downgroWih rate has slowed. 'ies, my. That has fed fear that as
right silly.
Readers of this column the financial lll.adets have ~elati'&lt;e net worth bas
!mow that I bave long railod been rattled by the boasing declined, so wiU overall
against the gloom and and credit crunch, and the cons11mer spending, which
accounts for two--thinis · of
doomers. while champi- spike in oill and gas prices.
But with everything that the economy. But it d01;sn't
oning our economy's ineJJ.·
haustible resilience, exuber- has been thrown at it - the affect it at all, as Irwin aptly
ance and competitive spirit, subprime housing ooUapse, notes, citing a study by
subsequent ,credit Wellesley CoHege econoas well as its ability to the
recover against any and all crunch, sk:yr"cketing oil mist Karl E. Case, who
challenges. That's why .prices and reooFd fuel oosts compared spending habits
with changes in hou·sing
Wa~thingmn Post repo!ter !!t 1he puJhp _. this -eoonoNeil Irwin's story last my is holding up mucli bet- values. Homeowners, r eelWednesday ,c ame as a · ter than it has in previous. ing wealthier, will spend
breath of fresh ai£. It's a reoessions. Uaemployment more as lhose ·values· ·rise,
gutsy,
against-the-grain remains historically low by but dwy don't spend less
reexamination
of · t:he most measures (far below when they fall
Wall Street economists
biggest eleclion issue in the ·paSt recessions) and, all but
oountry lha.t puts the num- overl~ed by critics, lhe David Malpass, is a realist
bers into a sharper and more .economy is still growing by with an optimistic outlook
nearly I percent in ·t he first who sees economic probhonest context.
Under the headline, "Why - quarter. T() make any seri- lems ahead of us as wen as,
We're Gloomier Than the ous comparisons with lhe more importantly, opportu·
Ecooomy," Irwin ridicules Great Depression in 1ihe nities for growth. He worthe sky-is-falling view held 1930s, when more than one- ries about inflation through
by most Americans that lhe thifd of the workforce was 2009, · even if the dollar

111 Cowl Slit It.~. OhiO

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992~2157
-.my' '']rw I lltillll.com

· Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congrus sludl nudee no law respecting 4ft
otJJIIIislunmt of rdigilnt, or ,.lti6iti•g 1M
.fru anrise tluruf; or a6riJgmg dee .fruJsm
of spucla, or of dee press; or tlu right of 1M
people peaaab1r to assemllk, atul to petitiDn
du GoM'Itmmt for 11 mlrus ofgrieHffUS.
- The Flrlt Amendment to lhe u.s. Constftution

TODAY
IN HISTORY
•

Today is Monday, June 23, tbe 174tb day of 2008. 'l'bore
are 191 days left in tbe year.
. Today's Highlight in History: On June 23, 1868,
Chrisrop~J« Latham ·Sholes received a patent for his ''Type·
Writer." .
On this dale: In 1757, forces of tile East India Co. led by
Robert Clive de~ tfiJops loyal to the proviiicw governor of Bengal in the Battle of Plassey, which effectively
matted lhe beginning of British ooloniallule in India.
, In 1836, Congress approved the Deposit Act. which ·contained a provision for turning over surplus federal revenoe
tO tbe states.
: In 1931 , aviators Wiley Post and Harold Gatty toQk oft"
from New York: on a round-the-world ffight d!at lasted
.
eight days and 15 hours.
In 1938, the Civib\erooautics Authority was established.
. In 1947, the Senaie joined the House in overriding
President Truman's veto of the Taft-Hanley Act, designed
to limit the power of organiwl labor.
·
· In 1967, President Johnson and Soviet Premier Alexei
Kosygin held the first of two meetings at Glassboro State
College in New Jersey.
In 1969, Warren E. BulgCf was sworn in ·as chief justice
by tbe man he was succeeding, Earl Warren.
In 1972, President Nixon and White House chief ofstaff
H.R. Haldeman diswssed a plan to use the CIA to
obstruct the FBI'..s Watergate investigation. (Revelation of
the qq&gt;e recolding of this conversation sparked Nixon's
resignation in 1974.)
. In 1985, all 329 people aboard an Air-India Boeing 747
were k:illed when the plane ctaShed into the Atlantic Ooean
near Ireland. after a bomb on board e~
e •.:..:~..~1a~s-4~
• Five:c~Adi~S•
.
. lllllion. ~ __.
...... ~ '
-..
·
s
es .... ---~ .. .,.,.,.
sn!dtms based in part on ~&lt;~re. 'l'be Sllpieme Court said .the
govemmentoouldrequire public libraries toequipcomput·
en; with anti-pot11Qg£3pby ftltecs. Demoaai Howald Dean
formally announced his presidential campaign. Maynard '
f;Mboo Jr., the first black mayor of Atlanta, died in
Washington. D.C., at age 65.
.
. One year ago: Searchers in Summit County, Ohio, found
tbe body of Jessie Davis, a missing 26-year-old pregnant
WOJDaD. {Bobby Cutts Jr., a former Canton police officer
who was the father of Davis• unborn child, was later oonvictcd ofmurder and aggravated IDlllder· and sentenced to
57 years to life in prison.)
Today's Birtbdays: Singer Diana Trask is 68. Musical
condnctOI' James Levine is 65. Actor Ted Shack:elford is 62.
ActOI' Bryan Brown is 61. Supmne Court Juslioe Olarence
Tboolas ts 60. "American Idol" judge Randy Jacbon is 52.
Acu'ess Frances McllotJnand is 51. Actor Paul La Greca is
46. Rhythm-aDd-blues singer Chi00 DelllQe is 38. AlliRss
Selma Blair is 36. Rod singer KTTunstaifis 33. Rhythmand-blues singer Vrrgo Wtlliams (Ghostowns Dis) is 33. ·
Singer-songwriter Jason Mlllz is 31. Rod singer DuJiy is
24. Country singer Katie Anniger is 17.
,
: Thought for Today: 'Qne today is wonh two tomorrows."- Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790).

D

Clinto'n, Obama could use each other~ help
·Br-Kut••••

ASSOC\lTED PRESS WRITER

iSI!IoJu
.

· The Daily Sentinel

2

I

I

_,.,.,or--

r..., ....
~

----·-·
..... Cou...,

·- =

.

Jlriccs·

OWIN

------------..,...--------1
LETTERS T 0 T
· · EDIT 0 R
. · '·

-··Ill'·

rises. Tbe impact of tax
increases on labor, divi,dends, capital gains, ~tance and lhe altemabve
minimnm tax that are due to
expire in 2010 is a huge
concem. too. Still. Malpass
foresees "a reasonably Solid
g-lobal expansion in 2009,"
noting that the U.S . .eoooomy "bas an un~yillg ~- :
diness" because tt lS ~driwn
by small businesses and a .
flexible labor foroe.
He thinks "dde current·
rebound wiiHave legs and
the heavy investments made
~obally in recent years Will ·
pay off." How much of .a
rebound? Expect I paceat
1.6 2 peroent growdt in tbe
second quarter and 3 percent in the~ second balf of
· llhe year.
But · ri,ght · now, Neil
b:win's excellent .article
· notwithstanding, Americans
relllllin as gloomy as ever. ·
That mood is unlikely 10 .
change mytime ·soon as .
long as oil and gas prices
·k:eep rising and the
Democrats conti.nue to
block GOP proposals to
produce our way out 00' dlis
mess.
. Oba.mi"smitten
Democrats still mink dult
Americans are ~sed to
drilling for more oil in cJlfshore fields and in wildcl'ness areas .and d!at dley
blame U.S. oil companies
for higher gas
B).lt Amencans know
better. The latest Gdlup
poM finds that they ·support ·
such -dril~g by 57 percellt
to 41 percent ancf those'
wbo blame big oil bas
plunged from 34 percent to
20 peroent.

·'

r........

f

system allows him to use
left QVer primary money in
the fall campaign.
Republican John MoCain,
who secured bis party's
nomination in March, raised
$21 million in May .and had
$31.6 million in dte bank
The figures 1place him virtually on same finallcial foot.jog as Obama- a level of
parity d!at would have been
unimaginable just a few .
months ago.
Still., Obama man~~ged to
raise slightly more than
McCain -w.bile still fighting
his way· out of the
Democratic
primary.
McCain, on the other hand,
has been free to consOlidate
Republican support since he
clinched the nothloation
more than ·three inonths .ago
and has been on an actilo'e
fundraising schedule.
Overall, since the presidential campaigns began
last year, Obama has raised
$287 million. Clinton has
raised $209 mi Ilion and
McCain has raised $115
million.
Clinton
campaigned
actively thmugh the last
Democratic primaries on
June 3 before succumbing
to Obama and is !l!tiJeCtod to
have even greater deb! at
the end of this month. In a
call to donors on Thursday, ·
she said she would concentrate on paying off money
owed to vendors, not her
personal loans .
Of her $10 million in
debts to vendors, nearly half
- $4.6 million - is money
the campaign owes Clinton
adviser Mark Penn and his
· polling ftrm. Clinton report·
ed spending nearly S 19 million - more than $3 mil..

lion · on media advertising ·
and $3 million on phone
bank:s. She spent ll10H: than
$5 million -on travel.
·
· Obama reported SJW""'fing
$26.6 million in · MaY:His
heaviest spending was on
advertising - more than $4
million buying time for ·television comineJ:cials. Obama
had the most e.11,pensive payroll, spending $3.5 million
on his staff, more dian -twice
what Clinton spent and more ·
lhan six times what McCain
spent no his payroll
Obama on Friday defend·
ed his decision to be the
fJCSt major pany caodidv
.to tum down public funds in
the general election. He said
he is expecting McCain ,t o
have significant help from
the Republican hlty .and
from outside giolqls, tboup
few outside groups have
stepped into the presidential
election and tOOse 1hat have
have spent little mOney.
The Republican Nll.ional
Committee, however, ended
June with 13 times lllOI'e
money in the bank than tbe
Democratic
National
Committee. The RNC bad
$53 million cash on hand to
the DNC's $4 million. Bodl
parties arc allowed to asSi.•
their presidential candidates
with coordinated campaigns.
Obama pointed out !bat
both he and his wife have
been targeted by indqlendent ~ps and state party
orgaruzauons.
"So you k:oow, this isn't
speculative on my part," he
said. "I think: it's something
that we've seen in the past
and it's something that we
continue to be ·concerned
about."

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydail.yllentinel.com

Awarded for service

COLUMBUS - Dow Dalton Graham, 77,
of
Columbus, passed away June 21 , 2008.
_He was a U.S. ~ mrce Veteran WhC?fe he was a fighter
pilot, and also obtained the rank of MaJOr. He was a member of the Bexley Legion Post #430~
Mr. Graham was ~ in death by his parents, Renzie
and ~onaD:alton Graham, abd sister, Mary Margaret Harsin.
. He ts survtved by his loving wife of 50 years Marilyn Ann·
daughter, ~ (Don_) Grevenow; ~~gbter, Meg;u;
Grev:eoow; ruece, Dr. Jill Harsrn-Buscii; faithfuf companions,
R~, LuLu: and Rodney; and many -other dear friends.
Private family graveside service wil!l be held. Cards will
be &lt;q!preciated. Arrangements are by Schoedinger East
Chapel. 614-861-6268 . .

John Danicki, direc·
'tor at Gallipolis
Career College, was
recognized by GCC
President Robert L

Shirey for having
completed five years
of service at the col·
lege. Danicki began
his tenure as director
in June 2003. He is
a graduate of Lorain
County Community
College where he
received an AA in

Local Briefs

Business.

Administration and
The Ohio State
University where he
received a BS in

Clarification

Business ·

POMEROY - The Mark: A. Norton sentenced on a
stolen property charge in the Meigs County Common
Pleas Court recently is not the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Nolton of Pomeroy.
The individual sentenced is 21 years ,old and resides in
Columbus. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Norton is 46
and resides in Lanesville, lnd.

Coroner identifies Ohio
·man killed in gas accident
. MIDDLETOWN (AP) - . resulted . in the release of
Police ba!le identified a mao "hydrogen sulfite. The poisu-.
who was ltilled after being nous ,gas can, in high doses,
overcome lly toJtic gas at a severely attack the nervous
waste w.ater ?reatment plan? system.
in Middletown.
Rogers was an employee
The Wmen County at the plant. An autopsy is
Coroner's Office says 45- being conducted to deter·
year-old Thomas Rogers mine the cause of death.
died ~aturday after a chemThe Ohio Environmental
. leal reaction at United Agency plans 'to investigate
Waste Water Services the plant on Monday.

•

bowed
out
of
lhe
Democratic contest on June
7, re:ported a $22.5 million
debt at the end of May, more
WASHINGTON
Hillary Rodham Clinwn than half of which was a per·
needs Barack Obama' s sonalloan to her presidential
JfW•.,
donors to help retit'e her siz- campaign. She lent her cam~able debt Obama, who's pai1gn nearly $2.2 1Iii!lion in
forgoing public funds fiJI' May, bringing her total per. Letkrs 10 the editor are welC!Offle. n,_,
''ld be less lhe general election., ootild sonal investment in ,the cam. .K~
use her donors to boost his p.aign to $12.175 · million.
If-a JOO words. Alllenm are subject to editillg, must be ample fundraising.
She had $3.4 million cash on
signed, and include addreu and .telephone fiUiflbe,r. No
The · two
fQrmer hand [eft for primary spendruuignd letters will be. published. Leners shQuld be irr Democratic presidential ing. She also-had more than
good laSte, addressing issues, "!:?'. personolities. Letters of rivals ft1ed their May $23 million for the . general
thonlcs to organizations and indl:viduals will .not .b e accept- fundraising re~ Friday election, money her camttl for puhlicatiOfl.
-hers awash m fed ink: and · paign cannot use.
his lacking the higb.uar . "It's far more productive
siz.zle of his previous for Obama to have Hillary
monthly repotts.
· I 00 percent focused and
But if .the two ha"le an itch engaged . on campaigning
(USPS 21HIO)
to soothe, they're not yet and raising money for ;bim
,:• Reader Services
.
scratching each Qtber'j in the fall rather than having
Ohio ~~Hthtnu
· back:s.
to do fundraisers at the
'
CoiiKiioll PollcJ'
Publilhed -...ry dtliiOOil, ~
·
How
the
~gns can same time to retire her
pvt •MIIin oonoem in all is to lhrouth Fridoy, 111 Coull St-.
said
Hassan
1111.......... If ~ llnow "' .. """" POftiOI'OI', Ohio. Second-c- help eac:bother will •b e a like- debt,"
·
!)'
ttopic
'
w
hen
·
~
~
~
Nemall"P,
a
C_
l
inton
nation... lloly. cMI the .-room .. (7-40)
poo!OOO
.poid.
~Dnm' OOill1llOe m wart- al finance charrman.
Ill .... 1"he • •
It Praes and
.-~58.
ing, meets with Clintoo and
"It would clearly make
ttw ONo N:- : 1 1 • : c•tloi •·
•l'uL ' . Send ....... ODI"NCsome
,of
ber
top
fundnliliei'S
life
easier for those of us in
o..-....tunl••
''
tlonlt&gt; Tho·lloll!l-. 111 COull
on
Thursday
in
Washington.
the
· Clinton "'orld who
(1401..., ..
-.Pomeroy, Olio 4571111.
'
The
two
dlen
plan
w
camWQuld
lik:e to help S.enator
0
1 lniWP . 12-.-:
paign togethrr 011 Friday. But Obama raise the types of
.
..... tpllun .......
so file, die Obama camp has monies that are necessa.rY
l?y
OM-.?51
'11.27
-not devised a Clinton .assis- from the Clinton world to
'115.14
tance plan.
be in a position to point out,
''==~·Cl~""""'" ·Hc:~&amp;llich, Ext. 12 OM,._
o.lr
.
50'
· ~~oW~-. Ext. 14
Asked on Friday whelher 'Look what Senator Obama
•,..
Ienior. Cil?aMI Obama's
fmanct team had has done for Senator
,, .... - Selgent, Ext. 13
OM "*Ill! •
'1 0.27
I
discussed
ways to .ease Clinton.'"
OM,_,
'1Da.IO ,
'
SlIt
I
C
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lhadd
.nl
i1
.
a
Clinton's deb! when it met
Obama .had his ·weakest
Advertising
night
in
Chicago,
fundraising
monlh of the
Thursday
.;o
....., Dave Hani&amp;. Ext. 15 oCriptlon
., . . Oily · No IIUb1¥ moll pool\- In Obama communications year, collecting $22 million
: a u .....,_oavt~,Ext16
director Robert Gibbs said and ending the month with
• .Mir Clatl&lt;, Ext. 10
"those
meetings have $43 million cash on .hand
. . . .dill ~!on
focused more 011 what these and $304,000 in debts. But
~
two can do together.to bring $10 million of his available
1 a ....,...
'32.26
the party together and move cash can only be spent in
.26 Weelai
"64.20
it forward than it has on the fall after the party
52 Weelai
'127.11
these logistical details."
national conventions, leavOld I? ile ...,.. County
Clinton and her baclc.ers, ing $33 million for the sum13 Weeka
'53.~
meanwhile, are eqer ~
mer months. Obama's deci2&amp; Weeka .
'107.10
some help.
s1o
bypass the general
-52 WMica
'21'421
. . ..n.,...;Miltllel.com ,
1be fonner llrSflady, who . election public finance

:

Obifuaries

At last, common sense on the economy

The·Daily Sentinel

2

Monday, .June 23, 2008

•event has been organized
Although bringing a
by members of the cover dished, your own
Methodist cl!urob in the · 'table iillrvice and drink: is
past, any church member of appreciated,
it's
not
an:y denomination is invited required and organizers
to join in the planning .or hope to have extra for those
simply to attend the service. uneJJ.pected guests who
"We' re all brothers and were moved to join in the
sisters in Christ," Wolfe service.
· Rev. Brent W.atlion, lhe·
said. "The gathering isn' t'
3b?ut 'b eiqg a Methodis.t «
assi&amp;tant disQict uperinbetng~
from
another · ·tetldent f0r the Foothills
chUllCh. It's about ,coming DiktOGt of the United
't ogether along the river in Methodist Church, will
fellowship."
deliver 1be mes~. 1be
The missiOI! ofllhe galher- service is described its
ing, .according to the com- .casual.andwi.U feature chi!munity cpurches currently dren' s \time with the Bible
involved, is "to come Bear fRun East ,L etaJt
together •to witness ta the UMC .as wen as commuGospel mess~e that we are Ilion:. There wiU be -no
all one in Christ."
offering taken. There will
1be event is held outside to also be a perfonnance of
invite not only curiosity and combined choirs. Anyone
spectacle .but people to join wishing to participate in
in 'IUidm the tents which will the choir or event should
be set up ille3T the stage at contact Rev. John ·Gilmore
Star Mill Pane. Those attend- at 949-2229.
Wolfe said sbe hopes the
ing should bring a lawn chair
and . if the,Y'd like, ·they're event con~ues to gro~ ~tQ
asked ,to bring a .covered dish an even btgger Christian
·to share for the potluck: fol- celebration to engage pen- ,
-loW.in,g the service. •
ple in the community.

Scholars ~rom Page At
Rio Grande and Hoelting
The three bachelor's
dtpee ~grams are in pub-= Coll~ge are loo~g into
lie administration, archeolo- holding additional bache-·
gy, and wildlife and fish con- lor's degree programs at
servatien and management. Hocking, including a music
Many of the stuCients in the business program that could
tbree programs are moving begin ,as eady .as in the fall.
!light into jobs after gradua- of 2009.
This s~. the public
lion. while others are continuing their educations in mas- administration ~gram will
become a hytnid course,
ter's degree projlraDis.
Public administration pro- which means that it will.
gram students Susan Swain £ombine traditional classand Stacy Kukura, for room instruction and onex~le, · both received 'line coursework.
Students will be able to do
·scholarships and will be
most
of tbejr work on-line
atU:nding master's degree
aocording
to · :their own
pro~s.
Rio Grande student schedules, and. will only
Christopher Nelson will be have to attend classes .at
enteriqg a master's degree Hocking a ·few times each
program in archeology and ·semester. This. will allow
will •be serving as a graduate 'JiliE 'Sllldents from raround
assistant .at the Michigan ·the region to .enroll in the
Institute of Technology. His program. and will he!p all
wife, Natasha Nelson, also students fit the classes in
recently completed the Rio around their work and famiGrande progr~ in arch~J­ ly responsibilities.
AbeD is also talk:in~ with
ogy at Hoelting and will
officials
from W~n
enter the master 's degree
program at Ohio University. State Comm~ty Coliege
111 addition, student Aaron in Marietta about offering a
Goolex, who just completed bachelor's degree program
the wildlife and fish con- in social wott there, and is
servation and management also looking at .other proprogram, wiU ,be serving as grams in the region.
On May 17, Rio Grande
a graduate· assistant in the
celebrated
the work of the
master' s degree program at
students
taiting
£lasses at
. Marshall University.
"'lbe students in our pro· Hocking by holding a 1ungrams are moving into some cheon reception for them .at
of the top master's degree the Rio Grande campus.
"We're just really, really
programs in the region," s31d
Registrar Mark Abell . "lt pleased with the pro~ss
says a lot about the quality of our pmgtams have made at
our students, and it says a lot Hock:ing College," Abell
.
said. .
about our progrdllls."

Administration. He
resides in Chi?licothe
with his wife Bonnie.
Submitted photo

Meigs Local announces honor.roll
POMEROY
The Cox,
Charles
Crow,
names of Meigs Local Danielle Cullums, Michael
. School students malting the Davis,
Wesley
Davis,
bolior roll forthe fijjil nine- L.litosha Diddle, Tyler
week:&amp; grading period of the Dunham, Chelsey Eads,
school year bav-e l&gt;een Jazzmait Fish, Rebecca
announced by William Fortner, Tiffany Francis,
Bucldey, superintendent.
Emalee Glass, Destiny
Griffis, Karl Gueltig, Cody
'l1ley 11ft • ro~~ows:
Hanning,
Stephanie
Hoalcraft, Marlee Hoffman,
eJgS
.
Cassidy Hood, William
Hysell,
Taylor
Jones,
Jeffrey Kimes, Amelia
Grade 6: Morgan Barton, King,
Austin
King,
Shandi Beaver, Breanne Samantha King, Steven .
Bonnett, 1\imberly Casci, Mahr, Tanisha McKinney,
·Olivia Cremenas, Kimberly Lawrence
McQuaid,
. Alyson Kassandra Mullins, Kasey
Cunningham,
Dettwiller, Devan Dugan, Napper, Brady Norville,
Brittany Durst, Meredith Ben
Reed,
Dijaun
Gaul, Angel Green, David Robinson,
Jennifer
Hayes, Bradley Helton, Robinson, Nathan Rothgeb,
Taylor Hood,
Abigail Jeffry Roush, Michelle
. Houser, Jamee Johnson, Sanetiield, Zachary Sayre,
Sara Klein, Brandon Mahr, MacKenzie Sellers, Kay Ia
Morgan Marnati, Joshua Shane, Zachary Sheets,
Myers, 'trenton Prater, Tyler Cayelynn Smith, Jesse
Qualls, 'Selena Reynolds, Smilh, Elizabeth Sprouse,
C..lid_y J,bHe. 'M.~an Tuv.is TJII)kett, Ryan Tayler,
Russell, Alexis Schwab, c Bethaney Ulbrich, Victoria
Briana Smith, Samantha Wolfe, Victoria Zeigler.
:Spires, Carolann Stewart,
'CIIrly Taylor, Anthony
Vance, Kyle VanMeter,
James M. Waltets, tara
Waher-Kuharic, Me~an
W:ayland, Cooy Wb1te,

M. Middle
Sdtool

Danilt'W'tll.
Gl'lllle 1: Braden Baker,
Matthew ,Casci, Vanessa
Crane, Alyssa Cremeans,
Robert Dillon, Joshua
Otmham, William Duvall,
Megan
Dyer,
Haley
English, Delilah Fish,
Mercadies George., Shana
Gorslene. Karlie Hall,
Edward Hendricks, Justin
fl$inger, Corey King,
Hannah King, Anthony
McColllllll,
Kirsten
· McGuire., Jonian Meadows,
Tyler Pab0n, .Shawnella
Patterson, Rachel Payne,
Emma Perrin, Tess Phelps,
Keana Robinson, Kaitlin
Russell, Ashleigh Sayre,
Bethany Spaun, Kyrie
S )!Iann, William Taylor,
Madelyn Thoinas, Dustin
Ulbrich,
Halley
Will,
Autumn Williams.
Grade 8: Cheyenne
Beaver, Blair Bussey, ·Bruno
Casci, Olivia ,Cleek, Suzy

·Meigs
Intermediate
School

Grade 3: Layne Acree,
Grant
Adams,
Katie
Allman, Robbie B ack:us,
Tyler Billingsley, Taylor
Boggs, Grant Canady, Cory
Caruthers, Amanda Cole,
Sk:yla Coleman, Dakota
Connolly, Xavier Cooper,
Sarah Curl, Kylie Dillion,
Aaron Dunham, Madison
Dyer, Rainey Fitchpatrick:,
N1cole Folmer, Cynthia
Frederick, Emily Graham,
Alii Hatfield. Emily ~·
Brook:e Hettinger, Gracte
Hoffman, · Trae
Hood,
Morgan . Houtz, Keaton
Huffman, Luk:e Humphrey,
Courtney Jo~&amp;. Hannah
Kennedy, Jared Kennedy,
Alexis King, Kylie King,
John
Little,
Morgan
Lodwick:, Dillon Mahr,
Hannah · McKinley, Stacy
Michael, Makya Milhoan,
Alexis Moon, Danielle
Morris, Elena Musser,

Karlee Norton, Brendan
Nuscis ,. Dillyn Ohlinger,
Oevyn Oliver, Michael
Plumm, Raeline 'Reeves,
Mariah Reynolds, Jake
Roush, Keynath Rowe ,
Kamryn Smith, Savannah
Smith, K. J. Tracy, Crystal
Unbank:es, Abby Watson,
Dylan Weaver, Brittany
Whitt, Dianne Willard,
Tyler Williams, . Lindsay
Wise, Hanna Young.
Grade 4: Halley Barnes,
Brennan Bell, Lauren
Booth, . Dalton Bush, lace
Casto, Eric Chapman, Justin
Coe, David Doerfer, Haiden
English, Marisela EspinozaCruz, Courtney Evans,
Tyler Fields, Sadie Fox,
Evan George, Katie Gilkey,
Miranda Gillilan, Madison
Greene, Matthew Hawltins,
Austin Hendrick:s, Tracy
Herdman, Tyson Herman,
Lexie Houdashelt, Bradley
Hysell, Jacltie Jordan,
Macenzie Kennedy, Wyatt
King, Drayden IWpec, 18
Kom, Colton Lilly, Patricia
Master5, Dustin McGhee,
Collin Neutzling, Adriahna
Patterson, Lara Perrin,
.Kelsie Powell, Gregory
Priddy, Chase ' Scarberry,
Cory Scarberry, Kalynn
Seymour, Jack Starcher,
Krista
VanNest,
Ben ·
Wilson, Haley Wilson,
Jaden Wolfe, Sonja Yo.ung.
Gnde 5: Chaisty Abbott,
Jordyn Arnold, Drama
Amott, McKayla Barrett,
Destinee Black:weU, Jacob
Braley, Sariah Brink:er,
Alexis Coleman, Shaun
Coleman, Amber.Davidson,
Emily ~m. Gage Gilk:ey,
Marissa Hall, Rheanna
Harmon, Mitchell Howard,
Katelyn Hysell, · Haley
Kennedy, A. J. Kopec, Nick:
·Lester, Mitchell Metts, Bre
Mitchell, Keni Moon,
Lindsay Patterson, Ty
Phelps, Brooke Reynolds,
Bobby Rice, Courtney
Robinson,
Deshawna
Robinson, Hailey Roush,
· Adam Russell, Breanna
Thompson,
Mikayla
VanMatre, Tori Walker,
Issac Watson, Austin Wolfe,
Collen Young.

Meigs High
School

.'

Freshman:
Alaine
Arnold, Olivia Bevan;
Cameron Bolin, Shannon
McLaughlin,
Katey
Patterson, Kasey Roush;·
Connor Swartz, Shannon
Walz.er-Kuharic.
Sophomore:
Tyler
Andrews, Jeremy Ash,
Lauren Barnes, Dawn
Bi ssell, lan Bullington~:
Kristine Davis, Autunui
Ebersbach, Darby Gilmore,
Ashley
Good,
Scott'
Kennedy, Annisha Kopec;
Erin Patterson, Ashley .
Smith.
Junior: ·Jamie Bailey•.
Clayton
Bolin,
Chad·
Bonnett, Crock:ett Crow,Le' Anna Davis, Jennifer:
Fife, Shawnt~y Garnes;
Amanda Gilkey, Amber
Hockman, Lian Hoffman,
Jessica Holliday, Johanna
I:Juber. Benjamm HtMIK41,
Amanda Larldris, Cara·
Lawless, Morgan Lentes;
Jahnna Lydic, Mason Metts,
Carl Murnahan, Lindsey
Myers,
April
Oiler,
Alexandria Patterson, Erin
Perltins, Ripley Raubenolt,
Calee Reeves, Sarah Roach,
Amorette Salser, Kelsey· ·
Sauters,
Chelsea·
Smallwood, Megan Smith.·
Caitlin Swartz,· Kimberly
Swisher, James Welsh,
Catie Wolfe
Senior: Jacob Barnes,
Amy Barr, Talisha · Beha,.
Danielle Bing, Pamela
Bowles, Emily Davis, ·
Brandon Dodson, Rebecca
Hanstine, Nicole Hill, Kyle
Hoover, Corey Jarvis,
Joshua Johnson-McKinney.
Bradley Jones, Kaylee
Kennedy.
Bryce
Laudermilt, Kirk Legar,,
Tiffany McDonald, Lindsay
McKinney, Shane Milhoan,Charlo.tte Miller, Breanna
Mitcbell, Chelsea Noel,
Joshua .
Nottingham,
Cassandra Patterson, Tony
Roush, Jessica Sheets.
Merissa Snyder, Steven.
Stewart, William Stewart,
Alexa Venoy, Patti Vining;
Craig Willford

Bloodmoblle visits Meigs Senior Center
POMEROY Thirty
three units of blood were
collected when the Red
Cross Bloodmobile visited
the Meigs Senior Center
Wednesday.

O.O..Swere:
Pomeroy
Allen
Dow.nie, Harley Johnson,
RobeJt Rlun~. .Gerald
Rou~t, !Baroar.a Smith,
David King, ~Taylor,

Gregory White, Stephen
King, Raymond Jewell,
Mary Voss, Joyce Hall,
Barbara Matthews Crow,
and Charlotte VanMeter.
Middleport Norma
Wilcox, Donald Thomas,
Donna Hawley,and Timothy
Smilh.
.
Rutland - Ray Mueller
and Phyllis Moeller.
Long Bottom - Uri&gt;an

Graf, Judith Graf, Ivan
Powell,
and
Richard
Chapell, II. ·
I'
Racine - David Zirkle,
Barbara Dugan, Marsha
Barnhart, Mary Bush and
Rebecca Ours.
Vinton
Coleen
Murray-Smith.
Harrisonville ~ Margaret
Ne31, George Neal, and Jeff
Bale.

Meeting rrom Page At
counties are scheduled and
study results SJ?.I:cific to
those counties will be presentod. 1lbe ineetings are as
follows: &gt;6;30~June 25,
Tri-County
Center,
· Nelsonvilk; 7 p.m., July 10,

CH McKenzie Ag. Center,
Gallipolis; 6:30 p.m., July
29,
New
Boston
Commu,nity Center, New
Boston; 6:30 p.m., July 31,
Briggs Lawrence County
Library, Ironton.

RSVP volunteers assist- ·
ing at the bloodmobile
were Peggy Harris, Ken
Harris, Helen Bodimer,
Juanita
Roush,
Polly
Curtis,
and
Virginia.
MichaeL
Next visit of the blood- ·
mobile to the Meigs Senior
Center
will · be
on
Wednesday, Aug . 20, I :30
- 6:30p.m.

GRA"'D
'
,, '" .
~

.

~ ~·

SltOW1WES FOil MON•. _

IHE LOIH~~~~ Jlf~~ 1:11,. Jtl,
Pf.lFOIMNi U l'St1')11U

INTO THE WOODS

GET
S!IAlT' llf.\.11

a

tti,1S,ti.MI,

Ill, Is, .....

June27 &amp; 28
7:00pm

IHERU!EII'ING'•'

June 29th
3:00pm
llbPc &amp; l,yrica by

... Ollce: 428 2nd,.....
OH (740) --...RTS

....
...

Jtl,.,.• .

St1pllen Senddhelm
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·-

�/

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, June 23t 2008.

