SATURDAY

July 7, 2018

BARTOW COUNTY’S ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER 75 CENTS Douthit Ferry widening project on life support

BY NEIL B. MCGAHEE “There’s a lot of hoops left to be has to be approved before the environ- [email protected] jumped through before this thing gets off mental study can begin. the ground,” Sanders said. “There are en- “Needless to say, the environmental At the Cartersville City Council’s vironmental and archeological docu- study isn’t going too well,” Sanders said. work session Thursday, Public Works ments. Since 2016, we have kind of been “This project is a long way from becom- Director Tommy Sanders updated the in a stall on the environmental side be- ing a reality.” council about the Douthit Ferry Road cause there are two critical things in the Moving to the regular meeting, the widening project. It’s basically on life way. The survey has to be approved by council approved a change in the city or- support. GDOT before the environmental side can dinance regarding excessive false alarms He offered this bit of advice for those approve the road’s footprint.” in business and residential security sys- people whose homes or business are af- Sanders said the project is further com- tems. The wording was changed from a fected — pretend like it doesn’t exist. plicated by archeological concerns — “fine” to a “fee” to allow invoicing of ex- “This thing is so far off, I wouldn’t mainly its proximity to the Etowah Indian cessive false alarms instead of issuing ci- make any life decisions based on this Mounds, a National Historic Site. tations, which carry increasing fines for project,” he said. “Move if you’re going “But the Indians didn’t just live at the repeat offenders. to move; stay if you’re going to stay, but Etowah Mounds,” he said. They lived all The change mandates a flat $200 fee for don’t do anything because of this project.” up and down the river. The archeological the fourth and subsequent false alarms That snippet of wisdom was followed part of the project could take years.” within a 30-day period. NEIL MCGAHEE/THE DAILY TRIBUNE NEWS by a litany of what can only be described Then there’s the traffic study — the full Cartersville City Council members discussed the Douthit Ferry Road widening as “catch-22’s” study hasn’t yet been approved — which SEE CARTERSVILLE, PAGE 6A project at Thursday’s Cartersville City Council meeting.

‘Brain Teasers 2’ GIDDYUP back by popular Bartow County demand at Championship Tellus

Rodeo gallops BY MARIE NESMITH into Cartersville [email protected] Initially visiting the venue in 2015, “Brain Teasers 2” continues July 13, 14 to be a crowd-pleaser during its second showing at Tellus Science BY MARIE NESMITH Museum. Opened May 26, the tem- [email protected] porary exhibit is calling the site’s Discovery Garden home through Striving to create “lifelong rodeo fans,” Jan. 6, 2019. the Bartow County Championship Rodeo “We brought this exhibit back for will return to Cartersville July 13 and 14. its final run because it was wildly To be presented by Phillips Rodeo Produc- popular the first time we had it at tions, the event will begin at 8 both nights the museum” said Shelly Redd, di- at the Bartow County Saddle Club’s cov- rector of marketing for Tellus. “It ered arena, 43 Saddle Club Drive. “The rodeo was started by my father-in- SEE TELLUS, PAGE 2A law, Larry Phillips, in 1982,” said Bridgett Phillips, who owns Phillips Rodeo Produc- tions with her husband, Danny. “He [had] started the rodeo at our ranch [in] 1980 and wanted to expand the sport of rodeo to an- other close by town. So he reached out to the Bartow County Saddle Club about using their facilities. They came to an agreement and as the saying goes the rest is history. We have been here every year, even after his death in 2001. We love Bartow County and all the rodeo fans. The town and rodeo have grown together. “The rodeo is a tour stop for the Profes- sional Cowboy Association, so the rodeo contestants are vying to finish the year as a Top 15 money winner in their respective events. This rodeo helps them do that,” she said, adding the bull-riding event is the local rodeo’s top crowd-pleaser. “At the end of the year, the Top 15 money [winners] earn the chance to compete in the PCA RANDY PARKER/DTN Visiting Tellus Science rodeo finals in Biloxi, Mississippi, at the Museum with her family from Gulf Coast Coliseum. There they compete Palmetto, Florida, Penelope for over $150,000 in cash and [prizes].” Davidson, 10, works the color RANDY PARKER/THE DAILY TRIBUNE NEWS, FILE match puzzle in the venue's SEE RODEO, PAGE 7A Bartow County Championship Rodeo will return to Bartow County Saddle Club in Cartersville July 13 and 14. “Brain Teasers 2” exhibit. Group from CTC travels to Italy, Greece in study-abroad program

