<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4040" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/4040?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-28T09:10:21+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="13960">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/7aec52cd6dd737ef2e381709742dc994.pdf</src>
      <authentication>eff60bc0fa80c8c9a2b04c80f14586f1</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="14214">
                  <text>&amp;unba~limts·itntinel ACROSS THE NATION

·PageD6
Sunday, August 3, 2008
~

AP IMPACT

.Government loves its cars
Bv JENNIFER

C.

.all 642,233 of 'em

Transportation
Secretary
Peters, her car, fuel and maintenance cost $11,500 last
year. Most agency chiefs
have one driver.
The department says Peters
needs tWO because the "cosi
of paying one driver overtime
to cover both weekday shifts
and weekends would be prohibitive." A spokesman said a
driver has to be on duty or
available 24 hours a day,
seven days a week for Peters.
The Veterans Affairs
Department has five sedans
assigned to Secretary James
Peake, the deputy secretary
and the three top officials for
the health office, benefits
office and national cemetery
administration. Total cost for
the five cars and drivers:
$353,470 a year.
Salaries for government
drivers ranged from $46,000
for the driver for Equal
Opportunity
AP photo Employment
Video image showing Washington D.C. U.S. Government license plate on a government Commission Chair Naomi
fleet vehicle , Thursday, July 24. Americans love their cars, and so apparently does Uncle Earp to about $90,000 for
Leavitt's driver at HHS.
Sam- all642,233 of them. Operating those vehicles- maintenance, leases, and fuel . The latest report available
cost a whopping $3.4 billion last yeat, according General Services Administration data from
the
Government
obtai,ned and analyzed ~y The Associated Press. W~ile Cabinet and other agencies say. Accountability Office, from
they need their vehicles to do their jobs, watchdogs say mismanagement of the govern- 2004, looked at the tleets of·
ment fleet is costing taxpayers millions of dollars a year in wasteful spending.
five departments including

KERR

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

WASHINGTON
Ameri&lt;:ans love their cars.
and so. apparently does Uncle
Sain. He's gut 642.233 of
them. ·
, ,Operating those vehicles
- maintenance, leases and
fuel - cost taxpayers a
whopping $3.4 billion last
year, according to General
Services Administration data
obtained and analyzed by
The Associated Press.
While Cabinet and other
·Officials say they need the
vehicles to do their jobs.
watchdogs say mismanagement of the government tleet
is costing mi !lions of dollars
a year in wasteful spending.
For example:
• At the Department of
Housing
and
Urban
Development, fuel consumption and inventorv are down.
yet overall costs . have
increased
significantly.
Officials there can't figure
out why.
o The Interior Department
was told.by its own watchdog
that it should cut its inventory, but it 's added hundreds of
vehicles.
!ems with its tleet of about whether each is justified.
they all really necessary?
o The VA has some cars that
HUD has cars for employ"This is one bleeding part 450 vehicles.
are barely driven. One just of a budget and not just in
According to an AP analy- ees who conduct fair housing
disappeared.
one department but in a lot sis, tleet costs at HUD have and mortgage fraud investiAdd to that the cost of dri- of departments," says Sen. soared nearly 70 percent gations and housing inspecvers, a perk given to high- · Charles Grassley, R-lowa, a since 2004, to more than $2.1 tions across the country. At
level government officials.
longtime foe of what he con- million last ·year. But during the Interior Department, cars
Transportation Secretary siders wasteful federal the same period, 'the agency and trucks are used by workMary Peters has two dnvers . . spending. "When you have trimmed its tleet and c;werall ers who help manage some
Their salaries totaled more something bleeding like this, fuel consumption. While gas 500 million acres of public
than $128.000 last year. there can be a lot of money prices have increased since lands. The Agriculture
The driver for Health and saved."
2004, the j&gt;eriod AP analyzed Department has tens ofthouHuman ·Services Secretary
Saving taxpayer dollars came well before hx!ay's sands of vehicles for conserMichael Leavitt earns about should be a priority, says record-high prices.
vationists, scientists, .farm ·
$90,000 a year. That's more Washington-based Citizens
"Where that spike in over- loan specialists and the forest
than double the avemge Against Government Waste. all costs came from, I have no Service.
salary of an office manager or · "From a man~gement . idea," said Bradley Jewitt,
Federal agencies also have
accountant,
and
about standpoint, this is something director of HUD's facilities dedicated cars and drivers for
$35.000 more than a regi s- that can easily be handled," management ·
division. senior officials.
tered nurse earns. according said Tom Schatz, president of Agency spokesman Jerry
In addition to the salaries
to a salary calculator provid- the group. "It's critical use or Brown added, "We can't for the two drivers for
ed by CareerBuilder.com.
necessary use versus 'well, . explain it."
The government owns or we've got the money, let's go
Jewitt, who carne to HUD
leases sedans, SUVs, trucks, .out and buy some more late last year, p(omised more
limousines and ambulances cars."'
accountability and, oversight.
for more than three dozen
The
Department
of The agency has begun a thoragencies, the U.S. military · Housing
and , Urban ough review of its vehicles,
and the Postal Service. Are Development admits prob- how they are being used and

.·

Veterans Affairs, Homeland
Security and the Navy. It
found a number of instances
where agencies were keeping .
vehicles they didn:t need.
Ditching those cars, the
report said, could save the
government millions of dollars.
·
The Interior- Department
was another agency ,~ingled
out for wasteful spendmg. In
a 2004 report, the agency's
inspector general found a significant portion of department vehicles weren't being
driven much, Eliminating
them could save $34 million
a year.
Interior cut more than 600
vehicles before the report was
released, but its overall tleet
has increased by more than
I ,500 vehicles since then,
according to an AP analysis
of GSA data.
Interior ranks fourth among
civilian agencies in the size of
its tleet, but it spends the
most money -· more than
$241 mi II ion last .year on
vehicles. maintenance and
fuel. Agriculture has the
largest fleet but spends far
less, about $150 million ..

Making a donation, A3

Your
Daily Sentinel ~·
is printed on lOQ,% ~
USA Recycled Paper

ec

Printed on t00 9,

Rec.vclcd Newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
"

50 CENTS •Vol. 58, No. 17

MO!'IIDAY, AUGUST 4, 2008

"'"' ·"')d:til)"'nlirwl.&lt;·nm

transmission

SPORTS
:• Edwards gets fourth
win. See Page 81

BY BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

COLUMBUS
American Municipal Power·
Ohio recently submitted a
modification of its transmission line in regard to preferred an'd alternate routes to
the Ohio Power S.iting
Board
to reflect wliat
its consultants ca ll ·an
"updated
report" which
includes stream assessment
information.
The stream as sessment
information is for seven
additional areas within the

alternate transmi ssion route
not contained in the prior
report. The modification is
not an amendment to the
accepted, complete application with the OPSB becaUS$!
AMP-Ohio says it is within
2,000 feet of the study corridor and "will not impact
any additional landowners.
and will not create further
impacts within the planned
right -.of-way · of the pro. posed facility."
AMP-Ohio consuHant~
report the alternate route
contains 26 primary headwater streams including

seven .. class one streams,
two modified class two
streams and 17 dass two
streams. The preferred route
contains 30 streams, including II class one streams, I0
class two streams and eight
class three streams. · Two
wetlands were identified in
the preferred route totaling
.091 acres while 1.1 3 acres
of wetlands were identified
in the alternative route ..
No wetlands or streams
will be filled as part of the
transmission line construction or operation, according
to · the
modification .

Construction will require
stream crossings but these
are said to be temporary and
will be discussed with the
Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency and
OPSB during preconstruction meetings. The crossing
method will vary according
to width and quality of the
stream but will be designed
in · accordance with the
Rainwater
and
Land
Development Manual published by the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources/OEPA. Erosion
control and restoration will

be conducted according to
the conditions of the
Pollution
Stormwater .
Prevention Plan and OPS B
appl ication . The construction of the interconnect
sw itchyard however will
require what AMP-Ohio
consultants call "minimum"
impact to stream 537 with
impacts mitigated through
· the proposed off-site stream
· mitigation. .
At6:30. p.m. tomorrow at
Southern
Elementary
School a public information

'\

JJ5

.,,

Llllll·

cp .._..

tOiftBIR

· ...
OBITUARIES

Real Answers • Open Discussion

·"

~t~c.,.,

Page AS
• Floyd F. Finnicum, 85
.• Vesta G. Ham, 87
• Myrtle Holter, 81
• James Woodyard, 68

Vinton Baptist Church
9:30 AM beginning July 27
11818 S.tate Rd.160, Vinton, OH 45686
740-388-8454 • www.vintonbaptist.com

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@ MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

___...

INSIDE

Traci lost the weight...

'

. l()U cant()()!
.

Charlene Hoefttchlpholo

Kelly Watson, an employee in the Meigs County Fair Board office, lett, assists Lori Bailey of Reedsville in registering her
baby tor participation in the Pretty Baby Contest at the Meigs County Fair. Sixty-eight babies were entered in the contest.

• Award winner.
See Page A3
• Is it time lor your
heroes to collect social
security? See Page A3
• Girl 'Scout projects
; judged lor lair.
; See Page AS

Dr. Choudhary Rayani, M.D.

WEATHER

Cardiac Electrophysiologist 'Holzer Cardiovascular Institute is pleased
to announce the return of Dr. Choudhary
Rayani to the r~on. After completing two
Cardiology Fellowships during his four year
absence, he subsequently specialized in
Electrophysiology (EP). EP Cardiologists
are highly specialized In the ,management of
heart rhythm disorders.Trained to implant
pacemakers, cardioverter defibrillators
(ICDs), perform ablations, EP studies and a
broad range of other heart rhythm
management procedures; Dr. Rayani is
eager to bring these much needed services
to our community.

The total number of entries declined
this year from the 2,899 entries of
2007 and was the lowest in the past I0
years. In 2005, entries total 3378, the
highest in the past 18 years. The only
categories showing an increase in
number of entries this year were beef,
the Little Miss and Mister . and the
pretty baby contests.
The Little Miss and Mister entries
went from 20 to 24 entries, the pretty
baby contest entries went from 54 to
68, and the beef category jumped
from 22 to 28.

BSEAGENHIMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS Betsy Keams. brdllch manager of the Tuppers Plains
'
office of Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. has been promoted to the position of
Farmers
Bank Vice President.
:i SECOONS - 12 PAGES
"This promotion is well
. ~nie's Mailbox
deserved," Farmer.; Bank
President Paul M. Reed said.
Calendars
"Betsy has 29 years of bankB3-4 ing experience. She runs the
Classifieds
most prof.itabie branch in the
farmers Bank system. Her
Comics
loan portfolio is the third
Editorials
A4 largest among our branches,
A6 which is-an amazing achieveM6vies
ment, since the Tuppers
Plains
area does not have a
ql:litujlries
As large commercial
,,
base."
B Section
Prior to, her employment
As with Farmers, Ms. Keams ·
Weather
worked at Pomeroy National
@•oo80hloValleyPublishblgCo.
Bank and Bank One.
Kearns lives in Pomeroy,
with her husband, Pat. She
has four children: Ryan and
Dyana · Hawthorne and
•
Tyler
and Chelsi Kearns, J
I.

''

Delatte on Page AS

.
lNDEX

0

LAP-BAND"
S¥ST£

0

~

877.627.4957

GO Online: www.HolzerHeart.com
l

'

•

..

F.C.C.L.A. members, along with other
youth groups. It alsp does not include
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTIN ELCOM
several categories which are not clas·sified
in competitive-ope.n classes, like
POMEROY - Exhibit entries in
open classes for the 2008 Meig s the draft horses, according to Debbie
County Fair which gets under way on Watson, fair board secretary.
Entries in their respective categories
Aug. II totaled 2,264 when the time
were
dairy, 54; beef, 28; sheep. .I :
for entering exhibits closed Saturday
poultry, 4; farm crops, I04; hay show,
afternoon.
Open class entries represent only 6; flower show, I 024; domestic arts,
senior fair participation and do not 69: painting, .61; photography,. 454;
include the thousands of entries made baking and canning, 278; grange 4;
by 4-H Club members, boy and girl antique display, 85: little miss and
scouts, junior grangers, FFA and mister, 24; and pretty baby, 68.
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

BY BETH SERGENT

Bs

HOlZER
CARDIOVASCULAR
INS'ITI'UTE

·M_eigs Countiarts enter fair .exhibits

---

- - L - - - - - - - - --,~--------------..!----

TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains Regio nal
Sewer District has ad vised
its customers that flushing
irmppropriate items into the
sewer system is causing
damage to mechanical parts.
Customers are flushing
diapers, washcloths. toy s,
cotton swabs and other personal items and even toxic
chemicals into the sewer
system , according to an
advisory sent to cu~tomers.
According to that advisory, damages to the lift
station
motors
cost
$10,000 to repair. The
required cost. of a pumper
truck is $ROO a day.
The di strict, reports , that
.the force main at the lift station is clogged with debris
with only one pump oper;rt·ing. The · cost will be in the
thousands to repair.
"Custor~;~,ers can expect a
substantialincrease on sewer
bills in the future if this continues. and anyone dumping
trash into the sewer will be
prosecuted to the fullest that
the Jaw wi II allow ...
"Such items should never
be found in the lift stat ion or
grinder pump pits because
they will wrap arou.nd the
propell er and burn up the
motors .''
Please see Sewer, As

Kearns named Skatopia skates into-Rolling Stone
Farmers BankV.P.

•

Traci lost 111 pounds

'

Please see AMP, AS

Sewer
district
warns of
system·.
damage

OK? .

••1

'

Spans

•

Betsy Kearns

and a grandson, Hunter
Hawthorne.
She graduated from
Eastern High School in 1979,
and later obtained an associate degree in business management. She is a graduate of
the Consumer Lending
School and the Ohio Bankers
League Leadership InstiMe.
She is assistant cheerleader coach for Eastern
High School, and attends
the Clifton, W.Va. United
Methodist Church.

RUTLAND. Rumors of
debaucher.y, mayhem, burning cars and others even too
outrageous to print in this
newspaper, Skatopia, located just outside of Rutland,
definitely has a reputation
which ultimately landed it
in the Aug. 7 edition of
Rolling Stone , magazine,
considered one of the
world's premiere magazines
· on the latest in pop culture
with a reported circulation
of I .4 million.
The article focuses on
Skatopia's annual Bowl
Bash, an event featuring
free-for-all skating and
metal/thrash bands. Inside
the nearly . six-page spread
are photographs of skating,
alleged vandalism, drinking, fireworks and a car set
on fire, all of which is sensationalist to say the least.
Skatopia owner and creator Brewce Martin said the
reporter basically got the
story right and he isn't
denying mayhem goes .on
. durin~ Bowl Bash but

added "that mayhem is not
twenty-four-seven around
here ... the Bowl Bash is once
a year. That's what that
weekend is for." Martin's '
biggest beef with the art'icle
ir, that it didn't · contain
enough pictures of actual
skating or stress more of the
positives of Skatopia, as he
sees them. Still, Martin says
the "mayhem" has created
some huge publicity for his
place, including sponsorship op('lortunities.
"There's no bad publicity
at this point." Martin added
about the interest the article
has produced, saying most
people already have a preconce.ived notion about
Skatopia and whether that
notion is true or false, doesn't bother him. "All the article does is reinforce existing mi sconceptions."
As for the "positives''
Martin
wished
were
stressed more in the article,
he elaborated: "We' re trying
to make people realize and
believe they can live their
dreams no matter what
those dreams are. they can
make it happen with hard

work. Hard work makes up
for lack of money. People
bonding together as a group
can achieve insunnoun~ablc
projects."
For Martin, that "insurmountable · project" has
been constructing Skatopia
(with the help of skaters that
. use the park) which has
been dubbed "88 Acres of
Anarchy" and contains both
concrete and woode n skating bowls. The park is featured on a level of Tony
Hawk 's Underground . Two
skating video game. MTV
has made an appearance via
Bam Margen1 and a documentary is being made
about the pla&lt;:e. The next
addition to Skatopia and
M artin 's vision is an
amphitheater for concerts
with the group Slayer on the
top of his li &gt;.t to book to play
the new ven ue.
As for Skatopia 's reputation puf on view for a wide
audience to ''read all about
it" thi s month, Mar1in says:
"There are positives and
negatives . People have difPieese see Sketople. AS

�ATION

The Daily Sentinel

Fed likely to hold rates

steady amid crosscurrents
Bv JEANNINE AVERSA

Bv LARA JAKES JoRDAN
ASSOCIATED ?AESS WAITER

Rate unchanged

Tug repeatedly warned before Miss. River collision
As the pilot of the tanker ing in New Orleans on Aug.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER
becomes it)creasingly dis- 12, the Coasl Guard said.
There were no mechani tressed. he called our to the
NEW ORLEANS - The captain of the Mel Oliver cal or electrical problems
pilot of a hu ge tanker urged again and again to gel out of with the tanker Tmtamara,
.
or questions about the
a tug boat pushing a b&lt;trge the way.
"This ain't good, man,'' pilot's competency, said
to ge t out of the way of the
_tunker j ust before a co llision . the pilot said. Then, as the Coast Guard, which would
on the Mi ssiss ippi Riv er. t.wo dots on a radar inter- not coinmeni further on the
which caused thousunds of sect, he added: "We just . findings of the preliminary
gallons of fuel oi l to spill took his tow. The barge is investigation.
from the barge into a busy ri ght in front of us .and
Normal shipping traffic
· was continuing on the
stretch of the inland water· we' re running it over."
The pil,ot of the tanker Mississippi during the week·
way. Coast Guard radio
transmission s showed.
was not identified.
end, though ships were ru~ Dcspite the tanke r pilot's
Al so Saturday, the Coast ning slower than nonmal to
repea ted warnin gs to the Guard released the results of avoid creating a wake that
tu g, no one on the smaller its preliminary investi ga- could hamper cleanup efforts.
boat responded to the radio tion . The Coast Guard found
The barge was carrying
me ssages. accordin g to· that the person operating the . about 419,000 gallons of
recorded excerpt' released Mel Oliver boat had an heavy oil, though the Coast
_ apprentice mate 's license, Guard ·has not determined
Saturday.
The Jul y 23 collision and but no .one on the vessel was . exactly now much was
ensuing fuel spill shut down properl y documented to spilled. About 139,000 gal·
shippin g traffic on a stretch guide it. The Coast Guard Ions of an oil-water mix has
of the ri ver for several days. said the captain of the tug been recovered.
Th~ n ew !~ released auuio
was not aboard at the time of
Crews were tryin g to
record ings and radar from the collision .
remove oil from another
that day ' how the 1ug boat,
"We can say he was on tanker protruding from the
Mel Oliver. cross in g the land.'' Chief Petty Oflic~r river's surface, and hoped to
ri ver in fro nt nf the tanker. Mike O'Berry said of the remove a tanker, believed to
Tintamara.
captai n. declining further be intac t, from the bottom
"Mel Oliver. come in cap, co mment.
of the river.
The tt1 g's captain and
The tugboat is currentl y
you' re crossing the bottom
of a ship corni ng at you." a stccr&gt;rnan apprentice·. and being inspected for mechanCoast Guard traffic con- the pilot of the tanker have ical or electrical problems,
been su mmoned to a hear· authorities said.
troller is heard to say.
BY ALAN SAYRE

-_ . Monday, August 4,

2008

Scientist: DNA led agents to anthrax suspect ·

WASHINGTON - DNA
taken
from the bodies of
The centra! bank held its benchmark
funds
rate
to
2
percent.
WASH INGTON - An
people killeq in the 200 I
ugly brc\V of ri~ing unem Federal lunda rate
anthrax attacks helped lead
7 peroonl
ployment , 'piking fore cloinvestigators to Bruce Ivins.
s ure ~ anti -.l!)'
fatino
l.!nerov
who oversaw the highly
_
c
C6
pricC S i' plaguing the
specific type of toxin in an
5
country and making li fe
Army lab, a governme nt
dillin111
for
Federal · 4
sc
ientist said Sunday.
r
Rc,ervc Chairman Ben
Using new ge nu rile. tech ~
3
Bernankc as lw tric ., to
nology. researchers looked
2
right I he economy.
at samples of cells fro m the
Bernanke and his central . 1
victims to identify the kind
hank cplll'il~ucs ;1rc f;Kcd
of anthrax Ames strain that
wi th Liucii~Jg proh lc1m : 0 1J1~~03 '04 us 06 m mi
killed them, the &gt;eienti st
said.
They noticed very subweak economic grow th and SOURCE · Federal Reserve
AP
aclvam.: in!..! inflation. To treat
tle differences in the DNA
ont: ri"' k ~ aggra\'ating the in to a tail spi n later thi s of the strain used in the
other. So the Fed i' wi dely year. Hopes for a seco nd- attacks than in other types·
expected whe n it 1n ech half rebound have largely . of Ames anthrax .
Spores
taken
from
Tue sday to leave .r key fizzled .
·
in tc re ... t rat e alone .
The economy grew at a envelopes used to mail the
""It t ~ cau!.! ht hetwtien a ·s lower-than -e xpected 1.9 anthrax. as well as from the
rock and a il.li'&lt;J plal'c . The percent pal'e thi s spring sites where th,ey were se nt.
1Feu) wiII "'111tl pat ... pre- despite some oomph from also were scrutin ized.
dicted Sung. Won Solm. an tax rebate checks. It shrank
With· that, in vestigators
eco nomi c~
pro fe\~or
at late last yea r.
linked. the specific type of
Cal ifornia Stale Uni ve rsi ty
Terry Connelly, dean of anthrax back to Ivins' bioChannel l.slunds.
Golden Gate University's logical weapons lab at Ft.
lf Sohn and other econo- Ageno School of Busine ss, Detrick in Frederick , Md .,
mi sts prove l'orrcc t. the described the condition of where he oversaw its use
Fed's rcrte will stay at 2 per- th e economy as " moving and handling for research.
ce nt. And . in turrr. the l'ro1n pneumonj ;l to ane"It had to do with the very
prime lending rate for mil - mi a." Because of that, the specific characteristics in
lio n.., ul' con . . umcrs antl Fed can't afford to boost the DNA of the letters and
bu sinesses wnuld stay at 5 rates to fend off inflation what was in Bruce 's labs,"
percent. The prime rate concerns. That would slow said the government scienapplies to LTrlili ll credit thin gs down even more. "It tist. who is close to the
carib. home equit y lines of is not yet time to prescribe a investigation . "They were
crL"dit and other lines.
cultures he was personally
sedative.'' he said.
With infl ati on wo rrie s
Co nsumer prices in June responsible for. "
grow ing:. the Fed in June rose at the second-fastest
The sc ientist spoke on
halted a near ly yearlon g pace in a quarter century. condition of anonymity
s trin ~ nf rate reductions.
Wholesale prices went up because he is not authorized
one ~) f its mos t aggressive sharply, too.
to speak to reporters. A
campaigns to shore up the
U.S . official on
senior
However, .energy prices
wohhl y
ecnnom y. have calmed down some in Sunday night confirmed the
Additional rate reductions rece nt weeks, giving the scientist's account.
would aggravate inflation. Fed more · leeway to hold
The scientific discovery
and ' orne don't think addi - rates steady. Oil prices gave the FBI its first solid
tional cuts wnuld provide closed at $ 125.10 a barrel break in one of the nation 's
·rnu l' h re lief to the econo- on Friday. That' s down most high-profile unsolved
my's biggest problc1m : the from a record high above crimes after years of pointcollapsed housing market $147 a barrel reached last ing the. finger at the wrong
and crcuil lrtlllbles.
st1spect. Combined with
month.
President Hu sh rcc.cntl y
Still, many expect the Fed other evidence, the Justice
signed into law Congress' at its meeting Tuesday to Department is expected to
hou si ng resc..:ue package. keep up its tough anti-infla- close the case this wee k,
The plan would make it tion talk . That 's aimed at concluding Ivin s was the
ea, ier fnr thousanus of peo- controlling inllation expec- mastermind and sole crimi ple at risk of losin g their tations
of consumers, nal behind the attacks that
horne to refinance into a investqrs and businesses. If killed . five and sickened 17
cheaper,
gov~ rnment ­
those groups think prices , others in the v,ceeks follow ba.cked mortgage.
. will keep on rising, they'll ing 9/11. ·
The Fed. meanwhile. has act in ways that can make
Ivins killed himself last
as· prosecutors preweek
taken a number of extraor- intlation worse.
dinary steps to ease credit
With any luck, the Fell pared to indict him on murprobleiT,ls so that banks, might be able to leave rates der charges.
Dozens
of
other
mvestment houses and oth- steady through most - if
researchers 'in Jvins' lab also
ers will keep on lendin~. not all of- this year.
The free flow of credit ts
The Fed has signaled that had access to the type of
like oxygen io the economy. . its next move on rates· is Ames strain used in the
Without it, people find it probably up- although the attacks, the scientist said,
meaning the DNA alone is
difficu lt to make big- ticket timing is far from clear.
purchases like homes and
Charles Plosser, presi· not enough to prove his
·
·
·
cars and businesses are less dent of the Federal Reserve guilt.
inclineLI to expand and hire Bank of Philadelphia, last
Investigators have said
workers:
month said the Fed proba- they used o~her evidence 1'-1
The unemp loyment rate bly will need to boost rates build the case against
zoomed to a four-year high "sooner rather than later" Ivins, including looking at
of 5.7 pe rcent in July as eve n if employment and who had access to the poi ·
businesses hun ke red down financial
conditions son or the labs at the spe·
to ride out the slu mp . . haven't revived. He' s cific time it was mailed.
Nea rl y half a million job; among the Fed's members Those detail s are expected
have disappeared so far this who has a reputation for to be spelled out in sealed
yea r. More losses are bei~ g extra-vigilant about court documents that are
expected to be released thi s
ex peeled. The jobless ra te i~flation dangers.
Another
Richard week if the Ju stice
could hit 6.5 percent by the
Fi sher, president of the Department ends the invesmiddle of next year.
With employment det e- Federal · Reserve Bank of tigation, possibly as early
riorating. a growing num- Dallas - opposed the Fed's as Monday or Tuesday.
ber of economists worry decision in June to leave
A senior law enforcement
rate
s
unchanged.
official
said Sunday that
'He
prethat peo ple will. clamp
down on their ·spending, ferred a rate increase then to viciin\s' families were wait·
ing to be briefed · at FBI
throw in g th e economy fend off inflation.
AP ECONOMICS WRITER

