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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

lJeisel,Weber-Gale among new faces on Olympic team
Bv BETH

I

Tuesday, July 8, 2008 ,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2000 U.S. swim team at 16. ··Good Morning America,''
ASSOCIATED PRESS
· Jendrick narrowly missed and actor Johnny Dcpp,
makmg the team fur Athens which should make her very
OMAHA. ·Neb .
and then retired. She'll swim popular with her teammates.
Elizabeth Bei sel emerged as the 100 breaststroke in·, Cullen Jones made his
first Olympic team, two
a rwng star ;n the U.S. trials. Beijing. ·
earning a trip to her first
"It just feels amazing to be years after coming to attenOlympic s at 15 . Garrett back on top," she said . ''My tion as the world 's topWeber-Gal e assumed th e ooal is to delinitely break ranked swimmer in the 50
sprint lega9 left behind by the world record and win the free . He didn't qualify in
Gary Hall Jr. Then there's gold again."
any individual events: but
Megan Jendrick, back in the
Like Jendrick , . Weber- he' ll sw im the 400 free
swim or things eight years Gale missed out on making -relay.
after winning gold as a the 2004 team . The 22-yearJones helped the U.S. win
teenager.
.
old spri nter from Milwaukee gold in that event at last
They are among the fresh is a veteran of two world year's world championships.
face s joining
Michael championships, but as a He became lhe lirst black
Phelps. Katie Hoff, Natalie relay swimmer.
swimmer to break a loneCoughlin an&lt;i Ryan Locine
Now he'll try to extend the course world record in 2006,
" in rhe pool at the Beijing gold-medal legacy of Hall, again on the 400 free relay at
Olympics.
the two-time defending the
Pan
Pacific
Beisel . for one. still can ' t Olympic 50 free champion Championships.
quite believe it .
who fmled to qualify at the
Towering above then] all
The · teenager
from tnals.
·
is 6-foot-8 Matt Grevers the
Saunderstown, R.I. . earned . Weber-Gal_e, \~hose ~ame so n of Dutch immi gr~nts
spots in the 200-meter back- 1s a comhmat10n o. ~I S from suburban Chicago. He
stroke and 400 individual mother:s maiden . name will swim the 100 b·ackmedley just t~o years (Weber) and his father's stroke and the 400 free relay.
removed ~ro.m bemg on the . name (Gale), Will compete
Another first-ti me, Lacey
national B team. a step · ·m the 50 and I 00 freestyles Nymeyer, caught a hreak
be.I,o~ the b1g-t1me. .
. -. hts first tndlVIdual events Monday when 41-year-old
h s .~retty cool be~?g the m an mternatwnal meet - Dara Torres dropped out of
rook1e, Be1sel sa1d. There and the 400 tree relay.
the 100 free in Beijing.
are so. many veterans here
"If you ?on 't eKpect to do
Nymeyer was only set to
that w1ll help me out w1th well, you r~. not gomg ~? swim the 400 free relay, but
l)erves and stuff. I, was not swim fast , he sa1d. I now she'll compete in the
expectmg th1 ~. I ve been tramed hard all year. 1 was 100 free while Torres focus. dreamtn~ of th1s smce 1 w~s really . confident 111 my es on the 50 free as her best
a IJtt[e g1rJ ,and now that It S SWt mmmg and wanted the chance for an' individual
true and I m up here with best tunes. I· want to keep
ld
these guys. it's pretty my confidence high going to go.,. ·
- b th ldest
..
B ...
d
.orres WI 11 e e o .
1
sw~~~ips was also 15 when a:J 1 ~~P~~tat~~~: 0~1r s~~~~ ~m~\can ever toh swim ~
he made hf6 Olymj'lic debu! rn'tng fast ;md winning .sameymp~c~- ~~ reco
at the Sydney Games in medals."
. 1_t - ~n s e cou poten2000, going all but unno- Jessica Hardy has been tlally ~w 1 ~ 1 t":o _relays_.
ticed except for his status as around for a few years, but
Locme 15 ?~cK 111 hiS secthe youngest J)Jaie since never in an Olympics. The ond Olymptcs, havmg guah1932. He tinished fifth in the 21-year-old from Long fled m three mdJHdual
Beach. Calif., earned spots· events as the runner-up each
200 butterfly.
He's not worried about in the 50 free. I00 breast- ttme. but Phelps IS Ill two of
Beisel handling the pressure. stroke and 400 free relay.
them;
.
"S he 's been on a · few
"I pon't think "if you had
He II challenge Phelps 1_n
-national team trips already, told me a month ago that 1 both the .200 and 400 mdJ which is a few. steps ahead would make it in all three of v1dual medleys, wh1\e teamof where 1 was in 2000," these events that I would mate . and
defendmg
Ph!!lps said. "The biggest have believed you," she Olymp1c champ10n Aaron
said. ''I' m expecting good Petrsol a watts 111 the 20Q
thing is just to have fun."
The bubbly Jendrick is things for sure."
backstroke.. ,
.
back this time with a differAnother newcomer is
Lochte 1sn t fazed by
ent 'name after marrying Elaine Breeden; an 18-year- either of them.
.
"1 think that .1 can wtn
three years ago. She won old from Lexington, ·Ky. ,
two gold medals in Sydney who will swim the I00 and every time," he. said. "! still
under her maiden name of 200 butterflys. Her relatives have another month to corQuann,
becoming the include
cousin
Diane rect things. Beijing is going
youngest medalist on the Sawyer, co-host of ABC's to be a lot different." ·
HARRIS

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Pirates beat'Astros on McLouth,.Doumit homers

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Divorce

USA Recycled faper

•
;;o CENTS~ Vol. 57, No. 249

See Page Bl

Bv BRIAN

Page AS
• Phyllis Ebersbach, 70

INSIDE

\

· • US, allies want global
pollution slashed-by
2050. See Page A2
• Wildfires push some
from homes.
See Page A:2
• When e·mailing gets
inappropriate.·
See Page A3
• Divers learning more
about Lake Erie
shipwreck: See Page AS
• 4-H news notes.
See Page A6

_., euu

Violf

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CO UPE &lt;.

· -?r· 47K, ;
COUPE
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Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
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INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

12 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Calendars

A3

Classifieds
Comics.

B3-4

Editorials
Movies
Obituaries

group outside the huilding
belonging to the environmental organization Earth
First 1 · WOSU National
Public Radio is reporting
Columbus Police said officers used mace on ''about
six protesters" while Earth
First! daimcd police used
tasers on some members.
Police denied thi s claim to
WOSU and said no one was
tased. The Associated Press
quoted
Columbus
Lt.
William ·Morrison as saying
officers used pepper spray

J.

740-446-2342
www.mydailytribune.com

~otnt jleasant ~egtster

spe aking with police, the
company was told three of
the protesters arrested were
from Athens, one was from
Minnesota. one was from
Oregon, one was from
Indiana. two were from
Arizona. No one arrested
was from Meigs County.
Thompson said police told
her the eight are being
charged with criminal trespass and resisti ng arrest.
Thompson said the company · plans to pursue the
charges of criminal trespass.

Internet blogs associated
with the prote st and Earth
First 1 claim the activi &gt;t&gt;
"charged the building and
occupied the lobby. di sabled
video cameras with silly
. string, danced on furniture.
banged on pots and pans
and delivered anti-coal messages to employee &gt; wi th
chants and songs."
Thompson. who was in
the building &lt;tt the time of
th e protest. said the pro-.

Ple•se see AMP. AS

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Bs
A4
As
As

HOEFLiCH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

.

' POMEROY- Again this .
year
the
Pomeroy
Merchant's Association will
hold a duck . derby at the
Pomeroy
Sternwheel
Festival Sept. 11-13, it was .
decided at a meeting,of the
group Tuesday.
The derby is annually
held · to raise funds for the
Association's operation and
downtown improvements.
George Wright is chairman
and Edna Weber co-chair-

© 2008 Ohio Valley Publishlng Co.

•

•

.The Daily Sentinel

Beth Sergent/photo

grams located in the center ing strategy and protecting · nesses or ventlll'·es based on
which offers free help to an inventor's intellectual technology. These "lifesty le.
those entrepreneurs who propeny. The program also bu sine sses" mi ght · nmge
simp ly don't know where to helps start ups connect with anywhere from a movie thestart with their business investors, identify required ater to a grocery store. The
ideas or how· to improve an financial resources ·and only thing the program does
existing business.
eventually help attract not assist with are lega l and
Bohning spoke about the investors. A free online tax questions. Otherwise.
sc hool 's Entrepreneurial apphcation to begin the the program provides a
Signature Program (ESP) process is available at wide variety of free consultwhich assists those entre- www .techgrowthohio.com ing to help an existing busipreneurs who have a tech- or call 1-877-476-9681.
ness grow or help an entrenology I invention they
Jollick spoke about the preneur start up a new busiwish to manufacture or pro- . school's Small bu siness ness. Services include helpmote. The ESP program development
program ing develop a business plan.
assists in creating a business which deals with "lifestyle Please see Ch•mbe~. AS
plan, developing a market~ businesses" more than busi-

Merchants discuss festival fundraiser

A6

.,

Speaking to the Meigs
County Cham\;&gt;er of
Commerce about free
opportunities for small busi nesses were, front row
(from left) Sharon Hopkins,
Lissa Jollick, Phyllis
Bohning from the Voinovich
School of Leadership and
Public Affairs in Athens.
Also pictured from the
Chamber, back row (from
left) Patty Pickens, Michelle ·
Donovan:
·

Voinovich School·reps visit Chamber

man for the event to be held
on Sept. 12 at 4 p.m. John
Musser, president of the
Merchants Association and
chairman of the Stern wheel
Festival, noted that there are
1,000 ducks available to be
sold ..It was decided the top
award for the first duck
crossing the finish line
would be $1 ,000 in
Chamber of Commerce
bucks which means that the
prize money rem ains in
Meigs County. Numerous.
smaller prizes will also be
awarded at the derby.

f11;@liiiifWJ=m!OC®tOii£3o&amp;£l!.liAA3:1a~

~~e ~allipolt~ ·lailp ~rtbune

on about 20 people.
Though a spokesperson
for the Columbus Police
Department could not be
reached for comment on the
protest and arrests. Jolene
Thompson. vice president
of government and member
relations at AMP-Ohio. said
officers used pepper spray
on the protesters only after
they had been repeatedly
asked and refused to · leave
the private office/property
peacefully.·
Thompson said after

REED

POMEROY
-An
Albany man is. charged with
an indictment containing 12.
sex ual assault charges
involving four children.
Two other men were
recently indicted for ~exual ·
offenses, and appeared for
arraignments before Judge
Fred W. Crow Ill, along
with two others indicted on
charges of non-support and
drug-related counts ..
Jessy Wayne Young, 31,
appeared ·in Meigs County
Common Pleas CoJ,Jrl ·on
charges contained in a
secret indictment filed last
month. A local court rule
require s that all indictments
. be filed as secret indictments until defendants are
served. They are not made
public until that time,
regardless ·of when the
grand jury returns the
charges.
Young is charged with
four counts of gross sexual
imposition, four counts of
sexual assault, and four
counts of rape."Accordin!j to
· BY BETH SERGENT
an answer to discovery flied BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
in the case by th county
POMEROY - How to
prosecutor's office, the
female victims in the case start as . we! I as assist existranged in age from five to ing small businesses with
fre e help from Ohio
II years old.
Yoinovich
At his arraignment before University's
Crow, Young entered a plea School of Leadership and
of innocent. Crow set an Public Affairs took center
appearance
bond
of siage at yesterday 's Meigs
Chamber
of
$25,000, and set Young's County
Commerce's
Business·
trial date for Aug. 5.
Pomeroy .
Attorney Minded Luncheon.
Phyllis Bohning, Lissa
Christopher E. Tenaglia was
Jollick and Sharon Hopkins
Please see Indicted, AS
all spoke about various pro-

••
BSectwn

Sports
Weather

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17,000 HOUSEHOLDS!

w''"" ·lll)&lt;hoil)"S&lt;'ntinel.com

OffirJre~. help for small business owners

WEATHER

COUP I;

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BAEED@MYD."-,!LYSENTINEL.COM

. ,; 002$71...

"S cohd ·

BY BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

COLUMBUS - Several
. news outlets are reporting
Columbus Police arrested
eight people who · allegedly
refused to leave the ~orpo­
rate ·offices of American
Municipal Power-Ohio in
Columbus on Monday,
protesting the co mpany's
plan to build a ~oat-fired
power plant in Letart Falls.
Those arrested were
· allegedly part of a larger

.,rr. ''hr l
,)j COUPt
~ 'l

\\'EDNESil ·\ Y, JULY 9, :wo8

.

Three recently
indicted on
sex offenses
OBITUARIES.

I ' ffi hearing, no, it's not.'.'

co::-:u~P::-:e=­

_

~

Protesters arrested at AMP's Colu_mbus office

.SPORTS

Rodriguez has .found himself in the tabloids more
than any other Yankee since
arriving in New York in
2004. Last year, he was
labelecl "Stray-Rod" on the
front page.of the New York
Post after being .photographed out at night with
a former -Vegas stripper.
"I think for Alex. he's
been through this before, he
knows how to handle it,"
Yanke.es manager Joe ·
Girardi said Thursday. ''I'm
sure there are times he
wishes he could just fit in .
That's the price you pay."
everyone
"Obviously,
likes to keep their life private. Unfonunately,. in this
world, that doesn't h;tppen."
Ynnkees
co··ch:1-inn~n
Hank Steinbrenner said the
reports would not faze ·the
club.
"It 's no distraction to the
team," Steinbrenner · said
Thursday . at the Yankees'
complex in Tampa, Fla.
''Whether it is to Alex 1
don't know. But from what

to

frinll&gt;d on lOO t;(.

RccydL'd !\c11Sprint ~ ....

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

• Dempster, Fontenot, Soto
iead Cubs to 7-3 win.

Jake Co\'le contributed
this story jrom Ne!V York.

~

• is priht~d Qh ioo,% ·

l_e_adJor _.2:0')d

Rodriguez is in th~ first
season of a $275 million ,
10-year contract with the
Yat1kees, a deal that allows
him to earn up to $305 million. He made $185.45 million from 2001-7 from his
contract with the Texas
Rangers and Yankees.

.

. IDaily; Sentinel~· '

have lost -six nf seven and bursitis in ., hi s throwing in the founh.
Madonna - or any alleged
paramours - by name.
''Cynthia has made it ·very
clear to me that she wants to
from Page 81
take the high road and promanages both of ~s: I tect her children and herself.
. brought my kids to a Yankee There's no vindictiveness
game. I am nor romantically here," Kutner said. "She
involved in any way with wants to re.&gt;olve the issues
between Alex and herself in
Alex Rodrigue z.
an
amicable fashion."
Rodriguez added some
The
couple, who married
Hollywood glitz to his management team -last year in November 2002, has had
when he hired Oseary, who a prenuptial agreement in
had previously worked \Vith place since Oct. 3. 2002,
Madonna
and
Lenny according to the divorce
Kravitz. Oseary is not' a reg- papers.
Because Florida is a noistered baseball agent,
though. Rodriguez retained fault divorce state , extraScott Boras as his represen- marital affairs do not factor
into how the Rodriguezes '
tative on baseball matters.
assets
might be divided,
Madonna's
statement
added that she has "nothing a&lt;:&lt;.:&lt;Jtdh!g w marri&lt;Jgo: law
to do with the state of his experts Leon Finkel and
marriage or what spiritual David Levy of Oak Park.
path he may choose to [Jl. That is," unless such
study," apparently in refer- affairs are · specifically
ence to reports that the addressed in the prenuptial
.
singer had introduced the agreement.
They
have
a
$12
million,
ballplayer to the ·form ur
Jewish.mysticism known as six-bedroom house in the
upscale Miami suburb of
Kabbalah.
Coral
Gables. A company
· Cynthia Rodrigue.z last
week visited the Pari s home nm by a corporation conof . Kravitz. The rocker trolled by Rodriguez bought ·
denied anything improper, an apartment at Trump Park
say ing she had come to Avenue in Manhattan for
$7.4 million in July 2005.
Fran~e to escape the media
The divorce petition was
frenzy in New York and
day
after
stayed at his home as a filed . the
Rodriguez hit ·his 536th
friend:
Her lawyer, Maurice homer, tying Yankees Hall
Kutner, declined to elabo- of Farner Mickey Mantle
rate· on the divorce filing, for 13th.
which does not menti"on
The
32-year-old

Racine parade
wrapup,A6

'

· · '·., Your
~ ·• r ' - · - ·

PITTSBURGH (AP) - · fell back into last place in shoulder.
Nate McLouth and Ryan the National League Central.
He allowed a season-high
Doumit each hit home runs
The Houston pitching~staff seven runs on nine hits and
to lead 10 Pittsburgh Pirates was depleted after a 17- two walks in 3 1-3 innings,
with at least one hit in a 10-7 inning loss Sunday at his shortest start of the seawin over the Houston Astros Atlanta. forcing the Astros ·son.
on Munday night to snap a to ride Runelvys Hernandez
But the Pirates bullpen
(0-3) for four inning s in worked 5 2-3 shutout innings,
three-game losing streak.
Adam LaRoche reached which he allowed 10 runs _on highlighted
by
Denny
base four times, scored twice 13 hits and four walks.
. Bautista (2-1) 2 2-3 innings.
and drove in a run as eight
f\ilaking his season debut Tyler Yates struck out four in
Pirates had RBls. Jason Bay after having his contract · two perfect innings, and
went 2-for-3 with two walks purchased
after
the Damaso Marte pitched the
and two- runs, and Xavier marathon game Sundt)y, ninth for his second save,
Nady had two hits and two Chad Paronto pitched the .walk,ing Mark Loretta with
RBls for Pittsburgh, whic)l. final four innings, al lowing two outs to ruin a streak of 16
scored more runs during the only a hit and a walk. .
Astros in a row retired by the
first three innings Monday
Pittsburgh's pitching staff Pittsburgh bullpen.
than they did in being sw"ept has had its own problems
McLouth 's home run. his
in three games in Milwaukee with injuries and ineffective- I(jth, went high over the
ness in recent weeks. Lefty stands in right in the second.
over the weekend.
Carlos Lee hit his 20th Phil Dumatrait was ineffcc- Doumit 's shot, hi s II th.
home run and had three tive in his first start since a. scored Lui s Rivas, and gave

- -~(,\\~

Musser noted that The
Ruble excursion boat will
be docked at the levy offering cruises all weekend. He
said that severa l classes
from schools will be iaking
cruises, that there will be a
special
Chamber
of
Commerce crui se, and two
or more Meigs Alumni
cru.ises. That same·weekend
the
Meigs
Alumni
Association will have its
reunion and several hundred
graduates of Meigs High
School are expected to be in
town for the Friday night

· sq, by alociiiQIIIII olllcl and get a
Quote lor • CaUIMI Ill'-' now and Augult 31st
Nationwide will doMte $10 fllr ..:11 quota Ill the light egaln8t ClllCtl'
H~ ue rwll our goal of donating $75,0001

--- aou,_..
'

successful hi storical walks
in ·Pomeroy and the possi - ·
bility of conducting another
one this fall. Mike Gerlach.
local historian, has conducted two previous walks in
the community.
Bill Quickel reported on
. the success of t.he Gold
Wings and Ribs Festival in
early June and noted the
suppon of the loca l co mmunity.
Musser reported .that the
village received $4.000 in

Ple•s• see Merch•nts, AS

nationwide. com/pink

GET A QUOTE TODAY!

740-992-2155 .
304-675-1333
www.mydailyregister.com www.mydailysentinel.com

homecoming game and participation in a variety of
· activities including a downtown P.arade. ·
The possibility of holding
~ holiday church tour again
this year was discussed. The
· one two years ago was very
successful and ideas to
enhance the event this year
making it more inclusive of
the merchants, displays in
downtown, along with
adding music in the way of
a quartet or band were d-iscussed.
Also disc,ussed was the

BROWN AGENCY
33105 Hiland Rd. Suite 1
f=-QMEAOY, 6H 46789
740-992-2318

.

·

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· .
. Nunticliilj,. a ~~·-· of
'
.DO ~ lalqW ~who • WOfldna hardin 11\1 ftght OIMt cai\Oet? If eo, nomlnat. t1er lor the
· · ' · ·· ~ 1~ '$,~ or Cal!raoe llWtlld at natlonwlde.cotulplnk
•
•
"

••

'

•

,,

�'

D

The.Daily Sentinel

FTC
considers
backing
off nicotine
guidance.

•I
I
I

I

I

I .
I

I
I

tl

I:

.II

WASHINGTON (AP)
· The · Federal
Trade
Commission . said Tuesday
that it no longer considers
rel.iable a test for tar and
nicotine use&lt;.! for more than
40 years and touted by the
tobacco industry in marketing "l ight" and "low-tar"
cigarettes.
The FTr '"in it m"v
resci nd its guidance on tar
and nicotine yields that is
based on that test. The commission said if the ·guidance
is withdrawn. adverti sers
should no longer use terms
suggesting FTC endorsement or approval of any
specific test method.
The test. known as the
Cambridge Filter Method,
is a machine-based test that
smokes cigarettes according
to a standard procedure and
is sometimes . referred to as
"the FTC method." The
FTC issued its guidance in
1966 at a time when most
public health officials
believed
reducing the
amount of tar produced by a
cigarette could reduce a
smoker's risk of lung cancer.
The ·commission
believed that giving consumer:; uniform inf&amp;fftn·}iem
about tar and nicotine yields
of .cigaretl"s would help
them make informed decisions· about the cigarettes
'
they smoked.
But the FTC said Tuesdav
sc ientists now believe the
test does not provide meaningful information on relative amounts of tar and
nicotine people are likely to
get from smoking different.
brands of cigarettes.
.The main reason is that
smokers often alter their
behavior to get · the neces- .
sary . nicotine dosage, the
FfC said. The techniques
include taking larger and
deeper puffs. smoking more
and blocking the ventilation
holes .that may contribute to
lower.levels of tar and nicotine.
Nicotine acts as a stimulant and is one of the main
factors contributing to the
addiCtive quality of smoking. Tar is the residue from
burning tobacco and one of
the
most
destructive
byproducts of smoking,
accumulating in a smoker's
lungs.
" While today's FTC
action is important, it will
not by itself end the tobacco
industry's deceptive marketing of 'Jighi' and ' low- .
tar'
cigarettes ,"
said
Matthew Myers , president
of the Campaign for
Tobacco-Free Kids . He said
the FTC action underscores
the need for Congress to
"enact pending legislation
to grant the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration regu'
: Jatory authority over tobacco. products .'' He said any
FfC action w.ould not prohibit tobacco companies
from making statements
regarding tar and nicotine
levels , and from describing
· cigarettes as "light" and
uloW- rar."
For decades. the FDA said
it lacked authority to regulate tobacco so long as cigarette makers did not claim
that smoking provided
health benefits . In 1996, it
· reversed course · and cited
- new evidence that the industry intended its products to
feed the nicotine habits of
the roughly 45 million
Americans who smoke.
Tobacco companies sued,
and the case ·eventually
landed in the Supreme
Court. In 2000, the court
ruled 5-4 that Congress did
not authorize the FDA to
regulate tobacco. ·
. The FDA legislation
approved by House and
Senate committees would
prohibit . terms such if!;
"light" or "mild" which
many consumers mistakenly believe means the products are safer. It also would
assess millions of dollars in
user fees to help pay the
agency's added costs for
regulating tobacco. More
than 400,000 people die
from smoking-related ill nesses each year.

'

BY TOM RAUM

-..

AND
JOSEPH COLEMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER S

TOYAKQ , Japan
.
World leaders embraced for
the first time on Tuesday an
ambitious but nonbindinz
goal of slashing · greenhouse-gas emissions in half
by midcentury to stttve off
global
. warmin g.
· Unimpressed environmen-.
talists called the effort too
slow and too unce11ain.
Leaders of some of the
world 's richest nation s
praised the agreement.
which endorsed Presid~nt
!:lush's insiste nce that lastdevelop ing countries like
China and India join in the
effort. But one environmental critic suggested that by
2050 those leaders would be
forgotten and "the world
will be cooked."
AP photo
Details were scant in the U.S. Pres ident George W. Bush . left. talks with his Russtan counterpart Dmitry Medvedev,
statement issued by the right , prior to a group photo at the G8 summit in 'foyako , Hokka ido, Japan. Tuesday.
Group of Eight. Some could
Indeed. U.S. officials
become clearer Wednesday treaty. with Bush complain- culling cm i" ion&gt; by 2020.
ing
that
it
puh
too
much
of
a
"To
be
mea
ningful
and
hailed
the declaration as a
when China ; India and six
burden
on
the
U.S.
and
other
credi
ble
.
a
long-term
goal
major
step forward ..;subother
fast-developing
nations sit down with the deve loped countric, to llll"l ha,·c a base year. it stantial progress from last
Group of Eight industrial reduce em issions while mu st be underpinned by year." in the words of Dan
nations - the United States, developing .giants such as amhi tiou, midterm targets Price, the president's deputy
acuons ."
· said national security apviser for
Japan, Germany, Britain, China and India arc ui vcn a and
Germany, Russia, Italy and freer rein to ppllute even'" Martltinu' van Schalkwyk ,' international. . economic
Canada - to discuss cl i- they vigoror1sly compete South African Minister of affairs.
with America around the Environmental Affairs and
U.S. officials sa id they
mate change strategies.
Tourism. " As it is expressed expected agreement on
The G-8 did not specify a world.
Bush will leave offi ce in the G-R statement, the cooperation to be reached at
base year for its proposed 50
ex panded
percent cut. and the actual next January, and both lon g - tc~;n goal is an empty Wednesday 's
meeting , even if painted
emissions reductions and the major candidates to succeed &gt;logan.
Saitl
Atonio
Hill. with a broad brush. But the
effect on the environment him have &gt;aid they are will·.
could vary hugely depending ing to go further in cutting &gt;Jl&lt;&gt;kesman for Oxfam wording of the G"8 stateIntern ational. a confedera- ment left a lot of wiggle
· on what is eventually decid- back American emissions ..
G-~
statement
,
tio
n of organizations that· room for the fast -growing
The
ed. Reductions from 2005
bv
host
Prime
work
on climate change. economies to ease the
released
levels, for instance, would be
far less than from l 990 lev- Minister Yasuo Fukuua in poverty anu other causes: potential burden.
And wh ile the developels, as in the Kyoto Protocol an announcement with the "At thi' rate .. by 2050 the
verdant
hill
s
of.
northern
world
will
be
cooked
and
ment
appelrred to be a victoon global wam1ing.
·
Still, U.N. Secretarv- Japan behind him, sohu1fied the G-8 leaders wiJI'be long ry for Bush. it could tum'out
General Ban Ki-n10on said. it a pledge made at the l"st foraotten.
The
G-8 's to be mostly a symbolic one
in
Gcrm
uny
u
year
enlorsement
of
a
tepid
50- once the fina.J statement
summit
was essential to set a longterm goal for global green- ago to seriousl y consider by-50 cl imate goal leaves us from what·the G-8 is calling
with a 50-50 chance of a eli- a
"Major
Economies
house emissions by 2050. s uch a long-term target.
But the move fell far short mate meltdown."
Meeting" is issued on
He said the world cannot
White House press secre- Wednesday. ·
afford to wait until 2009, · of demands by some deveJ c
The deci sion on climate
when nations are planning to opi ng countrie s and envi- tary Dana Perino responded
try to conclude a new global ro~mentali s ts pushing for to such criiicisms by sayi ng chaf)gc split some ofthe,difwarming treaty to succeed deeper cuts by 2050 and a that the G-8's action was ferences between ,Bush and
the Kyoto Protocol when its firm signal from wealthy "quite significant."
other G-8 members .
first phase expires in 20 12.
countries on what they are
"For the environmental
Japan and European
The United States has wi lling to do on the much groups , it wi ll never be members have been pressnever ratified the Kyoto tougher midterm . goal of enough," she said.'
ing for setting a long-term

goal .of a 50 percent reduction in global greenhouse
emissions by 2050. Other
members . including the
U.S.. Russia and Canada.
have been less enthusiastic
about such a target. Bu sh
has long said that China and
lndilt and other. big . growing economies must share
in the. pain in reaching such
·a goal.
The Europeans
have
pushed harder for rich countries to Teinvigorate talks by
making unilateral commitments~
Germany,
for
. instance. has pledged to cut
emissions by 20 percent by
2020. and by 30 percent if
other countries join the effort.
Still, some European leaders
praised the Tuesday accord.
''Thi s is a clear advance,
compared with the shaky
agreement from the previous year.'' said German
Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Jim Connaughton, chairman of the White House
Council on Environmental
Quality, said, ult has always
been the case that a longterm goal is one that must
be shared."
·
"So what the· G-8 has
offered today is a G-8 view
of what that goal could be ·
and should be, but that can
only occur with the agreement of all the other parties." he added , referring to
nearly
200
countries
rnvolved in U.N. talks.
The agreement - and the
praise it el icited among
European countries usually .
more ambitiou s on climate
change - reflected·a desire
to avo id shortcom ings of
the 1997 Kyoto accord.
Kyoto, while considered
by many a worthy first step,
has also been seen as flawed
by its failure to commit
developing co·untrie s like
China to emi ssion s controls,
prompting ·the U.S. refusal
to ratify it. In adclition ,
inany countries with reduction commitments, such as
Japan and Canada, are
falling seriously behind.

~

•

and clothes from the back of .
her dusty Toyota 4Runner after
a week away from her home .
. She was relieved to find
the fire had stopped within
100 yards of the wood-frame
house, though it had ch;med
the nearby mountain side.
She wasn't sure how long
she'd stay: S)nok~ and ashes
still tloated among the black.ened remains of oak and
pine, burning her throat.
"It was s.o insane watching the whole hi ll side burn·
ing.'' she said. "It's so ni ce
to come back and know that
we're safer here now.·· .

'
• All Lot Mndels Reduced • Savings On All Models
• Up to $16,000 ·

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· Redman,Clayton

Public meetings
Thursday, July 10
RACINE
- Southern
. Local School Board, special
!lleeting to di scuss employmg personnel , 8 p.m .. high
. school media room.
:. SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Budget Hearing.
5:30 p.m., followed by a
recessed meetin g of council
at · 6 p.m.. both at vi llage
hall.
Thesday, July IS
RUTLAND - Rutl and
: Village Council. resc heduled regu lar meeting. 7
.· p.m., civic center.
Friday, July I~ .
LETART FALLS
Annual budget meeting of
·Letart Township Trustees, 9
a.m. , office building.

Clubs• and
organizations
Thusday, July I0
CHESTER
Shade
.River Lodge 453,7:30 p.m.
at the hall. Scholarships to
be awarded. Refreshments.
.TUPPERS PLAINS VFW 9053 will meet at 7
p.m . A dinner will be he ILl at
6:30p.m.
RACINE

2110 Em.tl'l'n \ll' • (,;illipoJi,, Oil• 7 ~~~-~~(, ..1:\-17

.

.

'

1_)

.&amp;,

.... .&amp;, ..........

740·992-6260

Southern FFA meeting. 6
p.m .. vo-ag room, members
asked to attend to update
information .

Sunday, July 13
POMEROY
Burlingham Camp 723 picnic . Route 33 roadsi de Park
going north, 12 :3 0 p.m .
RACINE Sonshine Modem Woodmen and fam Circle of the Bethany ilies. Take covered dish.
Unit~d Methodist Church, 7 . meat. r\)lls beverages and
p.ni. in fellowship hall. table service provided.
Hostesse s. Ann .Zirkle.
Kathryn Hart. July birth Mm1day, July 14
days. Evelyn Foreman and ·. POMEROY
Meigs
County Republican Party,
Hazel McKelvey.
7:30 p .m. at the Meigs
County Courthous~.
Friday, July II
HEMLOCK GROVE
Meig s County Pomona
Grange. 7:30 p.m .. at the
grange hall, elect ion of offi Saturday, July 12
cers held .
RACINE · - Reunion of
Charles and Fannie Beaver
Saturday, July. 12
family with lunch at noon,
RACINE
Star Mill Park. Friends and
Pomeroy/Racine Masonic relatives invited . Bring covLodge 164 and the Rac.ine ered dish.
Eastern Star Chapter I 34
picnic. 2 p.m .. with food
POMEROY - Blakeserved· at 4 p.m .. at Lodge in Reed reunion . 12:30 p.m at
, Racine . on Saturday 07- 12- ·. the Zion Church of Christ.
2008 at the Masonic Lodge ·Route 143 . Potluck dinner,
in Racine. Games and enter- ham and table service prot!linment for children. Bring vided . Take items and genecovered dish. Call Randy ology material for display
Smith 508-0816 with ques- table. Includes all rel atives
tions.
and descendants of Edgar ,
and Addie Reed Blake More
SALEM CEN.TER
information, call Kathryn
Star Grange 778 and Star Johnson. 992·5 195.
Junior Grange 878. pot luck
supper 6:30 p.m. followed
Sunday, July 13
by meeting at 7 p.m .. bring
RACINE - 17th annual
items for food bank . Theiss · reunion. Star Mill
Hem lock Grange will be the Park, Racine. Potluck at I
guests ..
p.m . and pig in a poke auc-

Reunions

~ · Date correction on anniversary celebration

and The Daily Sentinel
have launched a new page every
Friday c~lled "Faith and Family".
If you have a testimonial story,
life-changing event aboul yourself
or even a poem tliat you would
Uke to share please email to:

; MIDDLEPORT - Raymond and Maryln
. : (Roush) Wilcox of·Middleport will celebrate
· : their 50th wedding anniversary at' an open
• reception to be held 2 to 4 p.m . Sunday, July
: .,13, at the Middleport Church of Christ.
: :· Their daughter, Beverly (Ben) Wilcox

Miller of Huntington , W.Va., and their son,
Bryan Wilcox of Middleport , will host th&lt;;
celebration.
Wilcox .was a mechanic for many years and
his wife was a banker. Both are retired. They
reside at J7240 State Route 124, Middleport.

· · ,-----------------------------------~------~""

•.,:
~

Attn: People who like to help

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..
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free . unbiased information and counseling about
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OSHliP is funded by the federal government and the State of Ohio .

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Wednesday, July 9, 2oot:

POMEROY Lovett
reunion , I p.m. at the Zion
church of Christ . Lovett
family reunion quit depict ing
family
members 1
reunion event s and those
attending . Potluck dinner.

· Birthdays ·
Saturday, July 12
MIDDLEPQRT
Coleen Dunfee will observe
her 8 I st birthday on Jul y 12.
Cards may be sent to her at
979 Hyse ll St .. Middleport.
Ohio 45760.
•

Church events
-

Friday, July Jl
LONG BOTTOM
Gospel sing with Dave and
Debbie Dailey. 7 p.m.. Faith
Full Gospel Church.
Saturday, July 12
RUTLAND Chuck
Compton wi ll be in gospel
concert at the Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church. 7
p.m. Pastor Ed Barney
invites public.
.REEDSVILLE'
''S inging foi Jesus." with
Godsmen and Deli&lt;ered. 5
p.m .. Fellowship Ch urch of
t)le Nazarene. to benefit
Go lden
Harve st Food
Pantry. Admission is can of
fruit or vegetables.

When e-mailing
.gets inappropriate
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Anni~: My hu shund of over 25 yea rs ha ' a J:u·g,·
numb&lt;,:r of friends and acquaintances li sted in hi ., e-ma 1l
address book with whom he exchange' jokes. tl C\1 '· pic
tr1res and. at time &gt;. porn . Thi s sometime s incluJe, \CI'\
explicit videos.
·
He share:-. the tna.Jor ity of thc'-le ('-mai ls with m ~.

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.. GenPsycho-&lt;91

GenP!)'chCklQL._

•,
-m="'·· i ~ IM'""'
nio to lifo lech

I

know what he's doing. Mv prob lem is. he also share's the•,,
pornographic videos and pictures with the \\·omen in hi,
address book. Some of th e,e \\OIIl en arc co-worker' and
others are friend s. a fe \1 Dt' whom I ha ve never met.
I feel thi s is totally inap propri ate a1icl dctinitely crcJ&gt;,ing a
line l'v~ tnlrl him it hnllwro.;. mt". httf ht&gt; ('nnt!t1J.ti_':-. w ..:~nd then1
He !eels sharing such stuff is hannles&gt;. I' ve u·ied ex pl a inin ~
that women see this in :r difterent li ght. 'And I feel he\ doin ~
it behinu my back. wl1ich make&gt; nl'e feel even worse. Ani -,
making a big deal out of nothing ·' - Porn King's Wife
·
Dear Wife: He\ not doing it beh ind yo ur back if he
copies you on everything. However. if vour hu,b,md is
sending porn tu renmk co-worker:-.. h~ nlight lose hi s jnh
because it could he con st ru ed :r- harassment. And nnr arc
right that women u~uall y interpret such c-mails ,{, more·
intimate than intended . And more uncouth. Explain thi , t"
your hu sba nd· and '"k him . at the 'WY least. to stop se nd ·
in g. porn to fCll1alc co- \vnrk cr:-. . Be yond that. there'... IH 11
much you ca n do about such j uq~q i lc behav ior.
Dear Annie: My friend&gt; and I are co ncerned :rhout the
well- being of a cou pie we· re known fm ye:1 rs. (We arc 11011 ·
in our early 60s.) Two years ago . "John and Marth:t" \1 ere·
involved in an mtto accident.' .John hit the wind ,h ieJJ JWtty hard and a shnrt time later suft.cred a hc;!l'l att ac ~. We·
then noticed a drastic change in his personality. 0111 uf con
cern, one of the guy!-i spoh..c with Martha and \v a~ to ld in 1111
rmccrtain terms to mind his own bu sine ,s.
Things have gone downhill since. Tnd:t) . John and i\lanl u
have difficulty taking care of them,eJves. Last fori!. .som,·
friends took four hours cleani ng out their garage so they could
park their cars insiue. but thewhicb 'at out all winter. M:u1h. •
is now tn fatlin~. . he"llh and :;pe nd:.; li Lt d~ij':\ iii t.('-: lh·Li i -1~ .
They are estranged from their chi ldren. \\hom \I 'C . \c lk\e'l'
met. Their house is ~i fiictrap. wi th a:"\htnw:-. o\:~rilo\\ in ~ nn t1,
the floor. The walk ways have new'Jl"J1el·s l1 ikd up ami g}rba~· ·
everywhere. We've seen !Cces on the .w; tlb in the' hathmt&gt;lll .
This couple could afford to pay someone to con1e in :tm'
clean , but thev arc not interested. We don't know whel't'l&lt; ·
turn . Any suggestion ' would be grc:.rt ly apprec ratcd . Concerned Friends
.
.
Dear Friends: C:t ll Adult Protcctir c Scrvi t·c, ;uHI
explain the situation . A.,k it' a social worker can he 'cnt t"
investigate. lletween the car atciuent. heart attack a1HI
drinking, it sou nds li ke your friend s need to be ev:rlu:tte·d
for physical and mental impairment. Bless you fnr caring .
Dear Annie: Your answer to "Torn Parents in Den ' e·r .. ""
not the reliable advice you normally give. Their d&lt;tught e· ··
co uldn 't get alo11g with th~ir son· s gi rlfrienu . You su~ge,tet '.
among other things . to trc:tt one or tile couples to a hntc·l.
To suggest .rewarding one and possibly two immatLil'&lt;'
adult children With a romantic weekend instead of expect Ill)'
them to soc ialize at an occasiona l fam il y visit is ludicrou&gt; .
Just because the sibling s can' t get. along with the boYfriend ·.
and girl friends is no re;bnn for the parent&gt; to conrpe'INII ··
them for their si bling rivlt lry and .te:tlousy. - B.E.
Dear R.E.: It's neither reward nor compensatinn . Wlll·n adu lt
family members are forced to o&lt;:cupy the same 11ou.schold space
for many days: duration . it e&lt;m fra y the best of nerve,. Leninc
one couple have time alone is a way to case the tension and ;dlon
tile relationships to be tolerated unti l they can he acccpkd .
Annie's Mailbox is wrillt•il bv Kathv Mitchell ami Marn
Sugar, longtime editoni qf'the Aim L(//iders column.l'lease (;·
mail your questions to amrie.wwilbox@comcast.ne/, or write
to: Armie's Mailbox, P.O. Box 1/8190, Clricago, IL 606/1. 111
find out more about Anrrie'.1· Mailb"x, and readfeotures by
other Creators Syrulicate writas .mul cartooirists, 1•i.1·it tire
Cremors Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

..