BrOonull

ecooomy is "Dol just bad, i( unemployed and the ·eOOno.is run-fo.--4he-hills tenible." my was shrinkiqg, is patent·
The polling numbers 011 ly absurd.
WASHING1UN - An
As for any comparisons to
unlikely,
man-bites-dog consumer confidence are
now the lowest in ~ recent recessions, one need
Stol}' recmtly appeamj 011
tbe front page o( One of our decades. Gallup's surveys go back: to the spring of
natioiJ 's most libel'al news- find that the number of. 1980 wben Jimmy Carlter's
papers, as~g that the Americans who lhink the . .economy was heading soulh
U.S. economy is not as bad ooonomy is getting worse and lhe unemployment rate
has risen to 87 peroent. had risen to 7.5 peroent and
as
le think..
~Washington Post, a Uberal Democrats, Wall infiation was 14.4 peroent.
left -leaning newspaper dlat Street aitics of the adminis- The natiomd jobless ate
persistently
paints
a tration aDd eoooomic blog- . today is · 5.5 per&gt;cent
gloomy pictDre of the ' gers on the Internet routine- (between 4 peroent and 5
country's economy, even ly ll1llke comparisons ro that peroent in many states} and
before its descent into the mammoth economic disas- inflation is at 4.2 peroont,
subprime debacle, under• tcr of the 1930s, .the Great with the core rate (minus
· volatile energy and food
went a conversion of sorts Depression.
"But lhe reality is differ- prices) at less than 2 perlast week. It decided to
tak:e a fresh look at die fun• ent. According to the most cent. ·
The dec'line in bousing
dament3Is of our economy broad measures of how the
and concluded that com- economy is doing. it's oot values is perhaps the
parisons to past recessions all that grim." Irwin states biggest culprit malting
increasingly
and depressions were flatly. He's right. Yes, ,the . Americans
economy
is
soft.
Yes,
the
pessimisticabouuheeoonoexaggerated, if not downgroWih rate has slowed. 'ies, my. That has fed fear that as
right silly.
Readers of this column the financial lll.adets have ~elati'&lt;e net worth bas
!mow that I bave long railod been rattled by the boasing declined, so wiU overall
against the gloom and and credit crunch, and the cons11mer spending, which
accounts for two--thinis · of
doomers. while champi- spike in oill and gas prices.
But with everything that the economy. But it d01;sn't
oning our economy's ineJJ.·
haustible resilience, exuber- has been thrown at it - the affect it at all, as Irwin aptly
ance and competitive spirit, subprime housing ooUapse, notes, citing a study by
subsequent ,credit Wellesley CoHege econoas well as its ability to the
recover against any and all crunch, sk:yr"cketing oil mist Karl E. Case, who
challenges. That's why .prices and reooFd fuel oosts compared spending habits
with changes in hou·sing
Wa~thingmn Post repo!ter !!t 1he puJhp _. this -eoonoNeil Irwin's story last my is holding up mucli bet- values. Homeowners, r eelWednesday ,c ame as a · ter than it has in previous. ing wealthier, will spend
breath of fresh ai£. It's a reoessions. Uaemployment more as lhose ·values· ·rise,
gutsy,
against-the-grain remains historically low by but dwy don't spend less
reexamination
of · t:he most measures (far below when they fall
Wall Street economists
biggest eleclion issue in the ·paSt recessions) and, all but
oountry lha.t puts the num- overl~ed by critics, lhe David Malpass, is a realist
bers into a sharper and more .economy is still growing by with an optimistic outlook
nearly I percent in ·t he first who sees economic probhonest context.
Under the headline, "Why - quarter. T() make any seri- lems ahead of us as wen as,
We're Gloomier Than the ous comparisons with lhe more importantly, opportu·
Ecooomy," Irwin ridicules Great Depression in 1ihe nities for growth. He worthe sky-is-falling view held 1930s, when more than one- ries about inflation through
by most Americans that lhe thifd of the workforce was 2009, · even if the dollar

111 Cowl Slit It.~. OhiO

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992~2157
-.my' '']rw I lltillll.com

· Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congrus sludl nudee no law respecting 4ft
otJJIIIislunmt of rdigilnt, or ,.lti6iti•g 1M
.fru anrise tluruf; or a6riJgmg dee .fruJsm
of spucla, or of dee press; or tlu right of 1M
people peaaab1r to assemllk, atul to petitiDn
du GoM'Itmmt for 11 mlrus ofgrieHffUS.
- The Flrlt Amendment to lhe u.s. Constftution

TODAY
IN HISTORY
•

Today is Monday, June 23, tbe 174tb day of 2008. 'l'bore
are 191 days left in tbe year.
. Today's Highlight in History: On June 23, 1868,
Chrisrop~J« Latham ·Sholes received a patent for his ''Type·
Writer." .
On this dale: In 1757, forces of tile East India Co. led by
Robert Clive de~ tfiJops loyal to the proviiicw governor of Bengal in the Battle of Plassey, which effectively
matted lhe beginning of British ooloniallule in India.
, In 1836, Congress approved the Deposit Act. which ·contained a provision for turning over surplus federal revenoe
tO tbe states.
: In 1931 , aviators Wiley Post and Harold Gatty toQk oft"
from New York: on a round-the-world ffight d!at lasted
.
eight days and 15 hours.
In 1938, the Civib\erooautics Authority was established.
. In 1947, the Senaie joined the House in overriding
President Truman's veto of the Taft-Hanley Act, designed
to limit the power of organiwl labor.
·
· In 1967, President Johnson and Soviet Premier Alexei
Kosygin held the first of two meetings at Glassboro State
College in New Jersey.
In 1969, Warren E. BulgCf was sworn in ·as chief justice
by tbe man he was succeeding, Earl Warren.
In 1972, President Nixon and White House chief ofstaff
H.R. Haldeman diswssed a plan to use the CIA to
obstruct the FBI'..s Watergate investigation. (Revelation of
the qq&gt;e recolding of this conversation sparked Nixon's
resignation in 1974.)
. In 1985, all 329 people aboard an Air-India Boeing 747
were k:illed when the plane ctaShed into the Atlantic Ooean
near Ireland. after a bomb on board e~
e •.:..:~..~1a~s-4~
• Five:c~Adi~S•
.
. lllllion. ~ __.
...... ~ '
-..
·
s
es .... ---~ .. .,.,.,.
sn!dtms based in part on ~&lt;~re. 'l'be Sllpieme Court said .the
govemmentoouldrequire public libraries toequipcomput·
en; with anti-pot11Qg£3pby ftltecs. Demoaai Howald Dean
formally announced his presidential campaign. Maynard '
f;Mboo Jr., the first black mayor of Atlanta, died in
Washington. D.C., at age 65.
.
. One year ago: Searchers in Summit County, Ohio, found
tbe body of Jessie Davis, a missing 26-year-old pregnant
WOJDaD. {Bobby Cutts Jr., a former Canton police officer
who was the father of Davis• unborn child, was later oonvictcd ofmurder and aggravated IDlllder· and sentenced to
57 years to life in prison.)
Today's Birtbdays: Singer Diana Trask is 68. Musical
condnctOI' James Levine is 65. Actor Ted Shack:elford is 62.
ActOI' Bryan Brown is 61. Supmne Court Juslioe Olarence
Tboolas ts 60. "American Idol" judge Randy Jacbon is 52.
Acu'ess Frances McllotJnand is 51. Actor Paul La Greca is
46. Rhythm-aDd-blues singer Chi00 DelllQe is 38. AlliRss
Selma Blair is 36. Rod singer KTTunstaifis 33. Rhythmand-blues singer Vrrgo Wtlliams (Ghostowns Dis) is 33. ·
Singer-songwriter Jason Mlllz is 31. Rod singer DuJiy is
24. Country singer Katie Anniger is 17.
,
: Thought for Today: 'Qne today is wonh two tomorrows."- Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790).

D

Clinto'n, Obama could use each other~ help
·Br-Kut••••

ASSOC\lTED PRESS WRITER

iSI!IoJu
.

· The Daily Sentinel

2

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Jlriccs·

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LETTERS T 0 T
· · EDIT 0 R
. · '·

-··Ill'·

rises. Tbe impact of tax
increases on labor, divi,dends, capital gains, ~tance and lhe altemabve
minimnm tax that are due to
expire in 2010 is a huge
concem. too. Still. Malpass
foresees "a reasonably Solid
g-lobal expansion in 2009,"
noting that the U.S . .eoooomy "bas an un~yillg ~- :
diness" because tt lS ~driwn
by small businesses and a .
flexible labor foroe.
He thinks "dde current·
rebound wiiHave legs and
the heavy investments made
~obally in recent years Will ·
pay off." How much of .a
rebound? Expect I paceat
1.6 2 peroent growdt in tbe
second quarter and 3 percent in the~ second balf of
· llhe year.
But · ri,ght · now, Neil
b:win's excellent .article
· notwithstanding, Americans
relllllin as gloomy as ever. ·
That mood is unlikely 10 .
change mytime ·soon as .
long as oil and gas prices
·k:eep rising and the
Democrats conti.nue to
block GOP proposals to
produce our way out 00' dlis
mess.
. Oba.mi"smitten
Democrats still mink dult
Americans are ~sed to
drilling for more oil in cJlfshore fields and in wildcl'ness areas .and d!at dley
blame U.S. oil companies
for higher gas
B).lt Amencans know
better. The latest Gdlup
poM finds that they ·support ·
such -dril~g by 57 percellt
to 41 percent ancf those'
wbo blame big oil bas
plunged from 34 percent to
20 peroent.

·'

r........

f

system allows him to use
left QVer primary money in
the fall campaign.
Republican John MoCain,
who secured bis party's
nomination in March, raised
$21 million in May .and had
$31.6 million in dte bank
The figures 1place him virtually on same finallcial foot.jog as Obama- a level of
parity d!at would have been
unimaginable just a few .
months ago.
Still., Obama man~~ged to
raise slightly more than
McCain -w.bile still fighting
his way· out of the
Democratic
primary.
McCain, on the other hand,
has been free to consOlidate
Republican support since he
clinched the nothloation
more than ·three inonths .ago
and has been on an actilo'e
fundraising schedule.
Overall, since the presidential campaigns began
last year, Obama has raised
$287 million. Clinton has
raised $209 mi Ilion and
McCain has raised $115
million.
Clinton
campaigned
actively thmugh the last
Democratic primaries on
June 3 before succumbing
to Obama and is !l!tiJeCtod to
have even greater deb! at
the end of this month. In a
call to donors on Thursday, ·
she said she would concentrate on paying off money
owed to vendors, not her
personal loans .
Of her $10 million in
debts to vendors, nearly half
- $4.6 million - is money
the campaign owes Clinton
adviser Mark Penn and his
· polling ftrm. Clinton report·
ed spending nearly S 19 million - more than $3 mil..

lion · on media advertising ·
and $3 million on phone
bank:s. She spent ll10H: than
$5 million -on travel.
·
· Obama reported SJW""'fing
$26.6 million in · MaY:His
heaviest spending was on
advertising - more than $4
million buying time for ·television comineJ:cials. Obama
had the most e.11,pensive payroll, spending $3.5 million
on his staff, more dian -twice
what Clinton spent and more ·
lhan six times what McCain
spent no his payroll
Obama on Friday defend·
ed his decision to be the
fJCSt major pany caodidv
.to tum down public funds in
the general election. He said
he is expecting McCain ,t o
have significant help from
the Republican hlty .and
from outside giolqls, tboup
few outside groups have
stepped into the presidential
election and tOOse 1hat have
have spent little mOney.
The Republican Nll.ional
Committee, however, ended
June with 13 times lllOI'e
money in the bank than tbe
Democratic
National
Committee. The RNC bad
$53 million cash on hand to
the DNC's $4 million. Bodl
parties arc allowed to asSi.•
their presidential candidates
with coordinated campaigns.
Obama pointed out !bat
both he and his wife have
been targeted by indqlendent ~ps and state party
orgaruzauons.
"So you k:oow, this isn't
speculative on my part," he
said. "I think: it's something
that we've seen in the past
and it's something that we
continue to be ·concerned
about."

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydail.yllentinel.com

Awarded for service

COLUMBUS - Dow Dalton Graham, 77,
of
Columbus, passed away June 21 , 2008.
_He was a U.S. ~ mrce Veteran WhC?fe he was a fighter
pilot, and also obtained the rank of MaJOr. He was a member of the Bexley Legion Post #430~
Mr. Graham was ~ in death by his parents, Renzie
and ~onaD:alton Graham, abd sister, Mary Margaret Harsin.
. He ts survtved by his loving wife of 50 years Marilyn Ann·
daughter, ~ (Don_) Grevenow; ~~gbter, Meg;u;
Grev:eoow; ruece, Dr. Jill Harsrn-Buscii; faithfuf companions,
R~, LuLu: and Rodney; and many -other dear friends.
Private family graveside service wil!l be held. Cards will
be &lt;q!preciated. Arrangements are by Schoedinger East
Chapel. 614-861-6268 . .

John Danicki, direc·
'tor at Gallipolis
Career College, was
recognized by GCC
President Robert L

Shirey for having
completed five years
of service at the col·
lege. Danicki began
his tenure as director
in June 2003. He is
a graduate of Lorain
County Community
College where he
received an AA in

Local Briefs

Business.

Administration and
The Ohio State
University where he
received a BS in

Clarification

Business ·

POMEROY - The Mark: A. Norton sentenced on a
stolen property charge in the Meigs County Common
Pleas Court recently is not the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Nolton of Pomeroy.
The individual sentenced is 21 years ,old and resides in
Columbus. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Norton is 46
and resides in Lanesville, lnd.

Coroner identifies Ohio
·man killed in gas accident
. MIDDLETOWN (AP) - . resulted . in the release of
Police ba!le identified a mao "hydrogen sulfite. The poisu-.
who was ltilled after being nous ,gas can, in high doses,
overcome lly toJtic gas at a severely attack the nervous
waste w.ater ?reatment plan? system.
in Middletown.
Rogers was an employee
The Wmen County at the plant. An autopsy is
Coroner's Office says 45- being conducted to deter·
year-old Thomas Rogers mine the cause of death.
died ~aturday after a chemThe Ohio Environmental
. leal reaction at United Agency plans 'to investigate
Waste Water Services the plant on Monday.

•

bowed
out
of
lhe
Democratic contest on June
7, re:ported a $22.5 million
debt at the end of May, more
WASHINGTON
Hillary Rodham Clinwn than half of which was a per·
needs Barack Obama' s sonalloan to her presidential
JfW•.,
donors to help retit'e her siz- campaign. She lent her cam~able debt Obama, who's pai1gn nearly $2.2 1Iii!lion in
forgoing public funds fiJI' May, bringing her total per. Letkrs 10 the editor are welC!Offle. n,_,
''ld be less lhe general election., ootild sonal investment in ,the cam. .K~
use her donors to boost his p.aign to $12.175 · million.
If-a JOO words. Alllenm are subject to editillg, must be ample fundraising.
She had $3.4 million cash on
signed, and include addreu and .telephone fiUiflbe,r. No
The · two
fQrmer hand [eft for primary spendruuignd letters will be. published. Leners shQuld be irr Democratic presidential ing. She also-had more than
good laSte, addressing issues, "!:?'. personolities. Letters of rivals ft1ed their May $23 million for the . general
thonlcs to organizations and indl:viduals will .not .b e accept- fundraising re~ Friday election, money her camttl for puhlicatiOfl.
-hers awash m fed ink: and · paign cannot use.
his lacking the higb.uar . "It's far more productive
siz.zle of his previous for Obama to have Hillary
monthly repotts.
· I 00 percent focused and
But if .the two ha"le an itch engaged . on campaigning
(USPS 21HIO)
to soothe, they're not yet and raising money for ;bim
,:• Reader Services
.
scratching each Qtber'j in the fall rather than having
Ohio ~~Hthtnu
· back:s.
to do fundraisers at the
'
CoiiKiioll PollcJ'
Publilhed -...ry dtliiOOil, ~
·
How
the
~gns can same time to retire her
pvt •MIIin oonoem in all is to lhrouth Fridoy, 111 Coull St-.
said
Hassan
1111.......... If ~ llnow "' .. """" POftiOI'OI', Ohio. Second-c- help eac:bother will •b e a like- debt,"
·
!)'
ttopic
'
w
hen
·
~
~
~
Nemall"P,
a
C_
l
inton
nation... lloly. cMI the .-room .. (7-40)
poo!OOO
.poid.
~Dnm' OOill1llOe m wart- al finance charrman.
Ill .... 1"he • •
It Praes and
.-~58.
ing, meets with Clintoo and
"It would clearly make
ttw ONo N:- : 1 1 • : c•tloi •·
•l'uL ' . Send ....... ODI"NCsome
,of
ber
top
fundnliliei'S
life
easier for those of us in
o..-....tunl••
''
tlonlt&gt; Tho·lloll!l-. 111 COull
on
Thursday
in
Washington.
the
· Clinton "'orld who
(1401..., ..
-.Pomeroy, Olio 4571111.
'
The
two
dlen
plan
w
camWQuld
lik:e to help S.enator
0
1 lniWP . 12-.-:
paign togethrr 011 Friday. But Obama raise the types of
.
..... tpllun .......
so file, die Obama camp has monies that are necessa.rY
l?y
OM-.?51
'11.27
-not devised a Clinton .assis- from the Clinton world to
'115.14
tance plan.
be in a position to point out,
''==~·Cl~""""'" ·Hc:~&amp;llich, Ext. 12 OM,._
o.lr
.
50'
· ~~oW~-. Ext. 14
Asked on Friday whelher 'Look what Senator Obama
•,..
Ienior. Cil?aMI Obama's
fmanct team had has done for Senator
,, .... - Selgent, Ext. 13
OM "*Ill! •
'1 0.27
I
discussed
ways to .ease Clinton.'"
OM,_,
'1Da.IO ,
'
SlIt
I
C
IMii&amp;
lhadd
.nl
i1
.
a
Clinton's deb! when it met
Obama .had his ·weakest
Advertising
night
in
Chicago,
fundraising
monlh of the
Thursday
.;o
....., Dave Hani&amp;. Ext. 15 oCriptlon
., . . Oily · No IIUb1¥ moll pool\- In Obama communications year, collecting $22 million
: a u .....,_oavt~,Ext16
director Robert Gibbs said and ending the month with
• .Mir Clatl&lt;, Ext. 10
"those
meetings have $43 million cash on .hand
. . . .dill ~!on
focused more 011 what these and $304,000 in debts. But
~
two can do together.to bring $10 million of his available
1 a ....,...
'32.26
the party together and move cash can only be spent in
.26 Weelai
"64.20
it forward than it has on the fall after the party
52 Weelai
'127.11
these logistical details."
national conventions, leavOld I? ile ...,.. County
Clinton and her baclc.ers, ing $33 million for the sum13 Weeka
'53.~
meanwhile, are eqer ~
mer months. Obama's deci2&amp; Weeka .
'107.10
some help.
s1o
bypass the general
-52 WMica
'21'421
. . ..n.,...;Miltllel.com ,
1be fonner llrSflady, who . election public finance

:

Obifuaries

At last, common sense on the economy

The·Daily Sentinel

2

Monday, .June 23, 2008

•event has been organized
Although bringing a
by members of the cover dished, your own
Methodist cl!urob in the · 'table iillrvice and drink: is
past, any church member of appreciated,
it's
not
an:y denomination is invited required and organizers
to join in the planning .or hope to have extra for those
simply to attend the service. uneJJ.pected guests who
"We' re all brothers and were moved to join in the
sisters in Christ," Wolfe service.
· Rev. Brent W.atlion, lhe·
said. "The gathering isn' t'
3b?ut 'b eiqg a Methodis.t «
assi&amp;tant disQict uperinbetng~
from
another · ·tetldent f0r the Foothills
chUllCh. It's about ,coming DiktOGt of the United
't ogether along the river in Methodist Church, will
fellowship."
deliver 1be mes~. 1be
The missiOI! ofllhe galher- service is described its
ing, .according to the com- .casual.andwi.U feature chi!munity cpurches currently dren' s \time with the Bible
involved, is "to come Bear fRun East ,L etaJt
together •to witness ta the UMC .as wen as commuGospel mess~e that we are Ilion:. There wiU be -no
all one in Christ."
offering taken. There will
1be event is held outside to also be a perfonnance of
invite not only curiosity and combined choirs. Anyone
spectacle .but people to join wishing to participate in
in 'IUidm the tents which will the choir or event should
be set up ille3T the stage at contact Rev. John ·Gilmore
Star Mill Pane. Those attend- at 949-2229.
Wolfe said sbe hopes the
ing should bring a lawn chair
and . if the,Y'd like, ·they're event con~ues to gro~ ~tQ
asked ,to bring a .covered dish an even btgger Christian
·to share for the potluck: fol- celebration to engage pen- ,
-loW.in,g the service. •
ple in the community.

Scholars ~rom Page At
Rio Grande and Hoelting
The three bachelor's
dtpee ~grams are in pub-= Coll~ge are loo~g into
lie administration, archeolo- holding additional bache-·
gy, and wildlife and fish con- lor's degree programs at
servatien and management. Hocking, including a music
Many of the stuCients in the business program that could
tbree programs are moving begin ,as eady .as in the fall.
!light into jobs after gradua- of 2009.
This s~. the public
lion. while others are continuing their educations in mas- administration ~gram will
become a hytnid course,
ter's degree projlraDis.
Public administration pro- which means that it will.
gram students Susan Swain £ombine traditional classand Stacy Kukura, for room instruction and onex~le, · both received 'line coursework.
Students will be able to do
·scholarships and will be
most
of tbejr work on-line
atU:nding master's degree
aocording
to · :their own
pro~s.
Rio Grande student schedules, and. will only
Christopher Nelson will be have to attend classes .at
enteriqg a master's degree Hocking a ·few times each
program in archeology and ·semester. This. will allow
will •be serving as a graduate 'JiliE 'Sllldents from raround
assistant .at the Michigan ·the region to .enroll in the
Institute of Technology. His program. and will he!p all
wife, Natasha Nelson, also students fit the classes in
recently completed the Rio around their work and famiGrande progr~ in arch~J­ ly responsibilities.
AbeD is also talk:in~ with
ogy at Hoelting and will
officials
from W~n
enter the master 's degree
program at Ohio University. State Comm~ty Coliege
111 addition, student Aaron in Marietta about offering a
Goolex, who just completed bachelor's degree program
the wildlife and fish con- in social wott there, and is
servation and management also looking at .other proprogram, wiU ,be serving as grams in the region.
On May 17, Rio Grande
a graduate· assistant in the
celebrated
the work of the
master' s degree program at
students
taiting
£lasses at
. Marshall University.
"'lbe students in our pro· Hocking by holding a 1ungrams are moving into some cheon reception for them .at
of the top master's degree the Rio Grande campus.
"We're just really, really
programs in the region," s31d
Registrar Mark Abell . "lt pleased with the pro~ss
says a lot about the quality of our pmgtams have made at
our students, and it says a lot Hock:ing College," Abell
.
said. .
about our progrdllls."

Administration. He
resides in Chi?licothe
with his wife Bonnie.
Submitted photo

Meigs Local announces honor.roll
POMEROY
The Cox,
Charles
Crow,
names of Meigs Local Danielle Cullums, Michael
. School students malting the Davis,
Wesley
Davis,
bolior roll forthe fijjil nine- L.litosha Diddle, Tyler
week:&amp; grading period of the Dunham, Chelsey Eads,
school year bav-e l&gt;een Jazzmait Fish, Rebecca
announced by William Fortner, Tiffany Francis,
Bucldey, superintendent.
Emalee Glass, Destiny
Griffis, Karl Gueltig, Cody
'l1ley 11ft • ro~~ows:
Hanning,
Stephanie
Hoalcraft, Marlee Hoffman,
eJgS
.
Cassidy Hood, William
Hysell,
Taylor
Jones,
Jeffrey Kimes, Amelia
Grade 6: Morgan Barton, King,
Austin
King,
Shandi Beaver, Breanne Samantha King, Steven .
Bonnett, 1\imberly Casci, Mahr, Tanisha McKinney,
·Olivia Cremenas, Kimberly Lawrence
McQuaid,
. Alyson Kassandra Mullins, Kasey
Cunningham,
Dettwiller, Devan Dugan, Napper, Brady Norville,
Brittany Durst, Meredith Ben
Reed,
Dijaun
Gaul, Angel Green, David Robinson,
Jennifer
Hayes, Bradley Helton, Robinson, Nathan Rothgeb,
Taylor Hood,
Abigail Jeffry Roush, Michelle
. Houser, Jamee Johnson, Sanetiield, Zachary Sayre,
Sara Klein, Brandon Mahr, MacKenzie Sellers, Kay Ia
Morgan Marnati, Joshua Shane, Zachary Sheets,
Myers, 'trenton Prater, Tyler Cayelynn Smith, Jesse
Qualls, 'Selena Reynolds, Smilh, Elizabeth Sprouse,
C..lid_y J,bHe. 'M.~an Tuv.is TJII)kett, Ryan Tayler,
Russell, Alexis Schwab, c Bethaney Ulbrich, Victoria
Briana Smith, Samantha Wolfe, Victoria Zeigler.
:Spires, Carolann Stewart,
'CIIrly Taylor, Anthony
Vance, Kyle VanMeter,
James M. Waltets, tara
Waher-Kuharic, Me~an
W:ayland, Cooy Wb1te,

M. Middle
Sdtool

Danilt'W'tll.
Gl'lllle 1: Braden Baker,
Matthew ,Casci, Vanessa
Crane, Alyssa Cremeans,
Robert Dillon, Joshua
Otmham, William Duvall,
Megan
Dyer,
Haley
English, Delilah Fish,
Mercadies George., Shana
Gorslene. Karlie Hall,
Edward Hendricks, Justin
fl$inger, Corey King,
Hannah King, Anthony
McColllllll,
Kirsten
· McGuire., Jonian Meadows,
Tyler Pab0n, .Shawnella
Patterson, Rachel Payne,
Emma Perrin, Tess Phelps,
Keana Robinson, Kaitlin
Russell, Ashleigh Sayre,
Bethany Spaun, Kyrie
S )!Iann, William Taylor,
Madelyn Thoinas, Dustin
Ulbrich,
Halley
Will,
Autumn Williams.
Grade 8: Cheyenne
Beaver, Blair Bussey, ·Bruno
Casci, Olivia ,Cleek, Suzy

·Meigs
Intermediate
School

Grade 3: Layne Acree,
Grant
Adams,
Katie
Allman, Robbie B ack:us,
Tyler Billingsley, Taylor
Boggs, Grant Canady, Cory
Caruthers, Amanda Cole,
Sk:yla Coleman, Dakota
Connolly, Xavier Cooper,
Sarah Curl, Kylie Dillion,
Aaron Dunham, Madison
Dyer, Rainey Fitchpatrick:,
N1cole Folmer, Cynthia
Frederick, Emily Graham,
Alii Hatfield. Emily ~·
Brook:e Hettinger, Gracte
Hoffman, · Trae
Hood,
Morgan . Houtz, Keaton
Huffman, Luk:e Humphrey,
Courtney Jo~&amp;. Hannah
Kennedy, Jared Kennedy,
Alexis King, Kylie King,
John
Little,
Morgan
Lodwick:, Dillon Mahr,
Hannah · McKinley, Stacy
Michael, Makya Milhoan,
Alexis Moon, Danielle
Morris, Elena Musser,

Karlee Norton, Brendan
Nuscis ,. Dillyn Ohlinger,
Oevyn Oliver, Michael
Plumm, Raeline 'Reeves,
Mariah Reynolds, Jake
Roush, Keynath Rowe ,
Kamryn Smith, Savannah
Smith, K. J. Tracy, Crystal
Unbank:es, Abby Watson,
Dylan Weaver, Brittany
Whitt, Dianne Willard,
Tyler Williams, . Lindsay
Wise, Hanna Young.
Grade 4: Halley Barnes,
Brennan Bell, Lauren
Booth, . Dalton Bush, lace
Casto, Eric Chapman, Justin
Coe, David Doerfer, Haiden
English, Marisela EspinozaCruz, Courtney Evans,
Tyler Fields, Sadie Fox,
Evan George, Katie Gilkey,
Miranda Gillilan, Madison
Greene, Matthew Hawltins,
Austin Hendrick:s, Tracy
Herdman, Tyson Herman,
Lexie Houdashelt, Bradley
Hysell, Jacltie Jordan,
Macenzie Kennedy, Wyatt
King, Drayden IWpec, 18
Kom, Colton Lilly, Patricia
Master5, Dustin McGhee,
Collin Neutzling, Adriahna
Patterson, Lara Perrin,
.Kelsie Powell, Gregory
Priddy, Chase ' Scarberry,
Cory Scarberry, Kalynn
Seymour, Jack Starcher,
Krista
VanNest,
Ben ·
Wilson, Haley Wilson,
Jaden Wolfe, Sonja Yo.ung.
Gnde 5: Chaisty Abbott,
Jordyn Arnold, Drama
Amott, McKayla Barrett,
Destinee Black:weU, Jacob
Braley, Sariah Brink:er,
Alexis Coleman, Shaun
Coleman, Amber.Davidson,
Emily ~m. Gage Gilk:ey,
Marissa Hall, Rheanna
Harmon, Mitchell Howard,
Katelyn Hysell, · Haley
Kennedy, A. J. Kopec, Nick:
·Lester, Mitchell Metts, Bre
Mitchell, Keni Moon,
Lindsay Patterson, Ty
Phelps, Brooke Reynolds,
Bobby Rice, Courtney
Robinson,
Deshawna
Robinson, Hailey Roush,
· Adam Russell, Breanna
Thompson,
Mikayla
VanMatre, Tori Walker,
Issac Watson, Austin Wolfe,
Collen Young.

Meigs High
School

.'

Freshman:
Alaine
Arnold, Olivia Bevan;
Cameron Bolin, Shannon
McLaughlin,
Katey
Patterson, Kasey Roush;·
Connor Swartz, Shannon
Walz.er-Kuharic.
Sophomore:
Tyler
Andrews, Jeremy Ash,
Lauren Barnes, Dawn
Bi ssell, lan Bullington~:
Kristine Davis, Autunui
Ebersbach, Darby Gilmore,
Ashley
Good,
Scott'
Kennedy, Annisha Kopec;
Erin Patterson, Ashley .
Smith.
Junior: ·Jamie Bailey•.
Clayton
Bolin,
Chad·
Bonnett, Crock:ett Crow,Le' Anna Davis, Jennifer:
Fife, Shawnt~y Garnes;
Amanda Gilkey, Amber
Hockman, Lian Hoffman,
Jessica Holliday, Johanna
I:Juber. Benjamm HtMIK41,
Amanda Larldris, Cara·
Lawless, Morgan Lentes;
Jahnna Lydic, Mason Metts,
Carl Murnahan, Lindsey
Myers,
April
Oiler,
Alexandria Patterson, Erin
Perltins, Ripley Raubenolt,
Calee Reeves, Sarah Roach,
Amorette Salser, Kelsey· ·
Sauters,
Chelsea·
Smallwood, Megan Smith.·
Caitlin Swartz,· Kimberly
Swisher, James Welsh,
Catie Wolfe
Senior: Jacob Barnes,
Amy Barr, Talisha · Beha,.
Danielle Bing, Pamela
Bowles, Emily Davis, ·
Brandon Dodson, Rebecca
Hanstine, Nicole Hill, Kyle
Hoover, Corey Jarvis,
Joshua Johnson-McKinney.
Bradley Jones, Kaylee
Kennedy.
Bryce
Laudermilt, Kirk Legar,,
Tiffany McDonald, Lindsay
McKinney, Shane Milhoan,Charlo.tte Miller, Breanna
Mitcbell, Chelsea Noel,
Joshua .
Nottingham,
Cassandra Patterson, Tony
Roush, Jessica Sheets.
Merissa Snyder, Steven.
Stewart, William Stewart,
Alexa Venoy, Patti Vining;
Craig Willford

Bloodmoblle visits Meigs Senior Center
POMEROY Thirty
three units of blood were
collected when the Red
Cross Bloodmobile visited
the Meigs Senior Center
Wednesday.

O.O..Swere:
Pomeroy
Allen
Dow.nie, Harley Johnson,
RobeJt Rlun~. .Gerald
Rou~t, !Baroar.a Smith,
David King, ~Taylor,

Gregory White, Stephen
King, Raymond Jewell,
Mary Voss, Joyce Hall,
Barbara Matthews Crow,
and Charlotte VanMeter.
Middleport Norma
Wilcox, Donald Thomas,
Donna Hawley,and Timothy
Smilh.
.
Rutland - Ray Mueller
and Phyllis Moeller.
Long Bottom - Uri&gt;an

Graf, Judith Graf, Ivan
Powell,
and
Richard
Chapell, II. ·
I'
Racine - David Zirkle,
Barbara Dugan, Marsha
Barnhart, Mary Bush and
Rebecca Ours.
Vinton
Coleen
Murray-Smith.
Harrisonville ~ Margaret
Ne31, George Neal, and Jeff
Bale.

Meeting rrom Page At
counties are scheduled and
study results SJ?.I:cific to
those counties will be presentod. 1lbe ineetings are as
follows: &gt;6;30~June 25,
Tri-County
Center,
· Nelsonvilk; 7 p.m., July 10,

CH McKenzie Ag. Center,
Gallipolis; 6:30 p.m., July
29,
New
Boston
Commu,nity Center, New
Boston; 6:30 p.m., July 31,
Briggs Lawrence County
Library, Ironton.

RSVP volunteers assist- ·
ing at the bloodmobile
were Peggy Harris, Ken
Harris, Helen Bodimer,
Juanita
Roush,
Polly
Curtis,
and
Virginia.
MichaeL
Next visit of the blood- ·
mobile to the Meigs Senior
Center
will · be
on
Wednesday, Aug . 20, I :30
- 6:30p.m.

GRA"'D
'
,, '" .
~

.