Page i\a-

AP photo/Frederick News Post, Sam Yu

Bruce E. Ivins, a biodefense researcher is seen in 2003, at
Fort· Detrick, Md . Ivins, the scientist who was developing a
vaccine to combat anthrax. died July 29, in an apparent sui·
cide in a hospital in in Frederick. Md . L!.S. prosecutor.o
investigating the 2001 anthrax attacks were planning to
indict a nd seek the death penalty for Ivins in connection with
mail ings of the deadly anthrax toxin that killed five people.
headqua rters in Washin gton
as soon as prosecutors agree
to end the investigation.
Although the Army lab
where Ivins worked had
long been on th e FBI's
radar, scientists were unable
to pinpoint the specific
stra in used in th e attacks
until about a year ago.
The FBI recruited top
ge nome . researchers from
acro ss the country and

encouraged them to do
groundbreaking work to
identify and isolate the
type of anthrax i·n the
attacks . At least $10 rni Ilion was spent oi1 the
research' in what the scienti st called the FBI' s most
expensive and scientifically compelling case to date.
The new ge nome tec hnology that tracked down
Ivins was either not avail-

ab le or too c~pensive to use
often until about three
years ago. It abo looked at
the DNA of the anthrax still
in the envelopes that begall'
showing up at congressional offices, newsrooms and
post offices soon after Sept:
11 ,2001.
The science' i&gt; known a~
ON A
fin gerpr inting.
Alth ough any two samp les
of · an th rax bacte ri a will
like ly .share roughl y the
same DNA structure, there.
are tiny differences from
to
sampl e.
sa mpl e
Scientists used those "fin'
gerpri1m" to ident ify the
' "urce of the anthrax tha~
kill ed five people.
In the years si nce scien. ti sts mapped the hum an
ge nome ,' co mputer speeds
have increased dramatically,
making thi s process easier
and less expensive . DNA
fingerprint analysis that not
too long ago would have.
taken years, can now be
done in days.
The- government scienti st
said the FBI knew the DNA
evidence 'Iinked Ivins to the
attacks for at least a yeaf.
· However; prosec utors worried that becau se the
ge nome technology was so
new. it might be questioned
and eventually thrown out if
the case agaimt Ivins eve.t
went to trial. Researchef!
tested it for many mote
months to make sure its
conclusions were reli able. :·
Even so, its use in the.
anthrax case will probabcy
spark sc ientific debate o.n
how stron gly it can be used
to help solve crimes, the sci·:
entist said.
He predicted · few would ·
be able to argue with its,
namely.:
conclusions
identifying the type of
Ame s strain used. Still, the
scientist
said,
some_
researchers will probably
·note the DNA doe s not·
alone give the gove rnment' a
smoking gun or other sure-:
·
fire case-closer.

BY THE BEND

The
. Daily Sentinel
~ommunity

Calendar

Eurf'lllC slock
ind~x:

I'OSITI\'F,

Clubs and
organizations

Reunions

Church events

Making a donation

Award winner

Ordering your photos online is fast and easy!

www.mydailysentinel.com

This blue button on our website
links YOU
to all of our PlCTURES

to collect social security?

is not h ~ r decision to make.
Is there a reason your
fiance has to li ve with you
now'l If he can wait until
after the wedding. that
' would take care of th e
problem . If not, . do what'
you need to do. apologize .
si ncerel_y to your mother
for any offense. and then
don 't discuss it with her
further. She will ge t over it
once th e arran gement is
legal.
·
Dear Annie:' I am writ ing in response to "Texas
Tea," who disparaged the
in se nsitivity o r a sc hool
di strict hav ing a se parate
prom for student s with special need s. I agree it would
be sad if these student s
were specifi cally segregated. Howe ver. I would like
to provide the writer with
another ex planation .
I am ·&lt;\ Iife skills support
teacher. When prom time
rolled around, llJOSt of our
student s were very interested in going. but the prom
was 50 miles away and the
cost was $7 5 per student.
not to mention- flowers.
dre &gt;les. tt1xedos, etc. None
o f my students had the
reso urces to go. My coteacher and I had the idea of
holding a prom just for our
students. to give them that
cherished experience.
We invited
parent s.
administrators and teachers.
. and the students invited
whomever they wanted, disabled or not. The prom was
in town at a beautiful facility and cost $7 per person.
The feedback was immediate from everyone involved
that this was an excellent
alternative to the regular
prom. and that it should be
held annually.
We understand that indi ·
victu als with special needs
are treated differently, but
this is an example of an
accommodation that is
mear)t to bring them a typi· ·
cal prom c~pcrience. not
take anything away. Pennsylvania
Spl'cial
Education Teacher
Dear Teacher: What a
lovely idea. Thanks for
sharing.
Arurie 's Mailbox is writ·
te11 by Katlry Mitchell aud
Marcy Sugar, longtime eili_tors of tire Amr . lAnders
column. Please e-mail your
.questions to amriesmail·
box@conrcast.rret, or write
to: Arrnie 's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago,
60611. To jirrd out more
about Amrie 's Mailbox,
and read features by otlrer
l;reators Syrrdicate writers
and cartooni;·ts, visit tire
Creators SyndiCate Web
page at www.creators.com.

\!Cbe ~allipolis llailp \!Cribune,
«be ~oint ~leasant l\egtster

...

Even photos that were
not printed but were
a part of a news story
are available.

2008

Be open about
emotional affair

p.m.. at the home of
Tuesday, Aug. 5
Vacation Bible School, 6 p.m.
POMEROY .
Manning Rou ,h.
to 8:30 p.m., Aug . 4-8 at the
C HESTER - -Chester Wildwood Garden_ Club, Victory Baptist Church.
,,
Monday, Aug. 4
Township
Trustees wi ll 6:30 p.m. at Syracuse Theme. " It' s a Jungle Out
Meig s
' POMEROY meet
7
p.m.
at
the town hall. Communi ty Center. Janel l'here.'' Lessons, crafts,
Cou nt y Republican Party,
POMEROY
- Meigs Bolin to teach creat ing op· refreshments. For more infor7:30p.m. special meeting at
BY KATHY MITCHELL
the
Meig s
County Cou nty Board of Health, reg- · art and abstract arrange- mation call 992-7 111 or 992AND MARCY SUGAR
ular meeting, 5 p.m. , Meigs ments fo r the fair fl ower 9052, Pastor James Keesee.
Courthouse.
show. Guests welcome . .
Friday, Aug. 8
REEDSVILLE - Olive Count y Health Department.
Dear Annie: My hu sMIDDLEPORT
MIDDLEPORT - Stated
Township meeting. 6:30
band
and I have been marmee tin g . of Middleport Vacation Bibl e School. First
p.m.. township garage.
ri
ed
for
seven years. We hit
Lodge #363, F&amp;A M. 7;.'\0 Presbyterian Church. 1 64~
LETART FALLS
a
ro,ugh
patch during the
p.m..
at
Middlepor( N. Fourth Ave., Middleport,
Letaq Township Trustees.
Temple . All Aug. 8 and 9. Hours. 6 to 8 last two, and it led to my
Maso ni c
regular mee tin g, 5 p.m. ,
Master Maso ns in vited . p.m. on Friday, 9 a.m. to 4 ha vi ng an emotional affair
Monday, Aug. 4
office building . .
p.m. on Saturday. Theme with a co-worker (no sex
RACIN E
- Meigs Refreshment s follow.
Tuesday, Aug. 5
"Beach Party
Surfin' invo lve d). My husband
Thursday, Aug. 7
ALFRED
- Oranoe Ci ti ze ns Action Now, 4RACINE ·
The Through the Scriptures.'' For found out the day before I
Township Trustees. 7:30 5:30 p.m., Rac ine Library,
took my maternity leave.
p.m ., at home of Fiscal for more informati'on con-· Sonshine Circle will meet at more information. call Terri fi e forgave me and we
tact Elisa Youn g. 949-2175.· the church, 7 p.m. Take Fife, 992-2625, or Carroll see m to be doing OK.
Officer Osie Foil rod.
POMEROY ~ Meigs items being coll ected by the Ann Harper. 992-7172.
RACINE
- ·Ohio
How ever, my maternity
Hubbard .
Environment;tl Protection High School Band Boosters. group . Edie
is coming to an end
leave
Agency. (dO p.m.. Southern 6 p.m. in bandroom for short Blmidena Rainer, and Edna
and
I'm
supposed to go
Elementary School. informa- business· meetin g, then to Knopp will be hostesses.
back to work. That mean s I
POMEROY - Hemlock
Sunday, Aug. 10
tion session and accept public fairground s to ready food
will
be in the same office as
RACINE - Reunion for . that co-worker I was so
comments on draft permits concession booth for fair. Grange, 7:30p.m. at the hall.
for wastewater discharges. Parent s encoura ged to Members are to take old can- descendants of Charles and attracted to. I have a verv.
Alma Snyder, potluck at very good job and quitti.ng
landfill associated with attend and support fundrai s- ning jars and devices.
noon . table service provid- is out of the que stion. I'm
American Municipal Power- i ng effo rt for band benefit.
ed. Star Mill Park .
Ohio's coal-fired power plant.
RACINE
- Racine
worried my husband will
GALLIPOLIS
Fry feel uncomfor1able knowing
Wednesday, Aug. 6
Order of Eastern Star, regu-reunion at 1687 Jackson I'm with thi s guy all day.
.. POMEROY - Salisbury lar meeting and potluck.
Monday, Aug. 4
Pike. Gallipolis. Eat at I p.m .
MIDDLEPORl'
Township Tru stees. 6:30 6:30p.m. , lodge hall.
How can I prove I'm over
the attraction and repair the
tru st0 - Not Interested in
Him Anymore
Dear Not Interested:
You need to talk about thi s
openly with your husband .
Tell him you know returning to work may cause him
some anxiety and ~ou want
to allay his fears. Reassure
him that you are ·over your
infatuation . Ask what you
need to do to make him
comfortable with the situaHolzer Consolidated
tion , and promi se to put his
Health Systems recently
requirements first. If you
made a donation to the ·
find yourself being drawn to
National Wild Turkey
thi s co- worker again , we
Federation (NWTF) for its urge you tO consider quit·
annual fund raiser held on ting your job. "No matter
July 19 at the Shrine .
how good it is , it' s not
Club. Here Bob Don nett ,
worth your marriage.
local NWTF representes
Dear Annie: I am a
young professional woman, ·
receives a check from
Linda Jeffers-Les ter: fund engaged to a wonderful
man. We plan to move in
develpment manager of
toge
ther soon iri preparation
Holzer Foundation.
for beginning our lives
Submitted photo
together.
OK. cut to the chase. Here
is my dilemma: We are get·
ting married in . a few
months, but my mom insists
we need to have a small
civil marriage at the court·
house before he moves in to
make it legal before our
'actual wedding. She doesn 't
want us . to . live together
before marriage.
I know · Mom sees it thi s
way
for religious reasons.
by
visiting retirement today isn't getadventure, he may want to re tirement
~~ BY ELIZABETH CRUMP
~- SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER,
apply online for his retire- www.socialsecuriiy.gov/plan ting ready to sit on the porch However. my , fiance and I
r'
ATHEN S OFFICE
and lounge away. They' re have discussed ' it and don't
ment
benefits
at ners.
want a quickie civil ceremowww.socialsecurity.gr.&gt;v.
Even though the ladi es ready for action .
~Summertime is known for
These
days,
retirement
is
ny
before our formal one
Another box office champ from Sex and the City may
iXS popcorn movies (eturning this year- is not be ready to retire just yet.- the opening of a new chapter just to please her. HOw do I
b$ockbuster ~inema full of Batman. The Diuk ~ Knight they should be planning - a sequel of sorts . So assuage my meddling morn
e!tplosions , action and larg- first appeared in 1939 ahead by going to Social whether you're ready to com- · and pacify my anxious new
~-than life heroes . A couple the same year as Superman
Passing
Security's For WomGn page at plete that application for ben- fiance?
llburs in a darkened theater - in DeteCtive Comics. www.socialsecurity.gov/wom cfi ts or need to do some Through -Scylla ' and
g.n ·have you at the edge of That makes both caped cru- en.
retirement planning, the pl&lt;tce Charybdis
.
Dear
Scylla:
Although
hJur se,at and feeling like a saders e ligible for re tireor course. re tirement isn' t to go is not the silver screen.
. ~ agam .
ment benefit s. Surely there .what it used to be. The aver- but the comprrter screen, at you should be respectful of
your mother 's feeling s, this
•:~Now. take .a closer look at must be computers in the age person prepanng for www.socialsecurity.gov.
~9me of the movie heroes Bat Cave and Fortress of ·
!lashing across the. silver . Solitude with access to
~reen this summer. Could it www.socialsecurity.gov to
ai: that your hero's most chal- file online for their benefits .
~nging nemesis is deciding
Other heroes on the screen
this summer .include The
t!hether it 's time to retire'
':Take
this
summer\ lncrcLiible Hulk and Iron
~-gest action hero. Indiana · Man. Both are products of the
1960s. like the actors who
t~nes. Harri son Ford - stiH
twmg IllS ow n stunts - Js ponray them . They' ll have a
~years old. Before he trots while to wait. But it' s never
ieross the globe for another too em·ly to start planning for

,..

'fxchunar

Monday, August 4,

ANNIE 'S MAILBOX

· Public meetings

~sit time for your heroes

We have the professional
photos that featured
you in this ne\vspaper.
These photographs are
now available to yo.u
through easy online
'purchase!

PageA3

and The Daily Sentin(}l ·
have launched a new page every
, Friday called "Faith and Family".
If you have a testimonial story,
life-changing event about yourself
or even a poem that you would ·
like to share please email to:
kkelly@mydailytribune.com
nfields@mydailyregister.com
hoeflich @mydailysentinel.com
Limit your story to
·so0-750 words.

Submitted photo

The Daily Sentinel

Mohler recently won first place in both solo
Elt~Jrel&gt;silte interpretive movement and solo pantomime at a
Talent competition held in Columbus . She will be rep·
il!!&lt;:Antinnthe Rutland Church of \3od 'the week of Aug . 4 at
International Teen Talent at the Church of God General
~~serr1biY held in San Antonio, Texas.

Please include a ph·one number
·in your email.

n.

�OPINION
PageA4
~- ------------~--------~~----------~------_:~~~~~~~.~~~~~---------------------2~~o~n~d~a~y~,~A~u~g~u~s:t~4~,~2~o~o~8~
The.Daily Sentinel

Britain's silence ammo for a Sharia-ruri future

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Cong_ress shall make no law respecting an
establtsh'!'ent of religion, or prohibiting tlae
frfe exercm thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday. Aug. 4, the 217th day of 2008. There
are 149 days left 111 the year.
Today's Highlight in History:. On Aug. 4, 1944, Nazi
pollee ratded the secret annex ot a building in Amsterdam
and arrested e1ght people. including 15-year-old Anne
Frank, \~hose dwr)' became a famous account of the
Holocaust. (Anne dted at the Bergen-Belsen concentration
camp some. seven months later.)
.
On thts date: In 1735, a jury acquitted John Peter Zenger
of the New York Weekly Journal of seditious libel.
.In 1790, the Coast Guard had its beginnings as the
Revenue Cutter Service.
In 1792, English romantic poet Percy Bysshe Shelley
was born at Field Place near Horsham, England.
In 1830, plans for the c1ty of Chicago were laid out
In 1892. Andrew and Abby Borden were axed to de~th in
thm home m Fall R1~er, Mass. Lizzie Borden, Andrew's
daughter from a prevtous marriage, was accused of the
kllhngs, but acquitted at trial.
In 1900, Britain's Queen Elizabeth, The Queen Mother
was born.
•
In 1916, the United States reached agreement with Denmark
to purchase the Danish Virgin Islands for $25 million
!n 1964, the bodies of missing civil rights ~orkers
Mtchael Schwerne~. Andrew Goodman and James Chane
were found huned 111 an earthen dam in Mississippi .
y
In 1977. Prestdent Carter Signed a measure establishing
the Department of Energy.
In 1987. the Federal Communications Commission voted
to abolish the Fatrness Doctrine, which requjred radio and
televtsiOn statiOns to present balanced coverage of ·controversmlJssues.
One year ago: President Bush toured the site of a collapsed htghway bridge in Minneapolis, pledging to cut red
tape that could delay r~building . Three students, Iofemi
Hightower, Terrance Aenel and Dashon Harvey were shot
to death exe~ution-style in Newark, N.J. Barry 'Bonds tied
Hank Aaron s 755 career home runs as his San Francisco
Giants lost 3-2 to the San Diego Padres. Alex Rodriguez
became ~~ age 37. the youn~est player m maJor league his- t
.. to~ to htt 500 home runs with a firsl-lnning homer in a 16·:· 8 VJcto~ ave~ Kansas City.
Today s Blrth~ays : Journalist · Helen Thomas is 88.
Actress-smger Tma Cole is 65 . Actor-comedian Richard
Belzer IS 64. Actor-sc~~enwriter Billy Bob Thornton is 53.
. Actress Kym Karath ( Th~ Sound of Music") is 50. Track
, star Mary Decker Slaney 1s 50. Actress Lauren tom is 49.
, . Sen. Bara.~k. Obama, D-111., IS 47. TV producer Michael
·. ~elman ( L1ve wllh Regis and Kelly") is 47. Baseball
, pitcher Roger Cl~rnens IS 46. Actress Crystal Chappell is
. 43. Author Denms Lehane ts 43. Actor Daniel Dae Kim is
. · 40. Actor M1chael De':-uise is 39. Actor Ron Lester is 38.
Rapper-actress Yo-Yo 1s 37. Country singer Jon Nicholson
· IS 35. Rhythm-and-blues singer-actor Marques Houston is
27. Actors Cole and Dylan Sprouse are J.6.
Th()ught for Today: "Poetry is the record of the best and
happ1est moments of the happiest and best minds" _
·
Percy Bysshe Shelley ( t 792-1822).
'

Letters to the editor are wel.colne. They should be less
t~an 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
Signed, and mclud~ address and telephone number. No
uns1gned letters wtll be published. Letters should · be in
good taste, address!ng issue~·, 110t personalities. Letters of
thanks to o~ga~1zauons and mdiVlduals will not be accepted for publicatwn.

The Daily Sentinel
•

· Reader Services ·
Correction Polley

(USPS 213·960)
Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.

Our main concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon , Monday
through Friday, 11 1 Court Street,
be accurate. If you know of an error

Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second·class
In a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.

992-2156.

Our main number Is
(740} 992-2156.
Department extensions are:

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

Advertising

Member: The Associated Press and
· the Ohio Newspaper ASsociation.
Poatm11ter: Send address correc·

lions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Coun
Street, Po'meroy, Ohio 45769.

Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
One month
'10.27
'1 15.14
One year
Dally
50'
· Senior Citizen rates
Ona monlh
'10.27
One year
'103.90

s.-.. should remn Jn adyance
Outalde Selea: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 direct to the Daily Sentinel. No sub·
Outalde S.lea:'Brenda Davis Ext 16 scription by mail permitted in areas
where home carrier service 1s avail·
CI111JCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
able.

