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                  <text>Page B6 • The Uilly Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.corn

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

State inspectors
show how bridges
are inspected, A6

PRo BASEBALL
AmertcllnLMguo

E111 Dlvlolon

BY Tna•A M. WALKER
ASSOCIATI'D PRESS

NASHVILLE, Te nn. A@m "Pacman" Jones is
stepping into the ring and giving pro wrestling a whirl.
His latest career move was
announced Monday ai a new
conference. The suspended
Tennessee Titans cornerback,
who has rarely talked to the
media recently, didn't attend
as promised but released a
statement.
.
"I am a big fan of wrestling,
so I wanted to give it a try."
Jones said. " I respect
wrestling and I'm not coming
in like it's just a show. I want
to prove that I am the greatest
tearn-spon athlete."
Total Nonstop Action
Wrestling co-founder Jeff
Jarrett said Jones' daughter
had arrived from Atlanta on
Sunday and the player was
with her.
NR. contracts prohibit nonfootball activities that could
cause injury. Jones: agent,
Michael Huyghue, said last
week he had talked with the
Titans about Jones' plans with
TNA. The· agent previously
said Jones would not be
wrestling.
"I do not have a comment,"
Titans coach Jeff Fisher said
when asked about Jones
wrestling.
Titans quarterback Vince
Young said he hasn't talked to
Jones about wrestling and is
too busy in training camp to
watch.
"That's his decision. That's
his choice. The Tennessee
Titans, we're out here working," Young said.
Jones was suspended in
April for the 2007 season by
NFL commissioner Roger
Goodell for repeated conduct
. violations. He dropped his
appeal of that punishment in
June.
TNA announced Jones had

tier this year that left a man
paralyzed.
His bid to join the Titans in
training camp was denied by
the NR. on July 26. Jones'
case w ill be reviewed aftec the
Titans' I Oth game, which is
Nov. 19.
Jarrett said he and other
TNA wrestlers have been
working with Jones, and he
was impressed with the athletic ability of the ftrst defensive
player taken in the 2005 draft.
"I've never been in the ring
with s&lt;imeone with more natural athletic ability," Jarrett
said.
He wouldn 't be the ftrst
TI!lins player to make a TNA
appearance. Titans defensive
end Kyle Vanden Bosch
worked the corner for relined
tight end Frank Wycheck at a
TNA tag team match in June
in Nashville.
Vanden Bosch said after
Monday 's morning practice
that he consulted with Titans
AP photo officials about what he could
Jeff Jarrett, co-founder of Total Nonstop Action Wrestling, talks about the involvement of and could not do in that
Tennessee Titans cornerback Pacman Jones In their wrestling program Hard Justice appearance.
He
called
Monday in Nashville, Tenn. Jarrett said Jones will be in the wrestling ring in his new role wrestling a "soap .opera" for
and is working out at his Tennessee farm to prepare for his debut.
grown wen and said Jones
and
must weigh whether it's wonh
signed a contract
was pro- appeared while suspended Sunday the response he will d .
if
ffi 'als
rnoting Jones' appearance on from their day jobs.
get. He's a star. He's a star."
omg
team 0 ICI
don't
its Web site. His firSt televiAsked how Jones will be
Goodell was asked about · want him taking part.
·
· ··
"He has to keep continuing
s1on
appearance . WI'II be ponrayed1 J arrett ·sru'd to tune J one.s• wrest1·mg actiVIties
· TNA' s ·m Th ursuay
"
· ht and the w hen he vtslte
· · d the T'Itans • to take the little steps to get in
· hI dunng
Th ursdaY mg
mg
iMPACT! show, but the show audience will dictate whether camp Saturday. Goodell silid good favor with his teama)
' read y has been taped , th e· cornerbac k be comes a 1't was up to Jones to dec1'd e mates and this organization,"
· Iud'mg Jones ' appearance. good guy or "hee ]"
· hi s be st mterest
·
me
.
w hat•s m
as Vanden Bosch said. "T don't
"~e's looking forward ·~
"I'm a third generation in he tries to earn his way back know what kind of step this is.
. conung 10 and wrestling, this business. The wrestling onto the fteld.
It can be a gOod step. He also
Jarrett said. "He wants to con- business is built literally on
"I've often said that it's not has to take steps to rehabilitate
centnite on the tag-team conflict and controversy and about what you say, it's about his image with the public." ·
aspect of wrestling."
larger-than-life personalities. I what you do," Goodell said.
Several Titans declined to
Jarrett said TNA has fea- know that the rnepja cenainly "It's your actions. And I think talk about Jones. Tight end
lured appearance~ from knows Pacman from one side the actions will have to deter- Ben Troupe said he wquld
Chicago Bears linebacker . of his personality," Jarrett mine that."
record Thursday night's show
Brian Urlacher, 2005 World said.
Jones has been arrested six if the training camp schedule
Series MVP David Eckstein,
"l really think he's a very times since being drafted by keeps him busy with meetChicago White Sox catcher charismatic guy. When you the Titans in April 2005, ings, He hopes Jones will be
AJ. Pierzynski and New York · get to know him from our including June 22 when he careful.
Yankees outfielder Johnny approach - very marketable turned himself in on two
·~I hope it's worth it, and I
Damon.
·
·- and you'll see when you felony counts of coercion in a hope it don't violate his conBut none of those athletes tune into the pay-per-view on Las Vega~ strip club ftght ear- tract either," Troupe said.

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68
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48 64 .4,29 17 ~

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Sunday'• OlmM
Chicago Wh"o SoK 3, Oo1r0111
N.Y. Yankees 8, Kansas City 5

:;nll '\IS•\ol. .i-. '\n .

Ba"lmore 11 , Tampa Bay 3
Minnesota 1, CleVeland 0
Basion 9, Seattle 2

Monday'oOomn
N.Y. Yankees 5, Toronto 4
Detroit 6, Tampa Bay 4
Cleveland 4, Minnesota 0
Oakland 9, Texas 7, 13 Innings

• Post 128 eliminated
from state. See Page 81

LA Angals 4, Bos10n 2

Tllold&amp;y'a Gomoo

N.Y. Yankees (Clemens 3-St at
Toronto (Towers 5·8), 7:07p.m.
Minnesota (Bonser 5-7) at Kansas
City (Bannls1er 7-6), 6:10p.m.
Cleveland (Westbrook 2-6) at
Chicago While SOK (Danks 6-8), 8:11
p .m.
Oakland (Gaudin 8-7) at Te~eas
(Gabbard 4-1), 8:35 p.m.
Bos1on (Wal&lt;ofleld 13-9) a1 LA .
Angels (Saunders 5.0), 10:05 p.m.
Wedneada~'t

Oamea

Tampa Bay at Detroit , 7:05p.m.
Seattte at Bal11more, 7:05p.m.

N.Y. Yankees at Toronto, 7:07p.m.
Minnesota at Kansas City, 8:10p.m.
Cleveland a1 Chicago While Sox,
8:11 p.m. ·
Oakland at Texas , 8:35p.m.
Boston at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m .

National league
Eao1 Dlvlolon
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A11an1a
Philadelphia

63 48 .568 59 53 .527 4 :.
•
53 .523 5

sa

Washington
51 61 .455 12 'lr
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60 53 .531 53 .523 1
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sa

St. Louis

51 58 .468 7
49 63 .438 10 ),

· Houston
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Pittsburgh

44 64 .407 13 ~~

Arizona

48 62 .436 13

h

Aorida 6. Houston 5
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, ppd., Rain
Washing1on 6 , St. louis 3
•
Philadelphia B. Milwaukee 6, 11

Indians
from PageBl
Bay to stay a half-game
back in the race.
Hafner hit Silva's first
pitch of the seventh about as
hard as possible, slall)ming
the ball off the scoreboard
in right field for a solo
homer that gave Cleveland
a 2-0 lead.
'
With Byrd, who allowed
four hits, enjoying hi s usual
success against the Twins,
that was more than enough.
The last time the crafty

innings
San Diego 5, San Francisco 4
Arizona 3, LA Dodgers 0
N.Y. Mo1s 8, Chicago Clbs 3

Monday'e Oamee
St. Louis 10, San Diego 5
Houston 2, Chicago Cubs 1, 10
Innings
COlorado 6, Milwaukee 2
San Francisco 3, Washington 2. 11
innings
TueMtay'a Games
Florida (VandenHurk 3-2) at
Philadelphia (Moyer 9-8), 7:05p.m.
A11an1!l (Carlyle 8-3) a1 NY Me1s
(O.Peroz 10.7), 7:10p.m.
LA. Dodgers (Hendrlckson 4·5) a1
Cincinnati (.t.rroyo 4-1 2 or Harang 1Q3), 7:10p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Marshall 5-5) at

Houston (W.Williallls 5-12), 8:05p.m.
San Diego (Peavy 11-5) at St . Louis
(Reyes HO), 8:10p.m.
Milwaukee (Capuano 5·8)
Cotorado \Hirsh 4·7), 9:05p.m.
Pittsburgh (Gorzelanny 9-E)
ArizOna (Owings 5·5), 9:40p.m.

at
at

Washington (Bacslk 5·6) at San
Francisco (Zito 8-10) , 10:15 p.m.
Wadneaday'a Games
Milwaukee at Colorado, 3:05p.m.
Florida at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.

Atlanta at N.Y. Mats, 7:10p.m.

Bryan

WaHerall)hoto

tournament."
Meigs stranded seven
baserunners
while
Steubenville left ftve men
on the bags.
·
Anthony Gossett paced
Post 33 with three hits, fol lowed by both Brian
DeFranco and Stephen
Davis with two safeties
apiece. Gossett and Rocco
Auteri each hit a homer as
well in the triumph.
Meigs returned to action
this morning at Rannow
Field in The Plains, taking
on Jefferson in a losers'
bracket matchup at' 9:30
a.m. If Post 128 wins, it will
play on Wt;,dnesday at 9 :30
right-hander threw 'a complete game was,Aug. 17 of
last year - .
at the
Metrodome.
The victory allowed Byrd
to match last year's win
total, and now he's eyeing
hi s best season when he
went 17- 11 for the Kansas
City Royals in 2002.
Silva tied a season high
with six strikeouts and
alloweq six hits in seven
innings, but the Twins have
averaged just 4.19 runs of
support in hi s starts, seventh
lowest in the AL
Notes: Casey Blake 's
RBI single snapped a sea-

a.rn. at Bob Wren Stadium
on the campus of Ohio
University.
2007 Amertcan Lag!on Stats
Baseball Tournament

L.A. Dodgers at Cincinnati , 7:10
p .m.
Chicago Cubs at Houston, 8:05p.m.
San Diego at St. Louis , 8:10p.m.
Pitlsburgh at Arizona, 9:40p .m.
Washington at San Francisco, 10:1 5
p .m.

411 433 000

INSIDE
. • Girl Scout projects
judged. See Page A3
• St. Paul United
Methodist Women
meet. See Page A3
• Rutland woman
named manager of an
Athens Peoples Bank.
See Page A3
• L&lt;lcal Briefs.
See Page A5
• Family Medicine:
Care of dog bite
can prevent wound
. infection and rabies.
See Page AS
• Birth announced.
See Page A&amp;
• Rutland man ordained.
See Page A&amp;

WEATHER

-16 11 2

Meigs (18-24): Eric VanMeter, Austin

Dunfee (2), Titus Pierce (4), Patrick
Johnson (5), Luke Haislop (7) and Luke
Hai~op.

Joel Lynch (7) . .

Steubenville (38·19) : Tim Ohalek,
Rocco Auteri (7), Tim Ohalek (7). Sam

Busic (8) and Michael Mort.
•
WP - Ohalek; LP - Vanfv\eter; S Busic (l)
HA: S - Anthony Gossett (first inning,

nobody on, two out), Rocco Autart (sixth
inning, two on, two out); M - Cory
Shafter (seventh lflnlng, three on, one
out). Luke Haislop (seventh inning,

.

Detalla on Pace A6

nobody on, one out).

son-high 17-inning scoreless streak for Twins pitchers .... The Twins' normally
stellar bullpen was a little
off Monday night. Lefty
Dennys Reyes was charged
with two runs after leaving
with the bases loaded and
nobody out in the eighth.
Pat Nes hek gave up a run on
a fielder 's choice and an
RBI singl e to Jhonny
Peralta, who had three hits.
... 2B Alex i Casilla made a
brilliant play to ~ave a run
in the eighth , diving to stop
a bases-loaded grounder by
Hafner and throwing Gra.dy
Sizemore out at home.
•

J.

REED

rrtlrl.rth-.••tlrtlol ... rrt

Among the recent local
projects receiving ARC fundffijl is the new University of
R10 Grande/Rio Grande
Community College Meigs
Center, under construction
near Meigs Middle School at
Rocksprings.
'The ARC is a great source
of revenue for infrasctructure
and economic development
r,rojects," Varnadoe said.
The ARC also has a gQOii
record of making funds
available based on the needs
of.the communi'¥." '
'fhe reauthonzation bill
will next move to confer-.
ence where the differences
between the House and
Senate versions will be rectified. The ARC reauthorization maintains a requirement
that at least 50 percent of the

Commission 's grant dollars
go toward projects or activities benefiting distressed
counties and areas. This provision was added in ARC's
2002 reauthorization.
Because of its unemployment statistics, income and
other demographic information, Meigs County is considered a distressed county
and qualifies for additional
ARC funding consideration
as a result. The new legislation also creates the designation of economically "at
risk" counties, counties
with frajlile economies but
not considered "distressed,"
and provides an appropriate
federal matching rate of 70
percent for ARC-funded
projects in those counties .
"The reauthorization of

ARC remain s a top priority
for me and I am very
pleased that my colleagues
understand the. vital role
ARC plays in helping the
Appalachian region fully
realize its economic potential,"
Voinov.ich
said.
"These funds are essential if
we are going to build upon
the already tremendous successes in Ohio and the other
12 Appalachian states.
"I arn particularly excited
about my new mitiati ve
focused on enhancing the
region's economic competitiveness through energy
independence and alternative resource development."
Meigs County could also
benefit from a separate
authorization
for
an
Economic and Energy

Development' Initiative for
the region . The initiative
would allow the ARC to
provide technic al assi stance and grants to promote
energy efficienc y in the
region to enhance its economic
competitiveness,
increase the use of renewable energy resources,
especially biomass, in the
region to produce alternative transportation fuels,
electricity and heat.
Since ARC' s inception
under the Lyndon Johnson
presidency, the region's
poveny rate has been cut in
half the infant monality rate
has been reduced by twothirds and the percentage of
adults with a high school
education has increased by
over 70 percent.

Torres recognized
for healthcare
work with seniors ·
STAFF REPORT
NEWSIP~YDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
A
Henderson, W.Va. man has
been arrested for allegedly
stealing cash and checks
from a Miller Lite delivery
truck.
Vemin B. Dalton, 40,
appeared in Meigs County

PageA5
• Ruth L. Carter, 75
• Douglas Freeman, 40
• Terry Michael; Sr., 59
• Bryan Le,e Yonker, 59 ... C®rt.

Steubenville 16, Melgs14
Posl1 28 000 000 (14)00 - 1415 4

Post 33

\\\\"

BSERGENT.MYDI\ILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARI~

' WLPc1GB
63 50 .558 60 51 .541 2
58 53 .523 4
57 54 .514 5

Sunday'a Gam11

Cory Shaffer, third from right, is congratulated by teammates after hitting a grand s lam home run in the seventh inning of
Monday's American Legion State Baseball contest aga inst Steubenville at Dalton Field in Athens .

\l ( ,{ SI'H . :.!oo--

BY BETH SERGENT

47 64 .423 12

Well Dlvlllon

BRIAN

Man arrested
for beer .
truck robbery

52 60 .464 11 ~~

Florida

BY

BREEOOMYDAILYSENTI NEL.COM

POMEROY
- Meigs
County stands to benefit as
a distressed county under
of
the
provisions
Appalachian
Regional
Commission which have
passed the U.S. Senate.
U.S. Senator George V.
Voinovich's legislation to
reauthorize ' the ARC at
$510.9 million over five
years was passed by the full
Senate last week,
ARC funds are used for a
variety of local infrastructure
projects in Meigs ·County.
Economic
Development
Director Perry Varnadoe said
the program provides an estimated half-million dollars
each year for local projects.

Tampa Bay (Hammel 1-1) a1 Delroi1
(Robertson 6·9), 7:05p.m.
Seattle (Weaver 2·10) at Battlmord
(Trachsel5·7), 7:05p.m.

Atlanta 6, Colorado 5, 10 Innings

Meigs
starter
Eric
VanMeter, who lasted only
one inning after getting htt
on the elbow after a pick-off
play in the top of the .second, took the loss for Post
128.
Post 33 used three different pitchers on four occasions in the contest, while
Feeney Bennett also went to
Austin Dunfee, Titus Pierce,
Patrick Johnson and Luke
Haislop to go along with
VanMeter in the setback.
Meigs had 15 hits in the
game -- four more than
Steubenville - ana had
nine different players with
at least one safety.
VanMeter led Post 128
with four hits, followed by
Luke Haislop with three and
Zach Haislop added two.
Shaffer, Johnson, Joel
Lynch, Dave Poole, Wes
Riffle and Bryan DeLong
also supplied one hit apiece.
Shaffer
led
Feeney
Bennett with six RBis,
while both Lynch and Riffle
added a pair of RBI~.
Following such a wild
day of baseball that also
included a rain delay that
moved the original 2 p.m.
stan time back to 5 p.m .,
Feeney Bennett coach Will
Haislop could only speak
his mipd afterwards.
"I really don't know
where to start about today.
I'm sure the boys were nervous being in a game like
this, but we only played
about three innin~s of jlOOd
baseball tonight,' Ha1slop
.commented. "But I will say
this. They never quit and
they never gave up, and
they showed some people
that they do belong m this

~ll\\

ARC reaut~orization promises benefits to Meigs

SPORTS

L A. Angels 4. Oakland 3

Colorado
San Francisco

,.

\ \ll\\,1

10

Toronto 4, Texas 1

San Diego
Los Angeles

State

Bonds breaks
reoord, Bt

INDEX
2 SllCI10NS -

12 PAGFS

Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Annie's Mailpox

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports
We!'lther

B Section
A6

© 2007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co .

Judge Steven L. Story to
answer to seven felony
counts of theft. Assistant
Prosecutor Matt Donohue
requested Dalton"s bail be
set at $25,000 and called him
a "flight risk" with "no ftxed
address." Story set Dalton's
bond at $25,000 at 10 percent and scheduled a preliminary hearing for Friday. He
was reprimanded into the
custody of the Meigs County
Sheriff's Office until he can
.
- post bond.
The incident in question
happened on July 26 when a
Miller Lite delivery truck
which was parked at the Par
Mar Store (The Beacon) was

Please see Robbery, A5

BREC urges
•
energy savmgs
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINEL .COM

RIO GRANDE - The
next three d11ys' high temperatures and humidity will
make work and leisure time
uncornfonable - perhaps
downright dangerous - for
man and beast alike, but it
also can produce an unpleasant surprise when power
bills amve in September.
Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative expects peak
demand conditions through
Friday due to the air COI)ditioning load on its ninecounty distribution system.
"What this means is not
that we . will experience a
shonage of electricity," said
Steve
Oden,
BREC
spokesman. " Peak periods
translate into higher costs for
wholesale power when consumption is record-setting."
Power supply contracts
are set to match demand
with generation capacity,
Oden explained.
'"When demand exceeds
the last peak of record, we
pay a higher wholesale rate ,
he said. "This is why it is
important for consumers to
be aware that individual
conservation measures can
help lower the cost of electricity for everyone."
BREC members and all
electri c consumers can take

Please see BREC. AS
,.

POMEROY - Norma A.
D~~~~ ;;;&amp;es, clinical
su
orne care services for the Meigs County
Council on Aging has been
named Cambridge Who's
Who Professional of the Year
in heaithcare for seniors.
Only . two male and two
female.members in each discipline are selected for inclusion
in
Cambridge
Who's Who
Registry and
those
are
hand picked
by a selection commitBath s.reent/photoe
tee on the
Pictured are finalists for the "Not So Newlywed Game" (from left) Maxine and Bill Little, Norma Torres basis of their
fourth place, Joan Corder, host, Barbara and James Hudson, third place, Alice and Victor
accomplishWolfe, first place , Lee and Don Young, second place, Debbie Jones, activities director at ments, academic achieve. rnent, leadership and service.
the Meigs Senior Center.
As clinical supervism,
Torres ensures thut her staff
members provide excellent
personal care services to the
BY BETH SERGENT
Council's myriad of clients.
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
Torres utilizes her extensive
nursing expeltise in geronPOMEROY- How well
tology, her 22 years of expedo you know your spouse?
rience as the nursing direcApparently, Bill and Alice
tor
of the Meigs County
Wolfe of Racine know each
Health Department, her
other well enough to win a
more than 15 years of expestay at Belterra Reson in
rience as the only nurse repIndiana after competing in
re sentative on the Oh10
the championship round of
Department of Health
the "Not So Newlywed
Medical
Advisory
Game" at the Meigs County
Senior Center.
Please see Torres, A~
The Wolfe's had to get
through a series of questions
like this one: "What movie
star will your wife say she is
most like? Doris Day,
Eliza~th Taylor or Phyllis
Diller." In case you're wondering Bill got it right by
answering Phyllis Diller.
In "¥1dition to their stay at
Beltetra and two free
BY DIANE POTTORFF
rounds of golf at the reson,
OPOTIORFF®MYDAILYREGI
STER .COM
the champs took home a
$25 gas card from Herald
WEST
COLUMBIA,
Oil &amp; Gas Company, two
W.Va. - The Mason County
robes from Rocksprings
Sheriff's Department is conRehabilitation and a onemonth membership to the Spouses Bill and Maxine Little share a laugh during the "Not tinuing its investigation into
Wellness Center located at So Newlywed Game" when Bill gets the question wrong. The the shooting death of a West
Columbia boy on Aug. 2.
the senior center.
Little's came In fourth place but still had a good time.
. Sheriff Scott Simms conThe final four contestants
firm
ed the accidental shootwon a pfevious round of the
cates from the Wild Horse Janet and Joe Bolin, Susie ing death of Jeremy Tyler
game to move on to the
and Jim Soulsby, Betty and
champiQ\)ship. The elimina- . Cafe, free haircuts from Bo Rothgeb, Ellen and Stump, 12. of Spillman
tion rounds have taken Joyce Medley, Avon from Charles Rife , Allie and Les Lane in West Columbia,
according to a new s release.
place over the period of ·a Norma Torres, Mary Kay
Hawley, Joan and Bruce
products
from
Julie
On Thursda y evening,
month with 16 couples parCampbell , umbrellas and May, George and Nellie several juveniles were playticipating.
Wright , Mildred and TK
ing in the family's trailer
Joining the Wolfe's in the ba11ks from Peoples Bank, a
fmal four were Don and Lee ladies watch frrorn LT' s Workman .
when one of them picked up
The host for the entire a pellet guy and accidentally
Young of New Haven, Jewelry Center, robes from
W.Va. who came in second Rocksprings Rehabilitation series was Joan Corder and discharged it, Simms said.
The pe ll et struck Jeremy ·
place, James and Barbara and more of those $25 gas the crowd grew larger with
Hudson of Middlepon who cards from Herald Oil &amp; each round.
in the chest. A brother ran to
Debbie Jone s, activities a neighbor 's hou se for hj:lp,
carne in third place, Bill and Gas Company.
directo
r for the Meigs and Mason County 911 was
Other couples participatMaxine Little of Middleport
in g in the free contest were County Senior Center, said called.
who carne in fourth place.
All of the ftnal couples Pat and Russ Shoemaker, the event was a success so
Simm s said that once
walked away with prizes Mary and Ben Sl awter, Etta much so that she hopes to deputies arrived on the scene,
which included a stay at the Mae and Bob Hill, Mary plan a similar game show
Please see Confirms, AS
Carpenter Inn, gift certifi - Lou and Gene Hawkins, for sin gles in the winter.

'Not So Newlywed Game' champs·

Investigation
confmns that
boy was killed
by pellet gun

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•

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NATION•

The Daily Sentinel

WoRLD

Page.A2
Wednesday, August 8,

2007

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NORMANDY, England
Britain's.health and safety agency
said Tuesday there was a strong
probability that a foot-and-mouth
outbreak in southern England
originated at a vaccine lab and
was spread by human movement.
The outbreak was discovered on
a farm just four miles from the
Pirbright vaccine laboratory,
which is shared by the government's Institute for Animal
Health, or IAH, and a private
pharmaceuticai company, Merial
Animal Health, the British arm of
Duluth, Ga.-based Merial Ltd.
There is a "real possibility" the
disease was spread by human
movement, and the possibility it
was transmitted by air or floodwaters was "negligible," the government's Health and Safety
Ellecutive said in the report.
Environment Secretary Hilary
Benn said the report brought
efforts to stop the disease "a· bit
further forward." He said the possibility that the strain had been
released by human movement
would be urgently investigated,
and that footpaths in the protection zone covering two infected
farms would be closed immediately.
The highly contagious disease
can be carried by wind and on the
vehicles and clothes of people
who come into contact with
infected animals.
A group of cows at a second
farm was confirmed to have the
disease Tuesday. Cranes piled cat·
tie carcasses onto trucks and
authorities slightly ellpanded the
protection zone around a second
farm.
Both farms, about 30 miles
southwest of London, were within
the initial two-mile radius protec·
tion zone set up Friday, Benn said.
National · Farmers'
Union
President · Peter Kendall said the
findings would only "add to the
frustration and anger' of farmers.
"I have spoken to many farmers
over the last few days who are
absolutely horrified that tile
source of this outbreak could be

AP photo

British police officers look at a map of Surrey Outside a farm in Normandy, England, Tuesday. Tests confirmed
a second outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease at the farm southwest of London, Britain's Environment
Secretary Hilary Benn said Tuesday, raising fears that the highly contagious virus could devastate ·herds
across southern England. The second batch of cows, tested late Monday, were within the ·initial 3-kilometer
..(2-mile) radius protection zone set up Friday around the farm where a first group of infected cattle was found.
owns the fann where the second
from Pirbri~ht," he.said.
· Merial said it was assessing the infe'cted .herd grared, told B~;itish
· report and would comment on it as Broadcasting Corp. radio Tuesda;Y.
"Now this has set us back agam
soon as possible. The company
had previOusly said it foun~ no and most farmers - and I've been
evidence of a breach in biosecuri- speakinl! to a few- are very, very
scared,' he said, adding that the
ty.
News of a second confirmed infected cows belonged to a feloutbreak fed fears of.a repe11t of low farmer who usc:&lt;! his land.
Piime Minister Gordon Brown
scenes in 200 I ; when 7 million
said
a second report was expected
animals were killed and incinel'lit·
·
ed on pyres, devastating a~cul· as early as Wednesday.
ture ana rural tourism in Bntain. ·· .".The work goes.on to isolate, to
"We were starting to think this contiin, control and eradicate .the
virils had been contained and disease," Brown said after the. ini·
maybe we were going to be get· tial 'report was published.
ting back to normality in a few
Tbe health and safety. agency
weeks," Laurence Matthe:.vs, who . said Me.r ial s~ould not immeiliate-

ly resume production, despite a
pendilig government order for
300,000 doses of a strain-specific
foot-and-mouth vaccine.
"Our 'assessment is that there is
no reason to prevent the Institute
for Animal Health from operating
providing that all the usual biosecurity protocols are followed rigorously. In relation to Merial, we
advise that further work be done
before . any operations involving
live pathogens are restarted," the
health and safety agency's chief
executive Geoffrey·Podger said.
The disease strain was used in
both labs. Merial produced about
10,000 litres of vaccine between

Britain asks U.S. to release 5 British residents
from Guantanamo, U.S. welcomes request
BY

DAVID STRINGER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.\
'

I

LONDON- Britain's new Prime
Minister Gordon Brown asked the
United States on Tuesday to free
five British residents from the military prison at Guantanamo Bay - a
policy reversal that w·as welcomed
by the Bush administration.
·
The United States has been working to reduce the detainee population at Guantanamo with an eye
toward closing the controversial
detention center.
In some cases where a detainee is
likely to be mistreated in their
native country, the Bush administration has been appealing to nations
with respected human rights records
to take the Guantanamo Bay
detainees it does not intend to try in
U.S. military courts.
U.S. officials said Tuesday thl)t
Brown's decision to ask for the
transfer of non-British aationals was
a positive step in broader efforts to
cutback the number of inmates and
eventually shut Guantanamo.
State Department spokesman Sean
McCormack said the British request
was already being reviewed and
encouraged Britain and other
nations to accept more detainees.
"This request is for five," he told
reporters. "If there is a desire for the
U.K. government to look at more
than five, of course we would entertain that, just as we would with any
other country making a request."
of
closing
. Proponents
Guantanamo Bay offered similar
sentiments.
"The UK's decision to accept its
legal residents is an important step
forward," New York-based Human
Rights Watch said in a statement.
"At the same time, Human Rights
Watch continues to urge the UK and
other EU member states to help
resettle other detainees who may not
have a legal claim to residency, but
who cannot return to their home
countries."
Since 2002, the U.S . has transferred about 400 detainees from
Guantanamo to more than two
dozen countries. In some cases,
however, the U.S. has not been able
to transfer the pri soners to their
home countries because it hasn 't
been able to secure the assurances
required by American law that they
would not be mistreated. The State

Department has struggled to find
third co·untries willing to accept
Guantanamo prisoners and able to
provide the legally required assurances.
Tuesday's ·request by Brown's
government contrasts with Tony
Blair's refusal for years to intervene
in many Guantanamo cases. Brown
has been trying to distance himself
from Blair~ particularly in regard
to his predecessor's actions in Iraq.
Blair's government chose only to
secure the release of nine British citizens and one resident who had provided help to British intelligence
services. It refused to intervene in
the plight of other British residents,
saying as recently as March that it
could not help people who were not
citizens.
Foreign Secretary David Miliband
wrote to Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice requesting the
release, the Foreign office said
Tuesday. It said U.S. steps to reduce
the number of detainees at
Guantanamo prompted a review of
the British government's approach.
The men - Saudi Shaker Aamer;
Jordanian Jamil el-Banna, Libyanborn Omar Deghayes, Ethiopian
national Binyam Mohamed and
Algerian Abdennour Sameur - had
qll been granted refugee status,
indefinite leave or ellceptional leave
to remain in Britain before they
were detained, the statement said .
The . government has warned the
men's relatives it expects negotialions to take several months.
McCormack stressed that any
transfers from Guantanamo would
depend on assurances that the
detainees would be secured but not
mistreated.
"We don't want to be the world's
jailers," McCormack said . "At the
same time, we also don't want to see
very dangerous people allowed to
walk the streets freely so they can
pose a threat to our citizens as well
as others."
"We see this as a major change in
the government's position. Prior to
this, they were not calling for the
release of the British resident s,"
said Moazzam Begg , a Briton who
was detained at Guantanamo Bay
for two years before being released
in 2005.
"There are children that have
never seen their fathers. There are
parents who died while their chit -

dren have been locked away," he
said. "But finally there seems to be
some light at the end of a very long
tunnel."
Five Britons were freed in March
2004 and four in January 2005, the
Foreign Office said.
Bisher al-Rawi , a 37-year-old
Iraqi national and British resident,
was released from the camp in April
after five ;Years in detention. But
British officials only took up his
case after it was disclosed he had·
assisted MI5, Britain's domestic spy
agency.
"This change of policy is extremely welcome, espectally if it signals a
bigger change of approach on both
sides of the Atlantic," said James
Welch, legal director of the civil
rights group Liberty. "Surely the
U .S. and U.K. governments need no
further evidence that internment,
kidnap and torture have been completely counterproductive in the
struggle against terrorism."
Britain's Foreign Office said that,
of the five detainees it wants freed,
. only el-Banna has bei!n cleared for
release. The Pentagon ,could not
immediately clarify the status of the
four other men.
Britain will "take all necessary
measures to maintain national security" when the men return, the
Foreign Office said, but refused ' to
say whether they would be subject
to control orders, a form of house
a.rrest used to monitor terrorism suspects.
El-Banna was arrested with alRawi by Gambian authorities. in
November 2002 and transferred to
U.S.
detention,
Amnesty
International said. It said Deghayes
and Aamer were captured in
Pakistan in 2002 .
Aamer had been instrumental at
one point in trying to settle a 2005
hunger strike at the prison, the
human rights group Reprieve said.
Aamer, who speaks fluent English ,
was later placed in solitary confinement when agreements negotiated
with U.S. jailers broke down, said
Cori Crider, a Guantanamo case
worker for Reprieve.
Reprieve says Mohamed was captured in Paki stan in April 2002 and
held in Morocco for 18 months
before being sent to Guantanamo.
Amnesty International said .the circumstances of Sameur's detention
were not immedi ately clear.

Public meetings

July 14 and 25, while IAH conducted a series of small-scale
experiments using fewer than 10
milliliters in each case, the report
said.
The report found no evidence of
any. incidents such as laboratory
spillages or working practices that
could have led to a release of the
strain.
Roger Pride, who runs the farm
near
Godalming ,
southern
England, where the first outbreak
was confmned, said Tuesday his
staff realized there was a problem
when they spotted the cattle were
"off color and drooling."
"For a moment, we couldn't
believe it," he said. "It felt as if
our whole world was turned
upside-down."
The containment process at the
second farm seemed slow and
laborious, as tractors, glimpsed
from behind a thick row of trees,
haphazardly piled carcasses. Once
the pile was .. complete, a .black
crane grabbed the carcasses, one
or two. at a time, and slid them
gently, but quickly, into. a truck
that would haul them off the
premises ·
Britain's Chief Veterinary
Officer Debby Reynolds has said
the strain found in the first herd
matched samples taken during
Britain's 1967 outbreak of foot"
and-niouth disease. The strain had
not been seen in animals for a long
time - but was used to produce ·
vaccines, she said.
.Foot-and-mouth disease affects
cloven-hoofed animals, including
cows, sheep; pigs and goats, but
does not typically affect humans.
The first herd of around 120
cows from a farm in Normandy,
outside Guildford, was slaughtered Saturday after the virus was
identified and confirmed in two
animals, the Department for the
Environment, Food and Rur~tl
Affairs said. It said a total of 199
cows have been culled.
Britain has banned the export of
livestock; meat and milk - a
decision endorsed by the
European Commission.

Productivity rebounds as wage
pressures ease; analysts worry
improvement might be temporary
BY MARTIN CRUfSINOER
1&gt;1' ECONOMICS WRITER

WASHINGTON - The
productivity of American
workers rebounded in the
spring while wage pressures ·
eased, favorable economic
developments that ,analysts
worried might prove only
temporary. ·
The Labor Department
reported Tuesday that worker
efficiency rose at an annual
rate of 1.8 percent in the AprilJune quarter, more than double the 0. 7 percent pace of the
first three months of the year.
· Meanwhile, unit labor costs
rose at a 2.1 percent rate,
marking the second consecutive quarter that wa~e pressures have eased. While higher wages are good for workers, if wages rise too quickly
they can spur unwanted inflation.
Fed policymakers, who
were meeting Tuesday, were
expected to keep interest rate~
unchanged for the mnth consecutive meeting.
On Wall Street, investors
pulled back after a staging a
huge rally on Monday. The
Dow Jones industrial average
waS down 62 points in late
morning tiading.
The
second
quarter
improvements in productivity
and wage pressures were not
viewed as large enough to
convince the central bank that
inflation has been contained.
Analysts noted that for the 12
months ending in June, unit
labor costs are up by 4.5 percent, the highest year-overyear increase in nearly seven
years.
Sal Guatifii, an economist
at BMO Capital Markets, said
the continued wage pressures
would discourage the Fed
from cutting interest rates
unless the · tunnoil in credit
markets · gets significantly
worse. The Fed closelimonitbrs productivity and labor
costs for signals of underlying
inflation pressures.
Productivity, the amount of
output per hour of work, is the
key ingredient for rising living

~

•

standands. As long as productivity is rising at a solid rdte,
the increased output allows
businesses to pay their workers more without having to
boost the cost of their. products, which increases mflation.
The 1.8 percent rise in productivity in the second quarter
was slightly below the 2 perce'nt advance that had been
expected.
The productivity increase
reflected the fact. that overall
economic output, as measured
by the gross domestic product,
jumped sharply in the _spring
to an annual rate of 3.4 percent, the fastest pace in more
than a year and up sharply
from an anemic 0.6 percent
growth rate in the fii'St three
months of the year.
Economists believe that the
continued slump in housing
and the spillover problems in
credit markets will depress
growth for several more
months. They are forecasting
that overall economic gro}Vlh
will slow to around 2.5 percent in the second half of this
year and unemployment will
edge up. The jobless rate rose
in July to 4.6 percent.

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Wednesday, Aug. 8
POMEROY · - Meigs
County Board of Health,
regular meeting, 5 p.m.,
conference room, Meigs
County Health Department.
Thursday, Aug. 9
TUPPERS PLAINS Special meeting of Eastern
Local Board of Education, 8
p.m., administrative conference room, Tuppers Plains,
for the purpose of discussing personnel and other
business as permitted by
law.

Church events
Friday, Aug. 10
LONG BOTIOM
Faith Full Gospel Church,
7 p.m., gospel sing, special
guests "Peace Makers,"
refreshments served.
Sunday, Aug. 12
SHADE - The 83rd
Hayes-Young and Holiday
· School reunion will be held
on the old lioliday School
grounds on .Gilkey Rid~e
Road. A potluck lunch will
be served at I p.m. Friends,
. relatives,
photographs,

genealogy information and
entertainment are welcome.

Clubs and
organizations
Tbursday, Aug. 9
CHESTER Shade
River Lodge will meet at
7:30 p.m. Refreshments.
POMEROY Meigs
Athletic Boosters, 7 p.m. at
the Meigs fieldhouse .
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053, 7 p.m. Meal served at
6:30p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS Fall sports and activity
meeting for parents of students participating in any
fall activity at Eastern High
School, 6:30 p.m., Eastern
High School cafeteria.
TUPPERS PLAINS -The Ladies Aulliliary of the
Tuppers Plains VFW 9053 ·
will meet at 7 p.m.
RACINE
The
Sonshine Circle will meet at
7 p.m. at Bethany Church.
All area women are invited.
Saturday, Aug. 11
BURLINGHAM
Modern Woodmen family
life potluck, 6:30p.m. at the

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

Community Calendar

BRITISH .INVESi'IGATION INDICA'IES VACCINE LAB
IJKEI.Y SOURCE OF FOOT-AND-MOUTH·OUTBRFAK
BY UNDSAY TOLER ·

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

GIRL SCOUT PROJECIS JUDGED
Woodmen Hall. Take COYered dish or dessert to share.
Fish, chicken rolls and
drinks will be provided by
Camp. Frank Gorscak of the
Health Department to talk
on the Pandemic Flu.
·
Thesday, Aug. 14
POMEROY Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce
BusinessMinded Luncheon, noon,
Pomeroy Library, featured
speaker from Holzer Health
Systems, entenainment by
River City Players and a
scene from "Seussical The
Musical," .RSVP 992-5005,
catered by Hometown
Market.
0

Other events
Friday, Aug. 10
POMEROY - Partners
in Care Caregiver Support
Group, noon, at the Meigs
Senior Center conference
room. Guest speakers will
be 'Paula Allen, OT, and
Melissa Colwell, COTA.
Topic of discussion will be
Memory
Enhancement.
Refreshments. Everyone is
welcome. For more information contact Kathy
McDaniel at 992-2161.

MIDDLEPOKI'- Judging
of Girl Scout projects to be
exhibited nellt week at the
Meigs County Fair was
recently completed at the
Middleport Church of Christ
Family Life Center. .
Judging results, by class,
were:
Life SkiDs
Junior: Valerie Wolfe,
Personal Sewing, grand
champion; Ashley Deem,
Personal
Cane
and
Development,
. reserve,
Abi~ai£ Houser, Personal
Sewmg, honorable mention.
Valerie Wolfe, canning, A;
Lindsey Putman, Mise
· Sewing, A; Lindsey Putman,
Canning, A; Brooke Johnson,
Child · Care, B; Katelyn
Ginther, Animal Care, B;
Kirruny Ginther, Animal care.

B.

Troop 1204, Health and
Safety, B..
Cadette: Darci Bissell,
Personal Sewing, A, grand
champion; Whitney Putm.aq,
reserve champion; Ashley
Bateman Lee, Animal Care,
honorable mention. Ravenne
Reed, Misc. Sewing, B.
Senior: Ericka Cogar,
Dehydration, B.
Communications
·Junior: Lindsey Putman,
Scrapbook, grand champion;
Alyssa Cremeans, reserve;
. Lindsey Putman, visual com-.
rnunication, honorable men-

tion. Brooke Johnson,
Scrapbook, B; Ashley Deem,
scrapbook, B.
"
Cadettes: Darci Bissell,
scrapbook, grand champion;
Ashley Bateman-Lee, creative
writing, reserve. Catherine
Grady, Creative Writing, B.
The Arts
Junior: Alyssa Cremeans,
grand champion; Ashley
Deem, reserve.
Group-Troop 1204, grand
champion.
Cadette: Whitney Putman,
grand champion; Holly
McGrath, reserve; Holly
McGrath, honorable mention.
·Custolm and Traditions
Junior: Abigail Houser,
grand champion; LindseY.
Putman, reserve; Abigatl
Houser, honorable mention.
Group: Troop 1276,grand
champion; Troop 1204reserve.
Cadette: Darci Bissen,
grand champion.
Science and Beyond
Junior: Valerie Wolfe, grand
champion, Mellican Jumping
Beans; Alyssa Cremeans, Trip
diary, reserve; Lindsey
Putman, Basket Weaving;
reserve champion; Ashley
Deem, honorable mention.
Group:
Troop 1204Carpentry, grand champion;
Troop 1204, Recycling,
reserve.
Cadette: Holly McGrath,

Carpentry, shelf, grand champion;
Holly
McGrath,
Recyling, reserve. Ashle)
Bateman Lee, science ellperiment, honorable mention.
Senior: Ericka Cogar, Baby
Gift, grand cham~on .
Girl Scout l'rogrdiD
Junior: Ashley Deem, grand
champion, Girl Scout Ways
and Traditions; Valerie Wolfe,
Camping, reserve. Group:
Troop 1204, National activities-grand
champion;
Camping-reserve.
Cadene/Senior Troop 1254:
Girl Scout Ways, grand champion; Troop 1208, National
Activities, reserve.
Culinary
Juniolrs: Abigail Houser,
grand champion ; Brooke
Jolu'Ison, reserve; and Abigail
Houser, honorable merition.
Ashley Deem, Abigail
Houser, A's. Kimmy Ginther
.and Katelyn Ginther, B's.
Cadette: Whitney Pubnan,
grand champion; Darci
Bissell, reserve; and Holly
McGrath, honorable mention.
Ravenne Reed, Catherine
Grady, All A's. .
Senior: Ericka Cogar, grand
champion.
Overall
Outstanding
Exhibitors: Valerie Wolfe,
Junior; Darci Bissell and
Whitney Putman, Cadette,
Ericka Cogar. Senior. Each
girl was awarded more than
two grand champion ribbons.

Rutland woman named manager
of an Athens Peoples Bank
St. Paul United Methodist Women meet
ATHENS Peoples
· Bank recently announced
; the promotion of Sherry
Robinson to office manager
. of its 801 East State Street
office in Athens.
Robinson joined Peoples
Bank in ~002 and was most
· recently a personal banker
· in Peoples' Rutland office.
office
manager,
. As
. Robinson focuses on clients
banking, insurance 'and
. investment needs as well as
assisting in the personal
growth and development of
associates.
"Sherry's ellperience in
the financial services industry is an asset to Peoples,"
stated Larry Holdren, president of Retail and Banking

advantage to fulfilling our
client's needs."
Sherry graduated from
Meigs High School and is
actively involved with the
Ladies Missionary Group at
Hysell Run Community
Church where she also
serves as youth leader and
. church secretary. She
resides in Rutland .
Clients interested in
more information concerning Peoples' products and
services may contact
Robinson at the East State
Street (Athens Mall) office
by calling (740) 597-2006.
Sherry Robinson
Peoples Bank also . offers
Division at Peoples Bank. convenient sales offices on
"Her enthusiasm and West Union Stre~t arid
knowledge will be an added Court Street.