BY DONNA HARRIS manager-talent acquisition at the ple you didn’t know before the trip perience what it was like to not know [email protected] North Metro campus in Acworth. and making friends that you would a language and how difficult it is to “There are literally hundreds of in- hit up when you get back,” horticul- communicate with said circum- For 14 Chattahoochee Technical ternational companies located in our ture student Jonathan Reyes said. “I stances,” Reyes, 20, said. College students and seven faculty service area and more than that who learned that people in Italy and “I have always been interested in and staff members, summer break deal with an intercultural client base, Greece are very proud of their cul- the culture and history of both coun- 2018 will be one they’ll never forget. and they all need students who are ture, and it is a cool thing to see.” tries, and this seemed like a great op- The group spent 10 days in May aware of life beyond our borders.” Hughes called their journey “won- portunity to travel, learn and broaden touring Italy and Greece as part of a The travelers flew into Rome May derful.” my cultural horizons at the same study-abroad trip that allowed the 14, visited the coastal town of Sor- “The trip was very well-organized time,” Hughes said. travelers to immerse themselves in rento and the archaeological site of and planned,” she said. “We had fab- Reyes, who received his collision the culture of both countries while Pompeii and took a high-speed train ulous local and experienced tour repair degree from CTC last fall, said also visiting important points of in- to Florence while in Italy. They then guides, and we were able to visit an his favorite city was Sorrento. terest and instilling a sense a global took an overnight ferry to Greece, incredible amount of historical sites “It was a beautiful city with not leadership. where they toured the cities of Pa- and cities in a short amount of time. that many tourists so you really get a “CTC started this program back in tras, Delphi and Athens before re- I never could have done this on my feel of what life is like there,” he 2012 with the belief that technical turning home May 24. own.” said. college students not only deserve the Some of the landmarks the group Both Cartersville residents wanted For Hughes, being asked about her same opportunities as four-year stu- visited were the Pantheon, the Vati- to visit the two countries to see how favorite part of the trip is “such a dif- SPECIAL dents, but that it is crucial that they can, the Duomo and the Parthenon people in other parts of the world ficult question.” Students and employees from Chattahoochee Technical have these opportunities to help inside the Acropolis. live. “My favorite city would probably College visited the Pantheon in Rome, among other achieve global competence,” said “This was an amazing experience, “I wanted to go on the trip to ex- historical sites, during their 10-day study abroad trip in May. Beth Anne Hughes, human resources especially going with a group of peo- perience a different culture and to ex- SEE CTC, PAGE 7A