General Manager
Chat1ene Hoeflich, Ext. t 2

.E-1111111:

Mall Subscription

Inside Melga County
13 Weeks
'32 .26
26 Weeks
•64 .20
, 52 Weeks
' 127.11

news@mydaitysentinel.com
Web:
www.mydailysentinel.com

Strange. the apparent lack
•
.
·
of public alarm in Britain
designe.J to stop or even lent uutluok of too many of
· hte't
. the1 growth of the Brt'tat.tJ's: bes 1 an d bng
Ireverse
over an extensive new poll
1
showtng that significant
s amtc c emographic in Muslims is in fact traditionBntam as a means of pre- a! islamic doctrine. Shuttin~
minorities of Muslim students at some of Britain's
venttng the democratic down discussion of Islam~
better colleges and univer&gt;iDiana
implementation of Islamic eradicating all religion.
ties embrdce the most threatWest
law in Britain 'J
,even
British
cor~
ening aspects of Islam. .
Nola chance. "First," she Anglicanism. from the pubThese include the convicw•(He. "I think, we should l1 c square - which is
.tion that killing ' in the name
abandon all discussion of essentially what former
of religion can be justified
what Islam trulx. is.'~ ' lri French President Jacques
(32 percent), belief that men tic , and that:s got to be a other words, just slop the Chu·ac '"" 111 2003 when he
and women shouldn't mix cnme against multicultural - conversalton. PC-halting as banned the kippa and cro"
f 1 (40
)
ism . Calling for any action · it already is.
along wi th the hiJ'ab from
ree
Y
percent
·
support
ld
Her
logic'
"Que'tJ'ons
ot'
for Sharia (Islamic law) in wou be labeled xenopho,
public schools- allows the
.Britain (40 percent), and b1c-slash-mean-spjrited. true (Islamic) doctrine are Britisl1 to avoid this post support for a global Better to read and weep insoluble ,'' she declared. modern abyss .
caliphate (33 percent) based silently.
'
' felling with one deconstnJc• . But it leaves another gap.111 Sh ·
h
One early exception was a tive swoop the objecti ve lv mg hole .
ana,tenets.
among ot er 1au dabl Y passionate outcry 'knowable facts of' Isia 111 ,·c· · -Anthony Glees, a .profesrepressive
Of course, the poll, con- from columnist Minette law, which is rooted in Islam's sor of security and intelliducted by the · online Marrin writing in the vtncr- mainstream teachings.
gence studies at London's
resear h
v
G
able
Sunday
Times.
She went on: "Clearly, fur Brunei University. h:ts
· commissioned
c company ,au
ov Mat nn
· •
and
by the
s concern was .pal- lots
d of .MusluJJs· Islam ,· s 110t . underscored the importance
conservative Centre for pable; she ticked off man¥ a octnne of gentleness, tal - ot the survey. "The findin~
Social Cohesion, came out of the poll's disturbing sta- erance, sexual equality, for- that ,, large number of stu~
just this week . Still. having tJsllcs. noting also the perils gtveness, democracy and all dents think it is OK 10 kill in
. recen. tly .visited England to be found within Mu slim the rest. For countless oth- the name of religion is
O"er
Jt dearly
1 · .. he said, adding :
and. ~ntervJewed a string of uncertainty
.
• key ques- ersWh
. ,·s.·
:~ anmng:
pQlitJcal, media and reli - !tons. For example, she .
at f~!lows inescapabl y
There 1s a wtde cultural
gious figures , I'm going to wrote, "When asked how tram thiS, she wrote in the divide between Muslim and
guess that these horrifying supportive. if at all, they very next sentence - and non-Muslim students. The
num bers - . and they ~re would be ofthe·•'ntroductJ.on here we n1u ·st pause to so 1u,.ton ·ts to stop talking
mdeed horrifying, despite of a worldwide caliphate stretch our neck muscles to about celebrating diversitv
the emphatic disclaimer that based on Sharia, fully 42 soften the appro~ching lrau- and focus on integration .an~l
the majority of polled percent said they weren't ma .~f JOurnalistic whiplash assimilmion.''
Mu slim students support sure. That 's quite some IS that reltgious people . Excuse me. but imegraseculansm and democratic uncertainty." She added: and their views should not liOn and assimilation . intu
values - will kick up little "'One in five wasn't sure be officially recognized in what'l Not a Britain that
cultural dust. .. After being wh. ether Islam is compatt'ble groups· · Reli'gt'on shou ld ·no t ·a ban dons a1I discussion of
a pub! tc
' space or what Islam actually is plastered across a news With the western IlOlJ.on of be allowed
.
cycle's. worth of papers, democracy. Insecure young pubhc representation." She along with all vestiges of
they wtll be regarded a·s so people can be swayeo by added : "This is hard for what Britain ever was.
those
much political wallpaper extrerni sts.
· of us· wh0 used to love
(Diana West is a colwn And
then
she
acknowlthe
mudd!
d
A
1
·
that people gaze upon withe ng Jean com- nist for The Washingto11
ou.t seeing - or, at least, edged. the all-important and prom•·,ee·• ,-, mea· ns the d"
· tses- .,.
••mes. She is the aurhor o'
consistently avoided "robta· bl1'shment of' our na t'Jona 1 .. Tl le Death or the Grow/1-"
Without reacting.
y
"
Fear or outrage would be " Iem: "The question is how churc·h - 1·I' 1·t doesn ' t se 11-· up: HmrAm erica~·Arrested
to
stand
up
to
the
extremde
struct
first."
.
D
1
considered Jslamopho'b 1'c 1·sts."
eve opmell( Is Bringr·,,g
.
·
Huh'l It'&gt; not easv to read·.
ot course, and isn't there a
Did the columnist next b
Dow11
Western
law against that?.. Concern
etween these lines, but it Civiii:l:uion . .. . and has 11
call for a campaign of zero- seems p ·bl h M ·
for British common law tolerance·for Islamic law? A ·
ossJ e t at arnn blog m dicmawest.net. Sire
would be called natJ'·•naJ
's·
just
might
that the
can be, conracted' l'ia
1 new immigration policy anti. "'est believe
u
·
- ,., ern an d even v1odiwwwest@ •·eriwn.net.)

WHY WOULD
ANYONE WANT TO 8E
THE PRESIDENT OF TRE

UNITED STATES?

FRfE

Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks
•53 ,55
26 Weeks
'1 07.10
52 Weeks
'214.21

wwW .mydailysentinel.com

2008.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

'

Obituaries

'

Girl Scout projects judged for fair

POMEROY- Troop and B; and Cadette 1208, comindividual projects for dis- munity service. B.
play at the Meigs County
LETART FALLS - James H. Woodyard. 68. of Letart Fair were recently judged.
SCIENCE &amp; BEYOND
Falls passed away &lt;Il his residence on Saturday, Aug. 2, 2008.
Judging result, by class,
He was born on June 22, 1940 to the late· Claude and were:
BROWNIES : Meghan
Helen (Donaldson) Woodyard in Athens. He was a truck
Short, carpentry, grand
driver for most of his life and he was a member of the
champion ; Melyla Mash,
LIFE SKILLS
Pomeroy-Raci ne Masonic Lodge #164.
·
carpentry, honorable men- ·
· He is sm vived by children. Bryan and Barb Woodyard,
BROWNIES: Meghan tion.
and Debbie and Kenny Utt; Pomeroy; Darla and Frank Short, animal care, grand
JUNIORS:
Ashley
Shevelow, Hilliard; sp,ecial friend, Sue Riffle, Racine; sis- champion; Paige Dill, ani: Buchan~n . carpentry. powter, Ethel G. Stevens, Fl. Richie. Fla.; grandchildren, JesSe, mal care, reserve; Whittney der puff de.rby car, grand
Maddison, Danielle, Jason, Aaron , Mark, Lauren, Samuel Council, personal sewing, champion; Abigait Houser,,
and Sarah; and a nephew. Joe Rendon, Marysville.
honorable mention.
recyling. reserve; and
Vi sitation will be held from 6 to 9 p.m. on Tuesday, Aug .
JUNIORS: Valerie Wolfe, Mickayla Eblin, shelf, hon5, 2008 at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in child care. grand champion; orable mention.
Pomeroy. Masonic services will be conducted at 8:30p.m . Abby Causey, animal care,
CADETTES:
Ashley
the evening of visitation . There will be no funeral.
reserve;
and
Abigai I Deem , picture frame, carOnline registry is available by loggi ng onto www.ander- Hou ser, safety/fi rst aid, pentry, grand champion:
sonmcdaniel.com.
Holly McGrath , recyling ,
honorable mention.
CADETTES:
Kayla reserve champion: Kayla
Salser, pillow. honorable Salser. carpentry, bench,
mention .
honorable mention.
Receiving
A's
in
all
levels
Receiving A's . from all
. MASON, W.Va. - Floyd
were:
Valerie
Wolfe,
sports
.
age
levels: Ericka Cogar,
. F. "Frank" Finnicum, 85, of
and exercise; ( Emmalea carpentr'y, powder puff
Mason, W Va .. died Friday.
Durst, sports and exercise; derby car; Lindsey Putman,
Aug. I, 2008. at Holzer
Peyton Humphreys, recipe carpentry; Paige Dill. bird
Senior Care .
book; Melyla Mash, sports house; Taylor Parker, powBorn June I, 1923 , . in
der puff derby car; Jessica
and
exercise.
·Letart, W.Va .. he was the son
Cook,
pinewood derby car;
Receiving
B's:
Kaylee
of the late Wade 0. and
Melyla
Mash, carpentry.
Werry, animal care; Hannah
. Elizabeth
(Grimm)
Receiving· B's from all
Young, sewing ; Hanna
Finnicum.
age
levels in this category:
Barnette.
gardening;
He was a mechanic for
Mickayla
Eblin, shelf;
Madison
Council,
animal
Collier Construction. attendAshley
Deem,
recyling.
care; Whittney Council, anied Fathers House Church in
Receiving C: Mika.yla
mal care.
Hartford, W.Va., was a
BROWNIES:
Life
skills:
Eblin,
crystals.
member of LB.E.W Local
BROWNIES
:
Troop
Troop
1061.
nutrition,
B;
and
' #71 of Columbus, Ohio. and
1061 , recyling, grand chamTroop 1271, cookbooks, B.
American Legion Post 23 of
Floyd F. Finnicum
pion.
Junior Troop 1204,
Point Pleasant, W.Va ., and
recycling.
· A and Cadette
CUSTOMS&amp;
was an Army Veteran having served during WWII.
1208,
recyling,
B.
TRADITIONS
In addition to his parent s, he was preceded in death by hi s
wife, Florene (Gibbs) Finnicum in 1979, infant son, Harry
GIRL SCOUT
BROWNIES: Whittiley
Franklin Finnicum. sisters: Mary Aycock, Martha Morris,
Council,
hi
storical
places,
PROGRAM
Bette Dovenbarger, Nellie Denny and Natalie Aiello, and
grand champion; Meghan
brothers, John Finnicum arid Jack Finnicum.
BROWNIES:
Elena
Short,
friendship projects,
He is s'urvived by daughters: Judy Lynn (Roger) Eblin of
Musser,
Girl
Scout
Ways.
reserve
champion:
and
Rutland, Ohio. Diane (George) Tietz of Pittsboro, N.C.,
Son: Floyd "Mike" (Karen) Finnicum of Letart; grandchil- Kaleigh Scott , heritage grand champion: Meghan
Short, Girl Scout Ways ,
dren: Regina Eblin of Vienne; W.Va., Amber (Shawn) Fetty· crafts, honorable mention.
reserve champion; and
Receiving
A's
in
all
levof Delaware, Ohio, Matth_ew Eblin of Long Bottom. bhio,
Emmalea
Durst, Girl Scout
els:
Ashley
Buchanan,
holiJoseph (Ashley) Finnicum of Point Pleasant and Jennifer
Way
s,
honorable
mention.
(Lenny) Tennant of Letart; great grandchildren: Matthew day craft and Drew
JUNIORS; Lauren Booth,
Eblin Jr, Alexa Fetty, Allison:Tcnnant, Kaycee Tennant, and Humphreys. holiday craft.
Girl
Scout Ways , reserve
Receiving
B's
in
all
levels
Carson Finnicum; sister, Alice (Lao-y) Eads of Gallipolis,
were:
Lindsey
Putman,
holchampion.
and several nieces and nephews.
Receiving A's in all levServices will be at I p.m. on Wednesday, Aug. 6, 2008, at iday crafts, Holly McGrath,
els:
Mica Drehel , Girl Scout
collections.
B;
Paige
Dill.
Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home with Pastor Huling
Ways.
shoebox
float
;
Melyla
Greene and Pastor Mike Finnicum officiating. Burial will
BROWNIES:
Troop
be in Letart Evergreen Cemetery. Visitation will be from 2- Mash, . collections; and
1271. songbooks, grand
Ashley Deem. collections.
4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home :
champion;
Troop 1061,
C:
Kaylee
Receiving
a
E-mail
condblences
may
be
sent. to.
Celebrationsffhinking
Day,
Goff,
family
tree.
foglesongtucker@myway.com.
TROOP
PROJECTS: re serve champion; and
Junior Troop 1276, commu- Troop 1271, day camp prep,
nity service. grand champi- A, honorable mention.
JUNIORS: Troop 1204,
on; Junior Troop 1204, herintertroop,
council events,
itage, A. Brownie Troop
I 061. · community ·service, grand champion; Troop

James H. Woodyard

Floyd F. ·Frank' Finnicum

Deaths

HOUSING

Vesta Ci. Ham

,•

'

~

.

GALLIPOLIS- Vesta G. Ham, 87, Gallipolis, died
· Sunday, Aug. 3, 2008, in the Arbors of Gallipolis.
Funeral arrangements will . be announced by the
Cremeens F11neral Chapel.

I042. celebrations, reserve
champion; and Troop 1276,
lntercounci l, council events,
honorable mention.
CADETTE: Troop 1208.
ceremonies, grand champion:
Troop 1208, intertroop. council events, grand champion.

booking: Drew Humphreys.
photography ;
Ashley
Buchanan, creative writing ;
Lind sey Putman. photography ; Valerie Wolfe. scrap- .
booking.
Receiving B's in all age
levels were: Ericka Cogar,
photography; Valerie Wolfe.
ARTS
creative writing; Mica
Drehel ,
puppets;
and ·
BROWNIES:
Elena Kaleigh Scott. ·scrapbooking.
Musser, weaving, grand
champion;
Peyton
CULINARY
Humphreys, acrylic painting , reserve champion; and
BROWNIES:
Elena
Aubrey~ Hart , needlecraft. Mu sser, prom dres·s cake,
honOi'lible mention .
grand champion; Peyton
Ashley Humphreys. cake. reserve;
JUNIORS:
. Buchanan. string art. grand Chelsea Pullins, honorable
champion: Lindsey Putman, mention.
JUNIORS:
Abigail
jewelry, reserve; and Paige
Stanhope, art. honorable Houser. jams/jellies, grand
mention.
champi on: Lindsey Putman,
CADETTES:
Ashley peanut
butter
fudge;
Deen1, sculpture, grand reserve: Ashley Buchanan,
champion;
and
Holly pies from scratch. honorable
McGrath, 3-D Art, reserve.
mention: and Abigail
Receiving A's in all lev - Hou ser, cookies/bars, honels: Valerie Wolfe , perform- arable mention.
ing· arts; Paige Stanhope,
CADETTE:
Holly
art, Ashley Deem , jewelry; McG rath . candy, grand
Meghan Short. 3-D Art: champion: and Ashley
Hannah Young, painting: Deem. cookies gift jar.
Emmalea ,Durst, art; Peyton
SENIOR: Ericka Cogar,
Humphreys, pencil · art ; reserve.
Hannah Damewood , art
Receiving As in all age
drawn picture.
level s
were : Chelsea
BROWNI·ES: ·
Troop . Pullins, cook ies: Paige Dill ,
1061 , 3-D Art, grand cham- cookies; Whittney Council,
pion; Troop 5878, collages, · cake: Emily Graham. quick
reserve; and Troop 5878 , breads; Elena Musser,
fine art, honorable mention . candy: Kalcigh Scott. cookTroop 1271, mise crafts, ies or bars: Abigail Causey, ·
bears, B.
cookies: Mikayla Eblin,
JUNIORS : Troop 1204. cupcakes; Abigail Houser,
misc . crafts, grand champi- quick breads: and Angel
on. doll house: Junior 1276. Sanders. decorated cake.
mi sc. crafts, bell s and
Receiving B' s in all age
levels were : Emily Graham,
leather bracelets, reserve.
CADETTE: Troop 1208, cookies: Melyla Mash ,
quick breads: Mica Drehel,
3-D Art, grand champion.
cookies: Nicole Eblin. cupCOMMUNICATIONS cakes: Madison Council,
cookies·: Drew Humphreys,
BROWNIE:
Emma.lea cupcake s.
Durst , scrapbooking, grand
champion: Meghan Short.
OUT OF DOORS
scrapbooking, reserve : and
Hanna Barnette, scarpbook:
BROWNIES :, Hannah
Damewood . bird house
ing, honorable mention.
. JUNIORS :
Abigail made out of gourd, grand
Hou s~ r. creali ve writing. champion.
Other respective grades
grand champion; 'Paige
Stanhope, scrapbooking, were: Taylor Parker, walk- ·
ing stick. A: · Lindsey
reserve.
Receiving A's in all age Putman, nature's castoff, B;
levels were: Kaylee Werry, and Kaylee Goff. nature's
scrapbooking;
Lindsey castoff. C.
BROWNIE: Troop 1061,
· Putman,
photography;
Madison Council, scrap- outdoor experience, B.

.·Ohio State Fair takes green approach to waste

In
another
effort, other trash goes in a brown starch or sugar cane, but
COLUMBUS (AP) Butter cows and other won- gnawed-on corn cobs, left· bin. Written information look like high-quality
drous sculptures carved over sandwich buns and about the initiative is being paper plates .
The effort is part of a new
from the dairy products will other uneaten food at the placed on each table.
recycling
campaign .by the
"The
state
fair
is
a
wonfair's
Taste
of
Ohio
buildget more use after they're
RACINE- Myrtle Holler, 81 , Racine, died Sunday, done being displayed at the ing ·are being hauled to a derful opportunity to edu- Solid Waste Authority of
compost pile in South cate people," said Chet Central Ohio. Funding for
Ohio State Fair.
Aug. 3, 2008, in the Overbrook Center, Middleport .
Funeral arrangements will be announced by the · All 2,500 pounds of butter Cha.-Jeston, about 40 miles Chaney of the Ohio the project at the fair comes
will become biodiesel fuel southwest .of Columbus . Department of Natural from a· Department uf
Cremeens Funeral Horne, Racine.
through a project at Mount The waste was sent to a Resources. "We hope peo- Natural Resources ~rant.
"The third-largest type of
ple will start seeing this as a
Vernon
Nazarene landfill in past years.
wasle
we get at the land fill
Fairgoers are being asked traditional way of doing
. University. It 's part of a
is food waste." said Kristi
new, green-minded initiative tp separate their trash after business."
As part of a state grant, Michel s. environment eduto use ffie fair's recyclable meals and place them in
manager
for
or biodegradable elsewhere. · marked
bins. restaurants at the fair are cation
biodegradable SWACO. ''And we want to
The !55th annual fair Biodegradables go into a using
opened Wednesday at the green bin, recyclables get plates, cutlery and cups. reduce the waste ,going into
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Police Deaprtment is fairgrounds in Columbus.
placed in a blue bin ·and all They ' re made out of corn the landfi II ...
investigating vandalism of cemeteries on Middleport Hill.
Police Chief Bruce Swift said &gt;everal headstones and
monuments were pushed off their bases in both Riverview
and Middleport Hill cemeteries.
Anyone with information is asked to contact the police
Two of the cars wet'e
Mentor Police Lt. Andrew
Six cars were taken from
MENTOR (AP) - Police
·department at 992-6424.
say ·a northeast Ohio car Honda of Mentor on July Lehner says the most recent found later Saturday in
dealership has been targeted . 26. Police say one of the theft occurred Saturday Euclid. and one stolen car
recovered
in
by thieves who have stolen accused thieves in that inci- morning at a~out I :45 a.m .. was
II brand-new cars straight dent was seriously hurt when four Honda Accords Willou ghby after it was
from the lot in two incidents when he crashed trying to and one Honda Piloi were involved in a fender bender.
stolen .
elude Bratenahl police.
Thesduy... Partly sunny over the last week.
Monday.••Patchy dense fog
in the 1noming. Sunny. Highs · with a chance of showers ·
'in the upper 80s. Light and and thunderstorms. Hot
variable winds ... Becoming with highs around 90. West
from Page AI
south around 5 mph in the winds I0 to 15 mph . Chance
of rain 40 percent.
session
and
public record, though those ques- water permit or NPDES. should also be recei~ed by
aftemoon.
Monday night ... Mostly . Thesday night... Mostly hearing will be held by the tions won't be answered at those letters must be the close of business on
mailed to Ohio EPA-DSW, Aug. 12 and mailed to:
to discuss AMP- the meeting.
clear in the eve ning .. .Then cloudy with a chance of OEPA
EPA,
Divi sio n
For those wanting to be· Permits Pfocessing· Unit , Ohio
· becoming . partly cloudy. showers and thunderstorms. Ohio's draft permits conLows in the mid 60s. Light Lows in the upper 60s. cerning its landfill and on an interested parties list PO Box 1049, Columbus, of Solid and Infe ctious
Waste
Man agement,
Chance of rain 50 percent.
wastewater discharge . The or for those who cannot 432 I 6-1049.
· and variable winds.
Systems
Management
Un it,·
Comments
regarding
the
attend
the
meeting
but
meeting will begin with an
PO
Box
I
049.
Columbu
s,
informational presentation have concern or support . landfill draft permit or
Waste
PTI 43216-1049.
by the OEPA followed by for the draft permits, writ- Solid '
rrom Page AI
. the official hearing where ten comments can · be
oral and written testimony mailed to the OEPA but
"Replacing a grinder $6,000 at district expense.
will be· recorded for the must be received by the
The trash will also ·record. All those going on close of business· on Aug .
pump motor is approximately $2,500 at the · destroy the aerators .at the the record to ask questions 12 to be. part of the official
. owner's expense. The cost lagoons and could cause will have those questions record. For those wishing·
, to repair a motor at the 'lift much more damage the di s- answered in. the official to ·comment on ·the wastestation is approximately trict cannot afford.
Now enrollng fur ~e 2008 •2009 &amp;:nool year
·You Are Invited to Meet
Now aa:epting students in Pre-School ~rough ~e 10~ g1ade.

Myrtle.Holter

·For the Record

'

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Monday, August 4,

.

ALL BUSINESS: TM&gt;e for financial shareholders
BY RACHEL BECK ··
AP BUSINESS WRITER

'

Picture."
. .
·
·
Take Merr' II L h . h rare than 60 percent Ill the
once Ia d dt . ync , t e . ast year, they sent the stock
u e mvestrnent 10 percent h1&lt;&gt;her
· '
bank that has been plagued
The ain added. .
. .

·
mvestment from Temasek
Holdings , a Singapore sov·
1h f
ere•gn weal und. Under

NEW YORK - How
does it feel to be deceived
beaten down and disrespect:
·
0
ed? Just ask financial com- · on mortgage-related
. mt e
·• J 1 · .
em~sek s mvestment 11
pany shareholders.
ties imd qther debt as~:~sun ~~ y, ~tOs shares rose more Memll sold common stock
Thi
·
an
percent to chmb W1thm a year that was less
A year into this financial
be
lo~~~nwer~
supposed
to
over
$34
a share alongside than the $48 a share
crisis, and they aail't get a
once new gams m other financial Temasek had paid ·
break. Bank CEOs keep CEO J h g
am came to company stocks. They've
The .. rice res~t"
telling them all is fine but it h . o n
isn't. Share prices ;emairi ~;ai~~~;la~:~t S~~co~J:;i ~~~~;since to around $27 a into pia~ . undei Me~~Jr~
!argely in a freefall . Big who was forced out after the
Oh to be .dd
.new · capllal plan and
mvestors get better treat- first wave of Merrill 's mas- Untit'you're ~1 Y again. ;emasek 1501 $2.5 billion
11
ment than' small investors.
siv~ write-downs for its , News l'd\mda
rom. the -~nvestment bank.
We get it; business is bad. tox1c mortgage assefs
d . lea\· Y nig~t Temasek sa1d 11 would remFinancial companies are
e
swept up in a sea of troubles
- crumbled credit markets talked often about Merrill~~ ~pa~~ ..a out a "comfortable $900 million. StJbtracting
tepid investors and crimped busmess
·
· .mvestment bank .. ·d the- · ·.$2.5 ·btlllon · JMerr•'ll '5
Wit· h no a1arm. In
The
capital. But stock owners January:,
he said t~~ co"!pa- it would sell a big part ofi:s ~:~~~~~$~o~il\s1JOU!d be valwho have stuck around
10
ny
was.
well·P.OSlliOned
m asset-backed securiti es fo
"Wh·
~·
.
through all of that deserve 2008; m Apnl, he assured
$6.7 billion _ that' ·
r
. . at you h~tve here 1s
better than the death by a mvestors the firm had from their face v· s down ratsmg money ~ust to pay
l~ousand slices they are get- "plenty of capital."
ping $30 billion. ~~e ~o~l off pre.~•~us eq utty committing from the companies
But
the
feel-jlOOd with rivate- . e .. ea ments, sa~d Sasha Solunac,
they own.
moments would qUJckly Lone frar Fun~~~~ty k fmn a research analyst m Sprott
"Rinse,
lather
and d•ss•pale. Things are far to the fire-sale pric': ;f o?ui *~~s~~ Management in
repeat," is the way Barry from good. ··
cents on the doll·
-·
to.
·
Rtthohz, director of equity
Just two weeks ago, Thain · Anal sls at ar. B . ·
Solunac says that opens .
research at Fusion IQ !~ld investors not to worry. lnvestiXcnt Grou safspuke t!tf' . door . for "pu.tentwlly
describes some of the non: R1ght now we believe that think the
, , P . d they hmnless dtlutton of existing
sense from the financial we are .in a very comfort- out of Me~ell~age conung shareholders if and when
companies.
.
abl~ s~&gt;t in . terms of our should be th'i/ '- ~~ br~ss the bank goes to the market .
He sees this pattern often: capital, he said. July 17 everything we :. .. tsregard for more capital at ever"Relea.se earnings. Issue when Merrill reported its
Merrill L sa~. . . . . lower pnces."
gmdance. A few weeks fourth straight quarterly Joss would isstt~ 11 ch also saJd 11 . He al so warns that Merrill
later. lower earnings. A few and write-downs from raise $ · 5 b ' J~ew stock to 1sn l alone. Big investors at
8
weeks after that, take more failed
investments ca ·ita! _· . b'· ,10 n of fresh · all sorts of financial compawrite-downs. Raise more approaching $40 billion. · · qufckly ·h'·· t~n:ber that n1es arc getting sweet deals
capital. Start it all over
Tham 's statement sound- look atth~ ~~~a'l1 . / 11 h you at the exf?ense of common
again next quarter," Ritholtz ~d believable, or so inciuded
s 0 . w attS stockholders.
wrote on his popular finan- mvestors thought. After . Last · .
.
. No
wonder
small
cial blog , "The Big watching their shares lose nabb~d wu~te,r. $S M~rnlf mvest~rs · ·are
getting
billion mcreasmgly fed up. .
a near y

!~c'eess/~!\i~~~~f~g ~it;~~· :al~e~~~~rri~~s s~;1b~~~ *~~~da.?(:s~'~.e~~~ p~~:r~~:
nf.

fo:~a~~:~: t~~e;e~~~~ihtic ~:y h~v~ eove:~~~eJh~~~ ~~e;~~h~t~~~~~~e~it'~to a~~[~~~

---------'---------·---'----- - - -.. --.. --- ..... _ ·-

'

Investigation

·Police say car thieves targeting Honda dealer .