TUPPERS PLAINS layette shower for Olivia
Several fall activities were Grace Householder at the
announced during a recent Church on at 6 p.m. on Aug.
meeting of the Tuppers Plains 22. On Sunday Sept. 16 there
St. Paul United Methodist will be a slide show called
Women held at the church.
Blessing of the Children
Judy Kennedy read a arti- showing pictures of the chilcle on Prayer Shaws, Rise, dren taken during Bible
Shine and Glorify God, 311d school, and on Sept 22 will
Connie Rankin showed a pur- be the annual day of leaderple shaw that was given to ship. On Aug, 26 at 6 p.m.
her by the Mission team that there will be an ice cream
spent a week in the church social at the Church shelter
basement while worlting in house with special music.
the county. A pancake breakIt was noted that new offifast and bargam table will be cers will be elected at the
held in the chweh basement September meeting and that
on Nov.IO. There will be a in October the world thank

offering would be taken. A
birthday card was signed for
Celiz Efren of Someton, Ariz.
who was chosen for the birthday calendar book.
Attending the meeting
were Joanna Weaver, Barb
Roush, Connie and Mary
Rankin, Betty Cheviler, Terri
Soulsby, Anna Rice, Sharon
Louks, Kim Householder,
and Judy Kennedy.
President Joanna Weaver
opened the meeting with a
prayer followed with everyone reading the UMW ·
Litany.

Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperad.ve Issues•••

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Sneaky former in-law needs to go
no longer allowed in your The University of Iowa
home when you are not pre- Medical Center (where I
AND MARCY SuaAR
sent. Period. That bridge is was diagnosed) has good
at:
Dear Annie: Recently, I burned.
information
let my ex-husband's mothDear Annie: My mother- www.uihealthcare .com
. er, "Gladys," watch my in-law read the column . (search for fructose). The
... Michigan U.S. Dept. of Agriculture
daughter for the weekend. from
She hasn't been allowed to Grandmother,"
whose (USDA) has a publication
do this for quite some time granddaughter was diag- ·online entitled "Sugar
due to problems we had nosed with fructose intoler- Content
in
Selected
with her and her other ance. When our daughter Foods," which is available
grandchildren .
was 3 months old, she had through the search box at
While here, Gladys some constipation, and the www.fnic.nal.usda.gov.
grilled my daughter with pediatrician recommended
Wisconsin: We have a
questions about me, my com syrup be added to her daughter who is allergic to
current husband and other formula to stimula~ her eggs, and the Food Allergy
family members. She has a system. The corn syrup &amp; Anaphylaxis Network
history of backstabbing me. threw her into liver and (foodallergy.org) has been
She is very sneaky. While kidney failure. The won-· very helpful. It's $30 for, a
in my home, she and her derful doctors at the one-year membership and
oldest son hacked into my Cleveland Clinic discov- well worth it.
e-mail account, read all of ered she had Hereditary
Boston: I found my local
my mail and changed my Fructose ~ntolerance and natural food stores or boupassword. Luckily, I had saved he~ hfe.
.
tique markets to be incredimy laptop with me and was . There IS a lot ~f cooking bly helpful (the staff is
able to catch it before they , •'!volved ~1th th1s t~pe of familiar with different
did too much damage.
d1et, but 11 can easily be dietary needs), and foods
Gladys got into my managed .. That grandmoth- marked "natural" at regular
account by calling my ~r can ~md a wealth. of grocery stores often do not
mother and innocently ask- mformatlon
regardmg contain added fructose or
ing for her maiden name, rec1pes, .eating out, etc., at sucrose.
which was the "question" www.hfunfo.proboards42.c
Illinois: The best website
my account asked to help om. As with any informa- I've found is kidswithme remember my pass- tion, you should always foodallergies.org. T,lle supword. Please let your read- check with your own doctor portjorums there are filled
ers know not to use some- before followmg any witli
information
on
. thing so simple to discover. dietary advice. .
recipes, negotiating with
: I feel I can never trust
My daughter 1s now 3 and insurance companies, pickGladys again. Is there some doing great. She's a ~eauti - ing a great doctor, explainlaw I can mention to scare ful, smart ball of f1re. ing diet restrictions to famher so she won't do this K.G.
ily members, schools , day
. again? -Maine
Dear K.G.: Thanks . so care centers and so on. It
· Dear
Maine: much for the useful mlor- has been a lifeline for my
; Discovering your password mation. Our reader.s ':"ere family.
• and opening your e-mail is eager to help "Mtchtgan · Annie's Mailbox is writ·
: the equivalent of eaves- Grandma" and ?ffered a ten by. Kathy Mitchell and
dropping on your phone plethora of webs1tes. Read Marcy Sugar, longtime
calls. It's not nice, but no on:
editors of the Ann Landers
one is going to arrest her. If
From Iowa: I was diag- column. Please e-mail
Gladys had done real dam- nosed
with
Dieta~y your questions to annies. age-taken money from your Fructose Intolerance tn mailbox@comcast.net, or
bank account, for example, 2005 and had to learn a new write to: Annie's Mailbox,
· then she would be breaking way of eating, but it freed P.O. Box 118190, Chicago,
: the law. First, change your me from being. almost IL606ll. Tofindoutmore
' password and make the house-bound w1th mtestmal about Annie's Mailbox,
"clue" more cryptic, so problems. There are two and read features by other
: only you will understand it. types:
"Dietary" and Creators Syndicate writers
· In fact, you should update "Hereditary"
Fructose and cartoonists, visit the
your password frequently. Intolerance, the latter caus- Creators Syndicate Web
Then tell G)adys that she is ing many more problems. page at www.creators.com. ·
BY KATHY MITCHELL

'

for Wednesday thru Friday
August 8th·10th
Co-op members are asked to conserve
electric power. especially between the hoors
of 3-7 p.m., due to the heat wave predicted
to settle over the Ohio River Valley. There is no
shortage of electricity foreseen. However. consumers mi!llt be
charged a higher demand rate tf a new peak of record is set!

.

To help avoid a peak, BREC
recommends the following:
• Set air conditioning thermostats higher 10 reduce load
on system

• Don1 run pool or bot lub p~ in lhalft11110on and
early tvening. •

• Don1 hall up your hDIIII by 111lng the stove •d cwan.
This will CIUI8 yoiW air conditioner to work hll'llar.

• Close curtains and window blinds to reduce tht ellect
ol redlant heel from the sun.

• Tum oil your con,uttr with it'1 not in lilt.

Buckeye Rural Electric·
"
Cooperative, Inc.
5459 St. Rt. 217, Willow Wood, OH • 1-866-252-4811
St. Rt. 325, Rio Grande, OH • 800-231-2732

�•

j

•

•..

•

NATION•

The Daily Sentinel

WoRLD

Page.A2
Wednesday, August 8,

2007

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NORMANDY, England
Britain's.health and safety agency
said Tuesday there was a strong
probability that a foot-and-mouth
outbreak in southern England
originated at a vaccine lab and
was spread by human movement.
The outbreak was discovered on
a farm just four miles from the
Pirbright vaccine laboratory,
which is shared by the government's Institute for Animal
Health, or IAH, and a private
pharmaceuticai company, Merial
Animal Health, the British arm of
Duluth, Ga.-based Merial Ltd.
There is a "real possibility" the
disease was spread by human
movement, and the possibility it
was transmitted by air or floodwaters was "negligible," the government's Health and Safety
Ellecutive said in the report.
Environment Secretary Hilary
Benn said the report brought
efforts to stop the disease "a· bit
further forward." He said the possibility that the strain had been
released by human movement
would be urgently investigated,
and that footpaths in the protection zone covering two infected
farms would be closed immediately.
The highly contagious disease
can be carried by wind and on the
vehicles and clothes of people
who come into contact with
infected animals.
A group of cows at a second
farm was confirmed to have the
disease Tuesday. Cranes piled cat·
tie carcasses onto trucks and
authorities slightly ellpanded the
protection zone around a second
farm.
Both farms, about 30 miles
southwest of London, were within
the initial two-mile radius protec·
tion zone set up Friday, Benn said.
National · Farmers'
Union
President · Peter Kendall said the
findings would only "add to the
frustration and anger' of farmers.
"I have spoken to many farmers
over the last few days who are
absolutely horrified that tile
source of this outbreak could be

AP photo

British police officers look at a map of Surrey Outside a farm in Normandy, England, Tuesday. Tests confirmed
a second outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease at the farm southwest of London, Britain's Environment
Secretary Hilary Benn said Tuesday, raising fears that the highly contagious virus could devastate ·herds
across southern England. The second batch of cows, tested late Monday, were within the ·initial 3-kilometer
..(2-mile) radius protection zone set up Friday around the farm where a first group of infected cattle was found.
owns the fann where the second
from Pirbri~ht," he.said.
· Merial said it was assessing the infe'cted .herd grared, told B~;itish
· report and would comment on it as Broadcasting Corp. radio Tuesda;Y.
"Now this has set us back agam
soon as possible. The company
had previOusly said it foun~ no and most farmers - and I've been
evidence of a breach in biosecuri- speakinl! to a few- are very, very
scared,' he said, adding that the
ty.
News of a second confirmed infected cows belonged to a feloutbreak fed fears of.a repe11t of low farmer who usc:&lt;! his land.
Piime Minister Gordon Brown
scenes in 200 I ; when 7 million
said
a second report was expected
animals were killed and incinel'lit·
·
ed on pyres, devastating a~cul· as early as Wednesday.
ture ana rural tourism in Bntain. ·· .".The work goes.on to isolate, to
"We were starting to think this contiin, control and eradicate .the
virils had been contained and disease," Brown said after the. ini·
maybe we were going to be get· tial 'report was published.
ting back to normality in a few
Tbe health and safety. agency
weeks," Laurence Matthe:.vs, who . said Me.r ial s~ould not immeiliate-

ly resume production, despite a
pendilig government order for
300,000 doses of a strain-specific
foot-and-mouth vaccine.
"Our 'assessment is that there is
no reason to prevent the Institute
for Animal Health from operating
providing that all the usual biosecurity protocols are followed rigorously. In relation to Merial, we
advise that further work be done
before . any operations involving
live pathogens are restarted," the
health and safety agency's chief
executive Geoffrey·Podger said.
The disease strain was used in
both labs. Merial produced about
10,000 litres of vaccine between

Britain asks U.S. to release 5 British residents
from Guantanamo, U.S. welcomes request
BY

DAVID STRINGER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.\
'

I

LONDON- Britain's new Prime
Minister Gordon Brown asked the
United States on Tuesday to free
five British residents from the military prison at Guantanamo Bay - a
policy reversal that w·as welcomed
by the Bush administration.
·
The United States has been working to reduce the detainee population at Guantanamo with an eye
toward closing the controversial
detention center.
In some cases where a detainee is
likely to be mistreated in their
native country, the Bush administration has been appealing to nations
with respected human rights records
to take the Guantanamo Bay
detainees it does not intend to try in
U.S. military courts.
U.S. officials said Tuesday thl)t
Brown's decision to ask for the
transfer of non-British aationals was
a positive step in broader efforts to
cutback the number of inmates and
eventually shut Guantanamo.
State Department spokesman Sean
McCormack said the British request
was already being reviewed and
encouraged Britain and other
nations to accept more detainees.
"This request is for five," he told
reporters. "If there is a desire for the
U.K. government to look at more
than five, of course we would entertain that, just as we would with any
other country making a request."
of
closing
. Proponents
Guantanamo Bay offered similar
sentiments.
"The UK's decision to accept its
legal residents is an important step
forward," New York-based Human
Rights Watch said in a statement.
"At the same time, Human Rights
Watch continues to urge the UK and
other EU member states to help
resettle other detainees who may not
have a legal claim to residency, but
who cannot return to their home
countries."
Since 2002, the U.S . has transferred about 400 detainees from
Guantanamo to more than two
dozen countries. In some cases,
however, the U.S. has not been able
to transfer the pri soners to their
home countries because it hasn 't
been able to secure the assurances
required by American law that they
would not be mistreated. The State

Department has struggled to find
third co·untries willing to accept
Guantanamo prisoners and able to
provide the legally required assurances.
Tuesday's ·request by Brown's
government contrasts with Tony
Blair's refusal for years to intervene
in many Guantanamo cases. Brown
has been trying to distance himself
from Blair~ particularly in regard
to his predecessor's actions in Iraq.
Blair's government chose only to
secure the release of nine British citizens and one resident who had provided help to British intelligence
services. It refused to intervene in
the plight of other British residents,
saying as recently as March that it
could not help people who were not
citizens.
Foreign Secretary David Miliband
wrote to Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice requesting the
release, the Foreign office said
Tuesday. It said U.S. steps to reduce
the number of detainees at
Guantanamo prompted a review of
the British government's approach.
The men - Saudi Shaker Aamer;
Jordanian Jamil el-Banna, Libyanborn Omar Deghayes, Ethiopian
national Binyam Mohamed and
Algerian Abdennour Sameur - had
qll been granted refugee status,
indefinite leave or ellceptional leave
to remain in Britain before they
were detained, the statement said .
The . government has warned the
men's relatives it expects negotialions to take several months.
McCormack stressed that any
transfers from Guantanamo would
depend on assurances that the
detainees would be secured but not
mistreated.
"We don't want to be the world's
jailers," McCormack said . "At the
same time, we also don't want to see
very dangerous people allowed to
walk the streets freely so they can
pose a threat to our citizens as well
as others."
"We see this as a major change in
the government's position. Prior to
this, they were not calling for the
release of the British resident s,"
said Moazzam Begg , a Briton who
was detained at Guantanamo Bay
for two years before being released
in 2005.
"There are children that have
never seen their fathers. There are
parents who died while their chit -

dren have been locked away," he
said. "But finally there seems to be
some light at the end of a very long
tunnel."
Five Britons were freed in March
2004 and four in January 2005, the
Foreign Office said.
Bisher al-Rawi , a 37-year-old
Iraqi national and British resident,
was released from the camp in April
after five ;Years in detention. But
British officials only took up his
case after it was disclosed he had·
assisted MI5, Britain's domestic spy
agency.
"This change of policy is extremely welcome, espectally if it signals a
bigger change of approach on both
sides of the Atlantic," said James
Welch, legal director of the civil
rights group Liberty. "Surely the
U .S. and U.K. governments need no
further evidence that internment,
kidnap and torture have been completely counterproductive in the
struggle against terrorism."
Britain's Foreign Office said that,
of the five detainees it wants freed,
. only el-Banna has bei!n cleared for
release. The Pentagon ,could not
immediately clarify the status of the
four other men.
Britain will "take all necessary
measures to maintain national security" when the men return, the
Foreign Office said, but refused ' to
say whether they would be subject
to control orders, a form of house
a.rrest used to monitor terrorism suspects.
El-Banna was arrested with alRawi by Gambian authorities. in
November 2002 and transferred to
U.S.
detention,
Amnesty
International said. It said Deghayes
and Aamer were captured in
Pakistan in 2002 .
Aamer had been instrumental at
one point in trying to settle a 2005
hunger strike at the prison, the
human rights group Reprieve said.
Aamer, who speaks fluent English ,
was later placed in solitary confinement when agreements negotiated
with U.S. jailers broke down, said
Cori Crider, a Guantanamo case
worker for Reprieve.
Reprieve says Mohamed was captured in Paki stan in April 2002 and
held in Morocco for 18 months
before being sent to Guantanamo.
Amnesty International said .the circumstances of Sameur's detention
were not immedi ately clear.

Public meetings

July 14 and 25, while IAH conducted a series of small-scale
experiments using fewer than 10
milliliters in each case, the report
said.
The report found no evidence of
any. incidents such as laboratory
spillages or working practices that
could have led to a release of the
strain.
Roger Pride, who runs the farm
near
Godalming ,
southern
England, where the first outbreak
was confmned, said Tuesday his
staff realized there was a problem
when they spotted the cattle were
"off color and drooling."
"For a moment, we couldn't
believe it," he said. "It felt as if
our whole world was turned
upside-down."
The containment process at the
second farm seemed slow and
laborious, as tractors, glimpsed
from behind a thick row of trees,
haphazardly piled carcasses. Once
the pile was .. complete, a .black
crane grabbed the carcasses, one
or two. at a time, and slid them
gently, but quickly, into. a truck
that would haul them off the
premises ·
Britain's Chief Veterinary
Officer Debby Reynolds has said
the strain found in the first herd
matched samples taken during
Britain's 1967 outbreak of foot"
and-niouth disease. The strain had
not been seen in animals for a long
time - but was used to produce ·
vaccines, she said.
.Foot-and-mouth disease affects
cloven-hoofed animals, including
cows, sheep; pigs and goats, but
does not typically affect humans.
The first herd of around 120
cows from a farm in Normandy,
outside Guildford, was slaughtered Saturday after the virus was
identified and confirmed in two
animals, the Department for the
Environment, Food and Rur~tl
Affairs said. It said a total of 199
cows have been culled.
Britain has banned the export of
livestock; meat and milk - a
decision endorsed by the
European Commission.

Productivity rebounds as wage
pressures ease; analysts worry
improvement might be temporary
BY MARTIN CRUfSINOER
1&gt;1' ECONOMICS WRITER

WASHINGTON - The
productivity of American
workers rebounded in the
spring while wage pressures ·
eased, favorable economic
developments that ,analysts
worried might prove only
temporary. ·
The Labor Department
reported Tuesday that worker
efficiency rose at an annual
rate of 1.8 percent in the AprilJune quarter, more than double the 0. 7 percent pace of the
first three months of the year.
· Meanwhile, unit labor costs
rose at a 2.1 percent rate,
marking the second consecutive quarter that wa~e pressures have eased. While higher wages are good for workers, if wages rise too quickly
they can spur unwanted inflation.
Fed policymakers, who
were meeting Tuesday, were
expected to keep interest rate~
unchanged for the mnth consecutive meeting.
On Wall Street, investors
pulled back after a staging a
huge rally on Monday. The
Dow Jones industrial average
waS down 62 points in late
morning tiading.
The
second
quarter
improvements in productivity
and wage pressures were not
viewed as large enough to
convince the central bank that
inflation has been contained.
Analysts noted that for the 12
months ending in June, unit
labor costs are up by 4.5 percent, the highest year-overyear increase in nearly seven
years.
Sal Guatifii, an economist
at BMO Capital Markets, said
the continued wage pressures
would discourage the Fed
from cutting interest rates
unless the · tunnoil in credit
markets · gets significantly
worse. The Fed closelimonitbrs productivity and labor
costs for signals of underlying
inflation pressures.
Productivity, the amount of
output per hour of work, is the
key ingredient for rising living

~

•

standands. As long as productivity is rising at a solid rdte,
the increased output allows
businesses to pay their workers more without having to
boost the cost of their. products, which increases mflation.
The 1.8 percent rise in productivity in the second quarter
was slightly below the 2 perce'nt advance that had been
expected.
The productivity increase
reflected the fact. that overall
economic output, as measured
by the gross domestic product,
jumped sharply in the _spring
to an annual rate of 3.4 percent, the fastest pace in more
than a year and up sharply
from an anemic 0.6 percent
growth rate in the fii'St three
months of the year.
Economists believe that the
continued slump in housing
and the spillover problems in
credit markets will depress
growth for several more
months. They are forecasting
that overall economic gro}Vlh
will slow to around 2.5 percent in the second half of this
year and unemployment will
edge up. The jobless rate rose
in July to 4.6 percent.

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Wednesday, Aug. 8
POMEROY · - Meigs
County Board of Health,
regular meeting, 5 p.m.,
conference room, Meigs
County Health Department.
Thursday, Aug. 9
TUPPERS PLAINS Special meeting of Eastern
Local Board of Education, 8
p.m., administrative conference room, Tuppers Plains,
for the purpose of discussing personnel and other
business as permitted by
law.

Church events
Friday, Aug. 10
LONG BOTIOM
Faith Full Gospel Church,
7 p.m., gospel sing, special
guests "Peace Makers,"
refreshments served.
Sunday, Aug. 12
SHADE - The 83rd
Hayes-Young and Holiday
· School reunion will be held
on the old lioliday School
grounds on .Gilkey Rid~e
Road. A potluck lunch will
be served at I p.m. Friends,
. relatives,
photographs,

genealogy information and
entertainment are welcome.

Clubs and
organizations
Tbursday, Aug. 9
CHESTER Shade
River Lodge will meet at
7:30 p.m. Refreshments.
POMEROY Meigs
Athletic Boosters, 7 p.m. at
the Meigs fieldhouse .
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053, 7 p.m. Meal served at
6:30p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS Fall sports and activity
meeting for parents of students participating in any
fall activity at Eastern High
School, 6:30 p.m., Eastern
High School cafeteria.
TUPPERS PLAINS -The Ladies Aulliliary of the
Tuppers Plains VFW 9053 ·
will meet at 7 p.m.
RACINE
The
Sonshine Circle will meet at
7 p.m. at Bethany Church.
All area women are invited.
Saturday, Aug. 11
BURLINGHAM
Modern Woodmen family
life potluck, 6:30p.m. at the

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

Community Calendar

BRITISH .INVESi'IGATION INDICA'IES VACCINE LAB
IJKEI.Y SOURCE OF FOOT-AND-MOUTH·OUTBRFAK
BY UNDSAY TOLER ·

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

GIRL SCOUT PROJECIS JUDGED
Woodmen Hall. Take COYered dish or dessert to share.
Fish, chicken rolls and
drinks will be provided by
Camp. Frank Gorscak of the
Health Department to talk
on the Pandemic Flu.
·
Thesday, Aug. 14
POMEROY Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce
BusinessMinded Luncheon, noon,
Pomeroy Library, featured
speaker from Holzer Health
Systems, entenainment by
River City Players and a
scene from "Seussical The
Musical," .RSVP 992-5005,
catered by Hometown
Market.
0

Other events
Friday, Aug. 10
POMEROY - Partners
in Care Caregiver Support
Group, noon, at the Meigs
Senior Center conference
room. Guest speakers will
be 'Paula Allen, OT, and
Melissa Colwell, COTA.
Topic of discussion will be
Memory
Enhancement.
Refreshments. Everyone is
welcome. For more information contact Kathy
McDaniel at 992-2161.

MIDDLEPOKI'- Judging
of Girl Scout projects to be
exhibited nellt week at the
Meigs County Fair was
recently completed at the
Middleport Church of Christ
Family Life Center. .
Judging results, by class,
were:
Life SkiDs
Junior: Valerie Wolfe,
Personal Sewing, grand
champion; Ashley Deem,
Personal
Cane
and
Development,
. reserve,
Abi~ai£ Houser, Personal
Sewmg, honorable mention.
Valerie Wolfe, canning, A;
Lindsey Putman, Mise
· Sewing, A; Lindsey Putman,
Canning, A; Brooke Johnson,
Child · Care, B; Katelyn
Ginther, Animal Care, B;
Kirruny Ginther, Animal care.

B.

Troop 1204, Health and
Safety, B..
Cadette: Darci Bissell,
Personal Sewing, A, grand
champion; Whitney Putm.aq,
reserve champion; Ashley
Bateman Lee, Animal Care,
honorable mention. Ravenne
Reed, Misc. Sewing, B.
Senior: Ericka Cogar,
Dehydration, B.
Communications
·Junior: Lindsey Putman,
Scrapbook, grand champion;
Alyssa Cremeans, reserve;
. Lindsey Putman, visual com-.
rnunication, honorable men-

tion. Brooke Johnson,
Scrapbook, B; Ashley Deem,
scrapbook, B.
"
Cadettes: Darci Bissell,
scrapbook, grand champion;
Ashley Bateman-Lee, creative
writing, reserve. Catherine
Grady, Creative Writing, B.
The Arts
Junior: Alyssa Cremeans,
grand champion; Ashley
Deem, reserve.
Group-Troop 1204, grand
champion.
Cadette: Whitney Putman,
grand champion; Holly
McGrath, reserve; Holly
McGrath, honorable mention.
·Custolm and Traditions
Junior: Abigail Houser,
grand champion; LindseY.
Putman, reserve; Abigatl
Houser, honorable mention.
Group: Troop 1276,grand
champion; Troop 1204reserve.
Cadette: Darci Bissen,
grand champion.
Science and Beyond
Junior: Valerie Wolfe, grand
champion, Mellican Jumping
Beans; Alyssa Cremeans, Trip
diary, reserve; Lindsey
Putman, Basket Weaving;
reserve champion; Ashley
Deem, honorable mention.
Group:
Troop 1204Carpentry, grand champion;
Troop 1204, Recycling,
reserve.
Cadette: Holly McGrath,

Carpentry, shelf, grand champion;
Holly
McGrath,
Recyling, reserve. Ashle)
Bateman Lee, science ellperiment, honorable mention.
Senior: Ericka Cogar, Baby
Gift, grand cham~on .
Girl Scout l'rogrdiD
Junior: Ashley Deem, grand
champion, Girl Scout Ways
and Traditions; Valerie Wolfe,
Camping, reserve. Group:
Troop 1204, National activities-grand
champion;
Camping-reserve.
Cadene/Senior Troop 1254:
Girl Scout Ways, grand champion; Troop 1208, National
Activities, reserve.
Culinary
Juniolrs: Abigail Houser,
grand champion ; Brooke
Jolu'Ison, reserve; and Abigail
Houser, honorable merition.
Ashley Deem, Abigail
Houser, A's. Kimmy Ginther
.and Katelyn Ginther, B's.
Cadette: Whitney Pubnan,
grand champion; Darci
Bissell, reserve; and Holly
McGrath, honorable mention.
Ravenne Reed, Catherine
Grady, All A's. .
Senior: Ericka Cogar, grand
champion.
Overall
Outstanding
Exhibitors: Valerie Wolfe,
Junior; Darci Bissell and
Whitney Putman, Cadette,
Ericka Cogar. Senior. Each
girl was awarded more than
two grand champion ribbons.

Rutland woman named manager
of an Athens Peoples Bank
St. Paul United Methodist Women meet
ATHENS Peoples
· Bank recently announced
; the promotion of Sherry
Robinson to office manager
. of its 801 East State Street
office in Athens.
Robinson joined Peoples
Bank in ~002 and was most
· recently a personal banker
· in Peoples' Rutland office.
office
manager,
. As
. Robinson focuses on clients
banking, insurance 'and
. investment needs as well as
assisting in the personal
growth and development of
associates.
"Sherry's ellperience in
the financial services industry is an asset to Peoples,"
stated Larry Holdren, president of Retail and Banking

advantage to fulfilling our
client's needs."
Sherry graduated from
Meigs High School and is
actively involved with the
Ladies Missionary Group at
Hysell Run Community
Church where she also
serves as youth leader and
. church secretary. She
resides in Rutland .
Clients interested in
more information concerning Peoples' products and
services may contact
Robinson at the East State
Street (Athens Mall) office
by calling (740) 597-2006.
Sherry Robinson
Peoples Bank also . offers
Division at Peoples Bank. convenient sales offices on
"Her enthusiasm and West Union Stre~t arid
knowledge will be an added Court Street.

TUPPERS PLAINS layette shower for Olivia
Several fall activities were Grace Householder at the
announced during a recent Church on at 6 p.m. on Aug.
meeting of the Tuppers Plains 22. On Sunday Sept. 16 there
St. Paul United Methodist will be a slide show called
Women held at the church.
Blessing of the Children
Judy Kennedy read a arti- showing pictures of the chilcle on Prayer Shaws, Rise, dren taken during Bible
Shine and Glorify God, 311d school, and on Sept 22 will
Connie Rankin showed a pur- be the annual day of leaderple shaw that was given to ship. On Aug, 26 at 6 p.m.
her by the Mission team that there will be an ice cream
spent a week in the church social at the Church shelter
basement while worlting in house with special music.
the county. A pancake breakIt was noted that new offifast and bargam table will be cers will be elected at the
held in the chweh basement September meeting and that
on Nov.IO. There will be a in October the world thank

offering would be taken. A
birthday card was signed for
Celiz Efren of Someton, Ariz.
who was chosen for the birthday calendar book.
Attending the meeting
were Joanna Weaver, Barb
Roush, Connie and Mary
Rankin, Betty Cheviler, Terri
Soulsby, Anna Rice, Sharon
Louks, Kim Householder,
and Judy Kennedy.
President Joanna Weaver
opened the meeting with a
prayer followed with everyone reading the UMW ·
Litany.

Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperad.ve Issues•••

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Sneaky former in-law needs to go
no longer allowed in your The University of Iowa
home when you are not pre- Medical Center (where I
AND MARCY SuaAR
sent. Period. That bridge is was diagnosed) has good
at:
Dear Annie: Recently, I burned.
information
let my ex-husband's mothDear Annie: My mother- www.uihealthcare .com
. er, "Gladys," watch my in-law read the column . (search for fructose). The
... Michigan U.S. Dept. of Agriculture
daughter for the weekend. from
She hasn't been allowed to Grandmother,"
whose (USDA) has a publication
do this for quite some time granddaughter was diag- ·online entitled "Sugar
due to problems we had nosed with fructose intoler- Content
in
Selected
with her and her other ance. When our daughter Foods," which is available
grandchildren .
was 3 months old, she had through the search box at
While here, Gladys some constipation, and the www.fnic.nal.usda.gov.
grilled my daughter with pediatrician recommended
Wisconsin: We have a
questions about me, my com syrup be added to her daughter who is allergic to
current husband and other formula to stimula~ her eggs, and the Food Allergy
family members. She has a system. The corn syrup &amp; Anaphylaxis Network
history of backstabbing me. threw her into liver and (foodallergy.org) has been
She is very sneaky. While kidney failure. The won-· very helpful. It's $30 for, a
in my home, she and her derful doctors at the one-year membership and
oldest son hacked into my Cleveland Clinic discov- well worth it.
e-mail account, read all of ered she had Hereditary
Boston: I found my local
my mail and changed my Fructose ~ntolerance and natural food stores or boupassword. Luckily, I had saved he~ hfe.
.
tique markets to be incredimy laptop with me and was . There IS a lot ~f cooking bly helpful (the staff is
able to catch it before they , •'!volved ~1th th1s t~pe of familiar with different
did too much damage.
d1et, but 11 can easily be dietary needs), and foods
Gladys got into my managed .. That grandmoth- marked "natural" at regular
account by calling my ~r can ~md a wealth. of grocery stores often do not
mother and innocently ask- mformatlon
regardmg contain added fructose or
ing for her maiden name, rec1pes, .eating out, etc., at sucrose.
which was the "question" www.hfunfo.proboards42.c
Illinois: The best website
my account asked to help om. As with any informa- I've found is kidswithme remember my pass- tion, you should always foodallergies.org. T,lle supword. Please let your read- check with your own doctor portjorums there are filled
ers know not to use some- before followmg any witli
information
on
. thing so simple to discover. dietary advice. .
recipes, negotiating with
: I feel I can never trust
My daughter 1s now 3 and insurance companies, pickGladys again. Is there some doing great. She's a ~eauti - ing a great doctor, explainlaw I can mention to scare ful, smart ball of f1re. ing diet restrictions to famher so she won't do this K.G.
ily members, schools , day
. again? -Maine
Dear K.G.: Thanks . so care centers and so on. It
· Dear
Maine: much for the useful mlor- has been a lifeline for my
; Discovering your password mation. Our reader.s ':"ere family.
• and opening your e-mail is eager to help "Mtchtgan · Annie's Mailbox is writ·
: the equivalent of eaves- Grandma" and ?ffered a ten by. Kathy Mitchell and
dropping on your phone plethora of webs1tes. Read Marcy Sugar, longtime
calls. It's not nice, but no on:
editors of the Ann Landers
one is going to arrest her. If
From Iowa: I was diag- column. Please e-mail
Gladys had done real dam- nosed
with
Dieta~y your questions to annies. age-taken money from your Fructose Intolerance tn mailbox@comcast.net, or
bank account, for example, 2005 and had to learn a new write to: Annie's Mailbox,
· then she would be breaking way of eating, but it freed P.O. Box 118190, Chicago,
: the law. First, change your me from being. almost IL606ll. Tofindoutmore
' password and make the house-bound w1th mtestmal about Annie's Mailbox,
"clue" more cryptic, so problems. There are two and read features by other
: only you will understand it. types:
"Dietary" and Creators Syndicate writers
· In fact, you should update "Hereditary"
Fructose and cartoonists, visit the
your password frequently. Intolerance, the latter caus- Creators Syndicate Web
Then tell G)adys that she is ing many more problems. page at www.creators.com. ·
BY KATHY MITCHELL

'

for Wednesday thru Friday
August 8th·10th
Co-op members are asked to conserve
electric power. especially between the hoors
of 3-7 p.m., due to the heat wave predicted
to settle over the Ohio River Valley. There is no
shortage of electricity foreseen. However. consumers mi!llt be
charged a higher demand rate tf a new peak of record is set!

.

To help avoid a peak, BREC
recommends the following:
• Set air conditioning thermostats higher 10 reduce load
on system

• Don1 run pool or bot lub p~ in lhalft11110on and
early tvening. •

• Don1 hall up your hDIIII by 111lng the stove •d cwan.
This will CIUI8 yoiW air conditioner to work hll'llar.

• Close curtains and window blinds to reduce tht ellect
ol redlant heel from the sun.

• Tum oil your con,uttr with it'1 not in lilt.

Buckeye Rural Electric·
"
Cooperative, Inc.
5459 St. Rt. 217, Willow Wood, OH • 1-866-252-4811
St. Rt. 325, Rio Grande, OH • 800-231-2732

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

Obituaries

Wednesday, August 8, 2007•

Overturning
Roe
v.
Wade
ends
the
victimization
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exerdse 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 ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

time
'

Blues Bashfocus uus on music

Celebrated Newsweek
columnist Anna Quindlen
recently mentioned a
YouTube video abour a
question that falls into a
common abortion trap. The
filmmaker
behind
"Libertyville
Abortion
Demonstration" asks pro·
lifers how much jail time
women who seek abortions
should receive if Roe v.
Wade were to be overturned.
What people who a$k
this question fail to understan&lt;;! is what most abortion
opponents actually want to stop the additional victimization of women. They
already are victimized by
abortion. Women are often
pressured into it by desper·
ate circumstances and suffer in silence for years after
their decision.
The question feeds into
the misconcllption that the
United States will descend
into a state of vigilante
abortions. This fantasy is
complete with headlines
trumpeting a new world of
oppression as American
women are carted off to jail
in their most despondent
hours.

,
.

Kathryn

Lopez

In reality, the Supreme
Court, if it overturned the
landmark decision, would
put the abortion decision in
the hands of the people,
where it should bave been
all along. Federalism will
reign, as each state will
decide for itself what to do.
(The 1973 Supreme Court
decision ruled that state
bans on first- and' secondtrimester abortions were
unconstitutional.)
If Roe v. Wade is overturned, there will be a barrage of questions, hashed
out state by state: Exactly
what type of abortion will
be legal? Should there be
. an outright ban? Could
women be hit with severe
sentences for trying to get
an abortion?
In pre-Roe New York
State, as it happens,

Dear Editor:
I attended the Pomeroy .Village Council meeting the
week of the Pomeroy Blues and Jazz Bash to ask if there
had been a pol,icy put in place for events being held on the , 1
parking lot.
·
. Mayor Musser stated that they did not !lave a policy in
place but, did say that they had made some changes concerning this year's event. After attending the bash on
Friday and Saturday, it was very evident that there were
major changes made, and all to the good. It seemed that this
year's event was centered around music and not alcohol.
The huge inflatable beer bottles were not at the entrance
and the streets were not filled with immoral acts, but with
those who were enjoying good music. .
Pomeroy police officers were busy checking on opened
bottles and even arresting and ticketing a few. These offi·
cers worked hard to keep everyone as safe as possible.
·Both nights were very well attended. This year's event was
proof that you can have a good time and not be out of con·
trol.
On behalf of hundreds of residents, our appreciation to
the Pomeroy Blues and Jazz committee, Mayor Musser and
Village Council, and to the Pomeroy Police Department.
Events on the parking lot are wonderful and I along with
others enjoy them when they are kept under control as this
one was.
· Brendd Barnhart
Pomeroy ·

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Religious services to
open Meigs County Fair
POMEROY - The Meigs County Ministerial
·Association will conduct a songfest at 7:30 p.m. Sunday in
front of the grandstand as a special feature of the opening
of the I 44th Meigs County Fair.
· There will be special music by Mrs. Kerry Wood who
plays violin, solos b¥ Joann Robinson and Roy Jenkins, followed by group singing. Leaders for the service are the
Rev. Bob and Joarm Robinson.
·

Torres

frOm PageA1
Committee of the Bureau of
Children with Medical
Handicaps and her four
years as public health commissioner for Meigs County
to ensure that clients receive
the best possible care.
Furthermore, to enhance
the capabilities of caregivers, she also teaches personal care to homecare
nurse's aides. The Meigs
County Council on Aging is
a nonprofit corporation that
provides health and independence-oriented services
to senior citizens in the
Meigs County area. For
more information visit
http:/lwww.meigsseniors.co

mi.

Associ;ltion and the Health
Commission ·of Meigs
County. She has received
the Ohio State Award for
Lifetime Achievement from
the March of Dimes and
was also awarded the Ohio
State Senior Citizens Hall
of Fame Award, one of only
three winners within the
past 30 years.
The
mission
of
Cambridge Who's Who is to
ensure that Cambridge
members receive recos.ni·
tion, support and credibility
to advance their careers.
Cambridge Who's Who is
also committed to delivering
the highest quality networking resource for job recruitment, career enhancement
and new business development. See who's making
news and how Cambridjle
Who's Who is making a difference at our news blog:
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logs pot. coni.
Cambridge Who's Who
members have exclusive
access to the biographical
information of more than
200,000 successful executives, professionals and
entrepreneurs
at
http: l/www.cambridgewhoswho.com, where they
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via the Cambridge Who's
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Cambridge Who's Who
members to reach out when
they have a business need or
opportunity as well as
receive information on
exciting new ventures.

Torres earned a master's
degree in administration of
adult educatio!' and graduated Magna Cum Laude from
Florida
International
University, a bachelor of arts
in psychology from florida
International University, a
bachelor of science in nursing
from
Florida
International University and
a nursing diploma from .the
Kings County Hospital
Center School of Nursing.
She is affiliated with
Sigma Theta Tau, the Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
the Retired Senior Volunteer
Program, the Meigs County
Consonium, the Tri-County
Tobacco Coalition, the
International
GALLIPOLIS - Ruth L. Carter, 75, of Oallipolis, died Florida
University
Alumni
1\tesday, Aug. 7, 2007, at her residence, surrouniled by her
·
loving family.
She was born Feb. 19, 1932, in Gallia County, daughter
The EMS crew took the
of the late Homer and Aldeth Howard Wood.
l r m s-· boy to Pleasant Valley
In addition to her parents, she was preceded by a sister,
Hospital, where he was pro·
Dorothy Aspel; a brother, Tom White; and a son-in-law,
from
Page
A
1
nounced dead.
.
Richard Evans.
Services for Jeremy
Ruth was a homemaker, and a wonderful wife and moth·
er. She also worked as office manager for many years in her they immediately began Stump wwere beld Thesday
husband's plumbing business.
doing CPR and first aid until in · the Foglesong·Tucker
She is survived by her husband, Donald "Don" Carter, emergency personnel from Funeral Home at Mason.
whom she married on June 17, 1951, in El Paso, Texas; Mason County Emergency Burial was in Sunrise
thre~ daughters, Debbie Evans of Westerville, Yvette Medical Services arrived.
Memorial Gardens.
(Frank) Dantonio of Westerville, and Robin (Michael)
Saum of Bidwell; four grandchildren, Ross and Katelyn
Dantonio, and Jared and Annie Saum; a sister, Linda
Dalton was traveling in
Hensley of Gallipolis; a brother, Robert Wood of Cllnal
resembled the one used in
Winchester; and numerous brothers and sisters-i.n-law,
the truck robbery.
·
nieces, nephews and other family and friends.
Proffitt said when arrested
from PageA1
Services will be I0 a.m. Friday, Aug. 10, 2007, at the
a shirt matching the shirt
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home, with the Rev. John
Dalton was allegedly wear·
Wood officiating. Burial will follow in Salem Cemetery. robbed of around $3,000 in ing in the surveillance video
Friends may call at the funeral home on Thursday, Aug. 9, checks and cash from a cash at the Par Mar Store shortly
.bag resting inside the truck's before the robbery was
2007, from 6 to 8 p.m.
In lieu ,of flowers, contributions can be made to Holzer cab. Thanks to witnesses and found in Dalton's possesa surveillance tape, a descrip- sion. Proffitt added witnessHospice 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
To send condolences, visit www.timeformemory.com/whw. tion of the suspect and get- es have also identified
away vehicle was made pu~ Dalton as being the individlie. Apparently several sight· ual in the Par Mar Store the
ings of the alledged vehicle day of the robbery.
had .been reported in the
In all, II businesses had
county since the robbery.
either checks or cash in the
Pomeroy Chief of Police stolen cash bag taken from
Mark E. Proffitt said Dalton the Miller Lite truck. At the
was arrested yesterday at bond hearing , Story told
124 Mart on Ohio 7 by Dalton he was to have no
the
PORTLAND - Douglas Eugene Freeman, 40, Portland,
the
Meigs
County Sheriff's contact with the following
died at the Riverside Methodist Hospital on Friday, Aug. 6,
'2007. Services will be held at II a.m. on Saturday, Aug. II, Office during one of those stores: TNT Pit Stop,
at the Fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Friends may call sightings when employees Mi4dleport Speedway, 124.
from 6-8 p.m. on Friday, Aug. 10, at the funeral home. A reported "suspicious behav- Mart, Riverside Foodsho~,
ior" and noted the vehicle R&amp;J Food Shop, Bun s
full obituary will run later in the week.