INSIDE TODAY Showers, Obituaries ...... 2A Business ...... 6A storms VOLUME 72, NO. 54 Family Living ...... 3A Blotter ...... 7A High 86 U.S. & World ...... 4A Sports ...... 1B www.daily-tribune.com Entertainment ...... 5A Classifieds ...... 3B Low 69 2a Saturday, July 7, 2018 • www.daily-tribune.com Local the daily tribune news contactus oBITUarIES The Daily Tribune News Alabama. They also loved to remy Pinkard; niece, Bridgette Hawkins, Calhoun: granddaughter, address: deborah Lynn 251 S. Tennessee St. travel together and each year vis- Pinkard; great-nephew, Sebastian Isabella Cato, several nieces and Cartersville, GA 30120 ited Panama Pinkard; great-niece Dyme holmes hays nephews also survive. City Beach Pinkard; his beloved German Deborah Lynn Holmes Hays, Funeral services will be held at mailing address: with their Shepard, Nikita. age 64, of Rome, formerly of 11:30 AM Saturday July 7, 2018 at 251 S. Tennessee St. friends. Mr. A Celebration of Life Service Cartersville, passed away Wednes- West End Baptist Church, with Rev. Cartersville, GA 30120 Hagler loved will be conducted at one o’clock day July 4, 2018 at her residence. Greg Montgomery, officiating. Inter- helping others in the afternoon on Sunday the Deborah was born June 29, ment will follow in Woffords Cross phone: 770-382-4545 William daniel 1954, in Cartersville, a son of the Roads Baptist Church Cemetery after 5 p.m.: 770-382-4548 in need and 8th of July, 2018 in the chapel of late Lewis Milton Holmes, and near Cartersville. The family will re- fax: 770-382-2711 never met a Owen Funeral Home with Rev. hagler Zola Lee Holmes. She was a mem- ceive friends from 10:00 A.M. until stranger. He is Kenny Jacobs officiating. alan davis, William Daniel “Dan” Hagler ber of West End Baptist Church. the funeral hour on Saturday at West Publisher of Cartersville, GA, went home to already missed Friends are cordially invited to Deborah was preceded in death by End Baptist Church, 107 Mississippi be with the Lord on July 04, by his friends a visitation with the family imme- Jason greenberg, her husband, Tony Hays. Dr. Rome, Ga. 30165. and family, but hagler diately after the service at Owen Managing Editor 2018. Survivors include sons, William Please visit our website, www Dan was born on December 13, will never be forgotten. Funeral Home. Hays, Rome; Kristoper (Eileen) goodshepherdfh.net to post tributes. Jennifer moates, 1959, son of the late William D. Dan is preceded in death by his In lieu of customary remem- Hays, Rome; daughter, Kimberly Parnick Jennings, Sr.’s Good Advertising Director Hagler and his mother Betty E. father, William D. Hagler. brances, memorial donations may (C.J.) Cato, Rome; brother, Randy Shepherd Funeral Home, 2750 mindy Salamon, Hagler of Huntsville, AL. He is survived by his wife, be made in Dan’s honor to the (Martha Jean) Holmes, Shorter Ave. Rome, Ga. 30165, has Office Manager/Classified Dan worked as a sales associate Linda Morrow Hagler of Etowah Valley Humane Society, Cartersville; sister, Glenda charge of arrangements. Advertising Director at Napa Auto Parts in Dallas, GA Cartersville, GA; mother, Betty 36 Ladds Mountain Rd., lee mccrory, for ten years. He was a true and E. Hagler; brother, Wendell Dean Cartersville, GA 30120. Circulation/Distribution faithful servant of the Lord and Hagler of Huntsville AL; sisters, Please visit www.owenfuner- Manager proudly attended The Church at Cheryl Turney and Michele (Rob- als.com to leave condolences for Stacey Wade, Liberty Square, Cartersville, GA. bie) Robinson, all of Huntsville the family. Circulation Customer Care/ He and his loving wife of thirty- AL; sister-in-law, Donna (Greg) Owen Funeral Home, 12 Collins Account Manager   Byron pezzarossi, eight years, Linda Hagler, were Nichols of Hanceville, AL; Dr. Cartersville, GA has charge of Press Room Director huge fans of The University of nephews, James Scalf and Je- the funeral arrangements.   Email:   managing Editor [email protected] ants have to quickly solve a puzzle one or two puzzles and wanted       to move to the next round. Often- more time to figure the rest out. So, nEWSroom Tellus     [email protected] times, the puzzle is the ‘make it or I’m [excited] to have ‘Brain From PagE 1a break it’ part of the challenge — Teasers 2’ back at Tellus. The vari- fEaturES Editor continues to be a hit. We see adults [email protected] and is a great example of why it’s ety of mathematical problems and and children enjoy working on the important to exercise your brain.” puzzles in this exhibit encourages photographEr puzzles together and even compet- An expansion of the former problem-solving and creates a fun Whenever You Need A [email protected] itively. Weinman Mineral Museum, Tellus learning experience. You can send Staff rEportErS “Some of the puzzles are quite opened at 100 Tellus Drive in hours in this exhibit trying to solve [email protected] difficult, so we’ve incorporated a Cartersville in January 2009 and all 20 puzzles. Shoulder To Lean On When a funeral home is not owned and [email protected] ‘hints’ element into the exhibit. The became a Smithsonian affiliate dur- “The exhibit was created by [email protected] more challenging puzzles have a ing its first year. OMSI, Oregon