Local Weather

AMP

.

Sewer

Mid·Valley Christian School
In Middleport, OH

Ska~opia from Page At

ferent 'view points. that's
what makes America great
and we all still manage to
. function together. There's
always people that take
things to the next level (hke
some who attended the
Bowl Bash) but ·we weed
those out. We never let the

Rick Shriver,

Grades 111h &amp;12ttl wil be added the 2009-2010 ~ol year
C/m siltS are limited.

Candidate for Ohio Senate Representing Molgo County

Enjoy ll\18 Music at the
"Taking Our Values to Columbus" Tour!
Rid&lt; 11 1 profeaolonal muolci&lt;ln, and he's bringing along
his ctaa~tc lOCI&lt; band to ralatl110fi.IY for the campaign.

bad apples ruin the cider.
People .give us trouble, we
tell them don't come back."
Readers can form their
own opinions of Skatopia by
buying the issue of Rolling
Stone or visiting the park
which is open twenty-four
hours a day. free of charge.

.·

Call for a tour or an information packet

992-6249

Donations Appreciated!
Tuesday, August 5·
6 p.m. to 6 p:m:
On the Riverfront In Porne'roy, Ohio

Mid-Valley

has been educatin!iJihe mind &amp;
strengthening the sptrit of students

-·

•

SINCE 1985.

•

•

�I

The Daily Sentinel

AROUND THE WORLD

PageA6
.

Monday, August 4,

2008

Stampede kills 145 at
Hindu temple in India
could be identitied by relatives.
"I rushed to the spot in
NEW
DELHI
search of my three children
Thousands of panicked pil- who· had gone to pay obeigrims stampeded Sunday at sance at the hilltop shrine,"
a remote mountaintop tem- Jawahar Khurana told the
ple in northern India during · Press Trust' of India news
celebrations to honor a agency as he searched the
Hindu goddess, sending bodies.
dozens of people plummet''I fail to understand why
ing to their deaths and tram- God was so cruel to us," he
pling scores more. P~ice sai d..
said 145 people were killed.
All the bodies were taken
Rumors of a landslide to the Anandpur Sahib hosapparently started the panic pital in the neighboring
at the shrine in the foothills state of Punjab where
of the Himalayas, said C.P. · authorities were carrying
Verma, a senior govern- out autopsies, senior police
ment official in the officer R. N. Dhoke told
Bilaspur district.
The Associated Press by
Pilgrims already at the telephone from the hospital.
Naina Devi Temple began He said the death toll was
running down the narrow not expected to rise further.
path leadi ng from the peak.
Many of the dead were
There, they collided with women and children, he
devotees winding their said, and another 37 people
way up.
were injured and in hospital.
With a concrete wall on
Tens of thousands of worone side and a precipice on shippers had !locked to the
the other, there was nowhere remote temple in the
to escape and they were foothills of the Himalayas to
crushed. At one point a celebrate Shravan Navratras,
guard rail broke and dozens · a nine-day fe~tival that honof people fell to their deaths. ors the - Hindu goddess
The bodies of the devotees Shakni, or divine mother.
- many dressed in brightly
The temple is about 155
colored holiday clothes miles northeast of New
carpeted the path, intertwined Delh'i.
with flattened iron railings.
Deadly stampedes are a
Many still held the flowers relatively common occurand food they planned to rence at temples in India,
where large c.rowds offer at the temple.
Police said they used a sometimes . hundreds of
cable car at the shrine to thousands of people - conferry some of the bodies gregate in small areas lackdown, and helicqpteFs flew ing facilities to control such
in to take the wounded lo big gatherings.
hospital s.
Sunday· was the second
At the Bilaspur hospital in day of the festiva l and
Himachal Pradesh state, res- authorities sought to reascue workers unloaded bod- sure other pilgrims. "There
ies wrapped in brown blan- is no need to panic, everykets from a truck and laid thing is normalized now,"
them in neat rows so they· Verma said.

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Local Sports ~riefs, Page 82
Reds hold players·only meeting, Page·82
Bryant lifts USA over Russia, Page 86 ·

Monday, August 4, 2008

BY GAVIN RABINOWITZ
ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER

photo/Pakistan Touralm Office

Undated file photo provided by the Pakistan Tourism Office in Islamabad July 26, 2004, shows the world's second tallest
peak, K-2, in the northern area of Pakistan. A Pakistani tour operator says nine climbers are feared to have.died in an
avalanche after scaling the mountain. Nazir Sabir says 22 climbers, mostly f,oreigners, reached K-2's summ1t Saturday
but an ice avalanche struck them during their descent. He says nine of the mountaineers are feared to have died and
thre~ others are missing.
·

Atleast9
Bv

SADAOAT JAN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan
- At least nine climbers
were feared dead on K-2;
the world's second highest
mountain,
after
an
avalanche cut ropes used to ·
cross a trea.:herous wall of
jce, otliciqls and ·'other
climbers said Sunday.
Several other mountaineers were mi ssing,
prompting a desperate rescue. effort on the peak in
northern Pakistan, which is
regarded as more dangerous
to climb than Mount Everest.
A total of 22 people,
mostly foreigners, in eigl\t
different groups sca led K2's summit on Friday, said
Nazir Sabir .of the Alpine
Club of Pakistan.
·
As they made their way
down, an avalanche carried
away ropes tixed I, 148 feet
below the peak, sweeping
some climbers to their
deaths and stranding others
at a hei ght where they
would likely succumb to
exposure, Sabir said:
· Accounts .varied on the

onK-2
number of dead ·and how
they died.
·. Sabir said nine people died
in the avalanche. Included in
that number, were two rescuers - a Nepalese sherpa
and a Pakistani porter who survivors said fell to
their death.
He said two · other
climbers - Pakistani and
a Serbian on an expedition
he helped organize - fell
to their deaths Friday on the
way up.
Mohammed Akram, vice
president of the Adventure
Foundation of Pakistan, a
nonprotit organ.ization, said
six climbers died in the
avalanche with another
three killed in other accidents Friday.
.
He sa:jd several others,
including local' porters,
were missing ..
Akram said one rescue
team dispatched Sunday
had reached a Dutchman
and an Italian suffering
from frostbite and were
·helping them down toward
a camp at an altitude of
21.325 feet.
.
He said helicopter crews

a

spotted survivors, but could
not pluck them to safety
because the air is too thin
for them 10 operate so high.
The tixed rope lines were
strung across a point on the
mountain known as ·:The
Bottleneck." Chris Warner.
an American who climbed
K-2 last year, said it was the
deadliest place on the
mountain, the fall from
there down the south face is ·
some 9,000 feet.
"You can see how for
people who were exhausted,
It would have been nearly
impossible for . them to
descend without the ropes,"
said Warner.
He said hope was fading
for anyone still alive and
separated from their group.
"Once their hands and feet
are frozen, they really are
unable to move on their
own power, and it takes
other people to carry them
down," he said.
At 28,250 feet , K-2 stands
about 785 feet below Mount
Everest, but is a ''phenomenally dangerous mountain,"
said Alan Arnett, who
climbed a nearby peak with

at least one of the -missing
climbers.
Compared with Everest,
"it's more technical , it' s
steeper, the weather is more
intense," he said.
The toll from the
avalanche was the highest
from a sing le incident on K2 since at least 1995, when
seven climbers died after
being caught in a fierce
storm.
About 280 people have
summited K-2 since 1954,
when it was first conquered
by
Italians
Achille
Compagnoni and Lino
Lacedell. Dozens of deaths
have been recorded since
1939, most of them occurring during the descent.
The remote valleys of
Northern Pakistan are home
bend despite enormous ·
Bv DOUGLAS BIRCH
to five of the world's· 14
ASSOCIATED PRESS W~ITER
pressure, perhaps, also gave·
tallest peaks.
him the courage to criticize
An Italian died last month
MOSCOW - Alexander Western culiure for what he
after falling into a crevasse Solzhenitsyn. the Nobel considered its weakness and
while trying to pioneer a Prize-winning
Russian decadence.
treacherous route up Nanga author whose books chroniAfter a triumphant return
Parbat, one of the others. cled the horrors of dictator from exile in the U.S. in
His two companions were Josef Stalin 's slave labor 1994 that included a 56-day
rescued by helicopter after camps, has died of heart train trip across· Russia to
they ma11aged to descend failure, his ' son said become reacquainted with
part of the way.
Monday. He was 89.
his native land, Solzhenitsyn
Stepan Solzhenitsyn told later expressed annoyance
The Associated Press his and disappointment that
father died late Sunday in most Russians hadn't read
.
Moscow, but declined fur- his books.
torn up in Kirkuk, and this· ther comment
. During the 1990s, hi s stalThrough·
unflinching wart nationalist views, his
is very dangerous for all of
accounts of the eight years devout Orthodoxy, his .disIraq," Ayad said.
The truck bomb exploded he spent in the Soviet dain for capitalism and di'snear a fruit stand, about 200 Gulag, Solzhenitsyn's nov- gust with the tycoons who
yards away from a heavily els and non-fiction works bought Russian industries ..
barricaded passport office exposed the srcret history and resour~es cheaply folin Baghdad's Sunni district of ihe vast pfi son system lowing the Soviet' collapse,
of Azamiyah, a former that enslaved millions. The were unfashionable. He
in surgent stronghold. The accounts riveted his coun- faded fmm public view.
u,s. military blamed al- trymen and earned · him But under Vladimir
years of bitter exile, but Putin's 2000-2008 presidenQaida in Iraq .
At least two women were international r~nown,
cy, Solzhenitsyn's vision of
among the dead, a police
And they inspired mil- Russia as a bastion of
officer said on condition df lions, perhaps, with the Orthodox Christianity, as a
anonymity because he was knowledge that one per- place with a unique culture
nor authorized the release son's courage and integrity and destiny, gained renewed
the information.
could, in the end, defeat the prominence.
It was the first major totalitarian machinery of an
Putin now argues, as
attack in Baghdad since empire.
.
Solzhenitsyn did in a speech
last Monday, when three
Beginning with the 1962
Harvard University in
suicide bombers Killed short novel "One Day in the at
more than 30 people and Life of Ivan Denisovich," !978, that 'Russia has a sepawounded hundreds during Solzhenitsyn devoted him- rate civilization from the
a Shiite religious proces- self to describing what . he West, one that can't be reconsion.
called the human "meat ciled either to Communism
Elsewhere, a roadside grinder" that bad caught him or western-style liberal
bomb killed six people, along with millions of other democracy, but requires a
including three Iraqi sol- Soviet citizens: capricious system adapted to ·its history
diers, and wounded 13 oth- ·arrests, often for trifling and and traditions.
ers Sunday south of seemingly absurd reasons,
Baghdad, police said.
followed by sentences to
In Tarnuyah, .north of the . slave labor camps where
capital, a clash between cold, starvation and punishU.S.-allied fighters and ing work crushed inmates
Bo• OHic. Open• e
civilians killed one civilian physically and spiritually.
UO
PM
FOR EVENING SHOWS l
His "Gulag Archipelago"
Sunday and wounded I0
12:30
PM FOR
others, local police said.
.trilogy of the 1970s shocked
WED THRU SUN MATINEES
Late Sunday, the ·governor readers by describing the
of Babil province escaped savagery of the Soviet state
injury when . a roadside under the dictator Josef
bomb exploded . near his Stalin. It helped erase linconvoy in West Baghdad, gering sympathy . for the
provincial police said.
Soviet Union among many
The U.S. military also leftist intellectuals, espesaid two American soldiers cially in Europe.
.
were killed in non-combat
But hi s account of that
incidents Saturday - one secret system of prison .
southwest of Baghdad and camps was also inspiring in 1----....-..
another north of the capital. its description of how one
A total of three soldiers person Solzhenitsyn
were injured in the two inci- himself - survived, physidents, the U.S. said.
cally and spiritually, in a
. Associated Press writers penat· system of soul-crushSameer N. Yacoub in ing hardship and injustice.
Baghdad
and
Yahya
The West offered him
Barzanji in Sulaimaniyah shelter and accolades. But
contributed to this report.
Solzhenitsyn's refu·sal to.

Russian author Alexander
Solzhenitsyn dies at 89

Countdown
to Kickoff

Nationals
.sweep Reds

DAYS
Favre reports to
Green Bay today
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP)
- . Though the Green Bay
Packers say Brett Favre has
put them in a difficult situation, they're prepared to
welcome him back.
· The NFL · announced
Sunday that Favre will be
reinstated and added to the. I'
Packers' active roster on
Monday. ' Commissioner
Roger Goodell had held oft'
on granting Favre's request
for reinstatement for nearly
a week, hoping Favre and
the team could resolve their
standoff.
"Although we built this
year around the assumption
that Brett meant what he
said about retiring, Brett is
coming back," said team
president and CEO Mark
Murphy. "We will welcome
him back and turn this situation to our advantage ."
The reinstatement will
become .effective at 1 p.m.
EDT Monday, when Favre
will be added to the
Packers' active roster. By
reinstating Favre, Goodell
· Pleue see Favre, 81

No deal on election bill, bomb kills 12 in Baghdad
.

BY 0ASSIM ABDUL·ZAHRA
.. AND ROBERT H REID
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

BAGHDAD - Despite
intense U.S. pressure, Iraqi
leaders failed- Sunday to
resolve differences over
how io govern the oil -rich
city of Kirkuk - a dispuJe
that is blocki ng provincial
elections and stoking ten sion in the volatile north.
Also .Sund'ay, a truck
bomb exploded in a Sunni
area of northern Baghdad,
killing 12 people, wounding
23 and raising concern
about a revival of sectarian
conflict.
.
Parliament had called a
special session Sunday to
try to reach agreement on a
bill authorizing elections in
all 18 Iraqi provinces - a
move the United States considers essential to reconciling l1aq's rival ethnic and
religi6us communities.
But the session never convened because intensive
talks among party and legislative leaders were unable
to produce agreement on a
formula that would satisfy
Kurdi sh
and
Arab, ·
Turkoman demands for
governing Kirkuk.
Kurds consider Kirkuk
iheir traditional capital and
want to incorporate it into
their self-ruled region of the
north. Arabs and Turkomen
want the city to remain
under central government
control.
Last month, parliament
approved an election bill
after Kurdish lawmakers
walked out in protest. But
President Jalal Talabani, a
Kurd, rejected t.he bill and
sent .it back to parliament .
With th'e elections bill
held hostage over Kirkuk,
U.S. officials have been
stepping up pressure on the
Kurds and other groups to

resolve their differences so
the provincial balloting can
take place this year.
U.S. Ambassador Ryan .
Crocker and U.N. special
representative Staffan de
Mistura met late ·Sunday
with Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki and other top
leaders to try to hammer out
an agreement that could be
submitted to parliament.
President Bush telephoned .the Sunni parliamentary speaker Mahmoud
al -Mashhadani and Shiite
Vice President Adel AbduiMahdi to urge a resolution.
acGording to statements
Sunday from their oftices.
"President Bush has been
working with the Iraqi s to
encourage them to work out
their differences and get the
provincial elections law
passed," said White House
press secretary Dana Perino.
'The United Nations has
recommended postponing
provincial elections in
Kirkuk and surrounding
Tamim province while
allowing the vote to proceed
in Iraq's other 17 provinces.
A committee would make
recommendations on how to
govern Kirkuk by the end of
the year.
A senior parliamentary
official said lawmakers
were
leaning
toward
approving the U.N. proposal, but Sunni Arabs anc!
Turkomen were seeking
international guarantees. He
spoke on condition of
anonymity because of the
sensitivity of the negotiations.
The issue of Kirkuk, the
center of Iraq's vast northern oil fields, has emerged
as a litmus test Jar the ability of Iraq 's ethnic and sectarian leaders to compromise on critical issues in
the illterest Of national rec-.
onciliation.

The Kurds control the
current provincial council,
which would be up for reelection in a new ballot.
Arabs and Turkomen have
called for a quota system for
council seats to guarantee
representation of all communities - a demand the
Kurds reject.
"The struggle in the
cou.ntry is now turning
from a sectarian to an ethnic one due to the Kurdish
behavior, which poses a
danger on the country,"
said Dhafir al-Ani, a Sunni
Arab lawmaker. "There are
efforts and wishes to end
this crisis but they always
fail due to the obstinacy of
the Kurdish partie' that
want to annex Kirkuk at
any price."
Issues suc h as Kirkuk
underscore U.S. fears that
the improved security in
Iraq is fragile because
Iraqi leaders ha~e failed to
exploit the drop in violence to. reach long-term
political and power-sharing agreements.
U.S. officials fear that aiQaida in Iraq , a Sunni
group, and Shiite extremist
organizations may seek to
exploit lingering social tensions to undermine security
gains.
Residents of Kirkuk fear
that it lawmakers fail to
reach agreement, tension
could rise in the city, where
a suicide bomb attack killed
25 people last week during
a Kurdish protest.
"I hope they can reach a
solution that fits all parties
and prevents the situation
from deteriorating further," ·
said Yetman Ayad, a 59year-old . Turkoman. who
sells spare car parts in
Kirkuk.
"The mistakes of politicians brought us to this
stage. Our social fabric was
•

..

'

...

AP photo

In this aerial photo reviewed by the Chinese military, competition venues are seen at the Olympic Green in Beijing Saturday.
In the foreground is the National Aquatics Center, known as the Water Cube. which will host swimming competition: At center is the National Indoor Stadium, which will host gymnastics, and at rear is the Fenc ing Hall. At left rear is the Main Press
Center. and left front is Digital Beijing, the data processing center for the games.

BEIJING (APJ
Tick, impression of the dty and
tick, tick.
leave a legacy to Beijing citThe official countdown izens."
clock in tiananmen S9,uare
Though it's hot and
hits "4 Days To Go' on humid, the city's morale has
Mlon'•day. More than 40 mil- been lifted by several days
lion potted flowers are in of .noticeably cleaner air,
bloom everywhere, even replacing the shroud of
along the center medians of chemical haze that usually
gritty highways. And for hangs over the Chinese capseveral days now, blue skie~ ita!.
·
have taken the place of the
"It's much better than I
usual gray smog.
exp~cted, there's none of the
So far, so good.
gunk in the air," said Paul
The day China has long- Lewis, sports editor of the
awaited, the day it makes its Auckland, . New Zealand,
debut on the international Herald on Sunday newspasports stage with, literally, a per. 'There is a little haze in
cast of thou sands. arrives the air, but that reminds me
Friday when opening cere- of Los Angeles in 1984, but
monies kick qff the Beijing it's nothing like I've been
Olympics inside its stunnin~ reading about."
91 ,000-seat "Bird's Nest'
Even if the good weather
· hangs around, lingering
National Stadium.
"I hope the sky can stay issues could sh ift the focus
blue . like this, both during from sports in a snap.
and after the Olympic Among them; Tibet, · terrorGames," said 25 -year-old ism and Internet censorship.
Zhang Shuang, a govern- And since February, the
ment office worker. "This country has been ·wracked
will give .foreigners a good by crisis after crisis. Deadly

NASCAR
driver
Carl
Edwards
celebrates
after winning the
NASCAR
Sprint
Cup
Series
Pennsylv
ania 500
auto
race in
Long
Pond,
Pa., on
Sunday. .
AP photo

~dwards

gets fourth win

~

: LONG POND, Pa. (AP)
ia.- Carl Edwards won
~nday's NASCAR Sprint
Cup race at Pocono
Raceway, gambling with a
pit strategy that he thought
would cost him the victory.
Edwards pitted from the
!llad just before a rain show·
that caused a 41-minute
fed flag and had the driver
arguing with crew chief Bob
Osborne over the decisiqn.
~ut the plan worked perfectly as the race wound up
J!oing
to . completion.
j:.dwards stretched his las,t
tjl.nk of fuel to earn, his
fourth victory of the season.
:• "I was really nervous that
we made the wrong call
ihere," Edwards said after
doing his traditional victory
backflip off his car. "Bob's
the smartest guy in the
world. We were really arguing. We made light of it, but
we th9ught we .made the
wrong call."
The race started in sunshine and it appeared Mark

er

pies are almost here

Tick, Uck, tick: Beiiinu

Martin, who took the lead
from pole-winner Jimmie
Johnson at the start and took
control would be the driver
to beat all day. But Martin
had problems on two pit
stops that put him back into
the pack and then dark
clouds began movmg m,
changing some strategies. ·
Rain began falling on lap
127 of the 200-lap event
and,
moments . later,
Edwards and several other
lead~r s ducked onto pit
road. Nineteen other drivers,
led by June .Pocono winne'r
Kasey Kahne and Martin,
who led a race-high 55 laps,
stayed out to gain track positon; waiting to see if the rain
might end the race prematurely.
.
But, despite more threatening clouds and a few raindrops later in the event, the
racmg
co ntinued
and ·
Edwards found himselfbaak
on t~p for good when

riots in Tibet sparked chaos
The communist governand protests on international ment says it wants the games
legs of the Olympic torch to convey a message of
relay, stunning patriotic friendship and has mobilized
Chinese who staged counter- the security apparatus to
protests. In May, almost ensure it.
70,000 people died in the
In a rare meeting this
Sichuan earthquake, which week with foreign journalsparked an outpouring of ists, President Hu Jintao said
sympathy around the world the ¥ames would be successand muted criti cisms of ful If the sports were good
China's policies on Tibet, and they promoted world
human rights, Darfur and the friendship. He asked jourtreatment of its . Muslim nalists to . be fair and keep
minority.
·
politics out on the sideli nes.
To a lesser extent, there
That friendly face of the
was the nuisance of an algae' games contrasts with a much
bloom at the Olympic sail- harsher side featuring
ing site, caused by water · I00,000 troops, commandos
pollution.
and policemen. They 're
With the games about to aided by thousands of neighstart, it's anyone's guess borhood watch groups how they will end. They whose members wear red
could showcase China's ris- armbands - and are further
ing economic and political augmented by · watchmen
power of the 21st century or and guards dressed in gray
they could descend into a or blue uniforms.
miasma of protests, police
Add to this 70,000
crackdowns•and Chinese cit- Olympics volunteers, and
izens angry with their rude
guests.
Please see nck, 81

.,.~·--r ' "" "

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

. .... ,

-~

· Please see Reds, 81

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
'

is proud to be at the
Mason Cou••ty t-,ait•!
• Monday; August 4, 2008 · • Thursday, August 7, 2008 . • Saturday, August 9, 2008
(4 p.m. to 8 p.m.)

(4 p.m. to 8 p.m.)
Blood Pressure Screenings
CORE Display
Pulse Oximetry Screenings ·
Body Fat Scre~nings

Blood Pressure Screenings
CORE Display
Pulse OximetrY Screenings
Body Fat Screenings

• Tuesday, August S, 2008
"(4 p.m. to 8 p.m.)
· Blood Pressure Screenings
CORE Display
Pulse Oximetry Screenings
Body Fat Screenings
'¥-_...,

(4 p.m. to8 p.m)
Blood Pressure Screenings
CORE Display
Advance Directives
Pulse Oximetry Screenings
Body Fat Screenings

• Friday, August 8, 2008
(4 p.m. tu 8 p.m.)
Blood Pressure Screenings

,&lt;X)RflpJsplay '

J

·•

H~

.