Ruth L carter

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Conf

Robbery

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Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. A// letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not pers, ·a/ities. Letters of
Heard anything about that
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept· new Harry Potter book? Oh
ed for publication.
yeah, I forgot, that's all
we've heard about for three
months. Quick, name another book published in the last
three months. Whoops,
(USPS 213-960)
times up, we all lose. '
Reader Services .
Ohio Valley Publishing
Roughly 8.5 million
Co.
Correction Polley
copies of "Harry Potter and
Published every afternoon, Monday
Our mai!'l concern in all stories Is to
the Deathly Hallows" were
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
be accurate. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohlo.
sold in the first 24 hours,
Second-class
which means an impressive
In a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
292 million Americans did992-2156.
Member: The Associated Press· and
n't buy a copy:
the Ohio Newspaper ASsociation.
Postmaster:
Send
address
correc·
The common wisdom is
Our main number Is
tlons to The Daily Sentinel, 1H Court
that
it's a good thing
(740) 992-2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
because
children are readDepartment extensions are:
ing. OK, finfY. But wouldn't
Subscription Rates
the
world be a better place if
By carrier or motor route
News
we
could
get more adults to
One month
'10.27
Editor: Cha~ene Hoeflich. Ext. 12
read?
One year
'115.84
Dally
50'
"Oh," you say. "You're
Reporter. Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Senior Citizen rates
playing with statistics.
Reporter. Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
One month "
'10.27
Babies and young children
'103.90
One year
_
don't
buy books, and a lot of
SWscriber&amp; should romit in a&lt;Wanoo
Advertising
people
wouldn't be interestd"""' to tho Daily SerniM. No subOutside Sales: Dave Harris. Ext. 15
ed in Harry Potter." OK.
scriplion by mall permitted in areas
Outllde Sales: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home carrier service is ava/1Let's say half the popul11tion
CtassJCirc.: Judy Clar1&lt;. Ext. 10
able.
wasn't in the market for the
new Harry Potter book. That
Mall Subscription
means
an impressive 142
General Manager
tnalde Meigs County
million
Americans didn't
Charlene Hoeflich , Ext. 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
buy it. Let's say two people
26 Weeks
'64.20
52
Wee~s
'
12].11
read
each copy, a huge
E-mail:
improvement
- 134 million
newsOmydaifysentinel .com
Outside Meigs County
Americans didn't read it.
13 Weeks
'53.55
Any way you cut it, only
Web:
26 Weeks
'107.10
10 percent of the reading
52 Weeks
'214.21
www.myllaiiysen1inel.com
public read the best-selling

Deaths

Harry Potter and the Magical Numbers

Tl)e Daily Sentinel

POMEROY- Terry Douglas Michael; Sr., 59. Pomeroy,
passed away on Aug . 4, 2007, at his residence.
Hj: was born on Nov. 27, 1947, in Pomeroy, son of
Herman Michael and the late Maxine Michael. He was a
veteran of the U.S. Army. He was employed as an auto
. body repairman.
.
In addition to his Mother, he was. preceded by broth·
ers, Tim, Raymond and Thomas Michael, and a sister,
Bonnie Michael
He is survived by his wife, Karen Michael, Pomeroy; and
children, Terry (Amy) Michael, Pomeroy; Darrell Michael,
Middleport; Sherry (Darrell) Sands, Hartford, W.Va.; Katl)y
(Scott) Grueser, Mason, W.Va.; Jeremy Michael, Rutland;
Derek (Stacy) Michael, Pomeroy; Amy McKinney, Racine;
Crystal (Mark) Harrison, Bidwell; Angel McKinney, West
Columbia, W.Va.; his father, Herman Michael of Pomeroy,
a brother, Larry (Erma) Michael of Florida, a sister, Darlene
(Bill) Davidson of Florida, and several nieces and nephews.
Graveside service will be held at ll a.m. on Friday,
Aug . 10, 2007 , at Rocksprings Cemetery, Pomeroy.
Officiating will be Larry Lemley. Friends may call on
Thursday, Aug. 9, from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Pomeroy Chapel
of Fisher Funeral Home.
• On-line condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

'i ~ \

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LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

.Teny Douglas Michael

'

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, Aug. 8, the 220th day of 2007. There
are 145 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On Aug: 8, 1974, President Richard M. Nixon announced he
would resign following damaging new revelations in the
Watergate scandal.
On this date:
In 1876, Thomas A. Edison received a patent for his mimeograph.
In !9(fl, I 00 years ago, jazz musician, composer and bandleader Benny Carter was born in New York.
_
Thought for Today: "Man adjusts to what he should not; he
is unable to adjust to what he should." - Jean Toomer,
African-American author-poet (1894-1967).

POMEROY - Bryan Lee Yonker, 59, Pomeroy, passed
away on August 5, 2007, at the Charleston Area Medical
Center in Charleston, W.Va.
He was born on Aug. 13, 1947, in Mason, W.Va., son of
Doris Grinstead Yonker and the late Charles Yonker. He
was employed by Foote Mineral and American Alloy as a
lab and storeroom worker. He was a member of the
flatwoods United Methodist Church, the Meigs County
IKES and a life member of the National Rifle Association.
In addition to his father, he was preceded by his fatherin-law, Stanley Johnson.
He is survived by his wife, Linda Yonker of Pomeroy; his
children, Derek (Paula) Yonker, Letart, W.Va., and Corey
Yonker, P9meroy; his mother, Doris Yonker of New Haven,
W.Va. ; brothers: Charles Yonker, Maryland, Nathan
·(Michelle) Yonker, New Haven; a ·sister, Sonya (Larry)
Roush of New Haven; his mother-in-law, Betty Johnson of
Racine; brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law, Debbie and
John Powell, Syracuse, Greg and Bev Johnson, Pomeroy,
and Darrell Johnson of Racine ; and several nieces,
nephews, great nieces and great nephews.
Servjces will be held at II a.m. on Thursday, Aug. 9,
2007, at the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home with
Rev. Duane Stutler officiating, and burial will be in Meigs
Memory Gardens.
·
Friends may call from 6-9 p.m. on Wednesday at the
funeral home . On-line condolences may be sent to
www.fisherfuneralhomes.com

Jim
Mullen

book of all time. Now imagine 1a regular best seller, a
book that only sells a million copies, meanmg a
whopping 299 million
Americans didn't buy it.
You can get on the New
York Times best-seller list if
your · book sells roughly
15,000 copies in a week:
Beyonce, Justip Timberlake,
Jay-Z and many other music
stars regularly sell 100,000
COs a week. At roughly the
same price as the discount
price you'd pay for the kind
of book you'd find in a grocery store.
Reporters milke a big deal
about how many copies
Harry Potter has sold, about
the long lines at the bookstores, about how Harry
Potter books have kids reading again. I say, prove it.
There are long lines
around the bookstores
because there are so few
bookstores left. Look in the

yellow pages and see how one youngster asked me.
many bookstores there are "Mom bought me a copy at ·
in your town. Now look and the grocery store."
see how many beauty par- · Ah, yes, that temple of
tors there are. How many learning, the grocery store. ,
tattoo parlors? How many
"Was it squeezed in •
nail salons? How many · between 'Treasure Island'
Gaps, how many Gap Kids, and 'Doctor Dolittle '?" I
how many jewelry stores asked.
selling gold chains? Yeah,
"What're those?"
reading's back. Millions of
"Other great books for
kids have actually read the kids."
instructions on how to hook
"Ne.ver heard of 'em. The
up the latest video-game store only sells one book. ·
console into their computer. Harry Potter. ls 'Treasure
My small-town lil;lrary Island' a Harry Potter book? ,
splurged and got one copy 1 don't think so, I've read ·
of the new Harry Potter them all."
book. I thought they were
"How about Tom Swift or
crazy. Get 20 copies. We the Hardy Boys?"
want to get kids in the
library, so they can see that
"I don't know who they
it's not some spooky place are, Mister. Besides, my .
where you can't talk but a Mom says I can't join any
playground for the mind. gang's until I'm 16."
For a month there was a life"I'm talking about books, .
size cutout of Harry Potter all the books you voracious
standing in the corner of the young readers are going to
Young Adult section that start reading now that
counted down the days until you've finished Harry
the book appeared.
Potter."
Finally, the big, publicity"Is a voracious a
filled day arrived. The new dinosaur?"
Harry Potter was on the
"Apparently, he is."
shelf. After it sat there for
(Jim Mullen is the author of
three days, untouched. I "It Takes a Vr//age Idiot:
checked it out. It is now Complicating the Simple ·
back in the library, gathering Life" and "Baby's First
dust again.
Tanoo. " You can reach him at
"Why go to the library?" jim_mullen @myway.com.)

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

FAMILY MEDICINE

Local Briefs

Bry~n Yonker

•

women who had abortions Jos.eph W. Dellapenna, and
were considered, according according to other histori-"
to the letter of the law, ans, law enforcement 'took '
criminals. (This was not aim at the "do no harm"
the case in every state.) community - the doctors .
But in practice - in the who performed abortions. ,
interest of shutting down And even then, "enforce- .
doctors who perform abor- meilt in the United States
tions - women would cus- focused on the revocation,
tomarily get immunity of medical licenses:· in the
from criminal prosecution 1930s, with an uptick in
if they testified against the prosecutions in the 1940s ,
abortionists. It was practi, and 1950s.
As public opinion turns.
cal and it was compassiontoward
restrictions on ·
ate.
History suggests that abortion, abortion support·
when tough anti -abortion ers hope they can scare ·
. laws exist, desperate Americans into opposing ·.
women aren't rushed to the us crazy pro-lifers. The
slammer. If you don't trust truth is, though, ·we're not
whack-job pro-lifers like all ideologues marching
me, look at the historical with pictu(es of babies ~
record. Abortil;&gt;n was ille- killed in the land of Roe v.;
gal in the United States Wade. We know women
prior to the Supreme who have had abortions.
Court's 1973 ruling; and Some pro-lifers have . had ,
,women weren't being them. We know what haprushed to jail i.n droves for pens to a woman, to a couseeking abortions. Women ple and to the child. What
weren't
prosecuted we don't want is further
because the law gj:nerally victimization.
wasn't after them to begin
(Kathryn Lope z is the ·
with.
'
editor of National Review ,
According to "Dispelling Online (www.nationalre- ·
the Myths of Abortion view. com). She can be con(Carolina tacted at klopez@national·
History"
Academic Press, 2006) by review. com.)

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www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

Douglas Eugene Freeman

Care of dog bite can prevent
wound infection and rabies
Question: A friend of animal bite is rabies. Rabies
mine got bitten by her dog is a viral infection that, once
recently. She didn't go to symptoms have begun, is
the doctor because it' was virtually always fatal . It is
her dog and she didn 't most often spread from a
think the bite was very bad. rabid animal to a human
She got a terrible infection through infected saliva
and ended up in the hospi- when the human is bitten.
tal. She is OK now, but That's why you should
could you discuss care of a always find out if the anidog b1te please so others mal that bit you is up to date
won't make the mistake on its rabies shots. If not,
you should contact your
that she did?
Answer: There are over 4 doctor or the county health
million animal bites in the department for advice. They
United States annually. may want to quarantine the
About 80 to 90 percent of animal and/or instruct you
them are from dogs. While to get immune globulin and
most people recover fully rabies vaccine.
Immune globulin contains
from dog bites, there are
about a dozen dog bite fatal· some "ready to go" antibodities every year. Certain ies to rabies from other
breeds are · more likely to humans who have a high
bite, but any dog will bite if antibody count against this
it is provoked, feels threat- disease. This will be folened or is trained to be lowed by the rabies vaccine,
which stimulates your own
aggressive.
While most dog bites body to produce rabies antiwill heal well with good bodieS. The rabies vaccine
cleansing after the bite, is a series of five shots that
about 20 percent of the are given at specific intertime they become infected, vals. While you may have
and some infections can be heard stori~s about having
very severe as your friend to get shots "in your stomfound out. When a dog ach," the modem vaccine is
bites, it causes puncture given in your arm - like a
wounds to the skin as well flu shot - and is usually
as a "crush type" injury to just as painless.
Of course, the best treatdeeper tissues.
A good cleansing should ment for a dog bite is pre· ·
start with an immediate vention. Do not approach
washing of the entire area of strange dogs. Do not bother
the bite with soap and water. animals who are eating or
A bandage should" then be sleeping. Also, mother dogs
applied to keep the wound with puppies are very proarea clean. If the punctures tective of their litters and
are deep, then a v1sit to the should be left alone. If you
emergency department of a are startled by a dog, do not
local hospital or an urgent scream or run as this will
care center is in order. likely increase the dog's
There, the deep wounds can aggression.
be irri$ated under local
Family Medicine® is a
anesthetiC.
we~kly
column. 1b submit
People with deep wounds ·
are usually started on an qu11dom, write to Martlul
antibiotic to prevent infec· A. Simpson, D.O'J. M.B.A.,
tion. The wounds are not Ohio UnlversitJ l:oUifl of
sutured, but left to heal Ost10pathic Midicin1, P.O.
"from the bottom up." The Box 110, Athens, Ohio
exception to this is dog bites 45101, or via •·mail to
to the face. These are usual· readerquistions@/amily·
ly cleaned very well and medicinenew1.org. Medical
sutured to prevent excessive i'lfo17ltlltion in thil column
scarring. Older ~ople and is provld#d as an educa·
those with certain medical donal service only. It do11
conditions - diabetes, can· not repkue the/uilgment of
cer or other immunosup· your persona physicltm,
pressive illnesses - should who should be relied on
always contact their physi· to diagnose . and recoriJ·
cian, even if the injury is not mend treatment for any
severe, because these medical conditions. Past
groups have an increased columns are available
online at www,familymetfi·
risk for infection.
Another concern with any cinenews.org.
Party Barn, Pomeroy Exxon
and the Miller Lite truck.
Proffitt noted other persons of interest from the
truck robbery may be facing
charges.
Proffitt said Pomeroy
Patrolmen ,Ronnie Spaun
and Adam Holcomb had
been working on the case
with help from tips reported
to the Meigs County
She~iff's Office. Sheriff
Robert Beegle and Deputies
Bryan Holman and Rick
Patterson made the arrest at
124 Mart with Proffitt,
Spaun and Holcomb also on
the scene.

"This was totally a joint
effort between law enforcement agencies in the county
and by working together we
were able to solve this
case," Proffitt said before
also thanking the sheriff's
office. "The citizens of
Pomeroy shouldn't have to
put up with this type of
hehav10r and we're doing
·everything we can to solve
these types ef crimes."
An unspecified amount of
cash was recovered on
Dalton according to Proffitt
who ~added Dalton is on
felony probation for p-and
larceny in West Virgima.

•......c. IC .A...,-A.M
And

BREC
from PageA1

avoid heat buildup, or
replace bulbs in lamps and
ceilings with energy-saving
and cool compact fluorescent lights (CFLs).
BREC members enrollc:d
in the water heater load control program can expect
operation of the radio switches during peak periods this
week, according to Oden,

steps to reduce the peak and .
their bills:
• Bump up air conditioner
thermostat settings a few
degrees, especially during
peak times of3 to 7 p.m. Use
ceiling or portable fans to
circulate air inside the home.
~I'N C.&lt;~,j&gt;
• Don't run swimming
"
, J'o
~
pool or hot tub pumps in the
~
:.. ..-\
d
~
1.
;t&gt;
afternoon or early evening.
• Avoid using your oven
~ ).\"-~~ f$
to bake. This heats inside air
--·*----···-·
PfkFOR.MINfi .-\KTS Ctlfl'l E
and causes air conditioning .
The Unsinkable
units to work harder.
• Close curtains and winMolly Brown
dow blinds to reduce the
August 17 &amp; 18, 8 pm
effect of radiant heat from
Captain Fantastic
the sun.
August 25 &amp; 26
• Turn off all electric appliDucktona, SeJII. 8
ances when not in use, espe4th Prize:
cially computers and TV s.
2 Leather Recliners
• Much of the energy used
Donated by:
by conventional light bulbs
Corbin &amp; Snyder Furniture
produces waste heat. Keep
Box Office: 428 21\d Ave.
indoor lighting to a miniGallipolis,
OH (740) 446-ARTS
mum when possible to

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. I

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

Obituaries

Wednesday, August 8, 2007•

Overturning
Roe
v.
Wade
ends
the
victimization
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exerdse 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 ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

time
'

Blues Bashfocus uus on music

Celebrated Newsweek
columnist Anna Quindlen
recently mentioned a
YouTube video abour a
question that falls into a
common abortion trap. The
filmmaker
behind
"Libertyville
Abortion
Demonstration" asks pro·
lifers how much jail time
women who seek abortions
should receive if Roe v.
Wade were to be overturned.
What people who a$k
this question fail to understan&lt;;! is what most abortion
opponents actually want to stop the additional victimization of women. They
already are victimized by
abortion. Women are often
pressured into it by desper·
ate circumstances and suffer in silence for years after
their decision.
The question feeds into
the misconcllption that the
United States will descend
into a state of vigilante
abortions. This fantasy is
complete with headlines
trumpeting a new world of
oppression as American
women are carted off to jail
in their most despondent
hours.

,
.

Kathryn

Lopez

In reality, the Supreme
Court, if it overturned the
landmark decision, would
put the abortion decision in
the hands of the people,
where it should bave been
all along. Federalism will
reign, as each state will
decide for itself what to do.
(The 1973 Supreme Court
decision ruled that state
bans on first- and' secondtrimester abortions were
unconstitutional.)
If Roe v. Wade is overturned, there will be a barrage of questions, hashed
out state by state: Exactly
what type of abortion will
be legal? Should there be
. an outright ban? Could
women be hit with severe
sentences for trying to get
an abortion?
In pre-Roe New York
State, as it happens,

Dear Editor:
I attended the Pomeroy .Village Council meeting the
week of the Pomeroy Blues and Jazz Bash to ask if there
had been a pol,icy put in place for events being held on the , 1
parking lot.
·
. Mayor Musser stated that they did not !lave a policy in
place but, did say that they had made some changes concerning this year's event. After attending the bash on
Friday and Saturday, it was very evident that there were
major changes made, and all to the good. It seemed that this
year's event was centered around music and not alcohol.
The huge inflatable beer bottles were not at the entrance
and the streets were not filled with immoral acts, but with
those who were enjoying good music. .
Pomeroy police officers were busy checking on opened
bottles and even arresting and ticketing a few. These offi·
cers worked hard to keep everyone as safe as possible.
·Both nights were very well attended. This year's event was
proof that you can have a good time and not be out of con·
trol.
On behalf of hundreds of residents, our appreciation to
the Pomeroy Blues and Jazz committee, Mayor Musser and
Village Council, and to the Pomeroy Police Department.
Events on the parking lot are wonderful and I along with
others enjoy them when they are kept under control as this
one was.
· Brendd Barnhart
Pomeroy ·

'

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~- i

···~

'

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Religious services to
open Meigs County Fair
POMEROY - The Meigs County Ministerial
·Association will conduct a songfest at 7:30 p.m. Sunday in
front of the grandstand as a special feature of the opening
of the I 44th Meigs County Fair.
· There will be special music by Mrs. Kerry Wood who
plays violin, solos b¥ Joann Robinson and Roy Jenkins, followed by group singing. Leaders for the service are the
Rev. Bob and Joarm Robinson.
·

Torres

frOm PageA1
Committee of the Bureau of
Children with Medical
Handicaps and her four
years as public health commissioner for Meigs County
to ensure that clients receive
the best possible care.
Furthermore, to enhance
the capabilities of caregivers, she also teaches personal care to homecare
nurse's aides. The Meigs
County Council on Aging is
a nonprofit corporation that
provides health and independence-oriented services
to senior citizens in the
Meigs County area. For
more information visit
http:/lwww.meigsseniors.co

mi.

Associ;ltion and the Health
Commission ·of Meigs
County. She has received
the Ohio State Award for
Lifetime Achievement from
the March of Dimes and
was also awarded the Ohio
State Senior Citizens Hall
of Fame Award, one of only
three winners within the
past 30 years.
The
mission
of
Cambridge Who's Who is to
ensure that Cambridge
members receive recos.ni·
tion, support and credibility
to advance their careers.
Cambridge Who's Who is
also committed to delivering
the highest quality networking resource for job recruitment, career enhancement
and new business development. See who's making
news and how Cambridjle
Who's Who is making a difference at our news blog:
http:/lcambridgewhoswho.b
logs pot. coni.
Cambridge Who's Who
members have exclusive
access to the biographical
information of more than
200,000 successful executives, professionals and
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at
http: l/www.cambridgewhoswho.com, where they
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via the Cambridge Who's
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Cambridge Who's Who
members to reach out when
they have a business need or
opportunity as well as
receive information on
exciting new ventures.

Torres earned a master's
degree in administration of
adult educatio!' and graduated Magna Cum Laude from
Florida
International
University, a bachelor of arts
in psychology from florida
International University, a
bachelor of science in nursing
from
Florida
International University and
a nursing diploma from .the
Kings County Hospital
Center School of Nursing.
She is affiliated with
Sigma Theta Tau, the Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
the Retired Senior Volunteer
Program, the Meigs County
Consonium, the Tri-County
Tobacco Coalition, the
International
GALLIPOLIS - Ruth L. Carter, 75, of Oallipolis, died Florida
University
Alumni
1\tesday, Aug. 7, 2007, at her residence, surrouniled by her
·
loving family.
She was born Feb. 19, 1932, in Gallia County, daughter
The EMS crew took the
of the late Homer and Aldeth Howard Wood.
l r m s-· boy to Pleasant Valley
In addition to her parents, she was preceded by a sister,
Hospital, where he was pro·
Dorothy Aspel; a brother, Tom White; and a son-in-law,
from
Page
A
1
nounced dead.
.
Richard Evans.
Services for Jeremy
Ruth was a homemaker, and a wonderful wife and moth·
er. She also worked as office manager for many years in her they immediately began Stump wwere beld Thesday
husband's plumbing business.
doing CPR and first aid until in · the Foglesong·Tucker
She is survived by her husband, Donald "Don" Carter, emergency personnel from Funeral Home at Mason.
whom she married on June 17, 1951, in El Paso, Texas; Mason County Emergency Burial was in Sunrise
thre~ daughters, Debbie Evans of Westerville, Yvette Medical Services arrived.
Memorial Gardens.
(Frank) Dantonio of Westerville, and Robin (Michael)
Saum of Bidwell; four grandchildren, Ross and Katelyn
Dantonio, and Jared and Annie Saum; a sister, Linda
Dalton was traveling in
Hensley of Gallipolis; a brother, Robert Wood of Cllnal
resembled the one used in
Winchester; and numerous brothers and sisters-i.n-law,
the truck robbery.
·
nieces, nephews and other family and friends.
Proffitt said when arrested
from PageA1
Services will be I0 a.m. Friday, Aug. 10, 2007, at the
a shirt matching the shirt
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home, with the Rev. John
Dalton was allegedly wear·
Wood officiating. Burial will follow in Salem Cemetery. robbed of around $3,000 in ing in the surveillance video
Friends may call at the funeral home on Thursday, Aug. 9, checks and cash from a cash at the Par Mar Store shortly
.bag resting inside the truck's before the robbery was
2007, from 6 to 8 p.m.
In lieu ,of flowers, contributions can be made to Holzer cab. Thanks to witnesses and found in Dalton's possesa surveillance tape, a descrip- sion. Proffitt added witnessHospice 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
To send condolences, visit www.timeformemory.com/whw. tion of the suspect and get- es have also identified
away vehicle was made pu~ Dalton as being the individlie. Apparently several sight· ual in the Par Mar Store the
ings of the alledged vehicle day of the robbery.
had .been reported in the
In all, II businesses had
county since the robbery.
either checks or cash in the
Pomeroy Chief of Police stolen cash bag taken from
Mark E. Proffitt said Dalton the Miller Lite truck. At the
was arrested yesterday at bond hearing , Story told
124 Mart on Ohio 7 by Dalton he was to have no
the
PORTLAND - Douglas Eugene Freeman, 40, Portland,
the
Meigs
County Sheriff's contact with the following
died at the Riverside Methodist Hospital on Friday, Aug. 6,
'2007. Services will be held at II a.m. on Saturday, Aug. II, Office during one of those stores: TNT Pit Stop,
at the Fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Friends may call sightings when employees Mi4dleport Speedway, 124.
from 6-8 p.m. on Friday, Aug. 10, at the funeral home. A reported "suspicious behav- Mart, Riverside Foodsho~,
ior" and noted the vehicle R&amp;J Food Shop, Bun s
full obituary will run later in the week.

Ruth L carter

'·

•
Conf

Robbery

'
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oj ; /

.:~

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Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. A// letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not pers, ·a/ities. Letters of
Heard anything about that
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept· new Harry Potter book? Oh
ed for publication.
yeah, I forgot, that's all
we've heard about for three
months. Quick, name another book published in the last
three months. Whoops,
(USPS 213-960)
times up, we all lose. '
Reader Services .
Ohio Valley Publishing
Roughly 8.5 million
Co.
Correction Polley
copies of "Harry Potter and
Published every afternoon, Monday
Our mai!'l concern in all stories Is to
the Deathly Hallows" were
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
be accurate. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohlo.
sold in the first 24 hours,
Second-class
which means an impressive
In a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
292 million Americans did992-2156.
Member: The Associated Press· and
n't buy a copy:
the Ohio Newspaper ASsociation.
Postmaster:
Send
address
correc·
The common wisdom is
Our main number Is
tlons to The Daily Sentinel, 1H Court
that
it's a good thing
(740) 992-2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
because
children are readDepartment extensions are:
ing. OK, finfY. But wouldn't
Subscription Rates
the
world be a better place if
By carrier or motor route
News
we
could
get more adults to
One month
'10.27
Editor: Cha~ene Hoeflich. Ext. 12
read?
One year
'115.84
Dally
50'
"Oh," you say. "You're
Reporter. Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Senior Citizen rates
playing with statistics.
Reporter. Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
One month "
'10.27
Babies and young children
'103.90
One year
_
don't
buy books, and a lot of
SWscriber&amp; should romit in a&lt;Wanoo
Advertising
people
wouldn't be interestd"""' to tho Daily SerniM. No subOutside Sales: Dave Harris. Ext. 15
ed in Harry Potter." OK.
scriplion by mall permitted in areas
Outllde Sales: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home carrier service is ava/1Let's say half the popul11tion
CtassJCirc.: Judy Clar1&lt;. Ext. 10
able.
wasn't in the market for the
new Harry Potter book. That
Mall Subscription
means
an impressive 142
General Manager
tnalde Meigs County
million
Americans didn't
Charlene Hoeflich , Ext. 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
buy it. Let's say two people
26 Weeks
'64.20
52
Wee~s
'
12].11
read
each copy, a huge
E-mail:
improvement
- 134 million
newsOmydaifysentinel .com
Outside Meigs County
Americans didn't read it.
13 Weeks
'53.55
Any way you cut it, only
Web:
26 Weeks
'107.10
10 percent of the reading
52 Weeks
'214.21
www.myllaiiysen1inel.com
public read the best-selling

Deaths

Harry Potter and the Magical Numbers

Tl)e Daily Sentinel

POMEROY- Terry Douglas Michael; Sr., 59. Pomeroy,
passed away on Aug . 4, 2007, at his residence.
Hj: was born on Nov. 27, 1947, in Pomeroy, son of
Herman Michael and the late Maxine Michael. He was a
veteran of the U.S. Army. He was employed as an auto
. body repairman.
.
In addition to his Mother, he was. preceded by broth·
ers, Tim, Raymond and Thomas Michael, and a sister,
Bonnie Michael
He is survived by his wife, Karen Michael, Pomeroy; and
children, Terry (Amy) Michael, Pomeroy; Darrell Michael,
Middleport; Sherry (Darrell) Sands, Hartford, W.Va.; Katl)y
(Scott) Grueser, Mason, W.Va.; Jeremy Michael, Rutland;
Derek (Stacy) Michael, Pomeroy; Amy McKinney, Racine;
Crystal (Mark) Harrison, Bidwell; Angel McKinney, West
Columbia, W.Va.; his father, Herman Michael of Pomeroy,
a brother, Larry (Erma) Michael of Florida, a sister, Darlene
(Bill) Davidson of Florida, and several nieces and nephews.
Graveside service will be held at ll a.m. on Friday,
Aug . 10, 2007 , at Rocksprings Cemetery, Pomeroy.
Officiating will be Larry Lemley. Friends may call on
Thursday, Aug. 9, from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Pomeroy Chapel
of Fisher Funeral Home.
• On-line condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

'i ~ \

(

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

.Teny Douglas Michael

'

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, Aug. 8, the 220th day of 2007. There
are 145 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On Aug: 8, 1974, President Richard M. Nixon announced he
would resign following damaging new revelations in the
Watergate scandal.
On this date:
In 1876, Thomas A. Edison received a patent for his mimeograph.
In !9(fl, I 00 years ago, jazz musician, composer and bandleader Benny Carter was born in New York.
_
Thought for Today: "Man adjusts to what he should not; he
is unable to adjust to what he should." - Jean Toomer,
African-American author-poet (1894-1967).

POMEROY - Bryan Lee Yonker, 59, Pomeroy, passed
away on August 5, 2007, at the Charleston Area Medical
Center in Charleston, W.Va.
He was born on Aug. 13, 1947, in Mason, W.Va., son of
Doris Grinstead Yonker and the late Charles Yonker. He
was employed by Foote Mineral and American Alloy as a
lab and storeroom worker. He was a member of the
flatwoods United Methodist Church, the Meigs County
IKES and a life member of the National Rifle Association.
In addition to his father, he was preceded by his fatherin-law, Stanley Johnson.
He is survived by his wife, Linda Yonker of Pomeroy; his
children, Derek (Paula) Yonker, Letart, W.Va., and Corey
Yonker, P9meroy; his mother, Doris Yonker of New Haven,
W.Va. ; brothers: Charles Yonker, Maryland, Nathan
·(Michelle) Yonker, New Haven; a ·sister, Sonya (Larry)
Roush of New Haven; his mother-in-law, Betty Johnson of
Racine; brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law, Debbie and
John Powell, Syracuse, Greg and Bev Johnson, Pomeroy,
and Darrell Johnson of Racine ; and several nieces,
nephews, great nieces and great nephews.
Servjces will be held at II a.m. on Thursday, Aug. 9,
2007, at the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home with
Rev. Duane Stutler officiating, and burial will be in Meigs
Memory Gardens.
·
Friends may call from 6-9 p.m. on Wednesday at the
funeral home . On-line condolences may be sent to
www.fisherfuneralhomes.com

Jim
Mullen

book of all time. Now imagine 1a regular best seller, a
book that only sells a million copies, meanmg a
whopping 299 million
Americans didn't buy it.
You can get on the New
York Times best-seller list if
your · book sells roughly
15,000 copies in a week:
Beyonce, Justip Timberlake,
Jay-Z and many other music
stars regularly sell 100,000
COs a week. At roughly the
same price as the discount
price you'd pay for the kind
of book you'd find in a grocery store.
Reporters milke a big deal
about how many copies
Harry Potter has sold, about
the long lines at the bookstores, about how Harry
Potter books have kids reading again. I say, prove it.
There are long lines
around the bookstores
because there are so few
bookstores left. Look in the

yellow pages and see how one youngster asked me.
many bookstores there are "Mom bought me a copy at ·
in your town. Now look and the grocery store."
see how many beauty par- · Ah, yes, that temple of
tors there are. How many learning, the grocery store. ,
tattoo parlors? How many
"Was it squeezed in •
nail salons? How many · between 'Treasure Island'
Gaps, how many Gap Kids, and 'Doctor Dolittle '?" I
how many jewelry stores asked.
selling gold chains? Yeah,
"What're those?"
reading's back. Millions of
"Other great books for
kids have actually read the kids."
instructions on how to hook
"Ne.ver heard of 'em. The
up the latest video-game store only sells one book. ·
console into their computer. Harry Potter. ls 'Treasure
My small-town lil;lrary Island' a Harry Potter book? ,
splurged and got one copy 1 don't think so, I've read ·
of the new Harry Potter them all."
book. I thought they were
"How about Tom Swift or
crazy. Get 20 copies. We the Hardy Boys?"
want to get kids in the
library, so they can see that
"I don't know who they
it's not some spooky place are, Mister. Besides, my .
where you can't talk but a Mom says I can't join any
playground for the mind. gang's until I'm 16."
For a month there was a life"I'm talking about books, .
size cutout of Harry Potter all the books you voracious
standing in the corner of the young readers are going to
Young Adult section that start reading now that
counted down the days until you've finished Harry
the book appeared.
Potter."
Finally, the big, publicity"Is a voracious a
filled day arrived. The new dinosaur?"
Harry Potter was on the
"Apparently, he is."
shelf. After it sat there for
(Jim Mullen is the author of
three days, untouched. I "It Takes a Vr//age Idiot:
checked it out. It is now Complicating the Simple ·
back in the library, gathering Life" and "Baby's First
dust again.
Tanoo. " You can reach him at
"Why go to the library?" jim_mullen @myway.com.)

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

FAMILY MEDICINE

Local Briefs

Bry~n Yonker

•

women who had abortions Jos.eph W. Dellapenna, and
were considered, according according to other histori-"
to the letter of the law, ans, law enforcement 'took '
criminals. (This was not aim at the "do no harm"
the case in every state.) community - the doctors .
But in practice - in the who performed abortions. ,
interest of shutting down And even then, "enforce- .
doctors who perform abor- meilt in the United States
tions - women would cus- focused on the revocation,
tomarily get immunity of medical licenses:· in the
from criminal prosecution 1930s, with an uptick in
if they testified against the prosecutions in the 1940s ,
abortionists. It was practi, and 1950s.
As public opinion turns.
cal and it was compassiontoward
restrictions on ·
ate.
History suggests that abortion, abortion support·
when tough anti -abortion ers hope they can scare ·
. laws exist, desperate Americans into opposing ·.
women aren't rushed to the us crazy pro-lifers. The
slammer. If you don't trust truth is, though, ·we're not
whack-job pro-lifers like all ideologues marching
me, look at the historical with pictu(es of babies ~
record. Abortil;&gt;n was ille- killed in the land of Roe v.;
gal in the United States Wade. We know women
prior to the Supreme who have had abortions.
Court's 1973 ruling; and Some pro-lifers have . had ,
,women weren't being them. We know what haprushed to jail i.n droves for pens to a woman, to a couseeking abortions. Women ple and to the child. What
weren't
prosecuted we don't want is further
because the law gj:nerally victimization.
wasn't after them to begin
(Kathryn Lope z is the ·
with.
'
editor of National Review ,
According to "Dispelling Online (www.nationalre- ·
the Myths of Abortion view. com). She can be con(Carolina tacted at klopez@national·
History"
Academic Press, 2006) by review. com.)

'

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

Douglas Eugene Freeman

Care of dog bite can prevent
wound infection and rabies
Question: A friend of animal bite is rabies. Rabies
mine got bitten by her dog is a viral infection that, once
recently. She didn't go to symptoms have begun, is
the doctor because it' was virtually always fatal . It is
her dog and she didn 't most often spread from a
think the bite was very bad. rabid animal to a human
She got a terrible infection through infected saliva
and ended up in the hospi- when the human is bitten.
tal. She is OK now, but That's why you should
could you discuss care of a always find out if the anidog b1te please so others mal that bit you is up to date
won't make the mistake on its rabies shots. If not,
you should contact your
that she did?
Answer: There are over 4 doctor or the county health
million animal bites in the department for advice. They
United States annually. may want to quarantine the
About 80 to 90 percent of animal and/or instruct you
them are from dogs. While to get immune globulin and
most people recover fully rabies vaccine.
Immune globulin contains
from dog bites, there are
about a dozen dog bite fatal· some "ready to go" antibodities every year. Certain ies to rabies from other
breeds are · more likely to humans who have a high
bite, but any dog will bite if antibody count against this
it is provoked, feels threat- disease. This will be folened or is trained to be lowed by the rabies vaccine,
which stimulates your own
aggressive.
While most dog bites body to produce rabies antiwill heal well with good bodieS. The rabies vaccine
cleansing after the bite, is a series of five shots that
about 20 percent of the are given at specific intertime they become infected, vals. While you may have
and some infections can be heard stori~s about having
very severe as your friend to get shots "in your stomfound out. When a dog ach," the modem vaccine is
bites, it causes puncture given in your arm - like a
wounds to the skin as well flu shot - and is usually
as a "crush type" injury to just as painless.
Of course, the best treatdeeper tissues.
A good cleansing should ment for a dog bite is pre· ·
start with an immediate vention. Do not approach
washing of the entire area of strange dogs. Do not bother
the bite with soap and water. animals who are eating or
A bandage should" then be sleeping. Also, mother dogs
applied to keep the wound with puppies are very proarea clean. If the punctures tective of their litters and
are deep, then a v1sit to the should be left alone. If you
emergency department of a are startled by a dog, do not
local hospital or an urgent scream or run as this will
care center is in order. likely increase the dog's
There, the deep wounds can aggression.
be irri$ated under local
Family Medicine® is a
anesthetiC.
we~kly
column. 1b submit
People with deep wounds ·
are usually started on an qu11dom, write to Martlul
antibiotic to prevent infec· A. Simpson, D.O'J. M.B.A.,
tion. The wounds are not Ohio UnlversitJ l:oUifl of
sutured, but left to heal Ost10pathic Midicin1, P.O.
"from the bottom up." The Box 110, Athens, Ohio
exception to this is dog bites 45101, or via •·mail to
to the face. These are usual· readerquistions@/amily·
ly cleaned very well and medicinenew1.org. Medical
sutured to prevent excessive i'lfo17ltlltion in thil column
scarring. Older ~ople and is provld#d as an educa·
those with certain medical donal service only. It do11
conditions - diabetes, can· not repkue the/uilgment of
cer or other immunosup· your persona physicltm,
pressive illnesses - should who should be relied on
always contact their physi· to diagnose . and recoriJ·
cian, even if the injury is not mend treatment for any
severe, because these medical conditions. Past
groups have an increased columns are available
online at www,familymetfi·
risk for infection.
Another concern with any cinenews.org.
Party Barn, Pomeroy Exxon
and the Miller Lite truck.
Proffitt noted other persons of interest from the
truck robbery may be facing
charges.
Proffitt said Pomeroy
Patrolmen ,Ronnie Spaun
and Adam Holcomb had
been working on the case
with help from tips reported
to the Meigs County
She~iff's Office. Sheriff
Robert Beegle and Deputies
Bryan Holman and Rick
Patterson made the arrest at
124 Mart with Proffitt,
Spaun and Holcomb also on
the scene.

"This was totally a joint
effort between law enforcement agencies in the county
and by working together we
were able to solve this
case," Proffitt said before
also thanking the sheriff's
office. "The citizens of
Pomeroy shouldn't have to
put up with this type of
hehav10r and we're doing
·everything we can to solve
these types ef crimes."
An unspecified amount of
cash was recovered on
Dalton according to Proffitt
who ~added Dalton is on
felony probation for p-and
larceny in West Virgima.

•......c. IC .A...,-A.M
And

BREC
from PageA1

avoid heat buildup, or
replace bulbs in lamps and
ceilings with energy-saving
and cool compact fluorescent lights (CFLs).
BREC members enrollc:d
in the water heater load control program can expect
operation of the radio switches during peak periods this
week, according to Oden,

steps to reduce the peak and .
their bills:
• Bump up air conditioner
thermostat settings a few
degrees, especially during
peak times of3 to 7 p.m. Use
ceiling or portable fans to
circulate air inside the home.
~I'N C.&lt;~,j&gt;
• Don't run swimming
"
, J'o
~
pool or hot tub pumps in the
~
:.. ..-\
d
~
1.
;t&gt;
afternoon or early evening.
• Avoid using your oven
~ ).\"-~~ f$
to bake. This heats inside air
--·*----···-·
PfkFOR.MINfi .-\KTS Ctlfl'l E
and causes air conditioning .
The Unsinkable
units to work harder.
• Close curtains and winMolly Brown
dow blinds to reduce the
August 17 &amp; 18, 8 pm
effect of radiant heat from
Captain Fantastic
the sun.
August 25 &amp; 26
• Turn off all electric appliDucktona, SeJII. 8
ances when not in use, espe4th Prize:
cially computers and TV s.
2 Leather Recliners
• Much of the energy used
Donated by:
by conventional light bulbs
Corbin &amp; Snyder Furniture
produces waste heat. Keep
Box Office: 428 21\d Ave.
indoor lighting to a miniGallipolis,
OH (740) 446-ARTS
mum when possible to

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PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 8, 2007
'

State inspectors show how
bridges are inspected

State sees ~at emergenaies, ,
floods as temps, humidity soar .

'

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

AP photo

Jeff Meyer, an inspector with Ohio Department of
Transportation, looks over the 5th Street Viaduct Tuesday,
in Cincinnati:
Under-deck,
truss
bridges are . considered
"fracture critical"" because
they have no additional
construction to compensate for a broken truss,
Collett said. The underdeck design is still used,
especially on long spans,
he said, but in many cases
designers choose a cheaper girder design.
Ohio
Transportation
Director James Beasley,
following requests from
Gov. Ted Strickland and
U.S.
Transportation
Secretary Mary Peters,
ordered
accelerated
inspections of most of the
12
under-deck
truss
bridges under ODOT's
supervision.
Two spans were inspected last week, two are to be
done this week and five
more .by the end of next
week. Of the remaining
three, one was inspected
·in November, one in

March and one in May,
and they are not scheduled
for new inspections.
ODOT also was helping
county engineers refine a
list of about 170 similarly
designed bridges that are
the re&amp;ponsibility of local
governments.
Ohio law mandates that
all bridges be inspected
every year. In that sense,
the
inspections
in
Cincinnati and Cleveland
are nothing special.
"We're not doing anything different from what
we n&lt;.1rmally do," Collett
said.
·
Although
the Fifth
Street Viaduct was built in
1938, it got a new concrete deck less than I 0
years ago, and the recent
light green paint job on
the steel trusses makes it
easier to spot corrosion .
"If you see brown on
green, it's a telltale sign,"
Collett said.

Local weather
Wednesday . .. Most! y
sunny. Ha~: .. Ho1. Humid
w\*P hjjtlsP,: t~ mid 90s.
Soilthwest . ·.win&lt;IJ; 10 to 15
mph. H'eat .index values up
'
to 103.
Wedd!Sllii)' 'rt~ht...Partly
cloudy. ~A slighi chance of
showers and thunderstorms
after midnight. Humid with
lows in the lower 70s.
Southwest winds 5 to I 0
mph. Chance of rain 20 percent.
Thursday ... Mostly sunny

with a slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Hot. Humid with highs in
the mid 90s. South winds
.around 5 mph. Chance of
hUn 20 per9ent. Heat index
values up to I03.
·
Thursday night...Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Humid with lows in the mid
70s.
Southwest winds
around 5 mph. Chance of
rain 40 percenl.
,Friday .... Mostly cloudy

with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Hot with
highs around 90. Chance of
rain 40 percent.
Friday
night...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
60s.
Saturday '
through
Monday ... Mostly clear. Hot.
Highs around 90. Lows in
the mid 60s.
Monday
night and
Tuesday ... Partly
cloudy.
Hot. Lows in the upper 60s.
Highs in the lower 90s.