~ ~·

SltOW1WES FOil MON•. _

IHE LOIH~~~~ Jlf~~ 1:11,. Jtl,
Pf.lFOIMNi U l'St1')11U

INTO THE WOODS

GET
S!IAlT' llf.\.11

a

tti,1S,ti.MI,

Ill, Is, .....

June27 &amp; 28
7:00pm

IHERU!EII'ING'•'

June 29th
3:00pm
llbPc &amp; l,yrica by

... Ollce: 428 2nd,.....
OH (740) --...RTS

....
...

Jtl,.,.• .

St1pllen Senddhelm
Book by ...IIIII Ulpine,

·-

�•

PageA6

COMM

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, June 23,

Imide
I

2~

, Wadr,aE T - USA, Pice 82

....

n- .._'tcwe . . dllndet,

Recent golf
tournament
raises funds
for meals
on wheels

Today's Forecast

CMp1' Q'

I

Caw, Gllluy draw 3.3,

High I ' - - ten'1pS

r. 86
Monday, June 23, 2008

.•

POMEROY
The
Meigs County Council on
Aging held its fi rst golf
IOUillament Saturday June
14, to mise .money for the
meals on wheels program
which helps local seniors
with their daily nutritional
needs.
The tournament. held at
Pine Hill's Golf course near
Pomeroy was a success raising almost $1,300. for the
program. Awards were
given to the top three plac1ng teams -. Jay Harris,
:Bryan Hoffman, Willie
.Johnson, and Donnie' Riffle,
'fmt; Adam McDaniel. John
Matson, David Justis, and
.Bill Justis, second; and
SUblnltled phOtO
:Bucky Dent, Terry Hupp, ·
John Stewan, and George Taking first in the Senior Citizens Center golf toumament were from the left, Willie
Johnson, Donnie Riffle, Jay Harris, and Bryan Hoffman.
Stewan, third.

Area nurses' educational options expand
· ATHENS
Ohio . health facilities and the uni- be offered at Flrirfield Bird, vice provost for uni- ..
· :University's School of versity,
Medi~;al
Gent11r
in V!lrsity outrCidt. "C~ng
Nursing will use a three-year,
The funds -to be divided Lancaster, wlllch.was chO:. opportunities for healtli$787,841 grant to lauuch an nearly equally over three sen forits ceatrallocation in ~ professionals by parte
innovative program that will years beginning this sum- the regioO: Plans call for nering across providers ,and
educate area nurses for mer - will help the School expanding the program to die university demomS.IJ3tcs.
acute&lt;are and family-practi- of Nursing accomplish two include other regional hos- what is possible in a , vecy
tioner specialties.
main goals, ·said Interim pitals, with Adena Regional exciting way. This grant:
. The Grow Our Own pro- Director Kathleen Rose- Medical
Center
near will ~ a vecy tJOSi:tivc;
gram will be offered in the Grippa: increase the region's Chillicothe committed to difference in our regtO!i." '·"'
Southeast Ohio hospitals resources for advanced participate in the program's
The School of Nursing .,
where the nurses currently nu(sing
training'
and third year.
provides courses to stUdents
work. Ohio University' s improve local retention of
Securin~ the grant was a
via
several · methods.
College of Health and nursing program graduates.
collahoratlve effort involv- Associate-degree courses
Human Services will use
"Ninety percent of·the stu- ing the university's College are offered in classrooms on
the. U.S. Department of dents in the School of · of Health and Human the university's Chillicothe,
Health and Human Services Nursing are local and plan to Services, home to the Zanesville and Southern
grant to enhance the exist- stay in southeastern Ohio. School of ·Nursing, and campuses. The. RN-to-BSN
ing nursing master's degree With the program available University Outreach, which program is offered excluprogram hy adding the spe- in their place of work, more oversees off-campus educit- sively online. Existing mas.
cialty options. The funds nurses will be able to seek an tiona! opportunities.
ter' s degree courses comalso will be used to add four advanced degree that in turn
"This collaboratipn ,is an ' bine classroom .and online
online courses to the mas- improves ~th care in our outs~ding example of w~ The
option in the
ter's program and to hire a traditionally underserved Ohio University reaching mastet•s·progr.am·will offer ,
coordinator• to oversee the area," Rose.Qrippa said
out to make edl!cation more courses at the hospitals
collaboration
between . Initially, the program will acceSliible," said Charles wbere' nurses
wodt.
.

new

on

.l'OUEIICII'-.-

aefl IJ•

dl-.. . Kyle Busch wiDs 5th race of season with victory in Sonoma

..::hoot w•r&amp;fty sporting ~ inYoMng
tNiml from . . . . ...:t GaiN countila.
. . . . ., ..... ;a
Leglan.
;

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*Columllus
77'1 56'

Post 128, 6 p.m.

ZW .ywas

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fdde .... Z7

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McArthur at Post 128, 6 p.m.

...

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- a t Post 128 ( - ). ,

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1

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Local Weather

Wea1he&lt; ~"'""" • AP

Martin homers
in Dodgers' 4-3
win over Indians

Thesday night... Partly
Monday ••• Mo s tly
sunny
in
the cloudy. Lows in the mid
moming ...Then beconting 50s. Northwest winds
mostly cloudy. A chance around 5 mph.
of showers. A · slight · Wednesday... M~stly
chance of thunde.r~torm~
nny= Hi ghJL.in ~ mid.
80s.
·
in the morning ...'fhen a
Wednesday
night...
cllance of. thuriderSlOOlls
iri the aftel;noon:, Hig\1!&gt;' j,p Mostly cloudy. Lows in
the uppet ;lOs. Wtst Win4s the upper 50s.
and
5 .to 10 '1I!Ph- ~~tim~ .of · Thursday
r.nn ~roent,. ·
· · Thursday night...Mostly .
M
'oolliJ.o.' u.;lill~ cloudy: A chance of showdoudy --~:;~ ers · and thunderstorms.
showers. · :·~~.;;· liki*'~· Highs in the mid 80s.
storms •.;.·
. ·• .the Lows in the lower 60s.
' •..• f'l"-:·'in
...
evening ... Then
partly Chance of rain 30 percent.
Friday
through
cloudy wilh a slight chance
of showers 'and""thlinder- Saturday night. .. Mo s~ly
storms after midnight: cloudy with a chance of
Lows ill the mid 50s. West showers and thunderwinds arouud' 5 mph in the storms. Highs ip the mid .
evening ...Becoming light 80s. Lows in the mid 60s.
and variable.· Chance of Chance. of rain 40 percent.
rain 40 percent.
Sunday... Mostly cloudy
Tuesday ... Mo s Uy with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs
su:~~~~~~i~in~lbe5 l~e~
81
t~ IO in the mid 80s. Chance of ·
.. ' rain 30 percent.

liT JaiNA Ftna
ASSOCI-'TEO PRESS

SONOMA, Calif. - Kyle
Busch~ the slump
that pi
him the
t
two w
• racing to his l:t
Sprint Cup Series win on a
road course Suuday at
lnfineon Raceway.
BuSch, who had a poor
qualifying run and started
30th,
steadily
moved
through the field and
grabbed the lead away fium
defending race· winner Juan
Pablo Montoya on an early
restart. Nobody came close
to taking the lead from him
the rest of the way, but he
did have to hold ~ff a pair,of
. challenges on two late
restarts. ·
It was Busch's series-best

fifth win of the seasoo, and
II th overall spanning ~II
thme of NASCAR 's top
It also was his second
road course victory of the
.s eason,
following
.a
Nationwide · Series win in
Mexico~!.
Busch
with his
tnditional smoky burnout.
then climbed from his car
for his customary bow to the
crowd. For once, the fans
were cheering the driver
they so famously love to
hate.
"i am reall)' impre~&gt;sed
with Kyle," saJd third-plaoe
finisher Jell Gonloo, bis former tea!D!Mte. "fve been
around him, and I didn't

senes.

.phalto

PI ne-b•

a.U

. LOS ANGELES
The Los Angeles Dooilgers
went cold after a fast ,·;;·="'~I
the plate against Paul
.
They managed to hold
on beca11se
of
their
bullpen and
defense.
Russell
Martin
capped a four- run fitst
inmng . with a two-run
homer, four relievers held
Cleveland to one hit over
the final four innings and
Los Angeles beat the
Indians 4-3 on Sunday to
avoid a three-game sweep
in the first series between
the teams at Chavez Ravine.
The Dodgers also made a
critical defensive play in the
fifth. The Indians were trailing 4-3 with two outs and a
runner on first when David
DeUucci doubled down the
right-field line.
Third
coach Joel

NASCAR driver Kyle BuSch negotiates tum fU as t1e races in the Sprint Cup Toyota/ Save
Mart 350 auto race at lnfineon Raceway Sunday in Sonoma, Calif.
·

. '

•·

~r home
w!~~r
Peralta
but· ~~~1:
Ethier slid in the comer to
keep the ball from getting
past him and relayed to second baseman Luis Mata, D . J ~ ..... .. U....- .
.... XT
.
LanyCrum/pholo
nver
oe
r.::pi ' ouan warms up .,,s - reme Machine Jet Semi Truck moments before making a run down the track dJJring the O'Reilly Thunder Jam
whose throw was in plenty·
·
of time for Martin to slap Saturday Night at Kanwaha Valley Motorsporls Park in Southside, W.va.
the tag on Peralta.
· "It was the right thing to
ilo,n Indians manager Eric
~e said. "It be doesn 't,
1hey U just walk Kelly
8r lMRr C..
director James Marcbyshyn.
s~ with the pitcher
LCRU~LYREGISTER .COM
"(t takes a lot of teamwork
commg up next. So Joel has
between our gtoup and
to be aggressive right there.
SOUTiiSIDE, W.Va. - everyone here at Kanawha
tmller cutting the ball off There was thunder· in the Valley Motorsports Park to
was the key, no doubt about forecast, but it amved a little put this on.
bit ahead · of schedule
~Every year we come here
'·PI • • - .. «n~oU
the place looks better and
Saturday night.
Drivers at the O'Reilly tRsher and we keep bring-·
.Thunder Jam event had to ing back bigger events so it
not only race ' QDe another is a true team effort. We are
but also the · weather as glad to keep coming back
storms threatened to bring year after year with a new
the annual event to a halt. look and a new feel."
But Mother Nature held off
And it is that consistency
just
long
enough
for
the
drithat
keeps bringing in such
Registtation is now open
vers
to
put
oo
an
impressive
large
numbers while each ·
for the 2008 flag football
in front of a paclted year attrncting new fans.
season to boys and girls in sbow
bouse
at ·Kanawha Valley
"It is kind of a summer tragrades 1-6 beginnin with
Motorsports
Patk
Saturday
dition
to be down here at
fhe I 2008-09 schoor year. ~t·in Southside.
Kanawha an~ every year
. The registration fee is. $40
·
·lt
is
part
drag
race,
part
~undl:r
Jam,lust keeps getper play.e r and $25 for each
thrill
show
and
people
love
..
tang
btgger,
Marchyshyn
additional sibling.
· The games wiU be played to come out and see the ftre satd.
' Lany crumlphuto
And this year was no Driver Ken Nelson makes a run down the track In his Cool Bus wheelstanding vehicle dur·
. starting in September oo the and the thunder and I am
ing the O'Reilly Thunder Jam Saturday Night at Kanwaha Valley Motorsports . Park in
Meigs High School practice glad to give everyone a little
82
field, and the fmal date for taste of that,'' said event Pitre
Southside, W.Va. .
·.
registration is July 1st.
Payment must also be
received by July I st:· A
tr;orkout/combine will be
held oo July 26th at 9 a.m.
at Meigs High School. All•
checks must be made out to
'
liT Mlu ftiUiitRICK
thankful that I gave us a
Meigs
Flag
Football
ASSOC:IIIlED PRESS
good start. It can get away
League, P.O. Box 751 ,
from you so easy even when
l'Qmeroy, Ohio 45769.
NEW
YORK
-.
During
you feel _good." . ·
: To register online go to
his
11
years
in
pinstripes,
Ken Griffey Jr. hit his
~ww.meigsffl.com, and for
DlOI'e information go to the Andy Pettitte has always 6() 1st home run, but the
website or call 740-541- been at his best when the Reds are still-looking for
New York Yankees need to their first three-game road
1222.
stop a losing streak.
sweep since last July at
Pettitte put the Yankees Atlanta.
back on track again Sunday,
Cincinnati won its previrunning his shutout stretch ous five games at Yankee
to 19 consecutive ~s Stadium, including visits
1-740-«6-2342 ext. 33
and helping New York avmd during the 1961 and '76
.
a three-game .sweep with a World Series .
,.. - 1- r40-44&amp;-3008
4-1
victory over the last"We wanted this one
· - - oponaOrnydallyoentlnal.ccm
place
Cincinnati.Reds.
badly, but it's tough to
Snorta Starr
By tossing six clean sweep these guys," Reds
~ R.ldolph, Spor18 Writllr
innings, the left-bander manager Dusty Baker said.
(740) oWl-23&lt;42, ext. 33
improved to 75-37 after a
Jason Giambi had a two~andolph0mydail)'l8f11inel.com
regular-season Yankees loss, run double and Robinson
BryM1 w.ttaw, Sports Writllr according to the Elias Spons Cano snapped a scoreless tie
(740) oWl-23o42, ext. 33
Bureau.
with a sacrifice fly in ·the
bwoiteiOOrnydallylrlbune.oom
_,photo
"I wouldn' t say I relish it fifth, sendin~ the Yankees to
Cincinnati
Reds
Adam
Dunn,
fight,
reacts
as
he
walks
to
the
dugout
past
New
York
Y
ankees
You'd rather be on a seven- their 13th wm in 18 games.
!.any Crum, Spom Writer
·game winning streak,"
catcher Jorge Po.sada .after striking out in the Reds 4-lloss to the Yankees in their inter(740) oWl-2342, ext. 33
... _ _ . . . . .2
lc:nomOrnydoilyNgialtr.oom
Pettitte said. "I'm just
league baseball game at Yankee Stad_
ium in New Yor1&lt; on Sunday.

Thunder Ja•n roars through Mason County

· '\!...

..

-a•••·

Pettitte puts Yankees back
on track against Reds

.

. ("

~.

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

JRI·C UNTY AREA.
m .mydailytribune.com. m.mydailyre~~er.com, www.myOailysenbneJ.rom

fl4"17

JuneJO, 2008

..

J

ComAcrUs

.

"-~ Jmlp~lmnt, Joiut j1tasa1tt lligi)trr and The Dail¥ Sen~

.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

11.111
..

'

..

'

�•

PageA6

COMM

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, June 23,

Imide
I

2~

, Wadr,aE T - USA, Pice 82

....

n- .._'tcwe . . dllndet,

Recent golf
tournament
raises funds
for meals
on wheels

Today's Forecast

CMp1' Q'

I

Caw, Gllluy draw 3.3,

High I ' - - ten'1pS

r. 86
Monday, June 23, 2008

.•

POMEROY
The
Meigs County Council on
Aging held its fi rst golf
IOUillament Saturday June
14, to mise .money for the
meals on wheels program
which helps local seniors
with their daily nutritional
needs.
The tournament. held at
Pine Hill's Golf course near
Pomeroy was a success raising almost $1,300. for the
program. Awards were
given to the top three plac1ng teams -. Jay Harris,
:Bryan Hoffman, Willie
.Johnson, and Donnie' Riffle,
'fmt; Adam McDaniel. John
Matson, David Justis, and
.Bill Justis, second; and
SUblnltled phOtO
:Bucky Dent, Terry Hupp, ·
John Stewan, and George Taking first in the Senior Citizens Center golf toumament were from the left, Willie
Johnson, Donnie Riffle, Jay Harris, and Bryan Hoffman.
Stewan, third.

Area nurses' educational options expand
· ATHENS
Ohio . health facilities and the uni- be offered at Flrirfield Bird, vice provost for uni- ..
· :University's School of versity,
Medi~;al
Gent11r
in V!lrsity outrCidt. "C~ng
Nursing will use a three-year,
The funds -to be divided Lancaster, wlllch.was chO:. opportunities for healtli$787,841 grant to lauuch an nearly equally over three sen forits ceatrallocation in ~ professionals by parte
innovative program that will years beginning this sum- the regioO: Plans call for nering across providers ,and
educate area nurses for mer - will help the School expanding the program to die university demomS.IJ3tcs.
acute&lt;are and family-practi- of Nursing accomplish two include other regional hos- what is possible in a , vecy
tioner specialties.
main goals, ·said Interim pitals, with Adena Regional exciting way. This grant:
. The Grow Our Own pro- Director Kathleen Rose- Medical
Center
near will ~ a vecy tJOSi:tivc;
gram will be offered in the Grippa: increase the region's Chillicothe committed to difference in our regtO!i." '·"'
Southeast Ohio hospitals resources for advanced participate in the program's
The School of Nursing .,
where the nurses currently nu(sing
training'
and third year.
provides courses to stUdents
work. Ohio University' s improve local retention of
Securin~ the grant was a
via
several · methods.
College of Health and nursing program graduates.
collahoratlve effort involv- Associate-degree courses
Human Services will use
"Ninety percent of·the stu- ing the university's College are offered in classrooms on
the. U.S. Department of dents in the School of · of Health and Human the university's Chillicothe,
Health and Human Services Nursing are local and plan to Services, home to the Zanesville and Southern
grant to enhance the exist- stay in southeastern Ohio. School of ·Nursing, and campuses. The. RN-to-BSN
ing nursing master's degree With the program available University Outreach, which program is offered excluprogram hy adding the spe- in their place of work, more oversees off-campus educit- sively online. Existing mas.
cialty options. The funds nurses will be able to seek an tiona! opportunities.
ter' s degree courses comalso will be used to add four advanced degree that in turn
"This collaboratipn ,is an ' bine classroom .and online
online courses to the mas- improves ~th care in our outs~ding example of w~ The
option in the
ter's program and to hire a traditionally underserved Ohio University reaching mastet•s·progr.am·will offer ,
coordinator• to oversee the area," Rose.Qrippa said
out to make edl!cation more courses at the hospitals
collaboration
between . Initially, the program will acceSliible," said Charles wbere' nurses
wodt.
.

new

on

.l'OUEIICII'-.-

aefl IJ•

dl-.. . Kyle Busch wiDs 5th race of season with victory in Sonoma

..::hoot w•r&amp;fty sporting ~ inYoMng
tNiml from . . . . ...:t GaiN countila.
. . . . ., ..... ;a
Leglan.
;

n· 1s.c·

X

~at

*Columllus
77'1 56'

Post 128, 6 p.m.

ZW .ywas

¥' 7

........

r

r

Logan at Post 128. 6 p.m.

fdde .... Z7

t..g~ont

Pcc ts;;WJUth• l'/~!19 .

n•154P.. ·
~
·•

1\

I

7

McArthur at Post 128, 6 p.m.

...

'

'*

p.m.

.

IAglon a
- a t Post 128 ( - ). ,

,I ...:

1

ly $

......

r

r

JyneZI

L.esiiDn a

· a

~atPost128(­

er), 1 p.m.

Local Weather

Wea1he&lt; ~"'""" • AP

Martin homers
in Dodgers' 4-3
win over Indians

Thesday night... Partly
Monday ••• Mo s tly
sunny
in
the cloudy. Lows in the mid
moming ...Then beconting 50s. Northwest winds
mostly cloudy. A chance around 5 mph.
of showers. A · slight · Wednesday... M~stly
chance of thunde.r~torm~
nny= Hi ghJL.in ~ mid.
80s.
·
in the morning ...'fhen a
Wednesday
night...
cllance of. thuriderSlOOlls
iri the aftel;noon:, Hig\1!&gt;' j,p Mostly cloudy. Lows in
the uppet ;lOs. Wtst Win4s the upper 50s.
and
5 .to 10 '1I!Ph- ~~tim~ .of · Thursday
r.nn ~roent,. ·
· · Thursday night...Mostly .
M
'oolliJ.o.' u.;lill~ cloudy: A chance of showdoudy --~:;~ ers · and thunderstorms.
showers. · :·~~.;;· liki*'~· Highs in the mid 80s.
storms •.;.·
. ·• .the Lows in the lower 60s.
' •..• f'l"-:·'in
...
evening ... Then
partly Chance of rain 30 percent.
Friday
through
cloudy wilh a slight chance
of showers 'and""thlinder- Saturday night. .. Mo s~ly
storms after midnight: cloudy with a chance of
Lows ill the mid 50s. West showers and thunderwinds arouud' 5 mph in the storms. Highs ip the mid .
evening ...Becoming light 80s. Lows in the mid 60s.
and variable.· Chance of Chance. of rain 40 percent.
rain 40 percent.
Sunday... Mostly cloudy
Tuesday ... Mo s Uy with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs
su:~~~~~~i~in~lbe5 l~e~
81
t~ IO in the mid 80s. Chance of ·
.. ' rain 30 percent.

liT JaiNA Ftna
ASSOCI-'TEO PRESS

SONOMA, Calif. - Kyle
Busch~ the slump
that pi
him the
t
two w
• racing to his l:t
Sprint Cup Series win on a
road course Suuday at
lnfineon Raceway.
BuSch, who had a poor
qualifying run and started
30th,
steadily
moved
through the field and
grabbed the lead away fium
defending race· winner Juan
Pablo Montoya on an early
restart. Nobody came close
to taking the lead from him
the rest of the way, but he
did have to hold ~ff a pair,of
. challenges on two late
restarts. ·
It was Busch's series-best

fifth win of the seasoo, and
II th overall spanning ~II
thme of NASCAR 's top
It also was his second
road course victory of the
.s eason,
following
.a
Nationwide · Series win in
Mexico~!.
Busch
with his
tnditional smoky burnout.
then climbed from his car
for his customary bow to the
crowd. For once, the fans
were cheering the driver
they so famously love to
hate.
"i am reall)' impre~&gt;sed
with Kyle," saJd third-plaoe
finisher Jell Gonloo, bis former tea!D!Mte. "fve been
around him, and I didn't

senes.

.phalto

PI ne-b•

a.U

. LOS ANGELES
The Los Angeles Dooilgers
went cold after a fast ,·;;·="'~I
the plate against Paul
.
They managed to hold
on beca11se
of
their
bullpen and
defense.
Russell
Martin
capped a four- run fitst
inmng . with a two-run
homer, four relievers held
Cleveland to one hit over
the final four innings and
Los Angeles beat the
Indians 4-3 on Sunday to
avoid a three-game sweep
in the first series between
the teams at Chavez Ravine.
The Dodgers also made a
critical defensive play in the
fifth. The Indians were trailing 4-3 with two outs and a
runner on first when David
DeUucci doubled down the
right-field line.
Third
coach Joel

NASCAR driver Kyle BuSch negotiates tum fU as t1e races in the Sprint Cup Toyota/ Save
Mart 350 auto race at lnfineon Raceway Sunday in Sonoma, Calif.
·

. '

•·

~r home
w!~~r
Peralta
but· ~~~1:
Ethier slid in the comer to
keep the ball from getting
past him and relayed to second baseman Luis Mata, D . J ~ ..... .. U....- .
.... XT
.
LanyCrum/pholo
nver
oe
r.::pi ' ouan warms up .,,s - reme Machine Jet Semi Truck moments before making a run down the track dJJring the O'Reilly Thunder Jam
whose throw was in plenty·
·
of time for Martin to slap Saturday Night at Kanwaha Valley Motorsporls Park in Southside, W.va.
the tag on Peralta.
· "It was the right thing to
ilo,n Indians manager Eric
~e said. "It be doesn 't,
1hey U just walk Kelly
8r lMRr C..
director James Marcbyshyn.
s~ with the pitcher
LCRU~LYREGISTER .COM
"(t takes a lot of teamwork
commg up next. So Joel has
between our gtoup and
to be aggressive right there.
SOUTiiSIDE, W.Va. - everyone here at Kanawha
tmller cutting the ball off There was thunder· in the Valley Motorsports Park to
was the key, no doubt about forecast, but it amved a little put this on.
bit ahead · of schedule
~Every year we come here
'·PI • • - .. «n~oU
the place looks better and
Saturday night.
Drivers at the O'Reilly tRsher and we keep bring-·
.Thunder Jam event had to ing back bigger events so it
not only race ' QDe another is a true team effort. We are
but also the · weather as glad to keep coming back
storms threatened to bring year after year with a new
the annual event to a halt. look and a new feel."
But Mother Nature held off
And it is that consistency
just
long
enough
for
the
drithat
keeps bringing in such
Registtation is now open
vers
to
put
oo
an
impressive
large
numbers while each ·
for the 2008 flag football
in front of a paclted year attrncting new fans.
season to boys and girls in sbow
bouse
at ·Kanawha Valley
"It is kind of a summer tragrades 1-6 beginnin with
Motorsports
Patk
Saturday
dition
to be down here at
fhe I 2008-09 schoor year. ~t·in Southside.
Kanawha an~ every year
. The registration fee is. $40
·
·lt
is
part
drag
race,
part
~undl:r
Jam,lust keeps getper play.e r and $25 for each
thrill
show
and
people
love
..
tang
btgger,
Marchyshyn
additional sibling.
· The games wiU be played to come out and see the ftre satd.
' Lany crumlphuto
And this year was no Driver Ken Nelson makes a run down the track In his Cool Bus wheelstanding vehicle dur·
. starting in September oo the and the thunder and I am
ing the O'Reilly Thunder Jam Saturday Night at Kanwaha Valley Motorsports . Park in
Meigs High School practice glad to give everyone a little
82
field, and the fmal date for taste of that,'' said event Pitre
Southside, W.Va. .
·.
registration is July 1st.
Payment must also be
received by July I st:· A
tr;orkout/combine will be
held oo July 26th at 9 a.m.
at Meigs High School. All•
checks must be made out to
'
liT Mlu ftiUiitRICK
thankful that I gave us a
Meigs
Flag
Football
ASSOC:IIIlED PRESS
good start. It can get away
League, P.O. Box 751 ,
from you so easy even when
l'Qmeroy, Ohio 45769.
NEW
YORK
-.
During
you feel _good." . ·
: To register online go to
his
11
years
in
pinstripes,
Ken Griffey Jr. hit his
~ww.meigsffl.com, and for
DlOI'e information go to the Andy Pettitte has always 6() 1st home run, but the
website or call 740-541- been at his best when the Reds are still-looking for
New York Yankees need to their first three-game road
1222.
stop a losing streak.
sweep since last July at
Pettitte put the Yankees Atlanta.
back on track again Sunday,
Cincinnati won its previrunning his shutout stretch ous five games at Yankee
to 19 consecutive ~s Stadium, including visits
1-740-«6-2342 ext. 33
and helping New York avmd during the 1961 and '76
.
a three-game .sweep with a World Series .
,.. - 1- r40-44&amp;-3008
4-1
victory over the last"We wanted this one
· - - oponaOrnydallyoentlnal.ccm
place
Cincinnati.Reds.
badly, but it's tough to
Snorta Starr
By tossing six clean sweep these guys," Reds
~ R.ldolph, Spor18 Writllr
innings, the left-bander manager Dusty Baker said.
(740) oWl-23&lt;42, ext. 33
improved to 75-37 after a
Jason Giambi had a two~andolph0mydail)'l8f11inel.com
regular-season Yankees loss, run double and Robinson
BryM1 w.ttaw, Sports Writllr according to the Elias Spons Cano snapped a scoreless tie
(740) oWl-23o42, ext. 33
Bureau.
with a sacrifice fly in ·the
bwoiteiOOrnydallylrlbune.oom
_,photo
"I wouldn' t say I relish it fifth, sendin~ the Yankees to
Cincinnati
Reds
Adam
Dunn,
fight,
reacts
as
he
walks
to
the
dugout
past
New
York
Y
ankees
You'd rather be on a seven- their 13th wm in 18 games.
!.any Crum, Spom Writer
·game winning streak,"
catcher Jorge Po.sada .after striking out in the Reds 4-lloss to the Yankees in their inter(740) oWl-2342, ext. 33
... _ _ . . . . .2
lc:nomOrnydoilyNgialtr.oom
Pettitte said. "I'm just
league baseball game at Yankee Stad_
ium in New Yor1&lt; on Sunday.

Thunder Ja•n roars through Mason County

· '\!...

..

-a•••·

Pettitte puts Yankees back
on track against Reds

.

. ("

~.

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

JRI·C UNTY AREA.
m .mydailytribune.com. m.mydailyre~~er.com, www.myOailysenbneJ.rom

fl4"17

JuneJO, 2008

..

J

ComAcrUs

.

"-~ Jmlp~lmnt, Joiut j1tasa1tt lligi)trr and The Dail¥ Sen~

.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

11.111
..

'

..

'

�hge Bz • The Daily Seruinel

Sonoma
fromPageBl
·

think he's a really good road

. racer. So I think you ' ve got

~give that guy a lot of Cred1t for his talent To be able to
get their car up front and
maintain the position ... I
would not have bet on that.n
David Gilliland finished .a
career-best second and was

followed by Gordon, Clint
Bowyer and £asey Mears.
Montoya was sixth, followed by Jlyan Newman,
Matt
Kenseth,
Carl
Edwanls and Tony· .Stewart.