'· OlQcO~ Fi!iiet~Ucks'' , .~ ,
. " Sc . . ..
~~
":of,~ ~

'~.Putfeh' . ~
''··'

· ·&amp;pdy Fat SCreetrlngs .

• Wednesday, Au8Utt 6,,.2008

'

··•· ·

(9 a.m. to 3 p.m.)
Dr. Bobbi Jo Muto
Oral Cancer Sc~ngs ..,
Toothbrush Giveaway &amp; Goodies
'

(I p.m. to 4 p.m.)
Agnes Simon, MD .~Medical Stud~s
CORE Display ' ·
,
Cholesterol &amp; Glucose Fingersticks
Pulse Oximetry Screenings
Body Fat Screenings ·

.'

'

Balloons provided

(4 p.m. to 8 p.m:) ·
Blood Pressure Screenings
-·
CORE Display
'
Glucose Fingersticks
Pulse Oximetry Screenings
Body Fat Screenings

alglatly to children
by the PVH Auxiliary

Please see Pocono, 86
_,

. ' . ,. ,.._. .

WASHINGTON (APl For one weekend. the
Washington Nationals managed to resemble a decent
baseball team. an achievement made possible with
the help of the stu mbling
Cincinnati Reds.
The Nationals completed
only their second sweep of
the year Sunday, jumping
ahead with a four-run first
inning in a 4-2 victory that
followed a, Reds' playersonly meeting.
Rookie Collin Balester
(2-3) allowed one run in 5
1-3 innings and Lastings
Milledge hit his ninth home
run for the Nationals. who
were mired in a nine-game
losing
streak
before
outscoring the Reds 19-10
over th ree games. Austin
Kearn s had three hits
against his former team.
Not counting a win in a
one-game seri es
with
Atlanta on opening day. the
Nationals now have two
sweeps - both against fellow last-place teams . They
took three in a row in
Seattle during an inter- ,
league series in June .
The . Red s lost for the
eighth time in nine games
and fell to a ·season-worst
10 games under .500, having failed to gai n any
noticeable edge ·from a 20minute players· meeting
prior to batting practice.
Cincinnati committed three
errors and failed to hold a
four-run lead in Saturday
night's 10-6loss. and ~moth­
er error lead to an unearned
run in Washington's big first
inning Sunday.
Reds sta~ter Johnny Cueto
(7 -II) struck out the first
two batters he race.d. but the

'

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

local Sports Briels
EHS mandatory OHSAA meeting
TUPPERS PLAINS - There wtll be a mandatory
OHSAA mcettn~ on Mnnd.ty. August -l, dt 6 30 p m for all
Eastern Ht gh Sdml&gt;l stuuent-athletes 111 graues 7-12 A parent!gu,mltan must .tl &gt;o attend the mectmg wnh hiS or her
studenh tth lete The mect mg wtll be held tn the elementary
school c.tletunum
For more tnfoll11.ttton. cont.tct P.tm or Scott at 985-3329
111 the EHS offtce

Fall sports passes available at EHS
TUPPERS PLAINS - E.tstern High School season
spot ts p.t"e' lut the 200S-01J tall season &lt;1re currently on
sale. Passes l\ln be pllllll.tscd tn the mam ottice at EHS
between 8 .t m ctnd 1 10 p m
To purch.tse cmy ul the "V.ttlable non-student passes, you
must be a restdc m ol Eastern Local School District.
An ,tdult p.tss lm the ·ox t.tll sports season may be purchct&gt;eJ lor 550. The p.tss ts good fur JUntor htgh and htgh
school \olleyhall cll1d footb,tll games.
A student pctss lll.t) be purch,tsed by Eastern students for
$25 lor the 0~ Jlllllor ht gh and high school volleyball and
footbdll &lt;e,Jsons
A &gt;C IIIIll pctss nt.ty be purchased for the '08 fall sports
season !01 S I0 You must have d Golden Buckeye Card to
purch.tse thts pclSS The pass IS good for JUnior htgh and
htgh sc hool H&gt;lleyb.tll .tnd lootball games
An ctdult volleyb,tll p.tss may be purchased for $30 and IS
good lot .til l.tll JU111or ht gh and l11gh school volleyball
m.nchcs
An .tdult lootb.tll p.tss n1.1y be purchased for $25 and IS
good lo t ,til t.tiltunllll ht gh .tnJ htgh schoollootball games
Athlcttc ttcket p11ccs fo 1 the 200H-01J s~ h ool year tor htgh
school .tnd JU ntot ht gh g.11nes wtll he $4 for adults and $2
to1 stuuenh

Meigs Alumni flag football game
ROCKSPRINGS - A tlag football game will be held on
Satutday. Se ptembet I 1 m conJU11llton with Meigs Alumm
Weekend The g.tme "open to .my graduate of Meigs Htgh
School tlt.tt p!.t yed looth.tll fat the M.u,tUdets fm at least
one ye.tr
The game wtll be p!,tyed between even year graduates
and udd yecll gt.tdu,ttes .11 Bob Roberts Field 111 Pomeroy
Start t11ne wtll be 5 p 111
Those Interested 10 pl&lt;tytng should contact Matt Stewart
ot Fox's Ptzz.t ,,t 740-444-2537 as soon as possible so Jerseys m.ty be ordered

Softball tourney set for August 8
CHESTER - A Days of Glory Co-pd Softball
Tournament has been set tor Aug. 8 through I0 at the
Chestet Ball Ftelds wuh all proceeds to benefit the Chester
Ball Assoctatton cll1d the Angela Eason Memonal fields
The charge ts $100 a team plus two 12-mch 44 core balls
This" slow pitch, ltve male and five female on lhe field at
all tunes, men bdt oppostte hands, ages 21 and older, and
slow pttch b.tts only with doub le elimination, one hour
games
Space ts limtted 10 12 teams For more mformatton call
Angte Edwards at 740-416-li956 or Mand1e Grueser at 740416-0900
On Aug 9 there wtll be a hog roast dinner at $6 per person, .t home run det hy at $5 per person v. tth 50 pen:;ent of
the pwceeus gumg lot lu &lt;t. second and third place pnzes,
and a vanety ot door p11zcs.

Reds hold players-only meeting
WASHINGTON lAP) The Ctnunn.tl t Reds, nmed
m last place tn the NL
Centr.tl held .1 pl.tyets-only
meet tn g belote tl1eit ga me
agmnst ~he Wdshtngton
Nallonals on Sunday
The Reds had lust &lt;even
at eight and were a se&lt;~son­
hi gh 15 games out ol ltrst
et1te11ng pl.ty Sund,ty They
committed three errors
Saturday mght In " I0-6
loss to th e NattOI1dls ,
promptmg 111d1Mger Dusty
Baker to say · That was a
ternble g_dme - an ugly
game
B,tker, who met bttetly
v.tth the team on Fnclay,
Send he saw some common
themes In the stnng ot lo-ses.
"Walks m the wrong tnne.

Reds .
from Page Bl
next ftve re,tched base .
M tlledge homered to left,
Kearns beat mtt an mlteld
htt .tnd Kory Casto stngled
to left
Then Pete Orr, who had
hts firs-t RBis in more than a
year In Saturday mght's
seventh-inning rally, came
through aga m by dnvmg in
Kearns wtth a single. Left
fielder Adam Dunn misplayed Orr's hit, allowmg
Casto to score on an error.
Wtl Nieves followed wnh a
bloop RBI single.
That was all Balester
needed m hts sixth career
start He allowed stx hits
and one run- Joey Votta's
14th home run of the season
m the stxth mnmg. Joel
Hanrah an surrendered a
nmth -1nntng homer to
Corey Patterson before fmishmg for hts ftrst save on
any protcsstonal le vel
Nattonals second baseman Emt!to Bomfac10, who
along
With
shortstop
Alberto Gonzalez provided
some energy dUtmg the
went
2-for-4.
senes.
Bomf,Jcto " 5-for-13 st nce

errors - a lot of errors physical ,mu mental errors
- a lot of opportumttes tor
the opposttton Most of the
ltme we've been scored
upon hrst," Baker said
The playet s met for 20
mmutes before batting practice Sunday and qUickly left
th e clubhouse for the fteld
When Baker played wah
the Los Angeles Dodgers,
he satd players often met
among themselves wahout
manager Tom Lasorda and they were helpful meettngs In ht s early vears as a
coach
wnh
the
San
Fr&lt;tncisco Giants, manager
Roger Crmg advtsed him
never to allow players-only
meetmgs, feanng it would
appear the manager lost
control of hts clubhouse.

Monday, August 4,

www .mydailysenti nel.com

2008

Monday, August 4, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

m:rtbune - Sentinel - 1\egtster

Liriano, Twins hold Indians at bay, 6-2
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) The Mmnesota Twms hope
Francisco Ltriano's return to
the starttng rotatiOn will bolster their postseason push
So tar, so good. After
Ltriano 's first maJor league
act ton smce Apnl, the Twms
have reclaimed f1rst place 111
the AL Central
Liriano, who missed all of
last season after Tommy
John surgery and struggled
m three starts earlter this
year, threw SIX scoreless
mmngs on Sunday, helpmg
the Twins to a 6-2 victory
over the Cleveland lndtans.
Denard Span and Brendan
Harns
homered
for
Minnesota, which moved a
half-game ahead of the
Whtte Sox . Chicago lost 143 at Kansas Ctty
''Been a long ttme,"
L1nano satd, when rem111ded
that his ldst maJOr leagoe
victory was also agamsl the
Indians, on July 23, 2006
Indeed. ll's been a long
road back fo r the hardthrowmg Ietty trom the
Dominican Republtc Two
seasons ago. he went 12-3
with a 2 16 ERA and 144
stnkeouts before arm problems cut short h1s rookte
year After 1ak111g off last
season, he went 0-3 wtth dn
11.32 ERA m three starts
before betng sent down 111
Ap11!.
But Ltriano dom111ated at
Tnple-A Rochester, gomg
I0-0 with a 2 67 ER,A 111 ht s
last II starts. and was openly frustrated as the Twms
watted unttl Fnday to call
htm up
Mtke Redmond caught
Liriano's prevtous maJor
league start, when he gave
up SIX runs in less than an
mnmg at Oakland on Apnl
24.
"Amazmg
transtonnation ," Redmond said "He's
improved so much ... Hts
arm strength, you know it's
not what 11 was before he
first got hurt. But tt was pret-

ty dose ..
Chectcd loudly by the
announced cnmd of 39.818
Jutmg starttng lmeup mlroducttons, Liri,uw allowed
three hns. w.tlked three and
struc~ out fi ve agamst the
lndidll &gt; He drew ~ standmg
ovdtton alter smkmg out
Ben Ft anctsco to end the
first
"Th.tt se ttleu me down a
hnle btt ." he said. " I was
re,1lly nervous "
After hreezmg through
two mmngs on 19 pitches,
Lmano was tested in the
thtrd, factng a bases-loaded
snuatton after two walks and
a throwmg error by shortstop Harris L1riano threw
34 pitches m the mmng but
got Franci sco swingmg
.tga111 to end the threat.
"We made htm work a littl e btt there 111 the mtddle
tnntngs, but we dtdn't take
advantage at tl That v.as
1eally the difference for us,"
lndtan s nt.ln.tger Enc Wedge
sa1d
Lmano threw 96 pttches.
Jesse Ctatn relieved h11n in
the seventh alter the Twms
pulled ahead 3-0 With hi s
ltrst wtn m more than two
years out of the way, he can
co n ~..:e ntl ate

CLASSIFIED
Galli a
Colmty,
OH

Ron

G,udenhne sdtd
Span went 2-lor-4. and
Ntck Punto and Mtke Lamb
each had run-sconng tnple&gt;
for Mmnesota
Matt Gtnlct ( 1-3). makmg
hts fourth st.Jrt ol the season,
allowed ltve ,tuns and ftve
htts tn stX inmngs for the
Indtdns
" In the fifth mnmg and
stxth mntng, I got the ball up
a ltttl e htt." G111ter satd
"They maue me pay They
put some good swtngs on the
ball "
Cleveland cut the lead to
5-I 111 the seventh when
Jason Kubel mt splayed

Offiee II(J~S'

Minnesota Twtns' Franctsco Ltnano pitches 1n the flr!\1
tnntng of a baseball game on Sunday m Mtnneapo lts.
Grady Stzemore's lon g llyball tn left field. allowmg
Frankltn Gut tet rez to score
from hrst
FranciSCO htl hts II tit
homer m the etghth but Span
went deep for his second ot
the se.tso11 111 the bottom
half.
Notes~ Cle;eland has lost
six of its last seven ga mes tn
Mmnesota and lost Its thtrd
straight
senes
at
Metrodome
J honny
Peralta has hit safely in 21 at
hts last 23 games
Gardenhire said OF Mtchael

Cuddyer v.ould report' for
hts rehab asstgnment at
Tnpl e-A Rochester OD
Monday Gardenhire satd h~
thtnks Cuddyer, out smce
June 30 wtth a stramed ten:.
don m hts left mdex fmger.,
wtll need about four or five
games m Rochester before
he' s teady to return
Cleveland has homered 10
25 of tt s last 29 games. :
Span htt h1s homer off for·
mer teammate Juan Rmco11,
who made his first career
appearance m Mmnesota as
a vtstting player

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edll,
re,tect or cancel any
ad at any lime
Must

but Cubs spokesman Peter
Chase sa1d he was f111e
He allowed an unearned
run 111 the first and a leadoff
hamel to Brandon Moss who came from Boston io
the Bay trade - tn the sec,
ond before settling
down The Cubs lied It at 2
111 the bottom half and got
two more runs m the fourth
on consec utive doubles by _
lun Edmonds, Soto an~
Zambrano
agamst
Pittsburgh starter Jan Snell
to make •t 4-2.
·
Aram1s Ramirez led off
the filth wtth his 19th
homer to make it 5-2
Snell allowed four runs
and'· seven hits m four
mmngs.

Favre

"As a resu lt at h1 s deciston. we tnvested considerably tn " new and dtlferent
future wnhout Brett and we
· were obvtously movtng 111
tlldt direction That's why
this wasn't easy Having
cto"ed the Rltbtcon once
when Brett dectded to
retire, it's very dtfftcult to
t~Ottent our plans and cross
11 agam 111 tH e opposite
d11 ectmn but we 'II put
thts 10 OUI aJvantage "
;,J_.Id reonentmg the tr
~
:,.~~~
tnclude a com petitiOn
1
between Favre and Aaron
Rodget's lor the starting
job'' Tedm offtctals have
·namtamed that 1f Favre
' eturned to the Packers, it
would be 111 some 1ole
other than as the starter and have satd Rodgers IS
thetr starter,
In hts statement . Murphy
satd only that coach Mike
McCarthy would "talk to
the team and the quarterbacks about the plan mov-

mg forward, Hnd alter he
has done that we wtll share
II publicly "
Earlier Sunday, Favre's
.tgent, Jame s "Bus" Cook,
con t1rm cd ' that
Favre
planned to fly to Green Bay,
on Sund,\y and teporlto the
Packers on Monday
"That 's the plan,'' Cook
satd 111 an e-matl to The
Associat ed Press.
Favre could be on the
held as early as Tuesday.
Favre retired 1n March
but has been havtng second
thought~
Team officials
have insisted they are movIng on wtth Rougers.
though, cau smg tcnstons to
rise between Favt e ,md the
team
Team olftctals publicly
have ruled out releasing
Favre, feanng he would
Immedi ately sign with
division rival Minnesota
The team has a scrunmage at Lambeau Field on
Sunday night, then does

not have another scheduled
public
praetice
until
Tuesday morning. Favre:s
arnval 111 training catnp
could cause a major di~~
rupuon to the team·,
although he would mit
likely begm practicm:g
with the Packers . nght
away.
McCarthy has satd the
Packers had a plan in pla&lt;;e
sho uld Favre report !'\)
camp. He ftrst would have
to pass a phystcal exam
and a condtliomng test,
then would likely be limited to mdividual dnlls
Goodell told the NFL
Netv.ork on Saturday th31
he thtnks the situation ha~
lmgered long enough
.
"I thtnk we have to force
it," Goodell sa1d. "I thmk
ll 's come to the point
where there need to be
some decisiOns made ol)
behalf of the Packers, on
behalf of Brett, on behalf
of all the fans ."
·

Party leader overseeing
preparations, told a rally of
volunteers last month. "A
safe Olympics is also a key
mdtcator of the postttve
reflectton of our natton 's
image "
VIctor Cha, the director of
Astan
Studies
at
Georgetown Un tverstty. satd
the government must reach
four targets 10 be successful
Cha satd Chmese athletes
must do well m the medal
co unt Many ptck them to
wtn more than 40 gold
medals and top the United
States Clean air is a must

Orgamzation and logtsllcs
must go well, and polittcal
protests have to be margln&lt;thzed .
"Protest by athletes doesn't really mar the games
because that is somethmg
even the IOC would be
opposed to," Ch.1 said " But
I thmk maJor protests that
the Chinese put down in
front of televiSion cameras,
particularly 1f they are foreign protesters, that could
look very bad ·•
The IOC has mamtamed
the games are about spotts,
not poliucs. But Cha said

spendmg $40 billion on
venues and infrastructure
was a political statement,
and the more Chinese offlc
cmls reJect the tag, the mo(e
It sticks.
"When you are the biggest
country m the world, an&lt;;!
you're an illiberal regime,
and you're hosting the
Olympics. then it's bound t&lt;il
be polttical," Cha said.
"These multtbillion dollar
1comc Olympic faciltues ru:e
meant to show that Chma ts
not simply the Great WaiL
It 's modern, it 's powerful;,
It's a player."

r

GIV.:AW&lt;Y

Blue Healer young fem ale
has cropped tat I, ve ry fnend
ly 446 25 15
Free to Good Home, lrtendly black Lab lemale Must
be only Pet 304-675 5027
German
short
hatr
Potnter/Choc Lab mtx looktng ltke a Lab 1 Yr old
male 992·3357 742 2533
Sola Bed fa1r condtlton 304675 1978

r

la;r ANll

YAR() SALE·

Pom:t&lt;m/Mmm E

12 Noon 2

Business Days Prior To

friday For Sunday5 Paper

Thursday for Sundays Paper

• All ads must be prepaid'

DeKriJJiion • Include A Prtce • Avoid Abbreviations

f"4

D•splay~

All

Publication

• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Davs

\{ I \II \ I'S

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
_(. ~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!ii1l
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

Display Ads

Sunday Display: 1·00 p . m

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

\~Ol

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

In Next Day 's Paper

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

\

Oead't;,~

Sunday In -Column : 1:00 p.m.

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

AP photQ

the tymg two-tun homer to
Andy LaRoche tn the
etghth
The dt am a started be tore
the top of the stxth when
Cubs m,m,tger Lou Ptmella
dectded Ia bt in o 111 Jef f
Samardzip even tl10u gh the
Cubs had a 5-2 le.td and
Zambrano hdd rettreu 12 111
a row.
Zambrano. who had completed his warm ups, lelt to a
sta'ndt ng ovation, rai sing his
1t ght tndex finger on h1s
V.d) to the dugottt as he
usually does.
Zambrano allov.ed JU St
three hns, struck out two
and walked one wh1le
throwin g just 82 pitches
after go111g 4-1 last month,

.Tick

l\egtster

Sentinel

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p .m .
Monday-Friday for Inliertlon

8:00 a.m. to 5:00p.m.

an e.1sy v. tn tm ned dramatic
111 the ·etghth
The wmnm~.rally started
when Cratg H.tnscn (0·1)
walked Geovany Soto With
two otlts Sean Burnett
came 111 , .tnd Johnson drove
an 0-2 pttch to left He
t ,used hts nght atm as soon
as the b.tll !ell hts bat and
came out ol the dugout for a
cu1ta111 call
Sonano gave the fans
more to chcet when he sent
.t 1-2 pitch from Burnett to
the seats tn lett, mak•ng It
8-5 Carlos Marmo! came m
&lt;tnd pitched a pertecl mnth
for htS SIXth SdVe Ill eight
chances
Chad Gaudtn (3- 1) got the
wtn even thou gh he allowed

the Nationals promoted h1m
on Fnday
Notes: The Reds went 1-5
on thts stint away from
home. They have a losmg
record 111 2 1 of thelf last 24
road tnps ... The Nationals
had a very th111 bench ·
EliJah Dukes (leg). Ryan
Zimmerman (hand) and
Crist1an Guzman (thumb)
were
unavailable .
Washmgton INF Aaron
Boone, on the disabled list
· with a stramed left calf, will
travel to Flonda to continue
h1s rehabilitation There
remains no timetable for hts
return. ... Reds OF Jerry
Hairston Jr. missed his second straight game wtth a
sore right hamstring. ...
Cincinnati RHP Aaron
Harang, who will pttch m a
on
rehab
assignment
fromPageBl
MondaY.
for
Tnple-A
LOUIS~ tile, probably Will
need a second rehab start several hundred-thousand
before bemg activated, so-called "city volunteers"
who fill subway stops, work
manager Dusty Baker said
Harang ts on the 15-day dis- in street-side tents offering
abled list with a sore right tounsl tnformatton, or stmelbow.
Reds RHP Jared ply stand at attentwn tn
at
Olympi c
Burton, on the 15-day DL hallways
with a right shou lder injury, venues
"A safe Olympic s IS the
threw 20 pitches m a
btggest
tndtcator of the sucbullpen
session
in
Cmcmnati on Saturday, and cess of the games," Vtcc
wtll throw agam on President X1 Jmpmg, the
. semor-most
Communtsl
Monday

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday

CHICAGO (AP)- Reed
Johnson
and
Alfonso
Soriano htl back-to-back
homers Ill the eighth, and
the Chtcago Cubs escaped
wtth an 8-5 victory over the
Pittsburgh
Pirates
on
Sunday after blow1ng a
three-run lead in the top
half of the 111mng
The home runs lifted the
Cubs to their seventh wm Ill
eight games and capped a
strange afternoon that saw
Carlos Zambrano leave
after five strong 1nmngs
even though he apparently
was not hurt. Chicago (6745) moved 22 games above
.500 for the first time smce
1989, when it won 93
games, but what looked ltke

is following through on a
recent promtse to torce
action.
Earlier th1 s week, the
team offered Favre a longterm, mulllmillion-Jollar
market111g agreement that
likely would have kept hun
retired. But Favre's dec tswn to report to cam!'
makes such an agreement
less hkely
A trade remams a P0''1btlity.
"Frankly, Brett's cha _
of mmd put us m a very
difficult spot," Murphy
sa1d m a statement released
by the team. "We now will
rev1se many actions and
assumpuons about our
long-term future, all predicated on Brett's decision
last March to reltre.

Websites
www mydatlytnbune com
www mydatlysenttnel com
www mydatlyregtster com

Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
Or Fax To (304) 675·5234

POLICIES Ohto Val11y Pubh1hlng resen111 the right to edt! reject, or cancel any ad at anv time Error1 must b4l reported on the tlr11l dav of
Tnbune'· S.ntmei·Regtllflt wtll be reaponatble lor no mor1 than the coet of the lpiiC• oecupled by the error and only the llret lnaertlon We
II not
any lost or eKpentethat reaulte from the publication or omission of an advertlaement .Correct ion will be made In the flr1t available edit ion • Box number
are alwaya conftdentta l • Currant rate card applies • All rn l 111111 advertl•aments are IUbJ.CI to the Federal Fair Houelflg Acl of t968 • This now ,opop••

accept• only help wanted ada meeting EOE 1tandard1 We
erroram an ad ta~en over the phone

will

K
ri:-:T:-:&amp;-C:-A:-R"::Lv_L""'E--:--:---------------,
kttncarlyle@comcast net

Roush Lane Cheshtre Aug
t 2 8.4 8 00 6 00 F~rst one m
2yrs
teen women men
ctothes&amp;Ktd s Toys&amp;mtsc 11

76

YAIIDSALE
YARTl SALE·

YARI) SALE-

Sale
At
Apphance
Warehouse t 14 Chestnut
Sl Henderson Mon Frt
FurntiUre appliances Mtsc
Items

0

0

0

WA'f!TJ)

roBUI

GALLLPOLll

Aug4 5 6 7 10am2pm
wtll start back up at 5 30pm
unt1! ? 509 Vanco4Rd
74
Y ,\RO S,\1 E·

Buymg junk cars, $250 cash
tor lull car (740)416·1594
Junk cars paymg $50·$300
If no answer leave a message 740 388 oot I

~--

.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

.. ............810

Momes for Sale
Household Goods . ... .... .. ..