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE)- 47.74
,Akzo (NASDAQ)- 80.37
Aehland Inc. (NYSE) 58.30
Big Lots. CNYSE)- 26.64
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 32.78
BorgWamer (NYSE)90.30
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)- 46.52
Champion (NASDAQ)6.01
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
-9.39
CHy Holding (NASDAQ) 32.32
Collins CNYSE) - 69.49
DuPont ( NYSE) - 4 7.40
US Bank (NYSE)- 31.24
Gannett ( NYSE) - 49.28
G!lneral Electric (NYSE) 39.48
Harley-Davidson ( NYSE) ·56.62
JP Morgan (NYSE)45.34
Kroger (NYSE) - 26.25
Umlted Brands (NYSE) 24.19
Norfolk Southern (~YSE) 50.14
Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ)- 27.06
'
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. ,
I

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

NFL Notebook, Page BZ
,
· Bonds: 756"ond beyond, Page B6

BY USA CORNWELL

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
~--~==~~~~~~--

BY TERRY KINNEY
CINCINNATI - Ohio
Department
of
Transportation inspectors
on catwalks and in cherrypickers called "sn.o opers" began an unusually
high-profile look Tuesday
at one of the state's
bridges similar in design
to the I-35W bridge that
collapsed
into
the
Mississ ippi
River
in
Minneapolis last week.
"We knew there was
public interest and media
interest in seeing our
inspectors out in the
field ,"
said
ODOT
spokesman Scott Varner.
The depJrtment invited
coverage of inspections of
under-deck, truss bridges
Cincinnati
and
in
Cleveland,
but
the
Cleveland inspection was
postponed
until
Wednesday due to heavy
rain.
"It's pretty milch a visual inspection unless we
see something that looks
suspicious," said Brandon
Collett, bridge engineer
for ODOT District 8 in
southwest Ohio.
Two inspectors were to
take two days to go over
every foot of the decks,
railings, piers and trusses
of the nearly 70-year-old
Fifth Street viaduct, looking for potential problems,
Collett said.
.
· "You name it, we're
looking for it," he said.
Also on Tuesday, workers from the Kentucky
Transportation Cabinet
inspected the Highland
Avenue bridge over I-471
just south of downtown
Cincinnati.
The ODOT inspection
was remarkably low-key.
People in cars whizzing
overhead · would have no
idea that inspectors were
checking for problems
below.
The cause of the
Minneapolis bridge collapse has not been determtned. Five people are
known dead, f1ve were in
critical condition and
eight remained missing
Tuesday as Navy and FBI
dive teams joined tlie
search
and · officials
planned to begin clearing
the debris.

school buildings have no air conditi.oru~g. .
District officials .said classes would be
Cl)nceled agairi Wednesday and school offiCINCINNATI - Ni.nety-one-year-old cials would monitor weather reports daily to
Elmer Michael braved Cincinnati's swelter- determine when to resume classes.
ing heat Tuesday to get to the air-condiEven though many schools haven't starttioned city recreation center where he ed, band members and football players have
planned to spend the day.
been holding outdoor practices. PrincetoQ
"I don't know what I'd do to keeP. cool High School in suburban Cincinnati moved
during the day without this center, ' said practices to early morning and late evening,
Michael, who crnly has fans to cool his fifth- and coaches at Cincinnati 's public schools
floor apartment new· downtown. "I spend were advised to shift sessions to morning (lr
some time at the library, where it's also air- even limit them.
conditioned, but I come here every day."
Other parts of southern Ohio and central
Health officials urged heat precau,tions, Ohio remained under a heat advisory especially for the elderly, in Cincinnati,
meaning high humidity and hot tempera- ·
Dayton and other patts of southwest Ohio tures were expected to combine to make it
on Tuesday as tem~atures hit the upper
90s, with high humidity expected to make it feel like 100 degrees or higher.
Members of the Columbus police departfeel like I 05 to 110 degrees by Wednesday.
ment
also. struggled to keep cool when the
~hile residen1s of ~puthern Ohio c9ped
air
conditioning
system for their nine-story
w1th the heat, heavt. downpours led to
headquarters failed. Temperatures inside
flooding in northeast ~o.
Heat ·emergency pleils went into effect were in the high 80s on Tuesday.
Monday in Cincinnati ·~d Dayton after the · Northeast Ohio coped with a different
National Weather Se~ issued excessive . weather problem. In Cleveland, the second
heat warnings, which later were extended to big downpour in five days flooded some
6 a.m. Friday in both cities. The plans des- streets and more than 200 people were evacignated recreation ceQters and indoor bus uated from an apartment complex in suburhubs as cooling cente~~for residents trying ban Parma ~cause of concerns about a
flooded electric transformer. Storms · in
to escape the heat.
.,r;
Cleveland
forced the shutdown of a flooded
Betty Daniels, who a~nds the san1e center as Michael, said :only four people emergency room at MetroHealth Medical
showed up Tuesday for the seniors' line-· Center and knocked out power to St.
dancing group that normally has about 20 Vincent Charity Hospital's ER. The
Cleveland Metroparks Zoo closed about II
members.
"Some people just don't want to get out in a.m. Tuesday when water from a rainthis at all if they don't have to," said swollen creek surged across a parking lot,
flooding offices. No animals were affected.
,
Daniels, 68.
•The weather was more helpful in northDayton, public schools ,opened Monday,
but closed Tuesday bei:aus~ of the excessive west Ohio where heavy rains drenched dry
the district's 28 farm fiel.ds for the second time in three days.
heat. About two-thirds

Inside

(NASDAQ) - 25
BBT (NYSE) - 39.81
Peoples CNASDAQ)- 23.48
Pepsico CNYSE) -. 68.51
Premier (NASDAQ) 14.50
Rockwell CNYSE) - 69.16
Rocky .Boots (NASDAQ) -.
11.41
Royal Dutch Shell - 76.57
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 133.05
Wai-Mart (N~SE)- 47.06

Wendy's (NYSE) - -33.29
Worthington (NYSE) 21.51
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions fOr Aug. 7,
2007, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In flolnt Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

of

Broker: Sale of coins, memorabiliashould top investment losses ,
Bv JOHN McCARTHY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS- The sale
of rare coins and other
memorabilia should bring
more than the $50 million
the state gave a coin dealer
convicted of ste;tling from .
the funds he managed for ·
the workers' compensation
bureau, the broker handling
the collection's .liquidltion
said Tuesday.
·
Tom Noe, a Republican
fundraiser who was given
the money in 1998 and 200 I
to . invest in the coins and
o\her items, was convicted
of theft and other crimes
and sentenced ih November
to 18 years in prison.
So far, \he state has recovered about- $42 million
through sales of the investments, said Bill Brandt,
president and CEO of
C h i c ·a g. o - b a s e d

RACINE Kourtney
Fisher and Ryan Miller of
Racine announce the birth
of a son, Braden Michael
Miller on June 19 weighing
7 pounds, 8 ounces.
Maternal grandparents are
Gene R. "George" and
Paula (Fisher) Lawrence of
Racine and Eddie Fisher of
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.
Maternal great-grandparents are Peggy Duncan of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., and
Faye Fisher of Gallipolis
Ferry and the late Dallas
Fisher.
Paternal grandparents are
Brian ·and Sherry Wolfe of
.Racine and Mike and Lisa
Miller of Cadiz. Paternal
great-grandparems
are
Sharon Russell of Portland,

Ml~hael

Edward Hannon

Rutland man
ordained

Braden Michael Miller
Wayne and Linda Russell of
Racine and Mick and Elaine
Miller of Middleport. Greatgreat grandparents are Bill
and Mary Russell of Racine.

RUTLAND - Michael
Edward Harmon, a 1981
graduate of Meigs Higli
School, has been ordained
into the ministry.
He is a member of the Old
Bethel Free Will Baptist
Church, where he studied
under the Rev. Ralph
Butcher. He was ordained
through the Golden Rule
Conference. Currently he is
pastor of the Pageville Free
Will
Baptist
Church,
Pageville.

X£
Mid-Valley Christian School

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year, three-month sentence
in federal court for illegally
funneling $45,000 in contributions to President Bush's
2004 re-election campaign.
Noe was awarded_ ·the
state contracts he held by
the Ohio Bureau of
Workers' Compensatiop,
The former chief financial
officer of the bure'il'i1' and an'
investment marketer also
were"sentenced in the scandal. Overall, the:bweaU" hS"s
lost $300 million· in investmerits since 1998.

Birth announced

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Development Specialists
Inc. Nearly all the coins
covered in Noe's contracts
have been sold, with the
bulk of the rest being sports
and historical memorabilia,
Brandt said. Those should
be liquidated by year's end,
he sa1d.
"It is clear now we are
going to retrieve more than
$50 million. The question is
how much," Brandt said.
The state confirmed the
total raised so far and it
expects the sale of remainin!! assets to surpass $50
mJllion as well, said Leo
Jennings, a spokesman for
Attorney General Marc
Dann.
Prosecutors calculated
Noe stole $13.7 . million
from the state. He has been
ordered to repay that
am6unt-.·
Besides his state conviction, Noe was given a three-

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IMIRICIN lEGION BASEBAll S.TATE TOURNAMENT

Pt Pleasant,
Wahama
compete in
Ravenswood
Invitational
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

this season, likes the direction the program appears
headed in.
"We've kind of set a new
standard for Meigs." he said.
"Now when Meigs comes
rolling into a ga!lle .:: (other
teams) are gomg to say
'these guys .can beat anybody.' That's going to be
expected out of them now,
they've set that tone."
And he was also proud of
the oharacter his team
showed this season.
"We're all very proud of
them, not just in the baseball
aspect of it, they've always
been well disciplined and
everyone speaks highly of
how polite and mannerly
they are. That's part of what
you teach them too."

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.
- The Wahama and Point
Pleasant high school golf
teams were among the 22
teams that competed in the
Ravenswood High School
Invitational
Golf
Tournament held Monday at
the Green Hills Golf Course
near Ravenswood.
Play began with light
showers and ended some
seven hours later in very
warm and muggy conditions. The weather made
play difficult for many of
the players, especially the
ones not accustomed to
walking up and down the
steep slopes of this golf
course.
The tournament was
divided into two divisions,
one section for the eight
Class AAA schools attending and a second section
combining the 14 Class AA
and A schools.
The large school title was
won by Cabell Midland
High School, which recorded an excellent score of 312
in the play five, count four
format. Robert C. Bird High
School was !he runner up
with a score of 321 while
Hurricane High School finished third scoring a total of
329.
Host
school,
Ravenswood, won the combined AA and A section of
the tournament with a score
of 313. There was a tie for
the second place trophy
between Ritchie County and
Williamstown which both
turned in a score of 325.
This situation required a
playoff and the results were
not available at press time.
. Point Pleasant, led by
Will Garrison's 82, finished
sixth with a team total of
370. J. T. Reynolds was next
in the scoring with a 91 followed closely by Chris
Long with a 92. Brock
McClung contributed a I 04

Plun see sa.te. a&amp;

Ple.se see Golf, 86

Bonds
breaks
record
.

'

Hits No. 756 in
fifth innin off
Nationals' ~acsik
BY JANIE McCAuLEY
ftP SPORTS WRITER

SAN FRANCISCO
Barry Bonds hit No. 756 to
the deepest pait of the ballpark Tuesday night, and
hammered home the point:
Like · him or not, legitimate
or not, he is
baseball's
-new · home
run king.
Bonds
broke Hank
Aaron's
storied
record .in
the
fifth
inning,
Bonds
connecting
on a 3-2
pitch from Washington's
Mike Bacsik. Three days
earlier, Bonds tied the
Hammer with a shot to leftcenter in San Diego.
"Thank you very much. I
got to thank all of you, all
the fans here in San
Francisco. It's been fantastic," he said shortly after
crossing home plate, his
godfather, Willie. Mays, at
his side.
"I got to thank my teammates. Through all of this,
you've been strong and
given me all the support I
needed and I'll never forget it as long as I live."
After thanking his children, be said: "I'm glad I
did it before you guys
went to school."
· To the Nationals , he
said: "Thank you for
understanding this ~arne.
It means a lot to me.'
He saved his late father,
Bobby, for last.
"To my tlad," he said, his
voice broke as he pointed
to the sky. Through tears,
he added, "Thank you for
everything."
Conspicuous by their
absence were the commissioner and Aaron himself.
. Bud Selig was on.hand for
the tying hornet, deciding to
put baseball history ahead
pf the steroid allegations
that have plagued the San
francisco Giants slugger.
On this night, he sent an
~missary, Major League

Ple•se see Bonds, 86

CoNTAcrUs
. OVP Score Line (5 p.m.·1 o.m.)
1·740-446·2342 ext. 33
fox -

1-740·446·3006

E-mail - sports@mydailysentinel.com

SR.Ot:.lt ...$.11\H

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
bsherman@ mydai!ytribune_com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
i740) 446:2342, ext. 23
Ierum C mydallyregister.com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
bwal ters@~da ilyt ribune . com

Brad Sherman/photo

Members of the Feeney Bennett baseball team hold one final meeting after being eliminated from the 2007 American
Legion State Baseball Tournament on Tuesday after suffering a setback to Jefferson, 7·4, at Rannow Field in The Plains.
Meigs Post 128 finishes its season with an 18-25 overall mark.
·

Post 128 eliminated from state tournament
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

THE PLAINS - James
Ashley and Jefferson Post
152 wrote an unhappy ending for surprising Feeney
Bennett Post !28's storybook run.
.
Ashley held the dangerous
Meigs County offense to a
single run for seven innings,
and his club advanced in the
loser's bracket of the State
American Legion Baseball
Tournament with a 7-4 victory Tuesday morning at
Rannow Field.
. Feeney Bennett,.which set
an AL record by scoring 14
runs in a single inning just
one day prior, saw only five
balls fall for hits against the
Jefferson starter. The Meigs
countians rallied for three

runs in the eighth frame
against Post 152 relievers,
but could not make it alt the
way back from a 7-1 deficit.
Coach Will Haislop's club ·
consisten\ly put the ball !n
play, but a rock sohd
Jefferson defense, which
made just omi error, always
seemed to be in the right
place at the right time.
"We hit the ball to them,
they hit the ball to the grass
- that was basically the dif,ference in the game,"
Haislop said.
As a result, Jefferson kept
its season alive and
adva~ced to play again this
mormng - and Me1gs, on
the other hand, saw its historic run come to -an end.
Post 128, which finishes
the season with a losing
record at 19-25, was a sur-

prise entrant into the state's
grandest American Legion
baseball showcase. The team
punched its ticket when it
got hot at the right time and
won the Eighth District tournament .as a fourth seed.
This year's club became
just the second from Meigs
County to qualify for the
State Legion tourney, and
the first in 36 years. Haislop,
head coach for the first time

Quinn ends 11-day
holdout with Browns,
agrees to 5-year deal
BY JOE MtUCIA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BEREA - Quarterback
Brady Quinn has some
catching up to do.
Quinn agreed to a fiveyear contract Tuesday with
the Cleveland Browns, ending an 11 -day holdout that
essentially eliminated his
chances to begin the season
as the team's starter.
Quinn was to fly to
Browns' headquarters to
sign the deal, Browns general manager Phil Savage said.
The contract's language was
still being finalized.
Browns coach Romeo
Crennel noted that Quinn
looked lost when he practiced with the team in May
and has a long way to go.
"He'll get here earl~ and
he'll stay late. I know If you
put those kind &lt;if hours in
and study, you ' ll have a
chance. Plus, I believe he's a
smart kid also - on reports
by some people I know," a
grinning Crennel said, referring to Notre Dame coach
Charlie Weis.
The deal, worth $20.2 million, with $7 .75 million
guaranteed, c9uld reach $30
million over five years with
incentives. Quinn was to be
introduced to the media
Wednesday.
The deal was first reported
by Foxsports.com.
Quinn's absence has all
but ensured he will not win
the Browns' !tarting job,

which has become a twoman contest between Charlie
Frye and Derek Anderson.
Quinn has missed 16 practices.
"It's unfortunate that it
took this long to get done,"
Savage said. "I feel like it's a
deal that we potentially
could have done at the start
of camp."
Quirin, a four-year starter
at Notre Dame, was projected as a top 10 pick in April's
draft. When he slipped deeper into the first round, the
Browns traded a 2008 firstround pick to Dallas and
selected the Ohio native and
childhood Browns fan at No.
22.
During Quinn's holdout,
Crennel coldly referred to
him as "the quarterback" and
not by name. He continued
·to refer to him that way
Tuesday.
"We're going to put him at
the bottom of the chart and
see where he is," Crennel
said. "We' lllet hiin compete,
but I' m not putting him on
the first team tomorrow."
The Browns have only two
practices before their first
preseason ~arne Saturday at
home agatnst the Kan sas
City Chiefs.
"Maybe in the fourth quarter we might want to give
him a snap," Crennel said.
Rookie offensive tackle
Joe Thomas said he 's looking forward to Quinn com-

Please see Quinn, Bl

AP photo
Cincinnati Reds players, from left, Brandon Phillips, Adam Dunn. Norris Hopper ancl Ken
Griffey Jr. celebrate after they defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers , 4-0, in a baseball game
Tuesday in Cincinnati.

Reds snap 9-game skid with Dodgers
BY JOE KAY
ftP SPORTS WRITER

CINCINNATI - Bronson
Arroyo pitched into the seventh inning on the hottest
night at Great American Ball
Park, helping the Cincinnati
Reds end their nine-game
losing streak against the Los
Angeles Dodgers with a 4-0
victory Tuesday night.
It was 97 degrees · al the
first pitch, the hottest start
for a game in the ballpark's

five seasons. A steamy
breeze only made it worse
for the 22,057 fan s who saw
a breakthrough win.
The fading Dodgers lost
their fifth in a tow, their
longest losing streak of the
season. They've dropped 14
oftheirlast 19 overall, a slump
that has dumped them from
first to third in the Nl West.
On this night, they
couldn't beat the team
they've dominated over
the past two seasons .

The Dodgers swept their
six-game series last season,
and took all three from the
Red s in a May series in Los
Angeles . Arroyo (5-1 2)
stopped the streak and got
himself back on track. The
right-hander had retired
only four batters in a 7-2
loss in Was hington on
Wednesday. the shortest
start of his career.
Arroyo gave up six hits in

Pl..se see Reds, Bl

�•

PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 8, 2007
'

State inspectors show how
bridges are inspected

State sees ~at emergenaies, ,
floods as temps, humidity soar .

'

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

AP photo

Jeff Meyer, an inspector with Ohio Department of
Transportation, looks over the 5th Street Viaduct Tuesday,
in Cincinnati:
Under-deck,
truss
bridges are . considered
"fracture critical"" because
they have no additional
construction to compensate for a broken truss,
Collett said. The underdeck design is still used,
especially on long spans,
he said, but in many cases
designers choose a cheaper girder design.
Ohio
Transportation
Director James Beasley,
following requests from
Gov. Ted Strickland and
U.S.
Transportation
Secretary Mary Peters,
ordered
accelerated
inspections of most of the
12
under-deck
truss
bridges under ODOT's
supervision.
Two spans were inspected last week, two are to be
done this week and five
more .by the end of next
week. Of the remaining
three, one was inspected
·in November, one in

March and one in May,
and they are not scheduled
for new inspections.
ODOT also was helping
county engineers refine a
list of about 170 similarly
designed bridges that are
the re&amp;ponsibility of local
governments.
Ohio law mandates that
all bridges be inspected
every year. In that sense,
the
inspections
in
Cincinnati and Cleveland
are nothing special.
"We're not doing anything different from what
we n&lt;.1rmally do," Collett
said.
·
Although
the Fifth
Street Viaduct was built in
1938, it got a new concrete deck less than I 0
years ago, and the recent
light green paint job on
the steel trusses makes it
easier to spot corrosion .
"If you see brown on
green, it's a telltale sign,"
Collett said.

Local weather
Wednesday . .. Most! y
sunny. Ha~: .. Ho1. Humid
w\*P hjjtlsP,: t~ mid 90s.
Soilthwest . ·.win&lt;IJ; 10 to 15
mph. H'eat .index values up
'
to 103.
Wedd!Sllii)' 'rt~ht...Partly
cloudy. ~A slighi chance of
showers and thunderstorms
after midnight. Humid with
lows in the lower 70s.
Southwest winds 5 to I 0
mph. Chance of rain 20 percent.
Thursday ... Mostly sunny

with a slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Hot. Humid with highs in
the mid 90s. South winds
.around 5 mph. Chance of
hUn 20 per9ent. Heat index
values up to I03.
·
Thursday night...Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Humid with lows in the mid
70s.
Southwest winds
around 5 mph. Chance of
rain 40 percenl.
,Friday .... Mostly cloudy

with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Hot with
highs around 90. Chance of
rain 40 percent.
Friday
night...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
60s.
Saturday '
through
Monday ... Mostly clear. Hot.
Highs around 90. Lows in
the mid 60s.
Monday
night and
Tuesday ... Partly
cloudy.
Hot. Lows in the upper 60s.
Highs in the lower 90s.

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE)- 47.74
,Akzo (NASDAQ)- 80.37
Aehland Inc. (NYSE) 58.30
Big Lots. CNYSE)- 26.64
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 32.78
BorgWamer (NYSE)90.30
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)- 46.52
Champion (NASDAQ)6.01
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
-9.39
CHy Holding (NASDAQ) 32.32
Collins CNYSE) - 69.49
DuPont ( NYSE) - 4 7.40
US Bank (NYSE)- 31.24
Gannett ( NYSE) - 49.28
G!lneral Electric (NYSE) 39.48
Harley-Davidson ( NYSE) ·56.62
JP Morgan (NYSE)45.34
Kroger (NYSE) - 26.25
Umlted Brands (NYSE) 24.19
Norfolk Southern (~YSE) 50.14
Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ)- 27.06
'
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. ,
I

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

NFL Notebook, Page BZ
,
· Bonds: 756"ond beyond, Page B6

BY USA CORNWELL

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
~--~==~~~~~~--

BY TERRY KINNEY
CINCINNATI - Ohio
Department
of
Transportation inspectors
on catwalks and in cherrypickers called "sn.o opers" began an unusually
high-profile look Tuesday
at one of the state's
bridges similar in design
to the I-35W bridge that
collapsed
into
the
Mississ ippi
River
in
Minneapolis last week.
"We knew there was
public interest and media
interest in seeing our
inspectors out in the
field ,"
said
ODOT
spokesman Scott Varner.
The depJrtment invited
coverage of inspections of
under-deck, truss bridges
Cincinnati
and
in
Cleveland,
but
the
Cleveland inspection was
postponed
until
Wednesday due to heavy
rain.
"It's pretty milch a visual inspection unless we
see something that looks
suspicious," said Brandon
Collett, bridge engineer
for ODOT District 8 in
southwest Ohio.
Two inspectors were to
take two days to go over
every foot of the decks,
railings, piers and trusses
of the nearly 70-year-old
Fifth Street viaduct, looking for potential problems,
Collett said.
.
· "You name it, we're
looking for it," he said.
Also on Tuesday, workers from the Kentucky
Transportation Cabinet
inspected the Highland
Avenue bridge over I-471
just south of downtown
Cincinnati.
The ODOT inspection
was remarkably low-key.
People in cars whizzing
overhead · would have no
idea that inspectors were
checking for problems
below.
The cause of the
Minneapolis bridge collapse has not been determtned. Five people are
known dead, f1ve were in
critical condition and
eight remained missing
Tuesday as Navy and FBI
dive teams joined tlie
search
and · officials
planned to begin clearing
the debris.

school buildings have no air conditi.oru~g. .
District officials .said classes would be
Cl)nceled agairi Wednesday and school offiCINCINNATI - Ni.nety-one-year-old cials would monitor weather reports daily to
Elmer Michael braved Cincinnati's swelter- determine when to resume classes.
ing heat Tuesday to get to the air-condiEven though many schools haven't starttioned city recreation center where he ed, band members and football players have
planned to spend the day.
been holding outdoor practices. PrincetoQ
"I don't know what I'd do to keeP. cool High School in suburban Cincinnati moved
during the day without this center, ' said practices to early morning and late evening,
Michael, who crnly has fans to cool his fifth- and coaches at Cincinnati 's public schools
floor apartment new· downtown. "I spend were advised to shift sessions to morning (lr
some time at the library, where it's also air- even limit them.
conditioned, but I come here every day."
Other parts of southern Ohio and central
Health officials urged heat precau,tions, Ohio remained under a heat advisory especially for the elderly, in Cincinnati,
meaning high humidity and hot tempera- ·
Dayton and other patts of southwest Ohio tures were expected to combine to make it
on Tuesday as tem~atures hit the upper
90s, with high humidity expected to make it feel like 100 degrees or higher.
Members of the Columbus police departfeel like I 05 to 110 degrees by Wednesday.
ment
also. struggled to keep cool when the
~hile residen1s of ~puthern Ohio c9ped
air
conditioning
system for their nine-story
w1th the heat, heavt. downpours led to
headquarters failed. Temperatures inside
flooding in northeast ~o.
Heat ·emergency pleils went into effect were in the high 80s on Tuesday.
Monday in Cincinnati ·~d Dayton after the · Northeast Ohio coped with a different
National Weather Se~ issued excessive . weather problem. In Cleveland, the second
heat warnings, which later were extended to big downpour in five days flooded some
6 a.m. Friday in both cities. The plans des- streets and more than 200 people were evacignated recreation ceQters and indoor bus uated from an apartment complex in suburhubs as cooling cente~~for residents trying ban Parma ~cause of concerns about a
flooded electric transformer. Storms · in
to escape the heat.
.,r;
Cleveland
forced the shutdown of a flooded
Betty Daniels, who a~nds the san1e center as Michael, said :only four people emergency room at MetroHealth Medical
showed up Tuesday for the seniors' line-· Center and knocked out power to St.
dancing group that normally has about 20 Vincent Charity Hospital's ER. The
Cleveland Metroparks Zoo closed about II
members.
"Some people just don't want to get out in a.m. Tuesday when water from a rainthis at all if they don't have to," said swollen creek surged across a parking lot,
flooding offices. No animals were affected.
,
Daniels, 68.
•The weather was more helpful in northDayton, public schools ,opened Monday,
but closed Tuesday bei:aus~ of the excessive west Ohio where heavy rains drenched dry
the district's 28 farm fiel.ds for the second time in three days.
heat. About two-thirds

Inside

(NASDAQ) - 25
BBT (NYSE) - 39.81
Peoples CNASDAQ)- 23.48
Pepsico CNYSE) -. 68.51
Premier (NASDAQ) 14.50
Rockwell CNYSE) - 69.16
Rocky .Boots (NASDAQ) -.
11.41
Royal Dutch Shell - 76.57
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 133.05
Wai-Mart (N~SE)- 47.06

Wendy's (NYSE) - -33.29
Worthington (NYSE) 21.51
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions fOr Aug. 7,
2007, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In flolnt Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

of

Broker: Sale of coins, memorabiliashould top investment losses ,
Bv JOHN McCARTHY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS- The sale
of rare coins and other
memorabilia should bring
more than the $50 million
the state gave a coin dealer
convicted of ste;tling from .
the funds he managed for ·
the workers' compensation
bureau, the broker handling
the collection's .liquidltion
said Tuesday.
·
Tom Noe, a Republican
fundraiser who was given
the money in 1998 and 200 I
to . invest in the coins and
o\her items, was convicted
of theft and other crimes
and sentenced ih November
to 18 years in prison.
So far, \he state has recovered about- $42 million
through sales of the investments, said Bill Brandt,
president and CEO of
C h i c ·a g. o - b a s e d

RACINE Kourtney
Fisher and Ryan Miller of
Racine announce the birth
of a son, Braden Michael
Miller on June 19 weighing
7 pounds, 8 ounces.
Maternal grandparents are
Gene R. "George" and
Paula (Fisher) Lawrence of
Racine and Eddie Fisher of
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.
Maternal great-grandparents are Peggy Duncan of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., and
Faye Fisher of Gallipolis
Ferry and the late Dallas
Fisher.
Paternal grandparents are
Brian ·and Sherry Wolfe of
.Racine and Mike and Lisa
Miller of Cadiz. Paternal
great-grandparems
are
Sharon Russell of Portland,

Ml~hael

Edward Hannon

Rutland man
ordained

Braden Michael Miller
Wayne and Linda Russell of
Racine and Mick and Elaine
Miller of Middleport. Greatgreat grandparents are Bill
and Mary Russell of Racine.

RUTLAND - Michael
Edward Harmon, a 1981
graduate of Meigs Higli
School, has been ordained
into the ministry.
He is a member of the Old
Bethel Free Will Baptist
Church, where he studied
under the Rev. Ralph
Butcher. He was ordained
through the Golden Rule
Conference. Currently he is
pastor of the Pageville Free
Will
Baptist
Church,
Pageville.

X£
Mid-Valley Christian School

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year, three-month sentence
in federal court for illegally
funneling $45,000 in contributions to President Bush's
2004 re-election campaign.
Noe was awarded_ ·the
state contracts he held by
the Ohio Bureau of
Workers' Compensatiop,
The former chief financial
officer of the bure'il'i1' and an'
investment marketer also
were"sentenced in the scandal. Overall, the:bweaU" hS"s
lost $300 million· in investmerits since 1998.

Birth announced

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Development Specialists
Inc. Nearly all the coins
covered in Noe's contracts
have been sold, with the
bulk of the rest being sports
and historical memorabilia,
Brandt said. Those should
be liquidated by year's end,
he sa1d.
"It is clear now we are
going to retrieve more than
$50 million. The question is
how much," Brandt said.
The state confirmed the
total raised so far and it
expects the sale of remainin!! assets to surpass $50
mJllion as well, said Leo
Jennings, a spokesman for
Attorney General Marc
Dann.
Prosecutors calculated
Noe stole $13.7 . million
from the state. He has been
ordered to repay that
am6unt-.·
Besides his state conviction, Noe was given a three-

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IMIRICIN lEGION BASEBAll S.TATE TOURNAMENT

Pt Pleasant,
Wahama
compete in
Ravenswood
Invitational
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

this season, likes the direction the program appears
headed in.
"We've kind of set a new
standard for Meigs." he said.
"Now when Meigs comes
rolling into a ga!lle .:: (other
teams) are gomg to say
'these guys .can beat anybody.' That's going to be
expected out of them now,
they've set that tone."
And he was also proud of
the oharacter his team
showed this season.
"We're all very proud of
them, not just in the baseball
aspect of it, they've always
been well disciplined and
everyone speaks highly of
how polite and mannerly
they are. That's part of what
you teach them too."

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.
- The Wahama and Point
Pleasant high school golf
teams were among the 22
teams that competed in the
Ravenswood High School
Invitational
Golf
Tournament held Monday at
the Green Hills Golf Course
near Ravenswood.
Play began with light
showers and ended some
seven hours later in very
warm and muggy conditions. The weather made
play difficult for many of
the players, especially the
ones not accustomed to
walking up and down the
steep slopes of this golf
course.
The tournament was
divided into two divisions,
one section for the eight
Class AAA schools attending and a second section
combining the 14 Class AA
and A schools.
The large school title was
won by Cabell Midland
High School, which recorded an excellent score of 312
in the play five, count four
format. Robert C. Bird High
School was !he runner up
with a score of 321 while
Hurricane High School finished third scoring a total of
329.
Host
school,
Ravenswood, won the combined AA and A section of
the tournament with a score
of 313. There was a tie for
the second place trophy
between Ritchie County and
Williamstown which both
turned in a score of 325.
This situation required a
playoff and the results were
not available at press time.
. Point Pleasant, led by
Will Garrison's 82, finished
sixth with a team total of
370. J. T. Reynolds was next
in the scoring with a 91 followed closely by Chris
Long with a 92. Brock
McClung contributed a I 04

Plun see sa.te. a&amp;

Ple.se see Golf, 86

Bonds
breaks
record
.

'

Hits No. 756 in
fifth innin off
Nationals' ~acsik
BY JANIE McCAuLEY
ftP SPORTS WRITER

SAN FRANCISCO
Barry Bonds hit No. 756 to
the deepest pait of the ballpark Tuesday night, and
hammered home the point:
Like · him or not, legitimate
or not, he is
baseball's
-new · home
run king.
Bonds
broke Hank
Aaron's
storied
record .in
the
fifth
inning,
Bonds
connecting
on a 3-2
pitch from Washington's
Mike Bacsik. Three days
earlier, Bonds tied the
Hammer with a shot to leftcenter in San Diego.
"Thank you very much. I
got to thank all of you, all
the fans here in San
Francisco. It's been fantastic," he said shortly after
crossing home plate, his
godfather, Willie. Mays, at
his side.
"I got to thank my teammates. Through all of this,
you've been strong and
given me all the support I
needed and I'll never forget it as long as I live."
After thanking his children, be said: "I'm glad I
did it before you guys
went to school."
· To the Nationals , he
said: "Thank you for
understanding this ~arne.
It means a lot to me.'
He saved his late father,
Bobby, for last.
"To my tlad," he said, his
voice broke as he pointed
to the sky. Through tears,
he added, "Thank you for
everything."
Conspicuous by their
absence were the commissioner and Aaron himself.
. Bud Selig was on.hand for
the tying hornet, deciding to
put baseball history ahead
pf the steroid allegations
that have plagued the San
francisco Giants slugger.
On this night, he sent an
~missary, Major League

Ple•se see Bonds, 86

CoNTAcrUs
. OVP Score Line (5 p.m.·1 o.m.)
1·740-446·2342 ext. 33
fox -

1-740·446·3006

E-mail - sports@mydailysentinel.com

SR.Ot:.lt ...$.11\H

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
bsherman@ mydai!ytribune_com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
i740) 446:2342, ext. 23
Ierum C mydallyregister.com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
bwal ters@~da ilyt ribune . com

Brad Sherman/photo

Members of the Feeney Bennett baseball team hold one final meeting after being eliminated from the 2007 American
Legion State Baseball Tournament on Tuesday after suffering a setback to Jefferson, 7·4, at Rannow Field in The Plains.
Meigs Post 128 finishes its season with an 18-25 overall mark.
·

Post 128 eliminated from state tournament
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

THE PLAINS - James
Ashley and Jefferson Post
152 wrote an unhappy ending for surprising Feeney
Bennett Post !28's storybook run.
.
Ashley held the dangerous
Meigs County offense to a
single run for seven innings,
and his club advanced in the
loser's bracket of the State
American Legion Baseball
Tournament with a 7-4 victory Tuesday morning at
Rannow Field.
. Feeney Bennett,.which set
an AL record by scoring 14
runs in a single inning just
one day prior, saw only five
balls fall for hits against the
Jefferson starter. The Meigs
countians rallied for three

runs in the eighth frame
against Post 152 relievers,
but could not make it alt the
way back from a 7-1 deficit.
Coach Will Haislop's club ·
consisten\ly put the ball !n
play, but a rock sohd
Jefferson defense, which
made just omi error, always
seemed to be in the right
place at the right time.
"We hit the ball to them,
they hit the ball to the grass
- that was basically the dif,ference in the game,"
Haislop said.
As a result, Jefferson kept
its season alive and
adva~ced to play again this
mormng - and Me1gs, on
the other hand, saw its historic run come to -an end.
Post 128, which finishes
the season with a losing
record at 19-25, was a sur-

prise entrant into the state's
grandest American Legion
baseball showcase. The team
punched its ticket when it
got hot at the right time and
won the Eighth District tournament .as a fourth seed.
This year's club became
just the second from Meigs
County to qualify for the
State Legion tourney, and
the first in 36 years. Haislop,
head coach for the first time

Quinn ends 11-day
holdout with Browns,
agrees to 5-year deal
BY JOE MtUCIA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BEREA - Quarterback
Brady Quinn has some
catching up to do.
Quinn agreed to a fiveyear contract Tuesday with
the Cleveland Browns, ending an 11 -day holdout that
essentially eliminated his
chances to begin the season
as the team's starter.
Quinn was to fly to
Browns' headquarters to
sign the deal, Browns general manager Phil Savage said.
The contract's language was
still being finalized.
Browns coach Romeo
Crennel noted that Quinn
looked lost when he practiced with the team in May
and has a long way to go.
"He'll get here earl~ and
he'll stay late. I know If you
put those kind &lt;if hours in
and study, you ' ll have a
chance. Plus, I believe he's a
smart kid also - on reports
by some people I know," a
grinning Crennel said, referring to Notre Dame coach
Charlie Weis.
The deal, worth $20.2 million, with $7 .75 million
guaranteed, c9uld reach $30
million over five years with
incentives. Quinn was to be
introduced to the media
Wednesday.
The deal was first reported
by Foxsports.com.
Quinn's absence has all
but ensured he will not win
the Browns' !tarting job,

which has become a twoman contest between Charlie
Frye and Derek Anderson.
Quinn has missed 16 practices.
"It's unfortunate that it
took this long to get done,"
Savage said. "I feel like it's a
deal that we potentially
could have done at the start
of camp."
Quirin, a four-year starter
at Notre Dame, was projected as a top 10 pick in April's
draft. When he slipped deeper into the first round, the
Browns traded a 2008 firstround pick to Dallas and
selected the Ohio native and
childhood Browns fan at No.
22.
During Quinn's holdout,
Crennel coldly referred to
him as "the quarterback" and
not by name. He continued
·to refer to him that way
Tuesday.
"We're going to put him at
the bottom of the chart and
see where he is," Crennel
said. "We' lllet hiin compete,
but I' m not putting him on
the first team tomorrow."
The Browns have only two
practices before their first
preseason ~arne Saturday at
home agatnst the Kan sas
City Chiefs.
"Maybe in the fourth quarter we might want to give
him a snap," Crennel said.
Rookie offensive tackle
Joe Thomas said he 's looking forward to Quinn com-

Please see Quinn, Bl

AP photo
Cincinnati Reds players, from left, Brandon Phillips, Adam Dunn. Norris Hopper ancl Ken
Griffey Jr. celebrate after they defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers , 4-0, in a baseball game
Tuesday in Cincinnati.

Reds snap 9-game skid with Dodgers
BY JOE KAY
ftP SPORTS WRITER

CINCINNATI - Bronson
Arroyo pitched into the seventh inning on the hottest
night at Great American Ball
Park, helping the Cincinnati
Reds end their nine-game
losing streak against the Los
Angeles Dodgers with a 4-0
victory Tuesday night.
It was 97 degrees · al the
first pitch, the hottest start
for a game in the ballpark's

five seasons. A steamy
breeze only made it worse
for the 22,057 fan s who saw
a breakthrough win.
The fading Dodgers lost
their fifth in a tow, their
longest losing streak of the
season. They've dropped 14
oftheirlast 19 overall, a slump
that has dumped them from
first to third in the Nl West.
On this night, they
couldn't beat the team
they've dominated over
the past two seasons .

The Dodgers swept their
six-game series last season,
and took all three from the
Red s in a May series in Los
Angeles . Arroyo (5-1 2)
stopped the streak and got
himself back on track. The
right-hander had retired
only four batters in a 7-2
loss in Was hington on
Wednesday. the shortest
start of his career.
Arroyo gave up six hits in

Pl..se see Reds, Bl

�'

.

Page Ba • The Daily Sentinel

.

Browns' Steinbach injures knee
BEREA (AP) - Offensive
lineQlllll Eric Steinbach, the
Browns' top free-agent acquisition, left practice Thesday
after he fell on his right knee.
Steinbach was being examined by team doctors following Cleveland's afternoon
practice, which took place
·mdoors because of rain. He
walked off tll.e field with a
trainer and did not return.
"I would say he bruised it,"
Browns coach
Romeo
Crennel said. ''That's what I
would say because we didn' 1
have pads on inside and we
were on the turf and he came

down on first play of contact in
the knee." training camp, tearing th_e
T h e patellar tendon in his left
Brown s, knee .
who have
Bentley has said hi s
b e e n injured knee is about 70
cursed by percent and he hopes to
Notebook injurie s, · JOin the team for practice
particular- by the end of the month. He
ly to their offensive line, can't hasn't given up on his goal
afford to lose Steinbach, who of playmg this season.
signed a seven-year, $49.5
Crennel reported a list of
million contract in March.
injuries Tuesday, including
Cleveland signed Pro linebacker
. Willie
Bowl center · LeCharles McGinest, .who had tight·
Bentley to a six-year, $36 ness in his back Monday
million contract last season and was being evaluated by
and he was mJured on the hts doctor 10 Los Angeles.

Jones and Owens· both practice
BY THE AssOCIATED

I

I

~

PRESS

Left tackle Walter Jones
returned to practice for the
first time in five days with a
still-sore right shoulder.
Seahawks coach Mike
Holmgren insists he isn't
worried about Jones' health.
"He's going to be fine.
He's fine," Holmgren said
after Jones spent the morning in the training room
before walking out to watch
the last 15 minutes of practice.
"He could have practiced
today. But honestly, I just
want him ready to play in
the first ballgame."
But by late afternoon the
33-year-old Jones was back
participating in a no-pads
practice.
"Glad to be back. It just
· felt better," Jones said after
his unexpected return to ·the
field.
Holmgren said Jones, a
seven-time Pro B.owl pick,
will likely sit out the exhibition opener at San Diego.
"I mean, he could ptar.
He 's in good shape. He s
honest about how he feels . I
really just want him ready to
play in the first ballgame,"
Holmgren said. Cowboys
Terrell Owens returned to
practice after missing two
days because of back
spasms, and is expected to
play in the preseason opener.
"At this point, there's no
reason for me not to,"
Owens said after the 1-hour,
45-minute practice, the
team's last full workout
inside the Alamodome.

Wednesday, August 8,

www.mydailysentinel.com

"I think
he'll be
ready for
the game,"
c o a c h
W a d e
Phi 11 ips ·
said.
T h e
Cowboys
play
at
h ?· m e

night when the Saints host'
the Buffalo Bills in a preseason !lame, although
Payton satd it was doubtful
he would rush his best
blocker back that quickly.
Instead, Pa~ton said second-year player Zach
Strief and rookie Jennon
Notebook
Bushrod will get most of
the playing time. ·
.
.
.
: Brown has complained
Thl!rsday ~ught agruns~ ~e of nagging knee pain
In~1anapohs Colts. Pbllllp~ throughout his first two
s~d the first-team offense seasons as a . pfo, but
with quarterbac!' Tony -Payton said the latest
Romo and Owens IS expect- injury is unrelated to that.
ed to play about a qul!fler.
Giants
Safety. Ken Hamhn sat
Backup
linebacker
?Ut pracuce, a day after l!'k- Gerris Wilkinson will miss
mg a ~hot to the head dunng . at least two-to-three weeks
a doll. . &lt;;owb~y~ .coach after dislocating his right
..yade Ph!lhps sa!d It ts pos- knee in practice.
s1ble Hamlin,_ stgned as a
A second-year player
free agen! dunng the offsea- from
Georgia
Tech,
son, wont play Thursday.
W'lk'
as h rt ·n a
Saints
. 1 10son w
u 1 .
Left
tackle
Jammal pileup dur~ng a 9-on-7 dnll
Brown bruised his right M~nday m,ght. · .
knee and will most likely sit
There ·ts. n~ ligament
out the Saints' first presea- dam~.ge , whtch ts the good
son game.
part, coach Tom Coughlin
"The encouraging thing is satd.
.
Bears-Patr10ts Trade
there wasn't any ligament
New England acquired
damage the doctors were
able to find " on an MRI or cornerback Dante Wesley
an X-ray,' coach Sean from Chi_cag~ for an undi ~­
Payton said. "So, we're for- closed ptck 10 next years
tunate and obviously that's draft.
.
Wesley stgned _a twoa big relief."
Earlier Tuesday, trainers year contract wtth the
carted Brown from the Bears in March 2006 after
practice field when he spending four seasons with
crumpled to the ground Carolina. He finished with
with a right knee injury. He 13 special teams' tackle.s
was diagnosed with ' a bone and two defensive tackles
bruise. '
in 13 games for Chicago,
Brown could be ready to while missing three games
get back on the fteld Friday with a knee injury.

I

2007

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Quinn

~ribune

fromPageBl
peting and pushing the other
quarterbacks. He doubted
Qujnn's holdout would be
an tssue with his teammates.
" I don't think it's something that guys will hold
against him as long as he
comes in here and works
hard," Thomas said.
The major sticking points
in negotiations between the
Browns and agent Tom
Condon were escalator
clauses based on playing·
time for Quinn, who has
been working out in
Arizona.
Condon proposed allowing Quinn to get a $5 million increase in the final two
years of a potential fiveyear .deal if he takes 55 percent of the snaps in any two
of the first three years or 70
percent in any one of the
first three. The Browns
wanted to make·ihe triggers
tougher to reach.
Quinn was seeking $8.
million . in guaranteed
money, roughly th.e. same
amount that the No.20 pick,
cornerback Aaron Ross,· got
from the New York Giants.
Sava~e expres~d frustra- ·
tion w1th' negotiations and
. talks intensified over the .
weekend. · The two sides
were only $500,000 apart in
guaranteed money as of

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

t~ter

- Sentinel - l\e

CLASSIFIED
•

Galli a
County
OH
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ca
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(74o) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
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III"'_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___;O::..;r•Fiiiiax To (740) 446-3008
Or Fax To
992·2157

'

f;:.::

·AP photo

''•

Cleveland Browns quarterback throws a pass during mini·
camp, Friday, May 4, In Berea. Quinn ended an 11-i:lay holdout by stgnlng a :&gt;-year deal with Cleveland on Tuesday.

Mmiday. They basically
split the difference in arrivij)g at.$7.75 million guaranteed.
Savage said Quinn's intelligence and work ethic are
two iraits that the Browns
liked about the quartetback.
He said those traits will
serve him well over the
coming days.