...

tion. Rain or sh ine:

davit , Vill age of Pomeroy.
Westfall, Christina Westfall.
Harley E. McDonald .
Jennifer Lynn Morris. deed Scipio.
deceased. · to Alicia Kay
Jeffrey Wayne Morris, tr1
Robert Boring to Leroy McDonald , certificate of
Elisha Lacy Dickens , deed. Hendrix. Lois Hendrix. transfer.
Vill age
of
Vi·llage of Pomeroy.
deed, Scipio.
Middleport.
~·
Richard
L.
Perdue.
Newt lee. Shei la Cossm.
. Harley . E. McDonald.
Roxanne F. Perdue. to R. to W.H. Putnam , right of deceased, to Dori s J .
Leslie Cornwell , Constance way, Olive .
. Murray, certificate of transH. Cornwe ll. deed, Village
Wells Fargo Bank. Merrill fer, ViUage of Middleport .
of Syracuse/Sutton.
Lynch Mortgage, Barclay\
Harley E. McDonald.
Angela Eason Memorial Capital Real Estate . HomeQ deceased, to James Arthur
Park to Tuppers Plains- Servicing Corp., deed , McDonald. certificate of
Chester Water District , right Salisbury.
transfer. Rutland.
of way.
Dennis · Stanley, · Paula
Harley E. McDonald ,
Jamey
Lee
Nelson , Stanley, to Farmers Bank deceased. to James Arthur
Ange la Dawn Carleton, and Savings Co., sheriffs McDonald ,certificateoftransAngela Dawn Nelson . to deed, Village of R11tland .
fer. Village of Middleport.
Jennifer Lynn ·Carleton.
Hol singer,
James Arthur McDonald
Staci · L.
Jennifer Lynn Seth, deed. Charles B. Hol singer. to to Ali cia Kay McDonald.
Rob
Burkett , Patricia deed , Village of Middleport.
Sutton/Village &lt;l Racine.
Victoria June Frye to Paul Burkett, deed. Olive.
Bank One. Homeside
L. McDaniel , Jr.. Dian M.
· Martha V. ·Parson s to Lending·, Inc. , Bane One
Molden , deed, Salem.
David Ray Parsons, Susan Mortgage Corp .. Robert H . .
Glen Shaffer to U.S. Parsons, deeed, Sutton. ·
Romine , to Chase Finance
Bank , affidavit of affixaCleveland C. HowurJ 'to Lq:: , affidavit of assignment.
tion, Salem.
Dennis L. Zook. Amanda
Randy Hart , Sherri L.
Phylli s E. Baker to Zook , deed , Scipio.
Hart . to Trenton T. Roush,
Jeremy A. Sinith, deed,
Linda Diddle. James E. Candace L. Roush. deed.
Sutton.
Dtddle. to Twin Oaks Store, Village of Pomeroy.
Frank lin Earnest Shiltz . . LLC, deed , Chester.
Harley E. McDonald.
deceased. to Arlene G.
Melissa
Hemsley
to deceased. to Harley Ertge ne
Shi ltz. affidavi t, Columbia.
Bryan K. Green, Jeed, McDonald,
certificate.
Lois J. Hawley to Fnmk Bedford.
Village of Middleport.

•

Please include a phone number
in your email

't .Jli..U

A NN IE 'S MAIL HOX

TUPPERS PLAINS - A donation io the And Self Denial. The group will hold a
Tuppers .Plains St. Paul United Methodi st prayer vigil and all members will choose a
, Church Bible School to be held July 2 I - 24. quiet time to pray for it.
&lt;.was made at this week's meeting of the
It was noted that the church is collecting
United Methodist Women .
school supplie' for Gods Net. Weaver asked
;- .,lanned during the meting as an icc cream all the members to bring in box tops ans soup
~ social for Aug. 3 at the church shelter house.
labels for the school program. Emphasis is on
; The meeting was opened with prayer by prescompleting
the five-star rating for giving this
' ident JoAnna Weaver. Pastor Ket.th and Dee
: Radar spoke on the Cooperative Pari sh and year. The meeting was closed with prayer and
: God's Net and the need in Meigs County. . refreshments were served to Weaver Betty
: . Kortney Fredrick from North Wesf, Ohio Chevalier, Connie Rankin, Kim Householder.
i who.is visiting Meigs County was a guest at Kas Seckman: Sharon Louks, Barb Roush
; the meeting . Barb Roush read an article from and visitors Mildred Ca ld\vell. Grace Stout,
! the U.M Womens News on ·A Call To Prayer and Anita Wells.

Ca ll Today &amp; Save!

kkelly@mydailytribune.com
nfields@mydailyregister.com
hoeflich@mydaiiY,sentinel.com
Limit your stqry to
500-750 words.

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- Racine

POMEROY
- Meigs
· ·County Recorder Kay Hill
reported the followin'g
transfers of real estate:
Gene "Jeffers . Yvonne
Jeffers, to Marco Jeffers ,
Robe11 Lowell Jeffers. deed ,
Columbia.
Edward L. Vires , Amber
M. Vires, to Willard L.
Moore, Karen S. Moore ,
deed., Village of Middleport .
. Lewis Eugene Humphrey,
deceased, to Patricia D.
Humphrey.
affidavit.
Salisbud.
-• Harol E. Allen to Curtis
· D. JQ!les, deed , Village of
Racine.
William
Robert
;::Moodispaugh to Julia
affidavit,
~: Moodispaugh,
&gt;Rutland.
:: Donald R. Shultz, Kay
· ;Shultz, to GeorgeS . Hurley,
: deed , Rutland .
: Anna ·
Margaret ·
i.Blackwood, Ueceased, to
' · uoyd E. Blackwood, affi: davit, Orange . ·
Rosa Ohlinger, deceased,
Jeffrey Wayne Ohlinger. to
Jennifer Lynn Morris , affi-

.1 -r..( Surf,up to 6Xlttsfer/

~~
l.ocoiNef

rr

I .and transfers

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:Community £alendar

Wildfires push some from homes
BIG SUR, Calif. (AP) Firefighters pushed back a
blaze threatening this small
coastal community just
enough to allow hundreds
of people to check. on their
homes Tuesday as a separate fire 300 miles north
forced residents of other
towns to evacuate.
Fire crews have been
straining to cover 330 active
California wildfires, many
of which were ignited . by a
lightning storm more than
two weeks ago. A heat wave
forecast to linger in much of
the state until the weekend
was making the job all the
more difficult.
Winds of up to 30 mph
fanned a blaze in Butte County,
where firefighters went door to
door overnight to evacuate 800
to l .000 residents from the
towns of Concow and Yankee .
Hill, about 85 miles north of
Sacramento. Nearoy Paradise,
where a fire destroyed 74
homes . month, was also
ordered evacuated, along with
Ono, a rural town about 170
miles north of Sacramento.
"Now you're in a hell of. a
fire · fight," said Todd
Simmons, a spokesman for
the California Department of
Forestry and Fire Protection.
· Five structures have been
destroyed, and the complex
of fires in Butte County was
about 55 percent contained.
At least 23 homes and 25
other structures have been
destroyed in the Big Sur
area, where flames have
marched over more than
125 square miles of forest
land since June 2 I .
AIthough that fire is far
from controlled - the rugged
terrain has kept containment
at 18 percent into the lire's
third week - authorities lifted the mandatory evacuation
order. issued for 25 miles of
the 3 I -mile stretch along the
Pacific Coast Highway that
had been closed.
Many of the I ,500 evacuated residents of Big Sur headed home Tuesday morning
through smoke and ash, anxious to. gauge the damage.
34,
Dena Angelique,
· unloaded hastily packed bags •
of books, photos, art supplies

Rv ·TJ.IJ{.

..... :·lhe Daily Sentinel

.. ,.
eonesoay, JUlY 9, 20ots

.,

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US,

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Page.A2

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'19 .JC

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The.Daily Sentinel

FTC
considers
backing
off nicotine
guidance.

•I
I
I

I

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I

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I:

.II

WASHINGTON (AP)
· The · Federal
Trade
Commission . said Tuesday
that it no longer considers
rel.iable a test for tar and
nicotine use&lt;.! for more than
40 years and touted by the
tobacco industry in marketing "l ight" and "low-tar"
cigarettes.
The FTr '"in it m"v
resci nd its guidance on tar
and nicotine yields that is
based on that test. The commission said if the ·guidance
is withdrawn. adverti sers
should no longer use terms
suggesting FTC endorsement or approval of any
specific test method.
The test. known as the
Cambridge Filter Method,
is a machine-based test that
smokes cigarettes according
to a standard procedure and
is sometimes . referred to as
"the FTC method." The
FTC issued its guidance in
1966 at a time when most
public health officials
believed
reducing the
amount of tar produced by a
cigarette could reduce a
smoker's risk of lung cancer.
The ·commission
believed that giving consumer:; uniform inf&amp;fftn·}iem
about tar and nicotine yields
of .cigaretl"s would help
them make informed decisions· about the cigarettes
'
they smoked.
But the FTC said Tuesdav
sc ientists now believe the
test does not provide meaningful information on relative amounts of tar and
nicotine people are likely to
get from smoking different.
brands of cigarettes.
.The main reason is that
smokers often alter their
behavior to get · the neces- .
sary . nicotine dosage, the
FfC said. The techniques
include taking larger and
deeper puffs. smoking more
and blocking the ventilation
holes .that may contribute to
lower.levels of tar and nicotine.
Nicotine acts as a stimulant and is one of the main
factors contributing to the
addiCtive quality of smoking. Tar is the residue from
burning tobacco and one of
the
most
destructive
byproducts of smoking,
accumulating in a smoker's
lungs.
" While today's FTC
action is important, it will
not by itself end the tobacco
industry's deceptive marketing of 'Jighi' and ' low- .
tar'
cigarettes ,"
said
Matthew Myers , president
of the Campaign for
Tobacco-Free Kids . He said
the FTC action underscores
the need for Congress to
"enact pending legislation
to grant the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration regu'
: Jatory authority over tobacco. products .'' He said any
FfC action w.ould not prohibit tobacco companies
from making statements
regarding tar and nicotine
levels , and from describing
· cigarettes as "light" and
uloW- rar."
For decades. the FDA said
it lacked authority to regulate tobacco so long as cigarette makers did not claim
that smoking provided
health benefits . In 1996, it
· reversed course · and cited
- new evidence that the industry intended its products to
feed the nicotine habits of
the roughly 45 million
Americans who smoke.
Tobacco companies sued,
and the case ·eventually
landed in the Supreme
Court. In 2000, the court
ruled 5-4 that Congress did
not authorize the FDA to
regulate tobacco. ·
. The FDA legislation
approved by House and
Senate committees would
prohibit . terms such if!;
"light" or "mild" which
many consumers mistakenly believe means the products are safer. It also would
assess millions of dollars in
user fees to help pay the
agency's added costs for
regulating tobacco. More
than 400,000 people die
from smoking-related ill nesses each year.

'

BY TOM RAUM

-..

AND
JOSEPH COLEMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER S

TOYAKQ , Japan
.
World leaders embraced for
the first time on Tuesday an
ambitious but nonbindinz
goal of slashing · greenhouse-gas emissions in half
by midcentury to stttve off
global
. warmin g.
· Unimpressed environmen-.
talists called the effort too
slow and too unce11ain.
Leaders of some of the
world 's richest nation s
praised the agreement.
which endorsed Presid~nt
!:lush's insiste nce that lastdevelop ing countries like
China and India join in the
effort. But one environmental critic suggested that by
2050 those leaders would be
forgotten and "the world
will be cooked."
AP photo
Details were scant in the U.S. Pres ident George W. Bush . left. talks with his Russtan counterpart Dmitry Medvedev,
statement issued by the right , prior to a group photo at the G8 summit in 'foyako , Hokka ido, Japan. Tuesday.
Group of Eight. Some could
Indeed. U.S. officials
become clearer Wednesday treaty. with Bush complain- culling cm i" ion&gt; by 2020.
ing
that
it
puh
too
much
of
a
"To
be
mea
ningful
and
hailed
the declaration as a
when China ; India and six
burden
on
the
U.S.
and
other
credi
ble
.
a
long-term
goal
major
step forward ..;subother
fast-developing
nations sit down with the deve loped countric, to llll"l ha,·c a base year. it stantial progress from last
Group of Eight industrial reduce em issions while mu st be underpinned by year." in the words of Dan
nations - the United States, developing .giants such as amhi tiou, midterm targets Price, the president's deputy
acuons ."
· said national security apviser for
Japan, Germany, Britain, China and India arc ui vcn a and
Germany, Russia, Italy and freer rein to ppllute even'" Martltinu' van Schalkwyk ,' international. . economic
Canada - to discuss cl i- they vigoror1sly compete South African Minister of affairs.
with America around the Environmental Affairs and
U.S. officials sa id they
mate change strategies.
Tourism. " As it is expressed expected agreement on
The G-8 did not specify a world.
Bush will leave offi ce in the G-R statement, the cooperation to be reached at
base year for its proposed 50
ex panded
percent cut. and the actual next January, and both lon g - tc~;n goal is an empty Wednesday 's
meeting , even if painted
emissions reductions and the major candidates to succeed &gt;logan.
Saitl
Atonio
Hill. with a broad brush. But the
effect on the environment him have &gt;aid they are will·.
could vary hugely depending ing to go further in cutting &gt;Jl&lt;&gt;kesman for Oxfam wording of the G"8 stateIntern ational. a confedera- ment left a lot of wiggle
· on what is eventually decid- back American emissions ..
G-~
statement
,
tio
n of organizations that· room for the fast -growing
The
ed. Reductions from 2005
bv
host
Prime
work
on climate change. economies to ease the
released
levels, for instance, would be
far less than from l 990 lev- Minister Yasuo Fukuua in poverty anu other causes: potential burden.
And wh ile the developels, as in the Kyoto Protocol an announcement with the "At thi' rate .. by 2050 the
verdant
hill
s
of.
northern
world
will
be
cooked
and
ment
appelrred to be a victoon global wam1ing.
·
Still, U.N. Secretarv- Japan behind him, sohu1fied the G-8 leaders wiJI'be long ry for Bush. it could tum'out
General Ban Ki-n10on said. it a pledge made at the l"st foraotten.
The
G-8 's to be mostly a symbolic one
in
Gcrm
uny
u
year
enlorsement
of
a
tepid
50- once the fina.J statement
summit
was essential to set a longterm goal for global green- ago to seriousl y consider by-50 cl imate goal leaves us from what·the G-8 is calling
with a 50-50 chance of a eli- a
"Major
Economies
house emissions by 2050. s uch a long-term target.
But the move fell far short mate meltdown."
Meeting" is issued on
He said the world cannot
White House press secre- Wednesday. ·
afford to wait until 2009, · of demands by some deveJ c
The deci sion on climate
when nations are planning to opi ng countrie s and envi- tary Dana Perino responded
try to conclude a new global ro~mentali s ts pushing for to such criiicisms by sayi ng chaf)gc split some ofthe,difwarming treaty to succeed deeper cuts by 2050 and a that the G-8's action was ferences between ,Bush and
the Kyoto Protocol when its firm signal from wealthy "quite significant."
other G-8 members .
first phase expires in 20 12.
countries on what they are
"For the environmental
Japan and European
The United States has wi lling to do on the much groups , it wi ll never be members have been pressnever ratified the Kyoto tougher midterm . goal of enough," she said.'
ing for setting a long-term

goal .of a 50 percent reduction in global greenhouse
emissions by 2050. Other
members . including the
U.S.. Russia and Canada.
have been less enthusiastic
about such a target. Bu sh
has long said that China and
lndilt and other. big . growing economies must share
in the. pain in reaching such
·a goal.
The Europeans
have
pushed harder for rich countries to Teinvigorate talks by
making unilateral commitments~
Germany,
for
. instance. has pledged to cut
emissions by 20 percent by
2020. and by 30 percent if
other countries join the effort.
Still, some European leaders
praised the Tuesday accord.
''Thi s is a clear advance,
compared with the shaky
agreement from the previous year.'' said German
Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Jim Connaughton, chairman of the White House
Council on Environmental
Quality, said, ult has always
been the case that a longterm goal is one that must
be shared."
·
"So what the· G-8 has
offered today is a G-8 view
of what that goal could be ·
and should be, but that can
only occur with the agreement of all the other parties." he added , referring to
nearly
200
countries
rnvolved in U.N. talks.
The agreement - and the
praise it el icited among
European countries usually .
more ambitiou s on climate
change - reflected·a desire
to avo id shortcom ings of
the 1997 Kyoto accord.
Kyoto, while considered
by many a worthy first step,
has also been seen as flawed
by its failure to commit
developing co·untrie s like
China to emi ssion s controls,
prompting ·the U.S. refusal
to ratify it. In adclition ,
inany countries with reduction commitments, such as
Japan and Canada, are
falling seriously behind.

~

•

and clothes from the back of .
her dusty Toyota 4Runner after
a week away from her home .
. She was relieved to find
the fire had stopped within
100 yards of the wood-frame
house, though it had ch;med
the nearby mountain side.
She wasn't sure how long
she'd stay: S)nok~ and ashes
still tloated among the black.ened remains of oak and
pine, burning her throat.
"It was s.o insane watching the whole hi ll side burn·
ing.'' she said. "It's so ni ce
to come back and know that
we're safer here now.·· .

'
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Public meetings
Thursday, July 10
RACINE
- Southern
. Local School Board, special
!lleeting to di scuss employmg personnel , 8 p.m .. high
. school media room.
:. SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Budget Hearing.
5:30 p.m., followed by a
recessed meetin g of council
at · 6 p.m.. both at vi llage
hall.
Thesday, July IS
RUTLAND - Rutl and
: Village Council. resc heduled regu lar meeting. 7
.· p.m., civic center.
Friday, July I~ .
LETART FALLS
Annual budget meeting of
·Letart Township Trustees, 9
a.m. , office building.

Clubs• and
organizations
Thusday, July I0
CHESTER
Shade
.River Lodge 453,7:30 p.m.
at the hall. Scholarships to
be awarded. Refreshments.
.TUPPERS PLAINS VFW 9053 will meet at 7
p.m . A dinner will be he ILl at
6:30p.m.
RACINE

2110 Em.tl'l'n \ll' • (,;illipoJi,, Oil• 7 ~~~-~~(, ..1:\-17

.

.

'

1_)

.&amp;,

.... .&amp;, ..........

740·992-6260

Southern FFA meeting. 6
p.m .. vo-ag room, members
asked to attend to update
information .

Sunday, July 13
POMEROY
Burlingham Camp 723 picnic . Route 33 roadsi de Park
going north, 12 :3 0 p.m .
RACINE Sonshine Modem Woodmen and fam Circle of the Bethany ilies. Take covered dish.
Unit~d Methodist Church, 7 . meat. r\)lls beverages and
p.ni. in fellowship hall. table service provided.
Hostesse s. Ann .Zirkle.
Kathryn Hart. July birth Mm1day, July 14
days. Evelyn Foreman and ·. POMEROY
Meigs
County Republican Party,
Hazel McKelvey.
7:30 p .m. at the Meigs
County Courthous~.
Friday, July II
HEMLOCK GROVE
Meig s County Pomona
Grange. 7:30 p.m .. at the
grange hall, elect ion of offi Saturday, July 12
cers held .
RACINE · - Reunion of
Charles and Fannie Beaver
Saturday, July. 12
family with lunch at noon,
RACINE
Star Mill Park. Friends and
Pomeroy/Racine Masonic relatives invited . Bring covLodge 164 and the Rac.ine ered dish.
Eastern Star Chapter I 34
picnic. 2 p.m .. with food
POMEROY - Blakeserved· at 4 p.m .. at Lodge in Reed reunion . 12:30 p.m at
, Racine . on Saturday 07- 12- ·. the Zion Church of Christ.
2008 at the Masonic Lodge ·Route 143 . Potluck dinner,
in Racine. Games and enter- ham and table service prot!linment for children. Bring vided . Take items and genecovered dish. Call Randy ology material for display
Smith 508-0816 with ques- table. Includes all rel atives
tions.
and descendants of Edgar ,
and Addie Reed Blake More
SALEM CEN.TER
information, call Kathryn
Star Grange 778 and Star Johnson. 992·5 195.
Junior Grange 878. pot luck
supper 6:30 p.m. followed
Sunday, July 13
by meeting at 7 p.m .. bring
RACINE - 17th annual
items for food bank . Theiss · reunion. Star Mill
Hem lock Grange will be the Park, Racine. Potluck at I
guests ..
p.m . and pig in a poke auc-

Reunions

~ · Date correction on anniversary celebration

and The Daily Sentinel
have launched a new page every
Friday c~lled "Faith and Family".
If you have a testimonial story,
life-changing event aboul yourself
or even a poem tliat you would
Uke to share please email to:

; MIDDLEPORT - Raymond and Maryln
. : (Roush) Wilcox of·Middleport will celebrate
· : their 50th wedding anniversary at' an open
• reception to be held 2 to 4 p.m . Sunday, July
: .,13, at the Middleport Church of Christ.
: :· Their daughter, Beverly (Ben) Wilcox

Miller of Huntington , W.Va., and their son,
Bryan Wilcox of Middleport , will host th&lt;;
celebration.
Wilcox .was a mechanic for many years and
his wife was a banker. Both are retired. They
reside at J7240 State Route 124, Middleport.

· · ,-----------------------------------~------~""

•.,:
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Attn: People who like to help

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free . unbiased information and counseling about
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health insurance to people covered by Medicare , their families and caregivers.
OSHliP is funded by the federal government and the State of Ohio .

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Wednesday, July 9, 2oot:

POMEROY Lovett
reunion , I p.m. at the Zion
church of Christ . Lovett
family reunion quit depict ing
family
members 1
reunion event s and those
attending . Potluck dinner.

· Birthdays ·
Saturday, July 12
MIDDLEPQRT
Coleen Dunfee will observe
her 8 I st birthday on Jul y 12.
Cards may be sent to her at
979 Hyse ll St .. Middleport.
Ohio 45760.
•

Church events
-

Friday, July Jl
LONG BOTTOM
Gospel sing with Dave and
Debbie Dailey. 7 p.m.. Faith
Full Gospel Church.
Saturday, July 12
RUTLAND Chuck
Compton wi ll be in gospel
concert at the Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church. 7
p.m. Pastor Ed Barney
invites public.
.REEDSVILLE'
''S inging foi Jesus." with
Godsmen and Deli&lt;ered. 5
p.m .. Fellowship Ch urch of
t)le Nazarene. to benefit
Go lden
Harve st Food
Pantry. Admission is can of
fruit or vegetables.

When e-mailing
.gets inappropriate
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Anni~: My hu shund of over 25 yea rs ha ' a J:u·g,·
numb&lt;,:r of friends and acquaintances li sted in hi ., e-ma 1l
address book with whom he exchange' jokes. tl C\1 '· pic
tr1res and. at time &gt;. porn . Thi s sometime s incluJe, \CI'\
explicit videos.
·
He share:-. the tna.Jor ity of thc'-le ('-mai ls with m ~.

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You may have family or friends who would benefit from our help . As an OSHIIP
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Brent Patterson (741J) 992·1BBIJ or
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I

know what he's doing. Mv prob lem is. he also share's the•,,
pornographic videos and pictures with the \\·omen in hi,
address book. Some of th e,e \\OIIl en arc co-worker' and
others are friend s. a fe \1 Dt' whom I ha ve never met.
I feel thi s is totally inap propri ate a1icl dctinitely crcJ&gt;,ing a
line l'v~ tnlrl him it hnllwro.;. mt". httf ht&gt; ('nnt!t1J.ti_':-. w ..:~nd then1
He !eels sharing such stuff is hannles&gt;. I' ve u·ied ex pl a inin ~
that women see this in :r difterent li ght. 'And I feel he\ doin ~
it behinu my back. wl1ich make&gt; nl'e feel even worse. Ani -,
making a big deal out of nothing ·' - Porn King's Wife
·
Dear Wife: He\ not doing it beh ind yo ur back if he
copies you on everything. However. if vour hu,b,md is
sending porn tu renmk co-worker:-.. h~ nlight lose hi s jnh
because it could he con st ru ed :r- harassment. And nnr arc
right that women u~uall y interpret such c-mails ,{, more·
intimate than intended . And more uncouth. Explain thi , t"
your hu sba nd· and '"k him . at the 'WY least. to stop se nd ·
in g. porn to fCll1alc co- \vnrk cr:-. . Be yond that. there'... IH 11
much you ca n do about such j uq~q i lc behav ior.
Dear Annie: My friend&gt; and I are co ncerned :rhout the
well- being of a cou pie we· re known fm ye:1 rs. (We arc 11011 ·
in our early 60s.) Two years ago . "John and Marth:t" \1 ere·
involved in an mtto accident.' .John hit the wind ,h ieJJ JWtty hard and a shnrt time later suft.cred a hc;!l'l att ac ~. We·
then noticed a drastic change in his personality. 0111 uf con
cern, one of the guy!-i spoh..c with Martha and \v a~ to ld in 1111
rmccrtain terms to mind his own bu sine ,s.
Things have gone downhill since. Tnd:t) . John and i\lanl u
have difficulty taking care of them,eJves. Last fori!. .som,·
friends took four hours cleani ng out their garage so they could
park their cars insiue. but thewhicb 'at out all winter. M:u1h. •
is now tn fatlin~. . he"llh and :;pe nd:.; li Lt d~ij':\ iii t.('-: lh·Li i -1~ .
They are estranged from their chi ldren. \\hom \I 'C . \c lk\e'l'
met. Their house is ~i fiictrap. wi th a:"\htnw:-. o\:~rilo\\ in ~ nn t1,
the floor. The walk ways have new'Jl"J1el·s l1 ikd up ami g}rba~· ·
everywhere. We've seen !Cces on the .w; tlb in the' hathmt&gt;lll .
This couple could afford to pay someone to con1e in :tm'
clean , but thev arc not interested. We don't know whel't'l&lt; ·
turn . Any suggestion ' would be grc:.rt ly apprec ratcd . Concerned Friends
.
.
Dear Friends: C:t ll Adult Protcctir c Scrvi t·c, ;uHI
explain the situation . A.,k it' a social worker can he 'cnt t"
investigate. lletween the car atciuent. heart attack a1HI
drinking, it sou nds li ke your friend s need to be ev:rlu:tte·d
for physical and mental impairment. Bless you fnr caring .
Dear Annie: Your answer to "Torn Parents in Den ' e·r .. ""
not the reliable advice you normally give. Their d&lt;tught e· ··
co uldn 't get alo11g with th~ir son· s gi rlfrienu . You su~ge,tet '.
among other things . to trc:tt one or tile couples to a hntc·l.
To suggest .rewarding one and possibly two immatLil'&lt;'
adult children With a romantic weekend instead of expect Ill)'
them to soc ialize at an occasiona l fam il y visit is ludicrou&gt; .
Just because the sibling s can' t get. along with the boYfriend ·.
and girl friends is no re;bnn for the parent&gt; to conrpe'INII ··
them for their si bling rivlt lry and .te:tlousy. - B.E.
Dear R.E.: It's neither reward nor compensatinn . Wlll·n adu lt
family members are forced to o&lt;:cupy the same 11ou.schold space
for many days: duration . it e&lt;m fra y the best of nerve,. Leninc
one couple have time alone is a way to case the tension and ;dlon
tile relationships to be tolerated unti l they can he acccpkd .
Annie's Mailbox is wrillt•il bv Kathv Mitchell ami Marn
Sugar, longtime editoni qf'the Aim L(//iders column.l'lease (;·
mail your questions to amrie.wwilbox@comcast.ne/, or write
to: Armie's Mailbox, P.O. Box 1/8190, Clricago, IL 606/1. 111
find out more about Anrrie'.1· Mailb"x, and readfeotures by
other Creators Syrulicate writas .mul cartooirists, 1•i.1·it tire
Cremors Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

..

...

tion. Rain or sh ine:

davit , Vill age of Pomeroy.
Westfall, Christina Westfall.
Harley E. McDonald .
Jennifer Lynn Morris. deed Scipio.
deceased. · to Alicia Kay
Jeffrey Wayne Morris, tr1
Robert Boring to Leroy McDonald , certificate of
Elisha Lacy Dickens , deed. Hendrix. Lois Hendrix. transfer.
Vill age
of
Vi·llage of Pomeroy.
deed, Scipio.
Middleport.
~·
Richard
L.
Perdue.
Newt lee. Shei la Cossm.
. Harley . E. McDonald.
Roxanne F. Perdue. to R. to W.H. Putnam , right of deceased, to Dori s J .
Leslie Cornwell , Constance way, Olive .
. Murray, certificate of transH. Cornwe ll. deed, Village
Wells Fargo Bank. Merrill fer, ViUage of Middleport .
of Syracuse/Sutton.
Lynch Mortgage, Barclay\
Harley E. McDonald.
Angela Eason Memorial Capital Real Estate . HomeQ deceased, to James Arthur
Park to Tuppers Plains- Servicing Corp., deed , McDonald. certificate of
Chester Water District , right Salisbury.
transfer. Rutland.
of way.
Dennis · Stanley, · Paula
Harley E. McDonald ,
Jamey
Lee
Nelson , Stanley, to Farmers Bank deceased. to James Arthur
Ange la Dawn Carleton, and Savings Co., sheriffs McDonald ,certificateoftransAngela Dawn Nelson . to deed, Village of R11tland .
fer. Village of Middleport.
Jennifer Lynn ·Carleton.
Hol singer,
James Arthur McDonald
Staci · L.
Jennifer Lynn Seth, deed. Charles B. Hol singer. to to Ali cia Kay McDonald.
Rob
Burkett , Patricia deed , Village of Middleport.
Sutton/Village &lt;l Racine.
Victoria June Frye to Paul Burkett, deed. Olive.
Bank One. Homeside
L. McDaniel , Jr.. Dian M.
· Martha V. ·Parson s to Lending·, Inc. , Bane One
Molden , deed, Salem.
David Ray Parsons, Susan Mortgage Corp .. Robert H . .
Glen Shaffer to U.S. Parsons, deeed, Sutton. ·
Romine , to Chase Finance
Bank , affidavit of affixaCleveland C. HowurJ 'to Lq:: , affidavit of assignment.
tion, Salem.
Dennis L. Zook. Amanda
Randy Hart , Sherri L.
Phylli s E. Baker to Zook , deed , Scipio.
Hart . to Trenton T. Roush,
Jeremy A. Sinith, deed,
Linda Diddle. James E. Candace L. Roush. deed.
Sutton.
Dtddle. to Twin Oaks Store, Village of Pomeroy.
Frank lin Earnest Shiltz . . LLC, deed , Chester.
Harley E. McDonald.
deceased. to Arlene G.
Melissa
Hemsley
to deceased. to Harley Ertge ne
Shi ltz. affidavi t, Columbia.
Bryan K. Green, Jeed, McDonald,
certificate.
Lois J. Hawley to Fnmk Bedford.
Village of Middleport.

•

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in your email

't .Jli..U

A NN IE 'S MAIL HOX

TUPPERS PLAINS - A donation io the And Self Denial. The group will hold a
Tuppers .Plains St. Paul United Methodi st prayer vigil and all members will choose a
, Church Bible School to be held July 2 I - 24. quiet time to pray for it.
&lt;.was made at this week's meeting of the
It was noted that the church is collecting
United Methodist Women .
school supplie' for Gods Net. Weaver asked
;- .,lanned during the meting as an icc cream all the members to bring in box tops ans soup
~ social for Aug. 3 at the church shelter house.
labels for the school program. Emphasis is on
; The meeting was opened with prayer by prescompleting
the five-star rating for giving this
' ident JoAnna Weaver. Pastor Ket.th and Dee
: Radar spoke on the Cooperative Pari sh and year. The meeting was closed with prayer and
: God's Net and the need in Meigs County. . refreshments were served to Weaver Betty
: . Kortney Fredrick from North Wesf, Ohio Chevalier, Connie Rankin, Kim Householder.
i who.is visiting Meigs County was a guest at Kas Seckman: Sharon Louks, Barb Roush
; the meeting . Barb Roush read an article from and visitors Mildred Ca ld\vell. Grace Stout,
! the U.M Womens News on ·A Call To Prayer and Anita Wells.

Ca ll Today &amp; Save!

kkelly@mydailytribune.com
nfields@mydailyregister.com
hoeflich@mydaiiY,sentinel.com
Limit your stqry to
500-750 words.

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Church sets Bible school week

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mbe ®alltpolis1iailp mrtbune,
mbe ~oint Jleasant i\eglster

,.

- Racine

POMEROY
- Meigs
· ·County Recorder Kay Hill
reported the followin'g
transfers of real estate:
Gene "Jeffers . Yvonne
Jeffers, to Marco Jeffers ,
Robe11 Lowell Jeffers. deed ,
Columbia.
Edward L. Vires , Amber
M. Vires, to Willard L.
Moore, Karen S. Moore ,
deed., Village of Middleport .
. Lewis Eugene Humphrey,
deceased, to Patricia D.
Humphrey.
affidavit.
Salisbud.
-• Harol E. Allen to Curtis
· D. JQ!les, deed , Village of
Racine.
William
Robert
;::Moodispaugh to Julia
affidavit,
~: Moodispaugh,
&gt;Rutland.
:: Donald R. Shultz, Kay
· ;Shultz, to GeorgeS . Hurley,
: deed , Rutland .
: Anna ·
Margaret ·
i.Blackwood, Ueceased, to
' · uoyd E. Blackwood, affi: davit, Orange . ·
Rosa Ohlinger, deceased,
Jeffrey Wayne Ohlinger. to
Jennifer Lynn Morris , affi-

.1 -r..( Surf,up to 6Xlttsfer/

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I .and transfers

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:Community £alendar

Wildfires push some from homes
BIG SUR, Calif. (AP) Firefighters pushed back a
blaze threatening this small
coastal community just
enough to allow hundreds
of people to check. on their
homes Tuesday as a separate fire 300 miles north
forced residents of other
towns to evacuate.
Fire crews have been
straining to cover 330 active
California wildfires, many
of which were ignited . by a
lightning storm more than
two weeks ago. A heat wave
forecast to linger in much of
the state until the weekend
was making the job all the
more difficult.
Winds of up to 30 mph
fanned a blaze in Butte County,
where firefighters went door to
door overnight to evacuate 800
to l .000 residents from the
towns of Concow and Yankee .
Hill, about 85 miles north of
Sacramento. Nearoy Paradise,
where a fire destroyed 74
homes . month, was also
ordered evacuated, along with
Ono, a rural town about 170
miles north of Sacramento.
"Now you're in a hell of. a
fire · fight," said Todd
Simmons, a spokesman for
the California Department of
Forestry and Fire Protection.
· Five structures have been
destroyed, and the complex
of fires in Butte County was
about 55 percent contained.
At least 23 homes and 25
other structures have been
destroyed in the Big Sur
area, where flames have
marched over more than
125 square miles of forest
land since June 2 I .
AIthough that fire is far
from controlled - the rugged
terrain has kept containment
at 18 percent into the lire's
third week - authorities lifted the mandatory evacuation
order. issued for 25 miles of
the 3 I -mile stretch along the
Pacific Coast Highway that
had been closed.
Many of the I ,500 evacuated residents of Big Sur headed home Tuesday morning
through smoke and ash, anxious to. gauge the damage.
34,
Dena Angelique,
· unloaded hastily packed bags •
of books, photos, art supplies

Rv ·TJ.IJ{.

..... :·lhe Daily Sentinel

.. ,.
eonesoay, JUlY 9, 20ots

.,

- ·bv2050

US,

•
.'

Page.A2

:::,.·.;··:~.:[1
r••~

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'19 .JC

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�)he D~ily

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co ..
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

·'

OeiNIO

S~ntjnel

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

OUR READER'S
VIEWS

Theater memories
Dear Editor:
l got a big chuckle out of Helen Lyons ' "no cussing" rule.
Things had changed quite a bit by the late 1960's. I remember of a couple of occasions when Henry Werry patrolled
the aisles looking for instanc~ of hooliganism.
·
One night, the group] traveled with purchased water pi stols at the old dime store and fired a few shots in the theater. After hiding mine in a shoe, I accidentally stopped on
it and ended up with a shoe full of water. Another weapon
w·as Red Hots. a small hard candy frequently thrown at. the
screen.
Helen had some familiarity with me because my sisters
had attended a few years earlier. After one instance of mischief by a member of my group, the usher collared him and
said; "All right, Fields!" l split the scene in a hurry and left
'the rest of the gang to face the music. ,
Did we act like hoodlums? As they say in the movies,
"search me." Previous generations in rural areas had their
own way of raising cain, which include(! putting frogs
down girls' blouses, so l guess it's just a question of taste
as to which was worse.

.......

PageA4

_

Wednesday, July 9,

Deaths

Huckabee no savior for McCain
In Texas just before
Independence Day, former
Arkansas governor · and
Republican
presidential
contender Mike Huckabee
co-sponsored
a
Kathryn
"Rediscovering God in
Lopez
America·· pastors ' conference. The event, Huckabee
said. was "to remind and
encourage us that the proper
position for America when
facing evil and confroming often seems like Huckabee '
out of his way to anger
enemies is not to find goes
the .other elements of the
excuses for defeat but to conservative
movement
find the resources, the instead of courting them ,
courage and the strength dismissing his critics who
from God necessary to believe in economic free win." But ·if John McCain dom and a iitrong national
thinks Huckabee as veep defense as members of the
. will give divine strength to Washington establi.shment,
!hf GQP tlda~1 iN Nonrn£e: ·wan S'treet mttftona11·es &lt;tnd
~ he ' s wrong.
secular elitists."
For some in the McCain
predicted:
Toomey ·
campaign -· most notably. '·Huckabee is a fringe
a Republican and does not
McCain himself
"social conservative" is represent the conservative
such a foreign entity that movement on economic
they are flying blind trying policy, domestic programs .
tQ secure that key GOP con- . law and order, and foreign
stituency. Despite his pro- policy. It is hard to imagine
lite voting recor(l, Arizona a candidate so out of step
Sen. McCain is on record with most in the conservathis election cycle making it Live movement assuming
clear he has little interest in the stage in Minne sota in
such issues . Knowing this, eight months as its leader."
conservative evangelicals
Toomey is far from itlone .
are not overjoyed at Conservative
talk-radio
· McCain's nomination.
leader Rush Limbaugh
The
problem
with declared Huckabee "not a
Huckabee is that he is not conservative" during the priconservative.
When mary
fight.
Althouglt
Huckabee won the Iowa Huckabee struck &lt;Ill attraccaucus in January, conserv- tive populist tone, his soluative Club for . Growth . tions tend to be statist. It' s
President Pat Toomev no surprise he'd run a bigdeclared, "Huckabee's wiit government campaign: He
in iowa IS a temporary set- was a statist as governor or
hack for conservatism." The Arkansa,. The Libertarian
former Republican · con- Cato Institute gave him a
gressman
from "D" rating on fiscal policy
Pennsylv·ania continued, "It when he was in Little Rock;

.,pending innea.,cd at three
times the rate of inflation
durinu hi s tenure there.
Further. Huc kabee is a protectionist and proved during
the primary &lt;:ampaign .to
know very little abou t foreign policy. While McCain
certainly has that ground
covered , Huckube ~ can't'
pass the ''plausi ble president" test a vice-presidential
pick really ought to - and
wil l need to, especially this
year on the Republican side.
with a 72-year-old candidate
at the top of the.ticket.
And how, exactlv, is
McCain to make an is sue of
Burack Obama 's naivete on
the Iran issue if Huckabee
o.~bv ·.;vuu:: :; io meel wi\11
Mahmo ud Ahmadinejad ?
In the months since he's
dt'opped out of t~e race for
the Repu_blican nomination,
Huckabee has done himself
no favors. 'First. there was
his disgraceful , juvenile joke
about Obama at the National
Rii'le Association convention. Then there was an
exhortation
to
fdlow
Republicans not to "demoni ze'' Obama. But no
responsible B.epublicans are
demonizing him, so why
insinuate that they are? The
r111necessary warnli1g once
again served to make conser.vati ves wonder whether
lluckabee actually knows~
much less is one of- them.
In substance and style,
Huckabee is bad news.
Having run ads calling himself a "Christian leader,"
Huckabee ran Oil identitv
politics - usua!! y a mairistay of liberal Democrats.
Although he had the thirdhighest number of votes in

Phyllis Ebersbach

the Repub lican race this
year. polls also showed him
a tough sell with nonevangelical Republicans , who
felt they had little in common with his mixed record
as a conservative.
The Arkansas pol doesn't
even offer an outside-theBeltway tJ1inking.
l:le
showed that recently b,y
endorsing
Alaska
Repub li can Congressman
Don Young's re-election
bid . He. too. is a liberal-indisguise. one with a pen:
chant for government lumdouts ·(famously. the $223
million
" Bridge
to
Nowhere''), and under an
ethical cl~ud (and a fedenil

LAKE, MICH. - Phyllis Ebersbach, 70, of Lake, Mich.,
died May 15 at a Pontiac, Mich. hospital.
· She is survived by her husband, Thomas.
Funeral services were held ai the Elton &amp; Black Funeral
Home at White Lake with burial in the Oak Hill Memorial
Gardens in Novi, Mich.