.

.310
510

Houses tor Rent .. . . ...................
. 410
In Memoriam . . ...................
.. ........ 020
Insurance
...................... . ,...... 130
~awn

&amp; Garden Equipment ................ 660
Livestock.. ..... .. ...........
......... 630
Coot and Found.. .. ...... .. ...
.. 060
Lots &amp; Acreage..... ........... ...
......... 350
lscellaneoua ... . ................................170
Miscellaneous Merchandise
.............. 540

Mobtte Home Repair.....
..............860
Mobtta Homes for Rent...... .
......... t20
Mobtte Homes for Sale...... .. ...................320
Money to Loan .............. .......................... 2:10
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................740
Muslcallnstrumenls

•. ..

. ......... 570

Personals ......... .. ..... . .
Pals lor Sale .... .. ........ .. ...
lumbtng &amp; Heating......... .

............ 005
. . ..... 560
......... 820

Professional Services, ,,, .. ,,,.,,, ................ 230

Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair .......................... 160
Real Ellate Wanted......
..
...............360
Schools Instruction..

jleed , Plant I Fertilizer

...................... 150

......... 650
Slluallona Wanted ...................................... 120
Space lor Rant ............ .............................. 460
Sporting Goods.......................................... 520
suv·aror Sale.......... .
.. ...................... 720
Trucks for Sale........ ...
. ............ 715
\lpholstary ......................
.... .... 870
Vans For Sale.............. ... . ........... .. .730
Wanted to Buy.................... . ..... ....... ..... 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Suppttea ................ 620
Wanted To Do ............................................ 180
Wanlld to Rent ......... .. .
.. ..................... 470
Yard Sale· Gallipolis . . . .. ...........
.072
.Yard Salo·Pomoroy!Middle .......... -' ......074
Yard Sata·P!. Pleasant ............................... 076

© 2008 by NEA, Inc

Want to buy Junk Cars, call
740·388 0884

fl'

ome Improvements...

~

www.com1cs.com

Wanted to Buy or Lease
Hunting property tn M9tgs or
l'oMEROY/MIVIlLE surrounding counties 304 Employment Opporlumty
612·1593
T-he Metgs County Board ot
Danville Garage Sal e on St
M
e
n
1
a
I
I \11'1
\11 \I
At 325 (Jude s) Thu rsday
RetardatiOn/Developmen tal
"if IH H I s
Aug 7th 7am-7pm J Deere
Dtsabt httes IS accepltng
ndtng tractor &amp; wagon blow l'l'\1~10~------, applications for lhe Dtrector
up bouncer Longaberger
HELP WANTEIJ
ol Educatton Successful
,__ _ _ _ _ __. appltcants wtll possess lhe
purses &amp; morel
followmg
credentials
100WOAKERS NEEDED Master's Degree tn Spectal
Assemble
crafls
wood Educa ttoniAdmmlstrahon fo
ttems To $480fwk Matenals ur years expertence worktng
•x4's For Sale............
725
provtded Free mlormatton m
Early
lntervenll0n1
Announcement........... ... ... . . .•.••••.. •
030
pkg 24Hr 801 428 4649
Pres chool or Schoot Age
Aott~ues .............................................. 530
Spectal Edudatton expert
jlpartments lor Rent.
.. ..................... 440
Administrative
ence m the MR/00 lteld pre
Auction and Ftea Market.. .. .......
080
Professional
!erred Send Resume to
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
......... 760
lrm1edlalely Available
Carleton School PO Box
Auto Repair.. ... . ........ ......... .. .
770
CPA hrm ts seektng a htgh
307, Syracuse, OH 4577 9
Autos for Sale
......................... , 710
ly quahlted, well spoken
August 7, 2008
Metgs
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
. .... ... . 750
admtmstrattve professional County Board ol MR/00 IS
Building Supplies
.. .. . . .
550
Ouai~ I C81tons that must be
an
equal
oppartuntty
Business and Buildings
. ...... .. . 340
met tnclude
employer
Business Opportunity ........................ 210
Prafesstonal appea1ance
Business Training ................................. 140
l:lOih mdress and groomtng Experienced Auto Body
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
................... 790
proper use ol grammar
Repairman I Frame reek
Camping Equipment
.... . 780
tnte1medtate kn O\Iedge of Technician. 740·992·2316
Carda of Thanks . . .
010
Mtaosoft Offtce mcludtng
Chttd!Etderly Care.. ................ .....
. 190
Expenenced Tanker Drtver
E.(Cel Word Outlook
Electrlcat/Relrlgerallon .................. . .. ..... 840
w/Hazmat
endorsement
Above-average
computer
Equipment for Rent . .. . .. .. . . ... 480
740 388 8547
abtltty
and
typtng
sk1lls
~xcavatlng ... .
. . .... .. . ........
830
Strong abthty 10 take 1M1a
Farm Equipment.. ..................... .... .
.. 610
FEDERAL
ttve to complete tasks and
Farms for Rent.. . ....... ........... , ........... 430
POSTAL
JOBS
pnortltze and organtze to·do
Farms lor Sale
....................... . 330
517
89
$28
27/hr
now htr
hsls
Pnor
experience
and
For Lease .
.... . . .
490
bookkeeptng
knowledge
IS
tng
For
appllcaiiOn
and free
For Sale ...
585
a plu s
governement 10b tnro. call
For Sale or Trade ............ ... .... .
590
Please send resume wtth Amenc an Assoc ot labor 1
Fruits &amp; Vegetables .................. .......
580
913 599·8226 24/hrs emp
, salary reqwrements to
Furnished Rooms ................. . .............. 450
Chapman &amp; Burris CPA.s serv
General Hauling... ... .. .. .. .. . .. .............. 850

Giveaway . ... . ... ........
.. .. .. 040
Happy Ada................... . .
..........:050
Hay &amp; Grain .. .................. ..
. .......... 640
Help Wanted.. ..... ......... . .....................110

LLC
64 State Street
GallipOliS OH 45631
If ca lled for an tnlervt ew
please be prep ared to take
a small test on the above
ttems and 1tem s 1n your
resume
An Eliceltenl way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304•882 2645
AVQNI All Areas' To Buy or
Sell Sh trley Spears 304
675 1429
BENNIGAN S now ' h1nng
evenmg cooks servers host
and mamtenance Apply
Wllhtn no phone calls
please
Cerltrted
Automottve
Techntctan ancl Cert1fmd
Diesel Mechantc 740-388·
8547
- -m-ln_o_s__P_oz_za__N
_ o_
w
00
,
ve•s
'ln
Hore
In
loo' Q 10
0I
Polnl Pleasant Eleanor,
Galhnnhs &amp; Pome•oy Apply

"v

tn Person

-----~--

.,MMIIi•'

FOSTER PAAEr.TS t\NO
RESPITJ
NE£ct'D, becofnS· ~ ltafe
liCensed by attendtng tratn·
1ngs held on Saturdays
Earn $30 $45 a day for the
care of a chtld livtng m your
home Homes are needed tn
your county Call Oasts toll
free
1-877 325- 1558
Tralmng wtll beg1n August in
Albany

POST

Gallla-Metgs CAA ts seektng
an Intake Clerk to work wrth
Emergency
Programs
Organtzaltonal sk1ll s com·
puler expenence a MUST
and ab1hty to deal with per
sans of venous soc to eco
nomt c
backgrounds
Temporary
fullttme
(6
months) possibly becomtng
permanent Valtcl Dnvers
hcense htgh school gradu
ate or eqUivalenl Resume
w1th three (3) references to
Ms Edwards Gatlla Metgs
C A A 8010 N State Route
7. Chesh1re , Ohio 456620
by 08/2912008 GMCAA o

OhiO Valley Pubhshmg With
oHtces 1n Pomeroy
Gallipolis and Pt Pleasant
IS accepllng resumes lor a
lull ttme outstde sates
representative Applicants
must be organ tzed
creattve and able to
manage an established
account hst while calling
on new customers
Candidates must be
dtSC tphned sell mott vated
and a learn player that
understands the
tmpor ta nce of developmg
strong mutually beneltctal
bustness relattonshtps wtth
our customers Sales
axpanence and reliable
transportatton necessary
It you can sell and you
want to work full ttme I
would like to hear !rom
you
Please send resume
cover letter and three
references to
Galltpolts Dally Trtbune
Attn Matt Rodgers
POBox 469'
GallipoliS OH 45631
o• ematl to
mrodgers@ mydellvtnbu ne com

Al l replies wtll be kept 1n
stnct conflclence

Center Is now accepttng
appttcaMns fo r a full ttme
Matntenance Asststant Thts
Will be a short term pos1t1on
Must have e)(penence tn
general mamtenance rnclud·
tng carpentry plumbtng
electnc al telephone and

lnfoClslon
= Opportunity
$8.50/hour
Take Inbound customer
servtce calls lor Fortune
100 Compames lncludtng

cabl e mstallatton

Time Warner Cable

Call to scedule an
Interview

f.888·1MC·PAYU
Ext. 2311
lnfoclalon com

WA.\'l'EI)

To Do

AesCare Home Care IS
accepting apphcattons for
Support ASSOCIB!es CNA &amp;
STNA MRfOD e~p prerer red Apply at 8204 Carla
Ortve Gallipolis Mon Frt
4
Ema11 resume to
rharn son@reEcare com

'I

D&amp;A Lawn Care
mow
mg weed eattn g hedge
tr1mm1ng, Spnng &amp; Fall
cleanup Day 740 853 1702
or Night 740 319·2599

Wtll babystt m my home on
Georges Creek Ad whtte
yo~u work Week days $20 a
Aocksprmgs Aehabilttatton day per chtld 446 4680
Center an Extencltcare
11'\'\11\l
Factllly located 1n Pomeroy
IS now accept tn'Q applicaBUSINOO
tiOns lor a full ltme
0PI'OR111NITY
Matnlenance
SuperviSOr

a

wtth e~~:p er tence 1n electn cal
pl umbmg general repatr otn orne n ertors or on
and troubleshooting equtp· 39 00 contact Rosalt
men! !allures Benefit pack Unrue at 304-273·2969 o
04 532 1229
age tncl udes health dental
vtston coverage, 401 K
vacatton and personal days
eNOTICE•
tUition reimbursement and OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
contmumg
educaiiOn
lNG CO recommends
Interested appltcants should that you do bus 1ness wtth
apply In person at 36759 peopiEl you ~now and
Rockspnngs Road Pomeroy NOT to send money
OH 45769 or Fax Resume :o through the mall unttl you
740-992 2678 E~tendtcare have mvest 1gated the
Health servtces Inc IS an offenng

j

Weekends Only Amencan
Legton Post t40 New
Haven, WV For tnfor mallon
call 304 882 3101 afler 4pm
WANTED Part·ttme posl·
!tons avatlable to a,sstst tndt
vtduals wtth mental reta rda
!ton at a group home m
Sidwell 35 hrs 11 p-8 30a

Th/F Sat 7p 9a Sun Htgh
School dtploma/GED valtd
gency equ ipment
Item Dnvers license and three
assembly and boiler system
operatton Contact Charla years good drtvmg exp en
8 r 0 w n M c G u 1 r e ence •equlred $7 75/hr Pre
Admtn tstrafor With quest1ons employment Drug Testm g
at 1740)992 _6472 Quallt•ed Send resume to Buckeye
candtdate s may apply at 333 Community Ser'.ltces PO
So)( 604 Jackson OH
Page Street Mtddleport Oh
45760 EOE
45640 or email to bcycc·
serv@yahoo com Deadlme
Partttme and full ttme work tor apptt canls 51 ~ 1/08
avatlable for a few good pe o Equal
Opportunity
pie m Athens Hock1ng, ancl Employer
Metgs Counttes Duttes
ScHoolS
tnvolve asstst tng people who
have developmental d1sab111
ttes m thetr own homes
Tram1n g provtded Some Gallipolis Career College
work may mvolve overntghts (CaTeers Close To Home}
on Bllher a regu lar or occa
Call Today! 740 ,446 4367.
slonal ba sts ExpenenGe m
I 800 2 14 0452
thts l1eld IS helpful but hon
www llll~ipOh5C&amp;re~rwl leglt edLJ
esty, reltabtlity ancl respon Accred lll!d Membe r Accred1hng
stblllty are more tmporlant Co\JOCI lor lndependenl Colleges
aM SchOOl! 127•8
Req w ements tnclude Htgh
School Dtp loma or GED, Upcomtng Certtfted Nurstng
dean background check and AsSIStant Class Must have
good drtvtng record Starttng a htgh school diploma or
pay $8 00 per hour Health GED to apply App licattons
tnsurance, rettrement plan may be ptcked up at Lakm
and 'Company patd life m~ur Hospttal
Monday
thru
ance avat lable for lull ltme Fnday,
8am·4pm
employees Please submit a Appftcatt ons mu st be turned
resume or letter wllh you r 1n no later th an 08115/08 at
contact mlormaiiOn to The COB EOE
Sech-Kar Co , 4831 second
St Nelsonvtlle Oh 45764

]NSTROCT!ON

MT MLT Valley Dtagn ostt c
Lab has an 1mmed1ate open·
tng for day stuft No swmg
shtf1 Resume to P 0 Box
33 Gatl1pohs Oh 45631

Rackspnngs RehabJIItatton
Center an Extendtcare
Factllty located rn Pomeroy
IS now acceptmg apphr:a
11ons lor the followtng post·
hans Expe11enood lull t1me
EOE
AN Untl Manager to help
The Athens Metgs ESC has focus our chn1ca1 team on
a posrtlon opentng as Part cont tnued sue&lt;:ess Also an
Ttme ASSistant tor Special expertenced lull ttme LPN
Educatton for the 2008·2009 Stall Scheduler wtth du\tes
1nclude
ensurmg
School Year ln terveni!On that
Spectallsttn Early Childhood department coverage, con·
Educatton degree required trol stafftng cos ts, and
Must have excellent organ•· tmprove employee satisfac
Beneltt
package
zattonal and computer sktlls liOn
IO be able to matnlatn rtles 1ncludes tmmediata health
and do data entry Salary wiN dental and VISion coverage
be based on credenllals and 401K vacat1on and personal
GApenence Please submtt a days, tuttton re tmbur.sement
letter of mterest and resume and conllnutng educatton
lo John D Costanzo ,lntorested appl1cants should
Supenntendent, Athens · apply 1n person at 36759
Metgs ESC 507 Rteh l~ Rocksprmgs Road, Pomeroy
Avenue Sune ~ 108, Athens OH or Falli Resume to 740
E~1end1care
Oh 45701 Appll cat1on 992 2678
Deadline Au..gust 11 2008 Hea~h 5ervtce9, Inc ls an
3 30pm The AMESC IS an equal opportur11ty employer
equal
opportuntly that encourages workplace
diVersity
Employer/Provrder

patnllng

~~~un~~~p=~~~n ~~al~~~rn

$8 50/hour FT
Prvtous expertence w1th
customer serv1ce a plus
Pa1d Tramtng Onstte
Heallh Beneltts

Must be 18 and able to wo rk
8\'entngs and weekends
Must nave good people
sktlls The JOb conststs ol
runnmg lotlilry machtne and
regtster as well as assummg
accountabtli!y for cash and
merchandtse Also stockmg
and cfeamng are reqUired
pe r
week
24-hours
M1n1mum wage Apply m
person at Country Carry-Out
t 834 SA 7 N No phone
ca lls w1U be accepted

Ko1 Goldttsh reduced prtce
on pond plants Also get
your Ko1ponds tested 446
1578 or 645 1361

HIRING
Avg Pay $20fhr or
$57Kiyr 1ncludes
Fed Ben OT
Placed by aciSource not
USPS who hires
1 866·403 2582

equal QPportuntty employer -;;:::::;:;::==~
that encourages workplace h
d1verSJty
MONE\
0-v-e-rb-ro_o_k_ R
_e_hab- ol-ote- \oon -W-a-nl-ed'-P-e-,I-T-om_e_8_a&lt;_
le-n-de-r
TO LoAN

oiiC::IxifoCision

http ·J~obs

OFFICE NOW

I

~wnus

•

Representative

FOUND

r

L..'\.o.".E.IJ&gt;•W-AI'ffi-'1)-' L..l1,_o_HEt_J&gt;•W•"•NT.E.•n_.~ll170
Oulatdo Sales

Pr. PUASANT

r

nol knowingly accept any advertlalngln violation ol the law Will not be reapon1lble tor any

---..

Absolute Top Dollar
stl
verlgold
cotns
any
10K/14KI18K golcl Jewelry
Large brown dog wtth black dental gold pre 1935 US
muzzle neutered male wa s cur ren cy proof/m1n1 sets
found on 588 could be par1 d1amonds MTS Cotn Shop
boxer 446 3870
151 2nd Avenue Galhpolts
446 2642

Back-to-hack homers by Johnson, Soriano lift Cubs

fromPageBl

\!Crtbune

To Place

on -.e ttlm~ back

manager

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

E-mail
classtfted@mydatlytnbune com

mto hts old 1ole
~
"That's a good start to
havmg hun bcick 111 the rota-

lion.' '

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

Oh to Valley Home Health
Inc htrtn g STNA CNA
Home Heatth At des &amp;
Personal Care Atdes Full,
Pari Ttme &amp; Per Dtem post
liOns avatlabl e Apply at
Jackson
Ptke
1480
Galllpolts or phone 441·
1393 Compet1t1v!l Wag es
mtleage retmbursemenl and
other benefits tncl udmg
health tnsurance

176

1

MtscELL•srous

WV BOhr Underground
Mtner Class starting soon
Pet Gremat1ons Call 740
Whit-Co·Trammg 304·372·
446-37 45
8346

FIND AJOB liN
THE CLASSIFIEDS

**NOTICE**
Borrow Smart Conta ct
lhe Oh10 DIVISIOn ol
Fmancta l
lnsttluhon's
Consumer
Office of
AffairS BEFORE you refl
nance your home o•
obta1n a loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments ol
lees or tnsurance Call the
Off1ce ol Consumer
Affatrs toll free at t 866
278 0003 to learn If the
mor tgage broker 0'
lender
ts
proper ly
licensed (Thts IS a publ i~
serv1ce announcement
from lh e OhiO Valley
Publlsh•ng Company)

ra'

I'ROFFliSIONAL

SER\LCES

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY fSSI?
No Fee Unless We Wtnl
1 888 582·3345

Htlli'l\11

riO

Homli
FOR SAI.E

. " " '....iiiiioiiiiiiiii,__.l
274 Bula vttle
Ptke
Galhpolts Move m ready
3BA 1 bath ranch CfA gas
heat VA/FHA approv ed
appra1sed at $85 000 asktny
$78 500 Call740·44~·7309
3 bed HUO Homes' only
$10 0001 for liStings 800
620·4946 ex RO 19

I Brand new Never hved 1n

2br 2 beth w/ whirlpool tubs
large LA on 3 acres m!l
$80 000 740 446 7029

�Monday, August 4, 2008

, Monday, A11gust 4, 2008
·: ALLEY OOP

Aurn;
fllR SAJ.E

,.

3Bft 1 H2 bth, full base·
ment, In-ground pool (needs
. work) , ·1 car gar. nice neighborhood. close to town
Asking $60,000 \Price nego·
liable) 740-645-1796 leave
message.

Federal Funds just released · I Bdr. Efficiency ·Apt. Clean
for Land Owners. No clos· &amp; Ready, Ret, Oep, No Pets,
ing cost and ZERO DOWN! Great LocatiOn 304·675·
Will
do
Land 5f62 ·
Improvements. Bankruptcy - - - - - - - &amp;BadCreditOK. 2. 3,Aand 1BA Apt . WI D hookups,
5 bedrooms ~vaitabie 740· salellite TV 1nC1 w/rent,

N. 3rd Ave. , Middleport, 2 br 6 weeks old m1xed puppies.
furnished apartment, no 2 female . 2 male. 304·675·
pets, deposit .&amp; references, 5361
(7 40)992-0165
-------~ AI&lt;.C female LhasaApso
Nice 1 br. appliances tur· puppy, 13 wks., has shots,
nished, $400 +deposit, near $600 OBO, (740)992-7651 ,

acres, Rutland, Oh, private IV
setting, eat-in kitchen , 3 br'
LOTS &amp;
2 full baths, lg. livingroom, 1..~--·Aoiilli'REAiiiil
" IIGiiEl;..,.,J
: , lg. fam 11y room ., out of llpod .....,
• plain. 17401742·2404 or 740- 3 acres lor Sale on Sandhill
-949-2930
Ad $25,000 .304-895·3929

r. .

r---~---, 33 acres VinJon County.

1

1'1 , .

Septic &amp; driveway cleared

tor homes1te, pnvate, great

hunting. 746-2 45-9603 or
740-501 ·8260

All real estate advertising
In this newspaper Is
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes it ! l~galto
advertise "any
preterence, limitation or
diKrimlnatlan based on
race, color, religion, sex
familial status or national
orjgln, or any int.ntlon to
make any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination."
Thla newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertlsel'!'lflnta for real
estate which Ia In
viofatlon or the law. Our
readers are hereby
lnformt~d that all
dwellings adverti~&gt;Oid in
this ·newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunitY bases.

1

MOBILE HOME LOT FOR .
'AENT. i 031 Georges Creek
Rd, 441 _1111
Ul\1\1 \

Call 740· _:;_sH__;_s~_4·-67-5-·3_1_00_o•_3_04_- 74lJ·4 16·1900.1ev. mess.
Chocolale Lab puppy for
1BR cottages. Daily, weekly SpaCIOUS second-floor apt. Sate, AKC Registered, mate,
or monthly. 740-286-5789 or overlooking Gallipolis·- City 6 weeks old, 1st shots,
740-441-3702
Park and rive r. LA. den , mother and father on site.
-------~ large kitch9n-dlnlng area Call 304-593·5363 or :}041br Upstairs Apartment for
593 o 28 1
1 •~
w1th all new appliances &amp;
· 1 or more ni\JrmaRent beside Domino's in Pt.
lion
Pleasant 304-812·4350
cupboards. 3BA,
.$ laundry - - - - - - ' - - ·
area. 2 112 ba1hs. 900 per Grea1 Pyrenees puppies.
1br. Apt, all utilities paid near month. Call 446·4425, 01 ~KC, 10wks, 1 (M) 2 (F),
town in PI Pleasant :304- 446 2325
·
livestock guardian or com360-0163
Tara
Townhouse panion dogs. Full regislra2 bedroom apartment lor A "" 1 v
s 10. . tion
$350.
iimited
rent In Middleport, no pets, /~ed~no~s,eziA:a~ ~ ~ Registration $250. 379·9213
(7401992 •5858
Bath, Mutt Pool &amp; Baby
FRUITS 8(
2 bedroom apt in Centenarv,1 Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
VEGETABLE'!
No Pets , Lease Plus
•
..
·
all ut1lilles pd ell:cept electric,
'
secunty Deposit Required,
$J50/mo, call (746)256·
Ear Corn tor Sale 740-992-

1

.1o_..,;,iiHiioilisESiiii_rl . 1135
FOR RENT
212 3rd Ave. 3 rooms and
rL,
bath, furnished, no pets
Rent+ Dep. 740 ..441. 0·245 .
$~38/mo '. 3 bed. 2 bath ,
Bank. Repo' (5% down, 20 2BR apt. CIA. 1740) 441·
years, 8% APR ) tor listings 0194
800-620-4946 ex . R027
~------2BR in Rio Grande/Thurman
2br in Pt. Pleasant. $465 area. W/0 hookup, appli month, f-jomestead Really ances furnished . .740·286·
Broke r. Nancy 304-675· 5789 or 740-441·3702
4024 or 304-675-0799
Apartment available now
3 br. house in Pomeroy, tota'l Alverbend Apts~ New Haven
elec1ric, small back yard, off wv. Now accepting apptica·
street parking, $500 per 't1ons tor Hud-S LJbsidized,
month, (740)949-2303
one . Bedroom Apts. UtilitieS
Included. Based on 30% of

~si~~···~:~~~~~e ·a~~:..,~:.

i

(740)367·0547 .
Twm Rivers Tower is accepting appliCations tor wailing
list for Hud·subsidized. 1-br
apartment
for
the
elderly/disabled, call 675·
66 79

~

YOUNG'S

1999

Camaro
T-Top ,
runs great. new
tires &amp; brakes. leather interior &amp; sports tires. well mam'
tained . body in great shape .
Call 446-2242
- - - - - - - - -'
Police lmpoundsl Cars lrom
$5001, HOndas. Chevvs,
'
Jeeps. Fords, &amp; m(lre! for
listings aoo-620·4676 fl)[ V435

silv~mblack,

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Additions 6
Remodeling
r..w Garage•
Electrical+ Plumbin g
Roofing &amp; Gutters
VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio and Parch Decks
WV036725

"rl'ltf~-~----,

V.C. YOUNG Ill

TRL'CKS
FOR SALE

07' Chevy Silve rado Z71 ,
b 1 1~ 1 1
1
reg. ca w VI;) 0 ex ras, ow

.

.

2003 Dodge Ram 1500 4 )( 4,
Hemi. $8200 obo. 256-1 233

I

r 4~=cwJ

9

r

llrl:!'"-APA-•I!ThiENTS----,

Irm

740-992-5882

Concrete Removal

Opn.9-&amp;M·f
9-12Sit.

and Replacement

Administrator,

320 Dlvl1lon, on or before

0

a•

au

4

• All

Types Of

Concrete Work
28 Years Experience

Consultant
u ww.mo ryka~.tflmljgrutser
740-949-3027

years

WUZ
BODACIOUS
OATMEAL,
MAW 1!

740.446.9200

ACTUALL'&lt;,
WE'RE

BUT I WON'T
TELL IF

YOU

OUTTA
OATMEAL 11

WON'T II

'Gallipolis

T

&lt;~~~~~
TATION.Lte

THE BORN LOSER

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
.Owners:
Jon Van Meter

f;,

email:

&amp;·

t-~&lt;:.W ~TUDi FOUN;'

YOU Ki'!OW
WAAHAAT
1'\E.II.N:'l -z .

COLQRNXJ f\1&gt;6
Tl-\( LOWE:.ST
0&amp;.~11'!' L[V(L V)...&lt;l +
f&gt;..N'I STf;.\C.

Cell: 740-416-&amp;047
jrshadfrm @aol.com

Novelist Holly lisle wrote, "If you don't
accept responsibility tor your own
aclions, the n you are forever chained to
a positiOn of. defense."
If you never take positiVe actions in the
auction , then you are forever chained to
a position ot defense.
'
We defend twice as often as we declare,
but books and newspaper columns
spend many more miles of pnnt on
declarer play than on defense because 11
is much easier. This w.eek, let's ·stop
being cowardly arJd look defense
squarely in the lace.·
West leads the heart ace against four
~---., . spades How .should the defense pro·
ceed?
South opened with three spades, showing a decent seven-card suit and 5-10
high-card po1nts. West made a takeout
double, indicating short spades and
le~th in the other three .su1ts. North
raised to tour spades. hoping there
weren't four fast red-suit losers. And
East was diSSuaded· from sacrificing by
the unfavorable vulnerability.
II ought to be clear to West that his side
needs to take two hearts and two dia·.
monds But who has the diamond lc.ing?
If it is East, West should cash his top
hearts. then shift to diamonds. "If 11 is
South, West must hope his par.tner has
the 'heart queen.
He is guided by East's card at trick one
FORe£\ I&gt;IUING_:"l Here, East signals enthusiastically with
his 10, an equal-honor s1gna1 showing
Wt'RE:. MOIJIW:. TO 'the queen, the hOnor touching the two
promised by West's ace-lead. Now West
COLO!Zt&gt;-t&gt;O
coiltinues with a low heart, putting his
partner on lead tor the fethfil diamond
switch.
tf, though, East had dropped his lowest
heart at trick one, West would have
cashed his heart King and diamond ace
before playing a s.econd diamond ·

THE WINDOW
LADY
~0 Y)~ ~ ~ &lt;: .\~~'IJt:n.:c
lll i&gt;CWIIl!:_!

Drapes. Shee1s. R(ll.l
1-'ocket Drapes.
Swags. V&lt;~lancc~.

H&amp;H
GuHering

.HAS
SOMETHING

More...
P lu~ Pillow, Bc1.bkin s
Tuhle CoYers &amp; Tullk

HOW

G

FOR YOU!!

CALL SAN!JY

TRY
LOOKING
ON THE
COUCH
IN Fli:ONT
OF THE

A C.AitEEP." \ltT+IOUT
FIRST COMPLETIJoi&amp; 1'1'(

COME

YOU

Seamless Gutters
Rooftr'lg, Sidi ng, Gutters
lnsu_red &amp; Bonded
740·653·9657
BAD CREDIT?
NO CREDIT'
BANKRUPTCY'

BE

t\OW C"-N T
E)CPECTEP lb EI'IMP.K ON

UNCLE TEll.

HIWE "-

JOuRNEY OF :&gt;ELF·
DISCOVERY?

JO&amp;?

TV'

B,omun Shudc:, and
.

...

We car 'lelpl

Runners ·

Hum&lt;:740-992-3220
Cell:.740·416-6144

r·"'''

C:&gt;ll nul To ll
866-564-B679

LU'J HOMES

..•

503 Mill St. •lllddiiiiOR, OH 45180

'

1 KNOW 'f'OU 60

I WAS

ON SOME MAPS iT'S
O~ANGE,AND ON

6'( niE COLORS
ON Ti4E MAP..

WONDERIN6
IF '(()U COULD
·FL't' MfTO
MONTANA.

1111111••• Clrts •••m11111 WllltiiS
CIIIIWIIC CIIVIrln •Cllllr
lillian IIIII Mini
ICIII ftlr Ctlrr•l PriceS!

Melal &amp; Shingle Roofs, Siding, Decks,
Bothroom Remodeling Licens~d &amp; Insured
wv ~0 4 0954 Cell740-590-7666

J&amp;L
Construction
• Vinyl Siding

• Replacement

Windows

• Pole Buildings
• Room Addillons
James Keesee II
742·2332

740-992-0730

·-

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,.,.
Remodeling, Room
Additions

. GARFIELD

FOR FIFiTI BUCKS,
SHE'D BE'Tit:'R!!!

1 BOUGHf LIZ A

_,.,.oozeN

Local Contractor

ROSes~

... FOR NO REASON
AT AL.L.I

740-367-0544

'----.

Free Estimates ·

740-367-0536

A FI..Er::TINO.

MOMeNf OF
tMI..IS CLARI'T'Io'

For "R emodeling and New Ho_use Building

B.S. · Pharmacy, · or

Ph.d

accredited

college

or

pharmacist

experience

preferred . Hospital experience preferred.

Call:

. I

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding·• Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio\, Porches and Decks
472W Riebel Rond . Long· Bottom, qH

740-985-4141

Send resumes to:

I

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

MIKE W; MARCUM, OWNER

· Pleasant Valley Hospital

Cell: 740-416-18.14

c/o Hunian Resources

25+ yt!ar!-i experit!11ce Free Estimates

i