1be race was fairly clean.
.unli.l me closing laps. .

www.mydallysentinel.com

own banle.
Montoya moved through .
the field early and took the
lead until Busch grabbed it
from him. But Montoya was
spun by Marcos Ambrose
while running second, and
th
dr - " h
e contact
op~""" t e .
Colombian to 14th.
Ambrose was later spun
by Sadler, and the. contact
came as be was mifting causing him to break· his
geadlox. Ambrose, who was
nmoing fifth in his Sprint
Cup Series debut, wound up
4~.
for Busch, it w,as the rem-t.&gt; be oocde(l after a n-us-~

trating two week-s. He won
eadier lhls mooth at 'Dover,
chen em!Jarlald ·on -his bis•' ....,;. ·~" f ..._
tone u.ptc o wu:;o:; races
at 1hree different tracks in
three days.
Although be finisbed sec. ood in
Truck Series race,
li le f hi .
the rst g ·o . s JOurney,
bC wreclred bis Cup car in
~ce the next day before
i)etting off to the Nationwide .
Se •
He "NN'eeked ·
nes race.
.
. m
that event ·amt fi~sbed ·
' 32od, ·dlcn ~ . m 1be. I

: David Reuitmann brought
out a late caution when .a
·
flat tire caused him to run
:off course and into a wall of
:tires. That set up a ~
·with six laps to go, and
:Tony Stewart quicldy
. M M
.,
:passed Jarrue • c un:ay LOI'
:second. But :a spin by KieVin
Harvick .as lbc:y entered
Tum 4 started a cllain-reac:tion ccisb that .took Stewart
~ut of oontention for cbal- ~noe:aud . .bed~
·lenging his teammate fur 'N' de. ~de m laSt ·
):h
·
amon~1
race, as we11 •
. ~;.vhm. 't
.t,
't'
and decided after not to hop
. ' aven seen I so I s all over the country tbis
:not .fair to co~ment on weekend to compete in the
that, Stewart satd.
lower series' events in
. _It set up a final restart Milwaukee.
:W!~ three laps to go .and . Still, he was in a bear of a
:CJIIliland arul (lordon hoed mood all weekend as lle
t~p behmd Busch.•He pulled struggled 10 get comfortable
_out to another 1nsurmount- in his Toyota. The Joe Gibbs
able lead, but a wreck Racing team made a slew of
·between Scott Pruett and
'Denny Hamlin brought out changes to _the . car on
a red-flag so NASCAR. Sautrday, and II patd off for
oould clean the track. The . yet another tnp to V1ctory
stoppage lasted 12 minutes, L~e .
forcing Busch to sit idle and
We unloaded he~ an~
,tbink about the impendi11g we were . ab~?lutely JUnk; .
•three-lap sprint to the finish. Busch satd. lt was a bad
• Busch once again moved feehnjl. but these guys
out to a large lead, and the worked so hard. It's just
only real races for position phenomena! that we're able
were back in the pack. to be bere m VICtory Lane
Montoya jockeyed. for posi- - never before on a road
.tion with Mears and Elliott course, in the Cup Series, so
.Sadler, while Kenseth, this is definitely really, realEdwards
and
Dale ly speciaL We came a long
Earnhardt Jr. m.,unted their ways with .this thing."

me

Indians

I'm still frustrated," Byrd
said.
Byrd matched his loss
total
from last season, when
fromPageBl
be was 15-8. He dropped bis
it - . because if the ball gets thiro straight start since
recording bis lOOth career ·
.by him, Jhonny 's going to victorv on 1une 6 at Detroit,
score."
-1
aUowmg four runs and
Chad Billingsley (6-7) ·s even bits over seven
allowed three runs and eight inili.ngs. 1'he right~hander is
hits in five innings for the l-7 with a 7.19 ERA on the
Dodgers, throwing · 108
road
pitches. All of Cleveland's
"He did a good 1·ab kee.n-:
runs came in the third on an
"" ·
RBl.single by Ryan Garto ·in~ in the game," M~
. satd. "Eve!)'hocly had the
and run-scoring groundouts mind-set that we were going
by Shin-Son Choo and to slay 018gressive and bit
Casey Blake.
-the first fastball we saw.
"He looked like he was 1bat's what we did in the
getting a 'linle frustrated ftrst inning, and then he
a couple of g roundballs
·
bet
finding holes and walldng a made an .adjustment w e
few guys," Martin said. "I be was throwing a lot more
off-speed stuff the second
just told him that once and .third time ·throu~ the
thing_s happen, you can't
d kee · th ball
.ch~ them. So you've just dli.tteup ·an , pmg · · e
·got t&lt;l keep your head in the . 0 n m~jb
Joe
·game and keep battlinjl. He Beirne!
lind K~~~athan
did enough to keep us m the Br-oxton
h pitched .an
· · be&amp;
""~ 1-~sbi
game and keep the lead."
Cleveland's
starting mrnng ' •Gre ........
ruto
finished for his · ll th save in
-pitchers have failed to gG at 14 attempts.
least five innings in only
seven of the team •s last 61
Peralta was moved up ro .
·g ames. Byrd (3-8) appeared the cleanup spot fm d!e second time !ibis season and
to be heading in that direc- went 2-for-3 with a walk.
tion for the fourth time in
his last five outings .
,Hebl~die In~~~ lo ,b ack. ·
Juan Pierre led off .the lG· ...,.. ex«a-mm11g IWIDS .
'first with a single, Matt with ,a. ~g tw.o-ruri
.Kemp followed with · a double•in the lrOdt inning of
ground-rule double and Friday night's series opener
James Loney drove in both and a go-ahelld RBI :single
.of them with another dou- in the II th on Saturday.
ble. Martin then hit a 2-2
Notes: Omar Vizquel
fastball into the. left-field Should expect quite a homepavilion for his seventh coming Tuesday when the
home run. It was the 20th Indians host his San
'allowed by Byrd, who Francisco Giants in the
.reached that figure for the opener of a.rtbree-game
.foutth straight season.
series. The !!-time Gold
"That was obviously all ·Glove winner, who .·broke
'tbe offense we could Luis Aparicio's majGr·
muster," manager Joe Torre league 'record for most
said. "He had a very low games played .a t SS on May
pitch count today. He 30, returns to Cleveland for
,throws a lot of strikes, 'but t:be fmt time since signing
you still have to make up with the Giants as a free
your mind what you want to agent on Nov. Hi, 2004. He
bit When you keep looking spent 11 seasons with the
for the last pitch he threw, Tribe, helping them reach
that's when you get into the playoffs six times and
·trouble. We need more the World Series in 1995
'patience. We've got to ·have and 1997.... Byrd wu the
a plan."
winnina
pitcher
for
Byrd retired 12 of his next Cleveland in Torre's final
13 bat1Crs and limlted the·
II Yankees manqer
Dodaers to just two •lnJlea - the AL dl vi1lon terie•
.a~Mt Manin'• home.r. Both cllncber, which the Indiana
•of them were in the fiflh w011 ~ ln the Bronx. ...
with none out, but Byrd . Billlgaaley hit two baiters In
retited Kemp on 1 double- ·the tint three lnnina•· The
play arounder and aot lndlabl have been plunked a
Loney to fly out.
major leque-biah S4 time1.
"I JUst have to be positive , Last season, opposina
and look at the fact that I pitchers bit 80 Cleveland
came back and made some batters to set a franchise
good pitches_after that. But record.

s·

aame

i.•

Monday, June 23, zooB

www.mydailysentinel.com

James, Wade set to restore US basketball pride
BY TOM WITIIERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

now," . James said. "We
have one goal , and that's to
win a gold medaL We're
very excited about it. We
don ' t worry about the rest.
We worry about getting in
shape and getting ready to
win a gold medal, that's
our only concern."
· James was joined at bis
"King for Kids Bike-athon" bv Wade, Cavaliers
coach Mike Brown, former
Indians center fielder
Kenny Lofton and NBA
great Spencer Haywood,
the leading scorer on the
1968 U.S. team that won
gold in Mexico City. More
than 2,000 riders took part
in 'the event in James·
hometown.
While James' spot on the
U.S. ro sier was a given,
Wade ' s wasn ' t assured
until recently.
His season ended in
Mar~h. shut down by a left
knee tJJat never was right
following surgery in 2007.
Wade has been in Chicago
working · out s·i nce. early
May, and while he was
there, both James and New
Orlean s Hornets guard
Chris Paul - also expected

ro be named to the U.S.
team - joined their good
friend to help him polish
his g:ame .
"One thing that really
helped my confidence was
when LeBron and C.P..
:came to Chicago and we
played together," said
Wade, who missed 31
,g ames last season, an
absence that sent the Heat
plummeting to a 15-67
record. "We really took it
up a notch and it was very
competitive and I was
doing what I nonnally do,
so I was feeling good."
Colangelo
came
to
Chicago to see Wade play
and came away convinced
the 6-foot-4 guard was
healthy.
Wade never wondered
whether he'd be able to get
ready.
"It's all about me being
healthy," he said. "I've
never .doubted my talent.
It's just making sure I' m
healthy for the long hauL
Once I knew that weeks
and weeks ago, then I was
· confident in moving forward."
For James ·and Wade.

~rtbune

playing with so many
other top players will be a
luxury they don't get during the regul~r season.
Instead of havmg to do
almost everything to help
their . team s win. they'll
have plenty of help.
" We get 12 guys that can
he ·out on the court for a
long period of time. so it's
not like on our respective
team s where we're the
only go-to guys , where
every time we come down
on the offensive end we ' re
the guy they have to go
to." James said. " If we
wanted to on Team USA,
we could go to Kobe
Bryant 20 straight possession s. We can go to
Carmel
Anthony
20
straight possessions. We
can to go D-Wade 20
straight possessions. It's
not like we ' re going to be
exerting a lot of energy
like we would if we were
ori the Cavs or the Heat."
Proceeds from the bikea-than will be djvided
among the Akron Area
YMCA. the Akron Urban
League and the LeBron
James Family Foundation.

CLASSIFIED

AKRON
LeBron
James and Dwyane Wade
cruised city streets on bicycles Saturday for chanty.
Soon, the NBA superstars will be touring China
for gold.
James · and Wade have
been selected to play on the
U.S. Olympic ··b asketball
Iteam, wbiob will be rormally
introduced '
Monday by ,o oacb ' Milke
Krzyze~lci , 'ami
USA
Basketball managing director Jerry Colangelo, The
12-man squad, whioh will
also include NBA MVP
Kobe Bryant, Jason Kidd
.and Carmelo Anthony, will
tty &lt;to win a gold medal that
has eluded the Americans
·s ince 1996.
This will be the second
Olympics for Clevelaiid'''S
James and Miami ' s Wade,
Who were on.the Ame~can
teamthat fi!l1sbed a dJsappomtmg thud and won a
bronze medal at the Athens
Games in 2004
.
" I-t's easy to focus on
USA Basketball nght
---------------------------------------)lear; · he joked.
fuw: ~i_ngles aru:ltwo walkS, l!l Oakhmd.
handing rookie Johnny
" Andy is back to being . Cueto, who has lost three
after winning
Cueto (5-8) a 'hard-luck Andy," GiJ:ardi said. "H~'s starts in
three
straight,
flashed the
loss.
Both
departed
foUGwbeen
on
a
nice
little
run.
fromPageBl
ing .a rain delay in the mid- He'·s been abig-gamepitch- nasty stuff that's made him
so tough at times ·this year.
dle.lilftbe sixth.
· erfor a 'loog,t ime."
They Josi reliever Kyle
Despite an mjury-deplet- He yielded one run and four
· Griffey
pulled
Farnsworth to injury, how- Famsworth 's eighth-Inning ed rotation, New , York hits in five innings, striking
ever, when he tried to bare- pitch into the front row of starters .are 6--1. ,with a 1 .11 out seven and walking none.
hand Brandon Phillips' right-field seats for ' bis ' , ElRAirithe.;p.l!St 1.0 games.
Notes: It is . Pettitte's
infield single in the ei_ghth.
eighth home. run this ~ ., PjlU;itr.e pi.ulhed out of ·a longest scoreless stretch
Farnsworth received three and first at Yankee Stadium ltiases-iGadcd. . ~c-out )am since a career-best 23stitches between his right since May 8, I!J99, \With .in.dle f~!lhen' ~scaped inning streak in 1997. . ..
ring finger and pinky. New · Seattle.
Reds
38
Edwin
,-~ 1roo'bl~ m the SIXth.
York manager Joe Girardi
New York is scheduled to . After~·a :S()-miliute delay, Encarnacion left in the third
said he doesn't anticipate move into a sparkling new Derek Jeter ·gpened the bot- with lower back spasms. He
the right-hander needing a ballpark next season.
tom of llhe sixth with a sin- is da}' to day.... Griffey was
stint on the disabled list.
"lt's always been fun," gle off' Gary ~ajewski. Cinctnnati's DH again. He
"It happenecl in A-ball , Griffey said. "If you can't Hideki Matsu1 .sing'l!lflwith has 19 career homers at
same
exact
spot," get hyped here, tllen you two outs .and Giamllii 1hit .an· Yankee
Stadium.
Farnsworth .said. "If I had can't do it anywhere."
·Opposite-field drive that Farnsworth became the
time to think about it,
The ball was caught by a sliced away from Hopper in 384th pitcher to give up a
there's no way I would have smiling fan wearing a Reds left :field with help frqm the home run to Griffey. ...
done it. It happened so shirt, and the crowd of · w.ind.
Baker benched the slumpquick. Just reaction. · ... '5 4,234 gave Griffey a
The two-ruq ,double, off ing Dunn for a day. Dunn is
Hopefully I won't miss any stan~ ovation as he · feremy Alfeldt, ma4e it 3-0. mired in a 6-for-55 skid ....
time."
roun
&lt;the bases. ,
. Jm:ge Posada acldclll :an RBI .Pettitte 's seven pickoffs .this
Mariano Rivera came oii
season are his most since he
"lt was nice. lenjoyed ·it.~ -dou~.
. .:
..- .
and got fgur outs for 'his said Griffey, who hit 'Ne. · Giambi also 10ingled ,l ead- . had seven in 200 I. ... The
21st save in 21 chances. 600 on June 9 at Florida.
injl &lt;Iff ,the fifth and went to Yankees are off Monday
Cincinnati put runners at the;
Pettitte is 5-0 wjth a 3.61 thiFd on Posada"sdouble off . before beginning a threecomers in the ninth before ERA in his last seven starts. -Oueto. Cano followed with game series Tuesday night
Rivera struck out pinch-hit- He has won three straight . a long sacrifice fly. ·
in Pittsburgh, their first .trip
ter Adam Dunn and retired since giving up 10 runs in a
Giambi finished with to the Steel City since losNorris Hopper on a come·- no-decision June 7 against three hits and his second ing the 1960 World Series
on Bill Mazeroski's-famous '
Kansas City, allowing only · stolen base.
backer.
"I might go 40-4 this home run in Game 7.
· Pettitte (8'5) allowed only a second-inning run June 12

on

Reds

Gallia
County

OH
'·.

In One Week With Us

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~~

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IKIT

kitncar1yleecomcast.net

Home, Office Ect, Cleaning
of all Kinds, reasonable
rates 304-812-0554 or 304675-0960

in Rio Grande,
REWARD:fof informatioo on 2 smoll block dogs. call 740person or persons B&lt;eal&lt;ing 44HJ865
&amp; Entering JetTy's Heating &amp; -----~canwoun&lt;~

r·:::,

I I'\ ' \I

CGU.. 1 +-\~\Ntl
\A+\ tu; ~Afr N~
;

Ffeie swing set. You must

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Mini car Port Salell Thin.,

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fromPageBl

CLASSIFIED INDEX

: 4x4'a For S.le ........... - ................................125
... Annoui'ICMDent-..........................................030

Antiquea .......................................... - ...........530
A~tllor'Rent ...................---~........... 440
Auction and Flu MMDt.......- .....:.............. OMt

•uto r-..
~
•
~
780
,. • I'IIICCIICDJW..........................
Auto Repak ................................................... 770.,
A.utoa for Sate .........................- ...................710

"

a.~.~tor"-~
,
_ , . ..........
...,,............................ 750

Blllldlng SUPIIIU ................ ,..... - ............... 550
Businel.a •nd Bulldi.
............................. 340
._.,.wnlty
8 ...
....,.,_
.............-...................210

Busi,_.
Trainlng ............... _._,. ___ .. ,........ 140
-

.

CampersAMolarltomea ... --······-...·-·----· 710
Camping EquipmMII: ••••....... _ •••. ~............... 710
Carda of Thll'lka ....................-.~··-····· ......... 010
ChlldiElderty Cltre .......................... - ........... 190
- Electricai/Raf(palkwt..........____................ 840
:· Equipment for ltent._
.................................... 480
', Excevlting ................................................... 830
: F.-m 1Equlpmenl .......................................... 610
c
fwD430

r...,. ""''"'""........................................

ferms for S.le .. ~-........................................ S30

·

For L..-.....................................-............... &amp;80
515
For S.le ............·.... r.......................................
For Sale or Trade ............................... _........ HO
fNita.l: •.;.eg.tablei ................................ - ... SIO
Ftwn'-'*1 ROOOM ...--... - .... - ........,•••_.......450
General tt.uiJng ............. - ............................850
Glvwwau........................ _... - .......................040
•
Hippy Adl...................... - ....................- ······::

Gnln.-...............................................

Hiy 1:
Hllp Ww:tcd--................ - .........;......... - ... 110

::::.
~S:~~::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::~
Hou..tlokl Gooda .......................................

510
. Hou... for Rent ............_. ............................ 410
In Memoriam ................................................ 020
lnaur•nce ..................................................... 130
Llwn l Garden Equipment ........................ 880
Liveatock......................................................630
Loat 8nd found ...................;....................... OIO
Lots. Acrotoge ................................... _ ...... 350
' M -......- ............................ :...- ...170
Mleceltaneous Merchlllldi•.......................540
Mobl .. Home "-lr...............................-...160
Mobt.. fw Rent ............................... 420

Mobfte Homea for Sale .......... :..................:.. 320

MOM)' 1D .....................................; .............. 220
· MuiDtcr&lt;='- • 4 Wheelero .......................... 740
. Muaicllllnatrurnentl ................................... 570
Pet.on81a ..................................................... 005
Ptrta for S.te ............................ ~---··.............. 560
PlUmbing • Hullng ..:.................................120
Profeeak&gt;nll Servk:ea ........................... - .... 230
Radio, TV • CB Repelr ............................... 160
Ileal e.t.1e W•nlld ..........,.............,......-.... 360
. 'Schoola 1netructl0n.....................................150
8eed , PIMI' Fertillowr .......:...................... 650
lltUIIIIonl WMited .................... _................. ~ 20
tor Renl ....................- ...... ................. 410
llpoltlng Qooda .......................................... 520
SUV'a for Sa........................................_.......720
Trucko fw Stale ........................................... 7t5

s.-ce

~ -- ...- ...:................................._..... 1'10
· Vlms For $alt ...............................................730
Wanted to Buy ••- ........--......................... ~ ..... 010
Wlinted to Buy~ Farm 5uppUH .................. 620

Wa~ To Do .............................................. 110

Yt.nlwclt0"-"1............................................470

Yllf'd Bille- Glllipofla................................. : •.O'T2
V..:l' ' ~kfdle ......................-.07.
Ywclle!H'I. .......................................... 071

· •NOTICE•

/../'taJ,

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends
that yoodo business with
people you know. and
NOT to send money
through the mail until you
have Investigated the

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car
KVC
POS'T OFFICE NOW •
Restorations, LLC is current1y seeking an experienced
~ HeallhCwtl
HIRING
custom and class1c car
liiiiiDn ~ ~
Avg. PC~)' S20h": or
$57Kiyr. includes
fanatiC to work tun lime tn
Known
tor
the
55TheNpist.
applicants
rnust
·
Federal
Benefits, OT.
shop
~r
have a MaS1er's degree in
Plated by adSource . not
Th.Jndefbirds &amp; the 64-70 COunseling , Psychoi!Vt\1
... ._~ or offeredw/ USPSwhohires.
1-866-403-2582
Mustang's; Hill's· is a lull Social Work. You mus1 be

I

Community Action is seeklng laborer(s} lor the
Weatherization crew. Prefer
those with general knowledge of home repair, tnsulation, etc. Send or deliver

Home Heatth Care South
East Oh1o is currently hiring
Home Heatth Aides . for
Meigs Co. Must be oert~ied
or currently have one year's
e.q&gt;ertence. Toll Free call-1·
368-1100
~~and re!&amp;rer:s dto 866n ra
• anent1on
~dwards, 8010 N. 5 tate
Join Our Team!
Route 7, Cheshire, Ohio
45620 by 7..03-08. GMCAA
is an EOE.
Be • pM1: a41• COI'I'q)lny

U:...~

=: :.:'

WVSW ·e&lt; LI'C licensaqle in AT 35 AdiJit Vide&lt;&gt; &amp; Book
WV.
Salary stans at
.
S2S,OOO
, store need Midnight Clerk
full or pan time 304 _937 _
KVC prDVides in home and 4900
foster care servi~ to chit
d
d f T
The
. Athens-Meigs
Educational Service Center
ffren an
1 1. . amlles.,
d be fit.
~: ra nmgs ~n HA ~s . has anticipated position
resu:edf 0d
..c::. ·• openings tor Full Time
200
or 25301
,......t .•. Preschool
Teachers with
Charleston,ra WV
.
.
Call
_
_
,
benef1ts,
and
Par'.·T1me
_
1 800 835 5277
Ext.1.27 or Fax (304)347- Pres~~ Teachers with No
. benefits 1n Athens County
ema1
1
9728
ci ftk
KVC
. tor the 2008-2009 School
~gra8i~Of~E 1 IS Year. Appllcantsmust holda
qu
un
mp oyer valid
Tea Cning
License/Certificate in Pre Local ~~me t:le~lth Agency Kinderganen. These posinow .hlnng HH,As. STN~'s. 1ions are 9-mon_th contracts.
CNA 5· . PCA s. Fle~lble Salary will be based on
scheduling. Call 74 0-44!- experience and certtfica13n
tiorv'licensure according to
Ia
ched I S b it I I·
LPN Dlairwd High Gas sa ry 5
u e. u m e
Prices Hurting Your Budget? ler of interest to John D.
Work Locally &amp; Get Ahead. Costanzo. . Supertln~ent.
Interview Are Now Being Athens-Meigs Educat.l onal
5 ~~
Condue1ed
For
A ~~r~~ced ~enter,
Professional
LPN
2 JC an.th •enOuHe, · 8 u'
., 08 ~ ens
4 57 01
Midnights. 2 Eve nings. Appli~tion Deadline· Ju~
AppNcants Mus! Possess A 27 2008 J&lt;]O P m. Th&lt;!
Team Spirit With
'
· ·
· ·
The Ability To Interact With
A.MESC is an ~qual
E~cjerlu Residents &amp; Their 0 P P 0 r ~ u n 1 t 'i
Famili~s.
Medications EmployerlProvtder.

KvC·

Ba&lt;*ground &amp; Supervisory
PIKeltoWortlt
Skills A Plus But Not
. Required. Benefits Include·
If you are looking for:
Competitive Walles, Pard
U
Sl 5Qih
Vacation,
Paid Meals
t
Available
lnsunince.
• Empl"f98 Health aod d Discoums &amp;
Wellness Programs
More
Interested
t On-Sne OOctor
Profes~oneis. May Gall Or
• Prolesaional Work
Stop By Monday-Sun . i)-4 .
Atmosphere
1113 , Washington . St. .
Rawn"'"""'. WV 273·58.93.
c.lllntue_, to
Aelerences Required EO.E.