Reds

away center.
The '))Qdgers had cleanup
hitter Jeff Kent back from a
sore hamstring, but couldn't
fromPag~Bl
get much goipg anything off
6 · 2·3 innings, struck out Arroyo and the NL's worst
five and didn't walk a bat- bullpen. The Re(,!s activated
ter. He also overcame a pair left-bander Eddie Guardado
of Cincinnati errors that set and called up right-hander
up scoring threats while he Gary Majewski before the
was on the mound.
· game in their latest attempt
Edwin Encarnacion dou- to set it straight.
Arroyo minimized the
bled home a pair of runs and bullpen's
impact by pitchBrandon Phillips hit a solo ing into seventh inning. It
homer off left-bander Mark appeared he was headed for
Hendrickson (4-6), who another fast meltdown
couldn't overcome his poor when he needed 31 pitches
first inning. Adam Dunn to . get through the first
singled home a run with two inning in the draining conouts in the first, and ditions. This time, he figEncarnacion followed with ured out what was going
a two-run double - the first wrong and fixed it, allowing
of his three hits.
only four baserunners after
Phillips led off the third the first inning.
inning with his 21st
Kent had missed the last
homer; a shot to straight- five games with a strained

"I don't think he'll be getting a lot of sleep over the
next few weeks ~fXing to
catch up," Savage sa1d.
Oakland
quarterback
JaMarcus Russell (No. I
overall) and New York Jets
cornerback Darrelle Revis
(No. 14) ate the only firstround picks without contracts.
hamstring. He singled in his
first at-bat; extending his
hitting streak to II games.
He has reached base safely
in his last 39 games, the
longest active streak in the
majors.
Notes: Hendrickson doubled in his first at-bat, ending an 0-for-21 this season.
He is 4-for-58 career. ...
Reds OF Ryan Freel will
have surgery Wednesday to
repair cartilage damage in
his right knee, He could be
sidelined for the rest of the
season. ... Reds INF Juan
Castro had reconstructive
surgery on hi s right elbQw.
He expects tq be fully
recovered by spring training .... Cincionati RF Ken
Griffey Jr. came up limping
after he stepped on first
base awkwardly on his
thil-d-inning single. He
stayed in the game.

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baby equipment, BIG clothing, toys, maternity clothes,
dishes, longaberger totes

I

A CELEBRATION OF
I,~::;;;:~· ~) _
New home in Gallipolis. 2br,
LIFE ... Overbrook Center,
IE!=f!OOO sq f1 mil split 2 bath w/whlrlpool tubs,
located at 333 .Page Street,
I J~~1' ~~u(:ntf 11' IN
•NOTICE•
level, 2 bath 24x25 m/l lanii- large LR on 3 acres ru/1,
Middleport, Ohio Is pleased
po~ 1\111:) I 0~
U?
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- ly room, septic system. $87.500. 740-446-7029
to announce we are accept·
lNG CO. recommends 100x130 lot in nice, quiet Ranch Style BriCk Home, 2
fj~i) ~ 1rf..s MI&lt;;Sir.IC. "'
lng applications lor the tol·
that you do bualness with neighborhood, 9/10 miles bedrooms, 1 bedroom extra
Big · ~ard sale· 8/9-B/10, lowing positions to join our
t&gt;o6'.
~!&gt;
~
1t-~lill
~
people you know, and out Sand Hill Rd. in Durst large. 2 full baths. on 2 112
9am-?, 35670 SR. 7, lots of friendly and dedicated stan.
NOT to send money Add.
Pt.
Pleasant acres. 3 miles !rom Point
misc., also fresh produce.
-Full nme and Part Time
through
the
mall
until
you
Restoration
needs
include Pleasant. Owner relOcating,
Garage sale, 3 family, 3202 STNA'S and Part Time
have Investigated the but not limited to: deck. Must sell. Photos/details
Syracuse, formerly Jo's Gift LPN'S. Apptlcallons must
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HVAC, carpet, some drywall. located
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at
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-;;:::;===~
Most
furniture stays. Brick. www. or.~b. com (code N7t37)
above Pizza shop, starts ers wtth positive attitudes to
~
aluminum siding. Toxic mold or call 304-675-4235 asking
Wed. 8th , Th urs. 9lh &amp; Frl..join usln provk:llng outstand·
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contamination dispute. Mold $128,000
tOth, free; small toys &amp; 1ng, quality care to our resi~
TO
LoAN
disclosure
awllable. lial&gt;lity
Gandy to kfds, school cloth· dents. Stop by and till out
waiver
signature
required . Save
·Thousands!
ing, coats &amp; shoes, baby an Application or contact
$45,000 as is. Serious buy- Clearance on lot models. ell
clothing, dresses, jeana, Hollie . Bumgarner, LPN,
ers/contractors 304-675- 1-888-736·3332. The Home
tops different sizes, brand Staff
Development
3n9 leave message
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new whatnots all kinds, (rea- Coordinator0740·992·6472
Borrow Smart. Contact
60.
sonable)
and come see lor yourseH
the Ohio Oivislon of
- - - - - - - - the difference you can make
XTAEME SAVINGS! Over
Financial
Institution's
Glasgo,Aitchie ,Shealy,Lee at Overbrooldll EOE&amp; A
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square fool home for
Office
ol
Consumer
lamilles.Fri.,Aug.10·Ritchie Participant of the Drug-Free
tess than $40/sq. ft. CaltThe
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BEFORE
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refi·
home,Tyree Blvd,Racine,9· Work Place Progtam.
Home Show - Barboursville
nance your home or
5:00.chairs,winter coate,etc
at 1-668-738·3332
obtain
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BEWARE
ACCEPTING APPLICA·
, .~
All rHI tsll.. lldvertlsing
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on right.OiiVFoster resi· AVAILABLE TO WORK ALL
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dence.Th.S.9-7 &amp; Fri.8·11H SHIFTS. APPLY AT PAR
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Office of Consumer
which m~bs It llleg~lto
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bath good condition. Must
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ir the
dvlr1isementl ar
1'1111".- - - - - - , 1'1111"...- - - - - , mortgage brohr or
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diiCrimlnatlon bliNd on be moved. $12.000.00.
uiiJect to the Fodeno out on Bailey Run Ad.
lfwoWANIUl
Hw.WAN!ID
740.949·2698 after 4:00pm
race, color, religion, ••
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femlll•l•talul or n•tlonel
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An Excellent way to earn
·IIELPWANIID
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-,
YARDSA!b
origin, or ..V Intention to
1168.
2007 Clayton
service announcement
Pr.I'JL.\sANr
Call Mantyn 304-882-2645 Help wanted-Pan time
m•'-•ny auch
5BRI3BA
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Security
Officers
needed
In
from
the
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administrative 8881stant, to
preference, limitation or
Starting
at
$33.00/sp.fl.t
New
Haven,
WV
$7.66
par
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Company)
dhlctlml,.tlon."
Yard Sale 3 112 miles SMdill AVONI All Areasl To Buy or work with Off.ce manafier,
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Ad . Thur-Fri 8-? Girls, ladles, Sell. Shirley Spears. 30'4- average 15·25 hours per
to qualified buyers.
675-1429.
Must have clean record ,
~!» .
This newspaper wilt not
week. Job cfNcnptfon to
ski's t s &amp; mare
The Home Show
paas a drug screen and
~ut'
knowingly Kcepl
tnctude but not limited to:
1
1 edv•rllltmtnts for rnl
Build Your C.rttr
ba~gmund chectc. Call 1·
WANIUI
Aahland,KY
answering lhe phone, ..,rk·
MANAGEMENT
800-275-8359, M-F 8:30 lo
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roBuv
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rddel'tl .... htlr.by
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3
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nroen jar with t13 on lhe Players Club Drive Suhe ~ovuou .... Pay besod on expe·
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Primary wo~
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1
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....
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Plant • bul lll.J&lt;X
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•
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House for sale in Racine
NEW 2008 4 Bed
some of theni have blue
One position open at two (2) required. Contact Valley
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G•Hipolla career College area. D; 304·675-3637 E; bedrooms, living room. din·
HmJl WANJm
pre-maintenance. on truc::ks interv~.
PO Box 2407
304-882·2334
lng room, kitchen, large lam·
8 seven wk old puppies
,-----,---=,..,.-:-- Huntington, WV 25725
(Careers Close To Hom&amp;) - - - - - -- - ily room, central air, gas heat
bla~ Lab/Golden Retriever
and equipment, yardlplanl Hau...,_,.,., FT. '"dnl"'t
Call Today! 740-446-4367, 3 br.. 2 full blh., 2Dx38 great·
""tlta.......
---·
1\'11
wo •
or fax resume to
and 1 lire.,.ace. Addition ol a ..... Mt121.f1M
and
Other
ml
To
Good Home 304-743· $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
~ operat·
·~us e , p e r t 0 n c e d
1-800-214-0452
room, cia. btactdop dri110, !g. large Florida
~
• ~'lo
chores.
Experience
740-+46-3400
or
room com7
mymldwellhome.com
.., ON
$300.00
lng equipment and extfa Ho use keeper /Ja nito r
3Q4.52g..()()55
--~lipolilclreercollegll.com parting area, all new win- pletely cedar opens onto
Desired. Interviews Now
EOE
Accreclited Member Accrediting dowsldOOfslroof &amp; septic, patio &amp; ,_.,1 area. Heated in
s~ltosuch as welding a plus. Being Conducted. Many :-:-::-----::-- - - - , """""
"' ·-~ """'"" laminated hardwOOd floors ground pool
~ endosed by priand ScilOOis 1274e.
Free Kittens: All colors, dlf· HIRING BONUS
011
ferent ages. Call: 740-992- $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ Starting pay based expe· Benefits Available. Paid McC/ures Restaurant ( =-=-:::-::::-:::-::---:::---- throughout, 24' above vacy fencing and land- New 3 Bedroom homes tram
rience and drt\llng record. Vacations, Free Meals. Galipolis Only) now hiring STUDENTS FOR THE NA ground pool, additional spot scaped. Finished 2 car $214.36 per month, Includes
9504 ask tor Lynn.
Benellts Including health
tor
Available part &amp; full time - dayshift PROGRAM. Rock"'"'rlngs
mobile home. on 1 acre, gararu:o
attached 10 house many upgrades, delivery &amp;
Have you aver been told insurance, available after Discounts
~
:..~
Insurance.
Homelike
available.
Apply
between
10
NursiiV'I
and
Rehabilitation
for
only
$~15,000,
near
St.
and
finished
&amp; heatad 3 car set-up. (740)385-2434
meeting
employment
··v
Free Silver Male Akita, you have a good phone
requiremen 1s. Call Valley Atmosphere. Ravenswood and 11AM Monday · Center is located s miles At. 143 &amp; St. At. 7, garage
unattached
voice?
Loves to play with kids and
Nice used 3 bedroom home
Center,
11 13 Saturday
from Pomer~"~~~
This Is the PERFECT job Brook Concrete corporate Care
-, and 20 min- Pomeroy, Oh., (740)696· Excellent condition ready 10 vinyVshingle. Will help with
other dogs. 740-446-9357
office at (304)n3-5519 to Washington
St., New Horizons Childhood utes lrom Athens and _122
_7- - - - - - move in. $255.000.00. Call: de~very. 740·385-4367
tor youl
schedule an interview.
Ravenswood,
WV. Enrichment Center is Albany, We currently are 3BR tBA In New Haven. (740)949-2217
To good homes only, solid
References Required. A accepting resume's for en seeking in(jviduets interest· Many updates have DeBfl '---'-----~-- OBC MOdular {LXM503)
black 1 vr old F cat, and two EARN $8.50/hr FT + Floral Oeslgner, Full·tlme, Pleasant Place To Wortttl!
afternoon teacher's aide ad In attending our 75 hour made. _.~ki ng $75000 . 304_ House on Meson Street, special
order
only
Waakly Bonus
E p 1 od
N 1 A 1t t p
"'::
Clifton. WV Call 740·992·
10 wk old F black and cream
Par-lme,
t t.
JCp. reerr '
IRS JOBS
position. Resume's can be '·· ursng sssan rogram 882-3773fordetails.
52,840.00delivered to your
Potenltal
kittens. 441.Q405
Pay based on Experience.
.sent to P.O. Box 706 , which will_start ~SI 20,
2090Monday throughFriday location. Cole'a Mobile
Take lnboundiCuttorner Send covet" tetter wilh $18.46-$32.60/hr., now hlr- Po
0H De dl' . B- 2007. ThiS class IS free of 4 BR house. 2.5 baths. 1 for information
Homes 4 miles East ol
Service ·calls for a variety or resume to: CLA Box 104, c/o lng. Paid Training is prOYid· .17 meroy,
· a 1ne 18
charge and begins with 2 acre, 1 car garage, gazebo. HUD HOMES! 3bd only Athens on AI 50/32.· PH:
7
YARD SALE
Christian ministries. Atso Gallipolis Tribune, PO Box ed. FOf application and free
-o .
volunteer days that will allow motor home hookup. $21,900. More 1-4bd 800-466-4687 or 592- 1972.
::~;:;:::~· make OUtbound calls tor 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631
government job. Info, call
POST OFFICE N&lt;YN
you to see wtlat the job con- Morning Star Rd in Racine. home• aveilablel from M-F. 8- 7. Sat. : 9 to 4.
various non-profit
American Assoc. ol Labor 1HIRING
sists ol fi rst har,d. We allow Asking $135.000. Call 225- $199/mol
5%dn, "Where you get your
YARD SALEorganizations. Full time LPN. evening shift. 913-599-8244, 2&lt;4/hrs. emp.
Avg. Pay $20Jhr or
12 students per ctass ·-so 264·1055
20yra08%. For listings money's worth"
Gt\UlPOLIS
'
If you would Nke to take· serv.
$57K annually
they fill up quickly. Please
800-559-4109 xF144
CALL NOW!
advantage of this opportuniIncluding Federal Benefits come in and complete an 502
LeGrande
Blvt1,
1..aa&amp;-IMC.PAVU
t)'. you may apply at 8204 Local Home Health Agency
and OT,Paid.Training,
application If interested. Gallipolis_ Quiet neighbor- In Syracuse
2800sq.tl. OWNER ANAIICING
Cara
1 Dnve,
· Ganrpoli:l,
• 1" Ohio• now hiring PCA's, HHA's, · Vacations-FT/PT
107 Colonial Dr ' behind
(1-888-462-7298)
Rocksprings Is an equal hood· 3BR · 2 BA · Aec qualit';' built mull1·level brick
Nice 312 singlewides
Dollar General on Jackson
Job ext. 1911
Monday thru Friday 8a-4p. CNA's and' STNA's. Aexible
1-866·542·153 1
opportunity employef.
Room, LA wrth FP. Florida home. maintenance free.
From $1 .800 down
Pike. Name brand girls
www.lnlocision.com
An Equal Opportunity scheduling. Apply in person
USWA
niir-.;.,:~.:;.;.:.;,;
room, fenced yard, inground Nice quiet neighborhood. ~payment
clothes sz 7·Jr0. Kirby - - - - - - - - Employer. VIM/ON.
or call 740-44 1-1377. 2
WANIID
pool, hot tub, 2 storage 4 bedrooms. 2 t/2 Oath with
Gary (740) 828-2750
sweeper, scrubs, lots of t:"&lt;&lt;OO Hiring Bonus - - ' - - - - - - - Commerce Or. Gallipolis. ResCar~ in Gallipolis, OH is
To Do
bldgs. all appliances. low hardwood trim throughout.
househokl items. Fri!Sat 9·5 ...,
Harris Steak house Now OH.
accepting bids tor an LSW · - - - - - - · interest &amp; assumable loan U-shaped kitchen wilh 40' ol
Full~~o~rt:U~ifts _H_irin..:g;...(;..304_.:_)6_7_5·_97_2_6__ Teacher Aide wanted to Consultant. Please include AU Types Masonry, Brick, available. Call [740)448- cabinets. Wood burning Pire- Small Mobile Home Parll,
available
Help wanted , weekends a work with students· with reQuired hOurly rate and Bloc!(, Stone, Free Estimate, 4486 or (740)645·2355
place. 2 1!2 car detached Good Investment. Good
8/5-8113 1oam..apmaltha Y
must, (740)992-5023
deYelopmental disabilities. number 01 hours available (304)773-9550 - 304-593·279 &amp; Centerpoint Rd. For
garage. Nicely landscaped Income call between 7pm &amp;
on a weekly basis. Fax to 6421 _
.
Sbd
2ba
Gallipolis .60 acres lot. Immaculate 10pm. 304-675-2359
Information 740-682·7163.
Experience
and/or
training
Pamela
Sheets,
CS
at
740.
Foreclosure!
Buy
for
Great Pay! Great Job! SCAC seeks Program
Shirley Arrowood.
preferred. Must be eijglble 446-3987 or email a1 - - -- -- - - $84,8001
5%dn, condition. Low utilities.
1-Bn-4&amp;3-6247
Director tor Mason Cty fo
Selling price $219,000. Call Trailer for sale. $2.000.
r an Aide Cartificate from psheetsOrescare com
Caregt•-r
wtlh
5
yrs
-peh
•.,
..... - 20yr~08%. More homes
ext. 2301
Homeless Sheller in pt,
740-44
1-51 71. Shown by [740)992·5858
the
Ohio
Dept.
of
Education,
ence
wOUld
like
to
care
for
hom
St99lmol
For
lOCI!
Elizabe th Lattley's . Yard - - - - - - - - Pleaaant BAIBS in Sodal
appl only.
Par
a
-Pr
o
t
e
s
s
ion
a
I
Salas
Posltlon
your
loved
one
in
their
8001
11 1
Sale. Thur 819 · Fri 8/ 0 8· Substitute AN/LPN wanted WorWCounseling or related
11
559-4 109
Cerlification
preferred.
home. Aef.available. 446- aF254
It nga ca
Why Pay rent ???
MFG.Homes
5pm. Cindy Dr. Bidwell. tor
the
Carleton lleld. Prefer 5-7 years expeLand Contract (2) 3 Clayton Single Wldest!t
Submit
application
or
An
outstanding
7165
or
441
-9232
Strolter/car seat combo. rid- School/Meigs Industries. rience In fiekf and superviBedroom homes. Payment
Star1ing at $22 5.00
Attention I
ing toys, girl clothes up to Hours 9am·3pm. MuSI have sion eJCp. Administrative resume by August 14th to: opportunity for the right
about
the
same
as
renl.
10%
Carpentry. painting, drywall, local company offering "NO down
person.
Brownell .
per month WAC.
5T, boys clothes up to current RNILPN license In lillies included fiscal man- Carleton SChool, PO Box
803
35 years experienced, quali307,
1
310
Carleton
Street,
Prefer
experience.
18moo,
exersaucer, the state ol Ohio. Prefer agement and development
1 -~:~-~:'.-~~
ty workmanship. For small DOWN PAYMENT" pro- ~iddleport · $49. 900: 152
Otters day wort&lt; week.
playpen, Surius ST Radio, experience in public health of program: lndraising and Syracuse. Oh 4577~
grams lor you to buy your Gavin St. Rodney- $57,900 --:::---:::-----,
jobs
call
Steve
at
(740)388home instead of renting.
F.i
Excellent benefits
computer games, water nursing and.lor working with grant development experi- Metal Fabricator seeks a full
'I OO'lto 1.1nancmg
.
Will work w1th you on down
_
~~
8071
8,._,.
u..:x~'lr~~
Email
cooier, VCR, misc.
children and adults with ence
plus time drafter. The ideal candi·
-,
L
_.
payment
(740)446-4543
•
,
m
BUIIJJING;s
'
ess than pe..ed cted1t
.., , ,.~,~
r7600 c la~on . net
- - - - - - -- developmental disabilities . communi cationtcompute.r date should have experi· to schedule
an interview Lawn-Care Service, Mowing accepted
Looking
lor a good pre- Loo-iiiii-iiliiiililiilii,..J
Fri-Sat Aug 10/11 8:30-5? Send resume by Monday. skills and knowledge ot gen- ence in CAD, preferably.
No Walk-Ins Please
&amp; Trimming. Call (740)441 - • Payment could be the owned home9 Many to 32 X48 Metal Bldg. for rent,
Green Valley Or. off Augus1 20, 2007 lo: Meigs era! office duties and equip- Auto CAD and mechanical lb...;...;;;;,;,;,,;;;;;,,g 1333 or (740)645-0546
same as rent
choose !rom at The Home across trom the new SGHS.
Evergreen or Kerr Rd.
COunty Boar ol Mental men!. AFT wfbenefits 8end draMing.
Compensation
l ocators. Show · Barboursville. I · $5001month. Can 740.256Will babysit in my Letart Mortgage
- - -,--,-,--::--::-c Retardation
and cover lener, resume and based upon experience.
se&amp;-736-3332
6034. 740-441·5325
Huge Yard Sale, Sat 8111 DeveiOpmental~lsabilitles. three letters of rei., to SCAC, Please submit resume and
home, behind Coal Mining (740)367-QOOO
8am. ? , Everything $1.001 1310 Carleton Slreet, PO HA, 540 Fifth Ave. references lo: St. AI. 124,
Plant, all ages &amp; hours,
6541 Stale Route 141 jus1 Box 307, Syracuse, Oh Huntington, WV 25701 by Vinton. OH 45686 by August
experienced, State EMT &amp;
20.
past SA 775 on the ri!jlt.
45779
Augusl1 3, 2?07 EOE
CPR cer1ified 304·882-3538

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I

Sheriff Sale
Caae
Number
06CV099
Unltoa
States
ot
America Plaintiff VS
Joan1111 Forguaon at at
""-ndanla
Court ol Common
Pleaae, Melga County,
OhiO
In ' puN"Af!CI o! 1n
order ,of sale to rna
dl~ .tfom laid
court Iii then above
ontltlad 'ioctlon, I wiH
· - to sale 11 PiJblie luctlon on tho front
1lep1 of· ttl&amp; Melga
CoUnty Court House
on Friday, September
7, '2007 at tO a.m., at
aeld day, the following
deacrlbad aarleatate;
Sttuslad In the Village
of Middleport, County
of Melga and State ot
OhiO
Parcel One: The 8881
one-halt of South onehalt (50 feat of Lot
1297) In · Horton's
Addfiton to what Ia
naw the VIllage of
Middleport, Ohio, forrnerty lower Pomeroy,
Ohio. Said original lot
being 50 feat In width
and 140 feet In depth
and baing furlhlr
deacrtbad 11 tollowa:
Beglnhlng 70 .feat E11t
Of the Southwell cor·
ner o! Lot N287;Thenca
North 60 feat; Thence
Eut 70 feet; Thenca
South 50 foet; Thence
West 70 feet to the
place of begiMing.
Parcel Two: A right-ofway tor sewer lines as
currently
existing
acro11 West one-halt
of the South one-halt
of Lot 1297 connecting
Into
High
Street.
SubJect to an euamont for the ballllflt of
tho Walt one•half ot
tho South one-halt of
Lot N2117 .tor wellr end
get llnaa connecting
Into the lillY , . _ n
Broadway and High
8traett.
Curr1nt
Owner:
Joan1111 Forguton 11111
748 High StrHI
Middleport, Ohio
PPI15-01138.000
Prior OHd Rtltrence:
Volume 324 Page 543
Appralaed
at
S32,000.00 termt ot
11te: Cannot be told
for tell then 213rds ot
the approlted value.
10% down on day of

aele, cash or cart Hied conflrmallan of aele.
check, balance due on Tho appraisal did
contlnnlllon ofaalo.
Include an Interior
The appraloal did not examlnatlon of the
Include an Interior houH.
examination ot the Robart E. BHgle,
house.
MelgaCounty Sheriff
Robert E. Beegle, Attorneys for
the
Meigs County Sheriff
Plaintiff
Attorney
tor
the Lerner Sempaon 6
Plaintiff
Rothlusa
D. MIIH
120 E. 4th St, 8th Floor
18 W. Monument Ave. Clnelnnatl, Oh 45202Deylorl, Ohio 46402
• 4007
937-461·1900
513-241-3100
(8) 1, 8, 15
(8) 1, 8, 15

a_,_

Public Notice
Shlrlff SIIIH
CaM Number 07CV024
ChiiH Home Finance
LLC Plaintiff VS
Jackie P. Crameano at
at Detandanta
Court of Common
Please, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance ot an
order of aate to me
directed from aald
court In the aboVe entl·
tied action, 1 will
eKpose to aale 11 publie auction on the front
steps of the Meigs
County Court Houee
on Friday, September
7;JJJ07 II 10 a.m., of
llld day, the following
described real eolate:
Stlualad In the State of
Ohlo, County of Molgs,
and In the Village of
Middleport:
Being the East onehell of Lots Numbers
One Hundred Thirty·
Seven (137) and One
Hundred Thlrty·Eight
(138) of Waterman
Palmar's Addition to
Sheffield,
now
Middleport, baing 100
11., moN or leal, on the
IIIey betwaen Fourth
end Fifth Streell, and
Fifty (50) n. fronting on
Hooker Sti'HI.
Current · Owner: Jeckle
P. Cremaant elat
Property At:
388
Hookor Straet
Mlddloport, Oh 45780
PPI 15-00122.000
Prior DHd Reference:
Volume 80, Page 357
Appraised
at
$55,000.00. Torma ot
tale: Cannot be aold
tor 1811 thin 213rdt Of
the appraltod value.
10% down on day of
tale, csah or certified
check, balance due on

-,..-

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r-l~'tl~oes

~eat,e~c:a

1 . . 1""-il-==-sp.a.p- - s to. ,....-a. ... .- IJa.c:.r.

~aaht.

dogra:.:.:-:w:e:st~1-::ro:d~;~~~~ne:":o:t~t:aw:n~a:h:lp~roa=d~1/~2~""':an:d~3=0~"-:,re:b:a~r~~~~~~~~~rec=ord=s~book::~2:-:at~p~a~g~e~M:a~l~ls~aa~D.~J~o~h~nso~

thence
north
81
degrees 80 rods to the
place ot beginning,
containing 85 acres
more or tess.
Exceptlng80.031acrea
conveyed to Burner
Land Company, Inc., by
daad
·~alad . May
30,1188, and · recordad
In volume 89, page 393,
of the Mllga C(!unty
official records.
Reference
Deed:
Volume 14, ·page 373,
Meigs County Oftldal
Racorda.
Public Notice
Tho above described
real estate Ia more
Shariff Sale
accurately described
CoM Number 07CV003 by Iurvey as folloWs;
J P Morgan Chase Sttualad In the state of
J1ank Plalntlft VS
Ohio, county of Molgs,
Allen R. Jacks at at Township of Rutland,
Defendants
being part ot fraction 2
Court ot Common and part of fraction 6,
Pleas, Malgs County, range 14 west, lawn·
Ohio
ship 6 north, ol the
In pursuance of an Ohio Company first
order ot oale to ma purchase of1787, and
directed from aald being bonded and
court In theabove end· described as follows:
tied action, 1 will Commencing for ret,r·
expose to sale at pub- once at 5/8" Iron Pin
tic auction on the front found
capped "E.
stops of the Meigs Triplett 6766" In the
County Court Houee weal line of fraction 2
on Friday, Sept 7, 2007 at the southeast corner
II 10 a.m., of said day, of traction 6 (Note: Nf·
the
lollowlng , erence hearing on the
daocrlbtid real estate: west line of fraction 2
Situated In the town· and the east line ot
ohlp
ot Rutland, fraction 6 used aa an
County of Melgo, and assumed bearing ot
In the state of Ohio:
north 03 degrees 29'
Beginning
at
the 21" easl)
ooutheaat corner ot Thence, wnh the west
E.K. Taylor's land In line of fraction 2 and
Fraction No. 2, town tha aast line of fraction
no. 6, range no. 14, Of 6, north 03 degreeo 29'
the Ohio company'o 21" east a distance of
purchased and In the 1414.75 feat to a point
center of tho road; bring the true place ot
thence
north
25 beginning for thlo
d111reeo - 1 48 rods d01crlptlon.
etong tho road; thence Thence from tald point
north 19 112 degrae• of beginning and leav·
w111 74 rod I and 5 lng the lot line, lOuth
links along the road to 75 degi'HI 51' 15" weat
A. A.
Hull)phrey't a dltlance of 146.00
acuth lint; thence Weal faat to an Iron pin set:
110 roda; lhtnct touth Thonco,
north
18
7 112 degrees east 36 degraea 08' 27" oaat a
10d1 end 10 llnkt; dlotance ot 417.84 taet
thence woat 22 llnkt; to on Iron pin tel, P•••·
thence
lOuth
12 lng through an Iron pin
degraes w01t 41 rodo 1et at a dlslance at
and 12 llnkolo a atone pluo 190.00 feet;
corner; thence eaot 37 Thence
north
74
rodt and 15 IInke; dagreea 11 ' 52" east a
thence
touth
28 distance of 260.97 feet
df111881 1111 41 rodo to an Iron pin set;
end 15 llnkt ; thence Thence
north
85
aouth 51 degree• 8ast degrees 04' 18" eaata
27 rods and 6 links; dlotance ot 357.65 faat
thence
south
5 to a point In the center-

I

no. 58 (Whltea Hill
Road) p81alng over the
-tina ot traction 6 at
a distance ot plua
46.28 teet and passing
through two Iron pin
His at a dlllance ot
plus 234.65 1ee1 plus
334.65feet, respectivety.
The.nce, wtth tho centerllna ot township
rood. np. 58, south 18
deg-i 33' 15" east a
distance of 206.10 feet
to a point,
Thence, leaving the
road, lOuth 63 deg-•
!9'. 06" nat a distance
of '157.48 . goat to an
Iron pin HI, passing
through an Iron pin oet
at a distance ot plus
10.561eet.
Thence, south 19
degreee 06' 36" east a
dlslance at 121.72feet
to an Iron pin set:
Thence, south 75
degraea 51' 15" west a
distance of 311 .34feet
to the place of begin·
nlng, passing through
an Iron pin set at a dis·
lance of plus 85.38
feel;
Containing
5.172
acres, more or less, of
which 2.985 acres era
In fraction 2 and 2.187
acres are In fraction 6;
Subject to all legal
rights ot way, easemenlo,
restrictions,
reservations, and zonlng regulations of
racord.
Subject to the right of
way to Township road
No. 58.
Subject to the100 year
tlood plain restrictions,
11 appllcapta.
Subject to a 50.00 feet
wide aaaomont being
retervad unto the
Grantor, their hairs,
and or aotlgnt, torev·
er. Said easement
being fnr the purpoae
of running utilities to
other parcel• of land
on or near Tawnahlp
Road No. 58. Said
aatement runo In e
ncirlh·oouth dlractlon
acr.,.1 the eaot ond ot
the above deocrlbed
propt!rty wtth the aaot
line of tald easement
baing the center llna ot
townthlp road no. 58.
containing 0.237 acrea,
more or len, ot easement.
AU Iron pln1 set are

capped and labeled
Claus 6456.
The bearlnga In this
doacrlptlon are for
angle calculation only
and are baaed on the
west Uno ot lractlon 2
and the east line of
fraction 6 used aa an
assumed bearing of
north .3 degrees 29'21"
east.
A plat ot the above
described ourvey has
been oubmlttad lor tile
at the county englnear's office.
The above description
prepared by Roger W.
Ctaua, registered surveyor No. 6456, basad
on actual field survey
of May 7, 1998: said
survey being subject
to an facta that maybe
disclosed In a lull and
accurate UUesaarch.
The real estate above
described Is oubject to
all leaaao, easements,
and rights of way of
record.
The preparer of thla
Instrument does not
certify the accuracy of
the aboVe description.
Parcel one: 1HI0675
Parcel two: 11-00676
Known as: 33565
Whiles Hill
Road,
Rutland, Ohio 45775
Current Owner : Allen
Jacka
Property at: 33565
Whites Hill Rd
Rutland, Ohio
PPI 11-00675.000
11-00676.000
Prior daad Reference:
Volume185, Page 485
Appraised
at
$95,000.00 Ierma ot
sale: Cannot be sold
for leoo than 213rda the
appralttd valuo. 10%
down on day ot aalo,
cuh
or
cortltlad
chock. Balance due on
conflrmall.on of aete.
The apprat1al did
Include an Interior
examination of the
horne.
Robart E. Booglt,
Malgo County Shorftt
Attorney
tor
the
Plaintiff
Shapero &amp; Felty
1500 W. Third St. Suite
400
Cleveland, Oh 44113
216-621·1530
(8) 1, 8, 15

Public Notice

::--:7.:-:--:---Sheriff Sale.
Case Number 07CV025
Welts Fargo Bank NA
PlalntlffVS
MeHsaa D Johnoon et
at Defendants
Court of Common
Ploaa, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance ol an
order ot sale to me
directed from said
court In the above anti·
lied action, I · will
axpoae to sale It publie auction on the front
~tepa 'Ole the ~alga
ounty ourt ouse
on Friday, September
14, 2007 at 10 a.m., of
said day, the follawlng
daacrlbacl l'&lt;llleatata:
Situated In the State of
Ohio, County of Meigs
and In the Township of
Olive.
Being 2.23 acres, more
or le11, out ot the
Northwest comer of lot
No. 1165, section 9,
town 4, range 11 and
bounded described as
follaws:
Beginning 8.00 rods
Wa~t of the common
corner of lando owned
.by J. W. Emrick T.
Kibble, Sarah M. Kibble
and
Herbert
Williamson on tho
North line of lot No.
1165 (this aame point
baing 72 rode ~aat ot
the North West corner
of Lot No. 1165);
Thence South 3" West
e distance of36.5 rods,
more or leas, along the
West line ot lot owned
by Herbert Williams, to
the center ot State
Route No. 680; Thence
North approximately
38' Wast 18 rodl, m0l'8
or loll, to Southoaat
corner of land owned
by Dr. Formarty owned
by Ira kibble; Thence
North 21 .8 roda, more
or lilt, to lht north
line of lot No. 1155;
Thence Etll along
North line ot Lot No.
1185, a dltlanca of 12.8
rodo to tho place of
beginning.
The above doocrlbod
real eotate Ia mora
accurllely datcrlbed
by 1urvey II follows:
baing a tract ot land
tranotorred to Margaret
Groaonlckle, Et. AI. as
recorded In official

I

n Et.
623, Meigs County AI.
Recorders
Office, Property at:
54210
Melga County, Ohio, Stata Route 681
also being a part of180
Reedsville, Ohio
acre lot No. 1165, PPN09.005n.ood
Townahlp·4·North , Prior lleed Relel'&lt;lnce;
Range-11 -We&amp;t, Olive Volume 135, Page 763
Township,
Meigs Appraised
at
County, State ot Ohio $25,000.00. Terms of
and more particularly sale: cannot be sold
described as follows: · tor Ieee than 2/3rds ot
Beginning at a 5/!l" lron ihe appralaed value.
pin sat which assumed 10% down. on day of.
to bear North 86' 40'00' sola, cash or certHiad
East a distance ot check, balance due on
976.80 feet from the ·confirmation ofoala.
Northwest corner of The appraisal did ·
aakl 160 acre lot No. lnclu~o an Interior
1185, Township 4; examination of the
Range 11 ;
house.
Thence along the north Robert E. Beegle,
line of said lot no.1165 Metga County SheriH
North 66' 40' 00" East e Attorney
for
the
distance of 211.20 feet Plaintiff
to a 518"1ron pin set:
Lerner Sampson &amp;
Thenca leaving sold Rolhtuss
North line South 00' 120 E. 4th Street 81h
26' 21" East paaalng Floor
through a 518" Iron pin Clnclnnall, Oh 45202·
HI at a Distance ot 4007
571.24feet and going a 513·241· 3100
total distance of 601.24 (8) 8, 15, 22
feet to a point In the r---~--..,
centerline ot State
Route t 681·
Thence aton'g said con·
terllne the following
thrae courses:
•
1. North 41 ' 20' 00'
West a distance of
49.50 teet to a point;
2. North 45' 54 ' 49'
West a distance ot
128.21 feet to a point;
3. North 50' 05 ' 37'
West a dlotance of
119.29feet 1o a polm·
Thence leaving said
centerline North oo·
09: 02' East a distance
of 386.05 feet to the
principal
point of
beginning, containing
2,3875 acres, more or
Ills sub]ect to all legal
ea~o and rightsof·way.
Baarlngt are ssaumad
and are tor the deter·
mlnatlon of anglea
only.
The above daacrlptlon
wao prepared from on
actual 1urvey made on
the 28th day ot July
1994, by C. Thoma~
Smith
Ohio
Prole~olonal Surveyor,
N 8644.
Auditors Parcel No. 09·
00577.000
Retorence
deed
Volume: 135, Page 763,
Meigs county Official
Recorda.
Current
Owner;

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

I

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.

Page Ba • The Daily Sentinel

.

Browns' Steinbach injures knee
BEREA (AP) - Offensive
lineQlllll Eric Steinbach, the
Browns' top free-agent acquisition, left practice Thesday
after he fell on his right knee.
Steinbach was being examined by team doctors following Cleveland's afternoon
practice, which took place
·mdoors because of rain. He
walked off tll.e field with a
trainer and did not return.
"I would say he bruised it,"
Browns coach
Romeo
Crennel said. ''That's what I
would say because we didn' 1
have pads on inside and we
were on the turf and he came

down on first play of contact in
the knee." training camp, tearing th_e
T h e patellar tendon in his left
Brown s, knee .
who have
Bentley has said hi s
b e e n injured knee is about 70
cursed by percent and he hopes to
Notebook injurie s, · JOin the team for practice
particular- by the end of the month. He
ly to their offensive line, can't hasn't given up on his goal
afford to lose Steinbach, who of playmg this season.
signed a seven-year, $49.5
Crennel reported a list of
million contract in March.
injuries Tuesday, including
Cleveland signed Pro linebacker
. Willie
Bowl center · LeCharles McGinest, .who had tight·
Bentley to a six-year, $36 ness in his back Monday
million contract last season and was being evaluated by
and he was mJured on the hts doctor 10 Los Angeles.

Jones and Owens· both practice
BY THE AssOCIATED

I

I

~

PRESS

Left tackle Walter Jones
returned to practice for the
first time in five days with a
still-sore right shoulder.
Seahawks coach Mike
Holmgren insists he isn't
worried about Jones' health.
"He's going to be fine.
He's fine," Holmgren said
after Jones spent the morning in the training room
before walking out to watch
the last 15 minutes of practice.
"He could have practiced
today. But honestly, I just
want him ready to play in
the first ballgame."
But by late afternoon the
33-year-old Jones was back
participating in a no-pads
practice.
"Glad to be back. It just
· felt better," Jones said after
his unexpected return to ·the
field.
Holmgren said Jones, a
seven-time Pro B.owl pick,
will likely sit out the exhibition opener at San Diego.
"I mean, he could ptar.
He 's in good shape. He s
honest about how he feels . I
really just want him ready to
play in the first ballgame,"
Holmgren said. Cowboys
Terrell Owens returned to
practice after missing two
days because of back
spasms, and is expected to
play in the preseason opener.
"At this point, there's no
reason for me not to,"
Owens said after the 1-hour,
45-minute practice, the
team's last full workout
inside the Alamodome.

Wednesday, August 8,

www.mydailysentinel.com

"I think
he'll be
ready for
the game,"
c o a c h
W a d e
Phi 11 ips ·
said.
T h e
Cowboys
play
at
h ?· m e

night when the Saints host'
the Buffalo Bills in a preseason !lame, although
Payton satd it was doubtful
he would rush his best
blocker back that quickly.
Instead, Pa~ton said second-year player Zach
Strief and rookie Jennon
Notebook
Bushrod will get most of
the playing time. ·
.
.
.
: Brown has complained
Thl!rsday ~ught agruns~ ~e of nagging knee pain
In~1anapohs Colts. Pbllllp~ throughout his first two
s~d the first-team offense seasons as a . pfo, but
with quarterbac!' Tony -Payton said the latest
Romo and Owens IS expect- injury is unrelated to that.
ed to play about a qul!fler.
Giants
Safety. Ken Hamhn sat
Backup
linebacker
?Ut pracuce, a day after l!'k- Gerris Wilkinson will miss
mg a ~hot to the head dunng . at least two-to-three weeks
a doll. . &lt;;owb~y~ .coach after dislocating his right
..yade Ph!lhps sa!d It ts pos- knee in practice.
s1ble Hamlin,_ stgned as a
A second-year player
free agen! dunng the offsea- from
Georgia
Tech,
son, wont play Thursday.
W'lk'
as h rt ·n a
Saints
. 1 10son w
u 1 .
Left
tackle
Jammal pileup dur~ng a 9-on-7 dnll
Brown bruised his right M~nday m,ght. · .
knee and will most likely sit
There ·ts. n~ ligament
out the Saints' first presea- dam~.ge , whtch ts the good
son game.
part, coach Tom Coughlin
"The encouraging thing is satd.
.
Bears-Patr10ts Trade
there wasn't any ligament
New England acquired
damage the doctors were
able to find " on an MRI or cornerback Dante Wesley
an X-ray,' coach Sean from Chi_cag~ for an undi ~­
Payton said. "So, we're for- closed ptck 10 next years
tunate and obviously that's draft.
.
Wesley stgned _a twoa big relief."
Earlier Tuesday, trainers year contract wtth the
carted Brown from the Bears in March 2006 after
practice field when he spending four seasons with
crumpled to the ground Carolina. He finished with
with a right knee injury. He 13 special teams' tackle.s
was diagnosed with ' a bone and two defensive tackles
bruise. '
in 13 games for Chicago,
Brown could be ready to while missing three games
get back on the fteld Friday with a knee injury.

I

2007

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Quinn

~ribune

fromPageBl
peting and pushing the other
quarterbacks. He doubted
Qujnn's holdout would be
an tssue with his teammates.
" I don't think it's something that guys will hold
against him as long as he
comes in here and works
hard," Thomas said.
The major sticking points
in negotiations between the
Browns and agent Tom
Condon were escalator
clauses based on playing·
time for Quinn, who has
been working out in
Arizona.
Condon proposed allowing Quinn to get a $5 million increase in the final two
years of a potential fiveyear .deal if he takes 55 percent of the snaps in any two
of the first three years or 70
percent in any one of the
first three. The Browns
wanted to make·ihe triggers
tougher to reach.
Quinn was seeking $8.
million . in guaranteed
money, roughly th.e. same
amount that the No.20 pick,
cornerback Aaron Ross,· got
from the New York Giants.
Sava~e expres~d frustra- ·
tion w1th' negotiations and
. talks intensified over the .
weekend. · The two sides
were only $500,000 apart in
guaranteed money as of

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

t~ter

- Sentinel - l\e

CLASSIFIED
•

Galli a
County
OH
Websjtes:
In One Week With Us
www.mydailytribune.com
E-mail
www.mydailysentinel.com
classified@ mydailytribune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
www.mydailyregister.com
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
~ Plac:e
mrtbune
Sentinel
l\egt~ter
ca
...
(74o) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
1
1
III"'_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___;O::..;r•Fiiiiax To (740) 446-3008
Or Fax To
992·2157

'

f;:.::

·AP photo

''•

Cleveland Browns quarterback throws a pass during mini·
camp, Friday, May 4, In Berea. Quinn ended an 11-i:lay holdout by stgnlng a :&gt;-year deal with Cleveland on Tuesday.

Mmiday. They basically
split the difference in arrivij)g at.$7.75 million guaranteed.
Savage said Quinn's intelligence and work ethic are
two iraits that the Browns
liked about the quartetback.
He said those traits will
serve him well over the
coming days.