~~~~:::1!--'-L.....L...l.~~~- t~~~~d
..

WV 25550

(304) 675-4340

OrfiJX:
304·675-6975, or apply on· line at

www.pvalley.ori
AA/EOE

I•

-'l!lrthdoijy:

by Luis Campos .
·

C~l ~bnty C1~her cryptogr;r~~s

are created Irom quotallors t·)·lam:ous ~Jp l e put and p·esenl
Each let1er 1n the c1ohe1 stands lor anolner

Today·s clue · P equals W

"YRYBO
KZY

UBYNK

KZYXBO

JXBY

XD . KZY

SNKKYB

KZNK

NDBNMH

KZY

XO ZMJ

GM. KV.ZYB. "

•

PXBLI

XW

GMKVZYB
KZNW

KO

ZY

O\tQl\T VM\t-11%,
~A~~'T\\W

FA~R&lt;PM
~\~tilE

.

' '·

Ml

VXSS

ORearrange

tenors of 1ho
four· scrambled wordt b•-

!QW ra form ·four simple words.

Tueaday, Aug. 5, 2008

DA!NNI .

By Bernice Bede O•al
Important elements, such as what you
·know and how capable yoU are in exe·
cuting your knowledge , will be responsible tor your ~ise in status in the year
ahead . The better prepared you are, lhe
higher you can cl imb. ·
LEO {July 23"·Aug. 22) - You · w1U do
quite well with whatever you lake on ; but
only if you don't let your ego get In the
way. Don't pretend to know how to do ,
something it you'va never had anY eKperience.
VIRGO ("Aug . 23·Sept. 22) . - Today's
~
activities might offer some pleeMnt
One e"cmiw &lt;IIIOihcr. ··J
reprieves from the pressures of the dSy.
qu it being &lt;1lhid when my ftrsl ·
However, be careful when having a good
time ; yoU don't want to forget about the
vcnlure failed and the 1ky
costs.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - You'll handle
didn"t··· .. ····."
difficult assignments ralher easily
beciluse you're prepared. Vei. when it
Comple1c the chuckle qvoted
comes to the easy tasks that you believe
.
bv lillir.g ill th~ mitsmg wor~
can be done blindfolded, that's when
you
develoA
from step Nc, 3 bel~:~w .
you're likely to screw up.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ·- Your g're ·
1
~ PRINT NUMatR~D
7 iJ
garioue mood will provide many enjoy·
lHliRS
iN
S
ClUA
~~
~
!
able Interactions and conversations with
others, but there Is a word ol warning:
You could 'Inadvertently say things you
don't want repeated.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov " 23-Dec. 21) Keep your expectations Wilh1n reason·
SCRAMJ£IS ANSWERS fl/1108
able bounds i:lhd you will accomplish
many things. Overstep them , and th1ngs
Humane - Dwell - S'aute - Fierce - IT'S WARM
will. fall apart That line between optimism .
"When you make a mistake apologize right
~ny
and setf·delusion is "a thin one.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan. 19) - The
taught me. "It's easier to eat crow when ITS WARM ."
only. way you Will be successful is lo rely
totally upon your resourcefulness and
perseverance. The minute you depend
on Lady Luck, all you put your hand to
could go awry.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 19) ~ Many
times your hunches are strong. reliable
allies, but !hat's not likely to be the case
at th1s ti me - so don't bank on ihem.
View all your dealings prag matically,
especially important maners.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) - Thin~';
twice about getting involved in a joint
venture w1th an individual who can afford
to lOse should things go south. "You'll be
the bne who Is hurt it you can't take the
loss.
•
ARI ES (March 21·April 19)- If you're
Involved in somelhing f6r which you
could use some outside advice, you'll be
smart to listen to several different people.
You'll know when you .hear the best
answers.
TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20)- You will be
e;.ctremely Imaginative, and many ol your
ideas will be quite good How8ver, when '
It cornea to implemenung them , you
could be lnfllcttd with a t~vere can ol
procraatlnatlon.
GEMINI (May ii!1·June 20)
Mlacalculatlona In your daallng• oan b•
recliflld, but thlnge will nevar ba llka naw
again. You can fl;.c all 1hl dant1, but tt;la
matal will haw blln waaklr~ad: 01 pr•·
pared to treatlhtngl gently.
CANCER (Jun• 21·July 22) - Tha later
It gn In the day, 1ht greater y&lt;lUr lack o!
judgmant In ....aluatlng crlttdal mattere,
ac don't put thlnga off. Mak• all-Important
Ul811mlnta aarty on -when you are

I

SOUP TO NUTZ
Mi&gt;le was A
FRickew E~FNeNT~

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

Ml

. PREVIOUS SOLUTION- ··ttalk loo much.'.- JamJe Lee CurtiS "Irs good lo
shot up sometimes." - Marcei.MarceaLJ
·

well reated.

2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant,

AstroGraph

CELEBRITY CIPHER

ARLO &amp;JANIS

RICK PRICE

New Homes, Room Additions, Remodeling,

diem

deposits
2~ Kennel
sound
24 Not new
Boxer's
25 Caboose's
quest
nanny.
spo1 .
Left Bank
26 Sampras of 47 Actress
pal
tennis ·
-Olin
Greet a dog 27 Etching
50 Fruit pastry
Scornful
fluid
51 Feign
laugh
28 Two oxen
Wild pig
30 Elite
Brand for
alterative
Bowser
3Z Mesh fabric

w

away,"

PSI CONSTRUCTION

cu rrently

40 Supports
41 Jug handles
42 Eat
a lollipop
43 Callit-45 Isinglass
46 Memsahib 's

I0

OTiolERS IT'S GREEN ..

PAYING TOP PRICES FOR

per

5
•
34 Mor.le signals 6
35 Follow
· 7
a trail
36 Fnm!ncabon 8
cloldde
9

(2 wds.)

38 Movie

1 Sole
2 Blissful
spot
3 Comfy seat

4

intently
31 Cheal
33 "Snow"
veggle.

34 Sells off
35 Regular
routines
37 Still

22 Mineral

r-..-,;rli/'~
,i-1
I.

:· PEANUTS

IJen MoldiV-ffltiiJ 9:00 anl-5:00 1m
SIIUniiJ 8:00 1111·12:00 1m

is

52 VCR maker
53 Woods
insect:
54 Flip through
55 Cloud
backdrop
10 Swarm
56 TV
12 -Far away
receivers
16 Autumn
57 I knew il!
colors.
20 Cobra
DOWN
cousin

DOFOL

Manley's
Racycl•na
740-912-3194

a

continuum

15 Beautiful
Nile queen
17 Long ..rined
primate
18 Shiny paint
19 Billiards
shot
21 Shelley poem
22 Authorozas
23 Mongol
Ienis
26 Not gel
billed
29 Gotcha! ·
(2 wds.)
30 Look

T~~

BIG NATE

for

¥A

I

..

'

university. WV State Pharmacist Licensure.
Two

AH,

·

Hospital

East

All pass

matador

=,--,=

DIH{

THAT

Paul Rowe

Pleasant , WV

North
44

The area that
gets short shrift

LOS~ W~IG~T

wear
41 Bring cheer
44 Cracker
shape
48 Pitch in
49 Einstein 's

. F/BE/l·OPi/C
. '

"--iiiii-iiilliiiiiilirl

0

from

Please lea\e mc,.saoe

HOME
1~1JIRO\l]\1ENTS

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee . local relerences fur·
nishe·d . Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs . 1740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
Walerprooling .

excursion

. 6Y ~ATING CA/l~OT
·SllAN MUFFINS.

@

740-591-8044

r.r::t0:--~~---,

PHARMACIST

Pharmacy

I'M T/lYING TO

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

Owner:

Pharmacist.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Rcfl.'rcncc:o. A\·ailable!

Call Gary Stanley

West

· Obi.

Opening lead:

Sl IH II I S

Help Wanted

resumes

Qur~liry

'lReasu nablc Rates
"' In sured
*Experienced

2459 St. Rt. 160
F

b \'

r\·~,'\i.,\'

Help Wanted

Valley

South

.3 •

Work

Insured
WVD421B2 Free Estimates

• Decks
• Garages

accepting

""' P1:ompt an-d

David Lewis
740-992-6971

• Roofing

Pleasant

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

BARNEY

304·675-5463

r--------::-----....;--,

AA/EOE

• 9
South
• A J 10 9

• 1\

Independent Beauty

.ADVERTISE
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Pt.

•I

• Q 10 1 '
+J7 6S2

• J 8 3

Juanita Grueser
Mary Ka~·

Southern Gospel Music
Tuesday, Aug. 5th
9:00pm
Mason County Fair

Kay Caeto &amp; Chaney
Pre-employment drug Jesting.
PLLC
P.O. Box 2031
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
Charleston, W.V253~7
(304) 346-3900
.
(304) 345·8909 (Fax)
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
jhoblltzell@kaycaeto.c
om
Counsel
for
SMI ·
Marine Tranaportatlon
~P ·
E. Spivey Gault, Esq.
Ramona I. Gardea,
MEDICAL ASSISTANTS
Etq.
'"
Gault,
Marshall
&amp;
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
Ml!ler, PLLC
accepting applicants for two part·time
P.O. Box 30
d'
•
Paducah, KY 42002•
Me 1ca 1 AssiStants. One po,ition is for our
0030
Family Practice office in Pt. Pleasant.
(270) 442-1900
Previous · medical office experience or
(270) 442-3247 (fax)
hospital rel ated experience preferred .
ageuner.ulllaw.com
rgordea geuHIIow.com
Counaol
for
SMI
Marine TransportaUoh,
Send resumes io:
LP
Plea.nt Valley Hospital
Clerk, United Statal
c/o Human Resources .
District Court
for
the
Southern'
1510 Valley Drive ·
Dlatrlct
of
Weal
Point Pleasant, WV 15550
Virginia
(304) 675-4340
Parkersburg Division
Or fax ;
by: Judy Kirkpatric k
D.C
·
304·675·6975, or apply on-line at
(8) 4, 11, 18,25
www.pvalley.ors

9 A K 9 5
10 9
• •J 7 3

• 6

(()',(1{ 111

St It 124 Polllirlll. ••

THE CRIST
FAMILY

Official No. 608017
("SMI"), has flied a
Complaint
seeking
exoneration from or
limitation of liability
pursuant to Title 46
U.S.C. §§30501, et seq.
ol the United States
Code lor claims lor
loaaea and damages
arielng out of, or attrlbulable to, a June 23,
2007, lncldenl lnvolv·
lng the M1V DIRKTAY·
LOR and Its tow and a
plaasure
boat
at
approxlmata Mile 216,
Ohio
River . (The
"Incident").
All firm, persona, or
corporations hevlng
clalmt arising out of
the Incident must file
them In tha form pr•
scribed by Rule F of
the ,
Supplemental
Rules
lor
Certain
Admiralty
and
Maritime
Claims,
Federal Flues of Civil
Procedure, with tho
Clerk of Jhe United
States Dletrlct Court
lor
the
Southern
Dlltrlct
of
Wtst
VIrginia, Parkortburg

+AQ

Stop &amp; Compore

I I 1\ IS
C()V,IJ(LC 110,_

DON'T MISS

of the Department of
A d m I n. i s I r
iv e
Services.
Bid documanls may be
secured at the office of
the
VJJiaga
Administrator, 320 E.
Main Street, Pomeroy,
OR 45769, Phone "num·
ber,.740·992·2166.
Each bid must be
accompanied by either
a bid bond In the
amount of 10% of the
bid mont with a surety
aatlsfactory to tha
aforesaid
Pomeroy
Village council or by
certlllod
. check,
caehler&amp; cl1eck, or let·
tar of crodH upon a sol·
vent bank In tht
emount of not lese
than 10% of the bid
amount In fiYOr of the
aforeuld
Pomeroy
Village Council Prof of
Authority of the official
or agent signing the
bond thall accompany
bid bonds.
Bids thall be aealed
and marked ea Bid for
Round 22 Paving, and
be mallod or delivered
to : Pomeroy. VIllage

• Complete

. 111411 mo pd

WANTED

.

·Garages

740-992-1611

7:00AM-8:00PM

Auros

.•

East
• 6

West
.• 4 3

w1th easy -to-apply
tips. A:o.k 1m· how you
can·get the hottc:o.t •
looks of the sca:.onand nlways he in

BLIC
NOTICES

'

• 83
• A K Q 10 5 2

coordinated for you

riiiF-------.,I

Free Rent
Special!!!

• 64

style!

·n

.

'·.

Remodeling

to 10'x30'

Pomeroy Oh 10
25 Years Lac~l E~per1ence

love
the latest
looks?