For the Record
Divorces
. POMEROY- An action for divorce was filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Tamela Sue Marcinko,
Reedsville, against Stephen P. Marcinko, Tuppers Plains.
Divorce.s were granted to Jessica l. Delacruz from Justin
D. Delacruz; · Christina Sue Sigman from Troy Curtis
Sigman; and Rebecca Minshall from James Minshall.

m·.,.·cs ti gJtiO ti ).

Dissolutions

So would McCain pick
so meone so out of step with
most in the conservative
movement as his No. 2?
Stranger things have hap,
pened . After all, in the
spring of 2007, much of the
conservative movemenl was
defeating McCain's "comprehensive
immigration
retorm." Who would have
predicted they ' d be stuck
·with him before long as
their nominee for president?
With McCain's own troubled pas~ and record with
conservative$, he doesn't
need to add to the ideological · muddle . De spite his
impressive turnout in the
primaries. Huckabee would
be a bad choice· to join· the
Republican ticket. Leai:l
McCain not into temptation.
(Kathry11 Lopez is the
editor of Natio11al Review
011/ine (www.natiollalreview.com). She ca11 be colltacted at klopez@natiollalreview.com.)

POMEROY -Dissolutions were granted in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to Hazel A. Balser and Roger
A. Balser, Jamie Baker and Jennifer Baker, and Eugene 0.
Adkins, Jr: and Cherissa Adkins.
·

Dismissed
•

POMEROY -Civil actions filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court were dismissed: United States of
America against Richard E, Swanson, Jr., and Home
National Bank against Rhonda Kay Watson, and others,

Foreclosure
POMEROY - A foreclosure ~as granted in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to American General
Financial Services against Jerome K. Howard, and others.

Local Briefs
MHS senior class pictures
POMEROY - Yearbook pictures for the class of 2009
will be taken July 1:6. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.; July 17 •. II a.m. to
7 p.m. and July 18, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the high school.
Appointments are to be made by calling 1-800-553-5433.
According to Denise Arnold, yearbook advisor, these are
the pictures which will ·appear in the yearbook. Suits and
drapes wi II be provided. :
. '

Yoli'L.L No1icE THAT

OSAMA IS NOT MAKIN6
J.IIS A&lt;:C£PTANC.£ SPEECH AT.
TJ-If PATRIDTS' $TAPlVM'
I'M Jv5T $A.VtNG ... ·

Jeff Fields
Syracuse

•••

Reunion planned
I.

Sold out

· POMEROY -The regular meeting of the Christian
Motorcy.cle Association's "Delivered" Ch\lpter has been
moved to 5 p.m., Saturday, July 19 at Common Grounds in
Pomeroy.
·

pal~

\~\lt.SCO Ff fLD

.. AMPrrom Page AI .

LETTERS -TO THE
EDITOR

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Correction Polley ,
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The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Cheney 'wanted·cuts in climat~ change testimony Divers learning .
WASHINGTON (AP) last fall was the ·first pan of White House, including in
Seeking to play down the "a master plan" aimed at Cheney's office, about link- more about LAke
effects of global warming, "covering up the real dan- ing climate change directly
Erie shipwreck
Vice . President
Dick gers of global warming and to public health or damage

Cheney's office pushed to
delete from congressional
testimony references about
the consequences of climate
change on public health, a
former senior EPA official
claimed Tuesday.
The official, Jason K..
Burnett, · said the White
House was concerned that
the proposed testimony last
October by the head of the
Centers
for
Di sease
Control and Prevention
might make it tougher to
avoid regu'lating greenhouse gases emitted , into
the atmosphere.
Burnett's assertion, which
he made in a July 6 letter to
s~u. Barbara Boxt:r. DCalif., chairwoman of the
Senate Environment and
Public Works Committee,
.conflicts with the White
House explanation at the
time that the deletions
reflected concerns by the
White House Office of
Science and Technology
over the accuracy of the science.
· Boxer, in a news conference on Tuesday, went so
far as . to say White · House
press secretary Dana Perino
had lied about why the
White House had pushed
for the deletions. That, in
turn, prompted Perino to
· demand . an apology from
Boxer.
•
"I have never said such a
thing about a fellow public
servant, and I wouldn't if l
didn't have ·all the facts,"
Perino said froin Japan,
where President Bu sh is
attending .a meeting of
world economic leaders. "!
think I deserve an apology."
Burnett, until last month a
senior adviser on climate
the
change
at
Environme)ltal Protection
Agency,
wrote
that
Cheney's office was deeply
involved in getting nearly
half of the CDC's· original
draft testimony removed.
"The
Council
on
Environmental Quality and
the office of the .vice presi, dent were seeking deletions
to the CDC testimony (concerning) ... any discussions
· of the human health consequences of climate change,''
Burnett wrote.
At her news conference,
Boxer maintained that the
heavy editing of the testimony given by CDC
Director Julie Gerberding

hiding the facts from the to the environment.
public."
Nowhere was that more
Burnett declined to com- apparent than in the heavy
ment beyond what he editing of the CDC testimodescribed in the letter and ny in October.
said he didn't want to idenThe White House, at the
tify the people he had talked urging of Cheney 's office,
with in Cheney's office or ' "requested that l work with
elsewhere at the White CDC to remove from the
House. "I'm not interested testimony any discussion of
in pointing fingers at indi- the human healtl:t conseviduals,'' he said.
quences of c'limate change,"
White House deputy press Burnett wrote.
secretary Tony Fratto said
"CEQ contacted me to
Jhe White House stands by argue that l could best keep
its explanation for the dele- options open for the (EPA)
tions, and noted that science administrator (on regulatadviser John Marburger had ing carbon dioxide) if I
raised concerns.
would convince ·CDC to
Marbur&amp;er issued a sum- delete particular sec tion ~
mary of lu s concerns at the of their te s timony, ~ he
time, but at a Senate hearing wrote.
But he said he reflfsed to ·
a few weeks later said he
had ·not recommended press the CDC on ' the deledeleting six of the 14 pages tions because he believed
as was done.
the CDC 's draft testimony
Megan Mitchell, the vice was "fundamentally' accu~
president's press secretary, rate."
dismissed the allegations by
Burnett said Cheney 's
Burnett and said, "We don't office also objected in
comment on internal delib- January to congressional
erations. "
testimony by Johnson that
Burnett. 31, a lifelong "greenhouse gas emissions
Democrat, resigned his post harm .the environment." An
last month as associate official in Cheney's office
deputy EPA administrator "called lo tell me that his
becatise of disagreements office wanted the Iangnage
over the ,agency's response changed" but that it was
kept as it was . ·
to climate change.
- He appeared to be au odd
Burne!t also descril)ed in
choice for the EPA post, greater detail t.han previ which included liaison with ously reported the White
the White House on climate House's
in
refusal
issues. Currently a support- December to accept a draft
er, of Barack Obama for EPA finding concluding
president, he has con- that carbon dioxide. · the
tributed nearly $125,000 to leading greenhouse gas, is
Democratic
candidates endangering human health.
since 2000, according to the
After he sent the e-mail
Center for Responsive With the draft finding
Politics.
attached, he said he
Burnett, an economist .received a telephone call
who had written a number from the White House askof papers on ~overnment ing that he "send a followregulation wh1le at the . up note saying that the eCenter • for Regulatory mail had been sent in error."
Study, a joint effort by the
"I explained that l could
American
Enterprise not do that because it was
Institute and the Brookings not true," Burnett wrote .
Institution, .first joined the
Boxer said the draft find.
ing
was now ''in limbo" and
EPA in 2004. He resigned
two years later because of not available for public
objections to an EPA rule on review.
More than a year ago,
soot.
· He was asked to return in the Supreme Court direct2007 by EPA Administrator ed the EPA to determine
Stephen Johnson, who put whether carbon dioxide
him in charge of coordinat- emissions enda.nger lmman
ing the agency's response to health and welfare and, if
a Supreme Court ruling on so, begin to regulate it
whether to regulate carbon under the Clean Air Act.
That process is not likely
dioxide emissions.
In his letter, Burnett to continue until the next
describes concerns at the administration.

The Village Idiot:·
Twice ·the price half as nice
What was the lowest pric~
you ever paid for gasoline?
When I was 18, I bought gas
in Kansas for 23 cents a gallon. It wasn't a promotion
or a gimmick, it was just the
Jim
price of gas in the late
spring of 1968. I only
Muller;~
remember it because, even
then, it seemed like aridiculously low price for' gas.
Sure enough, it soon shot
back up to its normal price seem to work alike. They
of 28 cents a gallon. The make it like a "Survivor"
minimum wage . that year ·challenge just to pump gas,
except you don ' t get a
was $1.60 an hour.
For 23 cents a gallon, a chance of winning a million
guy in a uniform came out , dollars; just a chance to
pumped the gas, washed all squirt gas on you ·shoes.
the bug-splattered windows, · Should l even bother to
checked the oil and asked if mention that my windows
didn' t get washed?
I wanted the tire pressure
How: is it that we got so
checked. I said "No," and
much
more service for 23
handed him $3 for filling it
cents
a
gallon gas than we
up. He reached in his pocket and gav.e me my change. do for a $4 per gallon of
The gas station was where gas? It defies all laws of
you went to have your oil economics , In theory, the
Changed, your tires fixed, less you paid for something,
your engine tuned. Now, the less service · you would
gas is 4-something dollars a get. At $4 a gallon for a fillgallon. On a recent trip up, we should be getting a
through Pennsylvania, Thad free spa treatment, a back
to beg the on-duty attendant rub and a manicure while
in. her tiny bulletproof booth . we relax in the gas stat ion 's
to come out ·and explain VIP lounge watching HBO
how the self-serve pump on the large-screen pla;.ma
· works because no two televi sion.
It 's not just gas &gt;lations
pumps tn Pennsylvania
'

.

- lack of service is everywhere, It bothers me to go
to a restaurant that has a
salad bar. If I wanted to
make my own salad, l could
stuy at home and make one.
You don' t have to be an Iron
Chef to chop up some lettuce. How much should l tip
myself for making my own
salad'! Whal's next? They' ll
let me cook my own meal?
Wow, we' ve got to go out
more often. They call it selfservice. If they called it,
work, would you pay for it?
"Gee, Honey, isn't this
great, the grocery store is
letting us check out Olor own
groceri€s and they ' re letting
us bag them ourselves. It' s a
dream come true. )t 's hard
to believe they used ·to pay
cashiers for hav in g thi s
much fun.''
Most bank\ ;ne self-work,
mean self-serve now,
charging a dollar or two per
transaction at a machine. If
you go to a teller, it's free.
Banks have to pay the teller
a salary. health care and a
pension
the ATM
machine gets none of that.
Shouldn't the machine be
free '' It';, the teller who
shou ld be charging for each
transaction .
It wasn't that lon g ago

that when you ordered a
soda at a fast food joint they
used to give you a soda.
Now they hand you an ·
empty cup and point you to
a self-service soda machine :
l · don ' t know how much
money thi s labor-saving
step saves them, but it musi
be a fraction of a penny on
every l mfl lion transactions . And small. children
love it. ''MOMMMMM! I
can · do it myself' !!" What
could possibly go wrong?
How much more do they
spend cleaning up the mess?
At my local convenience
store, the one that replace4
the full- service gas station
that used to be there, I pour
my ow n coffee, microwave
my own, lunch, get my own
napkins and utensils, then
pay twice the price I would
have in a pl'ace where it ·
would all be done for me. I
asked one clerk why everything was so expensive. He
~a id, "The convenience."
No doubt, but for whom?
(Jim Mulle11 is the
author of "It Takes a
Village Idiot: Complicating
tire Simple Life" a11d
"Baby's First Tattoo." You
ca11
reach
him
at
jim_mullerr@myway.com)

.,

•
•

testers rushed the building, Thoropson said that was
PageAl
threw objects on the floor untrue and though Gerken
including reports of shrimp, was in the building, he did identifying demographics areas, outdoor learning
silly string, dirt and other not meet with protesters.
for marketing purposes and areas for science activities
"unidentifiable substances."
Both Thompson and like the ESP, the small busi- for all three districts to utiShe went on to say the reports from protesters on ness program -provides lize, etc .
lobby furniture was pushed the Internet claim the pro- assistance to clients from . Currently $1.5 million has
into the edges of the room testers were asking AMP- MBA students at Ohio been raised for the project
so that a group of around ()hio to cancel it's plans to University.
through donations, pledges
five or six protesters could build the power plant.
and
in-kind contributions.
Hopkins spoke about the
sit locked arm and arm on
"This behavior will not school's government pro- The MLEF has already purthe floor in the middle Of the deter us from the project, · . curement program which chased the land for the comlobby. Thompson said the we made that abundantly helps local business people munity phase which will be
protesters were using air clear," Thompson said; identify government agen- near the old Sal is bury
hams, a bullhorn, banging adding even though the situ- cies which might be lnter- School and will either be
on a pan and were shouting ation appeared to be escalat- ested in purchasing their deeded to Salisbury
at staff. She said in the ing in terms of protests the products. Those participat- · Township or the Meigs
mean time, around 40 peo- company was moving for. ing in the free program are County Commissioners. For
ple were outside surging w~rd , preparing for any put into a bid-match system more information on the
against the doors so no one future incidents the best which is run each day, iden- project go to www.meigscould get in or out. In the way anyone could.
tifying potential purchasers. foundation.org.
end, there was some broken
The program is funded
Musser said the whole
"These people continue to . through grants from the · project . will update two
glass on the lobby floor
· from a 'wall hanging that fell represent themselves as United States Department important areas people look
and the revolving door was- speaking on behalf of Meigs of Defense, the stale and at when relocating in an
n't working correctly, in County and I know from . OU, making it a national area which are "schools and
talking to people in Meigs and statewide network.
terms of damages.
recreation."
For information'on any of
"It was not physical but it County-that is not 'the case,"
Chamber
In
other
was
not
peaceful," Thompson said.
the three programs go to announcements:
Thompson said of the pro- . Thompson also said in www.voinovichschool.ohio.
An afternoon with Ohio
Supreme Court Justice
teet. "This goes beyond · meeting with people; from edu.
what we' ve seen in the Meigs County who have
Also speaking was Steve Evelyn Stratton will be held
problems with the plant, she Musser on behalf of the from 3-5 p.m., July 17 at the
· past."
: Thompson also said the described them as "rational" Meigs Local Enrichment Pomeroy Library. Justice
protesters were claiming to and choosing to show up Foundation. Musser said the Stratton will spc:ak and take
be "there on behalf of the and voice their issues "pro- biggest · misconception questions. Ltght refreshfolks in Meigs County." ductively" at public hear, about the foundation was . ments will be served.
The Big Bend Blues Bash
One of the pictures found irtgs. She said protesters that'it was only about buildon an environmental blog such as the ones that arrived ing a football stadium at begins July 25-26 at the
showed two protesters on Monday seem to "choose Meigs High School. Musser Pomeroy riverfront.
hanging from the flagpoles not to show up at public said the football stadium · The Chamber will offer a
outside the offtce wtth a hearings and be a produc- was pan of the foundillion 's "Sunset Cruise" from 6:30 · banner below them reading : tive pan of the . process" plans but o!bat was just one 8:30 p.m., Wed. Sept. lO
"No more coal plants in relying instead on "demon-. pan of a larger project to leaving from the Pomeroy
Meigs ." Thompson said the strations and disruptions."
benefit people living in all riverfront. This is a familyoriented cruise with tickets
three school districts. ·
company agreed not to
Yesterday
·afternoon,
Musser said he fully $20 per person. There will
press charges against the
those associated with Earth
two females · hangmg from First!
were asking for sup- expected that next spring a be appetizers and a cash bat.
cross country running. and Call 992-5005. · · · ,
the flagpoles if they agreed
porters
to
co·ntribute
bail
walking track and ,recre-·
The next luncheon will be
to get down without hurting
themselves or anyone else; money via the Internet for. ations trails will be avail- at noon, Allg. 12, Pomeroy
. those arrested during the able to the public for use. Library with Tim and Edie
which they did.
"They damaged the lobby protest. Earth First! support- The track is part of what the King of King Ace Hardware
and certainly terrorized our ers also claim the plant will 'MLEF calls the community speaking about maintaining
staff," Thompson said. "It be a "major climate change phase. He added dirt will a business in Meigs County
was absolutely uncalled contributor". and one blog stan \Urning in about 90 for the last 50 years.
report associated with the days on the community
The Mason, W.Va. Bob
for."
proj ct
which Evans Restaurant catered
Though one blog claim d protest referred to Meigs phase
protesters met with AMP- County as "an environmen- mcludes not ol)ly the track yesterday's luncheon held at
·
but picnic and playground the Pomeroy Library.
Ohio CEO Marc Gerken, tal sacrifice zone."
.

.

"'

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..

VERMILION (A P) - For
more thtm a century. no one·
knew exactly where the sidewheel steari1er Anthony B.
Wayne came·to rest
Now researchers are diving
60 feet below the surface of
Lake Erie to explore the
wreckage discovered in 2006
and identified last year.
"It's one of the earliest
examples of a passenger and
cargo steamer that we have,
probably one of the Oldest in
Lake Erie .'' said Brad
Krueger, who is spending the
summer· leaming about the
steamer.
Kruege r. working on his_
master's degree in Texas
A&amp;M University's Nautical
Arcluleulugy lJI ugraJJJ. und
two other researchers dive at
the site about six miles off the
coast of Vermilion nearly
everyday.
The passenger ve~sel went
down in 1850 after an explosion, killing up to 80 people.
The ship was heading from
Sandu s~y to Buffalo with
wine, whiskey and livestock.
· "Shipwrecks are important
because they truly tell our
story." Carrie Sowden.
archaeological director of the
Peachman · Lake
Erie
Shipwreck Research Center
in Vennilion . "It's· interesting
to think that it had not been
seen since ll\50."
Thomas Kowalczk , an
amateur shipwreck prospector, used sonar on his boat to
discover the Anthony Wayne.
It takes hours nf research
and searching to fii'fd a wreck,
Kowalczk said. "You kind of
know where they are. You
have a general area, but there
is no X Jllarks the spot." he
said.
Underneath the surface,
two large paddlewheel' rise
upward from the wreckage.
~'To see ·these two great
stru~tures looming on the bottom and coming into focus ...
to see them rising up is
impressive," Krueger said.
Krueger hopes to learn all
he can about the steamer and
how it was built. The native of
Ann Arbor, Mich., said growing up around the Great Lakes
led him to study nautical
archaeology.
"There are no blueprints or
plans. They weren't constructed by a plan," Kmeger
said,
He also wants to know
more about day-to-day life on
the steamer.

·Mercbants from Page AI

Chamber from

Floyd Cleland
Pomeroy

The Daily.Sentinel

LONG BOTIOM - Descendents of Alva and Martha
Holsinger will gather at the Long Bottom Community
building on Aug. 9 from I0 a.m. Lo 4 p.m. Ham, tableware,
drinks will be provided; take covered dish.

Meeting rescheduled

Dea·r Editor:
Po you believe now that our government has sold us. the
American workers, out? l for one believe our government
wants two types of people in the USA, rich and poor.
Well l think they have found a w:ay to do that. Raise the
price of oil and take our paycheck each week to get to
work. Oh, did our government forget that most Americans
will be without jobs? It appears now no job is safe and the
layoffs are coming, America, so if you're like me, don't
buy now. Nothing is going to be worth what you ' re paying
' for it. So, America, stand tall. Go vote for someone new in
office and don't vote for· any new taxes, no matter what it
is for because they'll just steal it too. Save your money.
_You're going to need it for food tomorrow.

Letters to the ediror a,:e welcome. They should be len·
tha11 300 words, All lerters are subject to editing, 'm11st be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
.u11signed letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letrers of
thanks to organizatiom and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

www ;mydailysentinel.com

2008

Eloise Drenner was
the state's Capitol budget
for improvements to the commeni:led for her disCourt Street mini-park . play in the former vacant
Plans include installation of storefront on Court Street,
electricity once park use by and there was a discussion
the village is clarified with on downtown businesses
atid the space empty buildthe owner.
The Christmas bulbs ings .
The need for cleaning
featuring an etching of the
new
Pomeroy-Mason awnings in the business
bridge and noting a com- district was noted with
pletion date of 2009 are further discussioit on
for sale in downtown busi- arrangements to he connesses and banks along sidered at another meetwith the Meigs County ing. The possibility of a ·
Chamber of Commerce minimum charge to meroffice at $8 each or three chants for Cleaning their
for $20. Also included are awnings was discussed as
a few of the bulbs featur- a way . of paying, for the
ing the original bridge work and adding to the
Merchants' treasury.
which opened in 1928.

Indicted rrom Page Al
• Mark A. Haley. Jr., on
appointed to represent
charges of illegal possesYoung.
recently sion of drug documents ,
Others
forgery and deception to
arraigned were:
obtain
a dangerous drug.
• Larry Barnhart, on a
count of unlawful sexual Tenaglia was appointed to
conduct with a minor. represent Haley, and bond
Tenaglia was appointed was sent at $5.000 personcounsel. Bond was set at al recognizance . Tria.l was
$25,000 personal recog- set for Aug. 5.
• David Sigman. on four
nizance. Trial was set for
counts of non -support of
Aug. 5.
• James M. Pierc~. on a depe ndent s. Crow set a
charge of gross sexual surety bond ·of $ 1,000, an
bond
of
imposition. Tenoglia was appearance
appointed council, and $1 ,000, and a personal
bond was sent at $1 0;000 recognizance bond of
$1,000.
personal recognizance.

PROUD:
·TO BE APART OF.YOUR LIFE.
' ..
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The Daily Sentinel
. Subscribe ~!K'ay . • 992·21'55 • www.mydallysentinel:com

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�)he D~ily

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co ..
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

·'

OeiNIO

S~ntjnel

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

OUR READER'S
VIEWS

Theater memories
Dear Editor:
l got a big chuckle out of Helen Lyons ' "no cussing" rule.
Things had changed quite a bit by the late 1960's. I remember of a couple of occasions when Henry Werry patrolled
the aisles looking for instanc~ of hooliganism.
·
One night, the group] traveled with purchased water pi stols at the old dime store and fired a few shots in the theater. After hiding mine in a shoe, I accidentally stopped on
it and ended up with a shoe full of water. Another weapon
w·as Red Hots. a small hard candy frequently thrown at. the
screen.
Helen had some familiarity with me because my sisters
had attended a few years earlier. After one instance of mischief by a member of my group, the usher collared him and
said; "All right, Fields!" l split the scene in a hurry and left
'the rest of the gang to face the music. ,
Did we act like hoodlums? As they say in the movies,
"search me." Previous generations in rural areas had their
own way of raising cain, which include(! putting frogs
down girls' blouses, so l guess it's just a question of taste
as to which was worse.

.......

PageA4

_

Wednesday, July 9,

Deaths

Huckabee no savior for McCain
In Texas just before
Independence Day, former
Arkansas governor · and
Republican
presidential
contender Mike Huckabee
co-sponsored
a
Kathryn
"Rediscovering God in
Lopez
America·· pastors ' conference. The event, Huckabee
said. was "to remind and
encourage us that the proper
position for America when
facing evil and confroming often seems like Huckabee '
out of his way to anger
enemies is not to find goes
the .other elements of the
excuses for defeat but to conservative
movement
find the resources, the instead of courting them ,
courage and the strength dismissing his critics who
from God necessary to believe in economic free win." But ·if John McCain dom and a iitrong national
thinks Huckabee as veep defense as members of the
. will give divine strength to Washington establi.shment,
!hf GQP tlda~1 iN Nonrn£e: ·wan S'treet mttftona11·es &lt;tnd
~ he ' s wrong.
secular elitists."
For some in the McCain
predicted:
Toomey ·
campaign -· most notably. '·Huckabee is a fringe
a Republican and does not
McCain himself
"social conservative" is represent the conservative
such a foreign entity that movement on economic
they are flying blind trying policy, domestic programs .
tQ secure that key GOP con- . law and order, and foreign
stituency. Despite his pro- policy. It is hard to imagine
lite voting recor(l, Arizona a candidate so out of step
Sen. McCain is on record with most in the conservathis election cycle making it Live movement assuming
clear he has little interest in the stage in Minne sota in
such issues . Knowing this, eight months as its leader."
conservative evangelicals
Toomey is far from itlone .
are not overjoyed at Conservative
talk-radio
· McCain's nomination.
leader Rush Limbaugh
The
problem
with declared Huckabee "not a
Huckabee is that he is not conservative" during the priconservative.
When mary
fight.
Althouglt
Huckabee won the Iowa Huckabee struck &lt;Ill attraccaucus in January, conserv- tive populist tone, his soluative Club for . Growth . tions tend to be statist. It' s
President Pat Toomev no surprise he'd run a bigdeclared, "Huckabee's wiit government campaign: He
in iowa IS a temporary set- was a statist as governor or
hack for conservatism." The Arkansa,. The Libertarian
former Republican · con- Cato Institute gave him a
gressman
from "D" rating on fiscal policy
Pennsylv·ania continued, "It when he was in Little Rock;

.,pending innea.,cd at three
times the rate of inflation
durinu hi s tenure there.
Further. Huc kabee is a protectionist and proved during
the primary &lt;:ampaign .to
know very little abou t foreign policy. While McCain
certainly has that ground
covered , Huckube ~ can't'
pass the ''plausi ble president" test a vice-presidential
pick really ought to - and
wil l need to, especially this
year on the Republican side.
with a 72-year-old candidate
at the top of the.ticket.
And how, exactlv, is
McCain to make an is sue of
Burack Obama 's naivete on
the Iran issue if Huckabee
o.~bv ·.;vuu:: :; io meel wi\11
Mahmo ud Ahmadinejad ?
In the months since he's
dt'opped out of t~e race for
the Repu_blican nomination,
Huckabee has done himself
no favors. 'First. there was
his disgraceful , juvenile joke
about Obama at the National
Rii'le Association convention. Then there was an
exhortation
to
fdlow
Republicans not to "demoni ze'' Obama. But no
responsible B.epublicans are
demonizing him, so why
insinuate that they are? The
r111necessary warnli1g once
again served to make conser.vati ves wonder whether
lluckabee actually knows~
much less is one of- them.
In substance and style,
Huckabee is bad news.
Having run ads calling himself a "Christian leader,"
Huckabee ran Oil identitv
politics - usua!! y a mairistay of liberal Democrats.
Although he had the thirdhighest number of votes in

Phyllis Ebersbach

the Repub lican race this
year. polls also showed him
a tough sell with nonevangelical Republicans , who
felt they had little in common with his mixed record
as a conservative.
The Arkansas pol doesn't
even offer an outside-theBeltway tJ1inking.
l:le
showed that recently b,y
endorsing
Alaska
Repub li can Congressman
Don Young's re-election
bid . He. too. is a liberal-indisguise. one with a pen:
chant for government lumdouts ·(famously. the $223
million
" Bridge
to
Nowhere''), and under an
ethical cl~ud (and a fedenil

LAKE, MICH. - Phyllis Ebersbach, 70, of Lake, Mich.,
died May 15 at a Pontiac, Mich. hospital.
· She is survived by her husband, Thomas.
Funeral services were held ai the Elton &amp; Black Funeral
Home at White Lake with burial in the Oak Hill Memorial
Gardens in Novi, Mich.

For the Record
Divorces
. POMEROY- An action for divorce was filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Tamela Sue Marcinko,
Reedsville, against Stephen P. Marcinko, Tuppers Plains.
Divorce.s were granted to Jessica l. Delacruz from Justin
D. Delacruz; · Christina Sue Sigman from Troy Curtis
Sigman; and Rebecca Minshall from James Minshall.

m·.,.·cs ti gJtiO ti ).

Dissolutions

So would McCain pick
so meone so out of step with
most in the conservative
movement as his No. 2?
Stranger things have hap,
pened . After all, in the
spring of 2007, much of the
conservative movemenl was
defeating McCain's "comprehensive
immigration
retorm." Who would have
predicted they ' d be stuck
·with him before long as
their nominee for president?
With McCain's own troubled pas~ and record with
conservative$, he doesn't
need to add to the ideological · muddle . De spite his
impressive turnout in the
primaries. Huckabee would
be a bad choice· to join· the
Republican ticket. Leai:l
McCain not into temptation.
(Kathry11 Lopez is the
editor of Natio11al Review
011/ine (www.natiollalreview.com). She ca11 be colltacted at klopez@natiollalreview.com.)

POMEROY -Dissolutions were granted in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to Hazel A. Balser and Roger
A. Balser, Jamie Baker and Jennifer Baker, and Eugene 0.
Adkins, Jr: and Cherissa Adkins.
·

Dismissed
•

POMEROY -Civil actions filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court were dismissed: United States of
America against Richard E, Swanson, Jr., and Home
National Bank against Rhonda Kay Watson, and others,

Foreclosure
POMEROY - A foreclosure ~as granted in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to American General
Financial Services against Jerome K. Howard, and others.

Local Briefs
MHS senior class pictures
POMEROY - Yearbook pictures for the class of 2009
will be taken July 1:6. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.; July 17 •. II a.m. to
7 p.m. and July 18, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the high school.
Appointments are to be made by calling 1-800-553-5433.
According to Denise Arnold, yearbook advisor, these are
the pictures which will ·appear in the yearbook. Suits and
drapes wi II be provided. :
. '

Yoli'L.L No1icE THAT

OSAMA IS NOT MAKIN6
J.IIS A&lt;:C£PTANC.£ SPEECH AT.
TJ-If PATRIDTS' $TAPlVM'
I'M Jv5T $A.VtNG ... ·

Jeff Fields
Syracuse

•••

Reunion planned
I.

Sold out

· POMEROY -The regular meeting of the Christian
Motorcy.cle Association's "Delivered" Ch\lpter has been
moved to 5 p.m., Saturday, July 19 at Common Grounds in
Pomeroy.
·

pal~

\~\lt.SCO Ff fLD

.. AMPrrom Page AI .

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EDITOR

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The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Cheney 'wanted·cuts in climat~ change testimony Divers learning .
WASHINGTON (AP) last fall was the ·first pan of White House, including in
Seeking to play down the "a master plan" aimed at Cheney's office, about link- more about LAke
effects of global warming, "covering up the real dan- ing climate change directly
Erie shipwreck
Vice . President
Dick gers of global warming and to public health or damage

Cheney's office pushed to
delete from congressional
testimony references about
the consequences of climate
change on public health, a
former senior EPA official
claimed Tuesday.
The official, Jason K..
Burnett, · said the White
House was concerned that
the proposed testimony last
October by the head of the
Centers
for
Di sease
Control and Prevention
might make it tougher to
avoid regu'lating greenhouse gases emitted , into
the atmosphere.
Burnett's assertion, which
he made in a July 6 letter to
s~u. Barbara Boxt:r. DCalif., chairwoman of the
Senate Environment and
Public Works Committee,
.conflicts with the White
House explanation at the
time that the deletions
reflected concerns by the
White House Office of
Science and Technology
over the accuracy of the science.
· Boxer, in a news conference on Tuesday, went so
far as . to say White · House
press secretary Dana Perino
had lied about why the
White House had pushed
for the deletions. That, in
turn, prompted Perino to
· demand . an apology from
Boxer.
•
"I have never said such a
thing about a fellow public
servant, and I wouldn't if l
didn't have ·all the facts,"
Perino said froin Japan,
where President Bu sh is
attending .a meeting of
world economic leaders. "!
think I deserve an apology."
Burnett, until last month a
senior adviser on climate
the
change
at
Environme)ltal Protection
Agency,
wrote
that
Cheney's office was deeply
involved in getting nearly
half of the CDC's· original
draft testimony removed.
"The
Council
on
Environmental Quality and
the office of the .vice presi, dent were seeking deletions
to the CDC testimony (concerning) ... any discussions
· of the human health consequences of climate change,''
Burnett wrote.
At her news conference,
Boxer maintained that the
heavy editing of the testimony given by CDC
Director Julie Gerberding

hiding the facts from the to the environment.
public."
Nowhere was that more
Burnett declined to com- apparent than in the heavy
ment beyond what he editing of the CDC testimodescribed in the letter and ny in October.
said he didn't want to idenThe White House, at the
tify the people he had talked urging of Cheney 's office,
with in Cheney's office or ' "requested that l work with
elsewhere at the White CDC to remove from the
House. "I'm not interested testimony any discussion of
in pointing fingers at indi- the human healtl:t conseviduals,'' he said.
quences of c'limate change,"
White House deputy press Burnett wrote.
secretary Tony Fratto said
"CEQ contacted me to
Jhe White House stands by argue that l could best keep
its explanation for the dele- options open for the (EPA)
tions, and noted that science administrator (on regulatadviser John Marburger had ing carbon dioxide) if I
raised concerns.
would convince ·CDC to
Marbur&amp;er issued a sum- delete particular sec tion ~
mary of lu s concerns at the of their te s timony, ~ he
time, but at a Senate hearing wrote.
But he said he reflfsed to ·
a few weeks later said he
had ·not recommended press the CDC on ' the deledeleting six of the 14 pages tions because he believed
as was done.
the CDC 's draft testimony
Megan Mitchell, the vice was "fundamentally' accu~
president's press secretary, rate."
dismissed the allegations by
Burnett said Cheney 's
Burnett and said, "We don't office also objected in
comment on internal delib- January to congressional
erations. "
testimony by Johnson that
Burnett. 31, a lifelong "greenhouse gas emissions
Democrat, resigned his post harm .the environment." An
last month as associate official in Cheney's office
deputy EPA administrator "called lo tell me that his
becatise of disagreements office wanted the Iangnage
over the ,agency's response changed" but that it was
kept as it was . ·
to climate change.
- He appeared to be au odd
Burne!t also descril)ed in
choice for the EPA post, greater detail t.han previ which included liaison with ously reported the White
the White House on climate House's
in
refusal
issues. Currently a support- December to accept a draft
er, of Barack Obama for EPA finding concluding
president, he has con- that carbon dioxide. · the
tributed nearly $125,000 to leading greenhouse gas, is
Democratic
candidates endangering human health.
since 2000, according to the
After he sent the e-mail
Center for Responsive With the draft finding
Politics.
attached, he said he
Burnett, an economist .received a telephone call
who had written a number from the White House askof papers on ~overnment ing that he "send a followregulation wh1le at the . up note saying that the eCenter • for Regulatory mail had been sent in error."
Study, a joint effort by the
"I explained that l could
American
Enterprise not do that because it was
Institute and the Brookings not true," Burnett wrote .
Institution, .first joined the
Boxer said the draft find.
ing
was now ''in limbo" and
EPA in 2004. He resigned
two years later because of not available for public
objections to an EPA rule on review.
More than a year ago,
soot.
· He was asked to return in the Supreme Court direct2007 by EPA Administrator ed the EPA to determine
Stephen Johnson, who put whether carbon dioxide
him in charge of coordinat- emissions enda.nger lmman
ing the agency's response to health and welfare and, if
a Supreme Court ruling on so, begin to regulate it
whether to regulate carbon under the Clean Air Act.
That process is not likely
dioxide emissions.
In his letter, Burnett to continue until the next
describes concerns at the administration.

The Village Idiot:·
Twice ·the price half as nice
What was the lowest pric~
you ever paid for gasoline?
When I was 18, I bought gas
in Kansas for 23 cents a gallon. It wasn't a promotion
or a gimmick, it was just the
Jim
price of gas in the late
spring of 1968. I only
Muller;~
remember it because, even
then, it seemed like aridiculously low price for' gas.
Sure enough, it soon shot
back up to its normal price seem to work alike. They
of 28 cents a gallon. The make it like a "Survivor"
minimum wage . that year ·challenge just to pump gas,
except you don ' t get a
was $1.60 an hour.
For 23 cents a gallon, a chance of winning a million
guy in a uniform came out , dollars; just a chance to
pumped the gas, washed all squirt gas on you ·shoes.
the bug-splattered windows, · Should l even bother to
checked the oil and asked if mention that my windows
didn' t get washed?
I wanted the tire pressure
How: is it that we got so
checked. I said "No," and
much
more service for 23
handed him $3 for filling it
cents
a
gallon gas than we
up. He reached in his pocket and gav.e me my change. do for a $4 per gallon of
The gas station was where gas? It defies all laws of
you went to have your oil economics , In theory, the
Changed, your tires fixed, less you paid for something,
your engine tuned. Now, the less service · you would
gas is 4-something dollars a get. At $4 a gallon for a fillgallon. On a recent trip up, we should be getting a
through Pennsylvania, Thad free spa treatment, a back
to beg the on-duty attendant rub and a manicure while
in. her tiny bulletproof booth . we relax in the gas stat ion 's
to come out ·and explain VIP lounge watching HBO
how the self-serve pump on the large-screen pla;.ma
· works because no two televi sion.
It 's not just gas &gt;lations
pumps tn Pennsylvania
'

.

- lack of service is everywhere, It bothers me to go
to a restaurant that has a
salad bar. If I wanted to
make my own salad, l could
stuy at home and make one.
You don' t have to be an Iron
Chef to chop up some lettuce. How much should l tip
myself for making my own
salad'! Whal's next? They' ll
let me cook my own meal?
Wow, we' ve got to go out
more often. They call it selfservice. If they called it,
work, would you pay for it?
"Gee, Honey, isn't this
great, the grocery store is
letting us check out Olor own
groceri€s and they ' re letting
us bag them ourselves. It' s a
dream come true. )t 's hard
to believe they used ·to pay
cashiers for hav in g thi s
much fun.''
Most bank\ ;ne self-work,
mean self-serve now,
charging a dollar or two per
transaction at a machine. If
you go to a teller, it's free.
Banks have to pay the teller
a salary. health care and a
pension
the ATM
machine gets none of that.
Shouldn't the machine be
free '' It';, the teller who
shou ld be charging for each
transaction .
It wasn't that lon g ago

that when you ordered a
soda at a fast food joint they
used to give you a soda.
Now they hand you an ·
empty cup and point you to
a self-service soda machine :
l · don ' t know how much
money thi s labor-saving
step saves them, but it musi
be a fraction of a penny on
every l mfl lion transactions . And small. children
love it. ''MOMMMMM! I
can · do it myself' !!" What
could possibly go wrong?
How much more do they
spend cleaning up the mess?
At my local convenience
store, the one that replace4
the full- service gas station
that used to be there, I pour
my ow n coffee, microwave
my own, lunch, get my own
napkins and utensils, then
pay twice the price I would
have in a pl'ace where it ·
would all be done for me. I
asked one clerk why everything was so expensive. He
~a id, "The convenience."
No doubt, but for whom?
(Jim Mulle11 is the
author of "It Takes a
Village Idiot: Complicating
tire Simple Life" a11d
"Baby's First Tattoo." You
ca11
reach
him
at
jim_mullerr@myway.com)

.,

•
•

testers rushed the building, Thoropson said that was
PageAl
threw objects on the floor untrue and though Gerken
including reports of shrimp, was in the building, he did identifying demographics areas, outdoor learning
silly string, dirt and other not meet with protesters.
for marketing purposes and areas for science activities
"unidentifiable substances."
Both Thompson and like the ESP, the small busi- for all three districts to utiShe went on to say the reports from protesters on ness program -provides lize, etc .
lobby furniture was pushed the Internet claim the pro- assistance to clients from . Currently $1.5 million has
into the edges of the room testers were asking AMP- MBA students at Ohio been raised for the project
so that a group of around ()hio to cancel it's plans to University.
through donations, pledges
five or six protesters could build the power plant.
and
in-kind contributions.
Hopkins spoke about the
sit locked arm and arm on
"This behavior will not school's government pro- The MLEF has already purthe floor in the middle Of the deter us from the project, · . curement program which chased the land for the comlobby. Thompson said the we made that abundantly helps local business people munity phase which will be
protesters were using air clear," Thompson said; identify government agen- near the old Sal is bury
hams, a bullhorn, banging adding even though the situ- cies which might be lnter- School and will either be
on a pan and were shouting ation appeared to be escalat- ested in purchasing their deeded to Salisbury
at staff. She said in the ing in terms of protests the products. Those participat- · Township or the Meigs
mean time, around 40 peo- company was moving for. ing in the free program are County Commissioners. For
ple were outside surging w~rd , preparing for any put into a bid-match system more information on the
against the doors so no one future incidents the best which is run each day, iden- project go to www.meigscould get in or out. In the way anyone could.
tifying potential purchasers. foundation.org.
end, there was some broken
The program is funded
Musser said the whole
"These people continue to . through grants from the · project . will update two
glass on the lobby floor
· from a 'wall hanging that fell represent themselves as United States Department important areas people look
and the revolving door was- speaking on behalf of Meigs of Defense, the stale and at when relocating in an
n't working correctly, in County and I know from . OU, making it a national area which are "schools and
talking to people in Meigs and statewide network.
terms of damages.
recreation."
For information'on any of
"It was not physical but it County-that is not 'the case,"
Chamber
In
other
was
not
peaceful," Thompson said.
the three programs go to announcements:
Thompson said of the pro- . Thompson also said in www.voinovichschool.ohio.
An afternoon with Ohio
Supreme Court Justice
teet. "This goes beyond · meeting with people; from edu.
what we' ve seen in the Meigs County who have
Also speaking was Steve Evelyn Stratton will be held
problems with the plant, she Musser on behalf of the from 3-5 p.m., July 17 at the
· past."
: Thompson also said the described them as "rational" Meigs Local Enrichment Pomeroy Library. Justice
protesters were claiming to and choosing to show up Foundation. Musser said the Stratton will spc:ak and take
be "there on behalf of the and voice their issues "pro- biggest · misconception questions. Ltght refreshfolks in Meigs County." ductively" at public hear, about the foundation was . ments will be served.
The Big Bend Blues Bash
One of the pictures found irtgs. She said protesters that'it was only about buildon an environmental blog such as the ones that arrived ing a football stadium at begins July 25-26 at the
showed two protesters on Monday seem to "choose Meigs High School. Musser Pomeroy riverfront.
hanging from the flagpoles not to show up at public said the football stadium · The Chamber will offer a
outside the offtce wtth a hearings and be a produc- was pan of the foundillion 's "Sunset Cruise" from 6:30 · banner below them reading : tive pan of the . process" plans but o!bat was just one 8:30 p.m., Wed. Sept. lO
"No more coal plants in relying instead on "demon-. pan of a larger project to leaving from the Pomeroy
Meigs ." Thompson said the strations and disruptions."
benefit people living in all riverfront. This is a familyoriented cruise with tickets
three school districts. ·
company agreed not to
Yesterday
·afternoon,
Musser said he fully $20 per person. There will
press charges against the
those associated with Earth
two females · hangmg from First!
were asking for sup- expected that next spring a be appetizers and a cash bat.
cross country running. and Call 992-5005. · · · ,
the flagpoles if they agreed
porters
to
co·ntribute
bail
walking track and ,recre-·
The next luncheon will be
to get down without hurting
themselves or anyone else; money via the Internet for. ations trails will be avail- at noon, Allg. 12, Pomeroy
. those arrested during the able to the public for use. Library with Tim and Edie
which they did.
"They damaged the lobby protest. Earth First! support- The track is part of what the King of King Ace Hardware
and certainly terrorized our ers also claim the plant will 'MLEF calls the community speaking about maintaining
staff," Thompson said. "It be a "major climate change phase. He added dirt will a business in Meigs County
was absolutely uncalled contributor". and one blog stan \Urning in about 90 for the last 50 years.
report associated with the days on the community
The Mason, W.Va. Bob
for."
proj ct
which Evans Restaurant catered
Though one blog claim d protest referred to Meigs phase
protesters met with AMP- County as "an environmen- mcludes not ol)ly the track yesterday's luncheon held at
·
but picnic and playground the Pomeroy Library.
Ohio CEO Marc Gerken, tal sacrifice zone."
.