Reds

away center.
The '))Qdgers had cleanup
hitter Jeff Kent back from a
sore hamstring, but couldn't
fromPag~Bl
get much goipg anything off
6 · 2·3 innings, struck out Arroyo and the NL's worst
five and didn't walk a bat- bullpen. The Re(,!s activated
ter. He also overcame a pair left-bander Eddie Guardado
of Cincinnati errors that set and called up right-hander
up scoring threats while he Gary Majewski before the
was on the mound.
· game in their latest attempt
Edwin Encarnacion dou- to set it straight.
Arroyo minimized the
bled home a pair of runs and bullpen's
impact by pitchBrandon Phillips hit a solo ing into seventh inning. It
homer off left-bander Mark appeared he was headed for
Hendrickson (4-6), who another fast meltdown
couldn't overcome his poor when he needed 31 pitches
first inning. Adam Dunn to . get through the first
singled home a run with two inning in the draining conouts in the first, and ditions. This time, he figEncarnacion followed with ured out what was going
a two-run double - the first wrong and fixed it, allowing
of his three hits.
only four baserunners after
Phillips led off the third the first inning.
inning with his 21st
Kent had missed the last
homer; a shot to straight- five games with a strained

"I don't think he'll be getting a lot of sleep over the
next few weeks ~fXing to
catch up," Savage sa1d.
Oakland
quarterback
JaMarcus Russell (No. I
overall) and New York Jets
cornerback Darrelle Revis
(No. 14) ate the only firstround picks without contracts.
hamstring. He singled in his
first at-bat; extending his
hitting streak to II games.
He has reached base safely
in his last 39 games, the
longest active streak in the
majors.
Notes: Hendrickson doubled in his first at-bat, ending an 0-for-21 this season.
He is 4-for-58 career. ...
Reds OF Ryan Freel will
have surgery Wednesday to
repair cartilage damage in
his right knee, He could be
sidelined for the rest of the
season. ... Reds INF Juan
Castro had reconstructive
surgery on hi s right elbQw.
He expects tq be fully
recovered by spring training .... Cincionati RF Ken
Griffey Jr. came up limping
after he stepped on first
base awkwardly on his
thil-d-inning single. He
stayed in the game.

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"r'i ia~Ofro;:lMINml~Kl1JNm'~; ; ; ; ; l r..~.--~-s.~.6

August 9·10, 9am-3pm,
6th/College Rd., Syracuse,
baby equipment, BIG clothing, toys, maternity clothes,
dishes, longaberger totes

I

A CELEBRATION OF
I,~::;;;:~· ~) _
New home in Gallipolis. 2br,
LIFE ... Overbrook Center,
IE!=f!OOO sq f1 mil split 2 bath w/whlrlpool tubs,
located at 333 .Page Street,
I J~~1' ~~u(:ntf 11' IN
•NOTICE•
level, 2 bath 24x25 m/l lanii- large LR on 3 acres ru/1,
Middleport, Ohio Is pleased
po~ 1\111:) I 0~
U?
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- ly room, septic system. $87.500. 740-446-7029
to announce we are accept·
lNG CO. recommends 100x130 lot in nice, quiet Ranch Style BriCk Home, 2
fj~i) ~ 1rf..s MI&lt;;Sir.IC. "'
lng applications lor the tol·
that you do bualness with neighborhood, 9/10 miles bedrooms, 1 bedroom extra
Big · ~ard sale· 8/9-B/10, lowing positions to join our
t&gt;o6'.
~!&gt;
~
1t-~lill
~
people you know, and out Sand Hill Rd. in Durst large. 2 full baths. on 2 112
9am-?, 35670 SR. 7, lots of friendly and dedicated stan.
NOT to send money Add.
Pt.
Pleasant acres. 3 miles !rom Point
misc., also fresh produce.
-Full nme and Part Time
through
the
mall
until
you
Restoration
needs
include Pleasant. Owner relOcating,
Garage sale, 3 family, 3202 STNA'S and Part Time
have Investigated the but not limited to: deck. Must sell. Photos/details
Syracuse, formerly Jo's Gift LPN'S. Apptlcallons must
Offering.
HVAC, carpet, some drywall. located
online
at
Shop. ydlow house on i&lt;lft be dtpendeble, loam play·
-;;:::;===~
Most
furniture stays. Brick. www. or.~b. com (code N7t37)
above Pizza shop, starts ers wtth positive attitudes to
~
aluminum siding. Toxic mold or call 304-675-4235 asking
Wed. 8th , Th urs. 9lh &amp; Frl..join usln provk:llng outstand·
MONI!."\'
contamination dispute. Mold $128,000
tOth, free; small toys &amp; 1ng, quality care to our resi~
TO
LoAN
disclosure
awllable. lial&gt;lity
Gandy to kfds, school cloth· dents. Stop by and till out
waiver
signature
required . Save
·Thousands!
ing, coats &amp; shoes, baby an Application or contact
$45,000 as is. Serious buy- Clearance on lot models. ell
clothing, dresses, jeana, Hollie . Bumgarner, LPN,
ers/contractors 304-675- 1-888-736·3332. The Home
tops different sizes, brand Staff
Development
3n9 leave message
Show Barboursville, 5898 At
new whatnots all kinds, (rea- Coordinator0740·992·6472
Borrow Smart. Contact
60.
sonable)
and come see lor yourseH
the Ohio Oivislon of
- - - - - - - - the difference you can make
XTAEME SAVINGS! Over
Financial
Institution's
Glasgo,Aitchie ,Shealy,Lee at Overbrooldll EOE&amp; A
2,000
square fool home for
Office
ol
Consumer
lamilles.Fri.,Aug.10·Ritchie Participant of the Drug-Free
tess than $40/sq. ft. CaltThe
Affairs
BEFORE
you
refi·
home,Tyree Blvd,Racine,9· Work Place Progtam.
Home Show - Barboursville
nance your home or
5:00.chairs,winter coate,etc
at 1-668-738·3332
obtain
a
loan.
BEWARE
ACCEPTING APPLICA·
, .~
All rHI tsll.. lldvertlsing
LARGE
YARO TIONS FOR PART-TIME
d requests for any large
In lhll new.,.per Is ·
sale:St.Rt.33,past Beacon CASHIERS.
advance payments of
MUST BE
aub)tct to lhe Ftc11r11
on right.OiiVFoster resi· AVAILABLE TO WORK ALL
teea or insurance. Call the
Fl:lr Hou1lng Act of tHI
dence.Th.S.9-7 &amp; Fri.8·11H SHIFTS. APPLY AT PAR
www.comict.com
Office of Consumer
which m~bs It llleg~lto
@ 2007 by NEA, Inc.
i'998 Clayton 14X50 2 Br. t
Atfall'8 toll free at 1-866MAR ~38 15289 HUNTING·
ldYertln "any
All Rool Estat
Under a carpon on Sat-8111
bath good condition. Must
pral'~. limitation or
278·0003
to
learn
ir the
dvlr1isementl ar
1'1111".- - - - - - , 1'1111"...- - - - - , mortgage brohr or
from 9-4. 2 family. 2 miles TON ROAD GALLIPOLIS
diiCrimlnatlon bliNd on be moved. $12.000.00.
uiiJect to the Fodeno out on Bailey Run Ad.
lfwoWANIUl
Hw.WAN!ID
740.949·2698 after 4:00pm
race, color, religion, ••
tender
is
properly
olr Houolng Act o
femlll•l•talul or n•tlonel
Bcensed. (This is· a public
An Excellent way to earn
·IIELPWANIID
money. The New Avon.
-,
YARDSA!b
origin, or ..V Intention to
1168.
2007 Clayton
service announcement
Pr.I'JL.\sANr
Call Mantyn 304-882-2645 Help wanted-Pan time
m•'-•ny auch
5BRI3BA
2000 Sq. Ft.
Security
Officers
needed
In
from
the
Ohio
Valley
administrative 8881stant, to
preference, limitation or
Starting
at
$33.00/sp.fl.t
New
Haven,
WV
$7.66
par
Pibtlsl'ing
Company)
dhlctlml,.tlon."
Yard Sale 3 112 miles SMdill AVONI All Areasl To Buy or work with Off.ce manafier,
NO DOWN PAYMENT
hour, aU shifts, F.T &amp; P.T. -;;:;;;;::~
Ad . Thur-Fri 8-? Girls, ladles, Sell. Shirley Spears. 30'4- average 15·25 hours per
to qualified buyers.
675-1429.
Must have clean record ,
~!» .
This newspaper wilt not
week. Job cfNcnptfon to
ski's t s &amp; mare
The Home Show
paas a drug screen and
~ut'
knowingly Kcepl
tnctude but not limited to:
1
1 edv•rllltmtnts for rnl
Build Your C.rttr
ba~gmund chectc. Call 1·
WANIUI
Aahland,KY
answering lhe phone, ..,rk·
MANAGEMENT
800-275-8359, M-F 8:30 lo
· ••t•t• which 11 In
roBuv
lng with customers, schedul·
688-928-3426
TURNED DOWN ON
violation of ttt. law. Our
5:00 EOE MIF/DN
Professional
Field ing and Ot'Q8nlzing concrete OPPOATUNmES
rddel'tl .... htlr.by
SDCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
2007 Ooub6ewlde
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. Representative wanted for and stone orders, dlapalch· Wv seek career oriented
Informed lhet all
No
Fee
Untess
We
Win!
3BR, 2BA,
Silver and Gold Coins, Point Pleasant, Gallipolis &amp; lng trucks, operating digital Individuals who wtll strive to Security Officers needed In
dwellings ad~•rtiHd In
1-888·582·3345
Delivered &amp; Set $39,999.
Proofsats, Gold Rings, Pre· surround area. no eJCperl- weight scales, batching conachieve the ·eesr ln
New Haven, WV. $7.66 per
thla ntWipt~per are
1(1 \I I -. 1 \II
1935
U,S.
Currency, ence required. Excellent crete with automated com- CUS1omer Satisfaction end hour, all shifts, F.T.&amp;P.T.
The Home Show,
svaUabtt on an ~ual
Ashland, Ky.
Solitaire
Diamonds·
M.T.S.
training
program,
sales
Puter
batch
program
and
team
wortc..
If
you
have
a
Must
have
clean
record,
1\\ 11! \!I 111 \1'
· opportunity bases.
Toll- free 888-928-3426
Coin Shop, 151 Second tradl., potential, and benefits general cleaning or office desJre tol succeed with a pass &amp; drug screen and riO ;
H~
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446· for those who qualify. area.
Familiarity with goal driven, team oriented back"ound check. Call 1•
FOR SALE
For salaflantJ contract. BA
3
Great used 2005 3 bedroom
GJVV.Wi\V
2842.
Woodmen of the World Ufe QulckBooks (accounting and growing company, we 800-275·8359, M·F, 8:30 to "--ooiliiiliiiiiiiiii-,..t
Insure~ Society, Omaha, ' Invoicing, inventory, elc.):
' offer:
_
5:_
oo_._
E_
o E_
M_IDN
IF _ _ _ a Down even with less than house in Gallipolis, WID 161180 with vinyt/shlngle.
'
Ball Perfect Mason 112 pint NebraMa. Resumes to: 12 Word and Excel p~mo a
$1500 down Must sell, Only $25,995 with
....,........
Health, dental and ltfe
un•versity
. . of AI o Grande is pa:f8ct credit is available on connection
llt'Ar.t\1
1 54 751mo delivery. Call (740)385.-4367
nroen jar with t13 on lhe Players Club Drive Suhe ~ovuou .... Pay besod on expe·
ort"VU mo or ren
"'
,
.....,._
insurance, prescription
thls 3 bedroom, 1 bath AI 1 BA · Gatti ,. $7 o
boUom, standard screw lop 101' Char1eston, WV 25331 rience and &amp;kill level. card, bonus program, paid lOOking lor experienced home. Corner lot, fireplace,
so
m
po •s 5
lid, will buy or trade some or call 304~342-5021
Primary wo~
ase""'ment at
cook, with run time hours
down $200/mo or rent
1
"'
....
vacation, management
andbeoeflts.$9.30·10.15/lir. modem kitchen, jacuul tub, $250/mo.Call wayne 404 ·
nice nuns
for it, please don't Orivers needed:
Plant • bul lll.J&lt;X
~ ·~arel -~---·--t I~
•
COL D.J...-..k...
""""""'~a~Urg
.........
• auYcu l\iVI u ..... r...,, Please apply at the cafete- Payment around $550 per 456-3802 ror into
call unless you have ·this Orivers wiling to drtve for have flexibility to report to
within.
.
month. 740-367-7129.
•8• Puppies (Lab/Shepherd) particular jar. (740)533-3870 local ready-mix compan~. Millwood or Lakin Plants
Apply In person at the
fl~
House for sale in Racine
NEW 2008 4 Bed
some of theni have blue
One position open at two (2) required. Contact Valley
Burger King Restaurant
Scuooui
104 Tatum Dr. New ~rea. Appro11. 4 acres, all
eyes. 4M 4F, 6 112wks old.
plants. Experience Is pre- Brook Concrete Corporate
65 Upper River Road or •
~UCDON
Haven.WV 3bdf2ba. Ranch, professionally landscaped .
388-9956 Mike Hager
:::~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ferred but not necessarv. Office al lakin, WV cal
man resume to:
lg.sunroom, 2 car gar. g-eal Ranch style house with 4
IWZIIII ...
Oriver must be willing to do {304)n3-5519 to schedule
Burger King
G•Hipolla career College area. D; 304·675-3637 E; bedrooms, living room. din·
HmJl WANJm
pre-maintenance. on truc::ks interv~.
PO Box 2407
304-882·2334
lng room, kitchen, large lam·
8 seven wk old puppies
,-----,---=,..,.-:-- Huntington, WV 25725
(Careers Close To Hom&amp;) - - - - - -- - ily room, central air, gas heat
bla~ Lab/Golden Retriever
and equipment, yardlplanl Hau...,_,.,., FT. '"dnl"'t
Call Today! 740-446-4367, 3 br.. 2 full blh., 2Dx38 great·
""tlta.......
---·
1\'11
wo •
or fax resume to
and 1 lire.,.ace. Addition ol a ..... Mt121.f1M
and
Other
ml
To
Good Home 304-743· $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
~ operat·
·~us e , p e r t 0 n c e d
1-800-214-0452
room, cia. btactdop dri110, !g. large Florida
~
• ~'lo
chores.
Experience
740-+46-3400
or
room com7
mymldwellhome.com
.., ON
$300.00
lng equipment and extfa Ho use keeper /Ja nito r
3Q4.52g..()()55
--~lipolilclreercollegll.com parting area, all new win- pletely cedar opens onto
Desired. Interviews Now
EOE
Accreclited Member Accrediting dowsldOOfslroof &amp; septic, patio &amp; ,_.,1 area. Heated in
s~ltosuch as welding a plus. Being Conducted. Many :-:-::-----::-- - - - , """""
"' ·-~ """'"" laminated hardwOOd floors ground pool
~ endosed by priand ScilOOis 1274e.
Free Kittens: All colors, dlf· HIRING BONUS
011
ferent ages. Call: 740-992- $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ Starting pay based expe· Benefits Available. Paid McC/ures Restaurant ( =-=-:::-::::-:::-::---:::---- throughout, 24' above vacy fencing and land- New 3 Bedroom homes tram
rience and drt\llng record. Vacations, Free Meals. Galipolis Only) now hiring STUDENTS FOR THE NA ground pool, additional spot scaped. Finished 2 car $214.36 per month, Includes
9504 ask tor Lynn.
Benellts Including health
tor
Available part &amp; full time - dayshift PROGRAM. Rock"'"'rlngs
mobile home. on 1 acre, gararu:o
attached 10 house many upgrades, delivery &amp;
Have you aver been told insurance, available after Discounts
~
:..~
Insurance.
Homelike
available.
Apply
between
10
NursiiV'I
and
Rehabilitation
for
only
$~15,000,
near
St.
and
finished
&amp; heatad 3 car set-up. (740)385-2434
meeting
employment
··v
Free Silver Male Akita, you have a good phone
requiremen 1s. Call Valley Atmosphere. Ravenswood and 11AM Monday · Center is located s miles At. 143 &amp; St. At. 7, garage
unattached
voice?
Loves to play with kids and
Nice used 3 bedroom home
Center,
11 13 Saturday
from Pomer~"~~~
This Is the PERFECT job Brook Concrete corporate Care
-, and 20 min- Pomeroy, Oh., (740)696· Excellent condition ready 10 vinyVshingle. Will help with
other dogs. 740-446-9357
office at (304)n3-5519 to Washington
St., New Horizons Childhood utes lrom Athens and _122
_7- - - - - - move in. $255.000.00. Call: de~very. 740·385-4367
tor youl
schedule an interview.
Ravenswood,
WV. Enrichment Center is Albany, We currently are 3BR tBA In New Haven. (740)949-2217
To good homes only, solid
References Required. A accepting resume's for en seeking in(jviduets interest· Many updates have DeBfl '---'-----~-- OBC MOdular {LXM503)
black 1 vr old F cat, and two EARN $8.50/hr FT + Floral Oeslgner, Full·tlme, Pleasant Place To Wortttl!
afternoon teacher's aide ad In attending our 75 hour made. _.~ki ng $75000 . 304_ House on Meson Street, special
order
only
Waakly Bonus
E p 1 od
N 1 A 1t t p
"'::
Clifton. WV Call 740·992·
10 wk old F black and cream
Par-lme,
t t.
JCp. reerr '
IRS JOBS
position. Resume's can be '·· ursng sssan rogram 882-3773fordetails.
52,840.00delivered to your
Potenltal
kittens. 441.Q405
Pay based on Experience.
.sent to P.O. Box 706 , which will_start ~SI 20,
2090Monday throughFriday location. Cole'a Mobile
Take lnboundiCuttorner Send covet" tetter wilh $18.46-$32.60/hr., now hlr- Po
0H De dl' . B- 2007. ThiS class IS free of 4 BR house. 2.5 baths. 1 for information
Homes 4 miles East ol
Service ·calls for a variety or resume to: CLA Box 104, c/o lng. Paid Training is prOYid· .17 meroy,
· a 1ne 18
charge and begins with 2 acre, 1 car garage, gazebo. HUD HOMES! 3bd only Athens on AI 50/32.· PH:
7
YARD SALE
Christian ministries. Atso Gallipolis Tribune, PO Box ed. FOf application and free
-o .
volunteer days that will allow motor home hookup. $21,900. More 1-4bd 800-466-4687 or 592- 1972.
::~;:;:::~· make OUtbound calls tor 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631
government job. Info, call
POST OFFICE N&lt;YN
you to see wtlat the job con- Morning Star Rd in Racine. home• aveilablel from M-F. 8- 7. Sat. : 9 to 4.
various non-profit
American Assoc. ol Labor 1HIRING
sists ol fi rst har,d. We allow Asking $135.000. Call 225- $199/mol
5%dn, "Where you get your
YARD SALEorganizations. Full time LPN. evening shift. 913-599-8244, 2&lt;4/hrs. emp.
Avg. Pay $20Jhr or
12 students per ctass ·-so 264·1055
20yra08%. For listings money's worth"
Gt\UlPOLIS
'
If you would Nke to take· serv.
$57K annually
they fill up quickly. Please
800-559-4109 xF144
CALL NOW!
advantage of this opportuniIncluding Federal Benefits come in and complete an 502
LeGrande
Blvt1,
1..aa&amp;-IMC.PAVU
t)'. you may apply at 8204 Local Home Health Agency
and OT,Paid.Training,
application If interested. Gallipolis_ Quiet neighbor- In Syracuse
2800sq.tl. OWNER ANAIICING
Cara
1 Dnve,
· Ganrpoli:l,
• 1" Ohio• now hiring PCA's, HHA's, · Vacations-FT/PT
107 Colonial Dr ' behind
(1-888-462-7298)
Rocksprings Is an equal hood· 3BR · 2 BA · Aec qualit';' built mull1·level brick
Nice 312 singlewides
Dollar General on Jackson
Job ext. 1911
Monday thru Friday 8a-4p. CNA's and' STNA's. Aexible
1-866·542·153 1
opportunity employef.
Room, LA wrth FP. Florida home. maintenance free.
From $1 .800 down
Pike. Name brand girls
www.lnlocision.com
An Equal Opportunity scheduling. Apply in person
USWA
niir-.;.,:~.:;.;.:.;,;
room, fenced yard, inground Nice quiet neighborhood. ~payment
clothes sz 7·Jr0. Kirby - - - - - - - - Employer. VIM/ON.
or call 740-44 1-1377. 2
WANIID
pool, hot tub, 2 storage 4 bedrooms. 2 t/2 Oath with
Gary (740) 828-2750
sweeper, scrubs, lots of t:"&lt;&lt;OO Hiring Bonus - - ' - - - - - - - Commerce Or. Gallipolis. ResCar~ in Gallipolis, OH is
To Do
bldgs. all appliances. low hardwood trim throughout.
househokl items. Fri!Sat 9·5 ...,
Harris Steak house Now OH.
accepting bids tor an LSW · - - - - - - · interest &amp; assumable loan U-shaped kitchen wilh 40' ol
Full~~o~rt:U~ifts _H_irin..:g;...(;..304_.:_)6_7_5·_97_2_6__ Teacher Aide wanted to Consultant. Please include AU Types Masonry, Brick, available. Call [740)448- cabinets. Wood burning Pire- Small Mobile Home Parll,
available
Help wanted , weekends a work with students· with reQuired hOurly rate and Bloc!(, Stone, Free Estimate, 4486 or (740)645·2355
place. 2 1!2 car detached Good Investment. Good
8/5-8113 1oam..apmaltha Y
must, (740)992-5023
deYelopmental disabilities. number 01 hours available (304)773-9550 - 304-593·279 &amp; Centerpoint Rd. For
garage. Nicely landscaped Income call between 7pm &amp;
on a weekly basis. Fax to 6421 _
.
Sbd
2ba
Gallipolis .60 acres lot. Immaculate 10pm. 304-675-2359
Information 740-682·7163.
Experience
and/or
training
Pamela
Sheets,
CS
at
740.
Foreclosure!
Buy
for
Great Pay! Great Job! SCAC seeks Program
Shirley Arrowood.
preferred. Must be eijglble 446-3987 or email a1 - - -- -- - - $84,8001
5%dn, condition. Low utilities.
1-Bn-4&amp;3-6247
Director tor Mason Cty fo
Selling price $219,000. Call Trailer for sale. $2.000.
r an Aide Cartificate from psheetsOrescare com
Caregt•-r
wtlh
5
yrs
-peh
•.,
..... - 20yr~08%. More homes
ext. 2301
Homeless Sheller in pt,
740-44
1-51 71. Shown by [740)992·5858
the
Ohio
Dept.
of
Education,
ence
wOUld
like
to
care
for
hom
St99lmol
For
lOCI!
Elizabe th Lattley's . Yard - - - - - - - - Pleaaant BAIBS in Sodal
appl only.
Par
a
-Pr
o
t
e
s
s
ion
a
I
Salas
Posltlon
your
loved
one
in
their
8001
11 1
Sale. Thur 819 · Fri 8/ 0 8· Substitute AN/LPN wanted WorWCounseling or related
11
559-4 109
Cerlification
preferred.
home. Aef.available. 446- aF254
It nga ca
Why Pay rent ???
MFG.Homes
5pm. Cindy Dr. Bidwell. tor
the
Carleton lleld. Prefer 5-7 years expeLand Contract (2) 3 Clayton Single Wldest!t
Submit
application
or
An
outstanding
7165
or
441
-9232
Strolter/car seat combo. rid- School/Meigs Industries. rience In fiekf and superviBedroom homes. Payment
Star1ing at $22 5.00
Attention I
ing toys, girl clothes up to Hours 9am·3pm. MuSI have sion eJCp. Administrative resume by August 14th to: opportunity for the right
about
the
same
as
renl.
10%
Carpentry. painting, drywall, local company offering "NO down
person.
Brownell .
per month WAC.
5T, boys clothes up to current RNILPN license In lillies included fiscal man- Carleton SChool, PO Box
803
35 years experienced, quali307,
1
310
Carleton
Street,
Prefer
experience.
18moo,
exersaucer, the state ol Ohio. Prefer agement and development
1 -~:~-~:'.-~~
ty workmanship. For small DOWN PAYMENT" pro- ~iddleport · $49. 900: 152
Otters day wort&lt; week.
playpen, Surius ST Radio, experience in public health of program: lndraising and Syracuse. Oh 4577~
grams lor you to buy your Gavin St. Rodney- $57,900 --:::---:::-----,
jobs
call
Steve
at
(740)388home instead of renting.
F.i
Excellent benefits
computer games, water nursing and.lor working with grant development experi- Metal Fabricator seeks a full
'I OO'lto 1.1nancmg
.
Will work w1th you on down
_
~~
8071
8,._,.
u..:x~'lr~~
Email
cooier, VCR, misc.
children and adults with ence
plus time drafter. The ideal candi·
-,
L
_.
payment
(740)446-4543
•
,
m
BUIIJJING;s
'
ess than pe..ed cted1t
.., , ,.~,~
r7600 c la~on . net
- - - - - - -- developmental disabilities . communi cationtcompute.r date should have experi· to schedule
an interview Lawn-Care Service, Mowing accepted
Looking
lor a good pre- Loo-iiiii-iiliiiililiilii,..J
Fri-Sat Aug 10/11 8:30-5? Send resume by Monday. skills and knowledge ot gen- ence in CAD, preferably.
No Walk-Ins Please
&amp; Trimming. Call (740)441 - • Payment could be the owned home9 Many to 32 X48 Metal Bldg. for rent,
Green Valley Or. off Augus1 20, 2007 lo: Meigs era! office duties and equip- Auto CAD and mechanical lb...;...;;;;,;,;,,;;;;;,,g 1333 or (740)645-0546
same as rent
choose !rom at The Home across trom the new SGHS.
Evergreen or Kerr Rd.
COunty Boar ol Mental men!. AFT wfbenefits 8end draMing.
Compensation
l ocators. Show · Barboursville. I · $5001month. Can 740.256Will babysit in my Letart Mortgage
- - -,--,-,--::--::-c Retardation
and cover lener, resume and based upon experience.
se&amp;-736-3332
6034. 740-441·5325
Huge Yard Sale, Sat 8111 DeveiOpmental~lsabilitles. three letters of rei., to SCAC, Please submit resume and
home, behind Coal Mining (740)367-QOOO
8am. ? , Everything $1.001 1310 Carleton Slreet, PO HA, 540 Fifth Ave. references lo: St. AI. 124,
Plant, all ages &amp; hours,
6541 Stale Route 141 jus1 Box 307, Syracuse, Oh Huntington, WV 25701 by Vinton. OH 45686 by August
experienced, State EMT &amp;
20.
past SA 775 on the ri!jlt.
45779
Augusl1 3, 2?07 EOE
CPR cer1ified 304·882-3538

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I

Sheriff Sale
Caae
Number
06CV099
Unltoa
States
ot
America Plaintiff VS
Joan1111 Forguaon at at
""-ndanla
Court ol Common
Pleaae, Melga County,
OhiO
In ' puN"Af!CI o! 1n
order ,of sale to rna
dl~ .tfom laid
court Iii then above
ontltlad 'ioctlon, I wiH
· - to sale 11 PiJblie luctlon on tho front
1lep1 of· ttl&amp; Melga
CoUnty Court House
on Friday, September
7, '2007 at tO a.m., at
aeld day, the following
deacrlbad aarleatate;
Sttuslad In the Village
of Middleport, County
of Melga and State ot
OhiO
Parcel One: The 8881
one-halt of South onehalt (50 feat of Lot
1297) In · Horton's
Addfiton to what Ia
naw the VIllage of
Middleport, Ohio, forrnerty lower Pomeroy,
Ohio. Said original lot
being 50 feat In width
and 140 feet In depth
and baing furlhlr
deacrtbad 11 tollowa:
Beglnhlng 70 .feat E11t
Of the Southwell cor·
ner o! Lot N287;Thenca
North 60 feat; Thence
Eut 70 feet; Thenca
South 50 foet; Thence
West 70 feet to the
place of begiMing.
Parcel Two: A right-ofway tor sewer lines as
currently
existing
acro11 West one-halt
of the South one-halt
of Lot 1297 connecting
Into
High
Street.
SubJect to an euamont for the ballllflt of
tho Walt one•half ot
tho South one-halt of
Lot N2117 .tor wellr end
get llnaa connecting
Into the lillY , . _ n
Broadway and High
8traett.
Curr1nt
Owner:
Joan1111 Forguton 11111
748 High StrHI
Middleport, Ohio
PPI15-01138.000
Prior OHd Rtltrence:
Volume 324 Page 543
Appralaed
at
S32,000.00 termt ot
11te: Cannot be told
for tell then 213rds ot
the approlted value.
10% down on day of

aele, cash or cart Hied conflrmallan of aele.
check, balance due on Tho appraisal did
contlnnlllon ofaalo.
Include an Interior
The appraloal did not examlnatlon of the
Include an Interior houH.
examination ot the Robart E. BHgle,
house.
MelgaCounty Sheriff
Robert E. Beegle, Attorneys for
the
Meigs County Sheriff
Plaintiff
Attorney
tor
the Lerner Sempaon 6
Plaintiff
Rothlusa
D. MIIH
120 E. 4th St, 8th Floor
18 W. Monument Ave. Clnelnnatl, Oh 45202Deylorl, Ohio 46402
• 4007
937-461·1900
513-241-3100
(8) 1, 8, 15
(8) 1, 8, 15

a_,_

Public Notice
Shlrlff SIIIH
CaM Number 07CV024
ChiiH Home Finance
LLC Plaintiff VS
Jackie P. Crameano at
at Detandanta
Court of Common
Please, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance ot an
order of aate to me
directed from aald
court In the aboVe entl·
tied action, 1 will
eKpose to aale 11 publie auction on the front
steps of the Meigs
County Court Houee
on Friday, September
7;JJJ07 II 10 a.m., of
llld day, the following
described real eolate:
Stlualad In the State of
Ohlo, County of Molgs,
and In the Village of
Middleport:
Being the East onehell of Lots Numbers
One Hundred Thirty·
Seven (137) and One
Hundred Thlrty·Eight
(138) of Waterman
Palmar's Addition to
Sheffield,
now
Middleport, baing 100
11., moN or leal, on the
IIIey betwaen Fourth
end Fifth Streell, and
Fifty (50) n. fronting on
Hooker Sti'HI.
Current · Owner: Jeckle
P. Cremaant elat
Property At:
388
Hookor Straet
Mlddloport, Oh 45780
PPI 15-00122.000
Prior DHd Reference:
Volume 80, Page 357
Appraised
at
$55,000.00. Torma ot
tale: Cannot be aold
tor 1811 thin 213rdt Of
the appraltod value.
10% down on day of
tale, csah or certified
check, balance due on

-,..-

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r-l~'tl~oes

~eat,e~c:a

1 . . 1""-il-==-sp.a.p- - s to. ,....-a. ... .- IJa.c:.r.

~aaht.

dogra:.:.:-:w:e:st~1-::ro:d~;~~~~ne:":o:t~t:aw:n~a:h:lp~roa=d~1/~2~""':an:d~3=0~"-:,re:b:a~r~~~~~~~~~rec=ord=s~book::~2:-:at~p~a~g~e~M:a~l~ls~aa~D.~J~o~h~nso~

thence
north
81
degrees 80 rods to the
place ot beginning,
containing 85 acres
more or tess.
Exceptlng80.031acrea
conveyed to Burner
Land Company, Inc., by
daad
·~alad . May
30,1188, and · recordad
In volume 89, page 393,
of the Mllga C(!unty
official records.
Reference
Deed:
Volume 14, ·page 373,
Meigs County Oftldal
Racorda.
Public Notice
Tho above described
real estate Ia more
Shariff Sale
accurately described
CoM Number 07CV003 by Iurvey as folloWs;
J P Morgan Chase Sttualad In the state of
J1ank Plalntlft VS
Ohio, county of Molgs,
Allen R. Jacks at at Township of Rutland,
Defendants
being part ot fraction 2
Court ot Common and part of fraction 6,
Pleas, Malgs County, range 14 west, lawn·
Ohio
ship 6 north, ol the
In pursuance of an Ohio Company first
order ot oale to ma purchase of1787, and
directed from aald being bonded and
court In theabove end· described as follows:
tied action, 1 will Commencing for ret,r·
expose to sale at pub- once at 5/8" Iron Pin
tic auction on the front found
capped "E.
stops of the Meigs Triplett 6766" In the
County Court Houee weal line of fraction 2
on Friday, Sept 7, 2007 at the southeast corner
II 10 a.m., of said day, of traction 6 (Note: Nf·
the
lollowlng , erence hearing on the
daocrlbtid real estate: west line of fraction 2
Situated In the town· and the east line ot
ohlp
ot Rutland, fraction 6 used aa an
County of Melgo, and assumed bearing ot
In the state of Ohio:
north 03 degrees 29'
Beginning
at
the 21" easl)
ooutheaat corner ot Thence, wnh the west
E.K. Taylor's land In line of fraction 2 and
Fraction No. 2, town tha aast line of fraction
no. 6, range no. 14, Of 6, north 03 degreeo 29'
the Ohio company'o 21" east a distance of
purchased and In the 1414.75 feat to a point
center of tho road; bring the true place ot
thence
north
25 beginning for thlo
d111reeo - 1 48 rods d01crlptlon.
etong tho road; thence Thence from tald point
north 19 112 degrae• of beginning and leav·
w111 74 rod I and 5 lng the lot line, lOuth
links along the road to 75 degi'HI 51' 15" weat
A. A.
Hull)phrey't a dltlance of 146.00
acuth lint; thence Weal faat to an Iron pin set:
110 roda; lhtnct touth Thonco,
north
18
7 112 degrees east 36 degraea 08' 27" oaat a
10d1 end 10 llnkt; dlotance ot 417.84 taet
thence woat 22 llnkt; to on Iron pin tel, P•••·
thence
lOuth
12 lng through an Iron pin
degraes w01t 41 rodo 1et at a dlslance at
and 12 llnkolo a atone pluo 190.00 feet;
corner; thence eaot 37 Thence
north
74
rodt and 15 IInke; dagreea 11 ' 52" east a
thence
touth
28 distance of 260.97 feet
df111881 1111 41 rodo to an Iron pin set;
end 15 llnkt ; thence Thence
north
85
aouth 51 degree• 8ast degrees 04' 18" eaata
27 rods and 6 links; dlotance ot 357.65 faat
thence
south
5 to a point In the center-

I

no. 58 (Whltea Hill
Road) p81alng over the
-tina ot traction 6 at
a distance ot plua
46.28 teet and passing
through two Iron pin
His at a dlllance ot
plus 234.65 1ee1 plus
334.65feet, respectivety.
The.nce, wtth tho centerllna ot township
rood. np. 58, south 18
deg-i 33' 15" east a
distance of 206.10 feet
to a point,
Thence, leaving the
road, lOuth 63 deg-•
!9'. 06" nat a distance
of '157.48 . goat to an
Iron pin HI, passing
through an Iron pin oet
at a distance ot plus
10.561eet.
Thence, south 19
degreee 06' 36" east a
dlslance at 121.72feet
to an Iron pin set:
Thence, south 75
degraea 51' 15" west a
distance of 311 .34feet
to the place of begin·
nlng, passing through
an Iron pin set at a dis·
lance of plus 85.38
feel;
Containing
5.172
acres, more or less, of
which 2.985 acres era
In fraction 2 and 2.187
acres are In fraction 6;
Subject to all legal
rights ot way, easemenlo,
restrictions,
reservations, and zonlng regulations of
racord.
Subject to the right of
way to Township road
No. 58.
Subject to the100 year
tlood plain restrictions,
11 appllcapta.
Subject to a 50.00 feet
wide aaaomont being
retervad unto the
Grantor, their hairs,
and or aotlgnt, torev·
er. Said easement
being fnr the purpoae
of running utilities to
other parcel• of land
on or near Tawnahlp
Road No. 58. Said
aatement runo In e
ncirlh·oouth dlractlon
acr.,.1 the eaot ond ot
the above deocrlbed
propt!rty wtth the aaot
line of tald easement
baing the center llna ot
townthlp road no. 58.
containing 0.237 acrea,
more or len, ot easement.
AU Iron pln1 set are

capped and labeled
Claus 6456.
The bearlnga In this
doacrlptlon are for
angle calculation only
and are baaed on the
west Uno ot lractlon 2
and the east line of
fraction 6 used aa an
assumed bearing of
north .3 degrees 29'21"
east.
A plat ot the above
described ourvey has
been oubmlttad lor tile
at the county englnear's office.
The above description
prepared by Roger W.
Ctaua, registered surveyor No. 6456, basad
on actual field survey
of May 7, 1998: said
survey being subject
to an facta that maybe
disclosed In a lull and
accurate UUesaarch.
The real estate above
described Is oubject to
all leaaao, easements,
and rights of way of
record.
The preparer of thla
Instrument does not
certify the accuracy of
the aboVe description.
Parcel one: 1HI0675
Parcel two: 11-00676
Known as: 33565
Whiles Hill
Road,
Rutland, Ohio 45775
Current Owner : Allen
Jacka
Property at: 33565
Whites Hill Rd
Rutland, Ohio
PPI 11-00675.000
11-00676.000
Prior daad Reference:
Volume185, Page 485
Appraised
at
$95,000.00 Ierma ot
sale: Cannot be sold
for leoo than 213rda the
appralttd valuo. 10%
down on day ot aalo,
cuh
or
cortltlad
chock. Balance due on
conflrmall.on of aete.
The apprat1al did
Include an Interior
examination of the
horne.
Robart E. Booglt,
Malgo County Shorftt
Attorney
tor
the
Plaintiff
Shapero &amp; Felty
1500 W. Third St. Suite
400
Cleveland, Oh 44113
216-621·1530
(8) 1, 8, 15

Public Notice

::--:7.:-:--:---Sheriff Sale.
Case Number 07CV025
Welts Fargo Bank NA
PlalntlffVS
MeHsaa D Johnoon et
at Defendants
Court of Common
Ploaa, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance ol an
order ot sale to me
directed from said
court In the above anti·
lied action, I · will
axpoae to sale It publie auction on the front
~tepa 'Ole the ~alga
ounty ourt ouse
on Friday, September
14, 2007 at 10 a.m., of
said day, the follawlng
daacrlbacl l'&lt;llleatata:
Situated In the State of
Ohio, County of Meigs
and In the Township of
Olive.
Being 2.23 acres, more
or le11, out ot the
Northwest comer of lot
No. 1165, section 9,
town 4, range 11 and
bounded described as
follaws:
Beginning 8.00 rods
Wa~t of the common
corner of lando owned
.by J. W. Emrick T.
Kibble, Sarah M. Kibble
and
Herbert
Williamson on tho
North line of lot No.
1165 (this aame point
baing 72 rode ~aat ot
the North West corner
of Lot No. 1165);
Thence South 3" West
e distance of36.5 rods,
more or leas, along the
West line ot lot owned
by Herbert Williams, to
the center ot State
Route No. 680; Thence
North approximately
38' Wast 18 rodl, m0l'8
or loll, to Southoaat
corner of land owned
by Dr. Formarty owned
by Ira kibble; Thence
North 21 .8 roda, more
or lilt, to lht north
line of lot No. 1155;
Thence Etll along
North line ot Lot No.
1185, a dltlanca of 12.8
rodo to tho place of
beginning.
The above doocrlbod
real eotate Ia mora
accurllely datcrlbed
by 1urvey II follows:
baing a tract ot land
tranotorred to Margaret
Groaonlckle, Et. AI. as
recorded In official

I

n Et.
623, Meigs County AI.
Recorders
Office, Property at:
54210
Melga County, Ohio, Stata Route 681
also being a part of180
Reedsville, Ohio
acre lot No. 1165, PPN09.005n.ood
Townahlp·4·North , Prior lleed Relel'&lt;lnce;
Range-11 -We&amp;t, Olive Volume 135, Page 763
Township,
Meigs Appraised
at
County, State ot Ohio $25,000.00. Terms of
and more particularly sale: cannot be sold
described as follows: · tor Ieee than 2/3rds ot
Beginning at a 5/!l" lron ihe appralaed value.
pin sat which assumed 10% down. on day of.
to bear North 86' 40'00' sola, cash or certHiad
East a distance ot check, balance due on
976.80 feet from the ·confirmation ofoala.
Northwest corner of The appraisal did ·
aakl 160 acre lot No. lnclu~o an Interior
1185, Township 4; examination of the
Range 11 ;
house.
Thence along the north Robert E. Beegle,
line of said lot no.1165 Metga County SheriH
North 66' 40' 00" East e Attorney
for
the
distance of 211.20 feet Plaintiff
to a 518"1ron pin set:
Lerner Sampson &amp;
Thenca leaving sold Rolhtuss
North line South 00' 120 E. 4th Street 81h
26' 21" East paaalng Floor
through a 518" Iron pin Clnclnnall, Oh 45202·
HI at a Distance ot 4007
571.24feet and going a 513·241· 3100
total distance of 601.24 (8) 8, 15, 22
feet to a point In the r---~--..,
centerline ot State
Route t 681·
Thence aton'g said con·
terllne the following
thrae courses:
•
1. North 41 ' 20' 00'
West a distance of
49.50 teet to a point;
2. North 45' 54 ' 49'
West a distance ot
128.21 feet to a point;
3. North 50' 05 ' 37'
West a dlotance of
119.29feet 1o a polm·
Thence leaving said
centerline North oo·
09: 02' East a distance
of 386.05 feet to the
principal
point of
beginning, containing
2,3875 acres, more or
Ills sub]ect to all legal
ea~o and rightsof·way.
Baarlngt are ssaumad
and are tor the deter·
mlnatlon of anglea
only.
The above daacrlptlon
wao prepared from on
actual 1urvey made on
the 28th day ot July
1994, by C. Thoma~
Smith
Ohio
Prole~olonal Surveyor,
N 8644.
Auditors Parcel No. 09·
00577.000
Retorence
deed
Volume: 135, Page 763,
Meigs county Official
Recorda.
Current
Owner;

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

I

r·------_.jI: -: -: - -:- - :-:- :- -:- :-

11!0

·

S48r989

l'i10

-$293.

·-------I

r~
r

I

I'IU

_ _,

!SHOP CLASSIFIEDS FOR BARGAINS!!

�I
-Wednesday, August 8, 2007
ALLEYOOP

The Daily Sentinel• Page BS

www.mydallysentinel.com

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Ellm View
Apartments

10 -tor 101o located on 3BR. 2 1u1 bath, Allred Ad •
l!lood Run Road, In New Meigs CO. Eastern S&lt;:hoc&gt;
Hoven.
wv $3&lt;4,500 District. ~ + deposit, wMI
(804)173-5&amp;11

Phillip
Alder

except HUO. References
needed. 740-992-o653
• 2&amp;3 bedroom apanmems
5 Acre• MIL along Old
•Central heal a. A/C

Covered Bridlle Rd. Located

3BR, 2BA, on Bulaville Pike

Rotor

•Waeherl&lt;*yw hoolwp

In Ewinglon, Vlnlon County, Call740-367-n62.
•Tenant: pays electric
011. catl 606 353-0990
_.,017
(304)882..,.
93 t2x70 2bf, W/0 ~up
Mobile Home lot tor rent in ~-- ~~ '" 8 d ~

;;,;:-~;· A:;c" 6,~ ·~

Point

Pleasant,
wv.
$125/month + $100/deposit Cora Mill Rd. $385. 614·9o46. can 7~388-&amp;1 2a
3307 or 614-678-553?
Beautiful Ril/er View in

~;:=~==~
llot.5l.s

rL,~--·FOR-·RENr---,.1
10

KanaugaIdeO! to&lt; "ope~.
1 or 2
~ta. refere-•
•--•
- - " Qavln.
••
Loc;. 5 mi. ·from
(740)441-()181

Like

New

Saara

Retrigonotor S125 - · - - D-5
--c1ump 304-875-3338
bed traU11, ~
2220
Caterpillar
Dozer
'73 OBO.
~'--

•

seam.. Pipe

Rebar menual transmission 12'
81 -:-:-=:-:-:=--.,---engleFl!11118.
con baRO&lt;Jie
seen
For
Conorete,
Angle, Old
State
62 92 GMC 1/2 ton, 350, auto,
Channel, A1t Bar, Steel Ohl
R'
Road Pt loaded, fiber glass bad
0
Steel

•

r.