adjusted income. Call 304· 3936
E I ll V E
40
Downtown GalliPolis. for , $500 M. $SOO dep. Call after 882·3121. available · for
sale on land contract. prop SP.n 1or Leasing a 12x30 lighted bill TRAILERS, LOAD MAX
I
ertyorganized lnto3apts or ~5p_m_._74_0_·7_4_2·722_1_o_.- •
c. n d board locally owned and EQUIPMENT TRAILERS ;
07
Suzuki
LS650 Blue with
2 apts &amp; office in front; sepa· 4br. 2ba. HUD! · only $317
.
operated
on
Rt
35.
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp;
1
rate utility m.eters. $90.800 month! Great Location! (5%
·
''
$150/month. 740·367-7762 H 0 M E S T E A 0 E A custom Ame.ricBna graphiCS.
CARGO/CONCESSION garage kept, 220 m1les.
will finance to qualified buyer down, 20yrs , 8%APR). Disabled people
with lO% down. 74 0 . 710 . Listings 800·620-4946 ex.
TRAILERS . B+W GOOSE· Aid[Jlg is not for me. Has
0007
T461
r10
NECK
HITCHES. over $500 in eMtras $4000.
~------- ~----'---~ Boout~ul Ap1B. 01 Jackson
OUSillOW
CARMICHAEL
EOUIP· 740-441·1720
Foreclosure 4br 2ba. only Very n1ce hOme for renf in Estates. 52 Weslwood
Gooos
MEN T 1C-A AM 1C H A E L
883
Sportster.
$29.9001 Pnced to Sell I F9r Middleport, good ne1ghbor- Drive, from $365 to $560.
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA· 2005
L1st1ngs 800·620·4946 ex hood. Newly remodeled. 740-446·2568.
Equal Mollohan Carpet • Summer VICE.
SPECIAL
21)FT Windshield, crash bars. sad·
Low mileage.
T462
New
appliances.
2 Housing Opportunity ThiS Sale. Berber starting al GOOSENECK FLATBED dlebags.
.
Bedrooms. 1 bath large institution is an Equal $5.95/yd, Remnants $35 $3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE $6000
PRICE REDU.CEO $69,900 Kitche n.
Sun ~oom. Opportunity Provider and Drive a little, Save atot. 446· TRAILER INVENTORY AT 740-416·3078.
2712 Lincoln Ave. 3br, 1ba. Central Air &amp; Heat. Nice out· Employer.
7444
W WW. C A"R M 1C H A E Lwith detached
garage, door spaces Galt 992-9784 -''-'-----~
TRAILERS COM 740 446 2006 Kawasaki N1n1a EX·
motiVated seller. 304-675· or 992·5'094 for more CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
3825
.
- 250-F, 1150 miles, like new
6757, . 304-610·1313 ·'or details.
ED&amp;AFFORDABLEI
___
ANTIQlJ!'.S
-------~ 740-245-5789 or 645·6505
Assist 2 Sale 304-755·2980
Townhouse ·apartments,
,... Have you pnced a John 4x4 ATV Bombardia like
MOBH.E HOMES
and/qr small houses FOR GIBBS ANTtQUES Fri &amp;
Deere lately? You 'll be sur-· new, standard and auro
Small Middleport house on
HJR RENT
RENT. Call (740)441·111 1 ·Sat 10·5 Sun. 1-7 or by prised! Check out our used shift. double sea t. 400 miles.
2nd St tor sa le on land con·
for application &amp; information. appt. Also, restc.re lurni1ure tnventorv1
at wench·and rear grater blade
tract, as IS condition
Located on Tornado Ad . off W W W. C A A E 0 . C 0 M $4000. Ca11740-339·2239 or
$17,500. must have 10% 14)(60 2BR. 2 bath. 256·
6143
At 33, Rac1ne (Park
. Carmichael EqLJipment. 740· 645-4621
down. 740-710·0007
&amp; Aide) ex1t. 74D-949-2246 446-2412
~------Honda Rubicon 500cc ATV
MOBILE HoMES
2 bedroom , NO PETS.
540
FOR SALE
Btdwell area $375/month
MN:EL!ANEOUS
HAY &amp;
740-367·7803 or cell 740·
2&amp;3BR
ap1s.
$385
and
up,
"--iiMERoiiiiiCJIANiiiiiiiDiiSI:-,.J
·--tiGii!RAJNjiiiiliot-.,1
645·1262
· - - - - - - · $375/depOSII. 740-388-8547
Cebtral Air, W/0 HooKup, '
...,
I
1111!:-"~-~--::--,
2· 2006 16x80 Clayton 3 Bed 3br Washer/ Dryer, with a
Tenant pays electric. EHO For Sale as is~ 1986 M1ller 2nd Cutting Clover, no rain 7DO AUTO PAKIS &amp;
2 Bath, 2000 16x70 Deck, 1n Glenwood, b1g
Modular Classroom-. Sealed. on wagons. 58 0 bales $3.50
ACCE.WlRIE';
Fleetwood 2 Bed 2 Bath, lawn, 304-593-4496
bids accepted in Treasure's each. 740·379·2290
Ellm
View
Apts.
1999 Fortune 3 Bed 2 Bath.
Office until 12·00 noon on
91 Honda transmission for
3BA tratler in Kanauga.
Dayttme 740·388·0000 or
(304)882-3017
Wednesday August 13. Round Hay Bales fo r sate. compact and mtd size cars.
$450/rE!'nl + deposit. 367·
740·388-8513, Evening 740·
Hills
Career Call 740·379·9887 or 740- Starter and speedomete r
7015
Furnished Apt. 2nd Ave'· in Buckeye
388-8017 or 740-245-9213
C:enter,
Aio
Grande.
Ohio. _70_9_·1_so_a_·_ _ _~~ Cor]lrol included. P~id $600
Gallipolis upstairs, aJI utiliasktng $400 obo. 446·2295
Brand new 3bed 2bath on .
f'OR RThT
11es paid, 1 br. no pets. 446· 740-245-5334
Square bales. first and sec+ • half acre in Pt Pleasant. 1..~--oililioiiioiioo-~ 9523
ond cutt1ng orchard grass ~ . CAMPERS&amp;
JET
OWNER FINANCE AVAIL· '
-::--------,
mix. 4x5 rolls inside. 740·
MmoitHOMES
AERATION MOTORS
ABLE. 740-446-3570
1 and ·2 bedroom apart- Gracious Living 1 and 2
446-2075
Repaired,
New
&amp;
Rebu1h
tn
~------- "ment.s, furnished and unfur· Bedroom Apts. at Village
II~\ \-., 1'111{ I\ Ito\
1984 21ft · Motor Home,
New 3 Bedroom homes from nlshed, and houses in Manor and Riverside AptS. in Stocf(. Call Ron Evans, 1·
45,000 miles. asking $5.900
$214.3G,per month, Includes Pomeroy and Middleport , Middleport, from . $3~1 to 800·537·9528.
or trade 304-576·2383
many upgrades, delivery &amp; security deposit required, no $592 '740-992·5064. Equal
NEW AND USED STEEL
fllK SALE
se1-yp. (740)385-2434 ,
pets, 740-992-221 8
Housing Opportunity.
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar "--""'iiiiiiiii;.,_.l 98 30ft Salem fravel trailer
For
Concrete,
Angle,
with super slide, good conChannel, Flat ·ear. Steel 03 Ford Windstar LX, silver, mdition. $6950 . 303-368·
Grating
For
Drains, 72.000 miles $6987.04 Ford 8572
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l Explorer XLS, 4x4, bur- . , - : - , : - - - - - - - , Scrap Metals. Open Monday. gundy, 69,000 miles $8995. 99 24ft enclosed cargo trail·
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp; 05 Chevy Malibu LS V6, sil· er ~lth ramp door, awning
Friday, sam -4:30pm. Closed ver, 93.000 m"es $7940. 04 aM air. $4950. 330-398·
Thursday,
SaturdB.y
&amp; Toyota Tundra crew t ab 4x4, 8572
Sunday. (740}'1~7300
white ..62,000 mites $17995. RV Serv1ce at Carm1ch~e l
02 Pontiac Grand Prix GT
Trailers·740·446·3825 ·
Winchester Model 37-A, 4dr, 74,000 miles $7995.
Single Barret, 20 GA., 441 -85 85
· NOTICE TO CONTRAC· East
Main
Street, October 15,2008.
E)(oollent, $175; Also very
TORS •
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Any such , clalmanl rare quart ot Maytag Mu1t1 05 Pontiac G6 OT, loaded w/
Saaled prqposals for (8) 4, 11
desiring to conteat Motor Oll, for" the waslling e)(tras,
41,000
m1les,
the Village of Pomeroy
SMJ's right to exonera· n'laclline motor, In a. glass 510,500 obo. 740·446·0318
Paving Project ·Round
lion must file an botlle, N1ce label, $250 or cell 740-441 -7342
22 will be received by
Public Notice
Anawer
to
said 1740)S33·3870
07 Buick Lucerne CXS.
the Pomeroy VIllage
.
. ·complaint within the
loaded, low miles $28,000
Council at their office UNITED STATES DIS· lime prescribed above.
339-063S
at
the
Pomeroy TRJCT COURT
YOUR ARE NOTIFIED
I•
Municipal
Building, FOR THE SOUTHERN 1h~t failure . to timely
'96 Olds Delta 88 LS Fair
I
320 East Main Street, DISTRICT ·OF WEST fife a Claim and/or
Cond. $1 ,000 Firm. Call
Pomeroy, OR 45769, VIRGINIA
Answer,
In
proper
740·949·2766.
until
11 :00
AM, PARKERSBURG DIVI· fonn, within the time
August2, 2006, and SION
prescribed above, will
· Help Wanted
Help Wanted
then at aald office CASE NO. 607·CV-0530 Oj)ilrale·to bar the subopened
and
read In the Matter of the sequent filing of a
aloud.
Complaint
of
SMJ claim, suit, or answer,
Resurfacing portions Marine Transportation arising out of said
or all of Chesler Road, LP,
casualty, agalnsl SMI
Martin Street, Peacock as Charterer/Operator and/or any · of Ha offl·
PART·TIME positions available to assist
Street, Lincoln Hill. and Owner pro hac cera, agents, serY&amp;nts,
Beech ·Grove Roads, vice of the MN DIRK employee&amp;, or afflllal·
Individuals with menial retardotion In
Pleasant Ridge Road, TAYLOR, Official No. ed companlos, or .t he
Middleport:
and surface milling of 608017,
for MIV DIRK TAYLOR, In
portions of Lincoln Hill Exoneration from or rem, arising out of or
1) 36 hrs: 3-llp • M·Th; 3·10p Fri
Raid. The engineers· Limitation of Liability
attributable to the
2) 33 brs: 6o-10p • Sat/Sun
estimate for this proj- NOTICE OF FILING OF aforementioned lncl·
J)
31 brs: llp-9o • Th/Wffh
eel Ia $217,000.00.
COMPLAINT SEEKING dent.
Domestic steel use EXONERATION FROM FINALLY, a true and
Must hove high school diploma or GED,
requirements .as specl- OR LIMITATION . OF correct copy of any
valid driver's license, three years good
lied In section 153.011 LIABILITY
Claim or Anawer flied
driving experience and adequale
of the Revleed . Code NOTICEJSHEREBYGIV· In accordance with the
apply to this project. EN thai SMI Marina foregoing ahould be
automobile insurance. $8.00fl!r. Send
Coplea
of
se~tlon Transportation
LP, served on SMI'a attor·
re~ume to: Buckeye Community
153.011 of the Reviled charterer/oj)ilrator and nays at the following
Services,
P.O. Box 604, Jockson, OH
Code can be obtained owner pro hac vice of address:
45640. Deodiine for applicants: 8112/08.
from any of the offices Jhe MN DIR~ TAYLOR, John R. Hobllllell, Esq.
Rt. 62 North

(il

.Sizes 5'X10'

- Paul

4 Phone bugs 40 Highchair
dweller
11 Scent
13 Mrs. David
Bowie
14 Yea, to a

Nonh·
4 K Q 7

• New Homes

' 45771
740-949·2217

Hours

lUGER HYSELLS .
GAUGE

IrtO

S~;~Ll~

Racine. Ohio

'I '

a;;.;;;;;;;..;;;;.;:;.:..;;.;;;;;;_;_,

~~L~,S

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTIUCnON

29670 Bash an Road

992 62 15

96 Dodge 1500 PU modif1ed
by Show Trucks USA into a
Tra:1lcharger, all options
I \I&lt;\ I -., 1 1' 1'1 II \
available in 96, several after
,\1 1\I ..,I !ICh.
marlc.et eKiras added, grey
SPACE
leathe r .seats. Photos &amp; ·
tOR RENT
FARM
more
info
al
Garage for rent at1he corner L,--oiiEQiiiiiiiJII'MfJIITiiiiiii,;,_.l http:liwww.blztechwebde· Then look tu Mary
Slgn.comltracee/truck. After Kay. You.lllind 1he
of 2nd and Pme St. $75 per
month . 446·4425 cir 446· EBY, INTEGRITY, KIEFER 5pm, 740-446-2701 $15 ,000 latest on-trend colors

j

Hill's Self
Storage

Pointer
39 NASA

1 Guitarist

8 Ca\te

miles. $23.000. 339..()365

7603
1995 Ford F150 XLT, 4M4,
Peach9s . Pick your 6wn.
extended cab, low miles
$20 a bushel. Closed
$5500 36?.0551 or 645·
SLJn days. 74 0-446·4807
5284
Pick your own Half Runner
Bean (new crop) for
Cann1ng or Resale at $10
bushel 304·675·6908

I

· Phillip
Alder

:·~ ~'~j
BEN~~

.
••.

800·620·4876 ex

.~

38 Wes1

ACROSS

1997 Jeep Cherokee Sperl ,
only $2 ,000! Won 'l .lasl. For

I

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

~-'~----­

~~t;7gs

The DaiJy ,Sentinel• Page BS

·'

1992 Chevy Camara. V6 ,
Rally Sport, needs work
$1,500 OBO 304·675·1379
or 304;812-4444

=61~--le-v-el:-b:-r-icll/-ce-d-ar-.-0 n-.9-8 -":::-6:"·3·38•4"":'-~--, ·~o;.~~~h0sp1tal.

www.mydailysentinel.com

�•

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

~on day,

www:mydailysentinel.com .

August 4,

2008

Breastfe~ding .

For a good cause, A3

Awareness Month, As

,

e
'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

. :;o (')·. NTS • Vnl. :;H , !\lo. tH

SPORTS
· ;. Indians beatTampa
·Bay 5-2. See Page Bl

l'rinted on 100%
Recycled Newsprint

~•

www.mydaily-.·ntincl.cum

TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2008_

·FQHC practice moving to downtown Middleport
J.

office will be relocating to
the former office of Dr.
Joseph
Davis in downtown
.
'
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport. Varnadoe said
Family Health Care, Inc. he does not know when the
will move its federally- · Middleport office will be
qualified family clinic to open, but said he expected it
Middleport
to be soon.
The clinic has been operThe practice .provides
ating from the comity- care regardless of houseowned Medical Arts build- hold income and has been
ing on Mulberry Heights operating at full capacity
since
it
opened· in since shortly after it
December, 2007. Since opened. It is subsidized by
then, it has shared that space a grant from the federal
with physicians affiliated government. ·
with 0' Bleness Health
After several attempts to
Systems of Athens.
•
win funding for the practice,
commissioners
Meigs County Economic county
Development
Director received a $592,500 grant in
Perry Varnadoe said the September, 2007, with ass isBY BRIAN

REED

BREEDIIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

lance from Family Health
Care and other stakeholders.
Commissioners hope tpe
FQHC clinic will be the first
step in securing 24-hour
emergency room services
and possibly an inpatient
health care facility for the
county.
The FQHC designation
allows the facility to bill at a
higher reimbursement rate ·
through Medicare. Patients
on Medicaid . and private
insurance are also be
served. A sliding scale fee
schedule ~ill apply to
pallents paymg cash.
Beverly Phillips, a certified nurse practitioner, now
sees p;nients, but a new

physician is expected to join
the staff. The office also
serves as an access point for
mental health services and
dental care, and provides
basic laboratory services.
Family Health Care, Inc.
is a non--profit organization
and operates FQHC facilities in Chillicothe, Logan,
McArthur, New Lexington
and The Plains.
The move to Middleport
should bette.r serve Family
Health Care's growing
patient clientele, and will
also provide an economic
boost
to
downtown
Middleport, according to
Varnadoe.
'This is good hews for

Middleport. · because the
cli nic should draw traffic
downtown," Varnadoe said.
"Every downtown needs a
corne rstone that attracts
people, and the clinic shou ld
do that for Middleport."
Family Health Care
Executive Director Mark
Bridenbach said the new
office shou ld be open for
business by the end of
August, once renovations
are completed.
The. organization has rented both first and second
tloors of the building. The
ground floor office space
will be used for patient care,
while the second floor will
be used for business offices.

Southern
to place

renewal levy
OBITUARIES

Singh wins 1st World Golf Championship.
AKRON (A"P) - Vijay
Singh nearly threw away
the ·
Bridge stone
Invitational by ·mi ssing
three putts inside 8 feet on
the back nine at Firestone.
He won his first World Golf
Championship by making
the last one, which was all
that mattered.
· Singh ended an 0-for-34
drought on the PGA Tour
by swirling in a 3 1/2-foot
pur putt on the final hole
Sunday to close with a 2under 68 for a one-shot victory over Lee Westwood
and Stuart Appleby.
As shaky as Singh looked
down the stretch, Phil
Mickelson was even worse.
Mickelson playe&lt;;l bogeyfree through the first 14
holes to build a one-shot
lead, then threw it away by
making three bogeys from
the bunker on the final four
holes to finish with a 70,
two shots behind.
According to tour statistics, Singh was 8-of-18 on
putts from 4 to 8 feet during the tournament , and the
kist tbing he wanted was to
face another "attempt. But
he left his 30-foot birdie
putt well short of the hole,
. and was relieved to see
gravity pull it into the hol e.
"I didn't want to have a
4-footer;" he said. "I was
kind of sweating it. But !'in
glad it went in .''
S.ingh had not ·won on
U.S. soil since the Arnold
Palmer Invitational in
March 2007, and twice thi s
year he blew 54-hole leads
at Pebble Beach and Bay
Hill. But he finally got it
done, winning for the 32nd
time on· the PGA Tour.
After falling out of the
top I 0, the victory is
expected to move him up to
No. 4 in the world.
Singh finished at I 0-

~V BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENTIIMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Page AS
• Marie M. Cardwell, 87 ·
• Eleanor Jean Duerr, 86
• Vesta G. Ham, 87
• Myrtle HoHer, 81
• Anthony R. Scott, 45

RACINE
The
Southern Local School Roger Williams
views a prize
Board recent! y adopted a
winner at last
resolution approving the
year's
art show.
placement of a four-mill
Charlene
renewal levy for current
expenses on the Nov. II . Hoelllch/phata
ballot.
j
The renewal expense levy
I
would be for a period of five
,.
years. ~oard members vot- '
mg m favor to once agam
place the existing levy on
the ballot were Peggy
Gibbs, Don Smith, Gary
Evans and Dennie . Hill.
Board member Richard Hill
was absent. Voters previously approved the existing
levy in November 2005 for ·
a period of three years.
Proceeds from that levy
expire this year with a ·
renewal levy to contribute
funds in 2009, if approved
BY CHARLE.NE HOEFLICH
by voters.
of five pieces with entries not to . As for drawings, the chairman
HOEFLIGH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Other action taken by the
exceed two in any one category. The described these are coming in pen and
Board:
entry fee is $2 for each piece. All draw- ink, pencil. pastels, chalk, charcoal and
MIDDLEPORT
-The
popular
artApproved
a
purchase
ings, photography and paintings must other mediums done on paper or other
• Local students
in-the-park
program
of
the
Riverbend
agreement with the Village
be ready to hang with eye hooks and flag surface. These must also. be matawarded Conriect to
of Racine for the old j unior Arts Council will return to Dave Diles wire that cannot be seen when viewed. ted, framed and covered with a protecPark again this year.
. -Success
. scholarships.
high school property.
There are three categories for paint- tive surface such as glass or plexiglass.
Approved
.
bus
routes
as
Artists
from
the
Bend
area
are
ings,
oil, acrylic and watercolor. Any
• See Page A3
There is a category for "other" which
presented
by
the
transportaencouraged
to
participate
·
as
new
painting
on
unframed
.
gallery
wrap
also
must be prepared and ready to
: • Buckeye Boys State
tion supervisor with buses exhibitors and ones who have dis- style canvas with no staples showmg exhibit in a manner similar to'the others.
: participants to report to
now arriving 15 minutes played in previous years. Pieces which will be accepted unframed.
.
Entries must be registered ·by the
earlier
than
last
year,
t&gt;oth
:. legion. See Page AS
have been shown in earlier Art Council
· The photography category includes deadline date of Sept. 16 ·to qualify,
morning and evening trips. shows, however, are excluded.
a class for landscape pictures and one and delivered to the restored depot at
Also approved · classes
The show has been set for Saturday, for other photography. McClure said Diles Park in Middleport on Friday,
•.
beginning at 7:45 a.m. and Sept 20, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. with photography must be an original by Sept. 19 between the hours of 2 and 7
dismissal
at 2:45 p.m.
· entries to be made before Sept. 16. In the artist in high-quality photographic
WEATHER
p.m. They must remain on display
Accepted a donation of the event of rain, it will be moved to print no smaller than 5x7 of pictures
.·:_.
$91,778.56 from the estate the Arts Council headquarters in the that are created to fulfill the creative until after show hours and then picked
of Edith Jividen to the dis- Middleport Masonic Temple on vision including digitally enhanced up by 5 p.m. that same day.
For those who want to sell their art.
trict to benefit students. Second Avenue.
work. She said they must be matted, the entry forn1 should indicate that
Approved
transferring · According to Rhojean McClure, framed and with protectiv·e surface
$50,000 of the Jividen ·chairman, exhibitors may enter a total such as glass or plexiglass. ·
Please see Art show; A5
estate to the RacineSouthern
Scholarship
Association to be used to
award scholarships in the
Jividen Estate's name.
Approved G&amp;M Fuel as
·
the
provider of oil and fuel
Delatte on Page A5
for
the district during the
,
2008-09 school year. G&amp;M
Fuel was the only bid
received by the district for
Bv BETH SERGENT
the
service.
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL
COM
,
with
Approved
a
contract
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES
SuJ?reme Asphalt to do
'
POMEROY
The
mamtenance
on
the
school's
~nie's Mailbox
Village of Pomeroy is
A3
parking lot to include cleanaccepting bids on a paving
Calendars
A3 nig; filling cracks, sealing
project estimated to cost
and
striping
at
a
cost
not
to
$217,000 until II a.m. on
Classifieds
83- 4 exceed $17,500.
·
Aug. 22.
Approveil giving all 12Comics
Bs month
Bids will be opened and
employees a paid
read aloud on this date at the
Editorials
A4 day off to attend the Meigs
..
Pomeroy
,
Municipal
County Fair.
.
Building. Bid documents
Movies
A6
Approved applying to the
are
to be mailed or dropped
Department
of
Obituaries
off
As Ohio
at the office of the
Education for up to four
Village Administrator. 320
B Sectio n "waiver" days for the 2008Sports
East
Main Street; Pomeroy.
09 school year to provide
Roads
scheduled to be
Weather
As professional development
resurfaced are Chester
opportunities ·for school
® 2008 Ohio V.Uey Publishing Co.
Road,
Martin
Street.
employees.
·
Peacock Street, Lincoln
Hired the following
Hill up to the water tower,
teachers for the 2008-09
Brion J. RH&lt;IIphato
school year on a one-year Resiclents of Ovelbrook Center in Middleport took to the open road Friday, riding motor- Beech Grove Cemetery
Pleese see Pevlnc. AS
Pluse He Southem, AS cycles driven by volunteer members of local motorcycle groups.
'

·INSIDE

Art Show set for .September

AP photo

Vijay Singh, from Fiji, celebrates after winning the World Golf
Championships at Firestone Country Club, on Sunday in
Akron. Singh finished the tournament at 10-under par. ·
•
under 270 and earned $1.35 the only _player to compete
million for his first WGC in all 29 of these WGC
title.
events since they began in
Westwood, who could .1999. He was seemingly
have moved up to No. 4 in out of the picture •until a
the world ·with his . first 30-foot birdie on the . l6th ,
U.S. title in 10 years, ral- a 3-foot birdie on the 17th
lied from a five-shot deficit and an 18-foot bitdie
with II holes to play to get attempt on the final hole.
within one of the lead. But that just stayed right of the
he missed a 7-foot ' birdie cup.
on the 17th, and his IS-foot
"[ had a putt for what I
birdie putt from the fringe thought would get me
on the 18th to tie for the into a playoff," Appleby
said. 'T hit the best putt l
lead was left all the way.
An equally impressive could have hit without it
rally belonged to Appleby, going in."

laps and made it easily,
beating Tony S,tewart by
almost 4 seconds - half the
front straightaway on the
·from Page Bl .
2.5-mile trioval.
Stewart and third-place
Martin, the last of the dri- finisher Jimmie Johnson,
vers on the alternate strate- comin~ off 'ii victory last
gy, had to finally pit on lap week m Indianapolis, were
both on the same strategy as
J87.
Then Edwards, who made Edwards. Johnson was one
his final stop at the end of of several drivers who
lap 166., just had to worry if coasted across the finish
he had enough gas to get to line, out of gas.
Kevin Harvick , who
the end.
Edwards inherited a 5.6- crashed with Joe Nemechek
second lead and built it to on the first lap, came back
more than 7 seconds as to fini sh 'fourth, just ahead
Osborne kept telling his dri - of David Ragan.
Kahne . wound up seventh
ver on the radio to take it
easy and save fueL He ·did and .Mqrtin eighth.
The victory vau lted
ease up over the last few

Pocono

on ballot

. .

'

Edwards from fifth to third
in the season standings,
trailing only Dale Earnhardt
Jr. and Kyle Busch, who
also leads with seven· victories. Busch made a gas stop
on lap 199 and fell from
fourth to 36th, the last driver on the lead lap. But he
still owns a 176-point lead
over Earnhardt, who finished 12th.
With only five races
remaining until the start of
the Chase for the championship, Harvick jumped
from 13th to II th, switching
places with former Cup
champion Matt Kenseth,
who finished II th Sunday.
The top 12 drivers are eligible for the I0-race Chase.

-~
t:BSh &amp; t:BIIY IJIIIrl
r

u·

11'

w •

Drv tMall
Sheats

S2.1• S2.17 SUI II.M 14.21
211" SUI lUI lUI SUI

211r su1 sua SUI sua
211r $1.11 SUI m.u

.
21

Pressure

Treated Lumber

t:BBII &amp; t:arrJI IIRIJ/1
••

••

14'

••

$1:12 SUI M.N M.JI SUI

MJI ..... -

$111 ....

Jd" IUC $U1 ...12 1"1.11 SLM

2111" SUI SUI $1.14 Sl.ll $12.11
21111" Sl-11 $11.1! 14.11 &amp;11.41 $11.11

112·· x4" x

a·

Cash &amp; CBIIY IJRIJ/1

Hit the road!

$4.10

rs•••••••F 1

• ---=-...
a&amp;.. Wide

CB., &amp; CBrrNIIR,I

8' • $22.00

10'. $27.50

14'- $38.10
18'- $44.00

12' - 833.00 18' - 848.50
20'• Sliii.DO
.
on1v ~-In-Stock
RED • WHITE • GREEN • EARTH BROWN &amp;SANDSTONE

j

INDEX

.

~

Cash &amp; t:srrr llniJI
'

'

3/4" 14' 18'
$4.99 a Sheet .

Vlnvl
Sldlnu
t:lsll &amp; , , ,,,,,
0-4 Dutch Vision
Pro White

$48
A Sq.

'

•

Pomeroy
accepting
paving bids

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="546">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9997">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="14216">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="14215">
              <text>August 4, 2008</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3184">
      <name>finnicum</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4058">
      <name>ham</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="800">
      <name>holter</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="333">
      <name>woodyard</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