~~SS!i.ln~s

chedute .n ht••*-

1011¥

-87 7-463-6247
E-2347

Non CCL driwr needed k&gt;r

wanted: Front Desk Clerk,
must be computer literate.
customer service ex.Perience preferred. Must be willing to WOf1( any shift. Apply
In person at the Gallipolis
H9Jiday Inn. No phOne calls
9 ;;;,·~~--....,
eP·1;;as;;e

~~~~

TO LoAN

~

i

FOR RENT

I

Smoots
INmrucnoN

I
·

Borrow Smart. Contact

place. great view, (304)882·

the Ohio Division "'f
Financial
Institution's
Office of
Consumer

3021 , $53,000
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
ments, furnished and unturVery nice 4br. 2 ba on
Kineon Or in Gallipolis. Ourte n~shed. and houses in

Affairs Ba:oRE you refi- neighborhood on dead end
nance your home Of street. Large -? car garage
obtain a loan . BEWARE . ancl1inished basement. 749of requests tor any large 256-1109
a dvance payment5 of
r .._ _
fees or insurance. Call the
l~IUDII..I:.S~
Office of
consumer
fOR ALE

r ....

Affairs toll free at 1-866278-vvv
w3 ~
,..., 1earn "n the

licensed. (This is a public
service announcement
from the Ohio Valley
PublisMing Compan,)
.

i

~10NAL

~'KFS

1

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-888-582·3345

·

riO

lfoME&lt;;
FOR SALt:

97 141C70 3Br, 2Ba . on a
re nted lot. $13,500 nego· tia~ . 740-245-5466 leave a
message .

I

Brand new 3bed 2bath on
-+- haH acre in Pt. P~asant.
L.
Ave 3b lb
OWNER FINANCE AVAIL2712
1
lnCO n
. r. . a. ABLE. 740-446-3570
with detached O\ler s1zed ~-----garage. call for details Federal Funds JUSt released
$78,000 motivated · seller. for Land Owners. No clos304-675-6757,
304-610- ing cost and ZERO DOWN!
1313 or Assist 2 Sale 304- Will
do
Land
755-2980
Improvements. Bankruptcy

..,

Anentlonl
L
~ . "NO
oca1company v1'"nng
DOWN PAVMENf pro·
grams for you to buy your
home instead of Ianting.

1~010 fi:ncn-.g
r1
1

1'

i

1A r

.--------.

All-"- -ling
lnth'.o new popr ••
•ubfecttotheFedenll
FairttouaingActot 1161
wh~ IMkn ft lltepl to
f ldverti:'~

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AP.UI1\tENJS

.

1-llll RJ.~'T
.

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pets. 740-992-2218.
------1br all utilities pd. also 2 br
aII uti'I"ities p d. near downtown Po1nt Pleasant 304360 163
-------1BR Apt · W/D hookups ·
satelme TV incl. w/rent .
close to hospital. Call 740339•0362
------1b"1 Apt . ve 1y quite . deck
O\ler looking the Ohio. AU
utilities included Call 304675·5751 dep &amp; ref a must.

-o

2 bedroom apartment for
rent in "Middleport . no pets.
~(140_)9". 9_2-_58_58
_ _ __
2t2 3rd Ave . 3 rooms and
bath. furnished . no pets.
A nt De
-44
0 + p. 740 1-0245
.2BA apt . C/A. (740) 441 0194
------.2BR efficiency apt. very
nice . completely furnished 1\f, lmens. app!.. furn .. $800
per month . $500 deposi1
Also. 1BA apt utilities lncluded $SOO per monlh $SOO
deposit =~r,...~a~phcatl~~5
S1Gopll 81 1 o· Vt71nen~,ry
'
1

7

740:~~~~or ~~~3 :2490

--------

&amp; Bad Credit OK.~'!:t! '\~ 2bl.

S460.
Jbr. $540
month, same Oeposrt plus
electnc. washer.
dryer
.
llOo&lt;*up, No Pets. 304-674New 3 Bedroom homes from 0023 or 304-610-0776
·
$214 .36 per month. lndudes

5 bedrooms ava
446-3384

.

;e~nyp [;~~~~· 2~~very =~~~ ":s. atw:=~

d.
&amp;
n pe ect ere it-'J ·
~~pted
b
h·
Lo-r.; &amp;
aymenl t cou d e 1 e
Aan:A.GE
same as ren .
Mortgage
Locators. 100
G u·
C
(740)367-0000
Surtabl:c;;shome~;. gre~;
·hunting area. 419-23Q-7~
ess

Galllpolio c.- CO'.Iogo
{Cereers Close To Home)
Call Today' 700~367.
H !Oil-214-0452

6 80 Ct
3b d
2. 2006, x 2oocion16
2 batn .
bed 2 b' h
Fleetwood 2
at ·
1999 Fortune 3 bed .2 ~th.
Daytime 388-0000. even•ng
_2&lt;-..
5-_
92_1_3_ _ _ _ _
2008 3 bedroom 2 bam sectional home $279 per month
._ 7671 .
740. 38:.r

;o

PRof

4

I

16X80 3 "•"
~room 2 B at h
Vinyl Siding. Shingle Roof.
$230 per month . 740-385_
•
9948

mortgage
broker or
lender
ts
properly

•
•

r: .

NewHaven, 3br., 2bath, 4
acres. hrn tub. gas log fire-

tow truck operator Willtra1n.
7-40-388-8547
wwwga~reeu:ollyedu
......
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ .-.ocreo•led Memt)er AQCfttln'"9
FEDERAL
jotailllocieion.com
Office Adminlstr&amp;tOI need- C"ouncf tor lrldtP£ri!Oenl ColllgK
12746
POSTAL JOBS
-;;;;:;;~;;;;o;i;;;-- ed. MUST HAVE extensiVe •nd$cho016
70
181
$17.89-$28.27/hr.. now hir· Ragle
Dump Drinrw
working knowledge of MS
MN..HJ.AN}:x:JUt;i
~=;:.;on
mg. For application and tree R&amp;J Trucking is seeking Excel program ~ strong
'
· 1
· n
gQ\'Ornemtlnt )ob Info. call q&lt;Ullified COL-A drivers to aer:ounting skilled and pay:;,;:~~::..
American Aseoc. of Labor 1· operate semi-dumps for rotl 8KP&amp;fiei1Cit. Position is in Pel Cremations. cau 740origin, or-~ ..-,tiOfl to
913-599-8226, 2..,... omp. roglonal r~ W. looture the Biclwoll, OH area. M-F 9. . ·446-3745
.
.-..,."""
serv.
anill1enl home tir'n&amp;, health 5• no benefits. pay defen- ,._ _....,._ _ _..,
....... ICII, ...
- - , - - - - - - and
dental
Insurance, dant upon el&lt;pe!'ience.
WAN11D
d~:
Ohio Valley Home Health,. 40t(k), vocation, bonus poy, Lea"' a rno558ge.
•
To Do
Inc. hiring STNA, CNA. and safety awards Qualified 740-44t-7360
L.--~--_.1 This 1aw ; 1 will not
Home Health Aides &amp; opplteaniS must be """23 - - - - - - - All T
..,.
lrnooh&lt;ttJ8
Personal C.re Aides. Futl ..yfS.. have B minimum of 1 Ohio \/alley Home Health, Block~~ :t~~te.
edwcrtiauuud5tor,_.
Pan nne &amp; Per Diem posi- year af commericet driving Inc. hiring LPN lo! an otttce (
...... wt'tieh is tn
740~ 16-7 5- ~ -59 ~ vkMtiDn
tions availabte Appty at experience &amp; clean t.AVR. ~hedul1nglalde supeMsor ~
at the '9W· Our
1480
Jacklon
Pike. Prior experience with semi- position. ~y at 1480 ~_!______
,...,._ ... ._,.,
Galli""lis or phone 441 - durrc;&gt;s and roll-offs is help- Jacbon Pike. GBtlipotis, or Ha...e room m my home to
-""~
... - - • .
~. 1'O'.a I
• .,... ~,.,
t393.'""Competili"' Woges, ful. Contoct Kent at 1100- phone
441 -1 393 core lot' 1. elde""
.., Ia.,.
,...,,.
pororo "'
mMeage reirl'lbursement and -'62-9365 or tiM out applica- Competitive Wages and care provided! Pnwte pay
otnef benettts 1rdudlng lion at www.rftrucktng.com , benefits Including hea!th only. Ca!l Pnscilla Dodrill
opportunity.. . . ..
heaftttlnlurance.
EOE
ir:sut01\C8 .
740-388-8193
L..;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;::.;;;;;;,..,;,
1

House for sale in Racine 4BR available 1st week in
area. Approx. 4 acres, all July · .ADdison Pike •
professionally landscaped. $650/rent - $650/sec dep Ranch style house with 4 NO PETS. Call 446-3644 for
bedrooms, living room. din- more info.
ing'room,.kitchen, large tam- 1!1'!111"'~-~':""-..,
ily room. central air. gas heat
MoBILE~
and t fireplace. Addnion ol e
large Flortda room com· ___
pl e~ely cedar opens on~o 04 Clayton. 2br. 1 bath 8147
patio &amp; pool area. Heated 1 ~ Mercerville Rd. next 1o
ground pool enck&gt;sed by Pf•· school and gas station. 256v~ey fenc 1_ng and land- 8882. 256-6006. 446-2458
scapecl. Fmished 2 car - - - - - - - garallQ attached to house 2BR. 4 miles trom Holzer off
and finished &amp; heated 3 car 160. $375 + · security
garage
unanached. depOsit. 379-.2923 or 446Excellent condition ready to
6865
move in. $25S.OOO.OO, Call :
(740)949-2217
2br. References and depos~·
- - - - - - - required. 367-()632
HUO Homesl 3 bed. onty _;_:_~----si5,3DO! for listin"S 800 - rtlr. 2ba located Jenctlo Ad
620-4946 ex R019
area , S425 month plus
deposit, 1 year lease 304·
Middlepon in town .3 Sr. .27:Hi622 or 304-67~
ranch ,2 112 ba1h,2 fire
plaoes,hot water heat,cen- Mobile home lot" tor rent m
tral air,2 gara.ges.740-~92- Point
Pleasant.
WV.
4197
$1251month. 741l-388·B128

**NOTit::E••

®2008 by NEA, Inc.

"------~· .

1i
Dolt
.1
Absolute
DP
ara.
ver/gold
coins. .
any10K/14K/18K gold }ewelry,
dental gold, pre 1935 US service teSIOration shop for
Classic, Antinue &amp; Muscle
currency, proof/mint sets.
...
diamond&amp;. MTS Coin Shop. cars currently on the inter151 2nd Avenue, Gallipolis. national car show circuit
446-2842
Job requirements include
(but not limited to) working
Juntt cars with or · without on areas such as; ennine,
1;11
titles. 740-388-o884
transmission. brake, various
disassembly &amp; reassembly
af classic show car5.
;;;;jp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1\pt&gt;icant ~also expected to
hlwe sOme time manaoeu..,.. • u"ru·
;,..._,._..
ment &amp; customer . seivice
aau..r
.. ~
ech
'------·
· skiMs, i.e., answenng 1
calls, ordering parts, etc.
An ExceHent way to eam Job can wort( imo full time
money. The New Avon .
position after ·probationary
Cell Marilyn 304-882-2645
perOO . Interested . appli.
cants please call 740-949AVON! All Areas! To Buy or 2217 or email resume to
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304- tbirdt957@wuizon.net.
675·1429.

MoNEY

{,()140H"'f"

c.

~,t.ID_.;.•~-RENT--_.

·
----..1 --------

f)
,

and calico. 740-992-2335... right look for signs 8--3 Sat
seVeral acres of standing
612 8150
hay. Gold Ridge Ad.. a
.
. (740)992-2648
!ofSale
Small Male Jack Russell
WANIDI
ro Buv
Terrier, 4 yrs old, . has all

REb

.... . . - - - - - - - - .

clothes &amp; lots of other stuff 3
miles out Sandhill Rd. on the

1

•

304 54 96
~--.....~~··-·-·..
-

6:E:

D

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away. 2 Family Yard sale boyS

=.:..::~==--Long hair kittens.cufe.Solid

¥1'/

~.~y~:;:: ml
Pf.Pu'AsANf

'

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I

Brand New -Restaurant for
Lease RT 2 good loCation.
Owner has ather irrterests
can
_ ~ A""""'-

~L.~

&lt;;,t\DOL.b

June 26th. l-ee residenoe
~
na..-~ n-...:-if''

r·-

...

! \I

llusiNEli!;
OPPolnuNrJy

---.

~

.

' YARD SAL£

3 kittens, litter trained.
{700)7Cl!-o90I
4 male puppies. mother
Mou'!laln
Curr,
father
unknown. 6--8 weeks old.
CaH 379-91-'0
FFIEEftreWoodi
_ Cl!l
992 32

r

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.2 Adutl: &amp; 2 ldnens 304-5763073

first""....._

wt

Found near Bob Evans

.

~

Borders$3.00/perod
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for Iorge

POI.JCIES : ~ v...,. Pubhhlng,........ thll right to Milt,~ or CMCa~.nr ad III:Mftil'l'a. Errors 11'11111 t. NpOitld on 1ha first day of pubiclllion and the
T~will ba 1 ; :Wbleforno ~hn the 00111: ail.the apec:e~ br
ont,tt.flrst w-tion. W. .t\811 r:MJI:U.I_.fof
q kiA or •Xf*"M that mutts ftom h publlalllon or omiuion ol n edW6itiwu•••L Conection wll .,_ .....t.ln 1hoJ
.mion. • 8oz ~ _,.
. . ••rs ~- • CurNnl me~ • • • All rNI ntN altloardaau•cta .,.. aubjeel to tM Federll fair tb.-lng Act.ot 1t61. • Thl• ••• · ll r 1 r
~only tMIIp ~ .... tnllltint EOE . . . . . . ..
will nolla;owl:"'y IOOeiPI.ny acMrtltl"f in riotMIOI'I Glf ttlt tn. wtn1\0I be .-pon.tbtl hM' any

month~ ~~~=s

~

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.. r:-::-"-C~AR:-L:=:Y-L_e_.-.-.------------,t~,

1/2 G
Sh
d 6
.
erm~
eppar •
Lost:
long
haired
&amp; Chihuahua , answers to
neute
Cocheo, in Pine Grove,
2 112 yr c&gt;d Female Golden Eagle Ridge area. 992-4580
Retriewrtogoodhome304· or"iii5;:;91:;;-4;,;:19:,:1_ _ __ ,
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Monday~Frlday

Monday thru Friday
· 8:00 a.m. to $:00 p.m.

Thunder

,I

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arow

exception.
Along with runs by local
racers and the usual headlining jet semi and doorslammer
vehicles,
Saturday's event featured a
ftrst in Thunder Jam history..
Two ef the fastest wheelstanding vehicles ever built
were on hand for the event
and made a bead-to-head
run down the track with frre,
sparks and ftreworks bringing the show to a close.
Joe 'P,epi' Ur.!&gt;an then
made the fmal run of the
night in ~he X.-'frerne
MaclUne jet semi 1(0 end the
evenirtg as ·stofll!S .lllG:Vcld
into the area and ended the
show prelJlll.turely.
But not even the rains
Larry t&lt;rumlphoto
'could dampen an otherwjse
Tom Agler, driver of the North/South Towing 69 Camar6 super charged thunder car, does
flawless night.
The evening began with a burnout prior to his run during the O'Reilly Thunder Jam Saturday Night at Kanwaha Valley
•
runs by 'l ocal racers foi- Motorsports Park in Southside. W.Va.
IGwed ~y the first of two F-104 aircraft engine that favorite Bob Motz ·continAs for Saturday, the
runs by the super charged devoured 100 gallons of ues to ·recover from a scary show once again filled the
1hunder' vehides. Each of . kerosene per run, Urban put · accident one year prior at , stands as fans continue to
the eight machines on hand on an impressive show once · Kanawha
.Valley flock to the event that has
went head·to41ead; not only during the day and the other Motorsports Park. Sitting at now become a summer traon clock, •b.ut :priQr to their under the blanket of night. the start line prior to his dition in the Tri-State area.
runs with duel bum outs fill- Prior to each of his two runs run, Motz's jet semi caught And it is that show that has
ing the track with ~smoke. I
Urban warmed up the fire with him still inside as made Thunder Jam one of
· The drivers of the suph machine with a lengthy fire · track workers rushed to pull the largest traveling motorcharged vehicles traveled trail follow'e d by a solo~n . him from the burning vehi- sports events in the world.
from as far as Indiana and that nearly brought tiiCY cle at last year's Thunder
"The super charged thunMichigan for Saturday's bouse down - literally.
Jam event.
der cars are always a big
show with prize money
While everyone walked hit with the burnout show
The force from the jet
being awarded to the top engine during takeoff shook away from the accident, the and Pepi Urban, who is dridrivers.
pictures off the walls and memory of that incident ving the big jet truck , he is
Jimmy DeAngelo, driving nearly sent computers tum- remained fresh on the the guy we use in other
the worlds only 19SO bling in the operations minds of Kanawha Valley parts of the country and I
Studebaker wheefsta.nding tower behind the track. officials as they dedicated know that he is going to
f1tetruck, lhen made a 80io While no actual damage the evening to Motz and the put on the same kind of
run followed by a run from · was done, the blast created two ttaclt workers who show people have come to
Nelaon in the Cool Bus, a by the 7.3 ton vehicle iup- pulled him from the burn- expect from the jet semi·
one of • kind 1/3 scale plied the th~nder fans came ina vehil!le, Frank Wingo truck s that we have had ·
wbeel•tandlna ICI!ool bua. to see.
ani1 Oary Lacey. .
here
for
yean,"
Botb vehlclu made solo
But while the show went
"We want to make sure Marchyshyn said . "This
run1 before going head-to- off without incident, there everyone
knows • how event
keeps
arowing
head later in the evening.
we
are,'' because we keep it exciting
was still one. tbina missing appreciatl ve
In
between
Urban Saturday mght.
Marchyshyn said. "It was a and new. Never have we
brought the fans to . their
Urban, who lives in serious accident and the raced two wheel-stonders
feet.
S ~aso ta,
Florida, was whole team here performed against each· other and it is
Driving an I 8,000 horse- brought in for Saturday's well to make sure it wasn't events like this that keep
power jet semi featuring an show while regular fan more seriol!s."
people coming back."

- Sentinel -

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�hge Bz • The Daily Seruinel

Sonoma
fromPageBl
·

think he's a really good road

. racer. So I think you ' ve got

~give that guy a lot of Cred1t for his talent To be able to
get their car up front and
maintain the position ... I
would not have bet on that.n
David Gilliland finished .a
career-best second and was

followed by Gordon, Clint
Bowyer and £asey Mears.
Montoya was sixth, followed by Jlyan Newman,
Matt
Kenseth,
Carl
Edwanls and Tony· .Stewart.

1be race was fairly clean.
.unli.l me closing laps. .

www.mydallysentinel.com

own banle.
Montoya moved through .
the field early and took the
lead until Busch grabbed it
from him. But Montoya was
spun by Marcos Ambrose
while running second, and
th
dr - " h
e contact
op~""" t e .
Colombian to 14th.
Ambrose was later spun
by Sadler, and the. contact
came as be was mifting causing him to break· his
geadlox. Ambrose, who was
nmoing fifth in his Sprint
Cup Series debut, wound up
4~.
for Busch, it w,as the rem-t.&gt; be oocde(l after a n-us-~

trating two week-s. He won
eadier lhls mooth at 'Dover,
chen em!Jarlald ·on -his bis•' ....,;. ·~" f ..._
tone u.ptc o wu:;o:; races
at 1hree different tracks in
three days.
Although be finisbed sec. ood in
Truck Series race,
li le f hi .
the rst g ·o . s JOurney,
bC wreclred bis Cup car in
~ce the next day before
i)etting off to the Nationwide .
Se •
He "NN'eeked ·
nes race.
.
. m
that event ·amt fi~sbed ·
' 32od, ·dlcn ~ . m 1be. I

: David Reuitmann brought
out a late caution when .a
·
flat tire caused him to run
:off course and into a wall of
:tires. That set up a ~
·with six laps to go, and
:Tony Stewart quicldy
. M M
.,
:passed Jarrue • c un:ay LOI'
:second. But :a spin by KieVin
Harvick .as lbc:y entered
Tum 4 started a cllain-reac:tion ccisb that .took Stewart
~ut of oontention for cbal- ~noe:aud . .bed~
·lenging his teammate fur 'N' de. ~de m laSt ·
):h
·
amon~1
race, as we11 •
. ~;.vhm. 't
.t,
't'
and decided after not to hop
. ' aven seen I so I s all over the country tbis
:not .fair to co~ment on weekend to compete in the
that, Stewart satd.
lower series' events in
. _It set up a final restart Milwaukee.
:W!~ three laps to go .and . Still, he was in a bear of a
:CJIIliland arul (lordon hoed mood all weekend as lle
t~p behmd Busch.•He pulled struggled 10 get comfortable
_out to another 1nsurmount- in his Toyota. The Joe Gibbs
able lead, but a wreck Racing team made a slew of
·between Scott Pruett and
'Denny Hamlin brought out changes to _the . car on
a red-flag so NASCAR. Sautrday, and II patd off for
oould clean the track. The . yet another tnp to V1ctory
stoppage lasted 12 minutes, L~e .
forcing Busch to sit idle and
We unloaded he~ an~
,tbink about the impendi11g we were . ab~?lutely JUnk; .
•three-lap sprint to the finish. Busch satd. lt was a bad
• Busch once again moved feehnjl. but these guys
out to a large lead, and the worked so hard. It's just
only real races for position phenomena! that we're able
were back in the pack. to be bere m VICtory Lane
Montoya jockeyed. for posi- - never before on a road
.tion with Mears and Elliott course, in the Cup Series, so
.Sadler, while Kenseth, this is definitely really, realEdwards
and
Dale ly speciaL We came a long
Earnhardt Jr. m.,unted their ways with .this thing."

me

Indians

I'm still frustrated," Byrd
said.
Byrd matched his loss
total
from last season, when
fromPageBl
be was 15-8. He dropped bis
it - . because if the ball gets thiro straight start since
recording bis lOOth career ·
.by him, Jhonny 's going to victorv on 1une 6 at Detroit,
score."
-1
aUowmg four runs and
Chad Billingsley (6-7) ·s even bits over seven
allowed three runs and eight inili.ngs. 1'he right~hander is
hits in five innings for the l-7 with a 7.19 ERA on the
Dodgers, throwing · 108
road
pitches. All of Cleveland's
"He did a good 1·ab kee.n-:
runs came in the third on an
"" ·
RBl.single by Ryan Garto ·in~ in the game," M~
. satd. "Eve!)'hocly had the
and run-scoring groundouts mind-set that we were going
by Shin-Son Choo and to slay 018gressive and bit
Casey Blake.
-the first fastball we saw.
"He looked like he was 1bat's what we did in the
getting a 'linle frustrated ftrst inning, and then he
a couple of g roundballs
·
bet
finding holes and walldng a made an .adjustment w e
few guys," Martin said. "I be was throwing a lot more
off-speed stuff the second
just told him that once and .third time ·throu~ the
thing_s happen, you can't
d kee · th ball
.ch~ them. So you've just dli.tteup ·an , pmg · · e
·got t&lt;l keep your head in the . 0 n m~jb
Joe
·game and keep battlinjl. He Beirne!
lind K~~~athan
did enough to keep us m the Br-oxton
h pitched .an
· · be&amp;
""~ 1-~sbi
game and keep the lead."
Cleveland's
starting mrnng ' •Gre ........
ruto
finished for his · ll th save in
-pitchers have failed to gG at 14 attempts.
least five innings in only
seven of the team •s last 61
Peralta was moved up ro .
·g ames. Byrd (3-8) appeared the cleanup spot fm d!e second time !ibis season and
to be heading in that direc- went 2-for-3 with a walk.
tion for the fourth time in
his last five outings .
,Hebl~die In~~~ lo ,b ack. ·
Juan Pierre led off .the lG· ...,.. ex«a-mm11g IWIDS .
'first with a single, Matt with ,a. ~g tw.o-ruri
.Kemp followed with · a double•in the lrOdt inning of
ground-rule double and Friday night's series opener
James Loney drove in both and a go-ahelld RBI :single
.of them with another dou- in the II th on Saturday.
ble. Martin then hit a 2-2
Notes: Omar Vizquel
fastball into the. left-field Should expect quite a homepavilion for his seventh coming Tuesday when the
home run. It was the 20th Indians host his San
'allowed by Byrd, who Francisco Giants in the
.reached that figure for the opener of a.rtbree-game
.foutth straight season.
series. The !!-time Gold
"That was obviously all ·Glove winner, who .·broke
'tbe offense we could Luis Aparicio's majGr·
muster," manager Joe Torre league 'record for most
said. "He had a very low games played .a t SS on May
pitch count today. He 30, returns to Cleveland for
,throws a lot of strikes, 'but t:be fmt time since signing
you still have to make up with the Giants as a free
your mind what you want to agent on Nov. Hi, 2004. He
bit When you keep looking spent 11 seasons with the
for the last pitch he threw, Tribe, helping them reach
that's when you get into the playoffs six times and
·trouble. We need more the World Series in 1995
'patience. We've got to ·have and 1997.... Byrd wu the
a plan."
winnina
pitcher
for
Byrd retired 12 of his next Cleveland in Torre's final
13 bat1Crs and limlted the·
II Yankees manqer
Dodaers to just two •lnJlea - the AL dl vi1lon terie•
.a~Mt Manin'• home.r. Both cllncber, which the Indiana
•of them were in the fiflh w011 ~ ln the Bronx. ...
with none out, but Byrd . Billlgaaley hit two baiters In
retited Kemp on 1 double- ·the tint three lnnina•· The
play arounder and aot lndlabl have been plunked a
Loney to fly out.
major leque-biah S4 time1.
"I JUst have to be positive , Last season, opposina
and look at the fact that I pitchers bit 80 Cleveland
came back and made some batters to set a franchise
good pitches_after that. But record.

s·

aame

i.•

Monday, June 23, zooB

www.mydailysentinel.com

James, Wade set to restore US basketball pride
BY TOM WITIIERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

now," . James said. "We
have one goal , and that's to
win a gold medaL We're
very excited about it. We
don ' t worry about the rest.
We worry about getting in
shape and getting ready to
win a gold medal, that's
our only concern."
· James was joined at bis
"King for Kids Bike-athon" bv Wade, Cavaliers
coach Mike Brown, former
Indians center fielder
Kenny Lofton and NBA
great Spencer Haywood,
the leading scorer on the
1968 U.S. team that won
gold in Mexico City. More
than 2,000 riders took part
in 'the event in James·
hometown.
While James' spot on the
U.S. ro sier was a given,
Wade ' s wasn ' t assured
until recently.
His season ended in
Mar~h. shut down by a left
knee tJJat never was right
following surgery in 2007.
Wade has been in Chicago
working · out s·i nce. early
May, and while he was
there, both James and New
Orlean s Hornets guard
Chris Paul - also expected

ro be named to the U.S.
team - joined their good
friend to help him polish
his g:ame .
"One thing that really
helped my confidence was
when LeBron and C.P..
:came to Chicago and we
played together," said
Wade, who missed 31
,g ames last season, an
absence that sent the Heat
plummeting to a 15-67
record. "We really took it
up a notch and it was very
competitive and I was
doing what I nonnally do,
so I was feeling good."
Colangelo
came
to
Chicago to see Wade play
and came away convinced
the 6-foot-4 guard was
healthy.
Wade never wondered
whether he'd be able to get
ready.
"It's all about me being
healthy," he said. "I've
never .doubted my talent.
It's just making sure I' m
healthy for the long hauL
Once I knew that weeks
and weeks ago, then I was
· confident in moving forward."
For James ·and Wade.

~rtbune

playing with so many
other top players will be a
luxury they don't get during the regul~r season.
Instead of havmg to do
almost everything to help
their . team s win. they'll
have plenty of help.
" We get 12 guys that can
he ·out on the court for a
long period of time. so it's
not like on our respective
team s where we're the
only go-to guys , where
every time we come down
on the offensive end we ' re
the guy they have to go
to." James said. " If we
wanted to on Team USA,
we could go to Kobe
Bryant 20 straight possession s. We can go to
Carmel
Anthony
20
straight possessions. We
can to go D-Wade 20
straight possessions. It's
not like we ' re going to be
exerting a lot of energy
like we would if we were
ori the Cavs or the Heat."
Proceeds from the bikea-than will be djvided
among the Akron Area
YMCA. the Akron Urban
League and the LeBron
James Family Foundation.

CLASSIFIED

AKRON
LeBron
James and Dwyane Wade
cruised city streets on bicycles Saturday for chanty.
Soon, the NBA superstars will be touring China
for gold.
James · and Wade have
been selected to play on the
U.S. Olympic ··b asketball
Iteam, wbiob will be rormally
introduced '
Monday by ,o oacb ' Milke
Krzyze~lci , 'ami
USA
Basketball managing director Jerry Colangelo, The
12-man squad, whioh will
also include NBA MVP
Kobe Bryant, Jason Kidd
.and Carmelo Anthony, will
tty &lt;to win a gold medal that
has eluded the Americans
·s ince 1996.
This will be the second
Olympics for Clevelaiid'''S
James and Miami ' s Wade,
Who were on.the Ame~can
teamthat fi!l1sbed a dJsappomtmg thud and won a
bronze medal at the Athens
Games in 2004
.
" I-t's easy to focus on
USA Basketball nght
---------------------------------------)lear; · he joked.
fuw: ~i_ngles aru:ltwo walkS, l!l Oakhmd.
handing rookie Johnny
" Andy is back to being . Cueto, who has lost three
after winning
Cueto (5-8) a 'hard-luck Andy," GiJ:ardi said. "H~'s starts in
three
straight,
flashed the
loss.
Both
departed
foUGwbeen
on
a
nice
little
run.
fromPageBl
ing .a rain delay in the mid- He'·s been abig-gamepitch- nasty stuff that's made him
so tough at times ·this year.
dle.lilftbe sixth.
· erfor a 'loog,t ime."
They Josi reliever Kyle
Despite an mjury-deplet- He yielded one run and four
· Griffey
pulled
Farnsworth to injury, how- Famsworth 's eighth-Inning ed rotation, New , York hits in five innings, striking
ever, when he tried to bare- pitch into the front row of starters .are 6--1. ,with a 1 .11 out seven and walking none.
hand Brandon Phillips' right-field seats for ' bis ' , ElRAirithe.;p.l!St 1.0 games.
Notes: It is . Pettitte's
infield single in the ei_ghth.
eighth home. run this ~ ., PjlU;itr.e pi.ulhed out of ·a longest scoreless stretch
Farnsworth received three and first at Yankee Stadium ltiases-iGadcd. . ~c-out )am since a career-best 23stitches between his right since May 8, I!J99, \With .in.dle f~!lhen' ~scaped inning streak in 1997. . ..
ring finger and pinky. New · Seattle.
Reds
38
Edwin
,-~ 1roo'bl~ m the SIXth.
York manager Joe Girardi
New York is scheduled to . After~·a :S()-miliute delay, Encarnacion left in the third
said he doesn't anticipate move into a sparkling new Derek Jeter ·gpened the bot- with lower back spasms. He
the right-hander needing a ballpark next season.
tom of llhe sixth with a sin- is da}' to day.... Griffey was
stint on the disabled list.
"lt's always been fun," gle off' Gary ~ajewski. Cinctnnati's DH again. He
"It happenecl in A-ball , Griffey said. "If you can't Hideki Matsu1 .sing'l!lflwith has 19 career homers at
same
exact
spot," get hyped here, tllen you two outs .and Giamllii 1hit .an· Yankee
Stadium.
Farnsworth .said. "If I had can't do it anywhere."
·Opposite-field drive that Farnsworth became the
time to think about it,
The ball was caught by a sliced away from Hopper in 384th pitcher to give up a
there's no way I would have smiling fan wearing a Reds left :field with help frqm the home run to Griffey. ...
done it. It happened so shirt, and the crowd of · w.ind.
Baker benched the slumpquick. Just reaction. · ... '5 4,234 gave Griffey a
The two-ruq ,double, off ing Dunn for a day. Dunn is
Hopefully I won't miss any stan~ ovation as he · feremy Alfeldt, ma4e it 3-0. mired in a 6-for-55 skid ....
time."
roun
&lt;the bases. ,
. Jm:ge Posada acldclll :an RBI .Pettitte 's seven pickoffs .this
Mariano Rivera came oii
season are his most since he
"lt was nice. lenjoyed ·it.~ -dou~.
. .:
..- .
and got fgur outs for 'his said Griffey, who hit 'Ne. · Giambi also 10ingled ,l ead- . had seven in 200 I. ... The
21st save in 21 chances. 600 on June 9 at Florida.
injl &lt;Iff ,the fifth and went to Yankees are off Monday
Cincinnati put runners at the;
Pettitte is 5-0 wjth a 3.61 thiFd on Posada"sdouble off . before beginning a threecomers in the ninth before ERA in his last seven starts. -Oueto. Cano followed with game series Tuesday night
Rivera struck out pinch-hit- He has won three straight . a long sacrifice fly. ·
in Pittsburgh, their first .trip
ter Adam Dunn and retired since giving up 10 runs in a
Giambi finished with to the Steel City since losNorris Hopper on a come·- no-decision June 7 against three hits and his second ing the 1960 World Series
on Bill Mazeroski's-famous '
Kansas City, allowing only · stolen base.
backer.
"I might go 40-4 this home run in Game 7.
· Pettitte (8'5) allowed only a second-inning run June 12

on

Reds

Gallia
County

OH
'·.

In One Week With Us

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: 4x4'a For S.le ........... - ................................125
... Annoui'ICMDent-..........................................030

Antiquea .......................................... - ...........530
A~tllor'Rent ...................---~........... 440
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a.~.~tor"-~
,
_ , . ..........
...,,............................ 750

Blllldlng SUPIIIU ................ ,..... - ............... 550
Businel.a •nd Bulldi.
............................. 340
._.,.wnlty
8 ...
....,.,_
.............-...................210

Busi,_.
Trainlng ............... _._,. ___ .. ,........ 140
-

.

CampersAMolarltomea ... --······-...·-·----· 710
Camping EquipmMII: ••••....... _ •••. ~............... 710
Carda of Thll'lka ....................-.~··-····· ......... 010
ChlldiElderty Cltre .......................... - ........... 190
- Electricai/Raf(palkwt..........____................ 840
:· Equipment for ltent._
.................................... 480
', Excevlting ................................................... 830
: F.-m 1Equlpmenl .......................................... 610
c
fwD430

r...,. ""''"'""........................................

ferms for S.le .. ~-........................................ S30

·

For L..-.....................................-............... &amp;80
515
For S.le ............·.... r.......................................
For Sale or Trade ............................... _........ HO
fNita.l: •.;.eg.tablei ................................ - ... SIO
Ftwn'-'*1 ROOOM ...--... - .... - ........,•••_.......450
General tt.uiJng ............. - ............................850
Glvwwau........................ _... - .......................040
•
Hippy Adl...................... - ....................- ······::

Gnln.-...............................................

Hiy 1:
Hllp Ww:tcd--................ - .........;......... - ... 110

::::.
~S:~~::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::~
Hou..tlokl Gooda .......................................

510
. Hou... for Rent ............_. ............................ 410
In Memoriam ................................................ 020
lnaur•nce ..................................................... 130
Llwn l Garden Equipment ........................ 880
Liveatock......................................................630
Loat 8nd found ...................;....................... OIO
Lots. Acrotoge ................................... _ ...... 350
' M -......- ............................ :...- ...170
Mleceltaneous Merchlllldi•.......................540
Mobl .. Home "-lr...............................-...160
Mobt.. fw Rent ............................... 420

Mobfte Homea for Sale .......... :..................:.. 320

MOM)' 1D .....................................; .............. 220
· MuiDtcr&lt;='- • 4 Wheelero .......................... 740
. Muaicllllnatrurnentl ................................... 570
Pet.on81a ..................................................... 005
Ptrta for S.te ............................ ~---··.............. 560
PlUmbing • Hullng ..:.................................120
Profeeak&gt;nll Servk:ea ........................... - .... 230
Radio, TV • CB Repelr ............................... 160
Ileal e.t.1e W•nlld ..........,.............,......-.... 360
. 'Schoola 1netructl0n.....................................150
8eed , PIMI' Fertillowr .......:...................... 650
lltUIIIIonl WMited .................... _................. ~ 20
tor Renl ....................- ...... ................. 410
llpoltlng Qooda .......................................... 520
SUV'a for Sa........................................_.......720
Trucko fw Stale ........................................... 7t5

s.-ce

~ -- ...- ...:................................._..... 1'10
· Vlms For $alt ...............................................730
Wanted to Buy ••- ........--......................... ~ ..... 010
Wlinted to Buy~ Farm 5uppUH .................. 620

Wa~ To Do .............................................. 110

Yt.nlwclt0"-"1............................................470

Yllf'd Bille- Glllipofla................................. : •.O'T2
V..:l' ' ~kfdle ......................-.07.
Ywclle!H'I. .......................................... 071

· •NOTICE•

/../'taJ,

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends
that yoodo business with
people you know. and
NOT to send money
through the mail until you
have Investigated the

ll:ofle;;;,;";;;
'ng::;,.

'-

.

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www.comics.com

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Hill:s

,Automotive
car
KVC
POS'T OFFICE NOW •
Restorations, LLC is current1y seeking an experienced
~ HeallhCwtl
HIRING
custom and class1c car
liiiiiDn ~ ~
Avg. PC~)' S20h": or
$57Kiyr. includes
fanatiC to work tun lime tn
Known
tor
the
55TheNpist.
applicants
rnust
·
Federal
Benefits, OT.
shop
~r
have a MaS1er's degree in
Plated by adSource . not
Th.Jndefbirds &amp; the 64-70 COunseling , Psychoi!Vt\1
... ._~ or offeredw/ USPSwhohires.
1-866-403-2582
Mustang's; Hill's· is a lull Social Work. You mus1 be

I

Community Action is seeklng laborer(s} lor the
Weatherization crew. Prefer
those with general knowledge of home repair, tnsulation, etc. Send or deliver

Home Heatth Care South
East Oh1o is currently hiring
Home Heatth Aides . for
Meigs Co. Must be oert~ied
or currently have one year's
e.q&gt;ertence. Toll Free call-1·
368-1100
~~and re!&amp;rer:s dto 866n ra
• anent1on
~dwards, 8010 N. 5 tate
Join Our Team!
Route 7, Cheshire, Ohio
45620 by 7..03-08. GMCAA
is an EOE.
Be • pM1: a41• COI'I'q)lny

U:...~

=: :.:'

WVSW ·e&lt; LI'C licensaqle in AT 35 AdiJit Vide&lt;&gt; &amp; Book
WV.
Salary stans at
.
S2S,OOO
, store need Midnight Clerk
full or pan time 304 _937 _
KVC prDVides in home and 4900
foster care servi~ to chit
d
d f T
The
. Athens-Meigs
Educational Service Center
ffren an
1 1. . amlles.,
d be fit.
~: ra nmgs ~n HA ~s . has anticipated position
resu:edf 0d
..c::. ·• openings tor Full Time
200
or 25301
,......t .•. Preschool
Teachers with
Charleston,ra WV
.
.
Call
_
_
,
benef1ts,
and
Par'.·T1me
_
1 800 835 5277
Ext.1.27 or Fax (304)347- Pres~~ Teachers with No
. benefits 1n Athens County
ema1
1
9728
ci ftk
KVC
. tor the 2008-2009 School
~gra8i~Of~E 1 IS Year. Appllcantsmust holda
qu
un
mp oyer valid
Tea Cning
License/Certificate in Pre Local ~~me t:le~lth Agency Kinderganen. These posinow .hlnng HH,As. STN~'s. 1ions are 9-mon_th contracts.
CNA 5· . PCA s. Fle~lble Salary will be based on
scheduling. Call 74 0-44!- experience and certtfica13n
tiorv'licensure according to
Ia
ched I S b it I I·
LPN Dlairwd High Gas sa ry 5
u e. u m e
Prices Hurting Your Budget? ler of interest to John D.
Work Locally &amp; Get Ahead. Costanzo. . Supertln~ent.
Interview Are Now Being Athens-Meigs Educat.l onal
5 ~~
Condue1ed
For
A ~~r~~ced ~enter,
Professional
LPN
2 JC an.th •enOuHe, · 8 u'
., 08 ~ ens
4 57 01
Midnights. 2 Eve nings. Appli~tion Deadline· Ju~
AppNcants Mus! Possess A 27 2008 J&lt;]O P m. Th&lt;!
Team Spirit With
'
· ·
· ·
The Ability To Interact With
A.MESC is an ~qual
E~cjerlu Residents &amp; Their 0 P P 0 r ~ u n 1 t 'i
Famili~s.
Medications EmployerlProvtder.

KvC·

Ba&lt;*ground &amp; Supervisory
PIKeltoWortlt
Skills A Plus But Not
. Required. Benefits Include·
If you are looking for:
Competitive Walles, Pard
U
Sl 5Qih
Vacation,
Paid Meals
t
Available
lnsunince.
• Empl"f98 Health aod d Discoums &amp;
Wellness Programs
More
Interested
t On-Sne OOctor
Profes~oneis. May Gall Or
• Prolesaional Work
Stop By Monday-Sun . i)-4 .
Atmosphere
1113 , Washington . St. .
Rawn"'"""'. WV 273·58.93.
c.lllntue_, to
Aelerences Required EO.E.

~~SS!i.ln~s

chedute .n ht••*-

1011¥

-87 7-463-6247
E-2347

Non CCL driwr needed k&gt;r

wanted: Front Desk Clerk,
must be computer literate.
customer service ex.Perience preferred. Must be willing to WOf1( any shift. Apply
In person at the Gallipolis
H9Jiday Inn. No phOne calls
9 ;;;,·~~--....,
eP·1;;as;;e

~~~~

TO LoAN

~

i

FOR RENT

I

Smoots
INmrucnoN

I
·

Borrow Smart. Contact

place. great view, (304)882·

the Ohio Division "'f
Financial
Institution's
Office of
Consumer

3021 , $53,000
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
ments, furnished and unturVery nice 4br. 2 ba on
Kineon Or in Gallipolis. Ourte n~shed. and houses in

Affairs Ba:oRE you refi- neighborhood on dead end
nance your home Of street. Large -? car garage
obtain a loan . BEWARE . ancl1inished basement. 749of requests tor any large 256-1109
a dvance payment5 of
r .._ _
fees or insurance. Call the
l~IUDII..I:.S~
Office of
consumer
fOR ALE

r ....

Affairs toll free at 1-866278-vvv
w3 ~
,..., 1earn "n the

licensed. (This is a public
service announcement
from the Ohio Valley
PublisMing Compan,)
.

i

~10NAL

~'KFS

1

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-888-582·3345

·

riO

lfoME&lt;;
FOR SALt:

97 141C70 3Br, 2Ba . on a
re nted lot. $13,500 nego· tia~ . 740-245-5466 leave a
message .

I

Brand new 3bed 2bath on
-+- haH acre in Pt. P~asant.
L.
Ave 3b lb
OWNER FINANCE AVAIL2712
1
lnCO n
. r. . a. ABLE. 740-446-3570
with detached O\ler s1zed ~-----garage. call for details Federal Funds JUSt released
$78,000 motivated · seller. for Land Owners. No clos304-675-6757,
304-610- ing cost and ZERO DOWN!
1313 or Assist 2 Sale 304- Will
do
Land
755-2980
Improvements. Bankruptcy

..,

Anentlonl
L
~ . "NO
oca1company v1'"nng
DOWN PAVMENf pro·
grams for you to buy your
home instead of Ianting.

1~010 fi:ncn-.g
r1
1

1'

i

1A r

.--------.

All-"- -ling
lnth'.o new popr ••
•ubfecttotheFedenll
FairttouaingActot 1161
wh~ IMkn ft lltepl to
f ldverti:'~

=:;;

be..a:

...._,Of

1••

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1

AP.UI1\tENJS

.

1-llll RJ.~'T
.

::~~Yd;~it ~~~:=~~~~

pets. 740-992-2218.
------1br all utilities pd. also 2 br
aII uti'I"ities p d. near downtown Po1nt Pleasant 304360 163
-------1BR Apt · W/D hookups ·
satelme TV incl. w/rent .
close to hospital. Call 740339•0362
------1b"1 Apt . ve 1y quite . deck
O\ler looking the Ohio. AU
utilities included Call 304675·5751 dep &amp; ref a must.

-o

2 bedroom apartment for
rent in "Middleport . no pets.
~(140_)9". 9_2-_58_58
_ _ __
2t2 3rd Ave . 3 rooms and
bath. furnished . no pets.
A nt De
-44
0 + p. 740 1-0245
.2BA apt . C/A. (740) 441 0194
------.2BR efficiency apt. very
nice . completely furnished 1\f, lmens. app!.. furn .. $800
per month . $500 deposi1
Also. 1BA apt utilities lncluded $SOO per monlh $SOO
deposit =~r,...~a~phcatl~~5
S1Gopll 81 1 o· Vt71nen~,ry
'
1

7

740:~~~~or ~~~3 :2490

--------

&amp; Bad Credit OK.~'!:t! '\~ 2bl.

S460.
Jbr. $540
month, same Oeposrt plus
electnc. washer.
dryer
.
llOo&lt;*up, No Pets. 304-674New 3 Bedroom homes from 0023 or 304-610-0776
·
$214 .36 per month. lndudes

5 bedrooms ava
446-3384

.

;e~nyp [;~~~~· 2~~very =~~~ ":s. atw:=~

d.
&amp;
n pe ect ere it-'J ·
~~pted
b
h·
Lo-r.; &amp;
aymenl t cou d e 1 e
Aan:A.GE
same as ren .
Mortgage
Locators. 100
G u·
C
(740)367-0000
Surtabl:c;;shome~;. gre~;
·hunting area. 419-23Q-7~
ess

Galllpolio c.- CO'.Iogo
{Cereers Close To Home)
Call Today' 700~367.
H !Oil-214-0452

6 80 Ct
3b d
2. 2006, x 2oocion16
2 batn .
bed 2 b' h
Fleetwood 2
at ·
1999 Fortune 3 bed .2 ~th.
Daytime 388-0000. even•ng
_2&lt;-..
5-_
92_1_3_ _ _ _ _
2008 3 bedroom 2 bam sectional home $279 per month
._ 7671 .
740. 38:.r

;o

PRof

4

I

16X80 3 "•"
~room 2 B at h
Vinyl Siding. Shingle Roof.
$230 per month . 740-385_
•
9948

mortgage
broker or
lender
ts
properly

•
•

r: .