Ir:080·
r.,~-----!1.--'

::,r:~~d~re~ropa~:.~u:. ~~~m~::~

Clean, 2br, 1ba, AC in Beautiful country sett"ing. Thursday,

Must see to appreciate.
$4001or
""" (614)59"-7773
.r
.·~ ~· ··~ .
1-~-·-~...,..--::--:-::-:
Middleport, Eleech St., 2 br.
furnished apartment, ulllitles
new construction, fully tur- Electric, Rent includes trash , pakl, deposit &amp; references,
nlshed, new refrigerator, water &amp; sewer, $325/mo. no pets, (740)992-0!65
. -. cish-he&gt;. washB&lt; &amp; $325 depostt. Call (740)092·
::5639:::..::fo::.r=iapptr.- - - - Middleport, North 4th Ave., 2

Mobile H'omes for rent • br. furnished apartment,

Saturday

&amp;

Sunday. {740}446-7300

Pole

Barns

REPO'S ARCH BUILDINGS· HUGE SAVINGS.
3 Left. 2S'x.ta'qo'xs6'

Breeding, Top Pertoimance,

No R.euonable Ofl'er

(740)2S6-~

Refu5edl Serious

Inquira Only. can

ut7~~P1-~eq11.70430-698-1815

or Pomeroy and Middleport,
security deposit required, no
pets. 740-992·2218.
3 bedroom house in
Pomeroy, large &amp; very ctean, 1 BR A.pts. 21ocatlons. Ref &amp;
1 112 bath, ale, hardwood Dep. required. No pets. 740·
446-2957
floors, full basement w/2 car .:..:::.:.:.:.:..._____
garage, small back yard,
2 BA' in Rodney, WiD,
$635, (740)949·2~3
frldg&lt;o,stove,water/sawerhra
sh ;nctuded. No Peta. Oep
3 Bedroom House in req. 446-1271 or 709-1657
Syracuse. $500/month +
•
deposn No Pets. (304)675· 2BA apts, 6 miles from
5332 weekends 740·591· Holz~r. $400+dep. Wate'r,
0265
SOWer' trash P"CI,JU
'" . , 740• 988•
6130 Of 740-662-9243
4 bedroom: 2 story house,
4RM &amp; Bath, stove .f"""e,
very spacious &amp; clean, new utilities pakl, upstairs,
·~•46
carport, large bedroom, eatin kitchen with new cabinets, Olive
St.
No
pets.
$4501
th """394S
$635 per month, (740)949·
mon · ~
2303
s Ams &amp; Balh, Kanauga
- - - - - - - - $450, Waterffrash Pd. 1 BR
4 sale or r~. 5 mile from
· Port 1I"""' 5t
f
Centenary or. 7 from Rio In
er, r VV"• ove urn.
Grande, 3 Bedroom, Patriot, Waterrfrash Pd. $350. 388oep. &amp; No Pets. (740)379- 0173 or 367-7015
.

,2540
Accepting applications for 2
-------BA,
t BA apt, st0\/8, fridge,
A--on!
1wt1u
local oompany offering ·No WID included. Weter &amp;
~'d No ' ts
DOWN PAYMENr pro· Ga.II'Cige P8l .
pe • very
grams for you to bu~ your nice, clean &amp; anractlve.
horne Instead of renting.
$500/mo, 1st mo + S500
• 100% financing
.. Sec.dep. required. Available
• Lass than perfect credn 7116107. App~ wthtn. 1743
accepted
Centsnary Ad, Galli&gt;ollo. No
• Payment could be the Phone Calls Please.
same as rent.
•
Apartment for rent, 1·2
Mortgage
Locators.
Bdrm., remodeled, new car·
(740)367-QOOO
&amp; 11
pet, stove
r g., water,
House for Aent/Sale, 3 BR, sewer, trash pd. Midcllepprt.
1 SA, 112 basement, Spring &amp;425.00. No pets. Ref.
Valley Area, $550/mo, HUO required. 740·843·5264.

Adu~

Pets, Lease Plus
Q~~·rlh.· n............... :. Required,
~ " ' ~JV~o~VD~'
(740)""3481
.
.......,.
Twin Alvars Tower Ia ..............
:: =~:::.~~~~~~
apartment, lor
the
etderlyfdisabled call 675·
66
E
79
qual
Housing
Opportunll}'

j

SPA

CE
FOR RENT

Commercial bu.lldlng "For
Renr 1800 ~··_...,...., ~-t
r- ' off
street ."""'""'·
Gre·at loco·
..-"""'
lfoof 749 Third Avenue In
Gallipolis. Rent $300/mo.
Call wa,..¥ (404"=-3802
~
Prifne commercial space for
rent at Springvalley Plaza.
C811645·2192.
~1111"-~~---.,
W.•"-~"'•~
~

r

ro JlFNr
~;:;:;:::::;~
Wanted to rent or rent to

own

2·3

BR

house.

Mllttary man &amp; wife pregnant with first child.
(740)448-8228

~nr;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

riO

H&lt;KmiOI.Il
ro~

Aums

FORSAI.E

2001 Harley ·Davison 883
,
Sportster,
6200 miles,
1992 Ford Expktrer, runs Asking 55000 . (740)245 .
good. lookS good, calf lor 5984 or 1740184 s-4833
price, {740)992-3457
- - - - - - - - 2005 H.O.fat Boy custom
1995 Buick Roadmaster, all maroon
wlembossed
electriC, big engine, good flames, 1 of 200 made,BOO

7~~16.1~72.

Yorkie puppies. champion
bloodlines, Vet recommendBerber Carpet, $5.95/yd; ed, guaranteed, will be
VInyl, $4.95/yd, Drive-a-little approx 41b full grown, $550
Save alol. MollotJWI Carpet, (740)441-~510
76 Vine St. Gallfpollo, OH.
Fllurrs &amp;
r40)446·7.U.
V~

r

COOK MOTORS
328
Ja~··n ' PI"". we ·have 6
~
I\CI
Cavaliers, 1 Sunfire, Ford
Focus,
Grand
Am,
Bonneville, GMC sonoma,
lmpals, /Century,
Perk
Avenue, Jeep, Ford Van ,

111

i

I

aox 12 trailer 2 BR A.IC, Middleport, from $327 to pelled Yard Machine lawn
$200 deposit. $375 a month. $592. _740·992·5064. Equid mower 6HP, 22in cui used
740-379-2126
Housing Opportunity.
few times 304-458·1818

Plymouth Van, Grand Prix,
Taurus .. Pricing starts at
Canning tomatoes, bell &amp; $2500, with 3 months ~ 3000
hot peppers, picked, bring mile wananl}'. Stop or calf
containers, Rowe farm, 740-445-0 103
(740)247 '292
-:1~;.;.~---...,
...
17 c
fOR'IiiUCKSSAi.E
Pick uour own canning
'
tomatoes, bell ,_,..,rs,
hoi
,...."'"'"'

r1•

peppers.Tomatoes $3A:Iuck·
et ,Peppers
$5/bucket.
Troyer's WOOdcraft, 9 miles
West of Gallipolis oft S.R.
141

daytime,
evenings.

~~~~~~~~~
Help

Free EaUmetee

740·367.0536

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

• 65

t AI
+KJI0 81

Street • Gallipolis
740-446·0007 1011 Free 877-669-0007

rBoATSFOR&amp;~
~

""""

Wise Concrete

Sou.tll

All types of concrete

a•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1

A "F~lJDAL

MONAIEGt4''•••
NOT A ,
"$~~rFe~r r&gt;ur&gt;~ !

~=::!!!====~~~~~~~=~

·
New 07 16ft Nitro boaI wl
· d Q. ua11ty
·
cover, trolling motor, 50hp *Prompr an
mercury outboard motor, all
Work
safety equip., 2 live wells, 2 ·
batteries, trailer w/ fold away *Reasonable Rates
. $14,000 OBOI 645· *Insured

"'Ex.perien~ed

-

..
BARNEY
•

Hardnod cometrr And Fui'IIHIN

'

·
1995 3011 Fleetwood Torry,
very gOod conditio n, AC,
heater , queen size bed,
~stove, frldge, 1111\irowave,
1
1
1
s ereo,
at- screen TV.
Sfeep8 6-8, comes with 3
day weekend at Rocky Fork

l.l\~e In Hillsboro, Ohio tor

Labor 0 fl'/ weekend . Asking

$7300. 74()..286-8729
- - ' - - - - -- 99 30ft Sunnybrook trailer
/camper, 12ftstldeout.Good
cond. 740·446-8759 If no
answer leave a message
Two campers. 2005 • 33ft
long and 2006 • 30ft long.
For in1o eel 446-7834

'W'WW-*',.aae ...:•....,...-

·
'·IPKO"~~ - ~
'ft:.inu"'m

8

BASEMENT

'DIFF'RINT

WATERPROOFING

antee. Local references fur·
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 44.60870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

r-:::-~:-;;---,

YOUNG 'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
' Room ActdiUon~l ·
R.modlllng
Nn'Gangu
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Rooflng I Gun.rt
VInyl Skiing &amp; P•intlng
Patio and Porch O.C:kt
WV038726

V.C. YOUN G
qq
,'

1;,!\

I' ''
(, •' I

Ill

J

I r d,
•I
'

• • • • Constracllan
St. Rt.
Ml~e
\ ddil lll l l''"~~II
"\t\\

I , 111

I I olii• &gt;
C 1111'-f iiHI IIIII

THE BORN LOSER

1

IIII I '-. i dl ll '
lrll, 1 1"1 ~~l)lll&gt; ol tl l
\

l l'

742-2332

, ..
.. _;

$35A Stoop

T-Post 611. $3.29
Wide Variety of

Seed,

FertUizer and
Showmaster Sbow
Feeds

P'\i ~NC&gt;S U\Cf. ~Mw!lle:. ""'
'1'00 t:l\"l"f:t&gt; r£!'~ lot£ WT

MAAit.la&gt;!

days. August thru October
Treatment lor llldybuga,
, Spidel'!!,, ants &amp; wasp1.

David Lewis
. 740-992-6971

•

BIG NATE
WHAT ~ WT r

AT TtiE

Extermination Inc.
Commtrofal • RHidlniMI
V01.1r Loctll Termtt.l
· Pnt Control Comp.nv

POINT

EIGHT

WAS

IN ONLY

MINUTE'&gt;'·

(i40) 882-6244
40 -418-7509

Free

We Deliver To You I
• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios System

sonat

PEANUTS

11MAWAKE BECAUSE
'I'OU'RE CALLIN6 ME AT
ONE IN TUE MORNIN6!

~ c~-&gt;~"~='~!l!·t~a!P.!IAA"':IIIoo•
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

SLEEP
EITHER, HUl-l?
CAN'T

.446.0007

GOT LAND?
Owner finacing if

SUNSHINE CLUB

you own your

Sheriff Salu
Ca1111 Number 06CV132
LaSalle Bank National
Auoc. Plaintiff VS
Jerry Copplck eL al.
- •
Court of Common
Pleas, Melga County,
Ohio
In purauance ol an
order ol sale to me
dlractad from said
counln the above anti·
!lad action, I will
expose to oale at publie auction on the front
steps of the Meigs
County Court House
on Friday September
14, 2007 at · 10 a.m., ol
said day, the lotlowlng
daacrlbad real estate:
Sltuiotad
In
the
Township of SuHon,
County ot Meigs and
Stale ol Ohio:
Being Lot No. 65 in the
tncorporatad Village ol
Racine.
·
Said premise• also
known · as 404 4th
Street, Racine, Ohio,
45n1
PPN: 19-00242.000
Current Owner: Jeny
Copplck
Property At :
404
Fourth Street
Racine, Ohio
PPt 19-00242
Prior Dead Relerance:
VOlume 115, Paga 733
Apprallllld
at
$18,000.00. Terms of
sate: cannot be sold
lor loll than 2f.lrds of
the appraload value.
10% down o" day ol
sale, caah or certlflad
check, balance due on

,

conllrmatlon ol eele.
Tha
appraisal
did
Include an Interior
examination ol the
hou1111.
•
Robert
E.
Beegle,
Melga County SherlH
Anorney
for
lhe
Plalntlll
John D. Clunk
5601 Hudson Drive,
SUite 400
Hudson, Oh 44236
330-342-8203
(8) 8, 15,22

Public Notice
NOTICE OF AVAILABILITY TO THE PUB·
LIC
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
TRANSPORTAnON
Columbus, Ohio
Legal Copy Number;
DBE FY2008 Goal
Unit Prlca Contract
Monday, July 30, 2007
The Ohio Departmen1
of
Transportation
(ODOT) hereby notifies
all lnteres1ad persona
that the proposed FY
200B Statewide overall
goal lor Dlsedvantaged
Bualnass Enterprise
(DBE) participation In
Department
of
Transportation (DOT)
asslatad contracta will
be available tor review
and comment at the
ODOTCentral Olflca,
Office ot Contracts,
1980
West
Broad
Street,
Columbua,
Ohio
(800.459-3n8,
614-466-3778).
Ths

document lncludee the
calculatlona and analy·
ala used to prolect the
portion ol tHo goal
ODOTexpecta to meet
through race-neutral
and
raca·co"acloua
maaaures. The DBE
Goal
SaHing
Methodology
docu·
ment will be avlllable
lor ln1pect1on durl"g
nonnal business hours
at the ODOTCenlral
Office,
Office
of
Contracts tor 30 days
following the date ol
this notice.
A public meeting will
lake place at ODOT,
Central
OHlce,
Conference Room 1 D
on August 30, 2007,
from 9:00 am to WOO
am where Interested
persona wltl be given
the oppor!un(ly to
make comment
Wrtnon
comments
concerning · the FY
2008 Statewide overall
goal lor DBE pat1lctpalion In DOT aasls1ad
contracts should be
tranamlned to Ma.
Deborah
Jamea,
Manager, Exterltat Civil
Rights,
Olflca
of
Contracts, 1980 Wut
Broad
Straet,
Columbus, Ohio 43223.
ODOTwill ticcept commenta on the goal tor
45 days from the date
of thta notice.
James G. Beasley, P.E.,
P.S., Director
Oho Departme"l ol
Transportation
(8)_ 1, 8

hours off; sleep over required;

land!

866·564-8679

2) 15 hrs: 8am·3pm Sat/Sun

ZERO DOWN!

SHOP
CLASSIFIED$

Must have high school diploma or GED,

driving experience and adequate
automobile insurance.
resume

$7 .50A1r. Send

ROBERT
BISSELL

ClrtmUCTIII
• l!lew Homes
• Garages
• Complete

to:

Remodeling

Buckeye Community Services,
P.O. Box

Hill's Sel f
Stmage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

valid dliver's license, !hree years good

140-992-1m

604, Jackson, OH 45640.

Stop &amp; Compare

Deadline tor applicants: 8110/07.

GARFIELD

Pre-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

HelpWanlec;f

Help Wanted

0

RN INDUSTRIAL NURSE
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a full time and a
Per Diem Registered Nurse for the Toyota
Plant. Applicants must have a current

Don't Miss

Stella Parton
Thursday, Aug. 9th
9:00pm
Mason County Fair
Rt. 62 North
Pt. Pleasant, WV

304-675-5463

.West Virginia License. Previous In-dustrial
Nursing, ECC or Critical Care experience
preferred .
Se"d resumes to:

.

,

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Human Resources
2510 Valley Drive

c/o

Point Pleasant. WV 25550
Or apply online at:

www.pva!!ey.ors
AA/EOE

Manlay•a
Racycllng

I GUESS I' LL JUST

HAllE TO FACE FAC1"5 ...

..... dQR-1:11•1•1•
. . . . . . . . .12:11.

PIYIIIITIP PIICES.
.. I ...... ~--­
.......... EWIM•CII•
7 PIIWi ......

GRIZZWELLS
~ ~~~J't.\A

River Cities Military Support
Group Meeting
Thursday, Aug . 9th
7:00PM
Courtside Grill
2nd Ave. Gallipolis, OH
PLEASE SUPPORT
YOUR TROOPS!

+5

Sldnnor
23 Short
distance
24 Countosa'l
huobs"d
26 Trout
habitat
27 Pherooh's
god
28 Solar
plexus
30 Long-term

-II

33 Notched

11ory

wda.)

8
10
11
12
17
19

.

35 Ftrot..td
device
37 Magazlne
exhortation
38 Foul-up

Prlor to

F:lsho-

44Moequt

42
44
45
4G
47
48

CotiiUon

49

Son.

Fruh
In chlrllt o1
Blond
Uh cousins
Actrul
- Kendall

Kennedy
51 Underhand
throw

babyaltll1'8

illy sttempt

Mfmlc
Auguatalgn
Hor111'
father
20 Ou1back
maker
21 Acquired
22 CorneHa -

40 Polish
43 -Ray
Hutton

32 Big name in
chemlcalo
36 Catch 101110
raya
39 Reality
40 Jalpur

princes•
41 Argue lor

REA\..\.Y wo.WI
\(\0 ..

I MAY NEllER REACH
MY FULL P01'EN1"1AL

ANP JOS"f WHY
TAAT FUNNW

IS

CELEBRITY CIPHER

_o,oo_. . . . ,..-... _. . ... . -.
by Luis Campos

Each l«llr WI h •

·

rotlay's ""''
"HDL

YLPKLH

HDEH

N

HJ

XIC

JX

EIGECY

illn:lrb'IIICh'

G""'"" w

WC

YSPPLYY

W, EZEOLB

EZJHDLK

BEC."

•

HJ

NY
INFL

PDSPU

CLEOL· K
PREVIOUS SOLUTKlN - ' The one 1hing we can rover get enough of~ love.
And !he oro thing we never give enough of~ love." · Henry Miler

....

Astro-.
Graph

'=~:: S@~lA
-ttr.~s· UMI
l4llo4 (or CIAT II. ' O I W I - - - - 0 lour 10&lt;111tblod wordoof b.tht

-'llrthdlr:

""' to lor11t l011r

Thursdoy, Aug. 8, 2007
By Bernice a.ct. 0.01
The year ahead mlghl not be measured
In ·ordinary terms. A number of fortunate
occurrences oould be in the offing that
will be responsible tor opening new
doors to good lhlngs that are happening
- with you in the mldc:le.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Avail yourself
of anv opportunities to mingle with new
people because you shoukt be able to
make some good contactS whO could
turn out to be Important to you In per·

AA~FW"\'{

WANTED: Part-time position available-to

1) 30 hrs: Sat 3pm-8am Tues; daytime

3 Fencing
owont
4 Habit_,..,
5 Dtatant
6
lilape
7 Eda-Burruugha
8 Unllktly

~!he

· lne~perlenced players have great difficulty with deals like this one, wh~h
occuned during a Swisa Team avenllast
month in SL Loultl.
Look at the Norlh hand. Tha clealar on
your right opens IWO diamonds, -~ A
takeOut dOuble ~WUid ba a gamble with
on~ IWO haMS, 80 you paaa. tt then
pasa • three club• • paaa, What
would you do now?
·
Yeo,- South might have doubled, wh&lt;h In
parttcular liiOUkl haw kepiiWO dlamondl
doubled In !he picture. Bu1 he wao narv·
ous about his doui;alon he•"·
Because Norlh has a hand wo"h game,
a jump to five clubs is one option. It Is
better. though, to cue·bld three dla·
monds. Th is savs that · North haa an
unexpectedly strong hand, probat;y with
club support, and Interest In either slam
or other strains. Here, South would rebid.
three spades. Than North could control- '
b;d (cue·bid) tour hearts to show his
heart ace a'ncl slam Potential tor spadeS.
This Wbuld glw Nolth-SOU!h a chai\ce to
reach six spadeS, which ma1&lt;ea because
trumps are 3·2. South woukl draw
trumpe end ptlch North's low heart on
' the fifth dub, collac:tfng lour spades, one
heart, one diamond , five clubs and a
heart ruff on the board.
At tho ttme, Norlh bid a cautious 1oui
ctuba. Scu1h might have moued on, bu1
he understandably passed bocausa he
knew' his partner. had a stronger
seeJJenoe available. Four clubs making
1fve lost 11 intematlonal match points
agatnst1our spades plue two at the other

ao

Announce111vnts

retardation in Middleport:

1?

Cue-bids can keep
options open

tt's that tinle o1 year for fal
treatment servjce ~ for

Help Wanted

assist and individual with menial

2 Arab prince

25
eyes
29 Al:hlevo
31 Lot up

When your side has bid only a minor, a
cue·bld of the opponent's suit shows a
g&lt;iod hand and uncertain!}' about eHhar
the stra;n or the level.

.&amp; .MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Shop
Classlfieds!

lolaloro

18 compiteo
with orders
21 Fl,.englne

1-.

McCormick's

• Pole Bulldlnga

...

"J.ADY BUGS
BUGGING YOU?

26 Yean Experience

• Roo111 Additions

['~~Oi~~

,.00'1'00 I(J.IOI&gt;J WAAI
J /&gt;..1&lt;\P-1~ JE.~
C.I\ IC.KW I:'t "?

....

740-985-4141 Office
740..416-1834

•Decka

•Garages

Lawn

•'

Res1derUlal &amp; Commercial

• Roofing

'

•

Chester, Ohio
W. Marcum, Owner
248

• Replacement
Windows

5__.. VtNGS

••

ad llallai-Caatractlag

J&amp;L
Construction

Owner:
James Kee-n

On

TO .

KIND !! .

Please leave messa e

• Vinyl Siding

Uncond~lonat lifetlm8 guar-

ALJ.ERGIC

THAT

FLOWER,
LI'L TATER ?

Call Gary Stanley @
740-742-2293

-.. 1 I ~\ It I "

r!O-

'fORE MAW'S

CAN '1'A DRAW A
PITCHER OF A

Ret'ereooces Avao' lable'.

"-..,;iiiii

Pass

Paas

13 Flllllllartu
14 Dolph! progexplorer
-ucstor
15 Rllaon d'DOWN
16 Junglrau,
1 Ru-llor
lor one
Waldhelm
18 Romick or

ooa•

Trimming
&amp; Removal

•

2

PU!I

52 Viewpoints
53 DriH off
54 Bond raiUm
55 Antarc11c

IDnd ol(2

East

+

gc&gt;wlth

quick
lrrtatllgence

34 Become

West Nortb

Opening lead:

740-992-5929
740-416-1698
'i~ii:=~:;;:;~~::;;;;;

Seamless Gutters

I

5 Strong oult

ran111

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: Both

~·M

Roofing , Siding, Gutters

+u

+

H&amp;H
GuUerl"ng

446·6748

-----

Wanted

-

u-

99 Silverado 1500 Ext Cab,
4x4, a•utt, 3S'Iires. Call 740•
4414) 149

.+

....., Stanley Tree-

!1111!'~~-=-~:"""

2002 Cadillac- Escalade
EXT. ~liver Sand, . only
11900 miles, all wheel drive
fully loaded lndudiqg sun·
roof, AM/Fm/CO/cassette.
Serious ""'ulres. 44"'-7529

R.,.

+

Owner- Rick Wise

~W!if7'~~44

r

MONTY

70 Pine

Additions

mlles since
new,prlce
Insured &amp; Bonded
$19,000 OBO call for i-:=7=40=
·6::53-=96::5:7=~
detall6·740-949·22t7.
r

1"---iiiiiiiliiiOiiloo.,l

Accepted, (740)441·9650 or 841ou1llul Apto.l1 Jtld&lt;lon
MwouANIDUS
_(7 40~)7~09-633~-7~!""--, Ealltee. 52 Westwood
~
Drive. f.rom $365 10 $560.
MOIIFOIIER.,'!.~
740·446·2568.
Equal
__
ftl!.rll
• Housing Opportunity. This (2) Willie Nelson &amp; Mer1e
H~•rd tickets, Aug. 25th ;n
institution Is an Equal - 2 bedroom mobilii' homo In
Huntlnglon, WV, $100.
Provider and 1304159••~ 5
MlddfepM. $325 per mOfl!h, Opportunity
E 1
~
S325 deposit, no pels, 1 mp oyer
year lease, no calls after CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· 3 Seiko watches, great COO·
9pm ( 7401 ~ 2 • 5039
ED 6. AFFORDABLE!
cltion; radar detectors; tele·
- - - " ' - - - - - - Townhouse
apartments, phones; boom boxes; plus
2 BA trailer in Mercerville. andfor small houses FOR other misc. electronics;
$325/Month Call 740-256- RENT. Call (740)441·1111 priced fair, (740)99~·3176
"1
=-c:32.::____ _ _ _ for application &amp; information.
30·12in concrete blocks,
2000 14x10 Clayton, 3 bed· Gracious uvtng 1 and 2 10HP, lowas/MTD riding
room, 2 ~th for rent 304- Bedroom Apts. at Village lmower w/grater bleda, 3Sin
···Apts. 1n cut, mmor
·
· seu-pro•
675-7911or304-593-8127 Manor andR'IV9rsluo::o
repairs,

•

A&lt;

• 76 3
+A Q 9 5
East
' ' •til
• J 43
• 52
. K J IOB7i
• Q93
K J 10 9 8 5 • Q 2
6 I
South
A Q9 7

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

1·Remodeling, Room

"--..,;iiiiiiii-.,1

:.bod'J....:.:.:...Inc....::.ve:...ry.:_good_
· _sha--.,.pe_.
{740)949-2253
AKppiCReg, ~ old Shih Tzu
.
pu es, 3 ..,males, 1 male, 1996 Pontiac Gran Prix,
paron~ on premises, 1st
d 1 "
·d
runs gooV-6
• oo,s
goo
shots, ~$500 neg. (?40)44&amp; $
G
MPG •
650
0091 or (740)645-6706
raat
.
-------AKC Shelrle COllie pups, 1st 2001 Toyota Camery, V-6, 2
shots, wormed. $400 each. tone co lor, engine start
_74_0._2_58_·_1664_____ remote conrrot, cJd changer,
8 disc, vary nice, clean
A t II
Sh h d
us ra an
. ep er pup- Inside, look like new,
pies, Btliel&lt; &amp; White and Red {304)812--4835
&amp; While, 5125 each . .;......;._______
(740)245-5984 or (740)645- 2004 Jeep Liberty, $12,000
4833
080; 2001 Cavalier, $3400
CKC Min Pin puppies. 080; 1998 Cavalier, $1900
(740)256 "169
BiacWtan, Choc/tan, Stag 080.
__ ..:__:__v_.,--::-_
red. Males $350. Females
95 Mitsubishi 3000GT, Blk,
$400. 7.. n_'Jca.8788 ·
~
SUnroof, Alarm, 10 disc CD,
CKC ~ Re ~ ·
c
87,000 miles. Looks/runs
'"" 1 ••mars, hoc.
$6500
&amp; Wh"e
1
Its
"-~-"
great.
. 388-0406
n , a
uu''"uu, cur1 hot $195 7"" •••
ren s s,
· "tV"U"'&gt;r 97 Bulat Lasabre. Excelent
_ae_57_or_37_9_-9_5_15_._ _ _ shape, 90,000 miles, new
rubber, A/C. R.eady to go.
Female Toy Poodle, CKC $ 3995 _00 CaD 446--4514 or
Registered. tst shots, 441 •7534
•" &amp; ve1 ch8ck~
wormo:ro
a-u
$350 080. (740)446-1672
98 Sebring LXi Coupe.
Miniature Plncher P~. 2 71 .000 mIfes, exceIf ent con•t kl1i
1
1
$300 dition, Kelly Blue Book
~ ac an ema es,
each Aea... now {740)""" $7,435, 2.5l V6, 4·spaed
,.,
•
~ automatic w/00, leather,
8124 ·
A!C, AMfFM CasseneJCD,
p
Min1ature
lnscher CKC ABS, Loaded with all
Reg. Black and rust, 1 F 4 Options: Including Sunroof,
M. $250-$300. Born 6Jl3107. Cruile, Interval Wipers, Fog
Wormed , shots, tails lights, K8yiess Entry, asking
docl&lt;ed. 740·367.0210 If no $6,295 oao 304-882·2480
8flaw&amp;r teaue message_
01 304-S93--4540

"---ti"""""iiitiii--,1
·

4 Wlnn.os

·

Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,

gas mileage $1,200 304·
675-6727

Pool &amp; Bab)! lnga.$350. 740-767--4875

Poot. Patto. sta" $425/Mo.

MoroRcras/

Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,

1982 Honda Blac*. Hawk.
looks good, rur}S good, good

brakes, almost new tires,
Tara
Townhouse AKC Mini Schnauzers, all new battery, leather interior,
Apartments, Very Spacious, males, white and sip. 8 wks. appx. 99,000K,
never
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112 UTD on ehots and worm- wrecked or in high water,
Bath,

F;)

P1 d
A
bl
r co
easone y.
www .slaterunanaus .co m, ....,

r

No

Roo't·
ng S"'t'ng•
" . • •u,

04 Jeep Wrangler UnffmHed
air, auto: CD, 4X4, 50000
Vea~lng '!bung Angus Suits, miles. Exc. Cond. Asking
bred heifers. Excellent $15000 740-794-1m

•

.(fami4 C•&amp;flM~•

CORNER STONE
FOR~~_
I·
'---••liiiiiii""'"""iiiiii••~· CONSTRUCTION
Calf 7;245-o611

Delivery alter 7pm. 7~256-6003

$6,495
Free
(937)718-1471

Irio

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
for Rent, Meigs County, In
town, No Pets, Deposit
Required, 17401992-51 74 or
67-'-5--'-3&lt;46=9---,...--,---,- (740)441-0110.
.:..
3 bd,country setting, 4 mi. 1 and 2 bedroom apart·
from Albanu,
Meigs Local ments, furnished and unfur·
1
Schools . $550/monlh plus n1s
· h""
d h
1n
uu , an . ouses

•::,.-=:-

1 AQHA Registertd Quarter
30x50x10 Hcwsestorsaleortrade.C8JI ~

Today!
2SR, 1 Bath, Central air, deposit &amp; references, no
pets, (740)992..()165
8
storage building
1111"..;.;66-;;.:352;;,-&lt;&gt;4..;;::69;,;,_.,
Also, 3 BR 2 Batn New 2BR apartments. r
PErs
Doublewide, central air, Washer/dr~er
hookup,
FOR&amp;l.E
1622
Chatham
Ave, !10\l'elrefrlgerator included.
2 BA house in K'anauga Gallipolis, OH, Call740·446· Also, LilliS on SA 160, Pets
$375 + Dep. water/fresh Pd. 4234 or 740-208·7~81
Welcome! 1740144 HJ,jQ4.
AKC German Shepherd.
740-388-0173 or 367-7015.
pups. Top bloodline, large
AP.FOR~
breed bOth parents on prem.av.c"J
ises, $350/flrm (304)&amp;752BR !louse, Kit , DR, FA
$400/mo. 1BR mobile home - 5724

""'""' ~~r

LMm"tJa(

+

1

.,._..,__,

~

NootD
01&lt;1_1-0?
K 10 8 6

H
1
IRE iUAJ
t SERVJCE FREE DELIVERY
t MQNTHLf OXYGEN VISITS

~TIM
_ , , _ , c..
_

actlvlty
50 Hoving

1 Extramaty
oagor
10.Nolay
dlo.........,.
12 Champagne

.--------------•
NT'' c SALES

Grating
For
Drains, ·PI
nt IYISer rial ";,2038· cover, remote atar1er. Pretty
""--·•
&amp;
Wai,_,.
L&amp;L
eaaa
recllrud&lt; that runs'"""'"'
Immaculate 2 bedroom ..,., ..... "..,
.......r..
S25 000 - · ,.._..,..,
"""" .and
·
"'"""'~,.Open
lAo""-.
'
-·· 1~
drives t;ke a '"'·"ilac.
•~
apartment
New carpel &amp; ........
ut' ..,.......,
.......,
VO'-'
~vu '-~';.,_;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;•~_.
_

HartfOrd, Clep/ref ~ulred ,
No ,..,.....
$350/month 30457• '037
~
_M_ _ _ _ _ _ _
R
obifa Home fo• Rent. 2 B .
2 bedroom executive house, AJC, HUD Approved, Total

$250/mo. Option to buy,·land
_oon_tract_._256-_58_16_ _ _
2br unfurnished H('IUse 507
112 2nd. SL New Haven 304_

r~~~~~~,
'
-~ John10n's Tree
---§iFYice:::"'

NEW AI«) USED STEEL with C8lvo F'-60 winch with message.

$1741mol Buy 3bd HUD
homo! 5%dn, 20yrs II S%.
For Uoa- 800-SStl-4109
..~
.
x170t.

d&lt;yer, farge wrap around
pord'l, full basement, 1 car
garage, total electric with
central air. very spacious,
pdvate drlvo wl111 par~ng,
$1,100 par moolh, sedous
cans only (740)949·2303

Tillers. End of
Summer Sale 00 Bush 86 International Single axle
Hogs, aM Olzae. JIM'S FARIA dump trudc, 4611 DT Otosel,
18ft EOUIPUENTtNC. -«&amp;-9777 auto-trans, alrbrakaa,. 10ft

. topper

48 Dolo

Rt0m1ngo Ionon

oimplo

warda.

•

BALMEG

0 YE I L

ways.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sapl. 22) - Lady Luck
could have a hand In putting you In the
right spot at the right lime. You can
become a part of something tortunate
and reap benefits disproportionate to
your lrNOtvement.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- You could be
rather lucky and be invited lo take part In
a new venture, along wlth &amp;ome bright
associates. It has exceptionally good
potential and only needs a saUd sates
promotion.
·
SCORPtO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Don't be
· surprised tf you ~et ln110l'l8d In some·
thing that Is on a much larger scale than
thai to whlcl'l you're accustomed. You
won't be intimidated by the grandeur of it
all.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -You
ehouldn't have any trouble gathering the
support you need for a matter ll!altlnter·
ests you. Others will be attracted lor the
same reasons, and they'll want good
results .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19) - If
you're alert, you'll spot that opening you
need to take charge ot ROmethlng that
you believe has great po1ential but is
being misma~ged . Once In your hands,
fortuna will smile on lt.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - One of
your greatest talents Is presenting things
In such a mannar that your contempo·
raries end up thinking It was all their
idea. Once thai Is achieved. you'll have
what you want.
PISCES (Feb. 20.March 20) - Dame
Fortune is focused on helping you
achieve a number ot meaningful objec·
tivas that could be your ticket to
advancement and/or that ~a you'd
like to receive. Get going .
ARIES (March 21·Apri l 19) - Get out
and circulate beeeuse you're In a period
ot time during which you'll eMily turn
new people you meet into Instant lrlends.
One could become very lucky for you in
a lot ot ways.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Even
though your accomplishment. may not
•be readily apparent to othere, what you
achieve lor youTSelf will be to you, and
that's all that matters. 11'a the bottom line
ltuit counls.
GEM INI (May 21.June 20) - Yoo won't
have to grind and haggle In order lo
reach an Important understanding with
someone who 1111 usually tough to negoti·
ate with. You'll catch this person In an
agreeable mood .
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - A com·
marclal endeavor you've been trying to
flnalll• won 't be lett to gather dUll any
Ienger. Pr~rl~ handled, It thould be
completed on very acceptable terms .

A UNSC~A.MBI.t l!Tl ERS TO
~ GET ANSWH

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Brutal -

e~1~o 1

Rusty - Lunge - Slowly - TROUBLE

One fellow to lliiOlber, "I prefer to think the be!1 of ever)'body, ii
saves so much ~OUBLE."
ARLO &amp;JANIS
II !JUMW LIKE.

AGOOD IDEAAill&lt;f. liME: .•

...,

�I
-Wednesday, August 8, 2007
ALLEYOOP

The Daily Sentinel• Page BS

www.mydallysentinel.com

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Ellm View
Apartments

10 -tor 101o located on 3BR. 2 1u1 bath, Allred Ad •
l!lood Run Road, In New Meigs CO. Eastern S&lt;:hoc&gt;
Hoven.
wv $3&lt;4,500 District. ~ + deposit, wMI
(804)173-5&amp;11

Phillip
Alder

except HUO. References
needed. 740-992-o653
• 2&amp;3 bedroom apanmems
5 Acre• MIL along Old
•Central heal a. A/C

Covered Bridlle Rd. Located

3BR, 2BA, on Bulaville Pike

Rotor

•Waeherl&lt;*yw hoolwp

In Ewinglon, Vlnlon County, Call740-367-n62.
•Tenant: pays electric
011. catl 606 353-0990
_.,017
(304)882..,.
93 t2x70 2bf, W/0 ~up
Mobile Home lot tor rent in ~-- ~~ '" 8 d ~

;;,;:-~;· A:;c" 6,~ ·~

Point

Pleasant,
wv.
$125/month + $100/deposit Cora Mill Rd. $385. 614·9o46. can 7~388-&amp;1 2a
3307 or 614-678-553?
Beautiful Ril/er View in

~;:=~==~
llot.5l.s

rL,~--·FOR-·RENr---,.1
10

KanaugaIdeO! to&lt; "ope~.
1 or 2
~ta. refere-•
•--•
- - " Qavln.
••
Loc;. 5 mi. ·from
(740)441-()181

Like

New

Saara

Retrigonotor S125 - · - - D-5
--c1ump 304-875-3338
bed traU11, ~
2220
Caterpillar
Dozer
'73 OBO.
~'--

•

seam.. Pipe

Rebar menual transmission 12'
81 -:-:-=:-:-:=--.,---engleFl!11118.
con baRO&lt;Jie
seen
For
Conorete,
Angle, Old
State
62 92 GMC 1/2 ton, 350, auto,
Channel, A1t Bar, Steel Ohl
R'
Road Pt loaded, fiber glass bad
0
Steel

•

r.

Ir:080·
r.,~-----!1.--'

::,r:~~d~re~ropa~:.~u:. ~~~m~::~

Clean, 2br, 1ba, AC in Beautiful country sett"ing. Thursday,

Must see to appreciate.
$4001or
""" (614)59"-7773
.r
.·~ ~· ··~ .
1-~-·-~...,..--::--:-::-:
Middleport, Eleech St., 2 br.
furnished apartment, ulllitles
new construction, fully tur- Electric, Rent includes trash , pakl, deposit &amp; references,
nlshed, new refrigerator, water &amp; sewer, $325/mo. no pets, (740)992-0!65
. -. cish-he&gt;. washB&lt; &amp; $325 depostt. Call (740)092·
::5639:::..::fo::.r=iapptr.- - - - Middleport, North 4th Ave., 2

Mobile H'omes for rent • br. furnished apartment,

Saturday

&amp;

Sunday. {740}446-7300

Pole

Barns

REPO'S ARCH BUILDINGS· HUGE SAVINGS.
3 Left. 2S'x.ta'qo'xs6'

Breeding, Top Pertoimance,

No R.euonable Ofl'er

(740)2S6-~

Refu5edl Serious

Inquira Only. can

ut7~~P1-~eq11.70430-698-1815

or Pomeroy and Middleport,
security deposit required, no
pets. 740-992·2218.
3 bedroom house in
Pomeroy, large &amp; very ctean, 1 BR A.pts. 21ocatlons. Ref &amp;
1 112 bath, ale, hardwood Dep. required. No pets. 740·
446-2957
floors, full basement w/2 car .:..:::.:.:.:.:..._____
garage, small back yard,
2 BA' in Rodney, WiD,
$635, (740)949·2~3
frldg&lt;o,stove,water/sawerhra
sh ;nctuded. No Peta. Oep
3 Bedroom House in req. 446-1271 or 709-1657
Syracuse. $500/month +
•
deposn No Pets. (304)675· 2BA apts, 6 miles from
5332 weekends 740·591· Holz~r. $400+dep. Wate'r,
0265
SOWer' trash P"CI,JU
'" . , 740• 988•
6130 Of 740-662-9243
4 bedroom: 2 story house,
4RM &amp; Bath, stove .f"""e,
very spacious &amp; clean, new utilities pakl, upstairs,
·~•46
carport, large bedroom, eatin kitchen with new cabinets, Olive
St.
No
pets.
$4501
th """394S
$635 per month, (740)949·
mon · ~
2303
s Ams &amp; Balh, Kanauga
- - - - - - - - $450, Waterffrash Pd. 1 BR
4 sale or r~. 5 mile from
· Port 1I"""' 5t
f
Centenary or. 7 from Rio In
er, r VV"• ove urn.
Grande, 3 Bedroom, Patriot, Waterrfrash Pd. $350. 388oep. &amp; No Pets. (740)379- 0173 or 367-7015
.

,2540
Accepting applications for 2
-------BA,
t BA apt, st0\/8, fridge,
A--on!
1wt1u
local oompany offering ·No WID included. Weter &amp;
~'d No ' ts
DOWN PAYMENr pro· Ga.II'Cige P8l .
pe • very
grams for you to bu~ your nice, clean &amp; anractlve.
horne Instead of renting.
$500/mo, 1st mo + S500
• 100% financing
.. Sec.dep. required. Available
• Lass than perfect credn 7116107. App~ wthtn. 1743
accepted
Centsnary Ad, Galli&gt;ollo. No
• Payment could be the Phone Calls Please.
same as rent.
•
Apartment for rent, 1·2
Mortgage
Locators.
Bdrm., remodeled, new car·
(740)367-QOOO
&amp; 11
pet, stove
r g., water,
House for Aent/Sale, 3 BR, sewer, trash pd. Midcllepprt.
1 SA, 112 basement, Spring &amp;425.00. No pets. Ref.
Valley Area, $550/mo, HUO required. 740·843·5264.

Adu~

Pets, Lease Plus
Q~~·rlh.· n............... :. Required,
~ " ' ~JV~o~VD~'
(740)""3481
.
.......,.
Twin Alvars Tower Ia ..............
:: =~:::.~~~~~~
apartment, lor
the
etderlyfdisabled call 675·
66
E
79
qual
Housing
Opportunll}'

j

SPA

CE
FOR RENT

Commercial bu.lldlng "For
Renr 1800 ~··_...,...., ~-t
r- ' off
street ."""'""'·
Gre·at loco·
..-"""'
lfoof 749 Third Avenue In
Gallipolis. Rent $300/mo.
Call wa,..¥ (404"=-3802
~
Prifne commercial space for
rent at Springvalley Plaza.
C811645·2192.
~1111"-~~---.,
W.•"-~"'•~
~

r

ro JlFNr
~;:;:;:::::;~
Wanted to rent or rent to

own

2·3

BR

house.

Mllttary man &amp; wife pregnant with first child.
(740)448-8228

~nr;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

riO

H&lt;KmiOI.Il
ro~

Aums

FORSAI.E

2001 Harley ·Davison 883
,
Sportster,
6200 miles,
1992 Ford Expktrer, runs Asking 55000 . (740)245 .
good. lookS good, calf lor 5984 or 1740184 s-4833
price, {740)992-3457
- - - - - - - - 2005 H.O.fat Boy custom
1995 Buick Roadmaster, all maroon
wlembossed
electriC, big engine, good flames, 1 of 200 made,BOO

7~~16.1~72.

Yorkie puppies. champion
bloodlines, Vet recommendBerber Carpet, $5.95/yd; ed, guaranteed, will be
VInyl, $4.95/yd, Drive-a-little approx 41b full grown, $550
Save alol. MollotJWI Carpet, (740)441-~510
76 Vine St. Gallfpollo, OH.
Fllurrs &amp;
r40)446·7.U.
V~

r

COOK MOTORS
328
Ja~··n ' PI"". we ·have 6
~
I\CI
Cavaliers, 1 Sunfire, Ford
Focus,
Grand
Am,
Bonneville, GMC sonoma,
lmpals, /Century,
Perk
Avenue, Jeep, Ford Van ,

111

i

I

aox 12 trailer 2 BR A.IC, Middleport, from $327 to pelled Yard Machine lawn
$200 deposit. $375 a month. $592. _740·992·5064. Equid mower 6HP, 22in cui used
740-379-2126
Housing Opportunity.
few times 304-458·1818

Plymouth Van, Grand Prix,
Taurus .. Pricing starts at
Canning tomatoes, bell &amp; $2500, with 3 months ~ 3000
hot peppers, picked, bring mile wananl}'. Stop or calf
containers, Rowe farm, 740-445-0 103
(740)247 '292
-:1~;.;.~---...,
...
17 c
fOR'IiiUCKSSAi.E
Pick uour own canning
'
tomatoes, bell ,_,..,rs,
hoi
,...."'"'"'

r1•

peppers.Tomatoes $3A:Iuck·
et ,Peppers
$5/bucket.
Troyer's WOOdcraft, 9 miles
West of Gallipolis oft S.R.
141

daytime,
evenings.