.

"'

.-

~· ·

..

VERMILION (A P) - For
more thtm a century. no one·
knew exactly where the sidewheel steari1er Anthony B.
Wayne came·to rest
Now researchers are diving
60 feet below the surface of
Lake Erie to explore the
wreckage discovered in 2006
and identified last year.
"It's one of the earliest
examples of a passenger and
cargo steamer that we have,
probably one of the Oldest in
Lake Erie .'' said Brad
Krueger, who is spending the
summer· leaming about the
steamer.
Kruege r. working on his_
master's degree in Texas
A&amp;M University's Nautical
Arcluleulugy lJI ugraJJJ. und
two other researchers dive at
the site about six miles off the
coast of Vermilion nearly
everyday.
The passenger ve~sel went
down in 1850 after an explosion, killing up to 80 people.
The ship was heading from
Sandu s~y to Buffalo with
wine, whiskey and livestock.
· "Shipwrecks are important
because they truly tell our
story." Carrie Sowden.
archaeological director of the
Peachman · Lake
Erie
Shipwreck Research Center
in Vennilion . "It's· interesting
to think that it had not been
seen since ll\50."
Thomas Kowalczk , an
amateur shipwreck prospector, used sonar on his boat to
discover the Anthony Wayne.
It takes hours nf research
and searching to fii'fd a wreck,
Kowalczk said. "You kind of
know where they are. You
have a general area, but there
is no X Jllarks the spot." he
said.
Underneath the surface,
two large paddlewheel' rise
upward from the wreckage.
~'To see ·these two great
stru~tures looming on the bottom and coming into focus ...
to see them rising up is
impressive," Krueger said.
Krueger hopes to learn all
he can about the steamer and
how it was built. The native of
Ann Arbor, Mich., said growing up around the Great Lakes
led him to study nautical
archaeology.
"There are no blueprints or
plans. They weren't constructed by a plan," Kmeger
said,
He also wants to know
more about day-to-day life on
the steamer.

·Mercbants from Page AI

Chamber from

Floyd Cleland
Pomeroy

The Daily.Sentinel

LONG BOTIOM - Descendents of Alva and Martha
Holsinger will gather at the Long Bottom Community
building on Aug. 9 from I0 a.m. Lo 4 p.m. Ham, tableware,
drinks will be provided; take covered dish.

Meeting rescheduled

Dea·r Editor:
Po you believe now that our government has sold us. the
American workers, out? l for one believe our government
wants two types of people in the USA, rich and poor.
Well l think they have found a w:ay to do that. Raise the
price of oil and take our paycheck each week to get to
work. Oh, did our government forget that most Americans
will be without jobs? It appears now no job is safe and the
layoffs are coming, America, so if you're like me, don't
buy now. Nothing is going to be worth what you ' re paying
' for it. So, America, stand tall. Go vote for someone new in
office and don't vote for· any new taxes, no matter what it
is for because they'll just steal it too. Save your money.
_You're going to need it for food tomorrow.

Letters to the ediror a,:e welcome. They should be len·
tha11 300 words, All lerters are subject to editing, 'm11st be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
.u11signed letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letrers of
thanks to organizatiom and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

www ;mydailysentinel.com

2008

Eloise Drenner was
the state's Capitol budget
for improvements to the commeni:led for her disCourt Street mini-park . play in the former vacant
Plans include installation of storefront on Court Street,
electricity once park use by and there was a discussion
the village is clarified with on downtown businesses
atid the space empty buildthe owner.
The Christmas bulbs ings .
The need for cleaning
featuring an etching of the
new
Pomeroy-Mason awnings in the business
bridge and noting a com- district was noted with
pletion date of 2009 are further discussioit on
for sale in downtown busi- arrangements to he connesses and banks along sidered at another meetwith the Meigs County ing. The possibility of a ·
Chamber of Commerce minimum charge to meroffice at $8 each or three chants for Cleaning their
for $20. Also included are awnings was discussed as
a few of the bulbs featur- a way . of paying, for the
ing the original bridge work and adding to the
Merchants' treasury.
which opened in 1928.

Indicted rrom Page Al
• Mark A. Haley. Jr., on
appointed to represent
charges of illegal possesYoung.
recently sion of drug documents ,
Others
forgery and deception to
arraigned were:
obtain
a dangerous drug.
• Larry Barnhart, on a
count of unlawful sexual Tenaglia was appointed to
conduct with a minor. represent Haley, and bond
Tenaglia was appointed was sent at $5.000 personcounsel. Bond was set at al recognizance . Tria.l was
$25,000 personal recog- set for Aug. 5.
• David Sigman. on four
nizance. Trial was set for
counts of non -support of
Aug. 5.
• James M. Pierc~. on a depe ndent s. Crow set a
charge of gross sexual surety bond ·of $ 1,000, an
bond
of
imposition. Tenoglia was appearance
appointed council, and $1 ,000, and a personal
bond was sent at $1 0;000 recognizance bond of
$1,000.
personal recognizance.

PROUD:
·TO BE APART OF.YOUR LIFE.
' ..
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The Daily Sentinel
. Subscribe ~!K'ay . • 992·21'55 • www.mydallysentinel:com

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T neAL-e

PageA6
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STATE

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Wednesday, July I), 2008

Inside
&gt;

Sports bricjs, Page B2

...

- ...

The Daily Sentinel
-~

Bl -

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'
Blue Ja€kets sign Umberger,
Page 82
Cubs trade for Harden, Page 86

RACINE PARADE WRAP UP .

~-------------------,---w

Wednesday, July 9, 2008
LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY - A schedule o1 upcoming high
s,chool Yarsity sporting eyants involving
team s trom Me1gs County

Fr!dav Jyly 11
Legion Bru~•ball
Post 128 at Portsmouth (doublehead-

er), 6 p.m.

'
Saturday Jy!y 12

l'eglon Baseball
Parkersburg at Post 128 (doublehead·
er), 1 p.m

SPORTS BRIEFS

EHS football
·parents meeting
·

·

Beth Sergent/photoa

The Racine Fourth of July Par~ dEl float winners are as follows: Antiq~&gt;Jity Baptist Church, first place, Ladies of the GA~, second place, Syracuse Community Church (pictured), third
·place. No photos were available of the Antiquity Baptist Ch,urch or Ladies of the GAR floats lhough they can be e-matled to. bserg~nt@mydatlysent~nel .com for pubilshtng. Also pte:
tured from the parade are.the Racine Renegades, one of the many ball teams who got a free ride through the streets of Ractn!l dunng the annual parade:
:

Adviser gets 12 years in prison in Ohio fraud case
Bv JoE

MtLICtA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

AKRON
Nineteen
convictions, two acquittals
· and a bevy of changes in
how business is done in the
state's capital.
Those are the results of a
~h·ree- yca.T'1nvCstigatio~ into
an investment scandal at the
Ohio Bureau of Workers'
Compensation.
The sentencing of investment adviser Mark Lay to 12
years in prison on Tuesday
marked the close of the last
pending criminal case related
to the investigation.
"We're not ready to ·dose
the books yet," state Inspector
General Tom Charles said.
"We're happy that this part is
done and the sentence is complete and we can make some
decisions after that."
Lay was responsible for
the bulk of $300 million in
.investment losses at the
workers' camp bureau, costing the state $216 million in
a high-risk hedge fund he
set up in Bermuda.
U.S. District Ju!)ge David
D. Dowd Jr., who sentenced

a

Lay after the second day of
lengthy sentencing hearing,
ordered Lay to be taken into
custody immediately. He was
led away in handcuffs. His
mother shouted, "It's going
to be OK, babe, we're here."
Lay faced 27 years in prison.
Dow&lt;;! also ordered Lay,
d 1id cMxutivc aml fuunJ~r of
the now defunct MDL Capital
Management of Pittsburgh, to
pay nearly $213 million in
restitution and a $590,000 forfeiture . The forfeiture is the
amount of money the jury
determined he earned from his
work on the hedge fund.
Lay, 45, was convicted in
October of repeatedly failing to tell bureau officials
when questioned beginning
in 2004 about the extent of
the risk he was taking.
Lay's ·defense attorneys
argued that he Will! a scapegoat for a legitimate investment loss.that wasn't a crime.
"I do accept full responsibility for all trading involved
in the case with the Bureau
of Workers Compensation.
... I made mistakes no question .about it," Lay told
Dowd before sentencing.

4 Fun 4-H Club
The 4 Fun 4-H Club met
recently at ·the home of
Rachael Church with seven
members and three advisors
attending.
A date for a
fundraiser was set and
papers for tag in were discussed.
Savannah Hawley gave
a report on "Safety on 4Wheelers" and baseball
was enjoyed for recreation.

Clover 4-H Club
The Clover 4-H Club met
on June 28 at the home of
Alexis Carey with four mem-

bers and one advisor in attendance.
Business discussed was
the need . to turn in. alu•
minum cans: visit a hatch~
ery on the lOth or 25th; car
wash at Wai-Man - any
day that is available.
Alexis Carey showed her
pel rabbi-t fo~ ilie· faif. Mr.
Carey showed the group his
.stamp collection.
.
Patrick Carey jed games
and Alexts Carey served
refreshments.
The next meeting will be
on July 27 at I:30 p.m. Alexis
Carey will do a demonstratimi
at the next meeting and possi,.
bly a coin collector will visit.
Mikayla VanMatre,
News Reporter.
·

GCC offering grants
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis Career Cpllege is
·currently offering the Ohio
College Opportunity Grant
(OCOG) for those who ·
qualify . ·
This grant is reserved for ·
Ohio residents who are ftrst .
time students and enroll in
at least a two year degree

program for the 2008-2009
academic school year. T)le
deadline to apply for the
grant is Oct. I , 200g. For
more information on programs and classes available
at Gallipolis Career College
call 446-4.367, 800-2140452, or. visit www.gallipoliscareercollege.com .

Local Stocks

:Local Weather
Wednesday •.• Showers
and thunderstorms likely.
Humid with highs around
80. West winds 5 to· 10 mph.
Chance of rain 70 percent.
: Wednesday night ...Mostly
'cloudy. Scattered showers
:and thunderstorms in the
evening ...Then &lt;\ slight
chance of showers and thunderstorms after midnight.
Lows in the lower 60s. West
winds 5 to 10.mph. Chance of
rain 50 percent.
Thursday ...Mostly sunny.
Highs in ·the mid 80s.
Northwest winds Slo 10 mph.
Thursday night ... Panly

cials set. The state invested
$225 million and lost all but
$9 million. Lay heavily
leveraged, or borrowed
against, the fund, which
caused almost $213 million
of the $216 million loss.
He was convicted of
investment advisory fraud,
two · counts of mail fraud,
and conspiracy to commit
mail and wire fraud.
· "Lay should have stopped
the bleeding," assistant U.S.
Attorney Benita Pearson said.
"He should have stopped the
unnecessary losses."
Dowd took into account
at least 23 factors to determine the sentence, including the loss to Ohio workers
and Lay's lack of a criminal
record. In ordering Lay to
be taken into custody immediately - ~n unusual action
in a white-collar crime case
'.:... Dowd cited trips La&gt;'
rook to New Jersey . to visit
his girlfriend in the months
following his conviction.
An appeal was being filed
immediately along . with a
request to delay the prison
sentence pending the
appeal, Kerger said.

The scandal known as
"Coingate" began with the
2005 revelation that the
bureau was investing $50
million in rare coins through
Republican donor Tom Noe,
who is serving 18 years in
prison for theft and other
crimes on charges that he
slolt: from that invcshnen!.
It included former Gov.
Bob Taft, who pleaded no
contest to ethics charges and
was fined $4,000 for failing to
repon golf outings and other
gifts on his disclosure forms.
In the wake of the scan. dal, Democrats won four of
five statewide offices in the
November 2006 election,
including the governor's
office·.
Lay's defense team pn
Tuesday stressed to the
judge that Lay didn't pocket
any mo.ney. like Noe did. ·
"He didn't benefit from
this," said &lt;~ttorney Richard
Kerger. "Failing to anticipate which way the market
goes is not an offense."
Prosecutors said Lay hid
the extent of the risk he took
with the fund and went way
beyond the limit state offi-

4-H.News Notes

cloudy. Lows in the lower
60s.
Friday ...Mostly sunny.
Highs in the up!,'Cr 80s.'
Friday
mght ...Panly
cloudy in the evening ...Then
clearing. Lows around 60.
Saturday.. .Mostly sunny
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs around
90. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Saturday night and
Sunday •.•Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms .- Lows 'in
the upper 60s. Highs' in the
upper 80s. Chance of rain
. 40 percent.

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 24.50
BBT (NVSE) - 23.93
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 20.12
Pe~alco (NVSE) - 85.83
Premier (NASDAQ) - 10.40
RockWell (NVSE) - 43.22
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 4.32
Royal Dutch Shell ·- 79.05
Seal8 Holding (NASDAQ) - 76.07
Wai·Mart (NVSE) - 59.11
Wendy's (NVSE) - 27.24
WeaBanco (NVSE) - 16.70
Worthington (NVSE)- 18.99
Dally atock reportl are tha 4
p.m. ET cloalng quoteo of tronaactions lor July 8, 2008, provld·
ad by Edward Jones flnonctat
advtaora Isaac Milia In Galllpollf
at (740) 441·9441 and Leelay
Marrero In Point Pleasanl at
(304) 674-;9174. Member SIPC.

AEP (NVSE)- 41.15
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 67.05
Ashland Inc. (NVSE) - 47.11
Big Lots (NVSE) - 32.44
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 29.51
BorgWarner ( NVSE) - 40.43
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

-57.56
Champion (NASDAQ) - 4.25
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 4.70
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 39.08
Collins (NVSE) - 51.27
DuPont (NVSE) -:- 41.89
US Bank (NVSE) - 28.04
Gannett (NVSE) - 19.48
General Electric (NVSE) - 28.06 ·
Harley-Davldoon (NVSEI - .36.59
JP Morgan (NVSE) ,... 35.77
Kroger (NVSE) - 29.76
Limited Brands (NVSE) - 16.95
NQifolk Southam (NVSE) - 62.08

A Spe~ial supplement to highlight babies,
Ages newborn to four years old.

r----------------------,I Simply send your baby's
Age
Parents

.

Baby Edition '08
to be published
F1;iday, July 25

Your Baby's
Age

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

photograph along with the coupon
to the left with your payment of
$10.00, and we'll do the rest.

Parents Names Here

I The Daily
L--------------------~-~
Mail or deliver to:
Sentinel
BABIES! The Daily Sentinel
Box 729, 111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Deadline for submission,
Friday, July 18

Rooney is. without ques- Art Jr.. Timothy, Patrick and
tion, the most innuential John - want to drop their
and respecled member of 'interest in the Steelers to
that group.
concentrate on their race
During the past 40 years, track and other interests,
Rooney has helped resolve many of which involve the
labor disputes. promoted gambling industry. The
racial diversity wilhin the Rooney family owns rate
league and helped elect tracks in New York and
Paul Tagliabue and Roger Florida and has added
Goodell as commissioners , t:orms of gaming that are
The impending sale is the' inconsistent. with NFL gamIcsnl t ·uf a feud among bhng policy.
members of one of sport\ · Goodeil
has
asked
most renowned families and Tagliabue 10 represent the
has been jimmering about league on Dan Rooney's
two years.
behalf in talks to reach an
The 75-year-old Rooney agreemenr·on a separation
is the oldest of five broth- · of the gambling interests
ers. Their father, Art. and restructured ownership
bought the franchise in if part of the team is sold.
1933 for $2,500.
Rooney said in a stateDan and Art are enshrined ment Monday' that with
in· Pro Football's Hall of Tagliabue's help, he was
Fame.
attempting to put together a
The other four brothers financing plan that would

buy out his broth ers and
their familie s over a peri od
of time.
.
··r have spent my entire
life
devoted
I Q . the
Pittsburgh Steelers and the
National Football League,"
Dan Rooney said in the
statement. "I will do every- ·
thing pos sible to work out a
solution to ensure my
father's JeQacv.. of k•enino
'
0"
the Steelers in the Rooney
family and in Pittsburgh·for
at least another 75 years."
Druckenmiller did not
immediately return a call
placed 10 his office by The
Associated Pre.ss.
Although he lives primarily in New York, he frequently attends Stee lers
games and is said to want to
include Dan and · Art
Rooney ll in his ownersh ip
group.
~

Indians move
on without
CC Sabathia

TUPPERS PLAINS
The Eastern High Sc!wol
volleyball team will start
conditioning for interested
players entering grades 9\2 on Mo11day. J11Jy 14 at 6
p.m. at the EHS gymnasium .
. Players are reminded to
read through all information contained in the sludent-athlete athletic packets and must turn in all
required forms to the 'athletic director before they
will be eligible to participate.

the All-Star game, had a
two-run shot, his 16th of the
season, to chase Harang (3ll) in the fifth and make it
6-1.
Aramis Ramirez legged
out a triple in the second after
right fielder Ken Griffey Jr.
missed a diving attempt at his
sinking liner. Soto's sacrifice
fly made it l-0.
Ryan Theriot's single and
two walks loaded the bases
for the Cubs with no outs in

DETROIT (AP) - The
Cleveland Indian s learned
cc S-abalhia w~o; going re
traded during a flight lui&gt;rne
Sunday. It didn't · really hit
them until they came to the
clubhouse Tuesday without
the popular left-hander.
"It's tough," All-Star center fielder Grady Sizemore
said before Tuesdayes game
against the Tigers. "He was
a big part ol' this team.
"It' s tough to say goodbye
to a good teammate and a
good friend, but that 's part
of baseball."
Sabathia officially was
sent to Milwaukee on
. Monday for outfielder Matt
LaPorta, pitchers Zach
Jackson and Rob Bryson
and a player to be named.
All three new players were
assigned to ieams in the
club's farm system.
The 6-7, 290-pound lefty
left quite an impression on .
his teammates.
"You couldn "t tell a lot
about what' was going on in
his life because he was
always smiling and laughing," third baseman Casey
Blake said. ''He was a good
friend. You just liked bei ng
around him."
Sabathia wenl 19-7 last
season with a 3.2 1 ERA and
became the first Indians
pitcher to win a Cy Young
Award since 1972. but lost
both hi s starts against
Boston in the ALCS. He
rejected · Cleveland's $72
million, four-yeor extension
offer during spring training
and announced he wouldn 'l
negotiate until after th ese;~­
son.
"I told him it was an
honor to manage him and
thanked him for all he'd
done," manager Eric Wedge

Please see Cubs, Bl

Please see Sabathia, Bl

Southern High
volleyball camp
RACINE
The
Southern Volleyball Youth
Camp for all girls entering
fifth through eighth grades
in the fall will be held from
9 a.m. to noon, July 14-16 at
Southern High School.
: The cost is $30 per student. A camp T-shirt is
included in the price.
: The camp is meant Illteach passing, setting, hifAP photo
ting skills, and fundamen - Chicago Cub:&gt;' Mike Fontenot and Ryan Dempster celebrate after Fontenot hit a two run home run against the Cincinnati
tals.
Reds during the fourth inning of a baseball game Tuesday in Chicago.
: Contact Tonja .,Hunter at
740-949-3088 for more
Information.

RACINE
The
Southern Basketball program will host a four-man
golf scramble on Aug. 2 at
Riverside Golf Club in
Mason, W.Va.
The scramble will be an
8.:30 a.m. shotgun start and
the format is bring-yourown team. Only one player
with an under-10 handicap
is allowed per team with a
total team handicap of 40 or
above.
The cost will be $60 per
person ($240 per team)
with ·optional cash pot,
skins, and mulligan for purthase. Prizes of first, sec!i'nd, and third place finishe's will be awarded.
· Additionally, prizes · for
longest ·putt, longest drive,
lmd closest to the pin will
pe presented. Beverages
and food will be provided.
~o . enter, please ·contact
coach Jeff Caldwell at 740949-3129.

'

Address
Phone
·
1 Address will not be published 1

I

Druckenmiller's inlere st
was' first reported Monday
by The Wall Street Journal,
A deal could be reached which said a secret &gt;tudy by
within days to sell a majori- Goldman Sachs valued the
ty interest in the Pittsburgh franchise at betw~en $800
Steelers to the chairman of million and $1.2 billion.
a Pittsburgh-based invest- The repon came a day after
ment firm, taking control of Dan Rooney said he and his
the NFL franchise away son, team president Art
from the Rooney family.
Rooney ll, were attempting
The shares would be sold to buy out. his four brothers
to Stan lev Orucke:nmiller. ir: ::m effc;r~ to rcta~n- "sub-chairman· of Duquesne. stantial ownership of the
Capttal management, mak- team."
ing him principal owner of · Each brother owns 16
the team. Two officials percent of the team, adding
familiar with the talks iden- up to 80 percent, with
tified
the
buyer as another Pittsburgh family,
Druckenmiller and said the McGinleys, owning 20
Monday that the deal ·could percent.
be completed by the eild of
Even if the deal with
the week. They declined to Druckenmiller
goes
~e identified because they through, it would still need
were not directly involved approval by 24 of the
in negotiations.
league 's 32 owners. Dan
ASSOCIATED PRESS

EHS volleyball
conditioning

Southern Basketball
Golf Scramble set

In the D~ily Sentinel

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

BY DAVE GOLDBERG

Dempster, Fontenot, Soto lead Cubs to 1-3 win

Hey Moms and Dads, Grandmas and Grandpas and Aunts and Uncles ...

1 Baby's Name

There will be a meeting
for Eastern High " School
football
parents on
Thursday, July 10, at 8 p.m.
on the stadium bleachers.
For questions or more
information, contact head
football coach Kevin Welsh
at 740-678-0608.

Financier makes bid to become principal owner of Steelers

111 Court St. Pomeroy, OH

ComAcrUs
1-74Q-446-2342

ext 33

Fax- 1·740·446·3008
t'·mall- sports@riwdailysentinel.com
SPQfiO.§!DH

Eric Randolph, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342. exl . 33
erandolph@ mydaltysentinel.com

Bryan Waltere, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, ex1. 33
bwalters C mydailytribune.com

Lar,Y Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2341 , ext 33
Ierum@ mydaHyregister.com
(

CHICAGO (AP) - Ryan
Dempster became the ftrst
Cubs pitcher in 31 years to
stan a season 10-0 at home
and Mike Fontenot and
Geovany Soto homered
Tuesday night to lead
Chicago to a 7-3 victory
over the Cincinnati Reds.
· Before the game, the Cl!bS
acquired right-hander Rich
Harden from Oakland in a
six-player trade. Harden ,
e~pected to-pitch this weekend against the Giants at
Wrigley Field, jpins the staff

of the t\L Central leaders
that
already
includes
Dempster
and
Carlos
Zambrano.
All-Star Dempster (10-.3)
is the ftrst Cubs' pitcher to
win his first I 0 decisions at.
home since Rick Reuschel in
1977. He allowed two hits
and a run in seven innings, ·
while throwing 103 pitches
on a muggy night at Wrigley
Field.
- The Cubs capitalized on
·Cincinnati starter Aaron
Harang's wildness. The 6-

foot-7 right-hander walked a
career-high seven and gave
up six runs and five hits in 4
1-3 innings. Hararig had
been scheduled to start last
Saturday but was given a
few extra days to recover
from stiffness in his right
forearm.
Fontenol gave Chicago a
4-l lead in ·lhe founh with
his sixth homer of the season, a drive over the wall in
center.
Soto, the first rookie
catcher to stan for the NL in

Cabrera hits2 homers in.
Tigers' win over Indians
Bv

lARRY LAGE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

. DETROIT - ' Migu~l
Cabrera hit two home runs,
Marcus Thames had one and
Justin Verlander was dominant after a shaky start, lifting the Detroit Tigers to a 92 wm over the Cleveland
Indians on Tuesday night.
The surging Tigers (4544) lead the majors with 21
wins since June 7.
.
The
defending
AL
Central-champion Indians
(37-52) have dropped nine
straight and the latest setback was the . first or the
)lost-CC Sabathia era .
Sabathia, who officially
was sent to Milwaukee on
Monday for three prospects
and a player t(\ b~ named,
rejected Cleveland's $72
million, four-year extension
offer during spring training
and announced he wouldn't
negotiate until after the season.

Jeremy Sowers (0-5) took
Sabathia 's tum in the rotation and was roughed up
after getting through the ftrst
two innings · unscathed.
Sowers gave up seven runs
and 10 hits over 5 2-3
innings .
Cabrera cap' ped the four.
.
·
· run thtrd wtth a two-run
homer . - a pttch after
Thames RBI double-. on a
swtng that looked stmply
effortless.
.
.
Thames htt hts 17th
homer, a .two-run shot that
put DetrOit ahead 6-2 m the
fifth inning.
Cunis Granderson's · second RBI of the gave Detroit
a five-run cushion in the
sixth.
Cabrera's second homer
came on an 0-2 count on a
low-and-outside pitch that
he hit to opposite field over
the nght-field fence m the
PI
dl
Bl
ease see 1n ans.

AP photo

Detroit Tigers' Curtis Granderson hits a single in the third inning to drive in Ryan Raburn in
a baseball game against the Cleveland Indians on Tuesday in Detroit. The Tigers beat the
Indians 9-2.
·

•

'

�-

T neAL-e

PageA6
,

STATE

'""" .

Wednesday, July I), 2008

Inside
&gt;

Sports bricjs, Page B2

...

- ...

The Daily Sentinel
-~

Bl -

•'

--I

~

'
Blue Ja€kets sign Umberger,
Page 82
Cubs trade for Harden, Page 86

RACINE PARADE WRAP UP .

~-------------------,---w

Wednesday, July 9, 2008
LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY - A schedule o1 upcoming high
s,chool Yarsity sporting eyants involving
team s trom Me1gs County

Fr!dav Jyly 11
Legion Bru~•ball
Post 128 at Portsmouth (doublehead-

er), 6 p.m.

'
Saturday Jy!y 12

l'eglon Baseball
Parkersburg at Post 128 (doublehead·
er), 1 p.m

SPORTS BRIEFS

EHS football
·parents meeting
·

·

Beth Sergent/photoa

The Racine Fourth of July Par~ dEl float winners are as follows: Antiq~&gt;Jity Baptist Church, first place, Ladies of the GA~, second place, Syracuse Community Church (pictured), third
·place. No photos were available of the Antiquity Baptist Ch,urch or Ladies of the GAR floats lhough they can be e-matled to. bserg~nt@mydatlysent~nel .com for pubilshtng. Also pte:
tured from the parade are.the Racine Renegades, one of the many ball teams who got a free ride through the streets of Ractn!l dunng the annual parade:
:

Adviser gets 12 years in prison in Ohio fraud case
Bv JoE

MtLICtA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

AKRON
Nineteen
convictions, two acquittals
· and a bevy of changes in
how business is done in the
state's capital.
Those are the results of a
~h·ree- yca.T'1nvCstigatio~ into
an investment scandal at the
Ohio Bureau of Workers'
Compensation.
The sentencing of investment adviser Mark Lay to 12
years in prison on Tuesday
marked the close of the last
pending criminal case related
to the investigation.
"We're not ready to ·dose
the books yet," state Inspector
General Tom Charles said.
"We're happy that this part is
done and the sentence is complete and we can make some
decisions after that."
Lay was responsible for
the bulk of $300 million in
.investment losses at the
workers' camp bureau, costing the state $216 million in
a high-risk hedge fund he
set up in Bermuda.
U.S. District Ju!)ge David
D. Dowd Jr., who sentenced

a

Lay after the second day of
lengthy sentencing hearing,
ordered Lay to be taken into
custody immediately. He was
led away in handcuffs. His
mother shouted, "It's going
to be OK, babe, we're here."
Lay faced 27 years in prison.
Dow&lt;;! also ordered Lay,
d 1id cMxutivc aml fuunJ~r of
the now defunct MDL Capital
Management of Pittsburgh, to
pay nearly $213 million in
restitution and a $590,000 forfeiture . The forfeiture is the
amount of money the jury
determined he earned from his
work on the hedge fund.
Lay, 45, was convicted in
October of repeatedly failing to tell bureau officials
when questioned beginning
in 2004 about the extent of
the risk he was taking.
Lay's ·defense attorneys
argued that he Will! a scapegoat for a legitimate investment loss.that wasn't a crime.
"I do accept full responsibility for all trading involved
in the case with the Bureau
of Workers Compensation.
... I made mistakes no question .about it," Lay told
Dowd before sentencing.

4 Fun 4-H Club
The 4 Fun 4-H Club met
recently at ·the home of
Rachael Church with seven
members and three advisors
attending.
A date for a
fundraiser was set and
papers for tag in were discussed.
Savannah Hawley gave
a report on "Safety on 4Wheelers" and baseball
was enjoyed for recreation.

Clover 4-H Club
The Clover 4-H Club met
on June 28 at the home of
Alexis Carey with four mem-

bers and one advisor in attendance.
Business discussed was
the need . to turn in. alu•
minum cans: visit a hatch~
ery on the lOth or 25th; car
wash at Wai-Man - any
day that is available.
Alexis Carey showed her
pel rabbi-t fo~ ilie· faif. Mr.
Carey showed the group his
.stamp collection.
.
Patrick Carey jed games
and Alexts Carey served
refreshments.
The next meeting will be
on July 27 at I:30 p.m. Alexis
Carey will do a demonstratimi
at the next meeting and possi,.
bly a coin collector will visit.
Mikayla VanMatre,
News Reporter.
·

GCC offering grants
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis Career Cpllege is
·currently offering the Ohio
College Opportunity Grant
(OCOG) for those who ·
qualify . ·
This grant is reserved for ·
Ohio residents who are ftrst .
time students and enroll in
at least a two year degree

program for the 2008-2009
academic school year. T)le
deadline to apply for the
grant is Oct. I , 200g. For
more information on programs and classes available
at Gallipolis Career College
call 446-4.367, 800-2140452, or. visit www.gallipoliscareercollege.com .

Local Stocks

:Local Weather
Wednesday •.• Showers
and thunderstorms likely.
Humid with highs around
80. West winds 5 to· 10 mph.
Chance of rain 70 percent.
: Wednesday night ...Mostly
'cloudy. Scattered showers
:and thunderstorms in the
evening ...Then &lt;\ slight
chance of showers and thunderstorms after midnight.
Lows in the lower 60s. West
winds 5 to 10.mph. Chance of
rain 50 percent.
Thursday ...Mostly sunny.
Highs in ·the mid 80s.
Northwest winds Slo 10 mph.
Thursday night ... Panly

cials set. The state invested
$225 million and lost all but
$9 million. Lay heavily
leveraged, or borrowed
against, the fund, which
caused almost $213 million
of the $216 million loss.
He was convicted of
investment advisory fraud,
two · counts of mail fraud,
and conspiracy to commit
mail and wire fraud.
· "Lay should have stopped
the bleeding," assistant U.S.
Attorney Benita Pearson said.
"He should have stopped the
unnecessary losses."
Dowd took into account
at least 23 factors to determine the sentence, including the loss to Ohio workers
and Lay's lack of a criminal
record. In ordering Lay to
be taken into custody immediately - ~n unusual action
in a white-collar crime case
'.:... Dowd cited trips La&gt;'
rook to New Jersey . to visit
his girlfriend in the months
following his conviction.
An appeal was being filed
immediately along . with a
request to delay the prison
sentence pending the
appeal, Kerger said.

The scandal known as
"Coingate" began with the
2005 revelation that the
bureau was investing $50
million in rare coins through
Republican donor Tom Noe,
who is serving 18 years in
prison for theft and other
crimes on charges that he
slolt: from that invcshnen!.
It included former Gov.
Bob Taft, who pleaded no
contest to ethics charges and
was fined $4,000 for failing to
repon golf outings and other
gifts on his disclosure forms.
In the wake of the scan. dal, Democrats won four of
five statewide offices in the
November 2006 election,
including the governor's
office·.
Lay's defense team pn
Tuesday stressed to the
judge that Lay didn't pocket
any mo.ney. like Noe did. ·
"He didn't benefit from
this," said &lt;~ttorney Richard
Kerger. "Failing to anticipate which way the market
goes is not an offense."
Prosecutors said Lay hid
the extent of the risk he took
with the fund and went way
beyond the limit state offi-

4-H.News Notes

cloudy. Lows in the lower
60s.
Friday ...Mostly sunny.
Highs in the up!,'Cr 80s.'
Friday
mght ...Panly
cloudy in the evening ...Then
clearing. Lows around 60.
Saturday.. .Mostly sunny
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs around
90. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Saturday night and
Sunday •.•Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms .- Lows 'in
the upper 60s. Highs' in the
upper 80s. Chance of rain
. 40 percent.

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 24.50
BBT (NVSE) - 23.93
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 20.12
Pe~alco (NVSE) - 85.83
Premier (NASDAQ) - 10.40
RockWell (NVSE) - 43.22
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 4.32
Royal Dutch Shell ·- 79.05
Seal8 Holding (NASDAQ) - 76.07
Wai·Mart (NVSE) - 59.11
Wendy's (NVSE) - 27.24
WeaBanco (NVSE) - 16.70
Worthington (NVSE)- 18.99
Dally atock reportl are tha 4
p.m. ET cloalng quoteo of tronaactions lor July 8, 2008, provld·
ad by Edward Jones flnonctat
advtaora Isaac Milia In Galllpollf
at (740) 441·9441 and Leelay
Marrero In Point Pleasanl at
(304) 674-;9174. Member SIPC.

AEP (NVSE)- 41.15
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 67.05
Ashland Inc. (NVSE) - 47.11
Big Lots (NVSE) - 32.44
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 29.51
BorgWarner ( NVSE) - 40.43
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

-57.56
Champion (NASDAQ) - 4.25
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 4.70
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 39.08
Collins (NVSE) - 51.27
DuPont (NVSE) -:- 41.89
US Bank (NVSE) - 28.04
Gannett (NVSE) - 19.48
General Electric (NVSE) - 28.06 ·
Harley-Davldoon (NVSEI - .36.59
JP Morgan (NVSE) ,... 35.77
Kroger (NVSE) - 29.76
Limited Brands (NVSE) - 16.95
NQifolk Southam (NVSE) - 62.08

A Spe~ial supplement to highlight babies,
Ages newborn to four years old.

r----------------------,I Simply send your baby's
Age
Parents

.

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to be published
F1;iday, July 25

Your Baby's
Age

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photograph along with the coupon
to the left with your payment of
$10.00, and we'll do the rest.

Parents Names Here

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Mail or deliver to:
Sentinel
BABIES! The Daily Sentinel
Box 729, 111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Deadline for submission,
Friday, July 18

Rooney is. without ques- Art Jr.. Timothy, Patrick and
tion, the most innuential John - want to drop their
and respecled member of 'interest in the Steelers to
that group.
concentrate on their race
During the past 40 years, track and other interests,
Rooney has helped resolve many of which involve the
labor disputes. promoted gambling industry. The
racial diversity wilhin the Rooney family owns rate
league and helped elect tracks in New York and
Paul Tagliabue and Roger Florida and has added
Goodell as commissioners , t:orms of gaming that are
The impending sale is the' inconsistent. with NFL gamIcsnl t ·uf a feud among bhng policy.
members of one of sport\ · Goodeil
has
asked
most renowned families and Tagliabue 10 represent the
has been jimmering about league on Dan Rooney's
two years.
behalf in talks to reach an
The 75-year-old Rooney agreemenr·on a separation
is the oldest of five broth- · of the gambling interests
ers. Their father, Art. and restructured ownership
bought the franchise in if part of the team is sold.
1933 for $2,500.
Rooney said in a stateDan and Art are enshrined ment Monday' that with
in· Pro Football's Hall of Tagliabue's help, he was
Fame.
attempting to put together a
The other four brothers financing plan that would

buy out his broth ers and
their familie s over a peri od
of time.
.
··r have spent my entire
life
devoted
I Q . the
Pittsburgh Steelers and the
National Football League,"
Dan Rooney said in the
statement. "I will do every- ·
thing pos sible to work out a
solution to ensure my
father's JeQacv.. of k•enino
'
0"
the Steelers in the Rooney
family and in Pittsburgh·for
at least another 75 years."
Druckenmiller did not
immediately return a call
placed 10 his office by The
Associated Pre.ss.
Although he lives primarily in New York, he frequently attends Stee lers
games and is said to want to
include Dan and · Art
Rooney ll in his ownersh ip
group.
~

Indians move
on without
CC Sabathia

TUPPERS PLAINS
The Eastern High Sc!wol
volleyball team will start
conditioning for interested
players entering grades 9\2 on Mo11day. J11Jy 14 at 6
p.m. at the EHS gymnasium .
. Players are reminded to
read through all information contained in the sludent-athlete athletic packets and must turn in all
required forms to the 'athletic director before they
will be eligible to participate.

the All-Star game, had a
two-run shot, his 16th of the
season, to chase Harang (3ll) in the fifth and make it
6-1.
Aramis Ramirez legged
out a triple in the second after
right fielder Ken Griffey Jr.
missed a diving attempt at his
sinking liner. Soto's sacrifice
fly made it l-0.
Ryan Theriot's single and
two walks loaded the bases
for the Cubs with no outs in

DETROIT (AP) - The
Cleveland Indian s learned
cc S-abalhia w~o; going re
traded during a flight lui&gt;rne
Sunday. It didn't · really hit
them until they came to the
clubhouse Tuesday without
the popular left-hander.
"It's tough," All-Star center fielder Grady Sizemore
said before Tuesdayes game
against the Tigers. "He was
a big part ol' this team.
"It' s tough to say goodbye
to a good teammate and a
good friend, but that 's part
of baseball."
Sabathia officially was
sent to Milwaukee on
. Monday for outfielder Matt
LaPorta, pitchers Zach
Jackson and Rob Bryson
and a player to be named.
All three new players were
assigned to ieams in the
club's farm system.
The 6-7, 290-pound lefty
left quite an impression on .
his teammates.
"You couldn "t tell a lot
about what' was going on in
his life because he was
always smiling and laughing," third baseman Casey
Blake said. ''He was a good
friend. You just liked bei ng
around him."
Sabathia wenl 19-7 last
season with a 3.2 1 ERA and
became the first Indians
pitcher to win a Cy Young
Award since 1972. but lost
both hi s starts against
Boston in the ALCS. He
rejected · Cleveland's $72
million, four-yeor extension
offer during spring training
and announced he wouldn 'l
negotiate until after th ese;~­
son.
"I told him it was an
honor to manage him and
thanked him for all he'd
done," manager Eric Wedge

Please see Cubs, Bl

Please see Sabathia, Bl

Southern High
volleyball camp
RACINE
The
Southern Volleyball Youth
Camp for all girls entering
fifth through eighth grades
in the fall will be held from
9 a.m. to noon, July 14-16 at
Southern High School.
: The cost is $30 per student. A camp T-shirt is
included in the price.
: The camp is meant Illteach passing, setting, hifAP photo
ting skills, and fundamen - Chicago Cub:&gt;' Mike Fontenot and Ryan Dempster celebrate after Fontenot hit a two run home run against the Cincinnati
tals.
Reds during the fourth inning of a baseball game Tuesday in Chicago.
: Contact Tonja .,Hunter at
740-949-3088 for more
Information.