NewHaven, 3br., 2bath, 4
acres. hrn tub. gas log fire-

tow truck operator Willtra1n.
7-40-388-8547
wwwga~reeu:ollyedu
......
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ .-.ocreo•led Memt)er AQCfttln'"9
FEDERAL
jotailllocieion.com
Office Adminlstr&amp;tOI need- C"ouncf tor lrldtP£ri!Oenl ColllgK
12746
POSTAL JOBS
-;;;;:;;~;;;;o;i;;;-- ed. MUST HAVE extensiVe •nd$cho016
70
181
$17.89-$28.27/hr.. now hir· Ragle
Dump Drinrw
working knowledge of MS
MN..HJ.AN}:x:JUt;i
~=;:.;on
mg. For application and tree R&amp;J Trucking is seeking Excel program ~ strong
'
· 1
· n
gQ\'Ornemtlnt )ob Info. call q&lt;Ullified COL-A drivers to aer:ounting skilled and pay:;,;:~~::..
American Aseoc. of Labor 1· operate semi-dumps for rotl 8KP&amp;fiei1Cit. Position is in Pel Cremations. cau 740origin, or-~ ..-,tiOfl to
913-599-8226, 2..,... omp. roglonal r~ W. looture the Biclwoll, OH area. M-F 9. . ·446-3745
.
.-..,."""
serv.
anill1enl home tir'n&amp;, health 5• no benefits. pay defen- ,._ _....,._ _ _..,
....... ICII, ...
- - , - - - - - - and
dental
Insurance, dant upon el&lt;pe!'ience.
WAN11D
d~:
Ohio Valley Home Health,. 40t(k), vocation, bonus poy, Lea"' a rno558ge.
•
To Do
Inc. hiring STNA, CNA. and safety awards Qualified 740-44t-7360
L.--~--_.1 This 1aw ; 1 will not
Home Health Aides &amp; opplteaniS must be """23 - - - - - - - All T
..,.
lrnooh&lt;ttJ8
Personal C.re Aides. Futl ..yfS.. have B minimum of 1 Ohio \/alley Home Health, Block~~ :t~~te.
edwcrtiauuud5tor,_.
Pan nne &amp; Per Diem posi- year af commericet driving Inc. hiring LPN lo! an otttce (
...... wt'tieh is tn
740~ 16-7 5- ~ -59 ~ vkMtiDn
tions availabte Appty at experience &amp; clean t.AVR. ~hedul1nglalde supeMsor ~
at the '9W· Our
1480
Jacklon
Pike. Prior experience with semi- position. ~y at 1480 ~_!______
,...,._ ... ._,.,
Galli""lis or phone 441 - durrc;&gt;s and roll-offs is help- Jacbon Pike. GBtlipotis, or Ha...e room m my home to
-""~
... - - • .
~. 1'O'.a I
• .,... ~,.,
t393.'""Competili"' Woges, ful. Contoct Kent at 1100- phone
441 -1 393 core lot' 1. elde""
.., Ia.,.
,...,,.
pororo "'
mMeage reirl'lbursement and -'62-9365 or tiM out applica- Competitive Wages and care provided! Pnwte pay
otnef benettts 1rdudlng lion at www.rftrucktng.com , benefits Including hea!th only. Ca!l Pnscilla Dodrill
opportunity.. . . ..
heaftttlnlurance.
EOE
ir:sut01\C8 .
740-388-8193
L..;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;::.;;;;;;,..,;,
1

House for sale in Racine 4BR available 1st week in
area. Approx. 4 acres, all July · .ADdison Pike •
professionally landscaped. $650/rent - $650/sec dep Ranch style house with 4 NO PETS. Call 446-3644 for
bedrooms, living room. din- more info.
ing'room,.kitchen, large tam- 1!1'!111"'~-~':""-..,
ily room. central air. gas heat
MoBILE~
and t fireplace. Addnion ol e
large Flortda room com· ___
pl e~ely cedar opens on~o 04 Clayton. 2br. 1 bath 8147
patio &amp; pool area. Heated 1 ~ Mercerville Rd. next 1o
ground pool enck&gt;sed by Pf•· school and gas station. 256v~ey fenc 1_ng and land- 8882. 256-6006. 446-2458
scapecl. Fmished 2 car - - - - - - - garallQ attached to house 2BR. 4 miles trom Holzer off
and finished &amp; heated 3 car 160. $375 + · security
garage
unanached. depOsit. 379-.2923 or 446Excellent condition ready to
6865
move in. $25S.OOO.OO, Call :
(740)949-2217
2br. References and depos~·
- - - - - - - required. 367-()632
HUO Homesl 3 bed. onty _;_:_~----si5,3DO! for listin"S 800 - rtlr. 2ba located Jenctlo Ad
620-4946 ex R019
area , S425 month plus
deposit, 1 year lease 304·
Middlepon in town .3 Sr. .27:Hi622 or 304-67~
ranch ,2 112 ba1h,2 fire
plaoes,hot water heat,cen- Mobile home lot" tor rent m
tral air,2 gara.ges.740-~92- Point
Pleasant.
WV.
4197
$1251month. 741l-388·B128

**NOTit::E••

®2008 by NEA, Inc.

"------~· .

1i
Dolt
.1
Absolute
DP
ara.
ver/gold
coins. .
any10K/14K/18K gold }ewelry,
dental gold, pre 1935 US service teSIOration shop for
Classic, Antinue &amp; Muscle
currency, proof/mint sets.
...
diamond&amp;. MTS Coin Shop. cars currently on the inter151 2nd Avenue, Gallipolis. national car show circuit
446-2842
Job requirements include
(but not limited to) working
Juntt cars with or · without on areas such as; ennine,
1;11
titles. 740-388-o884
transmission. brake, various
disassembly &amp; reassembly
af classic show car5.
;;;;jp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1\pt&gt;icant ~also expected to
hlwe sOme time manaoeu..,.. • u"ru·
;,..._,._..
ment &amp; customer . seivice
aau..r
.. ~
ech
'------·
· skiMs, i.e., answenng 1
calls, ordering parts, etc.
An ExceHent way to eam Job can wort( imo full time
money. The New Avon .
position after ·probationary
Cell Marilyn 304-882-2645
perOO . Interested . appli.
cants please call 740-949AVON! All Areas! To Buy or 2217 or email resume to
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304- tbirdt957@wuizon.net.
675·1429.

MoNEY

{,()140H"'f"

c.

~,t.ID_.;.•~-RENT--_.

·
----..1 --------

f)
,

and calico. 740-992-2335... right look for signs 8--3 Sat
seVeral acres of standing
612 8150
hay. Gold Ridge Ad.. a
.
. (740)992-2648
!ofSale
Small Male Jack Russell
WANIDI
ro Buv
Terrier, 4 yrs old, . has all

REb

.... . . - - - - - - - - .

clothes &amp; lots of other stuff 3
miles out Sandhill Rd. on the

1

•

304 54 96
~--.....~~··-·-·..
-

6:E:

D

;

I

away. 2 Family Yard sale boyS

=.:..::~==--Long hair kittens.cufe.Solid

¥1'/

~.~y~:;:: ml
Pf.Pu'AsANf

'

~Qui

I

Brand New -Restaurant for
Lease RT 2 good loCation.
Owner has ather irrterests
can
_ ~ A""""'-

~L.~

&lt;;,t\DOL.b

June 26th. l-ee residenoe
~
na..-~ n-...:-if''

r·-

...

! \I

llusiNEli!;
OPPolnuNrJy

---.

~

.

' YARD SAL£

3 kittens, litter trained.
{700)7Cl!-o90I
4 male puppies. mother
Mou'!laln
Curr,
father
unknown. 6--8 weeks old.
CaH 379-91-'0
FFIEEftreWoodi
_ Cl!l
992 32

r

iO

.2 Adutl: &amp; 2 ldnens 304-5763073

first""....._

wt

Found near Bob Evans

.

~

Borders$3.00/perod
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for Iorge

POI.JCIES : ~ v...,. Pubhhlng,........ thll right to Milt,~ or CMCa~.nr ad III:Mftil'l'a. Errors 11'11111 t. NpOitld on 1ha first day of pubiclllion and the
T~will ba 1 ; :Wbleforno ~hn the 00111: ail.the apec:e~ br
ont,tt.flrst w-tion. W. .t\811 r:MJI:U.I_.fof
q kiA or •Xf*"M that mutts ftom h publlalllon or omiuion ol n edW6itiwu•••L Conection wll .,_ .....t.ln 1hoJ
.mion. • 8oz ~ _,.
. . ••rs ~- • CurNnl me~ • • • All rNI ntN altloardaau•cta .,.. aubjeel to tM Federll fair tb.-lng Act.ot 1t61. • Thl• ••• · ll r 1 r
~only tMIIp ~ .... tnllltint EOE . . . . . . ..
will nolla;owl:"'y IOOeiPI.ny acMrtltl"f in riotMIOI'I Glf ttlt tn. wtn1\0I be .-pon.tbtl hM' any

month~ ~~~=s

~

'""

.. r:-::-"-C~AR:-L:=:Y-L_e_.-.-.------------,t~,

1/2 G
Sh
d 6
.
erm~
eppar •
Lost:
long
haired
&amp; Chihuahua , answers to
neute
Cocheo, in Pine Grove,
2 112 yr c&gt;d Female Golden Eagle Ridge area. 992-4580
Retriewrtogoodhome304· or"iii5;:;91:;;-4;,;:19:,:1_ _ __ ,
743-5753
rW

::~:'::';.~~~

Noon :l

Thursday for Sundays

1 Gold Cooch to giwaway
740-208-3()16

::;:::.::~-:-II

1~

Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p . m.

emn In an .cl taken overthi Pfiiiii, -

~~·•I

Now you can have borders and C)raphics
IL-'
oddedtoyourclasslfledods
(.~

• All ad1 must be prepaid'

D 1 lptiun • l...::lud. It Prtoe • A¥01111 A' l eul 11 &amp;
• lndude PhoM Number And~ When fleeded
• Adl 5ltould llun 7 .,.,.