~~~~~~~~~
Help

Free EaUmetee

740·367.0536

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

• 65

t AI
+KJI0 81

Street • Gallipolis
740-446·0007 1011 Free 877-669-0007

rBoATSFOR&amp;~
~

""""

Wise Concrete

Sou.tll

All types of concrete

a•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1

A "F~lJDAL

MONAIEGt4''•••
NOT A ,
"$~~rFe~r r&gt;ur&gt;~ !

~=::!!!====~~~~~~~=~

·
New 07 16ft Nitro boaI wl
· d Q. ua11ty
·
cover, trolling motor, 50hp *Prompr an
mercury outboard motor, all
Work
safety equip., 2 live wells, 2 ·
batteries, trailer w/ fold away *Reasonable Rates
. $14,000 OBOI 645· *Insured

"'Ex.perien~ed

-

..
BARNEY
•

Hardnod cometrr And Fui'IIHIN

'

·
1995 3011 Fleetwood Torry,
very gOod conditio n, AC,
heater , queen size bed,
~stove, frldge, 1111\irowave,
1
1
1
s ereo,
at- screen TV.
Sfeep8 6-8, comes with 3
day weekend at Rocky Fork

l.l\~e In Hillsboro, Ohio tor

Labor 0 fl'/ weekend . Asking

$7300. 74()..286-8729
- - ' - - - - -- 99 30ft Sunnybrook trailer
/camper, 12ftstldeout.Good
cond. 740·446-8759 If no
answer leave a message
Two campers. 2005 • 33ft
long and 2006 • 30ft long.
For in1o eel 446-7834

'W'WW-*',.aae ...:•....,...-

·
'·IPKO"~~ - ~
'ft:.inu"'m

8

BASEMENT

'DIFF'RINT

WATERPROOFING

antee. Local references fur·
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 44.60870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

r-:::-~:-;;---,

YOUNG 'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
' Room ActdiUon~l ·
R.modlllng
Nn'Gangu
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Rooflng I Gun.rt
VInyl Skiing &amp; P•intlng
Patio and Porch O.C:kt
WV038726

V.C. YOUN G
qq
,'

1;,!\

I' ''
(, •' I

Ill

J

I r d,
•I
'

• • • • Constracllan
St. Rt.
Ml~e
\ ddil lll l l''"~~II
"\t\\

I , 111

I I olii• &gt;
C 1111'-f iiHI IIIII

THE BORN LOSER

1

IIII I '-. i dl ll '
lrll, 1 1"1 ~~l)lll&gt; ol tl l
\

l l'

742-2332

, ..
.. _;

$35A Stoop

T-Post 611. $3.29
Wide Variety of

Seed,

FertUizer and
Showmaster Sbow
Feeds

P'\i ~NC&gt;S U\Cf. ~Mw!lle:. ""'
'1'00 t:l\"l"f:t&gt; r£!'~ lot£ WT

MAAit.la&gt;!

days. August thru October
Treatment lor llldybuga,
, Spidel'!!,, ants &amp; wasp1.

David Lewis
. 740-992-6971

•

BIG NATE
WHAT ~ WT r

AT TtiE

Extermination Inc.
Commtrofal • RHidlniMI
V01.1r Loctll Termtt.l
· Pnt Control Comp.nv

POINT

EIGHT

WAS

IN ONLY

MINUTE'&gt;'·

(i40) 882-6244
40 -418-7509

Free

We Deliver To You I
• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios System

sonat

PEANUTS

11MAWAKE BECAUSE
'I'OU'RE CALLIN6 ME AT
ONE IN TUE MORNIN6!

~ c~-&gt;~"~='~!l!·t~a!P.!IAA"':IIIoo•
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

SLEEP
EITHER, HUl-l?
CAN'T

.446.0007

GOT LAND?
Owner finacing if

SUNSHINE CLUB

you own your

Sheriff Salu
Ca1111 Number 06CV132
LaSalle Bank National
Auoc. Plaintiff VS
Jerry Copplck eL al.
- •
Court of Common
Pleas, Melga County,
Ohio
In purauance ol an
order ol sale to me
dlractad from said
counln the above anti·
!lad action, I will
expose to oale at publie auction on the front
steps of the Meigs
County Court House
on Friday September
14, 2007 at · 10 a.m., ol
said day, the lotlowlng
daacrlbad real estate:
Sltuiotad
In
the
Township of SuHon,
County ot Meigs and
Stale ol Ohio:
Being Lot No. 65 in the
tncorporatad Village ol
Racine.
·
Said premise• also
known · as 404 4th
Street, Racine, Ohio,
45n1
PPN: 19-00242.000
Current Owner: Jeny
Copplck
Property At :
404
Fourth Street
Racine, Ohio
PPt 19-00242
Prior Dead Relerance:
VOlume 115, Paga 733
Apprallllld
at
$18,000.00. Terms of
sate: cannot be sold
lor loll than 2f.lrds of
the appraload value.
10% down o" day ol
sale, caah or certlflad
check, balance due on

,

conllrmatlon ol eele.
Tha
appraisal
did
Include an Interior
examination ol the
hou1111.
•
Robert
E.
Beegle,
Melga County SherlH
Anorney
for
lhe
Plalntlll
John D. Clunk
5601 Hudson Drive,
SUite 400
Hudson, Oh 44236
330-342-8203
(8) 8, 15,22

Public Notice
NOTICE OF AVAILABILITY TO THE PUB·
LIC
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
TRANSPORTAnON
Columbus, Ohio
Legal Copy Number;
DBE FY2008 Goal
Unit Prlca Contract
Monday, July 30, 2007
The Ohio Departmen1
of
Transportation
(ODOT) hereby notifies
all lnteres1ad persona
that the proposed FY
200B Statewide overall
goal lor Dlsedvantaged
Bualnass Enterprise
(DBE) participation In
Department
of
Transportation (DOT)
asslatad contracta will
be available tor review
and comment at the
ODOTCentral Olflca,
Office ot Contracts,
1980
West
Broad
Street,
Columbua,
Ohio
(800.459-3n8,
614-466-3778).
Ths

document lncludee the
calculatlona and analy·
ala used to prolect the
portion ol tHo goal
ODOTexpecta to meet
through race-neutral
and
raca·co"acloua
maaaures. The DBE
Goal
SaHing
Methodology
docu·
ment will be avlllable
lor ln1pect1on durl"g
nonnal business hours
at the ODOTCenlral
Office,
Office
of
Contracts tor 30 days
following the date ol
this notice.
A public meeting will
lake place at ODOT,
Central
OHlce,
Conference Room 1 D
on August 30, 2007,
from 9:00 am to WOO
am where Interested
persona wltl be given
the oppor!un(ly to
make comment
Wrtnon
comments
concerning · the FY
2008 Statewide overall
goal lor DBE pat1lctpalion In DOT aasls1ad
contracts should be
tranamlned to Ma.
Deborah
Jamea,
Manager, Exterltat Civil
Rights,
Olflca
of
Contracts, 1980 Wut
Broad
Straet,
Columbus, Ohio 43223.
ODOTwill ticcept commenta on the goal tor
45 days from the date
of thta notice.
James G. Beasley, P.E.,
P.S., Director
Oho Departme"l ol
Transportation
(8)_ 1, 8

hours off; sleep over required;

land!

866·564-8679

2) 15 hrs: 8am·3pm Sat/Sun

ZERO DOWN!

SHOP
CLASSIFIED$

Must have high school diploma or GED,

driving experience and adequate
automobile insurance.
resume

$7 .50A1r. Send

ROBERT
BISSELL

ClrtmUCTIII
• l!lew Homes
• Garages
• Complete

to:

Remodeling

Buckeye Community Services,
P.O. Box

Hill's Sel f
Stmage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

valid dliver's license, !hree years good

140-992-1m

604, Jackson, OH 45640.

Stop &amp; Compare

Deadline tor applicants: 8110/07.

GARFIELD

Pre-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

HelpWanlec;f

Help Wanted

0

RN INDUSTRIAL NURSE
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a full time and a
Per Diem Registered Nurse for the Toyota
Plant. Applicants must have a current

Don't Miss

Stella Parton
Thursday, Aug. 9th
9:00pm
Mason County Fair
Rt. 62 North
Pt. Pleasant, WV

304-675-5463

.West Virginia License. Previous In-dustrial
Nursing, ECC or Critical Care experience
preferred .
Se"d resumes to:

.

,

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Human Resources
2510 Valley Drive

c/o

Point Pleasant. WV 25550
Or apply online at:

www.pva!!ey.ors
AA/EOE

Manlay•a
Racycllng

I GUESS I' LL JUST

HAllE TO FACE FAC1"5 ...

..... dQR-1:11•1•1•
. . . . . . . . .12:11.

PIYIIIITIP PIICES.
.. I ...... ~--­
.......... EWIM•CII•
7 PIIWi ......

GRIZZWELLS
~ ~~~J't.\A

River Cities Military Support
Group Meeting
Thursday, Aug . 9th
7:00PM
Courtside Grill
2nd Ave. Gallipolis, OH
PLEASE SUPPORT
YOUR TROOPS!

+5

Sldnnor
23 Short
distance
24 Countosa'l
huobs"d
26 Trout
habitat
27 Pherooh's
god
28 Solar
plexus
30 Long-term

-II

33 Notched

11ory

wda.)

8
10
11
12
17
19

.

35 Ftrot..td
device
37 Magazlne
exhortation
38 Foul-up

Prlor to

F:lsho-

44Moequt

42
44
45
4G
47
48

CotiiUon

49

Son.

Fruh
In chlrllt o1
Blond
Uh cousins
Actrul
- Kendall

Kennedy
51 Underhand
throw

babyaltll1'8

illy sttempt

Mfmlc
Auguatalgn
Hor111'
father
20 Ou1back
maker
21 Acquired
22 CorneHa -

40 Polish
43 -Ray
Hutton

32 Big name in
chemlcalo
36 Catch 101110
raya
39 Reality
40 Jalpur

princes•
41 Argue lor

REA\..\.Y wo.WI
\(\0 ..

I MAY NEllER REACH
MY FULL P01'EN1"1AL

ANP JOS"f WHY
TAAT FUNNW

IS

CELEBRITY CIPHER

_o,oo_. . . . ,..-... _. . ... . -.
by Luis Campos

Each l«llr WI h •

·

rotlay's ""''
"HDL

YLPKLH

HDEH

N

HJ

XIC

JX

EIGECY

illn:lrb'IIICh'

G""'"" w

WC

YSPPLYY

W, EZEOLB

EZJHDLK

BEC."

•

HJ

NY
INFL

PDSPU

CLEOL· K
PREVIOUS SOLUTKlN - ' The one 1hing we can rover get enough of~ love.
And !he oro thing we never give enough of~ love." · Henry Miler

....

Astro-.
Graph

'=~:: S@~lA
-ttr.~s· UMI
l4llo4 (or CIAT II. ' O I W I - - - - 0 lour 10&lt;111tblod wordoof b.tht

-'llrthdlr:

""' to lor11t l011r

Thursdoy, Aug. 8, 2007
By Bernice a.ct. 0.01
The year ahead mlghl not be measured
In ·ordinary terms. A number of fortunate
occurrences oould be in the offing that
will be responsible tor opening new
doors to good lhlngs that are happening
- with you in the mldc:le.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Avail yourself
of anv opportunities to mingle with new
people because you shoukt be able to
make some good contactS whO could
turn out to be Important to you In per·

AA~FW"\'{

WANTED: Part-time position available-to

1) 30 hrs: Sat 3pm-8am Tues; daytime

3 Fencing
owont
4 Habit_,..,
5 Dtatant
6
lilape
7 Eda-Burruugha
8 Unllktly

~!he

· lne~perlenced players have great difficulty with deals like this one, wh~h
occuned during a Swisa Team avenllast
month in SL Loultl.
Look at the Norlh hand. Tha clealar on
your right opens IWO diamonds, -~ A
takeOut dOuble ~WUid ba a gamble with
on~ IWO haMS, 80 you paaa. tt then
pasa • three club• • paaa, What
would you do now?
·
Yeo,- South might have doubled, wh&lt;h In
parttcular liiOUkl haw kepiiWO dlamondl
doubled In !he picture. Bu1 he wao narv·
ous about his doui;alon he•"·
Because Norlh has a hand wo"h game,
a jump to five clubs is one option. It Is
better. though, to cue·bld three dla·
monds. Th is savs that · North haa an
unexpectedly strong hand, probat;y with
club support, and Interest In either slam
or other strains. Here, South would rebid.
three spades. Than North could control- '
b;d (cue·bid) tour hearts to show his
heart ace a'ncl slam Potential tor spadeS.
This Wbuld glw Nolth-SOU!h a chai\ce to
reach six spadeS, which ma1&lt;ea because
trumps are 3·2. South woukl draw
trumpe end ptlch North's low heart on
' the fifth dub, collac:tfng lour spades, one
heart, one diamond , five clubs and a
heart ruff on the board.
At tho ttme, Norlh bid a cautious 1oui
ctuba. Scu1h might have moued on, bu1
he understandably passed bocausa he
knew' his partner. had a stronger
seeJJenoe available. Four clubs making
1fve lost 11 intematlonal match points
agatnst1our spades plue two at the other

ao

Announce111vnts

retardation in Middleport:

1?

Cue-bids can keep
options open

tt's that tinle o1 year for fal
treatment servjce ~ for

Help Wanted

assist and individual with menial

2 Arab prince

25
eyes
29 Al:hlevo
31 Lot up

When your side has bid only a minor, a
cue·bld of the opponent's suit shows a
g&lt;iod hand and uncertain!}' about eHhar
the stra;n or the level.

.&amp; .MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Shop
Classlfieds!

lolaloro

18 compiteo
with orders
21 Fl,.englne

1-.

McCormick's

• Pole Bulldlnga

...

"J.ADY BUGS
BUGGING YOU?

26 Yean Experience

• Roo111 Additions

['~~Oi~~

,.00'1'00 I(J.IOI&gt;J WAAI
J /&gt;..1&lt;\P-1~ JE.~
C.I\ IC.KW I:'t "?

....

740-985-4141 Office
740..416-1834

•Decka

•Garages

Lawn

•'

Res1derUlal &amp; Commercial

• Roofing

'

•

Chester, Ohio
W. Marcum, Owner
248

• Replacement
Windows

5__.. VtNGS

••

ad llallai-Caatractlag

J&amp;L
Construction

Owner:
James Kee-n

On

TO .

KIND !! .

Please leave messa e

• Vinyl Siding

Uncond~lonat lifetlm8 guar-

ALJ.ERGIC

THAT

FLOWER,
LI'L TATER ?

Call Gary Stanley @
740-742-2293

-.. 1 I ~\ It I "

r!O-

'fORE MAW'S

CAN '1'A DRAW A
PITCHER OF A

Ret'ereooces Avao' lable'.

"-..,;iiiii

Pass

Paas

13 Flllllllartu
14 Dolph! progexplorer
-ucstor
15 Rllaon d'DOWN
16 Junglrau,
1 Ru-llor
lor one
Waldhelm
18 Romick or

ooa•

Trimming
&amp; Removal

•

2

PU!I

52 Viewpoints
53 DriH off
54 Bond raiUm
55 Antarc11c

IDnd ol(2

East

+

gc&gt;wlth

quick
lrrtatllgence

34 Become

West Nortb

Opening lead:

740-992-5929
740-416-1698
'i~ii:=~:;;:;~~::;;;;;

Seamless Gutters

I

5 Strong oult

ran111

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: Both

~·M

Roofing , Siding, Gutters

+u

+

H&amp;H
GuUerl"ng

446·6748

-----

Wanted

-

u-

99 Silverado 1500 Ext Cab,
4x4, a•utt, 3S'Iires. Call 740•
4414) 149

.+

....., Stanley Tree-

!1111!'~~-=-~:"""

2002 Cadillac- Escalade
EXT. ~liver Sand, . only
11900 miles, all wheel drive
fully loaded lndudiqg sun·
roof, AM/Fm/CO/cassette.
Serious ""'ulres. 44"'-7529

R.,.

+

Owner- Rick Wise

~W!if7'~~44

r

MONTY

70 Pine

Additions

mlles since
new,prlce
Insured &amp; Bonded
$19,000 OBO call for i-:=7=40=
·6::53-=96::5:7=~
detall6·740-949·22t7.
r

1"---iiiiiiiliiiOiiloo.,l

Accepted, (740)441·9650 or 841ou1llul Apto.l1 Jtld&lt;lon
MwouANIDUS
_(7 40~)7~09-633~-7~!""--, Ealltee. 52 Westwood
~
Drive. f.rom $365 10 $560.
MOIIFOIIER.,'!.~
740·446·2568.
Equal
__
ftl!.rll
• Housing Opportunity. This (2) Willie Nelson &amp; Mer1e
H~•rd tickets, Aug. 25th ;n
institution Is an Equal - 2 bedroom mobilii' homo In
Huntlnglon, WV, $100.
Provider and 1304159••~ 5
MlddfepM. $325 per mOfl!h, Opportunity
E 1
~
S325 deposit, no pels, 1 mp oyer
year lease, no calls after CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· 3 Seiko watches, great COO·
9pm ( 7401 ~ 2 • 5039
ED 6. AFFORDABLE!
cltion; radar detectors; tele·
- - - " ' - - - - - - Townhouse
apartments, phones; boom boxes; plus
2 BA trailer in Mercerville. andfor small houses FOR other misc. electronics;
$325/Month Call 740-256- RENT. Call (740)441·1111 priced fair, (740)99~·3176
"1
=-c:32.::____ _ _ _ for application &amp; information.
30·12in concrete blocks,
2000 14x10 Clayton, 3 bed· Gracious uvtng 1 and 2 10HP, lowas/MTD riding
room, 2 ~th for rent 304- Bedroom Apts. at Village lmower w/grater bleda, 3Sin
···Apts. 1n cut, mmor
·
· seu-pro•
675-7911or304-593-8127 Manor andR'IV9rsluo::o
repairs,

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&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

1·Remodeling, Room

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pu es, 3 ..,males, 1 male, 1996 Pontiac Gran Prix,
paron~ on premises, 1st
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runs gooV-6
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goo
shots, ~$500 neg. (?40)44&amp; $
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MPG •
650
0091 or (740)645-6706
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.
-------AKC Shelrle COllie pups, 1st 2001 Toyota Camery, V-6, 2
shots, wormed. $400 each. tone co lor, engine start
_74_0._2_58_·_1664_____ remote conrrot, cJd changer,
8 disc, vary nice, clean
A t II
Sh h d
us ra an
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pies, Btliel&lt; &amp; White and Red {304)812--4835
&amp; While, 5125 each . .;......;._______
(740)245-5984 or (740)645- 2004 Jeep Liberty, $12,000
4833
080; 2001 Cavalier, $3400
CKC Min Pin puppies. 080; 1998 Cavalier, $1900
(740)256 "169
BiacWtan, Choc/tan, Stag 080.
__ ..:__:__v_.,--::-_
red. Males $350. Females
95 Mitsubishi 3000GT, Blk,
$400. 7.. n_'Jca.8788 ·
~
SUnroof, Alarm, 10 disc CD,
CKC ~ Re ~ ·
c
87,000 miles. Looks/runs
'"" 1 ••mars, hoc.
$6500
&amp; Wh"e
1
Its
"-~-"
great.
. 388-0406
n , a
uu''"uu, cur1 hot $195 7"" •••
ren s s,
· "tV"U"'&gt;r 97 Bulat Lasabre. Excelent
_ae_57_or_37_9_-9_5_15_._ _ _ shape, 90,000 miles, new
rubber, A/C. R.eady to go.
Female Toy Poodle, CKC $ 3995 _00 CaD 446--4514 or
Registered. tst shots, 441 •7534
•" &amp; ve1 ch8ck~
wormo:ro
a-u
$350 080. (740)446-1672
98 Sebring LXi Coupe.
Miniature Plncher P~. 2 71 .000 mIfes, exceIf ent con•t kl1i
1
1
$300 dition, Kelly Blue Book
~ ac an ema es,
each Aea... now {740)""" $7,435, 2.5l V6, 4·spaed
,.,
•
~ automatic w/00, leather,
8124 ·
A!C, AMfFM CasseneJCD,
p
Min1ature
lnscher CKC ABS, Loaded with all
Reg. Black and rust, 1 F 4 Options: Including Sunroof,
M. $250-$300. Born 6Jl3107. Cruile, Interval Wipers, Fog
Wormed , shots, tails lights, K8yiess Entry, asking
docl&lt;ed. 740·367.0210 If no $6,295 oao 304-882·2480
8flaw&amp;r teaue message_
01 304-S93--4540

"---ti"""""iiitiii--,1
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Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,

gas mileage $1,200 304·
675-6727

Pool &amp; Bab)! lnga.$350. 740-767--4875

Poot. Patto. sta" $425/Mo.

MoroRcras/

Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,

1982 Honda Blac*. Hawk.
looks good, rur}S good, good

brakes, almost new tires,
Tara
Townhouse AKC Mini Schnauzers, all new battery, leather interior,
Apartments, Very Spacious, males, white and sip. 8 wks. appx. 99,000K,
never
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112 UTD on ehots and worm- wrecked or in high water,
Bath,

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04 Jeep Wrangler UnffmHed
air, auto: CD, 4X4, 50000
Vea~lng '!bung Angus Suits, miles. Exc. Cond. Asking
bred heifers. Excellent $15000 740-794-1m

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FOR~~_
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Calf 7;245-o611

Delivery alter 7pm. 7~256-6003

$6,495
Free
(937)718-1471

Irio

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
for Rent, Meigs County, In
town, No Pets, Deposit
Required, 17401992-51 74 or
67-'-5--'-3&lt;46=9---,...--,---,- (740)441-0110.
.:..
3 bd,country setting, 4 mi. 1 and 2 bedroom apart·
from Albanu,
Meigs Local ments, furnished and unfur·
1
Schools . $550/monlh plus n1s
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1 AQHA Registertd Quarter
30x50x10 Hcwsestorsaleortrade.C8JI ~

Today!
2SR, 1 Bath, Central air, deposit &amp; references, no
pets, (740)992..()165
8
storage building
1111"..;.;66-;;.:352;;,-&lt;&gt;4..;;::69;,;,_.,
Also, 3 BR 2 Batn New 2BR apartments. r
PErs
Doublewide, central air, Washer/dr~er
hookup,
FOR&amp;l.E
1622
Chatham
Ave, !10\l'elrefrlgerator included.
2 BA house in K'anauga Gallipolis, OH, Call740·446· Also, LilliS on SA 160, Pets
$375 + Dep. water/fresh Pd. 4234 or 740-208·7~81
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740-388-0173 or 367-7015.
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AP.FOR~
breed bOth parents on prem.av.c"J
ises, $350/flrm (304)&amp;752BR !louse, Kit , DR, FA
$400/mo. 1BR mobile home - 5724

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Drains, ·PI
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2 bedroom executive house, AJC, HUD Approved, Total

$250/mo. Option to buy,·land
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2br unfurnished H('IUse 507
112 2nd. SL New Haven 304_

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NEW AI«) USED STEEL with C8lvo F'-60 winch with message.

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For Uoa- 800-SStl-4109
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cans only (740)949·2303

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ways.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sapl. 22) - Lady Luck
could have a hand In putting you In the
right spot at the right lime. You can
become a part of something tortunate
and reap benefits disproportionate to
your lrNOtvement.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- You could be
rather lucky and be invited lo take part In
a new venture, along wlth &amp;ome bright
associates. It has exceptionally good
potential and only needs a saUd sates
promotion.
·
SCORPtO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Don't be
· surprised tf you ~et ln110l'l8d In some·
thing that Is on a much larger scale than
thai to whlcl'l you're accustomed. You
won't be intimidated by the grandeur of it
all.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -You
ehouldn't have any trouble gathering the
support you need for a matter ll!altlnter·
ests you. Others will be attracted lor the
same reasons, and they'll want good
results .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19) - If
you're alert, you'll spot that opening you
need to take charge ot ROmethlng that
you believe has great po1ential but is
being misma~ged . Once In your hands,
fortuna will smile on lt.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - One of
your greatest talents Is presenting things
In such a mannar that your contempo·
raries end up thinking It was all their
idea. Once thai Is achieved. you'll have
what you want.
PISCES (Feb. 20.March 20) - Dame
Fortune is focused on helping you
achieve a number ot meaningful objec·
tivas that could be your ticket to
advancement and/or that ~a you'd
like to receive. Get going .
ARIES (March 21·Apri l 19) - Get out
and circulate beeeuse you're In a period
ot time during which you'll eMily turn
new people you meet into Instant lrlends.
One could become very lucky for you in
a lot ot ways.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Even
though your accomplishment. may not
•be readily apparent to othere, what you
achieve lor youTSelf will be to you, and
that's all that matters. 11'a the bottom line
ltuit counls.
GEM INI (May 21.June 20) - Yoo won't
have to grind and haggle In order lo
reach an Important understanding with
someone who 1111 usually tough to negoti·
ate with. You'll catch this person In an
agreeable mood .
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - A com·
marclal endeavor you've been trying to
flnalll• won 't be lett to gather dUll any
Ienger. Pr~rl~ handled, It thould be
completed on very acceptable terms .

A UNSC~A.MBI.t l!Tl ERS TO
~ GET ANSWH

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Brutal -

e~1~o 1

Rusty - Lunge - Slowly - TROUBLE

One fellow to lliiOlber, "I prefer to think the be!1 of ever)'body, ii
saves so much ~OUBLE."
ARLO &amp;JANIS
II !JUMW LIKE.

AGOOD IDEAAill&lt;f. liME: .•

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.

.

.' .. ,_ ....

.

... .... '
~

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

JANIE r,tlcCAULEY
AP SPORTS WRITER

SAN FRANCISCO How
about this scenario for Barry Bonds
after he breaks Hank Aaron's record:
Unable to fmd a major league team
in 2008, he heads to Japan and takes
aim at Sadaharu Oh 's professional
home run mark.
lbat realJy would be a world baseball classic.
· Oh hit 868 home runs in Japan, a
place Bonds thinks of fondly.
"I don't think I have enough time
in life," the San Francisco slugger
said with a grin. "I like all count.nes.
I like Mextco. I like Venezuela. I
played there. I played in Puerto
Rico, in the Domimcan. All those
places."
So how about Tokyo or thereabouts?
"I'd go there and play for fun and
have a good time. With what I've
accomplished and what I'm doing,
-it's not funny to say I'll go break the
record in Japan."
As often as Bonds changes his

mind, for now he's sure of o~e thing:
He plans to be in the majors next
season at ~e 43.
Where he' II pia¥ 1he has no idea.
At the rate Yankees · star Alex
Rodriguez is hitting home runs,
Bonds probably figures he 'd better
k~p adding to his total to ensure his
record stands for years to come.
"I'm not going to re-evaluate it.
I'm playing," Bonds said in a recent
interview.
Still, there's a chance Bonds might
reconsider -- or that it won't entirely be his choice.
At times, he insists he would like
to be a \lasebalJ intmortal, playing
"till1' m I 00" and hitting home runs
vvell into tlte future.
Then there are days Bonds seems
content with the idea of walking
away from his game after 22 years
witlt tlte career home run record in
hand. His 17-year-old son, Nikolai,
will be a high school senior this fall
and playing sports.
But Bonds doesn't consider himself quite done.

"He ' II probably hit 800 home
runs," teammate Rylllt Kleskp said.
It's far from certain whether the
Giants would want Bonds back for a
16th season, and some of the teams
that would probably most interest
him - the Los Angeles Angels, the
DOdgers, San Diego or pemaps the
Detroit Tigers under his former skipper Jim Leyland - may not have a
need for an aging seven-time NL
MVP who brings along allegations
of steroid use and plenty of other
baggage.
Bonds might even need to make
another surprise appearance at the
winter meetings in December,
searching for work.
"It's like a mapc trick. You don't
know the end,' Giants shortstop
Omar Vizquel said. "Everything
seems s0 ~at and you don't know
what's gomg to happen at-.the end.
Or, it's like a movie.'
Giants owner Peter Magowan said
the day after the 2006 season ended
that Bonds would no lon~er be the
centerpiece of an organization in dire

Bonds
fromPageBl
Baseball executive vice
president Jimmie Lee
Solomon.
.
As for Aaron, he said all
along he had no interest in
being there whenever and
wherever his 33-year-old
mark was broken. He was
true to his word, but he did
offer a taped message of
congratulations that played
on stadium's video board.
"I move over now and
offer my congratplations to
Ba1ry and his family,"
Aaron said.
Absent, too, were the fans
who held up asterisk signs,
sure that Bonds wasn't the
real deal and that his power
came from steroids. ·
Bonds didn't face such
suspicions at AT&amp;T Park,
in front of a loyal, home
crowd. Bonds has always
AP photo
denied knowingly using
San Francisco Giants Barry Bonds reacts after hitting his 756th . performance-en ha nci ng
career home run in the fifth inning of their baseball game drugs.
against _the Washington Nationals in San Francisco Tuesday.
Yet even with Bonds at

Golf
fromPageBl
as the fourth score. Sean
Lewis played in the number
five position for Point, but
due to equipment problems,
was unable to complete the
match. Point's final total
was a five-stroke improvement over its first match.
First year coach, Mike
Lucas, believes this team
can continue to improve as
the season progresses.
Wahama's final team
score of 415 placed it lith

. ..

'

Wednesday, August 8,

in 'the final standings.
Although this score was
higher than the one posted
in their first match, three
of the four players bettered
their previous scores.
Jumot Adam Roush led
the White Falcons with a
very respectable sco~e of
85 . Sophomore David
Green, dispite some late
round troubles, finished
with
a
92 .
Chris
Dangerfield
improved
. only slightly with his score
of 120, but showed
promising signs by strikinll the ball much better in
thts
match.
Brandon
Johnson had one of those

days where what could go
wrong did , in fact, go
wrong. Brandon hit the
ball much better than his
score of 118 indicates.
Wah_ama only played four
players as number five
Miriam Gordon had a previous committment and
was unavailable .
Wahama's next match
will take place . this
Thursday when they play
Buffalo High School at the
Big Bend Golf Course.
Point Pleasant plays next
this ' coming Friday at
Riverside in a three-way
match against Wahama
and Meigs.

the top of the chart, fans
will surely keep debating
which slugger they consider
the true home run champion. Some will continue to
cling to Aaron while other,
older rooters will always
say -it's Babe Ruth.
"It's all about history.
Pretty ·SOon, someone will
come along and pass him,"
Mays said befure the game.
A seven-time NL. MVP,
the 43-year-old Bonds hit
his 22nd home run of the
year. Bonds broke Mark
McGwire' s single-season
record bY. hitting 73 in 200 I
and whtle he's no longer
such a force, opposing
. pitchers remain wary.
Bonds and Giants management bickered in the offseason over contract issues.
This big night was the main
, owner
Peter
reason
Magowan brought back the
star left fielder for a 15th
season in San Francisco,
signing him to a $15.8 million, one-year contract.
Bonds' once-rapid quest
for the record had slowed in
recent years as his age and
· balky knees diminished his

20P7'

756 and beyond;

need of becoming younger. Then,
San Francisco went ahead and
signed Bonds to a $15!8 pilllion,
one-year deal and brought back
many of the same faces to play
around him: sec011d baseman Ray
Dudtarn, third baseman Pedro Feliz,
pinch-hitter Mark Sweeney.
That likely won't be the case for
next season. The formula hasn't
worked and the Giants are in last
place in the NL West with a roster
featuring a strange mix of veterans
and young players. It could wind up
costmg general manager Brian
Sabean his job, thouldl many believe
the GM deserves a shot without having to worry about Bonds.
There has even been talk the
Giants could try to trade Bon,ds to a
contender this season after he breaks
Aaron's record of 755 home runs.
But Bonds can't be dealt without his
approval and would likely want a
contrnct for 2008 to grant it.
The most logical next step for the
left fielder - . who has two tender
knees and has lost a step on defense

2

despite being in much better health .
- would seem to be a move to th~
American League as ~ designated
·
.
,
hitter.
Yet Bonds didn't talk senously to
· any AL clubs last offseason and has
said be doesn 't particularly want to
charige leagues.
.
Parting ways with the Giants has
to be a daunting idea considering
Bonds grew up bouncing around the
San Francisco clubhouse at
Candlestick Park with his late father,
Bobby, and Hall of Fame godfatller.
Wtllie Mays. Bonds is a big reason
fans have packed the team's new
waterfront stadium since it opened in:
2000.
"A lot of American League teams
would want him if he 's healthy," said
Shooty Babitt, a Bay Area-based
scout with the New York Mets...The
big question is, will he want to go to
some of the AL teams that would
want him? The worst-case scenario
is he's the best pinch-hitter in baseball off the bench - if that's a role
he would accept.':
'

pace. He hit 258 home runs
from 2000-04, but has only
5Y since then.
While steroids have
tinged Bonds' pursuit, it
was race that was the predorv.inant issue when Aaron
broke Ruth 's mark in 1974.
Aaron dealt with hate mail
and death threats from racist
fans who thought a black
man was not worthy of
breaking the record set by a
white )!ero, the beloved
Babe, ·
Former
commtsstoner
Bowie Kuhn watched Aaron
tie the record but was not
present for the recordbreaker, a slight that both- ·
ered many fans of Aaron.
Selig is a close friend of
Aaron's and offered Bonds
tepkt congratulations when
he tied 'the record.
"I think Hank is his own
man," ~ays said. "I think if
he wanted to be here he
would be here."
"When he hit 715, the
commtsstoner
wasn't
there," he · said. "You may
not blame him because he
wasn't represented the right

way."

,)0( ('1""'•\ol. .)-. :\o II

•

• Bonds does ~
again, hits No. 757.
See Page 81

OBITUARIES
: Page AS
·• Douglas Freeman, 40
: • :r~Miebael, Sr., 59
• 'A'da· Windland, 70

INSIDE
• Staneart descendents
celebrate in patriotic
setting. See Page A3
• Fly-in, bean dinner
top farm activities.
See Page A&amp;

OUT THE HOUSE
AND MAKE A
LITTLE$$$

batters he faced.
Meigs lost both its State
Tournament games by a
combined five runs. Before
Tuesday 's clash, it dropped
a wild 16- 14 decision to
Steubenville on Monday.

WEATHER

JEFFERSON 7, MEIGS 4

Posit 52 200 210 200 - 7 10 1
Post12B 000 100 030 - 4 B 2
James Ashley, Adam l'lacek (8),
Andrew Saska and Anthony Paneto.
Titus Pierce, Ryan Chapman (2). Austin
Dunfee (6) and Joel Lynch . Luke
Haislop (5). WP - AShley. LP - Pierce.

S - Saska.

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~alltpoli~ iatlp ~ribune

Joint ~lea~ant l\egi~ter
The Daily Sentinel

»

Other benefits to annexation, according to council,
include trash pickup, local
police protection, future
fire hydrant placements to
lower fire insurance rates,
street maintenance , installation of street lighting, zoning ordinances to protect
property from unwanted
usage . Also, by increasing a

Please see Radne, AS

Getting groolitedfor 'Dog Days' Pomeroy
receives
•

NatureWorks
grant funding
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MY OAI LYSENTINEL.COM

REED

POMEROY - A man
convicted iii the 1991 double murder of a Gallipolis
man and·his son in Lebanon
Township. has been denied
post-conv,iction relief and
will contmue to serve his
prison term.
William LeMasters was
convicted in 1993 of four
counts of murder, two
counts of kidnapping and
aggravated robbery in connection with the death.s
Jeff 'Halley, Sr.. IID&lt;'L)Jis
year-old son, Jeff, Jr.
bodies were found in t~e
Portland area.
LeMasters was tried by a
jury and Judge · Fred W.
Crow III sentenced .him to
96 years in prison far the
crimes. A co-defendant in
the case, Fred Drennan, was
sentenced on the terms of a
plea bargain agreement.
Shortly after he was convicted, LeMasters appealed
his conviction in the Fourth

Shaggy,
Pomeroy's unofficial mascot and
"town dog,"
. recently received
a surnmer grooming paid for by
don.atlons from
the community,
Including ladles
from the Meigs
County Auditor's
Office ·whom ·
Shaggy visits
· through the week.
Pictured with
-Shaggy Is one of
her downtown
caretakers. Jenny
Shirley, of Cash
Till Payday.
Beth Seraont/photo

Auditions for films set
at Mason County fair

'\

'&lt;
;

benefits to annexation for
residents is that they would
he included in the Source
Water Protection Area
which was established by
the village along with help
Ohio
from
the
Environmental Protection
Agency. Inclusion within
the Source Water Protection
Area will prevent mining
under a resident's r.roperty,
according to counc1l.

POMEROY - Pomeroy
received
the
only
Nature Works grant awarded
to Meigs County in the most
recent round of funding. '
The village will receive
$7,319 for the development
of the Beech Grove
Cemetery Pond, including a
walking path around the
pond. Back' in May, Pomeroy
received a NatureWorks
grant in the amount of
$1,781 for the project after
requesting around $20,000.
Each grant requires a 25 percent local match.
.' ·
The process to develop
the pond with the help of
grants began back in
January of last year when
Village Administrator John
Anderson applied for a
Nature Works grant for the
first time. After multiple
applications the village has

Please see Grant. AS

InfoCision
offers jobs
to displaced
employees
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

Detalla on Pa&amp;e A6

\

INDEX
16 PAGFS

A3
A3
Bs-6

Comics

B7

Editorials
Obituaries
Places to go

A4

@ ZOO?

-' '-?•&lt;

operations will sit. The area
. also includes expandtng the
village
boundaries
to
Yellowbush
Creek
to
include the new boat ramp,
the Tackerville Area and
along Oak Grove Ro&lt;!d near
the old lock house.
The annexation has the
potential to take Racine's
population from 800 to just
under I,000.
Council feels one of the

BY KEVIN KELLY

Sports
Weather
'

J.

part, because of the -potential economic growtMur--rounding the area such as a
rumored subdivision and
the proposed coal mine on
Yellowbush Road.
"We' re tryinll to protect
this area, not JUSt the vii!age," Hill said.
The proposed annexation
includes a section of
Yellowbush Road but not
the section where the mine

KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

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leaving the game early in
the second inning.
Ryan Chapman returned
from injury to work four
inning s before Austin
Dunfee finished up on the
mound .
A~drew Saska picked up
the save for Jefferson. He
was the second pitcher used
in the eighth inning alone
by Post 152 ; he came on
after reliever Adam Placek
gave up a single and issued
two walks to the only three

RACINE
Racine
Village Council is at the
beginning of a process to
possibly annex areas currently outside the village
limits to "preserve the
integrity of Racine," accmding to Mayor J. Scott HilL
Hill said council is considering the annexation, in

BY BRIAN

Annie's Mailbox

Feeney Bennett reliever Ryan Chapman delivers a pitch during the second inning of Tuesday's American Legion State
Baseball Tournament game with Jefferson at Rannow Field .

\ l ( , lSrt) , :..! OCl ...

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. 2 SECTIONS -

Brad Sherman/photo

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT&lt;il'MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

LeMasters
denied post'"
conviction
relief

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Racine annexatjon ·plans in discussion p~ase

SPORTS

Bonds was destined for
stardom at an early age. The
son of All-Star outfielder
Bobby Bonds and the god,
son of one of the game's
greatest' players, Bonds
spent his childhood years
roaming the clubhouse at
Candlestick Park: getting
tips from Mays . and other
·
Giants.
.
"I visualized him playing
sports at a high level. He
was 5 when he was in my
locker all the timeo," Mays
said.
.
In a matter of years,
Bonds went from a wiry
wit~
leadoff
hitter
Pittsburgh in 1986 to abulked-up slugger. That
transformation is at the
heart of his many doubter~ /
who believe Bonds cheated
to accomplish his feats and
should not be considered
the record-holder.
There are plenty of fans
already hoping for the day
that Bonds total-' whatever it ends up - is topped.
Rodriguez may have the
best chance, with his 500
home runs at age 32 far
ahead of Bonds' pace.

LET US H~LP
YOU HAO~
YOUR NEXT\
GARAGE or
YARD SALE!!

Stella Parton,
Tracy Lawrence to
perfoi'lll at fair, A8

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

'

. from Page Bl

peoRle killed in

shooting at Ohio
trucking company, A6

IrS THAT TIME AGAIN!

State
Like in the tournament
opener on Monday, it was a
slow stan that ~pelled trouble for Meigs. Jefferson
scored twice in the first
inning, and was up 4-0
before Post 128 got on the
board with a tally in the
fourth .
Post 152 ., added three
more runs to go up 7 -I
before Meigs ' bats finally
got going in the eighth
inning. Post 128 had the
bases loaded with no outs to
stan the frame, but was only
able to push across three
runs - and that fell well
short.
Lead-off man
Ryan
Morford paced the winners
offensively by going 3-for4, including an extra base
hit, an RBI and he also
scored
twice.
Dustin
Volanski , with a pair of singles was the only other Post
152 player with multiple
hits in the 10-hit attack .
Luke Haislop doubled
and singled, and was one of
three to have multiple hits
in the loss. Eric VanMeter
had two singles along with a
run batted in and Cory
Shaffer also had a pair of
safeties.
Also for Meigs, Pat
Johnson had an RBI single,
Zach Haislop added a base
knock and Dave Poole
drove in a run.
Titus Pierce started and
took the pitching loss for
Meigs . He surrendered two
runs in the first frame and
allowed three walks before

~

www.mydailysentinel.com

Bonds, new HR~King, in ·uncharted universe
BY

.

As
AS
B Section
A6

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va . .:..._ Two independent filmmakers have joined forces with a local production·outfit to
shoot a pair of features in the area and are seeking local talent for roles in the films.
Chad Whitson of Point Pleasant and Dave Banks of
Gallipolis announced in Apri I their intention of producing
the features. This week during the.Mason County Fair, they
will be holding auditions at the . booth occupied by AJ
Productions and McDish Satellite.
Auditions will be held Friday and Saturday, said Banks.
Banks and Whitson have partnered with Point Pleasantbased AJ Productions on the projects. The production company, owned by A.J. Sallerfield, will do the cinematography for the films, which Banks said will add a greatly professional touch to their efforts.
Shooting is expected to begin next week, Banks said.
Whitson is directing a film tentatively called "Ewah,"
dealing with the Wompus Cat, a legendary creature whose
roots in West Virginia and Virginia are as strong as Mason
County's with Mothman. Back in April, Whitson said he
expected shooting to be in several locations, including the
University qf Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College.
Banks' project, tentatively titled " Holy Smoke," is a
comic examination of familiar stereotypes in American culture clustered together in a Purgatory waiting room, lookRachel Martindale/photo
ing for a chance at passa~e into Heaven ..
The
Pomeroy
Farmers
.
Bank
sign
read
102 degrees yesterWhitson and Burns sa1d they plan to promote both feac
rures, when finished, at film festivals in hopes of attracting day afternoon. Air conditioning provided a shelter from the
sweltering heat and humidity.
a distributor.

GALLIPOLIS
lnt'oCi sion
Management
Corp. is stepping forward to
offer employment to 75
people will soon lose their
jobs due to the closing of
the Milennium Teleservices
call center in Pomeroy next
month.
JnfoCision announced
thi s week it is looking to
hire ni'any of the displaced
workers at it s Gallipolis
call center.
"The closing of this call
center is certainly a hit to the
community.
however.
lnfoCision could immediately absorb all 75 displaced
workers," said Melissa
Clark, personnel coordinator
·'The
for
lnfoCision.
Millennium
Teleservice s
facility in Pomeroy is a high
quality call center so the
employees should be able to

Please see·Jobs, AS

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