RACINE
The
Southern Basketball program will host a four-man
golf scramble on Aug. 2 at
Riverside Golf Club in
Mason, W.Va.
The scramble will be an
8.:30 a.m. shotgun start and
the format is bring-yourown team. Only one player
with an under-10 handicap
is allowed per team with a
total team handicap of 40 or
above.
The cost will be $60 per
person ($240 per team)
with ·optional cash pot,
skins, and mulligan for purthase. Prizes of first, sec!i'nd, and third place finishe's will be awarded.
· Additionally, prizes · for
longest ·putt, longest drive,
lmd closest to the pin will
pe presented. Beverages
and food will be provided.
~o . enter, please ·contact
coach Jeff Caldwell at 740949-3129.

'

Address
Phone
·
1 Address will not be published 1

I

Druckenmiller's inlere st
was' first reported Monday
by The Wall Street Journal,
A deal could be reached which said a secret &gt;tudy by
within days to sell a majori- Goldman Sachs valued the
ty interest in the Pittsburgh franchise at betw~en $800
Steelers to the chairman of million and $1.2 billion.
a Pittsburgh-based invest- The repon came a day after
ment firm, taking control of Dan Rooney said he and his
the NFL franchise away son, team president Art
from the Rooney family.
Rooney ll, were attempting
The shares would be sold to buy out. his four brothers
to Stan lev Orucke:nmiller. ir: ::m effc;r~ to rcta~n- "sub-chairman· of Duquesne. stantial ownership of the
Capttal management, mak- team."
ing him principal owner of · Each brother owns 16
the team. Two officials percent of the team, adding
familiar with the talks iden- up to 80 percent, with
tified
the
buyer as another Pittsburgh family,
Druckenmiller and said the McGinleys, owning 20
Monday that the deal ·could percent.
be completed by the eild of
Even if the deal with
the week. They declined to Druckenmiller
goes
~e identified because they through, it would still need
were not directly involved approval by 24 of the
in negotiations.
league 's 32 owners. Dan
ASSOCIATED PRESS

EHS volleyball
conditioning

Southern Basketball
Golf Scramble set

In the D~ily Sentinel

I
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BY DAVE GOLDBERG

Dempster, Fontenot, Soto lead Cubs to 1-3 win

Hey Moms and Dads, Grandmas and Grandpas and Aunts and Uncles ...

1 Baby's Name

There will be a meeting
for Eastern High " School
football
parents on
Thursday, July 10, at 8 p.m.
on the stadium bleachers.
For questions or more
information, contact head
football coach Kevin Welsh
at 740-678-0608.

Financier makes bid to become principal owner of Steelers

111 Court St. Pomeroy, OH

ComAcrUs
1-74Q-446-2342

ext 33

Fax- 1·740·446·3008
t'·mall- sports@riwdailysentinel.com
SPQfiO.§!DH

Eric Randolph, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342. exl . 33
erandolph@ mydaltysentinel.com

Bryan Waltere, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, ex1. 33
bwalters C mydailytribune.com

Lar,Y Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2341 , ext 33
Ierum@ mydaHyregister.com
(

CHICAGO (AP) - Ryan
Dempster became the ftrst
Cubs pitcher in 31 years to
stan a season 10-0 at home
and Mike Fontenot and
Geovany Soto homered
Tuesday night to lead
Chicago to a 7-3 victory
over the Cincinnati Reds.
· Before the game, the Cl!bS
acquired right-hander Rich
Harden from Oakland in a
six-player trade. Harden ,
e~pected to-pitch this weekend against the Giants at
Wrigley Field, jpins the staff

of the t\L Central leaders
that
already
includes
Dempster
and
Carlos
Zambrano.
All-Star Dempster (10-.3)
is the ftrst Cubs' pitcher to
win his first I 0 decisions at.
home since Rick Reuschel in
1977. He allowed two hits
and a run in seven innings, ·
while throwing 103 pitches
on a muggy night at Wrigley
Field.
- The Cubs capitalized on
·Cincinnati starter Aaron
Harang's wildness. The 6-

foot-7 right-hander walked a
career-high seven and gave
up six runs and five hits in 4
1-3 innings. Hararig had
been scheduled to start last
Saturday but was given a
few extra days to recover
from stiffness in his right
forearm.
Fontenol gave Chicago a
4-l lead in ·lhe founh with
his sixth homer of the season, a drive over the wall in
center.
Soto, the first rookie
catcher to stan for the NL in

Cabrera hits2 homers in.
Tigers' win over Indians
Bv

lARRY LAGE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

. DETROIT - ' Migu~l
Cabrera hit two home runs,
Marcus Thames had one and
Justin Verlander was dominant after a shaky start, lifting the Detroit Tigers to a 92 wm over the Cleveland
Indians on Tuesday night.
The surging Tigers (4544) lead the majors with 21
wins since June 7.
.
The
defending
AL
Central-champion Indians
(37-52) have dropped nine
straight and the latest setback was the . first or the
)lost-CC Sabathia era .
Sabathia, who officially
was sent to Milwaukee on
Monday for three prospects
and a player t(\ b~ named,
rejected Cleveland's $72
million, four-year extension
offer during spring training
and announced he wouldn't
negotiate until after the season.

Jeremy Sowers (0-5) took
Sabathia 's tum in the rotation and was roughed up
after getting through the ftrst
two innings · unscathed.
Sowers gave up seven runs
and 10 hits over 5 2-3
innings .
Cabrera cap' ped the four.
.
·
· run thtrd wtth a two-run
homer . - a pttch after
Thames RBI double-. on a
swtng that looked stmply
effortless.
.
.
Thames htt hts 17th
homer, a .two-run shot that
put DetrOit ahead 6-2 m the
fifth inning.
Cunis Granderson's · second RBI of the gave Detroit
a five-run cushion in the
sixth.
Cabrera's second homer
came on an 0-2 count on a
low-and-outside pitch that
he hit to opposite field over
the nght-field fence m the
PI
dl
Bl
ease see 1n ans.

AP photo

Detroit Tigers' Curtis Granderson hits a single in the third inning to drive in Ryan Raburn in
a baseball game against the Cleveland Indians on Tuesday in Detroit. The Tigers beat the
Indians 9-2.
·

•

'

�•
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel
SPORTS
~-

B..RIUS
.

EHS fall sports
athlet,ic packets
TUPPERS PLAINS
Athletic packets for the
2008 fall $ports ~easo n are
current ly
available
at
Eastern
High
School.
Packets can be picked up in
the oftice from 8:30 a.m.
until 3:30 p.m. Tuesday
through Friday.
All student-athletes in 7th
th roug h 12t h grade who
wish to -pacticipate in cheerleading, football, golf, cross
country. or volleyball mu st
complete the packet with a
parent in orde r to be e ligi ble
to play a sport in the fall.
· Additionally. all student'athletcs must have a physical
completed and turned in irt
order to participate.
For . nw re .information ,
contirct Pam Douthitt · at
Eastern Hig h School.

BBYFL sign-ups

Saturdays in July .
The Bi g Behd Youth
Football League will be
holding football and cheerleading sign-ups every
Saturday in Jul y for any area
youth from Ohio or West

Softball tourney
set for Aug. 8
CHESTE R -· A Days of
Glory
Co-Ed
Softball
Tourn ament has been set for
Aug. 8 through I0 at the
Chester Ball Fields with a ll
proceeds to benefit the
'Chester Ball 'Assoc iati on
and the Angela · Eason
Memorial fields.
The c h a~ge !s. $.! 00 3 tean1
plus two 12-inch 44 core
balls. This is slow pitch, five
male and five fem ale on the
field at all times, men bat
opposite hands, ages 21 and
older, and slow pitch bats
only with double elimination, one hour games.
Space is ·limited to 12
teams. For more information
call Angie Edwards at 740416-6956
or
Mandie
Grueser at 740-416-0900.
On Aug. 9 there will be a

hog

n.~,~~l

Uinncr ;u St1 pc(

per'.on. a htime. run derby al
$5 per person with 50 percent

or the

procccu~ gui llg

for first. second and third
place

pri;e~.

and a\ ariL·ty of

door prizes.

OU baseball camps
AT HENS - The Oh1o
University baseh;rll program
will be hosting two prospect
can1ps thi s summc'r ;~nd f.rll
for 2009. 20 10. and 211 11
high sc hool graduates. The
first C(t111p wi ll be held
Augtlst 23. and the second is
schedtiled fur October .:1. ,
The tamps will give student-athletes the oppurtunily
to show.:asc their sk ill s in
fro nt of coll ege machcs from
;til divisions and prolcssional
~L:ouh

from Ohi o and it:-. ..,u r~

rounding areas. OU bas~ba ll
coaches wi II also be on hand .
Each camp wil l begrn with
reg ist ra11on at 8 a.m . al i:lob
Wren Stadium and conclude
at appmx i'mately 6:30 p.m.
There will be ~ lrmi t of 72
student-athletes per camp. so
pre-regi-;tratiuil

~~

l:llcour-

aged to ensure a part icipc~nt's
place. Cust for the camp is
$205 per player.
To
pre-re gis ter,
vist t
htt p:/I oh iohob.: at s.estv..:o m/c
amps/ohio-camps .htmL Fur
more in fonnirtion. con1act
Brian Hoskinson 'rt 740-593 IJ41 or hoskinsh0' ohio.cd u

Columbus signs center Umberger to 4-year deal
COLUMBUS (AP)
The Columbus Blue Jackets
have signed center R.J .
Umberger to a four-year
contract. Terms of the deal
were not d1 sc losed when the
\ deal
was
announced
~oilday.
·
The
Blue
Jackets
acquired Umberger and a
draft
pick
from
the
Philadelphi a Flyers on June
20 in exchange for two draft
choices.
Twenty-six- ye a·r- o Id
Umberger is a former Ohio
State All -American who
played three seasons with
the Buckeyes. from 20002003.

In three years and 228
games in ttie NHL. he has
scored 49 goals and accrued
67 assists for 116 points, all
with Philadelphia.
Columbus has also signed
defenseman ·
An.dre.i
Plekhanov to ·a two-year
contract and . defense man
Clay Wilson and left wing
John· Vigilante to one-year
contracts.
General manage r Scott
Howson announced the
moves Tuesday. The terms
of the deals were not disclosed.
Tw e nty - one-ye ar,o Id
Plekhanov s pent most · of
last season with the club's

'

·€ nbs
from Page Bl
the thii·d hut all Chicago
in:11WgL·d w:l'., a :-.acrifi ce fly
from Ramrrc; ..
C'inrinn;t tl had a l;lin
inni 11· hrc-will!.! in the f oLirth
when Dempster had trouble
thro11 in~ strikes. He walked
Grifr'cv " .1nd Adam Dunn ,
hu,t &gt;~.herr Je ll . Kepp inger
hloopcd a ball into righ t

Sabathia

from PageBl

American Hoc key League
affili·a te in Syracuse, where
he notched nine goaLs and
16 assists.
'
Wilson, acquired in a
trade with Ana heim lasl

se1enlh and Ivan Rodriguez
also hrt a solo homer in the
inn1ng to gi ve Detroit a 9-2
lead.

~u~:!

!4 '.'/ ~J L; rnuch more ~.;uppon:

and . one assis t in seven
games wi th Colu mbu s la st
seaso n. The 25-vca r-old
joined the tea m 0;1 e merge ncy recall from Syra&lt;:usc
in Mai·ch.
Twe nt y- th ree-yea r-o Id
Vigilante has spent the pasl
two season s wi th the
Nashville Predator~· AHL
affiliate in Milwaukee,
where he had 23 goa ls and
50 assists.

t11an Verlandcr needed.
Afler Casey Blake hit a
double and Jhonny Peralta
follo wed wi th a two-rui1
homa ·in the first innin g,
Verlamler didn ' t give up
another hi t and struck out
seven beton; ex iting with a
hu ~e
lead uft er · seve n
lllmngs.
The 2006 AL Rookie of
the Year is 4-0 .in his last six
stars - giving up two v r

N.o.Me.J.ttb.e.r. l;).t!&gt;d qne

fewer earned runs in each
outing - after starting the
year 2-9.
Notes: Cleveland moved
RHP Scott Elarton from the
restricted li st to the 15-day
DL for a non-baseba ll medical condition a nd is
ex pected to be replaced by
· RHP Juan Rin co n from
Triple -A
Buffalo
on
Wed nesday . ... RHP Fausto,
Carmona
(hip)
threw
Tue sday but the Indian s
won't bring him back at
least until after the All-Star
Game. He's heen on the DL
since May 24 ... Detroit I B
Carlos Guillen was not at
· the ballpark so . tha t he
could be with his wife and
thei'r daughter, who was
born Monday. "What did ·
he· name her ?· Leyland?"

twice"""'off Bob Howrx...,
Pincn- ~itt~r JavJCr Valentm
had an RBI double, the
Red s' only ex tra base hit of
the night.
Noles: Cubs LF Alfon so
Soriano, still out with a broken hand . sa.rd he'll wait
until &lt;rfter the All-Star break
to start playing again ....
Reds OF Norris Hopper
ligament
unde rwen t
replace11]ent s urgery on his
right ell5ow Tuesday and is
ex pected to be ready for
)pring trai ning.

S~ibuthia

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740-446-2342
www .mydailytribune.com
----~~

1996 SPORT Jdr, 139K m l, S12W
. 56W5!5-55S5

-

SPORT

39K, white, new

~ .

. Wl!&gt;lk

55!

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lv~5

i995 COMPA
') ••

""""'""'

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$~09{ilob0 . 555-555· 5555
77K, t'XC c:ond,

• .,AN'! • • • • • • • • • •

1Lw------_.t
n

Vegetabtos ..................................... 580

Houses for Rent ....... :..................... :............ 410
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
Insurance ................. ,, ....... :.....:..... .......... ~·-· 130
\.awn I Garden Equlpment .... ... ..........; ...... 660
~lvestock........................................... ........... 630
;. ' Lost and Found ........................................... 060

•

Lots &amp; Acraage ............................................ 350
Miscellaneous .... .. ..................................... ,,, 170
Mlacellaneous Merchandlae .... .-..................540
Mobile Home Aepatr ....... .... .........................860

. AC, 'fdt

Mobile Homes for Rant ............................... 420
Mobile Homes for Sale................................320
Money to Loan ........................: .................... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheeters ....... ,.. ,............... 740
... Mualcallnstrumanta .................... ............... 570
Peraonala ..... :.......................... ..................... oos
':... Pets for Sale ........................................ ,....... 560
' • Plumbing &amp; Huatlng .................................... 820
Professional Servlcea ................................. Z30
Radio, TV &amp; CB Aepatr ............................... t60
· · Real Estate Wanted .... ......................... ........ 360

Schoolalnstructlon .....................................150

Seed , Plant &amp;
~

SEDAN

-

11195 . .$EDM

, Trucka for Sale ......................... ~ .................. !15

·

seDAN

rh.tt o.ftft e\41

\

Vans For Sala .................. ............................. 730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted 10 Buy- Farm Supplles .................. 620

- ··. Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Rent ................... .......' .................. 470
Yard Sale· Galltpolts ....................................072
Yard Sale· Pomotoy/Middto .. , ..................... 074
Yard Sale·PI. Pleasant.. ........ ...................... 076

ATo lrm~

Ita

Fertilizer .............................. 650
Situations Won tad .......... - -..........., ............ 120
Spor&lt;o tor Rent ..........................- ............... ceo
Sporting ·Gooclo .................................. ,........ 520
SUV'o for Sate .............................................. 720

'. •• Upholstery ................................................... 870

·

..

(

~;:=====~~;======~~~=====:
YARD SALE·

1~: Pu:o\SA.f\11'

t

Yard Sale Thurs &amp; Fri 2429

Lw--oiiiioiiiiiiio-_.1

,oso

..

© 2008 by NEA , tnc .

·
www.com!cs
.com

Men , womens clothing &amp;

Happy Ads ............. ........................... : ..........
Hay Bo Graln ....... ...................................... , .... 640
Help Wanted ...............-................................. 110
Hom'e lmprovements .......... ......................... 810
Homea'lor Sale .......................... ............... ... 310
Household Goodo ....................................... StO

AC, *i

~

. GALLti'UIJS

CONVER1

·lA-

7~,

YARD SAtJ:·

?,.. Allov

ied. $9411
• htlM fOr
· lOOK WI)
.. new vttli

Horn e
Matntenance
Carpenlry
Plumbing, Bathrooms . No
Jotl 10 Small. Call 339 -3442

r

Furnished Rooms ........................................450
General Haullng ....................................... .... 850
•· Glvaaway ......................................................040

L ~m

Supe r~ o r

Porter
Rd . H9usehold
goods, car, riding mower,
furmlure, electronics.

• For Sale ................................................. ....... S85

-

90

1 Playstation &amp; games.

: · FOr Sale or Trade .. ....................................... 590

COI'(VER'I

"

1110

HEI.PWANTFD

lw------_.t

Equipment tor Aent ................. .. .................. 480

'?9. 1403(

15

Fn &amp; Sat July 11 &amp; 12 at 554
Jay Dr Spring Valley. 1nfant,
adult clothing , curtains, bed
lin ens &amp; large va r~ e t y ol

July 11 &amp; 12 from8 -3at 718 Lincoln Ave. New &amp; Used

sso

Bo

Look1ng for part!lme worK ·
2nd JOb. m1htary. cona~ru c ­
fiOn, secur1ty, food han ·
dlingl coo ktng. landscaping
pnor expenence and have
wor~ed co nsis tently fo• the
past 12 years InJury free in
martttme Industry 304-675·
2017

0

St. RorJney
V1Uage ~
Lost
Old
dog, small Graham
II (lasl Street)
Longaberger,
Terrier/Beagle m1x on OJ Home lntenor, mens b1g and
WhileRdandStRt 160. Ca ll tall sizes. womens clothes
446-9618
furn•lure,
housewares,

Business and Buildlngs ........ ....... ........;..... 340

• Fruita

ur

A-It" typ-e::.
HOHitl R'eiJ&lt;lir ::.
and Improvements Call R1c11
740-992·29 10 01 740-27&lt;1
2336

machine. porch

July 11 &amp; 12 8 am

.... Excavatlng ....................................... ............ 830
Farm !qulpment ..... ................. ................. ... 610
Farms for Rent ............................................. 430
f&amp;r1'!'1S for Sale ..,. .............................. ....... :.... 330
For Lease ................ ,.............. ..... ................. 490

The Daily Sentinel
740·992-2155

COMf'A(.. • •

FOUNil

yard
sale
Multi-family
Saturday July 12 at 8 AM at
th e
Cheernastics/SOGA
Buildmg behind Ponderosa
(The olrJ skatmg ·nnk) The
proceeds will benefit the

~lteg;m,:;s:.,_~~---.,
WANI'ED

ru BUY

Absolute Top Doll ar - sil·
verlgo ld
coins,
any
10KI14KI16K goiQ Jewelry,

11110

ave you ee n In yo u
have a ~ood phone

vo ice?
This 1"&gt; th f' PERFFCT job
fur you'
l&lt;Hn S8.501hr f T

+WL'ekly Bonus Potenlial
r "·' lnhound/CustnmPr

dental gold, pre 1935 US
currency, . proof/mi nt se ts,
diamo nds. MTS Coin Shop,
15 1 2nd Avenue, Ga llipolis.
44 6·2842
- - " ,- - - - Junk cars with or without
titles 740-388-0884

lh:trWM·rEn

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg Pay S20/h r or
$57Kiyr, 1ncludes
Federal Benetits OT. ·
Place d by adSourca . not
offered w/ USPS who hires.
1·866·403·2582

.Regional Dump Drivers
R&amp;J Tru cking is seekmg
qualified COL-A drivers to
operate semi-dumps tor
regional routes We feaiUre
excellent home lime. health
and
Qental
insuranca,
401(k), vacalton, bOnus pay
and safety awards. Qualified

appllcams must be over 23
-,;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
yrs , have a mm1mum of 1
r.l110
Local Law Off1ce has open- year of com merical driving'
H.f.ljJ \VANl}])
ing for a legal secretary. experie nce &amp; clean MVR .
·-------

Experienced
preferred .
Please send resume to CLA
An EKcellent way to earn 12 clo The Point Pleasanl
money. The New Avon
Register 200 Main Sl PI
Call Marilyn 304-882-2645. Pleasant, WV 25550

Prior e)(penence w1lh sem1 ~umps a~d roll-otis IS helpful. Contact Kent a1 600·
462·9365 or fi ll out apphcation at www.rjlrucking .com

----~--- - - - - - - - - EOE ·

Southern Oh10 GymnastiCS AVON! All Areas! To Buy or LPN pe&amp;!red Long Q1stance -RT
~--A-du-II_V_r'de
_o_&amp;_Bo
~
o'·
Aca,demy
Girls's Sell
Sh1rley Spea rs, 304"
Qrjves Hectic Enwonments
GymnasticsTeam
675-1429.
G
Store need Midni,ght Clerk
B. H1qh Gas prjcesot You
full or part t1me 304-937Sifver Slreaks 4-H bake BENNIGAN'S now hlring QQwn1 Work
4900
sa te"·ard sale Sat .July 12
Locally
m a Family
5
''
grill cooks 304-67 -5227
--------,
at 338 Airl1ne Rd . Vinton .
Atmosphere Where You Can I'"'
Oh. Bam -?
Feel

j014

YAKI&gt; SALE·

PoMt:RO\'1M IDOLE
2416 Lee Circle Rustic H1lls.
Syracuse, Oh, Fri. 8-4, Sat
8-12, newl used clothes,
tools, antiques. collect•b1es
4 fam1ly, Sat July 12th , Old
Crew Rd . beh1nd Me1gs
Fatrgrounds. 8:30-?? brand
name teen g1rls, men 's, plus
&amp; infan t clothing, Home
Interior, l ongabe rger. electronics. refrigerator, much
more.
B1g yard sa le- Bashan Ad ,
Cheste r side 1 mtfe from
248, July 17th &amp;. 1·.:::
81::_
h __
Co rner ol 2nd &amp; L1ncoln ,
Mldd. 10th ,11 ,12 Girls 10
thru Jr +M ens name brand
clothing. Lots of misc.

·
Garage Seia Ra."or sh'"e

Satu rday Only,July 12,
'wlpple Aoad ,Five Pis. Area

35

0

~~ecu~voeme~;~~tor v~~:~~~~

Good Atlout Se rving Others.
Agency serv•ng th rea couri· Applications Are Now Bemg
ties of Southern Ohio. 40 hr. Accepted For A Part·T1me,
Possible Full-Time LPN 2
a week position with some
Evenings, 2 Midnights .
overtime
needed.
Compensatory lime provid· _Enjoy A , Ca reer Working
ed.
Benefits-Health Wilh The ElrJerly In A Large.
Insurance , Paid Holidays, Personally Owned , Licensed
Home
Plea sa 111
Two weeks vacai!On after
Environment, Canng Stall
one year, three weeks after Paid Vacation. Dlscourrls,
live years Starlmg salary Parttal
PS1d
Insurance
$ 26 ·000 10 $ 28 ·000· Must Available, Discoumed Rent
have College Degree in
Human Serv•ces or m•nor in on Efficiency Apartment
Available .
lnteresled
human services field wilh a
minor In administration. At Applicants May Apply Daily
M-Sun., 10·4 .
Ra vens
least two years el(perience woOd. WV 20164 (Across
working with the public in a Ritchie Srictge, Turn Righi ,
servtce pos1110n
Send Very. Last' Business on
resume and three raterences to Search Comm11tee. Rig!IH7 North OS) Resume
MdVSe
Faxed To (304) 273P.O Bo)( 454 , Gallipolis.
'"' 1
9230 Reference Requ ired

=-1

FED ERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$17 89-$28.27/hr , now hiring For application and free
governement job info. call
American Assoc. of Labor 1913·599·8226, 24/hrs. emp.
serv.

iiiC::JnfoCision
Take mbou nd cuslomer
service ca lls tor ·
Fortune 100 Compames
Including:

Time Warner Cable
• Up to $8.50/hour
• PreVIous e)(perienca
with cus1omer service a
plus
• Paid Trainmg Onsite
• Health Beneftts
Call to schedule an
Interview

1·888-IMC·PAYU
Ext. 2311

Truck

Dnver

We will do your cleamng
and errands lor you . 10
Save you Precious 11me!
Free esUmates.
Reasona ble pnces Qua lity
of Servece IS EXCEPTION·
All Call M1chele al (740)446-3881 Leave Message
Will do pressure wash1ng
work to your home. No
house to big I small Call for
more mto. 740-794· 1340

11\\\(t\1
10

RUSIN·X~

01,~1Kt1 N'IT

needed.

Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Div1sion of
Financial
lnslltution' s
ot
Consumer
Office
Aflairs BEFORE you tell·
nance your home or
obta.n a loan. BEWARE
of reques1s for any latge
advance payments of
fees or 1nsurance . Call the
0111ce
of
Consum er
Aflairs toll free at ! -866·
278·0003 to learn 11 the
mortgage
brbker
or
lender
is
properly
licensed . (Th1s IS a publiC
service announcement
from lhe Ohio Va lley
Publ1shmg Company)

sou th ol Tuppers ~lains on
left, Thursday 1011'1
SaleBrowns
Yard
Ta:ocldermy, Pomeroy Pike
ll.• r elle•l••· July 11 · 12.9·
a
3, lo1s ol mise, rain cancels

'-

1480
Jackson
Pike,
Galltpolis or phone 4411393 Competitive Wages,
mtleage reimbursement and
·
utlter btrrltlfilS it~luthJllr
'"
healtl'1 insurqnce.

needed Experience helpful, {Careers Close To Home)
but not required .
Bnng Call Today! 74Q-446·4367.
resume
In person
to
1· 800-214-0452
2922 Jackson Ave . Point
www 111 1hpo!IK!IreerWtevudu
PISaSa111, WV No P1
1 •.me hccrodlted \!urrber Accred•l I'll!
Counc1l tor lndeponaent ColleOBS
calls please!
and School• t274B

Brand new Neve r lived 1n 2008 3 bedroom 2 til!ll ~e1
2br. 2 balh w/ Nhirlpool tubs. t•onal honi e S27'J l1l'l n1enll •
large LA on 3 acrss mi l 740-385· 76 71
$80 000 740· 446-702 9
92 Bayv•ew -{
·, ., 1
Mobile Home , •6xK•· _! •
2ba. unm.!rplnnu')g .J~·e, ~­
wheels.
porch
r el'lt.' ~­
s t ep~. Oul bU1kJ1ny5 llh,lull
ss or.oJD4·674--16A9

en

All real estate advertising
Brand new 3bed 2tiltl1 on
1n this new spaper is
+ · half ac w 1n PI Pleasant
subje ct to the Fede ra l
OWNER FINAN C:E: AVAil
Fai r Housing Act of 1968
. ABLE 740·446 -3 S70
which makes i1111egal to
advertis e " any
Ferteral Funds JUSI teleased
preference, limitation or
tor Land Owners No clos
discrimination based on
ing cost and ZERO DOWN '
race, color, reli giOn, sex
Will
do
Lan d
lsmlllal statue or national
Improvements Bnnk ruptl ,
or1g in, or any inl enllon to
&amp; Bad Credit OK 2 3 4 anr
make any suc:h
5 bedrooms av&lt;:ulaolc 740
preferen ce, llmitallon or
' dlscnminol lon .·
446 3364
New 3 Bedroom hO mes 1ro11
$214 36 per month lncl\Jder
many upgrades d e il~cry t,
se1-up (7401 385 -2434

This newspaper wil l not
knowingly accept
adverti sements lor rea l
estate which IS In
viol&amp;tlon of the IBw. Our
re 8ders Bre hBreby
Informed 1hat ail
dwelhngs advertised in
I his newspaper are

350

Lors &amp;
A('Rb l t;E

2br 1n Pt Plcnsant $465
month. Home sl ead Re a lt ~·
14x70 2 bedroom 2 bath 1n Broker Nancy 304-675-4024
Vinton aren . mus1 be moved or 304-675·0799
Good Cond . $4500. 740- - - - - - - - 853-1143 or 446- 1648
2BR 1n Iown , Galltpohs . NC'
pets $500/rent + deposit.
16X80 3, Bodroo m 2 Bath .Calf44 1-0110or 591 ·5 t 74
V1nyl S1d1ng Shmgle Root
$230 per monlh. 740- 385- 3br house ·imh mce ya rd and
pond on Bulav1ll c P1'ke. 740
9948
339-3186
1974 2br. 2 bath la1T11nent - - - - - - - hardwood floors em $5000. 4br, 2 b~ . HUDr only S3F
Call 740-2 56·6382
month! G1ea1 Loca11on! (5°o
down .. 20y rs
8"-oAPR,.
1986 Holley Park 14x70
28R, ~ balh S6500 ObO 245- ltSIIngs 800·6 20-4946 e~
5230
T46 1

·•· -

.~~

1997 · 14~ 70 MH . 3br. 2ba Newly rem odeled hOuse
$11 ,500 negoti able. 740- 3br. Galha County S500/rent
S3501depos ll 740-388-906(
245·5466

SF.R\'10};
TURNED DOWN ON

SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win !
1·886·582 ·3345

HOME.~
·--f;,;Oo;R;oS••;;I[Ii
,E;.._.r

WV BOhr Underground
Miner Class , starling sooo . _s_ag_•_ _ _ _ _ __
Whit-Co-Training 304-3722br, WID,hooKup. 8x10 oul
8346
building. 2 lots 1n Clifton
$39,500 between 10am ·
I~1'RU.......,. ,.,
9pm 304· 773·91 92

Galllpolll Career Collage

fog _ __ _ __

home. 34286 New Cfe\•1 2006 Rednta11 1·1•65 ]n ,1·
Ad. Pcmcro)•. lg pole b:,!l!d r:e·.-, cond;tlc.n l•n loO-I •k d 1, ·
1ng &amp; oul bu1ldmg on 6 ac1es 1n Apple Grove WV 30.J
w'pond. (B1G )66B-07S8
576-2000

I'Rony;K&gt;NAt

lg 2 112 car gar . tJ,usl Sell
304·675-6395 leave mes ·

-P-a-rt--tim
_e
_ d_e_
n l-al_a_5_5;-,r-a-nt

Fleetwood 2 be-a 2 l &gt;.1 1 1~
1999 Fo11u ne 3 Dec&lt;: l'att"
Daylime Jas-oono e·.'emnc
245 9:?1 3

Hmn-:-;

FT and PT MediCs . EMT.s en&lt;::e. MVR requtred. Call Or.. new Carpet. updated Kit
and Dnver's for more infor- 304-675-7434
&amp; Ba, Full bsmt. scr. p01ch.

:::~t/i~:ai~a~: O~ep~l~~;

bat ~

2. 2005 16xRU C:IAylml2 bN"
2 bath. 200J 16.-. : i•

. FOil S .\I,E

County EMS is Henderson. Wv based COL accepting app/tcations for License &amp; 2 years 9)(pen- 2br, 1ba Home on N Park

0

;!, f(.::

.

Lw------_.1

Mason

1.,.-toililiililii~liil
"II"...

4 tJedmo111

llmtt·.....

S \II.

'MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
evalt'abte on an equal
RENT, 1031 Georges Cree~
op portumty bases.
Lea se RT 2 good loca11on. J....;.:.:;.."":~'"':'"':...l Rd,441-1111
Owner has other 1n1ems1s 111-~1\I.S
ca ll 304·549·5696 Anytime Foreclosure 4br. 2ba only
1
. .- -.........- . . $29.900' Pnced lo Sel1 For
L1SI1 ngs 800-620- 4946 ex ,.,, . . . - - - - - - ,
• NOT ICF•
10
T402
HOl'."iE"'i
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHFOR
RE:\T
lNG CO re co mmend s
Meigs Cou nty.Syracus e For
that you do bus1ness w1th
S&lt;1l e or ren1 3 bed.2 b3111 .
199/mo l 3 bed. 2 bath Ba ni- ..,
people you know . and laundry
room ,del ac hed
Repo! (5 °o down 20 years.
NOT to send mo ney
garage near--pooL$700/ M
8°o AP R) for listings 801
1
1
tl1rough the ma11unlil you
plus depostt NO PETS "
620-4946 6 ) R027
ha ve awestlgatf:ld lhe Please cal l 740-949 ·2.5 13
oHering
:;:::;:;:==~ PRICE REDUCED $6 ~. 900 1br $37 5/monlh . 3h ·
2712 Lmcoln Ave 3br, tba . 5500/month
1n S~r acusc
with delached
garag10. . depos1t f.lud App No Pt! ts·
1\'IO'It:\'
mot1va1ed Sel let. 304 -6 75- (30&lt;1 )675-5 332 weeke nds
'---·
·ruiiioiLii&lt;)ii,\ii~-_.t
6757 . 304-610· 13 13 -01 740-591 -0265
ASSISI 2 Sale 304-755-2980 - - - -- - -2 bedroom hous e tor renl
320 ~lorm.J:
no pelS , (7401992· 5858

~.infoweare· ~1~50;.,._ScH_•OOI-•S--.

2 m1les

FIIR

Brend New Restau rant 1or

Ul \1 I S l \II·

ViSit us 31 :
1'1Hp :f~obl.infocllion .com

E.O.E.

Huge Yard Sale, Ram or
matl()f) cal/675-6134
Shine! Saturday, July 12
ONLY, 9am-4pm. A.ll sizes of
---------women's name brand cloth·
PfT' Sacuriry Officers, mu~t
purses, shoe• b~ks. -----~--- be able to pass drug test &amp;
1· ,~.
'll'
..,
""
~
S d
lamps, household goods OhiO Valley Home Health, background chec ·
en
Follow signs and balloons at Inc. hirin g STNA. CNA. resume to
Tuppers Plains to Rice Run Home HeaiiM A1des &amp; gonnagetem;"'om or fa)( to
9645
740
Road
Personal Care Ai~es. Full,
·«t·
The Grate res1dence

1\ lomu:

S.11.1·.

Do

Kerr July 11 &amp; 12

YARI&gt;SAtE

Ho,n:..;
Hll&lt;

Pot Crema tions. Call 740 - 3br. 2ba. Se CIIDr al on .G
446-3745
acre, Ros eberry Rd Pt.
Pleasant wl wa sher. dtye1.
180
WINTEtl
diShwas~ · er&amp;
rehg e'at o•
To
S6s,ooo (304)57 5- 6(128

Tortoise Shell Calico inside :
i l e:::m:::s:.:9::::•·.:S:!::p~----

70

310
Mtsu:u.~~l·: ous

cat lo good home litter Huge 5 fam1ly sale on 850 al
traine d 304-674 -5338
the cross roads ot 850 an d

ElectrlcaiJRefrlgaration ..................,,., ........ ,840

SEDAN

mc;unt' c:).

t oving 3 legged ins1de cat,
5Y,.s old , to good home,
preferably an elderly cou ple,
I•Mer trained , 304·674-5338

Chltd/Eiderty care ..... .................................. t ~o

CONVER1

170

7/ 11 &amp; 7/ 12 at31330 Painter
A ppro~ . 6-8 wks Old, male' Ridge Ad. Vmton . Tools ,
kttl en, grey tiger. litter box household items. computer
desk TV hutch. W/D etc'
trained . 256-6870

Business Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes .......... ................. 790
Camping Equipment .............................·... ... 780
Cards of Thanks ............ :.... .... ,.................... 010

304-675-1333
www.mydailyregister.com www.mydailysentinel.com _M~--ss,.
;,.),

cise
w1ll be med. size good
guard dogs 304 -395-5204
swing.

Real

Now you con have borders and graphics
~
added t~your classified ads
i_l~
.m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for large

POLICIES: Oh io Valley Publlahlr~g re1erva1 the r1 ght to edil, reject, or cancel any ad at any ti me. Errors must be reponed on the l1ul day ol
Tribune-Scmtinei·Regieter will be reaponalble lor no more than the coat of the llp&amp;ce occ upied by the error and on ly I hi! llrst-1Mert1on We
an~ loa• or ax pen~• that ruulta lrom the pu bl ication or omission of an adven iaement. Correction Will be made in the lirst available ed1tion • Bo~ numbc1 ads
are always con fidentiAL • CUrrent rate card applies . .'All re al u taH! adverlitemenll ar~ subfect to the Fr:dera l Fair Houting Act ol 1968. • Th is newspaper
accepts only help wante d ada meeting EOE standa rd I. Wa will not knowingly accept an~ advart1eing in ~iolation of the law . Will not be ,e,pons•ble fo r anv
error• in an nd taken over the p hone.

6 wks old Hemz 57 puppies, lroniCs, diving board, e~er-

Business Opportunlty .......... .. ..................... 210

wett rr

· •ct.

~oint ~lea~ant l\egt~ter

GIVEAWAY

lAJST ANU

Esta1
dvertisements ar
ubject to the Federa
air Housing Act o
1968.

be prepaid'

7 families , July 12th from 93 Yellow house 3/4 miles oul
Krine r Rd . Housewares. 4
wheeler, btkes.
elec-

CLASSIFIED INDEX

·.( cond,

SEOAN.SII

~~t ~alhpoli~ iJBatlp lribune

r

Otf1ce

ppllo•.
All

must

4 fam1ly July 11 &amp; 12 at 654
Debbie Dr
9 30
?
REWARD $500 For Informa- Childrens clothe s housetion leading to th e arrest &amp; hold 11ems &amp; much more
conv tcl1on of lh e thi eving
sc um that broke Into ou r 5 fam1Ues. July 9, 10. 11
home on BulaviiiP. P1kP. .omr1 Mov1es. toys. kntck: kn;;r:kl' .
slole guns &amp; Jewelry. Please pictures. baby IIams. com .call G.slll.3 Counl y Sher1trs _pu ler. e1c . 46 BurneM Rd .

taw.

co""

REACH OVER
17,000 HOUSEHOLDS!

VISA

kitncarlyle@comcast.net

m1sc items. July 12 at 299
4 family sa le July 10 &amp; 11 Roush Lan e, Cheshire.
from 9am-5pm at 1522 Sta1e
Oh10. Ra1n or Shtne
the
Reu le 141 Lane residence
Multl -lamily sale Sat July
12
at
earn
at
Ihe
Cheernaslics/SOGA
Building behind Ponderosa
4x4 's For Sale ............ .................... .......... .... 725 ·
(The old ska!lng rink ). The
... Announcement ........................... .. ............... 03D
proceeds wtll benefi t the
• Antiques ................................................. .. .... 530
Southern OhiO Gymnastics
· .• Aparttnents lor Rent ...... ............................. 440
Academy Girls Gymnastics
• Auction and Flea Market ............................. OSO
• Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .............. ............ 760
Team
Auto Aepslr ................ :................................ . 770
Mulll·family sale. Jul y 1o· &amp;
Autos for Sale .............................................. 710
1 4
Boatt &amp; Motors for Sale ................ ............. 750
11 Slale Roule 2 , before
. Buttdlng Supplles ....... ... .......... ........... ... .. ....
Rac11le.

,;, ~lk.'$9
·;oo
'Il l, N2tl01
. ~ DLRS
CONVB

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

car

AN~OUN!;EMfNI&gt;

adq

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

YARU SAt.l·
GAu.nnLL'i

accept any adver
lsement In violatlo

COUPE'

'&lt;P-.eo tl.

\ vv-r1

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
All Display: 12 Noon' 2
Monday-Friday for Insertion
Business Day!ji Prior To
In Next Day's Psper
PubliCation
Sunday In - Column: 1:00 p . m. Sunday Display : 1:00 p .m .
For Sundays Paper
. Thursday for Sundays Paper

Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Jndude A Price 1 Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
1 Ads Should Run 7 Days

1\\01\11 \I I \I'

&gt;We will nat knowing

.; r. 47K. :

*

:ONVERT!

.

&gt;Current rate

'•

C O ~PE

pu&lt;:_~
CONVER 1

~t$$SO(I _.

.... ·.