..
~-·~-- r
-r

~~~~~~~-2:56-6800::_ _ _- - ,

'v

Paper

SUnct.y In-column: 1:0G p.m.
Friclay For Sunct.ys Paper

• ltart Your Alii Wtth A tcewword • Include Coraplete

Should Include Tllesl! Items
To Help Get Response •••

~hilling I

Day~s

(304) 675-1333

Display Ads

Dally In-column : 1:00 p.m.
for In-rtton

In Next

l\egttiter

Oear/~irec

Monday~Frlday

Monday thru Friday
· 8:00 a.m. to $:00 p.m.

Thunder

,I

Websites:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.corn
www.mydailyregister.oom

classijied@!:i~une.com REACH ·oVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
Ta Place
~rtbune
Sentinel

arow

exception.
Along with runs by local
racers and the usual headlining jet semi and doorslammer
vehicles,
Saturday's event featured a
ftrst in Thunder Jam history..
Two ef the fastest wheelstanding vehicles ever built
were on hand for the event
and made a bead-to-head
run down the track with frre,
sparks and ftreworks bringing the show to a close.
Joe 'P,epi' Ur.!&gt;an then
made the fmal run of the
night in ~he X.-'frerne
MaclUne jet semi 1(0 end the
evenirtg as ·stofll!S .lllG:Vcld
into the area and ended the
show prelJlll.turely.
But not even the rains
Larry t&lt;rumlphoto
'could dampen an otherwjse
Tom Agler, driver of the North/South Towing 69 Camar6 super charged thunder car, does
flawless night.
The evening began with a burnout prior to his run during the O'Reilly Thunder Jam Saturday Night at Kanwaha Valley
•
runs by 'l ocal racers foi- Motorsports Park in Southside. W.Va.
IGwed ~y the first of two F-104 aircraft engine that favorite Bob Motz ·continAs for Saturday, the
runs by the super charged devoured 100 gallons of ues to ·recover from a scary show once again filled the
1hunder' vehides. Each of . kerosene per run, Urban put · accident one year prior at , stands as fans continue to
the eight machines on hand on an impressive show once · Kanawha
.Valley flock to the event that has
went head·to41ead; not only during the day and the other Motorsports Park. Sitting at now become a summer traon clock, •b.ut :priQr to their under the blanket of night. the start line prior to his dition in the Tri-State area.
runs with duel bum outs fill- Prior to each of his two runs run, Motz's jet semi caught And it is that show that has
ing the track with ~smoke. I
Urban warmed up the fire with him still inside as made Thunder Jam one of
· The drivers of the suph machine with a lengthy fire · track workers rushed to pull the largest traveling motorcharged vehicles traveled trail follow'e d by a solo~n . him from the burning vehi- sports events in the world.
from as far as Indiana and that nearly brought tiiCY cle at last year's Thunder
"The super charged thunMichigan for Saturday's bouse down - literally.
Jam event.
der cars are always a big
show with prize money
While everyone walked hit with the burnout show
The force from the jet
being awarded to the top engine during takeoff shook away from the accident, the and Pepi Urban, who is dridrivers.
pictures off the walls and memory of that incident ving the big jet truck , he is
Jimmy DeAngelo, driving nearly sent computers tum- remained fresh on the the guy we use in other
the worlds only 19SO bling in the operations minds of Kanawha Valley parts of the country and I
Studebaker wheefsta.nding tower behind the track. officials as they dedicated know that he is going to
f1tetruck, lhen made a 80io While no actual damage the evening to Motz and the put on the same kind of
run followed by a run from · was done, the blast created two ttaclt workers who show people have come to
Nelaon in the Cool Bus, a by the 7.3 ton vehicle iup- pulled him from the burn- expect from the jet semi·
one of • kind 1/3 scale plied the th~nder fans came ina vehil!le, Frank Wingo truck s that we have had ·
wbeel•tandlna ICI!ool bua. to see.
ani1 Oary Lacey. .
here
for
yean,"
Botb vehlclu made solo
But while the show went
"We want to make sure Marchyshyn said . "This
run1 before going head-to- off without incident, there everyone
knows • how event
keeps
arowing
head later in the evening.
we
are,'' because we keep it exciting
was still one. tbina missing appreciatl ve
In
between
Urban Saturday mght.
Marchyshyn said. "It was a and new. Never have we
brought the fans to . their
Urban, who lives in serious accident and the raced two wheel-stonders
feet.
S ~aso ta,
Florida, was whole team here performed against each· other and it is
Driving an I 8,000 horse- brought in for Saturday's well to make sure it wasn't events like this that keep
power jet semi featuring an show while regular fan more seriol!s."
people coming back."

- Sentinel -

3o

..,....Jb;.,;., ; . ,

i

Drive, from $
to $
/1
365
560
_
Equal
_ _
740 446 2568
Housing Opponunity TMis
mslitution fs an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
Employer
_:....:.._ _ _ __
CONVENIENTLY Lo¢"T·
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR ED &amp; AFfORDABLE!
RENT. 103, Georges Creek TownhouSe
apartments.
Rd. 441 -1111
and/or small houses FOR
RENT Call {740)441 ·1111

====~===~

riO

llol9.s
•"'R Roo'

L..--::ioi:iiiii-_.1

;or application &amp; mtormabon

Ellm View

A

partments

2&amp;3BR apts. $385 and up
t991mo13 beet. 2 bath . Bank CIA; WID Hookup, Tenant
Repo1 (5"" down. 20 years. pays electnc . EHO
aoto APR ) for listings BOo·
620 -4941i "' · R0 27
(304)882·3017
- - - - - - - Grwctoua Uving t and 2
lbr
$375/monlll.
3br Bedroom Apto at VIllage
SSOOtmooth
in Syracuse. Manor and Rtwrside Api:S. In
deposit Hud ~- No Pets. Middleport, from $32 7 to
{304)£75·5332 weekends $592. 740-992·5064 Equol
HouSing &lt;Jwortund-,.
740 _59 t-026S
------2 bedroom house lor rent. Middleport, Beech St ., 2 br
no pets. (740) 992-5858
furnished apanment. utilities
paid. deposit &amp; references.
2-3 bedroom n~ce. 2-story. no pets. (740)992..()165
LR. FR. Dining. t acre. 5 - ' - - - - - mileS from Holzer. sewage- N. 3rd A"' . M&lt;ddloport 2 bt
t111sh pd. Fenoed ba&lt;*yard. furnished apa rtment. no
$(1()0 monthly 7&lt;l0--388-IX&gt;" pets. depOsit · &amp; rete.renoes .
or 304-593-5616
(740)992.0165

�•

Piue 84 •

1c~1r ,..~
--

dopooil ~- No 446-1 27~ or 1'09-1657

1r·

Pleasant Valley Ho~pital currently has
openings for full-time MLTIMT"s.
Baccalaureate degree in Medical
T«hnology or related field plus eligibility
for ASCP and/or associates degree in
applied science or related field plus
eligibility for cenification by ASCP. Must
be able to woot all shifts.

Townhouoe

Reg. Golden RelrieYer pups.
l- 2 male, 1 -lllll S2SO.
~$500 linn. Coli 7&lt;11J.256-1428
Sdlnollmf pup, 9 wl&lt;s old,
NEW AND USED S1&amp;l lid &amp; - · groll wllh
St.,. lleoml, ~ - - $200. 740-379-9063
For eona.te. Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains;
·
&amp; w.,..,__, L&amp;l

llo!y Spaeiooo&amp; , l.lrgeoolldclllrr)'ollloo

2 Be&lt;lrooms, CIA. 1 112

Boll1. Adul1 Pool &amp; Baby
Pool, Polio, Stot1 $-C25/Mo.
No Pills. Lease f&gt;ius
Socurlly Dopooil Required,

(7-40)387~7.

• . R'
1Ml

.

•

. _

Mini 1CM81' IS ..............

on-ays · - - · ··

applications "" waiting

.
e

rngliS1~-u.~-~
, • . Scrap-()ponMondal'.
~ ·~~. ~• Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;

tor
the Friday. sam-e:~. OOeed
e~rly/disab:~ call 675- Thursday, Solurday &amp;
Sunday. (7-40)446--7300

nt Vslley Hospi.lal

do HIIIIWl Resourus
1511 Valley Drive

. Peinl Pltasant, WV 15551
..- fu 1o (304) 675-6975, or apply on-line
WI www.pvslley.org.

AAJOO
_ _E_ _ _ _ __.
..______

r

PErs

L.,-----_.1

•

Be-

Caipol $6.95 yoro
Rominents $40 &amp; up,

2212

Eastern Ave Gallpolls Oil
446-7444

plD_
1

l

SrolmMJ

ACROSS

,..5.u.1;;

rt!l

Phillip
Alder

'l'lllncS

,

01 Dodge DakD1a CII.C&gt; cab
4•4. Exc. Cond.,
tireS/brakes, always ..,...
iced, great gas mileage.

r;.,.;

HUBBARDS

I

EIIY,

Syracu9e, Ohio

As!ing below KBB price.
Only $8250 obo .. 446-0795

r

SlNs

,..

2005 Cht!Y)' Trailblazer
4WO, 43.000 miles In excellenlcoodltion. Call256-1329

j

I

4x4

FOIIS.W:
·-----·

Cass.

.

9 J t I
•• 7 2
• A Its S

.

'

Racine., Ohio
45171
740MI2217

992·5776

~Qt

~r· 1 ~

S,U.r

2005 Ford F-150 4x4 XL
Tnm. regular ceb. long bed,

VB, AfT, 1&gt;/C,
Player,
male 8. wks old. Male Shltzu $3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE bedllner, hitch, extra clean,
neutered AKC , Reg. $150. TRALEA INVENTORY AT . one owner non smoker. 740-

~,._

29670 llashan Road

2000tochoosefrom.
F1owering &amp; Foliage
Baskers, Bedding &amp;
"egetable Rats
"
·
4 in. foli age pol
Shrubs &amp; Azaleas
OpenM
_ _89_5
Closed Sunday

FORS.W:

-

'--'

f

,-...

-

NIIW ~·ftJI'
Spec,·.,.
·•·
10 in. Boston Ferns
Now $5.00
While they last. over

wheel

VALLEY

I

l""'•r ,

INTEGRITY, KIEFER 30« 7~-J295

BUILT.

I

,_"'11

GREENHOUSE

drive, low mileage, 6
cylinder 304-675-2767 or

F..QIMDT

I

•
•

i

~

· .·

--

I

7

AKC 'regislered Pomeranian prtsedl CheQ( out
•
·
1
$300 inventory
4

Miarques-&lt;:ollectionl.gloss I

=~:W 17:.~;;
'

al brakes. m good

cond~•on

WWW. C A AE Q . C 0 M (740) 4466-967 call atter 7
Carmidlael Equipment. 7-40-

YOUNG 'S

Large Kenmore chest IYl&gt;O
klnds,trunks,clodcs.pc:N1Ible CKC Min-Pin 2 blkltan 446-2412
deepfreeze$i00.1995 Ford
~ pianos,vending
males, ears cropped • tals John Deere Lawn Tractor \lan,auto,AC,runs asking
machine,oogans,oillampS, docked - Bl,liS. 740-388- GX·255, 20 Hp, KAW, 54 $1500. runs good 992-2272.

r..,

ool&lt;e Slgn;IOyS.etc 992-4197 8788

··~·- -r
JYIUI\""-T\.LLY
4WIIEWiliS

lndl cui. 56""'· like new w' _
lraJier $4600. 3()4.546-9193

''

t

I.JvErn:J!:K

I

I

19

, H-~El-E'~~--P-~•~mOH
~u

79

ObloCerllflaodonitl4074
~-----·. 7~74~ ~~., • •--·~

c...,... ...,.. _.....,., .,..w,...

BLIC
NOTICES

butchered

ABking $3800. 74o-«•·

r

$2,800740-446-7963

CW!us&amp;
MonlRHoME&lt;i
,..

I

·

life.....,;--

r

-

••

••

Pus

was loltiilg tollowing

30 llellarlna
34 Ooia
holders
37 Groove
38 Opoln.

Pass

Pass
Pass

39g:.

Pus

a-

7

Colu-.

'flt'WWt1!w' XWOJJ V)IR II?)'~

V C YOUtjG Ill
'

CHEF!!

'

-------

Sta Je 1i
~ n y ree-

~==~~~~~~~~~==~

Trimming
.
&amp; Removal
*PromptandQuality
Work
*ReasonableRales
*Insured

*Experienced
. References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
~::::;:;.,;:::..;.;;;,::.:;=&amp;;;.~

W\~~V

Racine, Ohio 740-247·2019
Cell: 740-411-5047

Owt..-.:

emllll:

740-591·8044

1

,

:

:

•r

,_

rt•.

a"*

a

locole

43-lholho

7

~::::=:

-

33::0~

10 Alhlng

"'rod&lt;

13ao-'
44 Elcluonged
device

351111doeth

38 Guadupon

Noolhs lw&lt;&gt;&lt;M!r-

trump '""""'"' would indicate a ba~
anced 13-15 poi1ls In y&lt;IIJ' ~­
that would be """"''""". but I do not
like Hwith line low liamonds.)
1llere seem to be 13 easy trid&lt;s: one
spade, five heaots, fivli tBIIOIIds and
I'M&gt;. clubs. But wl1at w lhe Mmonds
break badly1 Then jCUI best chance is
to M! a cUrntllll on the board.
. OON o..t&gt; 00 'l'OU -, Wni with liJmmy's spadi! ace and draw
two rounds ct trumps. Then try to cash
AAilE-TO e£ TO
lhe ace and king of diamonds. n bolh
~oun
..,.... .. ots lollow suH, dn!w lhe missing
trump and clain. ~ ...... when East
discards on tile second diamond, lake
lhe diamond ~. rull a diamond on

L-----~--------'

. lhe board, oetum lo your t1lllld wilh a
spade M!, 11111101111 West's lasl heaot,
and claim.

.

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis campos

.

Ceietriy ~ aJI*lllams n aN~ed tr;m qUD~aK~ns b\' tamoiJs people . pu n ;res.erc.
Etch l!ner n !l'le cq:tw stlr1:ls lol ardher

Today'scludl eqr;ao

" RASSWGE
ITXWO
IYX,
-

ST

u

NWS LYAC Y KTS
RAS.

KWS'E

ETIWSAlW·E

LASVRWG

TU

UYVW AS,

SRWO HilES

YXCO

CT ."

LWSSASSW

PREVIOUS SOLUTION ~ "Every citizen in every country in lhe WOild now
grows UJ) in I'M&gt; nalions. Their own and Hollywood." - Nick lltlilCUIIO , .

'==' ~~lA-~t.~s·

=.

~., ClAY I. POlLAN -....;;~--...

.GI lotion ol ..
lour Cl'llinblrod ...... b.
low 1o ""'" four ........ -a

• ... ,

.

FRESH
HOME-GROWN
CABBAGE

Jim O'Brien
Farm Letart Falls

740-247-2113
•

. Clooe-Out Sole
I0" ~anging llaskels
$7.1S
4" Geraniums .60¢
Bedding Plants
48 per flat $6.00
Vegelllble plants
. $2.50 per dozen
Hrs M-F 7:30- 5,00
Sat. 8:30 - 4:30 Sun. 1-5

Ed's Green)louses
Noble Summit Rd.
Middleport, OH

THE WINDOW
lADY

HOW

20 yeon experien&lt;:e

740-99:Z.~

ME

LAME!"

Swags, Valances.,
Roman Sharl&lt;s 111&lt;1
More ...

_., __

Plu• Pillow, llcdsliitu
Table Covm /It Table

1' a

Ruonen

CAU SANDY
u-:7...992-3UI
Ctl:74t-41HI44

..........,.

(BetwCltn Bradbury a llulll!llll

THEI'IES

Drapes. Sheers. Rod
Pocket Drapes.

...1s

oooe they see what you're

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Unless you are
producllwo and elloc1MI, ft will ~ your
rational intellect and your sense of worth.
Matters that enhance growth . boih per-

PEANUTS

cltlfs•••••

-

,...., c••

-

"""" 10 t&gt;e ...-rpmductMI n you
to hido your leadonlhip
. - a buahol. Stop 10 tho lora ......,

q-

-..-

you - thai call "" 81rong
LIBRA (Sopt 23&lt;1c:t. 23) AdcnOwiarSge ~ Nddln IMIIngl end

l1y thlngo lhll could - - ~

to

or do much help lornlly and What you arv aensing can be done quite

~-(Oct. 24-No¥. 22) SCORPIO

lilt&gt;

~to,

you mlghl' ....... -

Without
p&lt;ei-

..-------...;....., r---------. ,.--------.,.---------..,.. =-:=..to:.::::::,."",:
you
cartain
might
CCYN. and BOY

PSI CONSTRUCTION
RICK PRICE

Roofs.

)

Shop
Classlfieds!

raaliz8
haw - . hurt.

momen1

YOU llJILT ATUllE
.....•• ....,.....
- - • ""'~ •..,
'lilT,1-\0W? IOONT
UlllEl1STfiNO.

WELL. ITHII&gt;I&lt; I,1JST

WANTID IT MCJ1E THAN .
ANYONE ELSE. AW WHEN
YOU COUPLE THAT WITt\
MOXIE. Tf-IEN YOU .lJST
CliNT FAIL
WfNrl wu •T

.

' ""

SERI
VE CXJSt.Y. HOW '
HA YOU WT NOTICED
THIS TIL tt:H/1
· • D.lft·,
' SQCI_,.,, ~
1o
1

•

Construction
• VInyl Siding
• Aaplec:eot•d
Windows
• Aoollllg
• Dw:lts '

·Gsriaea

• Pola Bulldlnga
· • ROom Acldlllona
Owner:

J-~·
742-2332

L.

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doots, Windows_.

Electric, Plumbing,

I~

I

~·

I

l I R DL

15

I'

I

•0
'

....
•'

• m~~BfDI' 1~ 1~ ,. ,~ ,. J 1· r f
~~ I J'·I I I I I I I I
IDWrllEI'S ANSWERS 6lm

lk:llri- JwSt- Crest- Uttnost- OUR TOES
"''be ooly way to mE mds meet today," ODe old- *'I Iii
pal, "is by toudliDg OUR TOES." .

ARLO&amp;JANIS

and you w11t aucooed .

7

CAPRICORN (Doc. 2lNon: 19)- Whon
you Uooc:iolo with pe!WOnO ....,.;,
bel- and phllooophies JOi1h

iltl•lgtl••

GOCJD?

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

pals

SAGITTARIUS (NO•- 23-0eo. 21) Allhoogh ~ might noo "" o1JVious at tho
~&gt;og~noo~ng, tho momen1 yot. - .., an
1o .,,.. "' Objocti.., your to .
wtn w111 booomo ~ - t i n g - .

5.¥£U..S so

J&amp;L

C U AS Y

eonally and motoriolly, should be placwd
81 tho top ot your_......
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepi. 22) - It would

'I'OII'RE EMDTIOHAU.V I!ANICRIIPT...
SCOTT FITZ6EAAI.D W fAIOTIOHAU.'f'
8AIIK!lUPT ••• WE'RE AU. 6WJ110NAUY
BANKRUPT ...

1
. . . . . ..

MEALFA
,~ 1 1

By--Uoai
New aJiiancerr with individuals you
thought W8l9 far aboY8 your status or
!landing in tho community will be established In tho year • -· n- 00001tions will occur through a strange tl8t ol
clroumslanCeS.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - IIMllvo
yourself in actMties lhat stimulate your
Imagination and determination to sucoood. - - will ~ In and oller

z.ooe:

in sewins:

l
r r

~..._M,~

!.BOUT
"$UMMEl!..

RecycUng

Summer Speech
Sensory Camp .

1

a ...

6~1

.

Pleasant.Valley
Hospital

l""'...

5 llleoouri

a!:'' Weshout

41 Ogilon

ADVERTISE

CLASSIFIEDS

Feng"

novel lot

one """"'""'' promised a rebid
Then, when North showed al least
game-lOfting values wi1h lhre&lt;Kard
hllart support, you launched inlo
Biad&lt;wood. (n you were usilg Roman
Kay Card - · Noolh IW)Uid bid
six clubs - live no-trump lo show lhe
dub king. And, yes, W an initio lwtHlo-

BUT OVER AN OPEN FIRE,
I'M A REG'!-AR CAST-IRON

°

IN THE

4~e

spade jact?

llarOMd Czbilllrf IIIII Fill. I

I

Goo_.. EDcullvw the following th,_ deo;
51 111f01ulw 51
Order of 1172, and ~: 11 on. curW MCOIIde East &amp;1.51
1988 Flags1aft pop up
o-_.-. Ellac:utMi to the '-II ol• ddlue IMIID-1111111'•-' ifti;;;;;;;;~;..-....., camper, good shape/paint,
Order IIW .....1 be 250.10 - . length 8ltf .......-y In the
Auros
newcenvasandliri.s.$1500
nq 'ad.
50.75 1M! c1ton1 o1 Gillllty Ridge
.,.. •
obO. 740-853-1739
BUJ a IIMII .COIIIPIJ Sauth 15 J ; n 48 ltolld (T-'tlp ltolld ..__ _
. _. . .........
_ __.1 - - - - - - with the pre¥11illng mlnuiM 211 eeconde 2351; thence slon;
RV Serv~e II Carmichael
wage- on Pultllc w.t50.86-.2ICMIS Wellman's Nllsl1y ·1995 Chevy Caprk;e TraMers 740-446-3825
ProjeCt
·
lntpooIn l8n;snt South 11 ltlturttlsry, uld buuncl- Classic, runs good, lool&lt;o
Dslcllption u1 Prafecl: Msfp County, Ohlu u J ; ws 57 nt1nutw 42 wry baing t h e - of good $1,8110 --B2n
The Pnljecl shall dtllennlnlld by the -Ida Wee! 202.17 Gilkey Rkl;e Rosel,
IIIIJ6;;;;;;;;;;;;;......,;;;
lncluds the lumlshill!l Ohio
Bu,_u
ol lwl; 31 South 73 Nurth 03 dell' I IS Dll 2003 Solum Vue, 1998 .
· of s1 El
S. 1
•
""'-- 40 ..._ 04
td Chewy Tru,., 2 5-10 truckS,
end inll8ttltionl I, JIMI•• Cll,
I - 01 .
In
..cor 1 2002 Hyundal Sonata. 2002 . . . . . . .iiliiliiillilo.J
--.1:, equipment. w.;a
and
ltcu SICO tds Wee! 101.11 Eat 281.42 feet; Cavalier. Other qualily vehi·
••••JIENT
- · and ~ICidsitlal Dlvlelon, (814) 844- IMI; a.- Nurth 02 South
II
,.quir8d far the lnslal- 2231. Sltould any bid dill 01 "'"""' 47 dill us 43 111inoMs 13 cles wi1h warranty in sloci&lt;.
WATERPROOFING
l8lion ol S uniWy be
Ujacled,
the _ . Weal 11.47 - t d a w.t 212.11 :"~:7=- aUntncondee
. L~oca
·onal lreleliletreimencesgulaurr:
to &amp;10 scc:ompMJlng
bid ... Ill ... Iron pin wt ... to the point of 103
LF. uf l-Inch pipe; bond, Ill' c11ec11, . . be by
beginning, paillng an
nished. EstabHshed 1975.
3,480 LF. ol 4-lndl
ned to IllS ltlddar Nurth 03 ds; ill 05 lronplnwtbythls..- 95 Jeep Grand CherOkee Call 24 Hrs. (740) «6mein; 11ft- lotthwltlt and lhoUid ntlnuiM . 03 UCOnds v.r .. 11.01 twl and 114,000 m1 $5000 obo. 99 0870, Rogers Ba,&amp;&lt;,nenl
InCluding aile worll, ""t' bid be
w.t 114.411 fwl to 811 ODtl Jlinjj 1.2SI- 4dr ChevY lumina 52,000 Wlllerproaflng.
-al lolcatl wor1&lt;; thecllecll,lll'bldbctnd lronplnwtiJt'llfe-· T......, wllhsn- mi$6500. 7~1-098B
cooroelon ltsrrler on 4 IIIII be ISium8d upon v.r; a.- Nurth • - f a r ri;ltl of WSJ 97 Neon 4dr, 4 cy( auto,
axlltlol!l.....- and the proper :JteCUIIOn Jag- a mln1Ms13 purp
to and " - 115.000 mi. A/C, new lires,
3 .._4 oleo; and and ~&lt;~Curing ol the seconds &amp;:1 375.15 Glllaty Ridge Ro8d, extra clean , 3 mo 3000 rni
,..._
surt.w cootb&amp;L
fwt to the point of said • - • baing warranty $2500. S&amp;S Auto
·-•tiona for the The right Ia rm lied, IJeVInnlilg, conlalning on utrip Gf I M I - Soles. 740-&amp;39-'Mro5
COii8INc:llon In secor· 1tJ the Syrscu• ·1.133 - .
7.5 fwl In lliiltlt and
dance
with
the RsciM Rsglansl
l i l l l . . , - . , . - edjolnint the ....._
Cut•act ~ Dlalricl, to noject any..- "*" far right Ill WSJ dwcrlbed psrc:al on
Bidding Docu- sl bids.
puopaila I l l - fnlm N 8011111 aida U.elll,
may be nlllllinlld .. Engl-'a
Coat GH!-J Rkl;e Road, Wid stJ'Ip bainU buunclthe following 1oc:s-- Estin-. $443,8711.00 uld "SIMI'lt beln; ad ... the
IJ- .:
(1116, 17, 11, 11,211, 22, on aatrip Ill I M I - by the -line ol uld
Engl_..
· Ofllce: 23
7:5 1M! In llidtlt and Sacllclt1 30 and baing
URS,
217
W.
ldjolnln; the ....._ boundedonthe-Nstlonllide
Blvd.,
dncolbed psn:el on IJ end by the center Ill
CGio t Iota, OH 43215,
Public Nollc:e
the llida - · Gllltay flldea Rold.
(114141445011.
lllfd stJ1p baing buuncl- Subject to all legal
Bulldsrra' ExcMn;e • Slwlfi.Sslaa
adontheaaslsrlyand 1111"'**IJode: Plan"-!~
CsMNuntlllrOic;w003 by -ICIItiiJithe- T h e - Jascolptlo 1
1175 Dublin ltolld, Andow Eggen
line Ill the 8ltova . . . In - OH 43215, Pilolttllft
das cribotd ,..... dMctl with an ltCtUIII
The Owner'a Office ..
.
.
llslng bounded on the ewvey c:dnducl8d by
(fnlrn 1:00 Ul. to 1 Lsi- ltullmsn, slat alia ot) and Itt' J - Stsnrt, PS
p.m); 405 SINe!, Lellllllie A - , et - llllllfd Section 31. 74211 on Jilna 3, &amp;, and
Asclns, 01145771 (7401 sL
SUbjaFI tu •1 t.;.1 13, 1114. lnrtn;s .-.
141-2411. Bidding ciao- Dafs:tdema .
I I t•*baed on pNVious - ·
&amp;
umoy
be Court or Common 1 1 t a - Jro colptich1 veylng within uld
ollllilnlld from the - . llelga County, wsa ...- In secor· pooperty and
Enpw et I ..... Ill Oltlo
oMnce with M -..1 . dadlne 03 d U I l l 01
$100.00 per wt (non- In . pui'SIIIInca . ol an sun'ay conduclitcl by minutes 36 seconcla
For Children 3 to 12
.....-~ Bids s1ts11 order u1 ula .to me , _ s-srt, PS Ill the Ohio SIMI
be either hend-lv· dlrscted from Mid 74211 on June, 3, 6, and ..._ Grid Direction.
years of ·age
In
-led COIM'tlnthe-antl- 13,1114.811 ~ . . .-. The ;rid ....lion......
June 24, 20QB to
wtu I ,_ Ia 405- tied action, I 1111 baed on poa•lau: - - obtliinecl by ceiMt1111
IINet, AKine, OH .....,.. ....... et pllb-- vaylng within uld obaw w.tlon.
July 31, 2008. ·
46T7'1, until 10:00 Lm. l i e . . - on IllS fron1 ........, po0f*111 end . . _ _
u.d:
For more information
-- CMI .,.... ol the llelgs dsi:llns 03 Jtg 111 01 ~ II, ..._. 117,
Wuol1 d.ot. July I, County Court House mlnllllil 36 ·.- i d a Msfp County Ollldlll
· please call
:11101.
on Frldlly, July 11th Ill the Ohio Slalo Rsclll'lls.
. Parcel
11ta 8lds wiH be pub- 2001 111 10:00 •-"'·• or Plane Grid Dltetlon. AuditOr's
PVH Rehabilitation
lidJ ap · - lntm8dl Wid day, the lalaa~IIJI The grid ... . . . , - ll:ttAt. .:
01.lllllr .......,..,. and J olbedtwl-: ollllilned by cotlaatloll 00311,._ and 01Services,
.... llloud,
The
follollln; obaw ........ _
00350.003.
bell · bidder
fa dascrlbed .-1 MRCEL 2:
C-'
0-:
(304) 674-2418.
NqUind to fuml:ll In BillfOld Being e1233 ......... LsiiiOils 'Huflmsn alia
will b prlp
I, a bid Township,
llelga eel In Mid See1lon 30 AI 1 FlWI
Go ally :nil cootbact County, In the Slats Ill c..nod out o!Parootl 2. Pnlparty
Artldresa:
Bond In IICCUidllnc:a Ohio, In S&amp;tlooll 30 331, ..._. 105; 421115 Gilby ROIIil,
will lec:llot1 153.54 Ill . 36, TOIIIIsltlp 3 ComiMIICing et an . _ , 0H 45776
.,. 01t1o Aitwlas d North, AMp 13 Wwt, Iron pin et the Appnolsed .. $30,000
Cada.Bid-"J,..· llltheOhloCon.-or': hOitl:aaat- u1 T...,.IIISela:clllehed In bond """'· Puod - · and ........ • Nld Section
30; ... far .... 1111111
.._. be lseuld bJ • tra:tllllsndcooalsllng a.- aol.ong t h e - :vardaolthesppnlaaJ
......., CompsnJ or or - psi'CIIie CIWI8d ·line or . said ee11on ..Ius. 1II% dolln on
Coopotetlon llcsnsod outllltheAsr- &amp;oullt 00 do;- 42 day ol ule, cwh or
In the Slalo Ill Ohio to pt ap a tr ~ 331, min.- 11 eec01td: certified check. baluld IUNIJ..... - 105, llelga w.t 201M 1M! to the snce Clue on contlnnsbch PIDpt&gt;Nl must CounlyOMd , _ . , , pctlnt Ill bagln."llng or lion Ill .....
001 tall the full uld .....,... boo ldad the
rusl
The J1P11 oltel did nut
at IllS ,..,. or .......... J CJ.,_ a lot- ...........
herein; Include an hbrlitr
w• t llt:V . . po..,.._ lolls;
thanc:a
continuing • ....,lnsllon of the
. Iii ... an .,.._.. MACEL 1:
ao1.ong N l d - - .........
-•••d
thaNin. llelnga1 .1USC1sper- 8ctullt 00 J 11- 42 Robert E. ........
E8Cit bidder- ... oel In Nld . . II: I 36 . , . _ 11 - t d s Msfp Cuunly Sharif!
,... arid a Ill l1e Ct tilt J 0111 ol • 15- w.t 1411.51 1M! laths Attomar far Plaloollll;
aapatlw y on proj- . n l*eal da&amp;tlled 111.-M • I IIIJI '--• . _ .........
actslll:llnllar-and In VOlume 331, ..._. ,..IICOWSI'OWI;
211-213' E. · Sscottd
oa pi l!f- T h e - 105; CallliRWICfng .t thanc:a uw•811J tot- IINet. PDIMiilf, OH
~-- ,.~ulow .,.._plnfoundslthe -.g the can1er ol 457WII
.... thfa poojacl be nortlneat ol u l d - liCOWS taw11 l I JINola: (7401 112·
CD pi I d no Mid
Ia C* t
36; the IDRUiitiiJI lout .... lsplaiilber 1, - - ........ - - w:1looucone (ti11,U,30
:111017
lin: Ill uld tl&amp;llon ...... rt;ltl at ......
All ,-..:ton lklultt 00 Ja; 111 42 250.10 txt. ...._... --;;;;-;;;;;-sultcontncton Allo- li &lt;'IICDnds 75... 1M!- cltonl
PllbllcNollce
~nolwadtlllltheproj- _ _ _ _
.................
a- 44 ~------ • to the .....,.. paint Ill ~lei ••• Ill mlnulw 36 - • PU81.ICNCmCE
·
Ohio the . ,,_1
£at 15.31-; 2}CMI a The Oralgs Townohlp
~ilL, •H•
•••ct1111d
herein; ....."' South a 'hwtHI w11 hold •
•Acw. and llbor In thanc:a
_.,.,.,. ' a
t 01 pultllc hiw~I1JI on the
. . h pith 1 I Ill sloti1Jiuldwdlon- - · Eut lUI poopo~ budeel for
111s1r
po aJo cL &amp;oullt 00 ds; sa 42 IMI; 31 on • c:urva to 2001 on July 3, 2001,
, IWkmlilly, -lbliC· ntlnulel 11 :sconcls the right of ddlua 7:30 at the home uf the
1111' car QflE oca with w.t 1411.51 1M! to the 1aUS - . length FIICIII Oftlcsr, O.la
. . ..,.. '"pl:r- 111 . . elittloiiJI 211.01 !;!lor!! Follrad.
111 101
nq..,. fantt IICOWS tawll; lloult 71 d
12 (1123
_...
of
Ohio thanc:a __......,lot- mlnulas 5I - t d •
, 1 I I I allw Coda lolling the ol East 2U5 IMI; 4) on e
Cf:ql
123. the uld fslnn I'OWI ........ South ..

'*

cHAilGEI .

e..:c. con.

fully loaded for Hunters

ADVERTlSEIIENT FOR
llllS
Syrscuae-Aeclna
~
s-r
Dletrict will ,_....
......Sitldsfar:
Yellollltush
Aoild
S... '--""_ Extenalon

r'-::~!===~!!!:!~!!~!:=~

r·
40 Cody
.
41 Wltere Allll ·
1teg1na
Ching"
42 Cialan• ,
. 26 GcHiioldo 43 Sharthsnd •
27Remlnda
1!'0 .
too- 44 111rc11, i.g. .
28 Jr. ......
45 Go
t
olllc:or
47 OveottiOig
3048Twlat
51 Moogoo
31
for
-pwt
53 Heaillnt
32 Hire I
-.nda

that the sun ~ shining, that
_., finesse will win and that each suH
wil spit ~- But the realist. wOO
has been bilten many limos by bad
breaks, alwtrfS carries an umbo8lla.
In this deal, you and your pallner bid
brilliantly lo _ , hearts. How would
you p&amp;llhe play after West leads lhe

0

f#lff of

tor

2006 Toro 2 rum mower. 54
lndl cul- ooly -BO "" ....

Pus

Pua

Pass

•

Nole jCUI (JJiellw&lt;Hiamon:t -.This

bllce, like new caM 304-675-

hand warmers,

Eul

5.

Quokw

89Stlll8

CARPENTER
SERVICE

2005 Honda CRF, 230 F dirt

average gg Honda Foreman, 400 4x4
dr8ssed weighl4-51bs. 379- 3000ibs winch , cargo. box,

.....

29 P.... Jng

N. . .

••

39 pronoun

19 Hove being
21 Inch

n=:. .....

Do notassume
favorable weather
N.the bridge-· I1IIIIIY players always

D

PEAP IATTf~lf$

DOWN

1 Tlllol guy
forwWd
2 lllcluat VIP 24F.,.IIy
24 I'Mcllpit
38e27 Mekesllter
25 "- Te

Opening lead: • J

, TAJ:.E otJfI

20 :::. alghbt

17 Stick up
59 Sombeo
1~ Sc:noen wllh
ewetgreono
22 Sitcom

Wut

Pass
Pass
" Pus

tNT
SNT

_......,~uucu

(2 - - )

58 Popular
c:oulu liiOp

• 10

4QJ94 2

Dealer: South
Vublerable: lllJih

zt

BARNEY

Farm Fresh Chicttens, pas- 6338
ture
faised
broilers, - - - - - - -

-·•7.

10 8

-

J AND MELECTRICAL

fnsured &amp; Bond8d

our used drive, '?ather int., ~~ L-.;.740-6.;,;..;:53;;.·;;.96;:5'""7-..1

97&lt;

91\KQ!O!
•AKQt3

H&amp;H

Deere la1ely7 You11 be sur- 94 Dodge caravan 4 wheel

s

••

1.::=:;;412;;5/0B::I:mo=:
~• •;S;ptd;;•~l~ld;IJI;;In;;IIGme;;~WI;;,riiJI;;iiii~
r

r

8 6

~-

15 .........
16 OodiM

• KB 7S2

• J 9 6 5

7~•·0162
www,cARM ICHAEL - ;.;446;·:82
::i.l.17:...~--.,
Gutterl·ng
· - - - - - · _ _ _ _ _ _ _ TRAILERS.COM 740-446VANS
Wanted 16GA., Single Shot AKC ENGLISH SPRINGER 3825
~
FOil SW; . 1
Seamless Gutters
Sl'f&lt;NIEL
REAlJ'f 10 GO 6.
,..
Root'1ng , Sid! ng, Gullers
304-615-641~
29-0B $350 304-2 3-4377 Have you pnc .
John

Gooos

-

w...
• J 10 9 i

46 U111a lddl
49 Skipped .

1 Gelltlll8r
town '
5 Dory- 50 Bolcony
. I Fly ..adler
MCIIon
11 --hippy 52 T,...hllbiiiF
for you!
54 Wlpitl
12 Wltonw
55 FlrCUIIy
1itnOIS poce
honcho
14 Efllcndo 55 -10 rnucll
tool
S1 ............. _

~s.w:

~

I

Carpel

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

..,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ "'441-7971
riO
F·-·
~ ------2002 Dodge Ram 1500, 2

HORSE / liVESTOCK
• . TRAILERS, LOAD MAX
EQUIPMENT TRAILERS,
2 - . , MC &gt;ei 1 rad CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
'Yorl&lt;ie Terrier puppies, H 0 M E S T E A 0 E A
males, 13 w1&lt;s old, VOl CARGO/CONCESSION
ctlea&lt;ed $500 30H175- TMILERS. B+W GOOSE'79460&lt;~75-0699
NECK
HITCHES.
-------CARMICHAEL
EQUIP·
2 male-puwieswillbe MENTICARMICHAEL
--t small c• ~
lliAILERS SALES &amp; SEA.
VICE. SPECIAL 20FT
ACK Reg. Shllzu puppy, GOOSENECK FLATBED

,..

-!""""""'!"_ _ _ _

Mollcllan

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

MOTORS

apartment

Seod resumes to:
"

~

www.mydallysantlnel.com

Labrador Retriewrs. 4 Police Impounds! Cars from
chocolate, 3 black $200 $5001, HondaS,• Cht!Y)'S,
Aepoirod. &amp;In NCI1. 7-40-98&amp;2707, plee"' Jeeps, F&lt;&gt;ros, &amp; moral fo&lt;
Stoat Cad Ron Evans. 1• leave message. '
listings IICJ0.620-4876 • V4JS
~RATION

&amp;

800-537-9528.
Tara

Auros

Monday, June 23, 2008
ALLEYOOP

JET

Nioo qulot 2BR "'ll ond 2BR

........

MLT/MT

Monday, June 23, 2008

www.rnydallysentlnel.com

The Daily _Sentinel

--.J

yours, il wit
}"'Uffatth In your
abllties. IAhctl ., tum wW stimulate your
coftsague&amp;, too.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191 -

L....:~;,...;;_;;,.....;;,..;;,...,..::,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..J

...., many •

- T- ...,.ntage ol as

ycu can.

PISCES (ft!&gt;.

Drywall,

Ewants

....-.onlinory In
conditiOns .... roll ~ ond
~to ac:tMM1 a numbef af ~·
QN1e . an

might

.

2G-Ma""' 20) -

Through

to

• llllnge aet of ctn:unstances, • 1om1er
antagonist might be drown c1osa&lt; you.

RBmOdeling, Room
Additions

This naw ISSOCidon wiH generate &amp;8Y&amp;f·
lllmulualbeo\oiita.

LOCIIII Cos• c1C

.

740-317..s.M
FresEilt PI a

740-317,..

ARIES~ 21-,&amp;.pril

19) - A - oituotion 1hat you loll ,.,_.... to Con.et
con be . - " you're otlling ·. , opply
e. r
''Y elbt to rectify iL When
yougot right"" • ..
1liiMJS (Aprll!O-Moy 20) -Thoro io •
ttrong t1
' Ill) thllt you wtll do tar t.l·
Wlhan ualll wflh .,.,liltldng ht until
now n. rellld on CtlllnOI. Mow on lt.
GEMINI !Mol&lt; 21-Juno 20) - - - ol
your .-ong motl ··~~- . . . . you. wMI
be., . . . . . . 5 ..... ..., ini5MCiual

tho-"""-

FIN' Rrmoold'=
~.w-~ IUld New n - I 2 !'

a
c.n: MARCUM CONSTRUCilON
• Room Additions • Garages • Vmyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Deets

.......-

-

-

11111.

ion~ lll&lt;oly ...... lffl -

""""

you oomml to -~~~ ~·

tqUPTONUTZ

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom.10H

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416-1834

25+ ,_. upnN-" F- Em• at

1

Advertise
·in this space for
$64 r month ·
•

I
'

'

•,

�•

Piue 84 •

1c~1r ,..~
--

dopooil ~- No 446-1 27~ or 1'09-1657

1r·

Pleasant Valley Ho~pital currently has
openings for full-time MLTIMT"s.
Baccalaureate degree in Medical
T«hnology or related field plus eligibility
for ASCP and/or associates degree in
applied science or related field plus
eligibility for cenification by ASCP. Must
be able to woot all shifts.

Townhouoe

Reg. Golden RelrieYer pups.
l- 2 male, 1 -lllll S2SO.
~$500 linn. Coli 7&lt;11J.256-1428
Sdlnollmf pup, 9 wl&lt;s old,
NEW AND USED S1&amp;l lid &amp; - · groll wllh
St.,. lleoml, ~ - - $200. 740-379-9063
For eona.te. Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains;
·
&amp; w.,..,__, L&amp;l

llo!y Spaeiooo&amp; , l.lrgeoolldclllrr)'ollloo

2 Be&lt;lrooms, CIA. 1 112

Boll1. Adul1 Pool &amp; Baby
Pool, Polio, Stot1 $-C25/Mo.
No Pills. Lease f&gt;ius
Socurlly Dopooil Required,

(7-40)387~7.

• . R'
1Ml

.

•

. _

Mini 1CM81' IS ..............

on-ays · - - · ··

applications "" waiting

.
e

rngliS1~-u.~-~
, • . Scrap-()ponMondal'.
~ ·~~. ~• Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;

tor
the Friday. sam-e:~. OOeed
e~rly/disab:~ call 675- Thursday, Solurday &amp;
Sunday. (7-40)446--7300

nt Vslley Hospi.lal

do HIIIIWl Resourus
1511 Valley Drive

. Peinl Pltasant, WV 15551
..- fu 1o (304) 675-6975, or apply on-line
WI www.pvslley.org.

AAJOO
_ _E_ _ _ _ __.
..______

r

PErs

L.,-----_.1

•

Be-

Caipol $6.95 yoro
Rominents $40 &amp; up,

2212

Eastern Ave Gallpolls Oil
446-7444

plD_
1

l

SrolmMJ

ACROSS

,..5.u.1;;

rt!l

Phillip
Alder

'l'lllncS

,

01 Dodge DakD1a CII.C&gt; cab
4•4. Exc. Cond.,
tireS/brakes, always ..,...
iced, great gas mileage.

r;.,.;

HUBBARDS

I

EIIY,

Syracu9e, Ohio

As!ing below KBB price.
Only $8250 obo .. 446-0795

r

SlNs

,..

2005 Cht!Y)' Trailblazer
4WO, 43.000 miles In excellenlcoodltion. Call256-1329

j

I

4x4

FOIIS.W:
·-----·

Cass.

.

9 J t I
•• 7 2
• A Its S

.

'

Racine., Ohio
45171
740MI2217

992·5776

~Qt

~r· 1 ~

S,U.r

2005 Ford F-150 4x4 XL
Tnm. regular ceb. long bed,

VB, AfT, 1&gt;/C,
Player,
male 8. wks old. Male Shltzu $3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE bedllner, hitch, extra clean,
neutered AKC , Reg. $150. TRALEA INVENTORY AT . one owner non smoker. 740-

~,._

29670 llashan Road

2000tochoosefrom.
F1owering &amp; Foliage
Baskers, Bedding &amp;
"egetable Rats
"
·
4 in. foli age pol
Shrubs &amp; Azaleas
OpenM
_ _89_5
Closed Sunday

FORS.W:

-

'--'

f

,-...

-

NIIW ~·ftJI'
Spec,·.,.
·•·
10 in. Boston Ferns
Now $5.00
While they last. over

wheel

VALLEY

I

l""'•r ,

INTEGRITY, KIEFER 30« 7~-J295

BUILT.

I

,_"'11

GREENHOUSE

drive, low mileage, 6
cylinder 304-675-2767 or

F..QIMDT

I

•
•

i

~

· .·

--

I

7

AKC 'regislered Pomeranian prtsedl CheQ( out
•
·
1
$300 inventory
4

Miarques-&lt;:ollectionl.gloss I

=~:W 17:.~;;
'

al brakes. m good

cond~•on

WWW. C A AE Q . C 0 M (740) 4466-967 call atter 7
Carmidlael Equipment. 7-40-

YOUNG 'S

Large Kenmore chest IYl&gt;O
klnds,trunks,clodcs.pc:N1Ible CKC Min-Pin 2 blkltan 446-2412
deepfreeze$i00.1995 Ford
~ pianos,vending
males, ears cropped • tals John Deere Lawn Tractor \lan,auto,AC,runs asking
machine,oogans,oillampS, docked - Bl,liS. 740-388- GX·255, 20 Hp, KAW, 54 $1500. runs good 992-2272.

r..,

ool&lt;e Slgn;IOyS.etc 992-4197 8788

··~·- -r
JYIUI\""-T\.LLY
4WIIEWiliS

lndl cui. 56""'· like new w' _
lraJier $4600. 3()4.546-9193

''

t

I.JvErn:J!:K

I

I

19

, H-~El-E'~~--P-~•~mOH
~u

79

ObloCerllflaodonitl4074
~-----·. 7~74~ ~~., • •--·~

c...,... ...,.. _.....,., .,..w,...

BLIC
NOTICES

butchered

ABking $3800. 74o-«•·

r

$2,800740-446-7963

CW!us&amp;
MonlRHoME&lt;i
,..

I

·

life.....,;--

r

-

••

••

Pus

was loltiilg tollowing

30 llellarlna
34 Ooia
holders
37 Groove
38 Opoln.

Pass

Pass
Pass

39g:.

Pus

a-

7

Colu-.

'flt'WWt1!w' XWOJJ V)IR II?)'~

V C YOUtjG Ill
'

CHEF!!

'

-------

Sta Je 1i
~ n y ree-

~==~~~~~~~~~==~

Trimming
.
&amp; Removal
*PromptandQuality
Work
*ReasonableRales
*Insured

*Experienced
. References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
~::::;:;.,;:::..;.;;;,::.:;=&amp;;;.~

W\~~V

Racine, Ohio 740-247·2019
Cell: 740-411-5047

Owt..-.:

emllll:

740-591·8044

1

,

:

:

•r

,_

rt•.

a"*

a

locole

43-lholho

7

~::::=:

-

33::0~

10 Alhlng

"'rod&lt;

13ao-'
44 Elcluonged
device

351111doeth

38 Guadupon

Noolhs lw&lt;&gt;&lt;M!r-

trump '""""'"' would indicate a ba~
anced 13-15 poi1ls In y&lt;IIJ' ~­
that would be """"''""". but I do not
like Hwith line low liamonds.)
1llere seem to be 13 easy trid&lt;s: one
spade, five heaots, fivli tBIIOIIds and
I'M&gt;. clubs. But wl1at w lhe Mmonds
break badly1 Then jCUI best chance is
to M! a cUrntllll on the board.
. OON o..t&gt; 00 'l'OU -, Wni with liJmmy's spadi! ace and draw
two rounds ct trumps. Then try to cash
AAilE-TO e£ TO
lhe ace and king of diamonds. n bolh
~oun
..,.... .. ots lollow suH, dn!w lhe missing
trump and clain. ~ ...... when East
discards on tile second diamond, lake
lhe diamond ~. rull a diamond on

L-----~--------'

. lhe board, oetum lo your t1lllld wilh a
spade M!, 11111101111 West's lasl heaot,
and claim.

.

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis campos

.

Ceietriy ~ aJI*lllams n aN~ed tr;m qUD~aK~ns b\' tamoiJs people . pu n ;res.erc.
Etch l!ner n !l'le cq:tw stlr1:ls lol ardher

Today'scludl eqr;ao

" RASSWGE
ITXWO
IYX,
-

ST

u

NWS LYAC Y KTS
RAS.

KWS'E

ETIWSAlW·E

LASVRWG

TU

UYVW AS,

SRWO HilES

YXCO

CT ."

LWSSASSW

PREVIOUS SOLUTION ~ "Every citizen in every country in lhe WOild now
grows UJ) in I'M&gt; nalions. Their own and Hollywood." - Nick lltlilCUIIO , .

'==' ~~lA-~t.~s·

=.

~., ClAY I. POlLAN -....;;~--...

.GI lotion ol ..
lour Cl'llinblrod ...... b.
low 1o ""'" four ........ -a

• ... ,

.

FRESH
HOME-GROWN
CABBAGE

Jim O'Brien
Farm Letart Falls

740-247-2113
•

. Clooe-Out Sole
I0" ~anging llaskels
$7.1S
4" Geraniums .60¢
Bedding Plants
48 per flat $6.00
Vegelllble plants
. $2.50 per dozen
Hrs M-F 7:30- 5,00
Sat. 8:30 - 4:30 Sun. 1-5

Ed's Green)louses
Noble Summit Rd.
Middleport, OH

THE WINDOW
lADY

HOW

20 yeon experien&lt;:e

740-99:Z.~

ME

LAME!"

Swags, Valances.,
Roman Sharl&lt;s 111&lt;1
More ...

_., __

Plu• Pillow, llcdsliitu
Table Covm /It Table

1' a

Ruonen

CAU SANDY
u-:7...992-3UI
Ctl:74t-41HI44

..........,.

(BetwCltn Bradbury a llulll!llll

THEI'IES

Drapes. Sheers. Rod
Pocket Drapes.

...1s

oooe they see what you're

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Unless you are
producllwo and elloc1MI, ft will ~ your
rational intellect and your sense of worth.
Matters that enhance growth . boih per-

PEANUTS

cltlfs•••••

-

,...., c••

-

"""" 10 t&gt;e ...-rpmductMI n you
to hido your leadonlhip
. - a buahol. Stop 10 tho lora ......,

q-

-..-

you - thai call "" 81rong
LIBRA (Sopt 23&lt;1c:t. 23) AdcnOwiarSge ~ Nddln IMIIngl end

l1y thlngo lhll could - - ~

to

or do much help lornlly and What you arv aensing can be done quite

~-(Oct. 24-No¥. 22) SCORPIO

lilt&gt;

~to,

you mlghl' ....... -

Without
p&lt;ei-

..-------...;....., r---------. ,.--------.,.---------..,.. =-:=..to:.::::::,."",:
you
cartain
might
CCYN. and BOY

PSI CONSTRUCTION
RICK PRICE

Roofs.

)

Shop
Classlfieds!

raaliz8
haw - . hurt.

momen1

YOU llJILT ATUllE
.....•• ....,.....
- - • ""'~ •..,
'lilT,1-\0W? IOONT
UlllEl1STfiNO.

WELL. ITHII&gt;I&lt; I,1JST

WANTID IT MCJ1E THAN .
ANYONE ELSE. AW WHEN
YOU COUPLE THAT WITt\
MOXIE. Tf-IEN YOU .lJST
CliNT FAIL
WfNrl wu •T

.

' ""

SERI
VE CXJSt.Y. HOW '
HA YOU WT NOTICED
THIS TIL tt:H/1
· • D.lft·,
' SQCI_,.,, ~
1o
1

•

Construction
• VInyl Siding
• Aaplec:eot•d
Windows
• Aoollllg
• Dw:lts '

·Gsriaea

• Pola Bulldlnga
· • ROom Acldlllona
Owner:

J-~·
742-2332

L.

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doots, Windows_.

Electric, Plumbing,

I~

I

~·

I

l I R DL

15

I'

I

•0
'

....
•'

• m~~BfDI' 1~ 1~ ,. ,~ ,. J 1· r f
~~ I J'·I I I I I I I I
IDWrllEI'S ANSWERS 6lm

lk:llri- JwSt- Crest- Uttnost- OUR TOES
"''be ooly way to mE mds meet today," ODe old- *'I Iii
pal, "is by toudliDg OUR TOES." .

ARLO&amp;JANIS

and you w11t aucooed .

7

CAPRICORN (Doc. 2lNon: 19)- Whon
you Uooc:iolo with pe!WOnO ....,.;,
bel- and phllooophies JOi1h

iltl•lgtl••

GOCJD?

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

pals

SAGITTARIUS (NO•- 23-0eo. 21) Allhoogh ~ might noo "" o1JVious at tho
~&gt;og~noo~ng, tho momen1 yot. - .., an
1o .,,.. "' Objocti.., your to .
wtn w111 booomo ~ - t i n g - .

5.¥£U..S so

J&amp;L

C U AS Y

eonally and motoriolly, should be placwd
81 tho top ot your_......
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepi. 22) - It would

'I'OII'RE EMDTIOHAU.V I!ANICRIIPT...
SCOTT FITZ6EAAI.D W fAIOTIOHAU.'f'
8AIIK!lUPT ••• WE'RE AU. 6WJ110NAUY
BANKRUPT ...

1
. . . . . ..

MEALFA
,~ 1 1

By--Uoai
New aJiiancerr with individuals you
thought W8l9 far aboY8 your status or
!landing in tho community will be established In tho year • -· n- 00001tions will occur through a strange tl8t ol
clroumslanCeS.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - IIMllvo
yourself in actMties lhat stimulate your
Imagination and determination to sucoood. - - will ~ In and oller

z.ooe:

in sewins:

l
r r

~..._M,~

!.BOUT
"$UMMEl!..

RecycUng

Summer Speech
Sensory Camp .

1

a ...

6~1

.

Pleasant.Valley
Hospital

l""'...

5 llleoouri

a!:'' Weshout

41 Ogilon

ADVERTISE

CLASSIFIEDS

Feng"

novel lot

one """"'""'' promised a rebid
Then, when North showed al least
game-lOfting values wi1h lhre&lt;Kard
hllart support, you launched inlo
Biad&lt;wood. (n you were usilg Roman
Kay Card - · Noolh IW)Uid bid
six clubs - live no-trump lo show lhe
dub king. And, yes, W an initio lwtHlo-

BUT OVER AN OPEN FIRE,
I'M A REG'!-AR CAST-IRON

°

IN THE

4~e

spade jact?

llarOMd Czbilllrf IIIII Fill. I

I

Goo_.. EDcullvw the following th,_ deo;
51 111f01ulw 51
Order of 1172, and ~: 11 on. curW MCOIIde East &amp;1.51
1988 Flags1aft pop up
o-_.-. Ellac:utMi to the '-II ol• ddlue IMIID-1111111'•-' ifti;;;;;;;;~;..-....., camper, good shape/paint,
Order IIW .....1 be 250.10 - . length 8ltf .......-y In the
Auros
newcenvasandliri.s.$1500
nq 'ad.
50.75 1M! c1ton1 o1 Gillllty Ridge
.,.. •
obO. 740-853-1739
BUJ a IIMII .COIIIPIJ Sauth 15 J ; n 48 ltolld (T-'tlp ltolld ..__ _
. _. . .........
_ __.1 - - - - - - with the pre¥11illng mlnuiM 211 eeconde 2351; thence slon;
RV Serv~e II Carmichael
wage- on Pultllc w.t50.86-.2ICMIS Wellman's Nllsl1y ·1995 Chevy Caprk;e TraMers 740-446-3825
ProjeCt
·
lntpooIn l8n;snt South 11 ltlturttlsry, uld buuncl- Classic, runs good, lool&lt;o
Dslcllption u1 Prafecl: Msfp County, Ohlu u J ; ws 57 nt1nutw 42 wry baing t h e - of good $1,8110 --B2n
The Pnljecl shall dtllennlnlld by the -Ida Wee! 202.17 Gilkey Rkl;e Rosel,
IIIIJ6;;;;;;;;;;;;;......,;;;
lncluds the lumlshill!l Ohio
Bu,_u
ol lwl; 31 South 73 Nurth 03 dell' I IS Dll 2003 Solum Vue, 1998 .
· of s1 El
S. 1
•
""'-- 40 ..._ 04
td Chewy Tru,., 2 5-10 truckS,
end inll8ttltionl I, JIMI•• Cll,
I - 01 .
In
..cor 1 2002 Hyundal Sonata. 2002 . . . . . . .iiliiliiillilo.J
--.1:, equipment. w.;a
and
ltcu SICO tds Wee! 101.11 Eat 281.42 feet; Cavalier. Other qualily vehi·
••••JIENT
- · and ~ICidsitlal Dlvlelon, (814) 844- IMI; a.- Nurth 02 South
II
,.quir8d far the lnslal- 2231. Sltould any bid dill 01 "'"""' 47 dill us 43 111inoMs 13 cles wi1h warranty in sloci&lt;.
WATERPROOFING
l8lion ol S uniWy be
Ujacled,
the _ . Weal 11.47 - t d a w.t 212.11 :"~:7=- aUntncondee
. L~oca
·onal lreleliletreimencesgulaurr:
to &amp;10 scc:ompMJlng
bid ... Ill ... Iron pin wt ... to the point of 103
LF. uf l-Inch pipe; bond, Ill' c11ec11, . . be by
beginning, paillng an
nished. EstabHshed 1975.
3,480 LF. ol 4-lndl
ned to IllS ltlddar Nurth 03 ds; ill 05 lronplnwtbythls..- 95 Jeep Grand CherOkee Call 24 Hrs. (740) «6mein; 11ft- lotthwltlt and lhoUid ntlnuiM . 03 UCOnds v.r .. 11.01 twl and 114,000 m1 $5000 obo. 99 0870, Rogers Ba,&amp;&lt;,nenl
InCluding aile worll, ""t' bid be
w.t 114.411 fwl to 811 ODtl Jlinjj 1.2SI- 4dr ChevY lumina 52,000 Wlllerproaflng.
-al lolcatl wor1&lt;; thecllecll,lll'bldbctnd lronplnwtiJt'llfe-· T......, wllhsn- mi$6500. 7~1-098B
cooroelon ltsrrler on 4 IIIII be ISium8d upon v.r; a.- Nurth • - f a r ri;ltl of WSJ 97 Neon 4dr, 4 cy( auto,
axlltlol!l.....- and the proper :JteCUIIOn Jag- a mln1Ms13 purp
to and " - 115.000 mi. A/C, new lires,
3 .._4 oleo; and and ~&lt;~Curing ol the seconds &amp;:1 375.15 Glllaty Ridge Ro8d, extra clean , 3 mo 3000 rni
,..._
surt.w cootb&amp;L
fwt to the point of said • - • baing warranty $2500. S&amp;S Auto
·-•tiona for the The right Ia rm lied, IJeVInnlilg, conlalning on utrip Gf I M I - Soles. 740-&amp;39-'Mro5
COii8INc:llon In secor· 1tJ the Syrscu• ·1.133 - .
7.5 fwl In lliiltlt and
dance
with
the RsciM Rsglansl
l i l l l . . , - . , . - edjolnint the ....._
Cut•act ~ Dlalricl, to noject any..- "*" far right Ill WSJ dwcrlbed psrc:al on
Bidding Docu- sl bids.
puopaila I l l - fnlm N 8011111 aida U.elll,
may be nlllllinlld .. Engl-'a
Coat GH!-J Rkl;e Road, Wid stJ'Ip bainU buunclthe following 1oc:s-- Estin-. $443,8711.00 uld "SIMI'lt beln; ad ... the
IJ- .:
(1116, 17, 11, 11,211, 22, on aatrip Ill I M I - by the -line ol uld
Engl_..
· Ofllce: 23
7:5 1M! In llidtlt and Sacllclt1 30 and baing
URS,
217
W.
ldjolnln; the ....._ boundedonthe-Nstlonllide
Blvd.,
dncolbed psn:el on IJ end by the center Ill
CGio t Iota, OH 43215,
Public Nollc:e
the llida - · Gllltay flldea Rold.
(114141445011.
lllfd stJ1p baing buuncl- Subject to all legal
Bulldsrra' ExcMn;e • Slwlfi.Sslaa
adontheaaslsrlyand 1111"'**IJode: Plan"-!~
CsMNuntlllrOic;w003 by -ICIItiiJithe- T h e - Jascolptlo 1
1175 Dublin ltolld, Andow Eggen
line Ill the 8ltova . . . In - OH 43215, Pilolttllft
das cribotd ,..... dMctl with an ltCtUIII
The Owner'a Office ..
.
.
llslng bounded on the ewvey c:dnducl8d by
(fnlrn 1:00 Ul. to 1 Lsi- ltullmsn, slat alia ot) and Itt' J - Stsnrt, PS
p.m); 405 SINe!, Lellllllie A - , et - llllllfd Section 31. 74211 on Jilna 3, &amp;, and
Asclns, 01145771 (7401 sL
SUbjaFI tu •1 t.;.1 13, 1114. lnrtn;s .-.
141-2411. Bidding ciao- Dafs:tdema .
I I t•*baed on pNVious - ·
&amp;
umoy
be Court or Common 1 1 t a - Jro colptich1 veylng within uld
ollllilnlld from the - . llelga County, wsa ...- In secor· pooperty and
Enpw et I ..... Ill Oltlo
oMnce with M -..1 . dadlne 03 d U I l l 01
$100.00 per wt (non- In . pui'SIIIInca . ol an sun'ay conduclitcl by minutes 36 seconcla
For Children 3 to 12
.....-~ Bids s1ts11 order u1 ula .to me , _ s-srt, PS Ill the Ohio SIMI
be either hend-lv· dlrscted from Mid 74211 on June, 3, 6, and ..._ Grid Direction.
years of ·age
In
-led COIM'tlnthe-antl- 13,1114.811 ~ . . .-. The ;rid ....lion......
June 24, 20QB to
wtu I ,_ Ia 405- tied action, I 1111 baed on poa•lau: - - obtliinecl by ceiMt1111
IINet, AKine, OH .....,.. ....... et pllb-- vaylng within uld obaw w.tlon.
July 31, 2008. ·
46T7'1, until 10:00 Lm. l i e . . - on IllS fron1 ........, po0f*111 end . . _ _
u.d:
For more information
-- CMI .,.... ol the llelgs dsi:llns 03 Jtg 111 01 ~ II, ..._. 117,
Wuol1 d.ot. July I, County Court House mlnllllil 36 ·.- i d a Msfp County Ollldlll
· please call
:11101.
on Frldlly, July 11th Ill the Ohio Slalo Rsclll'lls.
. Parcel
11ta 8lds wiH be pub- 2001 111 10:00 •-"'·• or Plane Grid Dltetlon. AuditOr's
PVH Rehabilitation
lidJ ap · - lntm8dl Wid day, the lalaa~IIJI The grid ... . . . , - ll:ttAt. .:
01.lllllr .......,..,. and J olbedtwl-: ollllilned by cotlaatloll 00311,._ and 01Services,
.... llloud,
The
follollln; obaw ........ _
00350.003.
bell · bidder
fa dascrlbed .-1 MRCEL 2:
C-'
0-:
(304) 674-2418.
NqUind to fuml:ll In BillfOld Being e1233 ......... LsiiiOils 'Huflmsn alia
will b prlp
I, a bid Township,
llelga eel In Mid See1lon 30 AI 1 FlWI
Go ally :nil cootbact County, In the Slats Ill c..nod out o!Parootl 2. Pnlparty
Artldresa:
Bond In IICCUidllnc:a Ohio, In S&amp;tlooll 30 331, ..._. 105; 421115 Gilby ROIIil,
will lec:llot1 153.54 Ill . 36, TOIIIIsltlp 3 ComiMIICing et an . _ , 0H 45776
.,. 01t1o Aitwlas d North, AMp 13 Wwt, Iron pin et the Appnolsed .. $30,000
Cada.Bid-"J,..· llltheOhloCon.-or': hOitl:aaat- u1 T...,.IIISela:clllehed In bond """'· Puod - · and ........ • Nld Section
30; ... far .... 1111111
.._. be lseuld bJ • tra:tllllsndcooalsllng a.- aol.ong t h e - :vardaolthesppnlaaJ
......., CompsnJ or or - psi'CIIie CIWI8d ·line or . said ee11on ..Ius. 1II% dolln on
Coopotetlon llcsnsod outllltheAsr- &amp;oullt 00 do;- 42 day ol ule, cwh or
In the Slalo Ill Ohio to pt ap a tr ~ 331, min.- 11 eec01td: certified check. baluld IUNIJ..... - 105, llelga w.t 201M 1M! to the snce Clue on contlnnsbch PIDpt&gt;Nl must CounlyOMd , _ . , , pctlnt Ill bagln."llng or lion Ill .....
001 tall the full uld .....,... boo ldad the
rusl
The J1P11 oltel did nut
at IllS ,..,. or .......... J CJ.,_ a lot- ...........
herein; Include an hbrlitr
w• t llt:V . . po..,.._ lolls;
thanc:a
continuing • ....,lnsllon of the
. Iii ... an .,.._.. MACEL 1:
ao1.ong N l d - - .........
-•••d
thaNin. llelnga1 .1USC1sper- 8ctullt 00 J 11- 42 Robert E. ........
E8Cit bidder- ... oel In Nld . . II: I 36 . , . _ 11 - t d s Msfp Cuunly Sharif!
,... arid a Ill l1e Ct tilt J 0111 ol • 15- w.t 1411.51 1M! laths Attomar far Plaloollll;
aapatlw y on proj- . n l*eal da&amp;tlled 111.-M • I IIIJI '--• . _ .........
actslll:llnllar-and In VOlume 331, ..._. ,..IICOWSI'OWI;
211-213' E. · Sscottd
oa pi l!f- T h e - 105; CallliRWICfng .t thanc:a uw•811J tot- IINet. PDIMiilf, OH
~-- ,.~ulow .,.._plnfoundslthe -.g the can1er ol 457WII
.... thfa poojacl be nortlneat ol u l d - liCOWS taw11 l I JINola: (7401 112·
CD pi I d no Mid
Ia C* t
36; the IDRUiitiiJI lout .... lsplaiilber 1, - - ........ - - w:1looucone (ti11,U,30
:111017
lin: Ill uld tl&amp;llon ...... rt;ltl at ......
All ,-..:ton lklultt 00 Ja; 111 42 250.10 txt. ...._... --;;;;-;;;;;-sultcontncton Allo- li &lt;'IICDnds 75... 1M!- cltonl
PllbllcNollce
~nolwadtlllltheproj- _ _ _ _
.................
a- 44 ~------ • to the .....,.. paint Ill ~lei ••• Ill mlnulw 36 - • PU81.ICNCmCE
·
Ohio the . ,,_1
£at 15.31-; 2}CMI a The Oralgs Townohlp
~ilL, •H•
•••ct1111d
herein; ....."' South a 'hwtHI w11 hold •
•Acw. and llbor In thanc:a
_.,.,.,. ' a
t 01 pultllc hiw~I1JI on the
. . h pith 1 I Ill sloti1Jiuldwdlon- - · Eut lUI poopo~ budeel for
111s1r
po aJo cL &amp;oullt 00 ds; sa 42 IMI; 31 on • c:urva to 2001 on July 3, 2001,
, IWkmlilly, -lbliC· ntlnulel 11 :sconcls the right of ddlua 7:30 at the home uf the
1111' car QflE oca with w.t 1411.51 1M! to the 1aUS - . length FIICIII Oftlcsr, O.la
. . ..,.. '"pl:r- 111 . . elittloiiJI 211.01 !;!lor!! Follrad.
111 101
nq..,. fantt IICOWS tawll; lloult 71 d
12 (1123
_...
of
Ohio thanc:a __......,lot- mlnulas 5I - t d •
, 1 I I I allw Coda lolling the ol East 2U5 IMI; 4) on e
Cf:ql
123. the uld fslnn I'OWI ........ South ..

'*

cHAilGEI .

e..:c. con.

fully loaded for Hunters

ADVERTlSEIIENT FOR
llllS
Syrscuae-Aeclna
~
s-r
Dletrict will ,_....
......Sitldsfar:
Yellollltush
Aoild
S... '--""_ Extenalon

r'-::~!===~!!!:!~!!~!:=~

r·
40 Cody
.
41 Wltere Allll ·
1teg1na
Ching"
42 Cialan• ,
. 26 GcHiioldo 43 Sharthsnd •
27Remlnda
1!'0 .
too- 44 111rc11, i.g. .
28 Jr. ......
45 Go
t
olllc:or
47 OveottiOig
3048Twlat
51 Moogoo
31
for
-pwt
53 Heaillnt
32 Hire I
-.nda

that the sun ~ shining, that
_., finesse will win and that each suH
wil spit ~- But the realist. wOO
has been bilten many limos by bad
breaks, alwtrfS carries an umbo8lla.
In this deal, you and your pallner bid
brilliantly lo _ , hearts. How would
you p&amp;llhe play after West leads lhe

0

f#lff of

tor

2006 Toro 2 rum mower. 54
lndl cul- ooly -BO "" ....

Pus

Pua

Pass

•

Nole jCUI (JJiellw&lt;Hiamon:t -.This

bllce, like new caM 304-675-

hand warmers,

Eul

5.

Quokw

89Stlll8

CARPENTER
SERVICE

2005 Honda CRF, 230 F dirt

average gg Honda Foreman, 400 4x4
dr8ssed weighl4-51bs. 379- 3000ibs winch , cargo. box,

.....

29 P.... Jng

N. . .

••

39 pronoun

19 Hove being
21 Inch

n=:. .....

Do notassume
favorable weather
N.the bridge-· I1IIIIIY players always

D

PEAP IATTf~lf$

DOWN

1 Tlllol guy
forwWd
2 lllcluat VIP 24F.,.IIy
24 I'Mcllpit
38e27 Mekesllter
25 "- Te

Opening lead: • J

, TAJ:.E otJfI

20 :::. alghbt

17 Stick up
59 Sombeo
1~ Sc:noen wllh
ewetgreono
22 Sitcom

Wut

Pass
Pass
" Pus

tNT
SNT

_......,~uucu

(2 - - )

58 Popular
c:oulu liiOp

• 10

4QJ94 2

Dealer: South
Vublerable: lllJih

zt

BARNEY

Farm Fresh Chicttens, pas- 6338
ture
faised
broilers, - - - - - - -

-·•7.

10 8

-

J AND MELECTRICAL

fnsured &amp; Bond8d

our used drive, '?ather int., ~~ L-.;.740-6.;,;..;:53;;.·;;.96;:5'""7-..1

97&lt;

91\KQ!O!
•AKQt3

H&amp;H

Deere la1ely7 You11 be sur- 94 Dodge caravan 4 wheel

s

••

1.::=:;;412;;5/0B::I:mo=:
~• •;S;ptd;;•~l~ld;IJI;;In;;IIGme;;~WI;;,riiJI;;iiii~
r

r

8 6

~-

15 .........
16 OodiM

• KB 7S2

• J 9 6 5

7~•·0162
www,cARM ICHAEL - ;.;446;·:82
::i.l.17:...~--.,
Gutterl·ng
· - - - - - · _ _ _ _ _ _ _ TRAILERS.COM 740-446VANS
Wanted 16GA., Single Shot AKC ENGLISH SPRINGER 3825
~
FOil SW; . 1
Seamless Gutters
Sl'f&lt;NIEL
REAlJ'f 10 GO 6.
,..
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-!""""""'!"_ _ _ _

Mollcllan

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

MOTORS

apartment

Seod resumes to:
"

~

www.mydallysantlnel.com

Labrador Retriewrs. 4 Police Impounds! Cars from
chocolate, 3 black $200 $5001, HondaS,• Cht!Y)'S,
Aepoirod. &amp;In NCI1. 7-40-98&amp;2707, plee"' Jeeps, F&lt;&gt;ros, &amp; moral fo&lt;
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Monday, June 23, 2008
ALLEYOOP

JET

Nioo qulot 2BR "'ll ond 2BR

........

MLT/MT

Monday, June 23, 2008

www.rnydallysentlnel.com

The Daily _Sentinel

--.J

yours, il wit
}"'Uffatth In your
abllties. IAhctl ., tum wW stimulate your
coftsague&amp;, too.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191 -

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Ewants

....-.onlinory In
conditiOns .... roll ~ ond
~to ac:tMM1 a numbef af ~·
QN1e . an

might

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2G-Ma""' 20) -

Through

to

• llllnge aet of ctn:unstances, • 1om1er
antagonist might be drown c1osa&lt; you.

RBmOdeling, Room
Additions

This naw ISSOCidon wiH generate &amp;8Y&amp;f·
lllmulualbeo\oiita.

LOCIIII Cos• c1C

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740-317..s.M
FresEilt PI a

740-317,..

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19) - A - oituotion 1hat you loll ,.,_.... to Con.et
con be . - " you're otlling ·. , opply
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yougot right"" • ..
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ttrong t1
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Wlhan ualll wflh .,.,liltldng ht until
now n. rellld on CtlllnOI. Mow on lt.
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~.w-~ IUld New n - I 2 !'

a
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• Room Additions • Garages • Vmyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Deets

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47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom.10H

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416-1834

25+ ,_. upnN-" F- Em• at

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Advertise
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$64 r month ·
•

I
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�'
Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, June 23, 2oos;

www.mydailysentinel.com

Foundation announces
local scholarship
recipients, A3

-Desperate teams don't care about character
ASSOCIATED PRESS

,,

t

You might lhink that after
his last bad experience with
!he bubbly, Javon Walker
would not have been out
spraying bottles of Dom
Perignon on people partying
in a Las Vegas nightclub.
You might.
. You might think the
Oakland Raiders would
have figured out Walker
could be bad news at any
price, much less the $16
million he was guaranteed
to play wide receiver for
lhem.
You might.
Unlike
the
Raiders,
Walker has an excuse of
sorts. Like many athletes
he' s young, dumb and so
flush with money lhat he
can't wait to buy $900 lxitties of champagne just to
shower people with.
Just how dumb really
comes into focus when you
think about what happened
with Walker just 18 months
ago when police believe
champagne spraying by a
teammate touched off a
fight in a Denver nightclub.
When it was over, Walker
was in a 'limousine cradling
a dying Darren! Williams in
tiis iums.
AI Davis isn't'that dumb,
just increasingly desperate.
1be architect of the great
Raider teams of old isn't
getting any younger and he
badly needs someone to
. catch lhe balls thrown by
JaMarcus Russell· if the
Raiders are going to have a
chance to win again.
Davis rolled lhe dice on
Walker not because ihe
Raiders have a reputation of
taking lhe NA..'s trash and
turning it into treasure. He
did it for the same reason he
took Randy Moss a few
years back and the same
reason Jerry Jones takes
every misfit who can find
his way· to Dallas.
They want to win so badly
they can't help lhemselves.

In Walker's case, the
Raiders knew they were getting someone who had
antagonized Brett Favre in
Green Bay, was with
Williams when he was shot
after a night out in Denver,
and had a history of bickering with the teams lhat
employed him. But when
the Broncos unceremoniously cut him, he got a $55
million deal from the
Raiders.
..
Walker has yet to play a
down for lhe Raidets but he
rewarded lhat failh earlier
this week when he was
found unconscious, beaten
and robbed, on a Las Vegas
street comer, hours after
being seen spraying champagne on fellow clubbers at
a nightclub. Technically
he's a victim, guilty only of
random champagne madness, since stupidity by
itself is not a crime.
Down in Texas, meanwhile, former bad boy
Micha~l lrv_in is helping
baby-sit vanous Cowboys
in hopes lhey'U aJI be ready
to play opening day. So far,
Terrrell Owens ha_s for the
most pan kept his mouth
shut., Tank Johnson has kept
hts guns home and Pacm~
Jone~ has kept out of stnp
clubs._
.
Whtle Jones ~opes ~ts
g~ behaviOr will get htm
.remstated for lhe upcommg
season, his past keeps popping up at just lhe wrong
time. In lhe latest chapter in
lhe Pacman saga, a woman
involved in a Las Vegas
brawl that police say Jones
incited was found dead last
week behind a building in
lhe Bronx after a fall from a
building.
, That by itself won't stop
Jones from getting reinstated by commissioner Roger
Goodell. There is, however,
the little matter of his testimony in the case of a man
charged in lhe Vegas shooting that left a strip club
bouncer paralyzed. The man
told a television station last

month that Jones ordered ·
lhe shooting and was trying
to fnune him for lhe crime.
Cowboy fans, of course, ·
couldn't care less what
Jones did in his past if he
can help lhem get to lhe ·
Super Bowl. And neither
does Jeny Jones, who worries ·more about selling
expensive seats in his new
stadium than lhe legal probterns of his latest project
Tl!e Yankees have a lot of
·expensive seats to sell in '
lheir new stadium, too, and
a desperate need for pitching. So lhey dido 't think
twice about signing seriaJ
malcontent Sidney Pooson
to a contract wilh the bope
he will be on the mound
soon·in New YQrk.
Ponson so tested lhe
patience of the Texas
Rangers that they waived
him this week even though
they need pitching even
worse than lhe Yankees and
he had an ERA of 3.88. That
number proved so enticing
that the Yankees were willing to overlook Ponson's
alcohol-soaked problems of
lhe past and his inability to
get along with both teammates and managetnent. ·
With the Yankees floun. dering most of the season in
the AL East, about the only
surprise is that they haven't
tried to sign Barry Bonds as
lh . DH
·
etr
·
·
Indeed, most ?f lhe talk
Y0~ ~ear by teams about
bu1ldm~ character an_d
~mploymg _good c1ttzens IS
-J~t talk. Gtven a Chan&lt;:C to
ptck up a star player w1th a
checkered past., most will do.
it without a second thought
if they t;Jtink it will help
them wm a few more
games.
'Like the Raiders, lhey' re
usually so desperate lhey
can.'t help themselves. ·

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
-,(J\.1 '1'-.•\ld . :;-. \o .:.!

Crew, Galaxy match ends in 3-3 draW:
Evans - finally
broke ·
11lrough In the 67th nun~
when he slammed tiu:
bouncing ball into lhe back
of lhe net Barros Schelotto
tied it four minutes later.
O'Rourke
foule4
· Beckham inside the penaJcy
area and Donovan converted
the ensuing penalty.
Lenhart., who catne on in
the 761h minute, knocked a
baJI into an empty net after a
brief scramble to give tht;
Crew the tie.
" It feels like a loss when
we commanded lhe game.
for so long. went in front 20 at the start of the secon4
half," Beckham said. "We
need to learn how .to fmisb
games off.
"Surrendering · leads i~
becoming an aU,too-famil~
sight"

Page AS

.• AJm¥t qen Henry, 79
• Robert E. Hudson, 60
• Joe Tavan, 83

feloliy wammt.

- · -· .. ~~,..

• Resii&amp;6keep
f91ti11g rising Miss'ssWJ

River. See PJ1F A2
• Coroner: Ohio
hker likely died

. d heat exhauStion.
See . . A3
• 'OYer the Hill
: Vacation Bille School.'
SeePi1JtA3

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work tights fur after dusk or before dawn
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~

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'

'

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See

r.AS·

. • LDcal Briefs.
Seer.AS
• Baseball and SoCial
Security: More ~ .
. ntll1'1bels. See ftlge A6
• Family Medicine:
Determine type of
anemia befo.re deciding
beatnlel1l See Pate A6

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Annie's Mailbox

A3

Calendars

i\3

Classifieds

83-4

Comics

Bs

fmtorials
.Movies
Obituaries

A4
As

Weather

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As

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o l!medDy"1mo-CU8546-ll~)

a SECI10Ns - Ill PMli!S

Sports

11/!JJIZ~~ilt~l

••• .Ill f'II'O'fi!M, IJIIII III'IJII1 hetflt

INDEX

BE'IOfl) TIE EXPEC IED:

I

4

'

'
.· • de~

,

''

.•

.~

..-•

•'

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. '

language whicb would
allow a new emvloyee to
bring past ,experience at
other public water utilities
to Pomeroy instead of staning ow at "kro."
Council also approved the
ftrSt reading and vote of an
amendment -on bow, when
and where political signs
are displayed i.n dJe village.
The amendment was discussed bl!lt ultimately failed

earuer this year. 1be ftrSI
readin~ of the amendment
to ordinance 593 prohibits
~litical signs pert.ainiJ1g to
a political GICC ()f issue from
being ·erected in the village
earlia: than 30 days prior to
an ·election. 1be signs must
be no larger than 12 square
feet and ootlocated HI feet
near a public right-of-way.
. Signs are .also prohibited
from any vi.liage plllilperty,
including adjacent to the
walkin,g path. Al1 signs must

be removed seven days after
an election.
Council also decided to
honor .the members of the.
Meigs Archery Team wruch .
took home a national championship wilh certificates and
a proclamation .at its next
meeting at? p:m.. July 14.
Council adjourned into
executive session once to
discuss personnel in the
street department and more
specifically a legal matter
within lhat department.

small business,
housing,

Randy Smith,
dllaimlan of
lheMeigs
Ooonty
Oepal bii8o1l of

'

·

James F. Bryant., 60,
Henlawson, W.Va., was
reoently aiR!Sted a&amp;r a foot
. ~~
in
downtown
uy and charged with
readtiug atUt and laiture to
comply in Pomeroy Mayor's
Cowt. ~g (O " f t
Pomeroy Polioe Depanment, .
Bryantts ooosidc:md a ~gi­
ti ve from justice who is
wanted in Mingo County,
W.Va. on a felooy charge of
attempted grand larceny.
According to Patrolman
Ronnie Spaun, Bryant was
ridiq a bicycle down the
middle of West Main Sweet
near Pizza Hut when Spaun
attempkd to stop him from
obstructing traffic. Bryant
then allegedly turned west
on Locust Slireet., jumped
off. his bicycle and ran into
the woods. The pursuit continued behind the Pomeroy
Exxon towards Lincoln Hill
and by this time Spaun was
:assisted by Chief Mlirk E.
Proffitt., Meigs County
Sheriff ,Robert Beegle and
Deputies Andy Myer~.
Ricky Smith and Josh
Ridenour.
Spaun and Proffitt eventually found Bryant laying on
tile ground in the weeds
behind a residence on
Lincoln Hill where he was
arrested. Bryant was transpol1ted from the Pmneroy
· Polire Department to the
Meigs County Sheriff's
Office for incarceratioli. He
is alSII on parole in Logan
' County, W.Va., according to
Police
the
Pomeroy
Dep.artment.
Another recent foot pur- '
suit · resulted in an · arrest
which saw Spa11D use his
taser· gun on Charles L.
Stewart, 27, Middleport.
ACCOFding to the )&gt;{Jmeroy
Police Department, Spaun
recently pul.kd ova: .a vehic;le on M«banie Street
Wlle:m Slew.ad was a pas~ei. .A1W ~ng with
· the dispatchtt, Spaun said
he learned Stewart was
wanted in Mjddlrpnrt ·un a
warrant.
Spaun said StewaJt dlen
fled the scene on foot while
he and Patro4nan Brent
Rose were in pursuit The
pursuit went from Butternut
Avenu~ into the woods on
Linco!D Hill. Spaun said he
and
Rose
repeatedly
advised Stewan to stop and
that they would use lhe taser
but Stewart did not comply.
Spaun lhen tasered Stewan
in the right ann and uoda
arm. Meigs EMS ' and

Ph u ... Aia

made. The amendment to

Sl per hour. ordinance 721 also includes

to address

POMEROY
l'wo
reoent foot pursuits by the
Pomeroy Police Department
resul.ted in as many am:stS,
including tbe am:st of an
alleged fugitive from Mingo
County, W.Va. wanted on a

0 BffUARIFS

~l-

\\\\" nndaih"'t'fltind en ll l

-Partnership

Foot ·
purs11its
result in
arrests

....

.. ll '\I :.!-J.:.!OOH

Mayor JOOil Musser said tbe
POMEROY -Last night wa1a: department is a public
Pomeroy Village Council utilily and it raises its own .
approved the ftrst two read- funds. Co"ncilwoman Mary
ing~ on separate ordinances McAogus \'Okd against the
liea! iog with raises in the raise wbiie Councilwoman
water depaltmellt and lhe Ruth Spaun abstailled.
, placement of political signs.
McAogus aslced about
Council approved the first mises in tbe slrCCI depanreading and vote on an ment as well Mus-ser said it
. nmendment to ordinaooe 721 was discussed at a recent
which will increase wages in fmaooe oommitt.ee meeting
tbe water depanment for the though not decision was

AP pllc*i

"From a character standpoint., we showed a loi,"
Crew coach Sigi Schmid
saili "I don't think this is
something we could have
done last year."
·
The match marked the
fm;t time since May 24 that
Donovan
and
David
Beckham played together
for the Galaxy, 3nd lhe pairing quicltly paid off.
Beckham crossed a baJI
into lhe front of the net, but
Columbus
goalkeeper
William Hesmer couldn't
oontrol it Donovan got lhe
hall and scored the first ~al
mto an empty net.
In the . 47th minute,
Buddie shook off defender
Danny ·O 'Rourke inside lhe
penalty area and ripped a
close-range . shot
past
Hesmer.