COUPI

&lt;Otr) l

110 CON V•.
1\l,llnl ir

~IO$A, ~~-'

...

&gt;This
newspape
ccepta · only hoi
anted ads meetin

'''&gt; 9 Vinlf

1, 33k . S&lt;i

her'. to&gt;·.

~~

wilt
tA
esponsible for
ore than the cost o
he space occupiS'd
y the error and on!
he -first Insertion. W

r:- oup~

41K :,.

55!&gt;; '
CONVER f

of publir,A.t [nn

Tribune-Sentinel

*

COUPE

, well "

B

Must

lhe1eglster

WlS71. ..
DLB!

v in•

tc cond, "
CONVER t
· I wlblk.

8t any time.

eported on the firs

•:;OUPE
rr r.Uhrf

tOi rJ
COUPE

Gallia

t~nA\

Display Ads

1

successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

Box number ads ar
lways confidentifll.

'* OLRJ.
:ouPe .

Wqrd Ads

• All

who would start Saturday
again st visiting Tampa Bay.

60lS11 .

Meigs County, OH

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

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

'

.

·.

.I

675..5234

Offee 11o~oS&gt;'

' OUPE .
' lOT Ont)

,,'

-·

~-

i\~gtstcr

Sentinel

'

Detroit's manager joked., ..
Tigers
OF
Magglio
Ordonez said his pulled
obl iq ue is improving and
he ex pects to be OK to play
when eli gible to be activated from the DL nex t week .
.. . .Le vland said Sunday's
15-inliing win at Seattl e
was one of the most boring
games he's ever seen "I'd
rat her watch the Perrysburg
water tower rust ," said
Leyland. referring to his
hometown in Ohio . "But it
turned out great. I even had
a beer after the ga me and I
don ' t drink beer." ... The
game started 5 minutes
· Jate . giving the grounds
crew time to get the 'field
ready after it was soaked
by a steady rain in the
hours.

~

-·---

----~--

Websites :
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregisler com

(740) 992-2156

,

KN~

~rthune

start

hlll the manager wasn ' t sure

«)3

'

Else Can.!

but is 6-8 wit!l a 3.83 ERA
and leads the majors iii
strikeouts ( 123). Cleveland
scored two runs or fewer in
II of his 18 starts. He's fifth
on the club's all' time strike- .
ou ts ( 1.265 J li st.
Wedge used left-hander
Jeremy Sowers (0-4) in
Sabathia 's place . Tuesday

REACH 3 COUNTIE

er
.We Cove
"elgs, Gallla,
And Mason
. counties Like
NoOne

possibi lit y now that the
Indians appear to be sellers
as the Jul y 3 1 non-waiver
trade dead line nears, said
he's ignoring the talk.
"The Indi ans are paying
my salary ri ght now," he
said . "I just have to come to
the field &lt;rnd prepare myself
I he way I always do.''
·

- ..

CLASSIF .I ED

. .

. '"'· l!h r ·
:IJCOUP i

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

\rrrtbunf ~ Sen1inel - 31\e

;,:;,:;,..:;,:;,;,.. ::.::.o::.

:oupe ·

www.mydailysentinel.com

------

fieid .(Qr what appcarc&lt;J to
be a single. Dunn hesitated
and was forced out on nght
fielder Kosuke Fukuclomc's
throw to second. Dempster
then ~alked two more to
force in a run bcl'orc Haran !I
struc k out.
'
The Reds also had two on
in the second heforc Paul
Bako lined into an inn·ingending double play.
Cincinnati. which did n't
have a hit from the third to
the eighth innings. got three
in the ninth when It scored

th e league's worst road
team ( 15-29) and arc anALworst .246 at the plate.
Inj uries· have played a
from Page B1
part · in the. disap pointing
first half: Starter Ja ke
... wd of hi -. ]a . ., l con versati on
with Sah;rthi a. " He's got a Wes tbrook was lost for the
l'l1&lt;tlll' t'
tn go uver and season with an elbow injury
im p;ic·t another.. ballclub and and designated hitter Travis
another clubhouse al)d Hafner (shoulde r), reliever
Faustc C~rmon~t (hj.p) un-d
tlldf :'I ~&lt;Jult fo 1 O;_t-..eban:·
Evcr'i with I he sl ar's future catcher Victor Martinez
irr doubt , Cleveland sti ll (elbow) ha ve mi ssed long
expected to &lt;:ontend for the stretches.
"They
haven· t
had
AL Cent ral ti tle and a penMartinez.
Carmona
and
nalll a season after winning
9.6 g; un c~ and losing a they've been hit by the
...even-game champion ship injury bug as much as anyseries to lhc c\·crllual wo rld body," said Detroit manager
Jim Levland, whose team
cha mpi un Ked Sox.
lnslcad. the dub arrived weni through its share of
in Detroit last in the di vi- earl y-seaso n disap point s inn . 1-+ uames beh ind ments. "That's tough."
Ch icago . The Indians are
Blake. a rumored trade

Indians

· Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Wednesday, July 9, 2008 ·

www.mydailysentinel.com

Virginia in tere:oJtcJ iu parli\:·
ipating.
-~.....,
Sign- ups wi!l be held at
th e Veterans Memorial
Stadium in Middleport from
' I0 a.m. unt il I p.m.
For questions or more
information, contact Sarah
at 740-698-4054, Regina at
740-698-2804. Dave at 3,04674-5178, Misty atJ04-7735230, or Rick at 740-3670438.

!

-------~ 1 ~6Do7~~r ~~~~::~ :;~

620-4946 ex R0 19
3 br. house tor 5ale m
Middleport on land conlract,
$3,000 down plus $400 per
month, (740)416-1354

Comics to
Stock Quotes
Find all the
news that
matters

f
, I(;

,,. '

to you.
'

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'
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@,1 111polts D•ltll' [nuuu r
l@otlll Plr,lsanll\rgtstrr
The Daily Seminel
$Junba P[tmr!l $lrntwrl

'

�•
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel
SPORTS
~-

B..RIUS
.

EHS fall sports
athlet,ic packets
TUPPERS PLAINS
Athletic packets for the
2008 fall $ports ~easo n are
current ly
available
at
Eastern
High
School.
Packets can be picked up in
the oftice from 8:30 a.m.
until 3:30 p.m. Tuesday
through Friday.
All student-athletes in 7th
th roug h 12t h grade who
wish to -pacticipate in cheerleading, football, golf, cross
country. or volleyball mu st
complete the packet with a
parent in orde r to be e ligi ble
to play a sport in the fall.
· Additionally. all student'athletcs must have a physical
completed and turned in irt
order to participate.
For . nw re .information ,
contirct Pam Douthitt · at
Eastern Hig h School.

BBYFL sign-ups

Saturdays in July .
The Bi g Behd Youth
Football League will be
holding football and cheerleading sign-ups every
Saturday in Jul y for any area
youth from Ohio or West

Softball tourney
set for Aug. 8
CHESTE R -· A Days of
Glory
Co-Ed
Softball
Tourn ament has been set for
Aug. 8 through I0 at the
Chester Ball Fields with a ll
proceeds to benefit the
'Chester Ball 'Assoc iati on
and the Angela · Eason
Memorial fields.
The c h a~ge !s. $.! 00 3 tean1
plus two 12-inch 44 core
balls. This is slow pitch, five
male and five fem ale on the
field at all times, men bat
opposite hands, ages 21 and
older, and slow pitch bats
only with double elimination, one hour games.
Space is ·limited to 12
teams. For more information
call Angie Edwards at 740416-6956
or
Mandie
Grueser at 740-416-0900.
On Aug. 9 there will be a

hog

n.~,~~l

Uinncr ;u St1 pc(

per'.on. a htime. run derby al
$5 per person with 50 percent

or the

procccu~ gui llg

for first. second and third
place

pri;e~.

and a\ ariL·ty of

door prizes.

OU baseball camps
AT HENS - The Oh1o
University baseh;rll program
will be hosting two prospect
can1ps thi s summc'r ;~nd f.rll
for 2009. 20 10. and 211 11
high sc hool graduates. The
first C(t111p wi ll be held
Augtlst 23. and the second is
schedtiled fur October .:1. ,
The tamps will give student-athletes the oppurtunily
to show.:asc their sk ill s in
fro nt of coll ege machcs from
;til divisions and prolcssional
~L:ouh

from Ohi o and it:-. ..,u r~

rounding areas. OU bas~ba ll
coaches wi II also be on hand .
Each camp wil l begrn with
reg ist ra11on at 8 a.m . al i:lob
Wren Stadium and conclude
at appmx i'mately 6:30 p.m.
There will be ~ lrmi t of 72
student-athletes per camp. so
pre-regi-;tratiuil

~~

l:llcour-

aged to ensure a part icipc~nt's
place. Cust for the camp is
$205 per player.
To
pre-re gis ter,
vist t
htt p:/I oh iohob.: at s.estv..:o m/c
amps/ohio-camps .htmL Fur
more in fonnirtion. con1act
Brian Hoskinson 'rt 740-593 IJ41 or hoskinsh0' ohio.cd u

Columbus signs center Umberger to 4-year deal
COLUMBUS (AP)
The Columbus Blue Jackets
have signed center R.J .
Umberger to a four-year
contract. Terms of the deal
were not d1 sc losed when the
\ deal
was
announced
~oilday.
·
The
Blue
Jackets
acquired Umberger and a
draft
pick
from
the
Philadelphi a Flyers on June
20 in exchange for two draft
choices.
Twenty-six- ye a·r- o Id
Umberger is a former Ohio
State All -American who
played three seasons with
the Buckeyes. from 20002003.

In three years and 228
games in ttie NHL. he has
scored 49 goals and accrued
67 assists for 116 points, all
with Philadelphia.
Columbus has also signed
defenseman ·
An.dre.i
Plekhanov to ·a two-year
contract and . defense man
Clay Wilson and left wing
John· Vigilante to one-year
contracts.
General manage r Scott
Howson announced the
moves Tuesday. The terms
of the deals were not disclosed.
Tw e nty - one-ye ar,o Id
Plekhanov s pent most · of
last season with the club's

'

·€ nbs
from Page Bl
the thii·d hut all Chicago
in:11WgL·d w:l'., a :-.acrifi ce fly
from Ramrrc; ..
C'inrinn;t tl had a l;lin
inni 11· hrc-will!.! in the f oLirth
when Dempster had trouble
thro11 in~ strikes. He walked
Grifr'cv " .1nd Adam Dunn ,
hu,t &gt;~.herr Je ll . Kepp inger
hloopcd a ball into righ t

Sabathia

from PageBl

American Hoc key League
affili·a te in Syracuse, where
he notched nine goaLs and
16 assists.
'
Wilson, acquired in a
trade with Ana heim lasl

se1enlh and Ivan Rodriguez
also hrt a solo homer in the
inn1ng to gi ve Detroit a 9-2
lead.

~u~:!

!4 '.'/ ~J L; rnuch more ~.;uppon:

and . one assis t in seven
games wi th Colu mbu s la st
seaso n. The 25-vca r-old
joined the tea m 0;1 e merge ncy recall from Syra&lt;:usc
in Mai·ch.
Twe nt y- th ree-yea r-o Id
Vigilante has spent the pasl
two season s wi th the
Nashville Predator~· AHL
affiliate in Milwaukee,
where he had 23 goa ls and
50 assists.

t11an Verlandcr needed.
Afler Casey Blake hit a
double and Jhonny Peralta
follo wed wi th a two-rui1
homa ·in the first innin g,
Verlamler didn ' t give up
another hi t and struck out
seven beton; ex iting with a
hu ~e
lead uft er · seve n
lllmngs.
The 2006 AL Rookie of
the Year is 4-0 .in his last six
stars - giving up two v r

N.o.Me.J.ttb.e.r. l;).t!&gt;d qne

fewer earned runs in each
outing - after starting the
year 2-9.
Notes: Cleveland moved
RHP Scott Elarton from the
restricted li st to the 15-day
DL for a non-baseba ll medical condition a nd is
ex pected to be replaced by
· RHP Juan Rin co n from
Triple -A
Buffalo
on
Wed nesday . ... RHP Fausto,
Carmona
(hip)
threw
Tue sday but the Indian s
won't bring him back at
least until after the All-Star
Game. He's heen on the DL
since May 24 ... Detroit I B
Carlos Guillen was not at
· the ballpark so . tha t he
could be with his wife and
thei'r daughter, who was
born Monday. "What did ·
he· name her ?· Leyland?"

twice"""'off Bob Howrx...,
Pincn- ~itt~r JavJCr Valentm
had an RBI double, the
Red s' only ex tra base hit of
the night.
Noles: Cubs LF Alfon so
Soriano, still out with a broken hand . sa.rd he'll wait
until &lt;rfter the All-Star break
to start playing again ....
Reds OF Norris Hopper
ligament
unde rwen t
replace11]ent s urgery on his
right ell5ow Tuesday and is
ex pected to be ready for
)pring trai ning.

S~ibuthia

h-ad a

s ~uw

,.

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classifi ed@~~:i!lvtribunecom 'REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
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Publistling reserves

the right to edit,
reject or cancel any

ad

..

l"•

Errors
A~

hall not be liable to
ny loss or expens
hat results from th
ubllcation or omls
ion of an advertise
ent. Corrections will
e made in the firs
vallable edition.

P ~.

co ~

740-446-2342
www .mydailytribune.com
----~~

1996 SPORT Jdr, 139K m l, S12W
. 56W5!5-55S5

-

SPORT

39K, white, new

~ .

. Wl!&gt;lk

55!

...

lv~5

i995 COMPA
') ••

""""'""'

&lt;'-

:.I,,,, ... i
$~09{ilob0 . 555-555· 5555
77K, t'XC c:ond,

• .,AN'! • • • • • • • • • •

1Lw------_.t
n

Vegetabtos ..................................... 580

Houses for Rent ....... :..................... :............ 410
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
Insurance ................. ,, ....... :.....:..... .......... ~·-· 130
\.awn I Garden Equlpment .... ... ..........; ...... 660
~lvestock........................................... ........... 630
;. ' Lost and Found ........................................... 060

•

Lots &amp; Acraage ............................................ 350
Miscellaneous .... .. ..................................... ,,, 170
Mlacellaneous Merchandlae .... .-..................540
Mobile Home Aepatr ....... .... .........................860

. AC, 'fdt

Mobile Homes for Rant ............................... 420
Mobile Homes for Sale................................320
Money to Loan ........................: .................... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheeters ....... ,.. ,............... 740
... Mualcallnstrumanta .................... ............... 570
Peraonala ..... :.......................... ..................... oos
':... Pets for Sale ........................................ ,....... 560
' • Plumbing &amp; Huatlng .................................... 820
Professional Servlcea ................................. Z30
Radio, TV &amp; CB Aepatr ............................... t60
· · Real Estate Wanted .... ......................... ........ 360

Schoolalnstructlon .....................................150

Seed , Plant &amp;
~

SEDAN

-

11195 . .$EDM

, Trucka for Sale ......................... ~ .................. !15

·

seDAN

rh.tt o.ftft e\41

\

Vans For Sala .................. ............................. 730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted 10 Buy- Farm Supplles .................. 620

- ··. Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Rent ................... .......' .................. 470
Yard Sale· Galltpolts ....................................072
Yard Sale· Pomotoy/Middto .. , ..................... 074
Yard Sale·PI. Pleasant.. ........ ...................... 076

ATo lrm~

Ita

Fertilizer .............................. 650
Situations Won tad .......... - -..........., ............ 120
Spor&lt;o tor Rent ..........................- ............... ceo
Sporting ·Gooclo .................................. ,........ 520
SUV'o for Sate .............................................. 720

'. •• Upholstery ................................................... 870

·

..

(

~;:=====~~;======~~~=====:
YARD SALE·

1~: Pu:o\SA.f\11'

t

Yard Sale Thurs &amp; Fri 2429

Lw--oiiiioiiiiiiio-_.1

,oso

..

© 2008 by NEA , tnc .

·
www.com!cs
.com

Men , womens clothing &amp;

Happy Ads ............. ........................... : ..........
Hay Bo Graln ....... ...................................... , .... 640
Help Wanted ...............-................................. 110
Hom'e lmprovements .......... ......................... 810
Homea'lor Sale .......................... ............... ... 310
Household Goodo ....................................... StO

AC, *i

~

. GALLti'UIJS

CONVER1

·lA-

7~,

YARD SAtJ:·

?,.. Allov

ied. $9411
• htlM fOr
· lOOK WI)
.. new vttli

Horn e
Matntenance
Carpenlry
Plumbing, Bathrooms . No
Jotl 10 Small. Call 339 -3442

r

Furnished Rooms ........................................450
General Haullng ....................................... .... 850
•· Glvaaway ......................................................040

L ~m

Supe r~ o r

Porter
Rd . H9usehold
goods, car, riding mower,
furmlure, electronics.

• For Sale ................................................. ....... S85

-

90

1 Playstation &amp; games.

: · FOr Sale or Trade .. ....................................... 590

COI'(VER'I

"

1110

HEI.PWANTFD

lw------_.t

Equipment tor Aent ................. .. .................. 480

'?9. 1403(

15

Fn &amp; Sat July 11 &amp; 12 at 554
Jay Dr Spring Valley. 1nfant,
adult clothing , curtains, bed
lin ens &amp; large va r~ e t y ol

July 11 &amp; 12 from8 -3at 718 Lincoln Ave. New &amp; Used

sso

Bo

Look1ng for part!lme worK ·
2nd JOb. m1htary. cona~ru c ­
fiOn, secur1ty, food han ·
dlingl coo ktng. landscaping
pnor expenence and have
wor~ed co nsis tently fo• the
past 12 years InJury free in
martttme Industry 304-675·
2017

0

St. RorJney
V1Uage ~
Lost
Old
dog, small Graham
II (lasl Street)
Longaberger,
Terrier/Beagle m1x on OJ Home lntenor, mens b1g and
WhileRdandStRt 160. Ca ll tall sizes. womens clothes
446-9618
furn•lure,
housewares,

Business and Buildlngs ........ ....... ........;..... 340

• Fruita

ur

A-It" typ-e::.
HOHitl R'eiJ&lt;lir ::.
and Improvements Call R1c11
740-992·29 10 01 740-27&lt;1
2336

machine. porch

July 11 &amp; 12 8 am

.... Excavatlng ....................................... ............ 830
Farm !qulpment ..... ................. ................. ... 610
Farms for Rent ............................................. 430
f&amp;r1'!'1S for Sale ..,. .............................. ....... :.... 330
For Lease ................ ,.............. ..... ................. 490

The Daily Sentinel
740·992-2155

COMf'A(.. • •

FOUNil

yard
sale
Multi-family
Saturday July 12 at 8 AM at
th e
Cheernastics/SOGA
Buildmg behind Ponderosa
(The olrJ skatmg ·nnk) The
proceeds will benefit the

~lteg;m,:;s:.,_~~---.,
WANI'ED

ru BUY

Absolute Top Doll ar - sil·
verlgo ld
coins,
any
10KI14KI16K goiQ Jewelry,

11110

ave you ee n In yo u
have a ~ood phone

vo ice?
This 1"&gt; th f' PERFFCT job
fur you'
l&lt;Hn S8.501hr f T

+WL'ekly Bonus Potenlial
r "·' lnhound/CustnmPr

dental gold, pre 1935 US
currency, . proof/mi nt se ts,
diamo nds. MTS Coin Shop,
15 1 2nd Avenue, Ga llipolis.
44 6·2842
- - " ,- - - - Junk cars with or without
titles 740-388-0884

lh:trWM·rEn

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg Pay S20/h r or
$57Kiyr, 1ncludes
Federal Benetits OT. ·
Place d by adSourca . not
offered w/ USPS who hires.
1·866·403·2582

.Regional Dump Drivers
R&amp;J Tru cking is seekmg
qualified COL-A drivers to
operate semi-dumps tor
regional routes We feaiUre
excellent home lime. health
and
Qental
insuranca,
401(k), vacalton, bOnus pay
and safety awards. Qualified

appllcams must be over 23
-,;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
yrs , have a mm1mum of 1
r.l110
Local Law Off1ce has open- year of com merical driving'
H.f.ljJ \VANl}])
ing for a legal secretary. experie nce &amp; clean MVR .
·-------

Experienced
preferred .
Please send resume to CLA
An EKcellent way to earn 12 clo The Point Pleasanl
money. The New Avon
Register 200 Main Sl PI
Call Marilyn 304-882-2645. Pleasant, WV 25550

Prior e)(penence w1lh sem1 ~umps a~d roll-otis IS helpful. Contact Kent a1 600·
462·9365 or fi ll out apphcation at www.rjlrucking .com

----~--- - - - - - - - - EOE ·

Southern Oh10 GymnastiCS AVON! All Areas! To Buy or LPN pe&amp;!red Long Q1stance -RT
~--A-du-II_V_r'de
_o_&amp;_Bo
~
o'·
Aca,demy
Girls's Sell
Sh1rley Spea rs, 304"
Qrjves Hectic Enwonments
GymnasticsTeam
675-1429.
G
Store need Midni,ght Clerk
B. H1qh Gas prjcesot You
full or part t1me 304-937Sifver Slreaks 4-H bake BENNIGAN'S now hlring QQwn1 Work
4900
sa te"·ard sale Sat .July 12
Locally
m a Family
5
''
grill cooks 304-67 -5227
--------,
at 338 Airl1ne Rd . Vinton .
Atmosphere Where You Can I'"'
Oh. Bam -?
Feel

j014

YAKI&gt; SALE·

PoMt:RO\'1M IDOLE
2416 Lee Circle Rustic H1lls.
Syracuse, Oh, Fri. 8-4, Sat
8-12, newl used clothes,
tools, antiques. collect•b1es
4 fam1ly, Sat July 12th , Old
Crew Rd . beh1nd Me1gs
Fatrgrounds. 8:30-?? brand
name teen g1rls, men 's, plus
&amp; infan t clothing, Home
Interior, l ongabe rger. electronics. refrigerator, much
more.
B1g yard sa le- Bashan Ad ,
Cheste r side 1 mtfe from
248, July 17th &amp;. 1·.:::
81::_
h __
Co rner ol 2nd &amp; L1ncoln ,
Mldd. 10th ,11 ,12 Girls 10
thru Jr +M ens name brand
clothing. Lots of misc.

·
Garage Seia Ra."or sh'"e

Satu rday Only,July 12,
'wlpple Aoad ,Five Pis. Area

35

0

~~ecu~voeme~;~~tor v~~:~~~~

Good Atlout Se rving Others.
Agency serv•ng th rea couri· Applications Are Now Bemg
ties of Southern Ohio. 40 hr. Accepted For A Part·T1me,
Possible Full-Time LPN 2
a week position with some
Evenings, 2 Midnights .
overtime
needed.
Compensatory lime provid· _Enjoy A , Ca reer Working
ed.
Benefits-Health Wilh The ElrJerly In A Large.
Insurance , Paid Holidays, Personally Owned , Licensed
Home
Plea sa 111
Two weeks vacai!On after
Environment, Canng Stall
one year, three weeks after Paid Vacation. Dlscourrls,
live years Starlmg salary Parttal
PS1d
Insurance
$ 26 ·000 10 $ 28 ·000· Must Available, Discoumed Rent
have College Degree in
Human Serv•ces or m•nor in on Efficiency Apartment
Available .
lnteresled
human services field wilh a
minor In administration. At Applicants May Apply Daily
M-Sun., 10·4 .
Ra vens
least two years el(perience woOd. WV 20164 (Across
working with the public in a Ritchie Srictge, Turn Righi ,
servtce pos1110n
Send Very. Last' Business on
resume and three raterences to Search Comm11tee. Rig!IH7 North OS) Resume
MdVSe
Faxed To (304) 273P.O Bo)( 454 , Gallipolis.
'"' 1
9230 Reference Requ ired

=-1

FED ERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$17 89-$28.27/hr , now hiring For application and free
governement job info. call
American Assoc. of Labor 1913·599·8226, 24/hrs. emp.
serv.

iiiC::JnfoCision
Take mbou nd cuslomer
service ca lls tor ·
Fortune 100 Compames
Including:

Time Warner Cable
• Up to $8.50/hour
• PreVIous e)(perienca
with cus1omer service a
plus
• Paid Trainmg Onsite
• Health Beneftts
Call to schedule an
Interview

1·888-IMC·PAYU
Ext. 2311

Truck

Dnver

We will do your cleamng
and errands lor you . 10
Save you Precious 11me!
Free esUmates.
Reasona ble pnces Qua lity
of Servece IS EXCEPTION·
All Call M1chele al (740)446-3881 Leave Message
Will do pressure wash1ng
work to your home. No
house to big I small Call for
more mto. 740-794· 1340

11\\\(t\1
10

RUSIN·X~

01,~1Kt1 N'IT

needed.

Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Div1sion of
Financial
lnslltution' s
ot
Consumer
Office
Aflairs BEFORE you tell·
nance your home or
obta.n a loan. BEWARE
of reques1s for any latge
advance payments of
fees or 1nsurance . Call the
0111ce
of
Consum er
Aflairs toll free at ! -866·
278·0003 to learn 11 the
mortgage
brbker
or
lender
is
properly
licensed . (Th1s IS a publiC
service announcement
from lhe Ohio Va lley
Publ1shmg Company)

sou th ol Tuppers ~lains on
left, Thursday 1011'1
SaleBrowns
Yard
Ta:ocldermy, Pomeroy Pike
ll.• r elle•l••· July 11 · 12.9·
a
3, lo1s ol mise, rain cancels

'-

1480
Jackson
Pike,
Galltpolis or phone 4411393 Competitive Wages,
mtleage reimbursement and
·
utlter btrrltlfilS it~luthJllr
'"
healtl'1 insurqnce.

needed Experience helpful, {Careers Close To Home)
but not required .
Bnng Call Today! 74Q-446·4367.
resume
In person
to
1· 800-214-0452
2922 Jackson Ave . Point
www 111 1hpo!IK!IreerWtevudu
PISaSa111, WV No P1
1 •.me hccrodlted \!urrber Accred•l I'll!
Counc1l tor lndeponaent ColleOBS
calls please!
and School• t274B

Brand new Neve r lived 1n 2008 3 bedroom 2 til!ll ~e1
2br. 2 balh w/ Nhirlpool tubs. t•onal honi e S27'J l1l'l n1enll •
large LA on 3 acrss mi l 740-385· 76 71
$80 000 740· 446-702 9
92 Bayv•ew -{
·, ., 1
Mobile Home , •6xK•· _! •
2ba. unm.!rplnnu')g .J~·e, ~­
wheels.
porch
r el'lt.' ~­
s t ep~. Oul bU1kJ1ny5 llh,lull
ss or.oJD4·674--16A9

en

All real estate advertising
Brand new 3bed 2tiltl1 on
1n this new spaper is
+ · half ac w 1n PI Pleasant
subje ct to the Fede ra l
OWNER FINAN C:E: AVAil
Fai r Housing Act of 1968
. ABLE 740·446 -3 S70
which makes i1111egal to
advertis e " any
Ferteral Funds JUSI teleased
preference, limitation or
tor Land Owners No clos
discrimination based on
ing cost and ZERO DOWN '
race, color, reli giOn, sex
Will
do
Lan d
lsmlllal statue or national
Improvements Bnnk ruptl ,
or1g in, or any inl enllon to
&amp; Bad Credit OK 2 3 4 anr
make any suc:h
5 bedrooms av&lt;:ulaolc 740
preferen ce, llmitallon or
' dlscnminol lon .·
446 3364
New 3 Bedroom hO mes 1ro11
$214 36 per month lncl\Jder
many upgrades d e il~cry t,
se1-up (7401 385 -2434

This newspaper wil l not
knowingly accept
adverti sements lor rea l
estate which IS In
viol&amp;tlon of the IBw. Our
re 8ders Bre hBreby
Informed 1hat ail
dwelhngs advertised in
I his newspaper are

350

Lors &amp;
A('Rb l t;E

2br 1n Pt Plcnsant $465
month. Home sl ead Re a lt ~·
14x70 2 bedroom 2 bath 1n Broker Nancy 304-675-4024
Vinton aren . mus1 be moved or 304-675·0799
Good Cond . $4500. 740- - - - - - - - 853-1143 or 446- 1648
2BR 1n Iown , Galltpohs . NC'
pets $500/rent + deposit.
16X80 3, Bodroo m 2 Bath .Calf44 1-0110or 591 ·5 t 74
V1nyl S1d1ng Shmgle Root
$230 per monlh. 740- 385- 3br house ·imh mce ya rd and
pond on Bulav1ll c P1'ke. 740
9948
339-3186
1974 2br. 2 bath la1T11nent - - - - - - - hardwood floors em $5000. 4br, 2 b~ . HUDr only S3F
Call 740-2 56·6382
month! G1ea1 Loca11on! (5°o
down .. 20y rs
8"-oAPR,.
1986 Holley Park 14x70
28R, ~ balh S6500 ObO 245- ltSIIngs 800·6 20-4946 e~
5230
T46 1

·•· -

.~~

1997 · 14~ 70 MH . 3br. 2ba Newly rem odeled hOuse
$11 ,500 negoti able. 740- 3br. Galha County S500/rent
S3501depos ll 740-388-906(
245·5466

SF.R\'10};
TURNED DOWN ON

SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win !
1·886·582 ·3345

HOME.~
·--f;,;Oo;R;oS••;;I[Ii
,E;.._.r

WV BOhr Underground
Miner Class , starling sooo . _s_ag_•_ _ _ _ _ __
Whit-Co-Training 304-3722br, WID,hooKup. 8x10 oul
8346
building. 2 lots 1n Clifton
$39,500 between 10am ·
I~1'RU.......,. ,.,
9pm 304· 773·91 92

Galllpolll Career Collage

fog _ __ _ __

home. 34286 New Cfe\•1 2006 Rednta11 1·1•65 ]n ,1·
Ad. Pcmcro)•. lg pole b:,!l!d r:e·.-, cond;tlc.n l•n loO-I •k d 1, ·
1ng &amp; oul bu1ldmg on 6 ac1es 1n Apple Grove WV 30.J
w'pond. (B1G )66B-07S8
576-2000

I'Rony;K&gt;NAt

lg 2 112 car gar . tJ,usl Sell
304·675-6395 leave mes ·

-P-a-rt--tim
_e
_ d_e_
n l-al_a_5_5;-,r-a-nt

Fleetwood 2 be-a 2 l &gt;.1 1 1~
1999 Fo11u ne 3 Dec&lt;: l'att"
Daylime Jas-oono e·.'emnc
245 9:?1 3

Hmn-:-;

FT and PT MediCs . EMT.s en&lt;::e. MVR requtred. Call Or.. new Carpet. updated Kit
and Dnver's for more infor- 304-675-7434
&amp; Ba, Full bsmt. scr. p01ch.

:::~t/i~:ai~a~: O~ep~l~~;

bat ~

2. 2005 16xRU C:IAylml2 bN"
2 bath. 200J 16.-. : i•

. FOil S .\I,E

County EMS is Henderson. Wv based COL accepting app/tcations for License &amp; 2 years 9)(pen- 2br, 1ba Home on N Park

0

;!, f(.::

.

Lw------_.1

Mason

1.,.-toililiililii~liil
"II"...

4 tJedmo111

llmtt·.....

S \II.

'MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
evalt'abte on an equal
RENT, 1031 Georges Cree~
op portumty bases.
Lea se RT 2 good loca11on. J....;.:.:;.."":~'"':'"':...l Rd,441-1111
Owner has other 1n1ems1s 111-~1\I.S
ca ll 304·549·5696 Anytime Foreclosure 4br. 2ba only
1
. .- -.........- . . $29.900' Pnced lo Sel1 For
L1SI1 ngs 800-620- 4946 ex ,.,, . . . - - - - - - ,
• NOT ICF•
10
T402
HOl'."iE"'i
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHFOR
RE:\T
lNG CO re co mmend s
Meigs Cou nty.Syracus e For
that you do bus1ness w1th
S&lt;1l e or ren1 3 bed.2 b3111 .
199/mo l 3 bed. 2 bath Ba ni- ..,
people you know . and laundry
room ,del ac hed
Repo! (5 °o down 20 years.
NOT to send mo ney
garage near--pooL$700/ M
8°o AP R) for listings 801
1
1
tl1rough the ma11unlil you
plus depostt NO PETS "
620-4946 6 ) R027
ha ve awestlgatf:ld lhe Please cal l 740-949 ·2.5 13
oHering
:;:::;:;:==~ PRICE REDUCED $6 ~. 900 1br $37 5/monlh . 3h ·
2712 Lmcoln Ave 3br, tba . 5500/month
1n S~r acusc
with delached
garag10. . depos1t f.lud App No Pt! ts·
1\'IO'It:\'
mot1va1ed Sel let. 304 -6 75- (30&lt;1 )675-5 332 weeke nds
'---·
·ruiiioiLii&lt;)ii,\ii~-_.t
6757 . 304-610· 13 13 -01 740-591 -0265
ASSISI 2 Sale 304-755-2980 - - - -- - -2 bedroom hous e tor renl
320 ~lorm.J:
no pelS , (7401992· 5858

~.infoweare· ~1~50;.,._ScH_•OOI-•S--.

2 m1les

FIIR

Brend New Restau rant 1or

Ul \1 I S l \II·

ViSit us 31 :
1'1Hp :f~obl.infocllion .com

E.O.E.

Huge Yard Sale, Ram or
matl()f) cal/675-6134
Shine! Saturday, July 12
ONLY, 9am-4pm. A.ll sizes of
---------women's name brand cloth·
PfT' Sacuriry Officers, mu~t
purses, shoe• b~ks. -----~--- be able to pass drug test &amp;
1· ,~.
'll'
..,
""
~
S d
lamps, household goods OhiO Valley Home Health, background chec ·
en
Follow signs and balloons at Inc. hirin g STNA. CNA. resume to
Tuppers Plains to Rice Run Home HeaiiM A1des &amp; gonnagetem;"'om or fa)( to
9645
740
Road
Personal Care Ai~es. Full,
·«t·
The Grate res1dence

1\ lomu:

S.11.1·.

Do

Kerr July 11 &amp; 12

YARI&gt;SAtE

Ho,n:..;
Hll&lt;

Pot Crema tions. Call 740 - 3br. 2ba. Se CIIDr al on .G
446-3745
acre, Ros eberry Rd Pt.
Pleasant wl wa sher. dtye1.
180
WINTEtl
diShwas~ · er&amp;
rehg e'at o•
To
S6s,ooo (304)57 5- 6(128

Tortoise Shell Calico inside :
i l e:::m:::s:.:9::::•·.:S:!::p~----

70

310
Mtsu:u.~~l·: ous

cat lo good home litter Huge 5 fam1ly sale on 850 al
traine d 304-674 -5338
the cross roads ot 850 an d

ElectrlcaiJRefrlgaration ..................,,., ........ ,840

SEDAN

mc;unt' c:).

t oving 3 legged ins1de cat,
5Y,.s old , to good home,
preferably an elderly cou ple,
I•Mer trained , 304·674-5338

Chltd/Eiderty care ..... .................................. t ~o

CONVER1

170

7/ 11 &amp; 7/ 12 at31330 Painter
A ppro~ . 6-8 wks Old, male' Ridge Ad. Vmton . Tools ,
kttl en, grey tiger. litter box household items. computer
desk TV hutch. W/D etc'
trained . 256-6870

Business Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes .......... ................. 790
Camping Equipment .............................·... ... 780
Cards of Thanks ............ :.... .... ,.................... 010

304-675-1333
www.mydailyregister.com www.mydailysentinel.com _M~--ss,.
;,.),

cise
w1ll be med. size good
guard dogs 304 -395-5204
swing.

Real

Now you con have borders and graphics
~
added t~your classified ads
i_l~
.m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for large

POLICIES: Oh io Valley Publlahlr~g re1erva1 the r1 ght to edil, reject, or cancel any ad at any ti me. Errors must be reponed on the l1ul day ol
Tribune-Scmtinei·Regieter will be reaponalble lor no more than the coat of the llp&amp;ce occ upied by the error and on ly I hi! llrst-1Mert1on We
an~ loa• or ax pen~• that ruulta lrom the pu bl ication or omission of an adven iaement. Correction Will be made in the lirst available ed1tion • Bo~ numbc1 ads
are always con fidentiAL • CUrrent rate card applies . .'All re al u taH! adverlitemenll ar~ subfect to the Fr:dera l Fair Houting Act ol 1968. • Th is newspaper
accepts only help wante d ada meeting EOE standa rd I. Wa will not knowingly accept an~ advart1eing in ~iolation of the law . Will not be ,e,pons•ble fo r anv
error• in an nd taken over the p hone.

6 wks old Hemz 57 puppies, lroniCs, diving board, e~er-

Business Opportunlty .......... .. ..................... 210

wett rr

· •ct.

~oint ~lea~ant l\egt~ter

GIVEAWAY

lAJST ANU

Esta1
dvertisements ar
ubject to the Federa
air Housing Act o
1968.

be prepaid'

7 families , July 12th from 93 Yellow house 3/4 miles oul
Krine r Rd . Housewares. 4
wheeler, btkes.
elec-

CLASSIFIED INDEX

·.( cond,

SEOAN.SII

~~t ~alhpoli~ iJBatlp lribune

r

Otf1ce

ppllo•.
All

must

4 fam1ly July 11 &amp; 12 at 654
Debbie Dr
9 30
?
REWARD $500 For Informa- Childrens clothe s housetion leading to th e arrest &amp; hold 11ems &amp; much more
conv tcl1on of lh e thi eving
sc um that broke Into ou r 5 fam1Ues. July 9, 10. 11
home on BulaviiiP. P1kP. .omr1 Mov1es. toys. kntck: kn;;r:kl' .
slole guns &amp; Jewelry. Please pictures. baby IIams. com .call G.slll.3 Counl y Sher1trs _pu ler. e1c . 46 BurneM Rd .

taw.

co""

REACH OVER
17,000 HOUSEHOLDS!

VISA

kitncarlyle@comcast.net

m1sc items. July 12 at 299
4 family sa le July 10 &amp; 11 Roush Lan e, Cheshire.
from 9am-5pm at 1522 Sta1e
Oh10. Ra1n or Shtne
the
Reu le 141 Lane residence
Multl -lamily sale Sat July
12
at
earn
at
Ihe
Cheernaslics/SOGA
Building behind Ponderosa
4x4 's For Sale ............ .................... .......... .... 725 ·
(The old ska!lng rink ). The
... Announcement ........................... .. ............... 03D
proceeds wtll benefi t the
• Antiques ................................................. .. .... 530
Southern OhiO Gymnastics
· .• Aparttnents lor Rent ...... ............................. 440
Academy Girls Gymnastics
• Auction and Flea Market ............................. OSO
• Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .............. ............ 760
Team
Auto Aepslr ................ :................................ . 770
Mulll·family sale. Jul y 1o· &amp;
Autos for Sale .............................................. 710
1 4
Boatt &amp; Motors for Sale ................ ............. 750
11 Slale Roule 2 , before
. Buttdlng Supplles ....... ... .......... ........... ... .. ....
Rac11le.

,;, ~lk.'$9
·;oo
'Il l, N2tl01
. ~ DLRS
CONVB

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

car

AN~OUN!;EMfNI&gt;

adq

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

YARU SAt.l·
GAu.nnLL'i

accept any adver
lsement In violatlo

COUPE'

'&lt;P-.eo tl.

\ vv-r1

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
All Display: 12 Noon' 2
Monday-Friday for Insertion
Business Day!ji Prior To
In Next Day's Psper
PubliCation
Sunday In - Column: 1:00 p . m. Sunday Display : 1:00 p .m .
For Sundays Paper
. Thursday for Sundays Paper

Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Jndude A Price 1 Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
1 Ads Should Run 7 Days

1\\01\11 \I I \I'

&gt;We will nat knowing

.; r. 47K. :

*

:ONVERT!

.

&gt;Current rate

'•

C O ~PE

pu&lt;:_~
CONVER 1

~t$$SO(I _.

.... ·.

COUPI

&lt;Otr) l

110 CON V•.
1\l,llnl ir

~IO$A, ~~-'

...

&gt;This
newspape
ccepta · only hoi
anted ads meetin

'''&gt; 9 Vinlf

1, 33k . S&lt;i

her'. to&gt;·.

~~

wilt
tA
esponsible for
ore than the cost o
he space occupiS'd
y the error and on!
he -first Insertion. W

r:- oup~

41K :,.

55!&gt;; '
CONVER f

of publir,A.t [nn

Tribune-Sentinel

*

COUPE

, well "

B

Must

lhe1eglster

WlS71. ..
DLB!

v in•

tc cond, "
CONVER t
· I wlblk.

8t any time.

eported on the firs

•:;OUPE
rr r.Uhrf

tOi rJ
COUPE

Gallia

t~nA\

Display Ads

1

successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

Box number ads ar
lways confidentifll.

'* OLRJ.
:ouPe .

Wqrd Ads

• All

who would start Saturday
again st visiting Tampa Bay.

60lS11 .

Meigs County, OH

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

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

'

.

·.

.I

675..5234

Offee 11o~oS&gt;'

' OUPE .
' lOT Ont)

,,'

-·

~-

i\~gtstcr

Sentinel

'

Detroit's manager joked., ..
Tigers
OF
Magglio
Ordonez said his pulled
obl iq ue is improving and
he ex pects to be OK to play
when eli gible to be activated from the DL nex t week .
.. . .Le vland said Sunday's
15-inliing win at Seattl e
was one of the most boring
games he's ever seen "I'd
rat her watch the Perrysburg
water tower rust ," said
Leyland. referring to his
hometown in Ohio . "But it
turned out great. I even had
a beer after the ga me and I
don ' t drink beer." ... The
game started 5 minutes
· Jate . giving the grounds
crew time to get the 'field
ready after it was soaked
by a steady rain in the
hours.

~

-·---

----~--

Websites :
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregisler com

(740) 992-2156

,

KN~

~rthune

start

hlll the manager wasn ' t sure

«)3

'

Else Can.!

but is 6-8 wit!l a 3.83 ERA
and leads the majors iii
strikeouts ( 123). Cleveland
scored two runs or fewer in
II of his 18 starts. He's fifth
on the club's all' time strike- .
ou ts ( 1.265 J li st.
Wedge used left-hander
Jeremy Sowers (0-4) in
Sabathia 's place . Tuesday

REACH 3 COUNTIE

er
.We Cove
"elgs, Gallla,
And Mason
. counties Like
NoOne

possibi lit y now that the
Indians appear to be sellers
as the Jul y 3 1 non-waiver
trade dead line nears, said
he's ignoring the talk.
"The Indi ans are paying
my salary ri ght now," he
said . "I just have to come to
the field &lt;rnd prepare myself
I he way I always do.''
·

- ..

CLASSIF .I ED

. .

. '"'· l!h r ·
:IJCOUP i

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

\rrrtbunf ~ Sen1inel - 31\e

;,:;,:;,..:;,:;,;,.. ::.::.o::.

:oupe ·

www.mydailysentinel.com

------

fieid .(Qr what appcarc&lt;J to
be a single. Dunn hesitated
and was forced out on nght
fielder Kosuke Fukuclomc's
throw to second. Dempster
then ~alked two more to
force in a run bcl'orc Haran !I
struc k out.
'
The Reds also had two on
in the second heforc Paul
Bako lined into an inn·ingending double play.
Cincinnati. which did n't
have a hit from the third to
the eighth innings. got three
in the ninth when It scored

th e league's worst road
team ( 15-29) and arc anALworst .246 at the plate.
Inj uries· have played a
from Page B1
part · in the. disap pointing
first half: Starter Ja ke
... wd of hi -. ]a . ., l con versati on
with Sah;rthi a. " He's got a Wes tbrook was lost for the
l'l1&lt;tlll' t'
tn go uver and season with an elbow injury
im p;ic·t another.. ballclub and and designated hitter Travis
another clubhouse al)d Hafner (shoulde r), reliever
Faustc C~rmon~t (hj.p) un-d
tlldf :'I ~&lt;Jult fo 1 O;_t-..eban:·
Evcr'i with I he sl ar's future catcher Victor Martinez
irr doubt , Cleveland sti ll (elbow) ha ve mi ssed long
expected to &lt;:ontend for the stretches.
"They
haven· t
had
AL Cent ral ti tle and a penMartinez.
Carmona
and
nalll a season after winning
9.6 g; un c~ and losing a they've been hit by the
...even-game champion ship injury bug as much as anyseries to lhc c\·crllual wo rld body," said Detroit manager
Jim Levland, whose team
cha mpi un Ked Sox.
lnslcad. the dub arrived weni through its share of
in Detroit last in the di vi- earl y-seaso n disap point s inn . 1-+ uames beh ind ments. "That's tough."
Ch icago . The Indians are
Blake. a rumored trade

Indians

· Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Wednesday, July 9, 2008 ·

www.mydailysentinel.com

Virginia in tere:oJtcJ iu parli\:·
ipating.
-~.....,
Sign- ups wi!l be held at
th e Veterans Memorial
Stadium in Middleport from
' I0 a.m. unt il I p.m.
For questions or more
information, contact Sarah
at 740-698-4054, Regina at
740-698-2804. Dave at 3,04674-5178, Misty atJ04-7735230, or Rick at 740-3670438.

!

-------~ 1 ~6Do7~~r ~~~~::~ :;~

620-4946 ex R0 19
3 br. house tor 5ale m
Middleport on land conlract,
$3,000 down plus $400 per
month, (740)416-1354

Comics to
Stock Quotes
Find all the
news that
matters

f
, I(;

,,. '

to you.
'

~

' "

'
~

"'

@,1 111polts D•ltll' [nuuu r
l@otlll Plr,lsanll\rgtstrr
The Daily Seminel
$Junba P[tmr!l $lrntwrl

'

�.'• .
'•I'

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sen line I • Page B5

...-.-t.,_
Polrce Impounds! Cars tram
$5001 , H on das Chevys,
Jeeps. Fords, &amp; mo re!. for
llstrngs BOO·Ei20·4876 e~ V4:l'i

!"'"'

ACROSS

Phillip

15

Double wide tor Rent
Gallipolis F.erry, br3/2tull
,b a .. Rei. req .. $0.00/renl ,
S5001deposit. mce yard .
304-576·2296

Alder

Hill's Self
' Storage

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

APAR1111ThTS

mR lb:xr
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
ments, lurnrshed and untur·
mshed. and houses in
Pomeroy and Middleport ,
securi ty deposit required , rio
pets. ·740·992·22 1 B.

·Beautiful

Estatea.

52

Wesiwood
Drive, from $365 to ·$560
740-446-2566 .
Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
inStitutron is an . Equal
1BR Apt , WID hookups. Opportunity Provider and
satellite TV rncl. wt rent, Employer.
close to hospital . Call 740· - ' - ' - - - , - - - - -

339·0362

Free Rent

Bedroom ' Apts . at Village
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
Middl eport . from $327 to
$592. 740·992·5064 Equal
Housing Opportunity.
La rge ,
nished

floor, LA, DR, overlooking
the

2 Apts. for Rent beside

Special!!!

Domin6 's rn Pt. Pteas8nt
304·812-4350

charming, unfur3 bedroom apt., 2nd
Park

Gallipolis.

downtown

Relecences

30

V.\~S
foR SALE

1993 Ford 250 Cargo Van. 6
cyl , auto. $1450 446-4999
or 446-6352

Unfurnished 1 bedroom apt.
2nd 11oor, co rner of Second
and
Pine .
No
pets
References
required.
Sec4rity deposit. $275 per
month, wafer rncluded. Call
446·4425 or 446·3936

40• :VIrrmRlYCU:&lt;J
.4 WIIEEI.EI!S

Ellin
(304)882-3017

r

"--ii.iiiiiliiiiiiiiililii...

(740)645·1361

Taking applications lor mod· Hot Tub I Swim Spa Outlet.
tBR.
no · pets . $1000 off. Huge selection .
$295/morrth includes' water. New Styles. Free Delivery.
Top .Qualily. 606·929·5655
, $200/deposlt. 446·3617

ern

Pharmacy Buyer
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting
resumes
for
a full-time
Pharmacy Buyer. State registration and
National certification as a Pharmacy Tech.
A minimum of 3 years as a hospital
pharmacy tech. Previous Business and/or
purchasing/buying
experience
in
a
Pharmacy setting preferred.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o ·Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

(304) 675-4340
Fax: (304) 675 -6975
or apply on-line at www.pvalley.org

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE·
NECK
HITC HES.

Hll"F, .
11\IPRf.V.l\ IE.I\TI

CARMICHAEL
EQUIP BASEMENT
MENT/CARMICHAEL
WATERPROOFING
TRAILERS SA,ES &amp; SEA· Unconditional lifetime guarVICE , SPECIAL
20FT ante~ . Loca l relerences lurGOOSENECK
FLATBED nished. Established i 975

$3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE Call

24 Hrs. i740i 446·

TRAILER INVENTORY AT 0870. Roger's
WWW . CA AM I C H"A E L· Walerprooling.

Basement

TRAILE RS.C0t;1 740·446·
Gen eral Contractor 35 Years
3825

Licensed Practical Nurses
Pleasant Valley Nursin g, and Rehabilitation
is currently accepting applications for fulltime and per diem LPN's. Long term ca re
experience pleferred. Must have WV
license. 12 hour shifts.
Please contact
Angie Cleland,
Director of Nursing at (304) 675-5250.
AA/EOE

Expe11ence. New Homes.
Have you prrced a John Remodeling &amp; Home Reparr.
Lrcensed and Insured WV
Deere lafely? You'll ~~ sur·
03031
B 304·458· 1l\68 (H)
prisedl Check oul our used
304-5t 1·0759 !C\

WWW . CAREQ . COM
Carmichael Equipmen1 . 740 446·2412

r

l,iVI·XHX:K

Angus Bu lls, show heifers
Excellenl Breeding . Top
· Performance ,
Priced
Reason a b l y .
www.sloteruna n g u5 . oom ,

(740)266·5395
Buff Orphington pullets just
starting to lay for sale.For
mora information ~all 740·

949·2237.

45771
740·949-2217

Sizes 5'x1 0'
to 10'x30'

V.C . YOUNG Ill
992-62 15

Hoors

Pomeroy Ohro

7:00AM - 8:00 PM

25 Years Local Exper1encl'!

: ~ ~ .:: :
• J 76

•

·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Propoaals,
to
SHERIFF SALES CASE
Public Notice
payment of 'S50.0q. all
NUMBER 08CV030
NONE OF WHICH WILL Increase or decrease
II~\ "'-4SJ'OR I \110\1
HSBC BAN~ USANA
LEGAL NOTICE
BE
REFUNDED. or omit any nem(s) and
PLAINTIFF
sealed Proposals wm Contract Documents to award to the lowest
10
Atmll&gt;
VS
be received by the will be aanl via U.S. an'd best qualified
Bidder.
Each
Proposal
tuRSAu·:
' JENNIFER DAVIS . AKA Meigs
County Mall after receipt of a
FINK ·
c o m m u n 1 1 y raquest with a $60.00 muat contain the lull
DEFENDANTS
I m p r o v e m e n t payment, ,
which name of every person 16' Lowes fishing boat, 25 hp
COURT OF COMMON Corporation,
Meigs Includes postage and or' company Interested Johnson. $2,500 080, 2003
In the same.
PLEAS, MEIGS COUN- County, Ohio unlll1 :00 handling.
Polaris 700, $3,500 OBO,
TY OHIO.
P.M. local lime, July 24, Eich
Bidder
Is Datod this 7th day of 2001 L.exu&amp; 300 ES 304-.
to pursuance of an 2008, for furnishing all raqulritd to furnish July 2008 :
773-5109
County
order of sale to me the necessary tabor, with Its proposal, a Bid " Meigs
directed from said materials, equipment, Guaranty and Contract C 0 m m u n I t Y 1984 Chev Monte Carlo and
court In the above enti- 1ools, and services for Bond In accordance I m p r o v e m e n t · 1984 700 Honda Nighthawk
call 304-674-0861 or 304·
tied action , I will the conattuction ol with Section 153.54 of Corporation"
Varnadoe, 674·0539
expose to sale at pub- "Rio
Granda the
Ohio
Ravlaed Perry
lie suction on the front Community
College Code. Bid security fur- Director
steps ol the Meigs Meigs .
Campus nlshed In bond form (7) 9, 1,6
1994 Toyota 4 runner.
County Court Housa Sanitary
Sewer shall be Issued by a - - - - - - - - engine needs fi xed or
. On Friday, August
lmprovemenls", hera- Surety Company or
Public Notice
replaced, body great 740·
2008 at 10 a.m., of said I nailer defined as the corporation licensed In
- - - - - - - 446·9465
day, the foll,owing Project, all as set forth the State ol Ohio to
~----described real estate. In
the'
Contract provide said surety.
SITUATED IN THE Documents now on file Each Proposal must
STATE
OF
OHIO, In the office ot the contain the full name
COUNTY OF MEIGS Consulting Engineer of the party or parties
AND IN THE VILLAGE hereafter named. At submitting tho proposOF
MIDDLEPORT: the lime above men- al and all persona
B.E!NG LOT NO. 139 IN tionod and at the office Interested herein. Each
SHEFFIELD, IN THE of
Meigs
County bidder must submit
VILLAGE OF MIDDLE· C o m m u n 1 t y evidence of Its expertPublic Notice
PORT, MEIGS COUN- 1 m p r 0 v 8 m e n t encae on projects of
TV, OHIO.
Corporation, 238 West similar size and comPROBATE COURT OF
Said premises also Main Street. Pomeroy. pledty.
known as: 462 South OH 45769, sold propos- Blddara must comply MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
5th
Avenue, ala will be publicly with the prevailing IN RE : CHANGE OF
Middleport, OH 45760 opened and read.
wage rates on Public NAME OF Addlsyn
Permanent
Parcel The Prolect Includes. Improvements
In Riley Clark
Addlsyn
Riley
Number: 15.00100.000 but may not be llmltod Molga County and the to
Prior deed references: to, tho following major Meigs
County Ramsburg
Volume 235, Page 21~ • Items:
C o m m u n I t y NOTICE OF cHEARING
Appalsed at $70,000 8" Gravity Sewer 835 I m p r o v e m e n t ON CHANGE OF NAME
Terms or Sale: Cannot L.F.
Corporation · as deter- Appilcant hereby gives
be sold lor tess than Sanitary Manhole 3 mined by tho Ohio notice to all lnterei1ed
2/3rds of the appraised Each
lluraau of Employment parsons that the applivalue. 10% down on Actualaatimelod quan- Services. Wage and cant has filed · an
day ol sale, cash or titin lor tho above Hour Division, (614) Application for chango
of Name In the Probate
certified chock, bat- Items and all other 644-2239.
anca due on conflrma- Items lor the project Each Bidder must Court of Melga Courity,
tlon ol sela.
are listed on the Insure tha~ all employ- Ohio, requesting tho
The appraisal did not Proposal forms.
ees and applicants for change of nama of
Include an interior The
Engineer's employment are not Addlayn Riley Clark to
. Riley
examination o1 the Estimate for this pro)· discriminated against Addlsyn
house.
act is $ 48.500.00.
because of rac.e, color, Ramsburg. The hearing
Robert E. Boogie, All Proposals' shall be religion, sex or nation- on the application will
be held on the 11th day
Meigs County SheriH
submitted
on
the al origin.
Attorney
for
the Proposal blenka con- All contractors and of ~uguat, 2008 at 1:30
PlalntiH
talned In the contract s u b c o n t r a c t o r 1 p.m. In the Probate
Shapiro &amp; Felty
document• furnished lrivolvod with tho pro)- Court I Molga County,
1500 W. Third St.
and ahsll be Holod In act will, to the extem located at 100 · East
Street,
Suite 400
an
envelope
and practicable use Ohio Second
Cleveland, OH 44113
marked eo follows: products, materlalo, Courthouse, 2nd Floor,
2164121-1530
" Rio
·
Grande services, and labor In Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
(7) 2, 9, 16
community College tho Implementation or Brad Ramsburg
Meigs
Campus their
project 40495 Kingsbury Rd.
Sanitary
Sewer Additionally, contrac- Pomeroy, OH 45769
Public Notice
lmprovomento "
and tor compliance with (7) 9
mailed or delivered so the equal emplo_yment
The Annual Financial aa to airlve at the opportunity requirePublic Notice
Report· Form 4502 of office of Meigs County manta
of
Ohio
the Eastern
Local
0 m· m u n 'I t y Administrative · Code
School District for tho 1 m p r o v e m e n t 123, the Governor's PUBLIC NOTICE
flacal year ended Juno corporation, 238 west Executive Order of Notice Is hareby given
30, 2008 has bean Main Str111t Pomeroy. 1972, and Governor'• that on July 14, 2008
completod. Form 4502 OH 45769, prior to the Executive Order 84-9 from 630 p.m. to 7:00
p.m. a public meeting
Ia avtllable for public above deadline.
ohall be raqulred.
lnopection In tho troa- The
Contract No bidder 111ay with- on the Budget and
surer's oHice located . Documenll Including draw his bl~ within Revenue Sharing tor
at 50008 Sr 681 , the
Conotructlon sixty (80) dayo alter the the year 2009 for the
Raedovllle,
Ohio, Drllwlngs may be ...., •ctual date of the Village of Pomeroy,
Ohio, will be held at the
between the houro of at the office of F.W. opening thereof.
8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Dodge. or the office of The Melga County Clark's Offlce at 320
Street,
Monday
through the Engineer, Sanda C o m m u n I t Y East Main
Friday.
Decker CPS LLC, 1495 I m p r o v e m e n t Pomeroy, Ohio .
Llao M. Ritchie
Old Henderson Road, Corporation, hereafter Kathy Hysell
Eaatern
Local Columbus, Ohio 43220 defined as the Owner, Village Clerk
Treasurer
or may be obtained at reMrvea the right to (7) 9
740-6e7·318
the taner office upon waive
lrrl!lulirltles
(7) 9
and to reject any and

East

•

•

7 5 2

9 6 3

• A74
• 8 5 4 3
• A 8 6

.. K J 9 3

South

740-992-1611

•

Stop &amp; Compare

AJ

a

" J 92

+

A K

Q

.. Q 10 1 4
Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both
South
rNT
2t

and Qual it~·

·l
&lt;1
l

West
Pass
Pass

North
24

3 NT

East
Pass
AI! pass

Opening lead: • 3

'~ Rea ... unahk R.tlL'~

What card should
you lead back?

* Insured
·~ Ex p eriL'tll'l'Li

IT APP~Ailf TO J~ SOM~ SO#lT
Of VAST ~~P~#liMfNT
/
IN P/lOiAIILITY.

Rt:fr.;rl'lll'C.~ Aliailahk~

Ctl l Gar~ Stanley

@

7~11-~Y I · R04~

leave

me..,~a\11..'

AU Types Oi
Work
!":'--:-:--:'--:--;

Hardwood Cabinetry And Furniture

/

28 Years Experience

www.timbat-Cre-elteab~e-try.com

\

David Lewis
740·992-6971
InsUred
WV042182 Free

2459 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis

ROGER HYSELLS
GARAGE
st 11. 124 romilrov.DH

I'M

GITTIN ' .

MARRIED,
AUNT
ELVINEY !!

740.446.9200

Estimates

CONGRATULATIONS,
ABBIE, YOU FOUND
MISTER RIGHT !!

WELL,
ALM0ST .. .

WIF A li'L TWEAKIN',
HE'LL BE MISTER
CL.OSE-ENUFF !!

Racine; Ohio 740-247-2019

FRESH

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

HOME-GROWN

CABBAGE

Cell:

740-416-5047

Here, though, with only two cards left in
the suit, East leads back the eight, starting high -low with a rema ining doubleton. ·

THE BORN LOSER

P"mLE:.I'I P l

T~OUC.!-1.T ~OU .,

WU!E. 01'1 f.&gt;.. 1)1(\, GLI\t&gt;Y!&gt; !

email:
jrshadfrm@aol.com

f""lXli'\'I'IOU

~~1/e. 'ffi€. WILL.· ., rr~~~ CQI.\I~G FROM mE. /Mtl;~

I'OWE.R TO COMMIT 'lOU~
TO 1-. ~fl-IM WE:I~T
LO~~

W~O.SE I~EA OF !&gt;IE.TING I')
S~OPPI~ F~ 1&gt;. ~~IR.T

Wl\fo\ \1(\l'JICM..

PU\f'll?

.

Jim O'Brien .

;).))

Then iuok tn Mary
Ka)'. You'll lind the
latL"'' on -tr.-nd colors
Gl{l!Tiinatl.'d l'o r you

-1-" Gcruniu1w. .60c
H l.'d~ing Plunts
..J.8 per nat $6.00
Vcgctahle planh
$~.50

per dotcn

1-lr~

wi\h l'Ll~) -Hl - &lt;.~pply
tips. A~J... rnc how you
~·:.m gel thr: hollt'..,t
looks of tht: :-.ca:-.un~~nd aiW&lt;
iY' h-: in

Sl\'·fe!

J~anita C;rul'ser

M-F 7:30 --5: 1}(1
Sen . l·UO- -l:.~O Sun. 1-5

y\)ar~

in

eXJ}Cricnce

~cu· ing

SLUu61N&amp; PERCENT~E.
IS .SB3 '

...

Orap~s. Shrer~.

Rod
Pockl!t Dnrpcs.
' Swag~. v~1lances.
Rnmun Shadr~ und

M iddlcporl. OH

More ...
Plu\ Pillow. Brdskirts
T;rhk Cuvcrs &amp; Table
Runners
CALL SA~DY

. 740-992-7960

Uome!740·992·3220
Ceii :H0·416-6144

Ed's Greenhouses
Nohlc Summit Rd.

OuR. TEII.t1 ~TTLNC:.
AVER.II.C:.E IS .3'\S, OlJI'.
O.ii.P. IS .SIO, II.ND 01)11.

LADY

Ol$. PITCHER. IS ~'&amp;"
AND WEIGHS THREE
POUNDS.

Independent lleauly

·

\\ 11 11 . 111111'~ k n~ .t·uutlj)!rUe'it!r

,--~

Manley's
Racycllng

740-949·3027

'(OU'RE RI~T•• ITS A TOU6H
WA'f MAKE A LIVI NEi ..

MOLES ~AI/E VERI( WEAK E't'ES ..
TJ.IE'( Dl6 TUNNELS JUST VNDER THe
AHD HUNT WORMS AND

503 Mill St. • MlddiiPOn, OH 451&amp;0
Jolll-992-3194

••• -·~Ill IV 9:18 11111-5:00 1m
. SIIUrdll 9:00 llii-12:DIIm

PAYING TOP PRICES FOR
AltmiRIII Clll • ~lmlttlm WIIHII
CllaiVIII: C01Vert1111• Clllllr
llllllllrS llld In!
ICIII fir Cltrrllll'rlcesl

PSI CONSTRUCTION

COW and BOY
OUI2 P~OBLEMS
· .!IRE TOO BIG TO BE
HANDLED LOCIILLv:
WE NEED TO TliKE

RICK PRICE
New Homes. Room Addiiions. Remodeling;
Melal &amp;.
Roofs, Siding, Decks,
Licensed &amp; Insured

OU~FiGHTTO
WASHINGTON.

"·

Construction
• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing

• Decks

• Hom'etown News
• Are~ Shopping

• ~ocal Sports
• Community

Calendar

... ana much more.

c

··~alttpolis "lailp ~rtbtute
Joint Jleasant legtster
The Daily Sentinel
~uitbap m:t~tes -itntind

"MPXYXHV

East on lead again before de clarer has
taken nine tricks .

NKLLY

West would probably shift ~o the dia-

10, but it does not' matter. South,
who must establish two tricks in hearts,
will im mediately attack that suit. Then
East carl grab his ace and return his last
club, giving West two more tri cks in the
suit and leaving the con~ract with no sec·
mond

• Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742-2332

For Remodeling and

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows ,.
Electnc, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Roclm I
Additions
Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Estimates

740-367-0536
~ew

House IJuilding

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barn s • Patio '~ . Porches and Decks

Call:

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER

,,.'"'""'u

BUT HOW? MOM
WIL(. NEVE~ LET

COW, WE'RE HIRING
A LOBBYIST.

ME Go. I GI.ESS
WE'U.....lJST

SO GUESS WHO

8111\IDED THEI~
BEA~. GIVE UP2

HAVE TO

FIGHT FII1E

1 I Dl). _.,

v

WITH F111E.

GARFIELD

8EUEVE ME,JON, WE ·
•

ALL L.l KE 1'0 'I'H INK
___..,...., YOU'RE UNIQue

Thurad.y, July 10, 2008
By Bernice Bede Oeol
ll you teach yourself to be a good con·
servator in the year ahead and tuck away
a lillie something each week, you will be
amazed at how much you can accumulate by year's end. The result willleel as
it you won the tottery.
CANCER {Jun e 2 1-July 22) - Guard
against anem-pling to bla me a scapegoat
lor a prol:tlem of your ·making, because
angry reacllone will turn people away
from you and the support you once had
will be gone.
'
·
LEO (July 23-AUI~. 22) - Just because
you set your mind on completing a specilic objective doesn't necessarily mean
you·u do so. ll you use · the wrong
method, It could take you completely off
track_
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.. 22) - Do not
make a finan~ial C9mmltment that you
know wi ll be hard to keep. Your desire to
be involved might be more wlshru t than
logical and would be a major mistake.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Timing and
preparation will be extremely Important
concerning a major goal. H you're impulsive or ill -equipped to handle th ings, lail· ·
ure is likely. Conversely, persistence and
readiness give you an edge .
SCORt:'IO (Oct. 24 -Nov. 22 ) - Expect to
make the same mistakes you did previ·
ous ly In a complicated matter it, once
again , you are careless and ra:sh In how
vou go about II. Don't repeat the past:
prom from it.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23· Dec. 21 ) - II .
you can adjuslto conditions being much
harder !hen anticipated, you'll do all
rlghl. But If you are Inflexible and refuse
1o adapt to unexpected dlfllcullles, you
won't sucor..d.
CAPRICORN (Cec. 22.Jen. 19) - ,One
ot your best assets 15 the ability not to be
thrown oH course jus t becauee some
tough , compte~ developments occur.
There is a good chance th is gift will be
used quite success luUy at this time.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) Although you're a quick study, your origi·
nal assessment with regard to a problem
a t work might be erroneous. Don't hesl·
tate to take a hard second look it things
just don't appear right.
'PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) _:_ Should
you get oN On the wrong tr&lt;!ck, don't
w~ste time chasing e horse that's going
in the wrong direction . It will be quicker to
ta ke the time to assess the situation and
be willing to resta rt the race.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)- Once you
take on an assignment, be sure to see li
thrqugh to completiOn. II would be a mistake to delegate II to someon6 else at the
midway point, bec:ause he or she could
take it o ff into another direction .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ll It
becomea obvious that you're not going to
!lnd reliable helpers to 1111ist you, see
whether you can figure out a way to handle tt youraelt. You'll be amazed at what
you can do on vour own.
GEMINI (May 21-J une 20)- Don't tty to
cover up tha projected bottom fine of a
financial arrangement In order not to
acare oH potential 1nvuto111. With the
bare facta up fl'l'nt, the right people will
join logather.

472)9 Riebel Road. Long Bouom . OH

740-985-4141
Cell: 740·416· IK1~
15+ years experielll't free Estimale.\·

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

SOUP

TO NUTZ

.

Today's Clue· R equals C

WPL

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TS

NKWCTM

UZNY

EWELP,

TS

WH

VTXHV

YT

KWAXHV

W ELH

XCLW

TS

NWF ."

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WHC
MKWY

HTY

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FTZ

SPWHRTXNL

NWV WH
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "I would nol wanllo live rna counlry ltlal would
have me as a leader many sort of political bent" - Tom Hanks

r:!~;~~Y S©1\~ }A_~"£- t/1~s WORD
GAM I

W~!J?!,

PEANUTS

K&lt;t)'

Cnnl\ultant

THE WINDOW
20

50' More in one

28 Winy
51 Write
remark
52 Cookware
30 Floor model
i1em
31 Kyo1o cash
37 Volcanic
rock

· by Luis Campos

~Astro10" h:.mg in g Bw,kch

27 Jai-

cries

Ce'e:xlty Ci~er cryr:tagrams 81&amp; crealed !rom qLXlla1 ons b'f lamous peop e pas1 an!J' p•e~1''
Each 191181 1n I he D~!' stands lor ano1he'

Of queen·si~ left. West must hope to get

ond season.

740-247-2113
love
the latest
looks?

26 Tanered
clothing

45 Bumper
mishap
47 TW~
guesses
46 Damage
49 Hairpiece

CELEBRITY CIPHER

West takes South's club 10 with his Jack
and knows that he niust abandon clu bs
because South still has the queen-sever:~

ST~PB!

Close-Ou1 Sale

uncommon

44 Occurrence

At tri ck two, East , with three clubs left,
should lead ba ck his lowest one. So,
from A-1;1-7-6, he would return the Silt
And with four or more clubs left, East
should play back his original fou rlh·highest. So, from A·9·8·5·2, he would return
lile l1ve. ·

·~

Open 9-6 M-F
9-12 Sat.

39 Michener
opus
41 Nongeneric
swab·
· (hyph.)
43 .More

North ' uses Stayman to try to uncover a
4·4 major-sui t lit. then, when he fails,
Wishes he had jusl jumped straight to
three no -trump.

I

I 140-992-5682

16 Fainthearted
18 Coger's
goal
20 More than
serious
21 Burma
neighbor
22 Long, long
time
24 Startlod

Against thre e no-trump, West leads the
club three, fourth highest from his ·
longes~ and Strongest East wins·w~h his
ace and will return a club. What are the
guidelines?

Concrete Removal
and Replacement
, Concre~e

42 Raised
cenle
1 rop 'rncink 46 Team at
6 Half a rno
Shea
11 Very spiny 48 Ho procodor
cactus ·
49 Elk
12 Polar show 52 Ai:lor
13 More open
- Oatea
14 Hooded
53 Large
pullover
glacier
15 Scrapes a 54 China and
knee
Japan
16 "And55 Twins shere
somal"
them
17 Kind ol pilot 56 Retail glan1
18 Cheery
· greetings
· DOWN
19 Lazing
about
1 Take- -I
23 Typeofleno 2 Mr. Yehaln
25 Luigi's
3 Thin '"""
farewell
cake
26 Gandhiloe 4 F'-choers
29 Cartoon
5 Road to~
woodpecker
ping
32 Howard or
6 Bride's
Perlman
month
33 Pub pint
. 7 Satirical,
34 Wild lime
maybe
35 Double
8 Gilt tag
curve
·word
l&amp; »m: oil'l~
; SruHi~ r· ~
.puff
title
38 All, In com- 10 Tibetan ox ·
boo
11 Do horo40 In- (as
scopes
found)
12 Pleased
41 Status sighs

Engl ish poel and politician Ambrose
Phi lips, who died in 1749 wrote "The
ftowers anew. returning Se~sons bring! 1
But beauty laded has no second spring:
After th ird hand wins the first trick, it can
be vital that he returns the right card in
th is suit at the second ttick. This deal is
a textbook e~~;ample.

~

II WIS

CONCHlll
CONS I illl( II Or&gt;.

M~1ry

52

West
" 8 6 5
• 10 9'2

Seamless· Gutters
Roofing, Sid1ng , Gutters

Removal

Pka~c

OHI9·08

Guttering

Trimming

1·W

•

North

H&amp;H

· Stanley Tree-

&amp;

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

1/14!1 1110 pd

1fN

* Pro lllpl

i

Farm Letart Falls

BL,Jrrows tor sale, 1 male and
14 females.. Call tor mora
information. 740-643-2430

a,

Racine. Ohio

wv 036725

required. no pets, secu rity
OS Suzukr King Quad ,
2&amp;3BR apts. $385 and up. deposit, $600 per month.
700cc, 4WO, 92 mrles. wrnch
\IIIH
11\\IUO.,I
2 bedroom apartment lor C'ebll'al Air , WID Hookup, Call 446-4425 or 446·3936
&amp; ramps $4 .800 304-674rent in Middleport, no pets, Tenant pays electric. EHO
10
HOUSEIIOLI&gt;
CKC Minature Pinscher 2 3279
Middleport N. 4th Ave. 2
(740)992·5858
Goons
males.
4 mon. old. ears
room efficrency Apt. utilities
07 HD Dyn!l Street Bob·
View Apts.
212 3rd Ave. 3 rooms and
~id, no pots, ::!Oi' !.. rc!. , " - - - - - - - · croooed: tails docked. shots dt:t:~ ~·()Uttil Uiu.; $.11 OEI in
. 740·388·8788
bath.· furnished. no pets .
extras $13 .500 F1 rm _ 99 HD
740-992-0165.
Berber Carpet $5.95 yard
Rent • Dep_ 740·441·0245
I \I(\ I 0.,1 1'1'1 II~
Sportster XI B83. loadea wl
Reminents $40 &amp; up,
F ra nchte~·:n
Ap:Jrtmont~.
,'\. 1.1 .
-- chrome, has trike kit $6000
Middieporl,
Bet~ch
S\.,
2
br.
Mollohan
Carpet
2212
28 A apt. CIA. (740 ) 44 1. 727 4th Ave. Gallipolis. is
lurnishEid apartment, utilities . Eastern Ave Gallipolis Oh·
wl kit .or 54500 w/o krl. 740·
0194
now accepting ap plications paid, deposit ~ references . 445.
jD10
441·1037 or 740-645-7086
7444
fARM
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- for waiting list for 1 bedroom, no pets, (740 )992·0165
EQUII'MENT
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
USDA Rural Development.
ML&lt;iCELL•NEOUS
CA.\ II'EI&lt;S &amp;
Townhouse
apartments, S!JbSidized apartment for N. 3rd Ave., Middleport, 2 br.
MERCHANDISE
EBY. INTEGRITY. KIEFER
MHilJR HOMEI
and/or small houses FOR · elderly lind handicapped. furniS hed apartment. no
BU!LT.
VALLEY
RENT. Call (740)44 1-1 111 740-446-4652.
Equal pets, deposit &amp; refe rences.
Flower
Flats.
$3.50. HORSE / LIVESTOCK AV Service at Carm1chael
for application &amp; informatron. Housing Opportunity.
(740)992·0165
Geraniums .
31$ 1.00 , TRAILERS . LOAD MAX T 'le s 740 _446 _3825
EQUIPMENT TRA ILERS . · rar r
.
Nice quiet2BR apt. and 2BA Elephant Ears. Cannas ,
SI· RIIli·S
have
Goldfish.
Koi
,
CARGO
EXPR6SS
&amp;
Also
Help Wanted
house.
References
&amp;
deposit req uired. No 'Pets. Pond Plants . (740)446-1578. H 0 M E S T E A 0 E A . m--":':"'~--,
446·1271 or 709·1657

29670 Bashan Road

Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
New Garages
Electrica l &amp; Plumbing
Rooling &amp; Gutters
Vinvl Siding &amp; Painting
Pati·o and Porch Decks

Apta. at Jackaon Gracious Living 1 and 2

NEA Crossword Ptt'Zzle

BRIDGE

!dl1td loy CLAY R. POllAN - - - - - -

0 Rl!larra'nge

latteri

tfle

of

four scrambled words be·

low to form fovr slrnpl• words.

T E R NY

I I I' I
~

' A famed actress once said.
.__.__..._..__.__. ~· "Between 2 evils I always pick

A MKB E R

I I I' I I I
.

5

.

.

.

.

•

Ithe one I
.

Q Complete
rhe ei'ruckle c:uoted
by filling In the missing words

you

e

haven't tried-----''

de-..eJop from step No. 3 below·.

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE l HTfRI
10 GH ANSWER
SC'RAMWI:l ANSWF.RS 7/8/08

Tribal -

Maker -

Unfit - Wlocpcr .. MAKE it TKlJE

"Now that you have

the g'rad,

"you

received all tl1i" prai,e,"

will bav• to M,AKE i1

ARLO&amp;JANIS

TR LIE."

granny tuld

�.'• .
'•I'

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sen line I • Page B5

...-.-t.,_
Polrce Impounds! Cars tram
$5001 , H on das Chevys,
Jeeps. Fords, &amp; mo re!. for
llstrngs BOO·Ei20·4876 e~ V4:l'i

!"'"'

ACROSS

Phillip

15

Double wide tor Rent
Gallipolis F.erry, br3/2tull
,b a .. Rei. req .. $0.00/renl ,
S5001deposit. mce yard .
304-576·2296

Alder

Hill's Self
' Storage

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

APAR1111ThTS

mR lb:xr
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
ments, lurnrshed and untur·
mshed. and houses in
Pomeroy and Middleport ,
securi ty deposit required , rio
pets. ·740·992·22 1 B.

·Beautiful

Estatea.

52

Wesiwood
Drive, from $365 to ·$560
740-446-2566 .
Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
inStitutron is an . Equal
1BR Apt , WID hookups. Opportunity Provider and
satellite TV rncl. wt rent, Employer.
close to hospital . Call 740· - ' - ' - - - , - - - - -

339·0362

Free Rent

Bedroom ' Apts . at Village
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
Middl eport . from $327 to
$592. 740·992·5064 Equal
Housing Opportunity.
La rge ,
nished

floor, LA, DR, overlooking
the

2 Apts. for Rent beside

Special!!!

Domin6 's rn Pt. Pteas8nt
304·812-4350

charming, unfur3 bedroom apt., 2nd
Park

Gallipolis.

downtown

Relecences

30

V.\~S
foR SALE

1993 Ford 250 Cargo Van. 6
cyl , auto. $1450 446-4999
or 446-6352

Unfurnished 1 bedroom apt.
2nd 11oor, co rner of Second
and
Pine .
No
pets
References
required.
Sec4rity deposit. $275 per
month, wafer rncluded. Call
446·4425 or 446·3936

40• :VIrrmRlYCU:&lt;J
.4 WIIEEI.EI!S

Ellin
(304)882-3017

r

"--ii.iiiiiliiiiiiiiililii...

(740)645·1361

Taking applications lor mod· Hot Tub I Swim Spa Outlet.
tBR.
no · pets . $1000 off. Huge selection .
$295/morrth includes' water. New Styles. Free Delivery.
Top .Qualily. 606·929·5655
, $200/deposlt. 446·3617

ern

Pharmacy Buyer
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting
resumes
for
a full-time
Pharmacy Buyer. State registration and
National certification as a Pharmacy Tech.
A minimum of 3 years as a hospital
pharmacy tech. Previous Business and/or
purchasing/buying
experience
in
a
Pharmacy setting preferred.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o ·Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

(304) 675-4340
Fax: (304) 675 -6975
or apply on-line at www.pvalley.org

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE·
NECK
HITC HES.

Hll"F, .
11\IPRf.V.l\ IE.I\TI

CARMICHAEL
EQUIP BASEMENT
MENT/CARMICHAEL
WATERPROOFING
TRAILERS SA,ES &amp; SEA· Unconditional lifetime guarVICE , SPECIAL
20FT ante~ . Loca l relerences lurGOOSENECK
FLATBED nished. Established i 975

$3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE Call

24 Hrs. i740i 446·

TRAILER INVENTORY AT 0870. Roger's
WWW . CA AM I C H"A E L· Walerprooling.

Basement

TRAILE RS.C0t;1 740·446·
Gen eral Contractor 35 Years
3825

Licensed Practical Nurses
Pleasant Valley Nursin g, and Rehabilitation
is currently accepting applications for fulltime and per diem LPN's. Long term ca re
experience pleferred. Must have WV
license. 12 hour shifts.
Please contact
Angie Cleland,
Director of Nursing at (304) 675-5250.
AA/EOE

Expe11ence. New Homes.
Have you prrced a John Remodeling &amp; Home Reparr.
Lrcensed and Insured WV
Deere lafely? You'll ~~ sur·
03031
B 304·458· 1l\68 (H)
prisedl Check oul our used
304-5t 1·0759 !C\

WWW . CAREQ . COM
Carmichael Equipmen1 . 740 446·2412

r

l,iVI·XHX:K

Angus Bu lls, show heifers
Excellenl Breeding . Top
· Performance ,
Priced
Reason a b l y .
www.sloteruna n g u5 . oom ,

(740)266·5395
Buff Orphington pullets just
starting to lay for sale.For
mora information ~all 740·

949·2237.