~~~\"l

supervisor and

labola.s by

Columbus Crew's Guillermo Barros Schelotto, left, soores on a penally kick past Lo~;
Angeles Galaxy goal keeper Steve Cronin, right, during the second half of an MLS soccer
match on Saturday in Carson. Calif. The game ended in a 3-3 tie.

CARSON, CaJif, (AP) Secood-balf
solmilutc
Stephen Lenhan netted the
tying goaJ in lhe 881h minute
for lhe Columbus Crew, who
scored three times in the
fmaJ 23 minutes and earned
a 3-3 draw with the Los
Angeles' Galaxy on Saturday
night.
I::andoo Donovan converted a penalty kick in the 83rd
minute, but .Lenhart erased
the second one-goal deficit
of the half for lhe Crew (7 -42).
Donovan had gi veiJ lhe
Galaxy a 1-0 lead in the
fourth minute.
Edson Huddle's goaJ in the
47th minute gave the Galaxy
Trm Dahlberg is a notion- (6-4-3) a 2-0 lead, but Brad
al· spons columnist for The . Evans and Guillermo Barros
Associated Press. Wnu to Schelotto answered to get
the Crew even. .
him at tdnhlbergap.org

Ill

assistant

·US~team
selected. See~ Bl

.

; .~

Pomeroy approves readin~ on raises, political signs

SPORTS

INsiDE

•

.

bi,AS

.

infrastructure

Joband

BY BRIAN

Family
SeNioeS dilaritatlle foundation preseuted
a$500donationto the
Meigs CQunly
Aelay tor Ufe
I:OJoann
Crisp, chairman ,o fthe
event.

J.

REED

BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

. POMEROY
A
$300,000 federal grant 'will
fund a strategic pI an
addressing future residential
infrastructure needs .and
encourage community-based
business opportunities.
The
Meigs
County
Economic
Peveloprnent
Office will partner with the
Rural
Community
Assistance Program on a
two- year project, aimed at
establishing a local re\'olv. iiig Joan program, development 'Of a community service initiative for young
adults and identifying areas
of projected res_idential
growth and infrastructure
SrAR' Aa ORr
NEWSewDAII:t'SENTINEliCOIII
needs in lhose areas.
Economic Development ·
Director Perry Varnadoe
MIDDLEPORT
said the plan will particularEmployees of the Meigs
ly study the need for sewerCmmty Department of Job and .
.age services in those areas
Family Services have formed a
where residential growth is
charitable foundation to supexpected. The study will
port local organizations and
identify tbe areas where
projects.
infrastructure
needs are
AU funds for the foundation
greatest, and assist with
come from in bouse through
fmding
sources of funding
donations .and fundraising
for
additional
infrastructure.
efforts by agency staff.
WSOS
.Community
~lt is the goal of the foundaAction Commi ssion of
tion to donate to a charity -that
Fremont.
the parent organi,serves Meigs County each
zation
of
the RCAP, identiquarter,~ said Chairman Randy
fies Meigs County as "an
Smith. "Staff members offer
area of Appalachian Ohio
die name of a charity they
exptlriencing
unprecedented
would like to see recei"'e the
in the .face
growth
potential
donation, and the charity with
of continuing and signifithe most votes gets the donacant
distress ...
tion for the quarter."
The
work plan for the proSmit:h said the employees
will
include an economject
hope to donate at least $500
Brian J. All cHphatc ic development strategy,
each Qlllii'ICI:. The first recipiTheresa
Lavender
ol
the
Department
of
Job and Family development of a business
ents are the American Cancer
Society's Meigs County Relay Services presented a $1 00 donation toward Middleport's loan fund, assistance to new
for Life and the Middleport July 4 fireworks display to Brenda Phalin, president of and expanding busine sses.
affordable and energy-effi,
the Middleport Community Association.
Commllllity Association.
cient housing technical
assistance and development
facilitation in response to th
need for inc(eased home
ownership and rental housing choices. ·.
"Activities will include
teclinical a·ssistance and
capitalization of a small
business loan fund. net·
working of local agencies
and governments to otbatin
highest -priority r~sources to
catalyze develo11ment and
housmg oppllrturlities, technical assistance to local
jurisdictions in matching
delivery of water and wastewater · infrastructure to
needs of emerging businesses and ·public facilities.
including
_the
new
University of Rio Grande
and a proix&gt;sed heal!h facility at Rocksprings. and intitiation of a county leadership development program .
That leadership P.rogram.
Varnadoe said. will focus
primarily on young professionals in their 20's and
30's.
'
-~
Varnadoe said Meigs
Emergency personnel from Middleport's Ladder 16. Pomeroy's Squad One and Meigs'
County
already suffers from a
EMS Medic 5 responded yesterday afternoon to the scene ol this on car rollover near the
of affordable housing.
.Meigs and Gallia County lines on Ohio 7. One person was transported to an area hospital lack
and is in panicular need of
for treatment ol their injuries. The Ohio State Highway Patrol was investigating the accin ._ ..., ,. AS
dent at press time.

Accident on Ohio 7

..

•

,_

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    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="14108">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="14107">
              <text>June 23, 2008</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="441">
      <name>graham</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