45771
740·949-2217

Sizes 5'x1 0'
to 10'x30'

V.C . YOUNG Ill
992-62 15

Hoors

Pomeroy Ohro

7:00AM - 8:00 PM

25 Years Local Exper1encl'!

: ~ ~ .:: :
• J 76

•

·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Propoaals,
to
SHERIFF SALES CASE
Public Notice
payment of 'S50.0q. all
NUMBER 08CV030
NONE OF WHICH WILL Increase or decrease
II~\ "'-4SJ'OR I \110\1
HSBC BAN~ USANA
LEGAL NOTICE
BE
REFUNDED. or omit any nem(s) and
PLAINTIFF
sealed Proposals wm Contract Documents to award to the lowest
10
Atmll&gt;
VS
be received by the will be aanl via U.S. an'd best qualified
Bidder.
Each
Proposal
tuRSAu·:
' JENNIFER DAVIS . AKA Meigs
County Mall after receipt of a
FINK ·
c o m m u n 1 1 y raquest with a $60.00 muat contain the lull
DEFENDANTS
I m p r o v e m e n t payment, ,
which name of every person 16' Lowes fishing boat, 25 hp
COURT OF COMMON Corporation,
Meigs Includes postage and or' company Interested Johnson. $2,500 080, 2003
In the same.
PLEAS, MEIGS COUN- County, Ohio unlll1 :00 handling.
Polaris 700, $3,500 OBO,
TY OHIO.
P.M. local lime, July 24, Eich
Bidder
Is Datod this 7th day of 2001 L.exu&amp; 300 ES 304-.
to pursuance of an 2008, for furnishing all raqulritd to furnish July 2008 :
773-5109
County
order of sale to me the necessary tabor, with Its proposal, a Bid " Meigs
directed from said materials, equipment, Guaranty and Contract C 0 m m u n I t Y 1984 Chev Monte Carlo and
court In the above enti- 1ools, and services for Bond In accordance I m p r o v e m e n t · 1984 700 Honda Nighthawk
call 304-674-0861 or 304·
tied action , I will the conattuction ol with Section 153.54 of Corporation"
Varnadoe, 674·0539
expose to sale at pub- "Rio
Granda the
Ohio
Ravlaed Perry
lie suction on the front Community
College Code. Bid security fur- Director
steps ol the Meigs Meigs .
Campus nlshed In bond form (7) 9, 1,6
1994 Toyota 4 runner.
County Court Housa Sanitary
Sewer shall be Issued by a - - - - - - - - engine needs fi xed or
. On Friday, August
lmprovemenls", hera- Surety Company or
Public Notice
replaced, body great 740·
2008 at 10 a.m., of said I nailer defined as the corporation licensed In
- - - - - - - 446·9465
day, the foll,owing Project, all as set forth the State ol Ohio to
~----described real estate. In
the'
Contract provide said surety.
SITUATED IN THE Documents now on file Each Proposal must
STATE
OF
OHIO, In the office ot the contain the full name
COUNTY OF MEIGS Consulting Engineer of the party or parties
AND IN THE VILLAGE hereafter named. At submitting tho proposOF
MIDDLEPORT: the lime above men- al and all persona
B.E!NG LOT NO. 139 IN tionod and at the office Interested herein. Each
SHEFFIELD, IN THE of
Meigs
County bidder must submit
VILLAGE OF MIDDLE· C o m m u n 1 t y evidence of Its expertPublic Notice
PORT, MEIGS COUN- 1 m p r 0 v 8 m e n t encae on projects of
TV, OHIO.
Corporation, 238 West similar size and comPROBATE COURT OF
Said premises also Main Street. Pomeroy. pledty.
known as: 462 South OH 45769, sold propos- Blddara must comply MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
5th
Avenue, ala will be publicly with the prevailing IN RE : CHANGE OF
Middleport, OH 45760 opened and read.
wage rates on Public NAME OF Addlsyn
Permanent
Parcel The Prolect Includes. Improvements
In Riley Clark
Addlsyn
Riley
Number: 15.00100.000 but may not be llmltod Molga County and the to
Prior deed references: to, tho following major Meigs
County Ramsburg
Volume 235, Page 21~ • Items:
C o m m u n I t y NOTICE OF cHEARING
Appalsed at $70,000 8" Gravity Sewer 835 I m p r o v e m e n t ON CHANGE OF NAME
Terms or Sale: Cannot L.F.
Corporation · as deter- Appilcant hereby gives
be sold lor tess than Sanitary Manhole 3 mined by tho Ohio notice to all lnterei1ed
2/3rds of the appraised Each
lluraau of Employment parsons that the applivalue. 10% down on Actualaatimelod quan- Services. Wage and cant has filed · an
day ol sale, cash or titin lor tho above Hour Division, (614) Application for chango
of Name In the Probate
certified chock, bat- Items and all other 644-2239.
anca due on conflrma- Items lor the project Each Bidder must Court of Melga Courity,
tlon ol sela.
are listed on the Insure tha~ all employ- Ohio, requesting tho
The appraisal did not Proposal forms.
ees and applicants for change of nama of
Include an interior The
Engineer's employment are not Addlayn Riley Clark to
. Riley
examination o1 the Estimate for this pro)· discriminated against Addlsyn
house.
act is $ 48.500.00.
because of rac.e, color, Ramsburg. The hearing
Robert E. Boogie, All Proposals' shall be religion, sex or nation- on the application will
be held on the 11th day
Meigs County SheriH
submitted
on
the al origin.
Attorney
for
the Proposal blenka con- All contractors and of ~uguat, 2008 at 1:30
PlalntiH
talned In the contract s u b c o n t r a c t o r 1 p.m. In the Probate
Shapiro &amp; Felty
document• furnished lrivolvod with tho pro)- Court I Molga County,
1500 W. Third St.
and ahsll be Holod In act will, to the extem located at 100 · East
Street,
Suite 400
an
envelope
and practicable use Ohio Second
Cleveland, OH 44113
marked eo follows: products, materlalo, Courthouse, 2nd Floor,
2164121-1530
" Rio
·
Grande services, and labor In Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
(7) 2, 9, 16
community College tho Implementation or Brad Ramsburg
Meigs
Campus their
project 40495 Kingsbury Rd.
Sanitary
Sewer Additionally, contrac- Pomeroy, OH 45769
Public Notice
lmprovomento "
and tor compliance with (7) 9
mailed or delivered so the equal emplo_yment
The Annual Financial aa to airlve at the opportunity requirePublic Notice
Report· Form 4502 of office of Meigs County manta
of
Ohio
the Eastern
Local
0 m· m u n 'I t y Administrative · Code
School District for tho 1 m p r o v e m e n t 123, the Governor's PUBLIC NOTICE
flacal year ended Juno corporation, 238 west Executive Order of Notice Is hareby given
30, 2008 has bean Main Str111t Pomeroy. 1972, and Governor'• that on July 14, 2008
completod. Form 4502 OH 45769, prior to the Executive Order 84-9 from 630 p.m. to 7:00
p.m. a public meeting
Ia avtllable for public above deadline.
ohall be raqulred.
lnopection In tho troa- The
Contract No bidder 111ay with- on the Budget and
surer's oHice located . Documenll Including draw his bl~ within Revenue Sharing tor
at 50008 Sr 681 , the
Conotructlon sixty (80) dayo alter the the year 2009 for the
Raedovllle,
Ohio, Drllwlngs may be ...., •ctual date of the Village of Pomeroy,
Ohio, will be held at the
between the houro of at the office of F.W. opening thereof.
8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Dodge. or the office of The Melga County Clark's Offlce at 320
Street,
Monday
through the Engineer, Sanda C o m m u n I t Y East Main
Friday.
Decker CPS LLC, 1495 I m p r o v e m e n t Pomeroy, Ohio .
Llao M. Ritchie
Old Henderson Road, Corporation, hereafter Kathy Hysell
Eaatern
Local Columbus, Ohio 43220 defined as the Owner, Village Clerk
Treasurer
or may be obtained at reMrvea the right to (7) 9
740-6e7·318
the taner office upon waive
lrrl!lulirltles
(7) 9
and to reject any and

East

•

•

7 5 2

9 6 3

• A74
• 8 5 4 3
• A 8 6

.. K J 9 3

South

740-992-1611

•

Stop &amp; Compare

AJ

a

" J 92

+

A K

Q

.. Q 10 1 4
Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both
South
rNT
2t

and Qual it~·

·l
&lt;1
l

West
Pass
Pass

North
24

3 NT

East
Pass
AI! pass

Opening lead: • 3

'~ Rea ... unahk R.tlL'~

What card should
you lead back?

* Insured
·~ Ex p eriL'tll'l'Li

IT APP~Ailf TO J~ SOM~ SO#lT
Of VAST ~~P~#liMfNT
/
IN P/lOiAIILITY.

Rt:fr.;rl'lll'C.~ Aliailahk~

Ctl l Gar~ Stanley

@

7~11-~Y I · R04~

leave

me..,~a\11..'

AU Types Oi
Work
!":'--:-:--:'--:--;

Hardwood Cabinetry And Furniture

/

28 Years Experience

www.timbat-Cre-elteab~e-try.com

\

David Lewis
740·992-6971
InsUred
WV042182 Free

2459 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis

ROGER HYSELLS
GARAGE
st 11. 124 romilrov.DH

I'M

GITTIN ' .

MARRIED,
AUNT
ELVINEY !!

740.446.9200

Estimates

CONGRATULATIONS,
ABBIE, YOU FOUND
MISTER RIGHT !!

WELL,
ALM0ST .. .

WIF A li'L TWEAKIN',
HE'LL BE MISTER
CL.OSE-ENUFF !!

Racine; Ohio 740-247-2019

FRESH

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

HOME-GROWN

CABBAGE

Cell:

740-416-5047

Here, though, with only two cards left in
the suit, East leads back the eight, starting high -low with a rema ining doubleton. ·

THE BORN LOSER

P"mLE:.I'I P l

T~OUC.!-1.T ~OU .,

WU!E. 01'1 f.&gt;.. 1)1(\, GLI\t&gt;Y!&gt; !

email:
jrshadfrm@aol.com

f""lXli'\'I'IOU

~~1/e. 'ffi€. WILL.· ., rr~~~ CQI.\I~G FROM mE. /Mtl;~

I'OWE.R TO COMMIT 'lOU~
TO 1-. ~fl-IM WE:I~T
LO~~

W~O.SE I~EA OF !&gt;IE.TING I')
S~OPPI~ F~ 1&gt;. ~~IR.T

Wl\fo\ \1(\l'JICM..

PU\f'll?

.

Jim O'Brien .

;).))

Then iuok tn Mary
Ka)'. You'll lind the
latL"'' on -tr.-nd colors
Gl{l!Tiinatl.'d l'o r you

-1-" Gcruniu1w. .60c
H l.'d~ing Plunts
..J.8 per nat $6.00
Vcgctahle planh
$~.50

per dotcn

1-lr~

wi\h l'Ll~) -Hl - &lt;.~pply
tips. A~J... rnc how you
~·:.m gel thr: hollt'..,t
looks of tht: :-.ca:-.un~~nd aiW&lt;
iY' h-: in

Sl\'·fe!

J~anita C;rul'ser

M-F 7:30 --5: 1}(1
Sen . l·UO- -l:.~O Sun. 1-5

y\)ar~

in

eXJ}Cricnce

~cu· ing

SLUu61N&amp; PERCENT~E.
IS .SB3 '

...

Orap~s. Shrer~.

Rod
Pockl!t Dnrpcs.
' Swag~. v~1lances.
Rnmun Shadr~ und

M iddlcporl. OH

More ...
Plu\ Pillow. Brdskirts
T;rhk Cuvcrs &amp; Table
Runners
CALL SA~DY

. 740-992-7960

Uome!740·992·3220
Ceii :H0·416-6144

Ed's Greenhouses
Nohlc Summit Rd.

OuR. TEII.t1 ~TTLNC:.
AVER.II.C:.E IS .3'\S, OlJI'.
O.ii.P. IS .SIO, II.ND 01)11.

LADY

Ol$. PITCHER. IS ~'&amp;"
AND WEIGHS THREE
POUNDS.

Independent lleauly

·

\\ 11 11 . 111111'~ k n~ .t·uutlj)!rUe'it!r

,--~

Manley's
Racycllng

740-949·3027

'(OU'RE RI~T•• ITS A TOU6H
WA'f MAKE A LIVI NEi ..

MOLES ~AI/E VERI( WEAK E't'ES ..
TJ.IE'( Dl6 TUNNELS JUST VNDER THe
AHD HUNT WORMS AND

503 Mill St. • MlddiiPOn, OH 451&amp;0
Jolll-992-3194

••• -·~Ill IV 9:18 11111-5:00 1m
. SIIUrdll 9:00 llii-12:DIIm

PAYING TOP PRICES FOR
AltmiRIII Clll • ~lmlttlm WIIHII
CllaiVIII: C01Vert1111• Clllllr
llllllllrS llld In!
ICIII fir Cltrrllll'rlcesl

PSI CONSTRUCTION

COW and BOY
OUI2 P~OBLEMS
· .!IRE TOO BIG TO BE
HANDLED LOCIILLv:
WE NEED TO TliKE

RICK PRICE
New Homes. Room Addiiions. Remodeling;
Melal &amp;.
Roofs, Siding, Decks,
Licensed &amp; Insured

OU~FiGHTTO
WASHINGTON.

"·

Construction
• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing

• Decks

• Hom'etown News
• Are~ Shopping

• ~ocal Sports
• Community

Calendar

... ana much more.

c

··~alttpolis "lailp ~rtbtute
Joint Jleasant legtster
The Daily Sentinel
~uitbap m:t~tes -itntind

"MPXYXHV

East on lead again before de clarer has
taken nine tricks .

NKLLY

West would probably shift ~o the dia-

10, but it does not' matter. South,
who must establish two tricks in hearts,
will im mediately attack that suit. Then
East carl grab his ace and return his last
club, giving West two more tri cks in the
suit and leaving the con~ract with no sec·
mond

• Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742-2332

For Remodeling and

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows ,.
Electnc, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Roclm I
Additions
Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Estimates

740-367-0536
~ew

House IJuilding

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barn s • Patio '~ . Porches and Decks

Call:

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER

,,.'"'""'u

BUT HOW? MOM
WIL(. NEVE~ LET

COW, WE'RE HIRING
A LOBBYIST.

ME Go. I GI.ESS
WE'U.....lJST

SO GUESS WHO

8111\IDED THEI~
BEA~. GIVE UP2

HAVE TO

FIGHT FII1E

1 I Dl). _.,

v

WITH F111E.

GARFIELD

8EUEVE ME,JON, WE ·
•

ALL L.l KE 1'0 'I'H INK
___..,...., YOU'RE UNIQue

Thurad.y, July 10, 2008
By Bernice Bede Oeol
ll you teach yourself to be a good con·
servator in the year ahead and tuck away
a lillie something each week, you will be
amazed at how much you can accumulate by year's end. The result willleel as
it you won the tottery.
CANCER {Jun e 2 1-July 22) - Guard
against anem-pling to bla me a scapegoat
lor a prol:tlem of your ·making, because
angry reacllone will turn people away
from you and the support you once had
will be gone.
'
·
LEO (July 23-AUI~. 22) - Just because
you set your mind on completing a specilic objective doesn't necessarily mean
you·u do so. ll you use · the wrong
method, It could take you completely off
track_
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.. 22) - Do not
make a finan~ial C9mmltment that you
know wi ll be hard to keep. Your desire to
be involved might be more wlshru t than
logical and would be a major mistake.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Timing and
preparation will be extremely Important
concerning a major goal. H you're impulsive or ill -equipped to handle th ings, lail· ·
ure is likely. Conversely, persistence and
readiness give you an edge .
SCORt:'IO (Oct. 24 -Nov. 22 ) - Expect to
make the same mistakes you did previ·
ous ly In a complicated matter it, once
again , you are careless and ra:sh In how
vou go about II. Don't repeat the past:
prom from it.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23· Dec. 21 ) - II .
you can adjuslto conditions being much
harder !hen anticipated, you'll do all
rlghl. But If you are Inflexible and refuse
1o adapt to unexpected dlfllcullles, you
won't sucor..d.
CAPRICORN (Cec. 22.Jen. 19) - ,One
ot your best assets 15 the ability not to be
thrown oH course jus t becauee some
tough , compte~ developments occur.
There is a good chance th is gift will be
used quite success luUy at this time.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) Although you're a quick study, your origi·
nal assessment with regard to a problem
a t work might be erroneous. Don't hesl·
tate to take a hard second look it things
just don't appear right.
'PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) _:_ Should
you get oN On the wrong tr&lt;!ck, don't
w~ste time chasing e horse that's going
in the wrong direction . It will be quicker to
ta ke the time to assess the situation and
be willing to resta rt the race.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)- Once you
take on an assignment, be sure to see li
thrqugh to completiOn. II would be a mistake to delegate II to someon6 else at the
midway point, bec:ause he or she could
take it o ff into another direction .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ll It
becomea obvious that you're not going to
!lnd reliable helpers to 1111ist you, see
whether you can figure out a way to handle tt youraelt. You'll be amazed at what
you can do on vour own.
GEMINI (May 21-J une 20)- Don't tty to
cover up tha projected bottom fine of a
financial arrangement In order not to
acare oH potential 1nvuto111. With the
bare facta up fl'l'nt, the right people will
join logather.

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WPL

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TS

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50' More in one

28 Winy
51 Write
remark
52 Cookware
30 Floor model
i1em
31 Kyo1o cash
37 Volcanic
rock

· by Luis Campos

~Astro10" h:.mg in g Bw,kch

27 Jai-

cries

Ce'e:xlty Ci~er cryr:tagrams 81&amp; crealed !rom qLXlla1 ons b'f lamous peop e pas1 an!J' p•e~1''
Each 191181 1n I he D~!' stands lor ano1he'

Of queen·si~ left. West must hope to get

ond season.

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26 Tanered
clothing

45 Bumper
mishap
47 TW~
guesses
46 Damage
49 Hairpiece

CELEBRITY CIPHER

West takes South's club 10 with his Jack
and knows that he niust abandon clu bs
because South still has the queen-sever:~

ST~PB!

Close-Ou1 Sale

uncommon

44 Occurrence

At tri ck two, East , with three clubs left,
should lead ba ck his lowest one. So,
from A-1;1-7-6, he would return the Silt
And with four or more clubs left, East
should play back his original fou rlh·highest. So, from A·9·8·5·2, he would return
lile l1ve. ·

·~

Open 9-6 M-F
9-12 Sat.

39 Michener
opus
41 Nongeneric
swab·
· (hyph.)
43 .More

North ' uses Stayman to try to uncover a
4·4 major-sui t lit. then, when he fails,
Wishes he had jusl jumped straight to
three no -trump.

I

I 140-992-5682

16 Fainthearted
18 Coger's
goal
20 More than
serious
21 Burma
neighbor
22 Long, long
time
24 Startlod

Against thre e no-trump, West leads the
club three, fourth highest from his ·
longes~ and Strongest East wins·w~h his
ace and will return a club. What are the
guidelines?

Concrete Removal
and Replacement
, Concre~e

42 Raised
cenle
1 rop 'rncink 46 Team at
6 Half a rno
Shea
11 Very spiny 48 Ho procodor
cactus ·
49 Elk
12 Polar show 52 Ai:lor
13 More open
- Oatea
14 Hooded
53 Large
pullover
glacier
15 Scrapes a 54 China and
knee
Japan
16 "And55 Twins shere
somal"
them
17 Kind ol pilot 56 Retail glan1
18 Cheery
· greetings
· DOWN
19 Lazing
about
1 Take- -I
23 Typeofleno 2 Mr. Yehaln
25 Luigi's
3 Thin '"""
farewell
cake
26 Gandhiloe 4 F'-choers
29 Cartoon
5 Road to~
woodpecker
ping
32 Howard or
6 Bride's
Perlman
month
33 Pub pint
. 7 Satirical,
34 Wild lime
maybe
35 Double
8 Gilt tag
curve
·word
l&amp; »m: oil'l~
; SruHi~ r· ~
.puff
title
38 All, In com- 10 Tibetan ox ·
boo
11 Do horo40 In- (as
scopes
found)
12 Pleased
41 Status sighs

Engl ish poel and politician Ambrose
Phi lips, who died in 1749 wrote "The
ftowers anew. returning Se~sons bring! 1
But beauty laded has no second spring:
After th ird hand wins the first trick, it can
be vital that he returns the right card in
th is suit at the second ttick. This deal is
a textbook e~~;ample.

~

II WIS

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CONS I illl( II Or&gt;.

M~1ry

52

West
" 8 6 5
• 10 9'2

Seamless· Gutters
Roofing, Sid1ng , Gutters

Removal

Pka~c

OHI9·08

Guttering

Trimming

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NEA Crossword Ptt'Zzle

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UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE l HTfRI
10 GH ANSWER
SC'RAMWI:l ANSWF.RS 7/8/08

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will bav• to M,AKE i1

ARLO&amp;JANIS

TR LIE."

granny tuld

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

_

Wednesday, July ·9, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

....

_~-

'

Nlore]u;twith the RodS,.. both A~- an(t C
BY TIM DAHLBERG
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The rich and famous, it
seems, split up differently
than the rest of us.
Chrislie Brinkley loaded
up the kids in rhe family private jet and flew off to
Colorado in search of comfort afler discovering her
husband was having an·
affair with an 18-year-old
and spending some of the
family fortune on Internet
porn.
Cynlhia Rodriguez chose
Paris in the sum!fier for her
getaway, booking a room al
Ihe mansion of rocker Lenny
Kravitz while trying 1to get
over lhe very public tale of
her husband's friepdship
with

-,

AP photo

In this June 26 file photo, Oakland Athletics' Rich Harden pitches against the Philadelphia
Phillies during a baseball game in Oakland, Calif. The Chicago Cubs have acquired Harden
from the A's in a six-player trade, a day after the rival Milwaukee Brewers landed CC
Sabathia.

Cubs land pitcher Rich Harden
if he liked the deal he got he 'Oh, we're going to gel in,
was going to try to do it we're better than last year,
before CC's turn. It had -we'll take our chances if we
- CHICAGO - One day nothing lo do with the tim- get in,"' Hendry said.
after
the
Milwaukee ing," Hendry added.
"There's a · lot of baseball
"I heard it was going to lefl. We don't look at it
Brewers landed an ace, the
Chicago Cubs answered.
happen. Still it's always a loday like we're gelling in
lntenl on ending lhetr 100- surpri se," Harden said. "l!'s for sure .... Our mode all
year droughl wuhout a ·a bit of a shock but il will be year has been that we will
World Series rille, the NL good. They've got a good lry lo get betler."
Cenlral leaders acq11ired tal- team.. anrl a chance of doing
Gaudin was 5.-3. with.. a
3.59 ERA in 26 games ented · right-hander Rich something special. "
Chicago also got right- including six starts for
Harden in a six-player deal
with the Oakland Athletics hander Chad Gaudin, who Oakland.
on Tuesday.
pitched previously for Cubs
Murton was a former top
With CC Sabathia going manager Lou Piniella in prospect for rlie Cubs, b~t
to Milwaukee, Harden was Tampa Bay, and senl he 's .shuuled between
the best available pttcher, prom·ising righr-hander Sean TriP, le-A Iowa and Chicago
Cubs general manager Jim Gallagher, outfielders Mat( lhe past two seasons. He's
Hendry said. ·
Murton and Eric Patterson hitting .250 in 40 at-bats.
"We felt thai the two high and minor leaguer Josh
Gallagher is 3-4 with a
4.45 ERA in 12 games,
end guys who would possi- Donaldson to the A's. .
Harden, eligible to be a including 10 starts. ·
bly be available were the
two that have already_ been free agent after the 2009 sea"ll's a great opportunity
traded. Those are Iegtt one ~on, ts 5-l wtth a 2.34 ER~ for me to go over there and
and two starters. So we tn.ed m 13 starts thts season. He s , slart every fiflh day and
to f~~us on trym.g lo acqutre scheduled to make $4.75 keep going," he s~id.
o~~· Hendry satd. ,
m!!hon th.ts season.
.
Gallagher is expected to
. . It certamly wasn t a reacWe wtll have the nghts start at home Friday against
tton move. We would have for .a year and a half, so the Angels.
gladly had "Rtch t_wo or three rhat s the or her advantage ot
"I'm excited aboul it "
· weeks ago."
him not being ~.free agenl," · Athletics manager B~b
The Cubs began play He~dry sa1d. He has an Geren said of the trade.
T':'esday 3 1/2 games ahe~d option that could vest.:or we "We've made some great
of the Cardmals and four m could ptck up .the opuon or deals the last 12 months and
front of the Brewers m the . we could arbttrate. So he this
is another one.
NL Central.
certamly has a chance to be (Gallagher is) young and talThe Cub~ can now match a Cub t~tf.ough the end .of ented and we got a lot of
Mtlwaukee s one-tw? com- next year. . .
other talent in the deal also. I
bmatwn of S~bathta and
!he oft-mJured 1_-larde_n lhink it's going to -be another
Ben Sheets wtth All-Star mtssed a month earher .rhts one of these trades where
Carlos Zambrano and season because of a nght both teams are going to be
Harden..
,
.shoulder stram. It was ~ts real happy with it."
Athlettc~ gene.ral ma.na!ler stxth tnp 10 ~he dtsabled hst . Pauerson, the brother of
Bt!Iy Beane sa1d tradmg m hts st_x-year career.
Corey Patterson was sent to
Harden doesn'l mean hts
"Obvtously there's some
. .
' .
team is in sel-ling mode. risk involved. He's missed t~e mmors on July 3, and
Oakland began the day six some time but he's never has also been on the frequent
games behind the first-place had any surgery,'' Hendry shuttle_ belween the Cubs
Los Angeles Angels in the said. "We did extensive and Tnple-A. Patte~son was
AL West and 3 1/2 behinq work with their doctors."
,htttmg .237 Wtth a homer
the Boston Red Sox in the . The Cubs said they a~d seven RBls m 38 at-bats
expecled Harden to join the wtth the Cubs. He also plays
wild-card race.
"I don't necessari ly lhink team Wednesday and pitch second base.
we've raken a slep back. I either Friday or Saturday al
Donaldson,. a calcher for
. think we've taken a step for- Wrigley Field against the Class .f':. Peona, was htttmg
.217 Wtth stx homers.
ward for the next lhree to S'an Francisco Giants.
"This gives us anolher
Murton and Patterson will
five years," Beane said. "We
were balancing that the weap,on," Piniella said. · be
sen! . to Tnple-A
c)ub's playing well but also "He 11 fit in here really nice. Sacramento. Donaldson may
keeping in mind that we've Let's keep him heahhy and 'be moved up to Dou~le-Aor
had numerous injuries over. pitching and go from there." could be sent to. Smgle A
the last week. "
The Cubs won the NL Stockton.
Hendry also talked with Central last season but were
Piniella said the trade
the Indians about Sabathia swept out of the playoffs by should send a message 10
and said conversations with Arizona. Without a World Cubs fans.
Beane about Harden have Series appearance since
"This show s the Cubs are
. been ongoing for three or 1945 and without a tille going to do everything in
four weeks.
since 1908, they are obvi- their power to gel where we
"I knew Rich was going to ously making a strong push. want to go,'' he said.
make his start Sunday, no The team is also expected to
malter what. AI the same be sold by the end of the seaAP Freelance Writer Mike
time, my chats with (Indians son.
Wa_gaman in Oaklam;i con~ - GM) Mark Shapiro .. I think
"We never looked at il as tributed to this story.
BY RICK GANO

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Madonn~

and

his

alleged dalliances ', elsewhere.
News of Brinkley's trip
surfaced !his week as part of
a divorce trial in New York
thai was a tabloid dream.
Amid rhe tales of lust,
money and motherhood was
a retort by her soon-to-be-ex
thai she should have been an
actress instead of a model
after her . performance in
court.
Abour the only thing missing was an appearance by
Madonna, bur apparently
this was one divorce she didn'l have to deny any
involvement wilh.
That's not the case when it
comes lo the Rodriguez
family, whose relationship
had always provided headline material for the New
York tabloids. Even they
CO'-..lld11-'~ believe their good
fortune over the past few
days
when
Cynthia
Rodriguez's dissatisfaclion
with her husband culminated with a filing seeking an
end to !heir five-year marriage .
Teenage girls, sex and
aging supermodels are
always good fodder: Put a
pop star and a Yankee superslar together. and you can
keep printing papers until

you run out of newsprint.
Our fascination with
everylhing celebrity apparently knows no bounds,
though that shouldn't come
as any surprise to anyone
·who pays auention to the
daily maling dance belween
the paparazzi and Britney
Spears or watches the hasbeens that masquerade as
celebrities on shows such as
"Dancing With The Srars."
We can 'I get enough of
Paris Hilton, can't believe
.David Archuleta sings like
he does, and can't stop lalking about how Nicole
Kidman· actually named her
new baby Sunday Rose.
so
celebrity
We're
obsessed
!hat
more
Americans can probably
better tell you hl}w mm:h Ed
McMahon is in arrears on
his Beverly Hills eslate than
they can discuss the monthly
trade deficil with Chin~.
And now there's a nalional debare over whether ARod 's relalionship with
Madonna is spiritual or sexual.
My uneducated guess is
!hal il's neilher, and not just
because I've never met a
ballplayer who had many
deep thoughts. I'm leaning
toward the theory that
Madcmna .- who shares a
manager with A-Rod either wanted good seals at
Yankee Stadium or was desperate for a publiciry jumpstart for her Sticky &amp; Sweet
world tour thai begins in
August.
She's certainly not inviting Rodriguez over for some
latc- ni~ht batting tips. He's
doing JUSt fine at the plate,
though he:s not hitting home
runs _at nearly the same pace
he did last season.
Yankee manager Joe
Girardi said lhe olher day he
didn't rhink rhe problems in
A-Rod's personal life would
spill over lo lhe field, and
he' s
probably
right.
Remember, !his is the same
player who hit 54 hb'me runs
last year despite tabloid pho-

tos showing him with a
woman reporled 10 be a
&gt;!ripper at a Toronto hole!.
Besides,
people
get
divorced every day. It's not
even all that inlriguing
unless, of course, you add
Madonna, Lenny Kravitz , a
new baby, and pictures that
show C-Rod is very serious
about physical fitnes s to the
mtx.
OK, so maybe it is an allstar cas! worthy of an all-star
player. And I• suppose it
beats worrying aoout gas at
$4.40 a gallon or the facl the
Yankees are stuck in third
place, 8 1/2 games out with
lhe season more than half
over.
As far as baseball players
wilh domestic issues go,
though, former pitchc;
Chuck Finley being assaulted by his actress wife,
Tawny Kiraen, was more
inleresting. So was Kris
Benson's wife showing up al
the Mets' annual holiday
. party in a low-cui Sanla costume and discussing ·intimate details of the couple's
sex life on her Web sile.
And don't forget the two
Yankee pilchers, Fritz
Pelerson and Mike Kekich,
who lraded bolh wives and
families in the middle of the
1972 season.
The Rods, both A and C,
would have to go a long way
lo top that.
Personally, the whole
lhing bores me, though I will
acknowledge some interest
in finding out what kind of
prenuptial
Cynthia
Rodriguez has and how
much of the $275 ittilliun
contract A-Rod signed after
last seasun she might get;
Yankee fans should be inler•
ested in that, too, because
it's their ticker money that ·
will fund both Rods for
many years.
For now, though, I've got
olher things lo worry about.
I'm sure you've heard the
latest about Tom Brady anq .
hi s main squeeze, Gisele
Bundchen ....

Bass tournament
" held, A6 .·

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,)0

ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHOLET, France
Stefan Schumacher of
Germany took lhe yellow
jersey at the .Tour de France,
and now says everything
else is a bonus.
He knows his early lead
won't last.
"Everybody &lt;;!reams of this
jersey," Schumacher said
Tuesday. "It's incredible.
The moment on lhe podium,
you see il a thousand times
on television, and to be there
for yourself - you can't
imagine."
·
Schumacher captured the
firs! time trial in rhe th'reeweek race, but the big winner in the fourth stage may
have ·been Australia's Cadel
Evans. He gained more than
a minute on his biggest challengers, a gap thai will mean
· a lot when the decisive
mountain stages arrive.
Schumacher finished the
I 8.3-mile individual trial in
35 minules, 44 ·seconds .
Kim
Kirchen
of
Luxembourg and David
Millar of Britain finished
second and third, both 18
seconds back. That is also
the order of the overall
standings,
where
Schumacher leads by 12
seconds ..
He will probably hold the
ll~ad in Wednesday's long,
flat stage, but he is under no
illusions about keeping the
jersey.

"I didn't come to win the onds over Carlos Sastre.
Tour," he said. "My goal
Two Americans are now
was to wear the jersey one well posilioned after excelday and to win .a stage. I _ lent time trials . Christian
reached this goal, so every- Vandevelde is sixth. 41 secthing else is a bonus ."
011ds behind Schumacher.
That Schumacher is riding George Hincapie, the faiththe Tour at all rematns con- ful Iieulenanl of seven-time
by champion Lance Armstrong,
tentious. .Stopped
German pollee for drunken is one place and six seconds
in · October, further back.
driving
Schumacher's blood sample
Tuesday's stage . had
rested postllve for amphera- seemed to be ideal for rimemm~s. He. has cons1sten1ly rrial world champion Fabian
demed taktn,g drugs.
Cancelktra · of Swilzerland,
He. wasn t p~mshed by but he struggled and fincychng authonlles be~ause_ ished fiflh.
the us,e of the drug out~tdeot
"There was wind, there
compelllwn . ts not constd- were a lot of things. but I
ered lo_be an offense.
don'! know what il w . ,, .
Belgtan cyclist Tom C
.
.. .
.. as,
Boonen also tested positive ancellara satd. Orhers
for a drug ·- cocaine_ in wete, qutc~er than m~.
an out-of-competition .lest. That s how It goes. I can !
He was banned by Tour chan~e anythmg. I ~an only
organizers, but Schumacher lry and ftnd what . went
was allowed to ride.
wr~.ng so I can make tl betSchumacher said he fell ter.
.
.
sorry for Boonen but does
~omatn Fetllu of France
not see a parallel in !he en!e~ed the day .w~lh the yelcases. He notes that he was low Jersey but fuushed near:
not caughl in a doping test. ly five minutes behind
"I was really not proud Schumacher.
that I went into the car
"I gave a lor yeslerday,
drunk," he said. "I am a pub- and I was very nervous
lie personality and I also today," he said. " I didn'!
have to be an example for have the slrength."
other guys. II .wasn't good
Wednesday is the fiftll
for me, but I didn't take stage- the longest and flat~
drugs."
test of the race- and favors
Evans, last year's runner- sprinters. The route rake5
up, is in fourth place. He has nders 144 miles east to
a lead of I :04 over his Chateauroux, setting therrl
biggest challenger, 17th- up for medium climbs of lh&lt;;
place Alejandro Valverde of Massif Central , beginning
Spain, and a further 16 sec- Thursday.

•

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Racine tables annexation plans

SPORTS
-:. Stewart released from
Gibbs Racing.
SeePageBI

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT II MVDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE
Racine
Village Council recently
decided to table making a
.decision on ils annexation
proposal, leaving that decision in limbo.
When asked if the labling
was indefipile, council
members sa1d "no" and a
decision would be made in
the near future. The decision to .table the vote was
made at lhe most recenl
meeting of Racine Village
Council afler a debate aboul
what to do next.

"I don't lhink we should
Hill said if council wants
scrap what we've done," to proceed with an atlempt
Council
President Ike al annexation, he advised
Spencer said.
they go door 10 door to disSpencer said he has cuss it with residents, show
received several phone calls them !heir estimated lax
from people living .in Ihe card if they were annexed
annexalion area that were and answer .question ~ on a
"disappointed" in how the ·one-to-one basis. .
informational meeling was
Councilman Jim Harmon
handled
las!
month. said in hindsighl lhat is how
Spencer, along wirh some the proposal should've been
other members of council handled in the first place.
and Mayor J. Scott Hill , Harmon also lfiaintained if
said the atmosphere of lhe the village sent out 119
meeting didn't permit in for- questionnaires to !hose resimarion .to be proticiently dents living within lhe pro"distribuled.
posed annexation area and

received 62 responses, of ing againsl rhe annexation.
which 44 were against saying those that are against
annexalion and 18 were for an issue, any issue, are
it, that told him the residenls going 10 be vocal, as is their
didn'l want to be annexed.
right.
It was also poinled our at - According to some mem rhe meering, again, that in bers of council, the question
lerms of those question- remains whether the vocal
naires, wilh only 62 or the silent are the maJority
responding out of the 119, in terms of being in favor or
nearly half didn't respond against annexalion. The
and their feelings remain . question may only be
unknown. In regards to this answered, at leas! for coundiscussion,
Councilman cil, once each home/properJason Shain said !hose thai ty owner has an opporlunity
sent those letlers in were to review whar that annexalikely the same residenls lion would mean to them
who showed up at the meet- personally.

•

.OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Donn.a Sue Rollins; 66
• Charldi,ne Rose Alkire ·
·• Frances V. Barber, 82
.• Annabel Houdashelt, 86

Schumacher wins Tour de France time trial
Bv NAoMI KoPPEL

( '[·. N IS • \ "ol. ;;~,No. :.!;}11

'.

.

l#ber named
to Farmers
.Bank.board
STAFF REPORT
NEWSIIMYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - David L.
Weber of Tuppers Plains has
been named to the board of
• Salmonella infects over directors at Farmers B"ank
and . Savings Co. and
1,000; peppers now
Farmers Bankshares, Inc.
eyed. See Page A2
Weber is the president of
• Family Medicine.
D.V. Weber Conslruction
Co.
of Reedsville.
See Page A3
"Our Tuppers Plains' mar• Ailing Kennedy retums ket is extremely impo'rtanl
:..to the Senate for vote.
to the future growth of our
bank, and Dave, as one of
._ See Page AS
the area's most prominenl
-.. Kiddy Day give-away
businessmen, will be a valuMeigs Fair feature.
able add ilion to our board of
directors,
said
Bank
See Page A6
President Pau!M. Reed ..
"We are all very pleased
he has chosen to join our
team."
WEATHER
Weber is a 1974 graduate
of Eastern High School and
a 1978 graduate of Ohio
University. He is a member
of the Reedsville United
Methodist Church, where he
series on the Board of
Trustees. He is also active in
various professional and
civic organizations, including the · Ohio Conrractors
Association.
Weber is vice president of
Delalle on Page A6
the Tuppers ,Plains-Chester
'.
Water District and is past
president and current vice
president of the Meigs Board
Please see Weber, AS

INDEX

l"s~'t

i.,sp~dio.,
Yesterday children participating in the
Children's Summer Reading Program
sponsored by the Meigs District
Public Library got to get up close and
personal with all types at insects and.
bugs at the Racine Library. Naturalist
Dee Kimes from Forked Run State
Park was on hand with several
insects and even an arachnid showed
up in the term of a pet tarantula
owned by Southern biology teacher
Ann Sisson. In addition to inspecting
the insects , children received a free
meal from the Appalachian Nutrition
Network.
Beth SergenUphotos

••
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.

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2 SECilONS- 16 p,_GES

Rapid ••• Reliable••• Responsible
Health Care
Holzer OinK's U~ent care M&gt;videS 9u'rt A

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quality healttl care for Allergic: Reattioas. Bums,

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7 days per week.

Boltrd Ce1 tffled PllrsJcMns
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""*'

v1111 www.mydailya eIilinel.com a

state-of-th-.Ait ~nostk Tests

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Ann~e's Mailbox

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics

Eastern board approves principal,·other contracts
Bs-6

B7

STAFF REPORT
'

NEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Editorials
A4 TUPPERS PLAINS ~
Eastern Loc1,1l Board of
Movies
As The
Education hired Shawn
Obituaries
As Bush as the district's new
middle school principal,
~laces to Go
AB and
approved coaches and
Sports
BSection other supplemental contract
positions during its recent
A6 meeting
:Weather
.
© aoo8 Ohio VaHey Pubtlshlng Co.

Adv•llced ubo,..forr SeiYkes

Click 111e 111ue tutton.

,

Bush was hired on twoyear contract. After meeting
in executive session, the
board approved the following personnel : Brandon
Wolfe, substitute teacher;

Kristen Chevalier, heallh
and physical education
teacher; Robyn Howard,
Intervention
Specialist
teacher; Rachael Marlep,
foreign language reacher;
Juli Simpson, Mental
Project
Health
Grant
Coord,inaror;
Cathy
Edwards,
·Student
Information
Services
Coordinator.
The board approved an
administmtive supplemen'ral
contract for Heather Wolfe
as curriculum coordinator.
The following supplemental
contracts were
.,

approved retroactive lo June
I : Sheryl Roush, Summer
OGT
Intervention
Instructor; Heather Wolfe,
High Schor! Summer
School Monitor; Chri s
Wilson,
Elementary
Summer School Instructor;
Jayne Collins, Math and
Science Academy lnstruclor
(Core
Grant);
Krista
Johnson, Math and Science
Academy Instructor (Core
Grant); Wade Collins ,
Dakota Collins, Morgan
Hall, Kimberly Minear,
Lonnie · Westfall and Tresa
Swatzel, Student Aides for

.'

Math and Science Academy. high assislant foolball
The following supple- coach.
mental contracts · were
Sam Thompson , freshman
approved for the 2008-09 class advisor and National
schoel year pending proper Honor Sociely · Advisor:
certification: Pam ·Douthitt, Angie Rigsby, eighth grade
athletic
director;
)uli class co· advisor ; Debbie
Simpson, head volleyball Barber. eighlh grade class
. coach; Kristen Chevalier, co-advisor ; and Randy
assistant varsity volleyball Wachter, varsiry golf coach.
coach; Kalie Robertson,
The board approved a
seventh grade volleyball transfer of Brad Holsingerto
coach; Rodney Ash, junior the position of maintenance
high as sistanl football at the appropriate srep on the
coach; Bringham Ash, vol- salary schedule, beginning
unleer junior high assistant the 2008-09 school year.
foorball
coach;
Ken
Please see Eastern, A5
Amsbary, volunteer junior
l

'

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