Museum of Science operated by local people, important SportS rEportEr QR code that you can take a picture Along with The Collins Family and Industry, out of Portland, Ore- decisions that need to be made quickly [email protected] of using the camera app in your My Big Backyard hands-on sci- gon. … When I was looking for our are sometimes delayed. We are a advErtiSing dirEctor smartphone and then be directed to ence gallery, the 120,000-square- next exhibit I saw that ‘Brain locally owned and operated funeral [email protected] a page of hints. The most serious foot museum contains three main Teasers 2’ was being retired and no home staffed with sincere and caring competitors don’t like using the officE managEr/claSSifiEd galleries — Science in Motion, The longer touring. The exhibit was people with familiar faces from our advErtiSing dirEctor hints, but they are very helpful in Weinman Mineral Gallery and The such a hit when we had it at Tellus own community, and we’re always teaching logical thinking skills and [email protected] Fossil Gallery — a 120-seat digital in 2015 that I figured this was our ready to serve at a moment’s notice. rationale. This exhibit is another circulation dirEctor planetarium, solar house and obser- last chance to have it back one Our concern doesn’t end with the one of the great offerings we have vatory. more time. This time the exhibit [email protected] funeral or memorial service, we’re here at Tellus where we disguise learn- “We first hosted ‘Brain Teasers will be at Tellus until Jan. 6, 2019, lEgal advErtiSing ing as just plain ole fun.” before, during, and after the service... [email protected] 2’ in 2015 for a short three month allowing visitors plenty of time to Comprised of 20 puzzles, “Brain run,” said Amy Gramsey, director try and solve all the mind-boggling J.T. Willoughby Whenever you need a shoulder production Teasers 2” features many chal- Funeral Assistant to lean on. [email protected] of curatorial services for Tellus. puzzles.” lenges with deceiving difficulty “Adults, kids and even Tellus staff For more information about the letter guidelines: levels. loved the exhibit and were disap- museum and its events and pro- Letters to the editor on issues “This special exhibit is made up pointed to see it leave. I often heard grams, call 770-606-5700 or visit of broad public interest are of different kinds of puzzles that in- people say that [they] finally solved http://tellusmuseum.org. welcomed. Letters must bear a volve problem-solving, creative complete signature, street ad- thinking and reasoning skills,” dress and phone number (ad- Redd said. “It’s designed to be en- dresses and phone numbers PARNICK JENNINGS FUNERAL HOME joyed by most all ages. At first will not be published). Letters of 430 Cassville Road • Cartersville glance, the puzzles look simple and 500 words or less will be ac- 770-382-0034 cepted. Libelous charges and easy. For example, one of the com- abusive language will not be ponents is a puzzle of only four www.parnickjenningsfuneral.com considered. Information given pieces and you are supposed to must be factual. All letters will arrange them first to make a trian- be printed as submitted. No gle and then to make a square. How     corrections will be made to hard could it be, right? grammar, spelling or style. “It’s actually quite a challenge     Writers may have letters pub- because logically your brain tells lished once every two weeks. you to put them in a particular       Consumer complaints and thank-you letters cannot be order because of the shape of each used. All are subject to editing. piece, rather than thinking of the Send letters to 251 S. Ten- overall shape you are trying to cre- nessee St., Cartersville, GA ate. Many of the puzzles remind me 30120, or e-mail to of some of the popular game [email protected]. shows, like ‘Survivor’ or ‘The Editor’s note: Amazing Race,’ where the contest- Opinions expressed by colum- nists for The Daily Tribune Join Us For Daily Specials News are those of the colum- Monday: nist alone and do not reflect the Large Mexican Salad $550 opinion of the newspaper or $ 00 Ex-school (Shell 1 More) any of its advertisers. Tuesday: ordering photographs: administrator Taco $100 (Soft or Hard) Every photograph taken by a Wednesday: $ 00 Daily Tribune News photogra- charged with Whole Potato Pancho 5 pher and published in the paper Thursday: $ 00 is available for purchase. Go to sex assault Reg. Mexicali 5 www.daily-tribune.com and Friday: $ 00 click on “Order Photos.” The AssociATed Press Med. Meat Nachos 5 WATKINSVILLE — A former Saturday: $ 50 Subscriber info: high school administrator was ar- Hot Steak & Cheese Sub Sandwich 5 To subscribe, call 770-382- rested Friday and charged with w/Chips & Pickle   4545. Visa, Mastercard, Ameri- multiple sex crimes in three Geor- * Sour cream and black olives 50¢ extra can Express and Discover gia counties. Monday - Saturday 10:30am - 9:00pm       accepted. Ryan Rickard, 34, was charged Six days by local carrier motor  route subscription rates: of sexual assault by a person with 4 N. Tennessee St. • 770-382-7321 3 months $32.95 supervisory or disciplinary author- 6 months $59.95 ity, sexual battery and rape. The 1 Year $112.50 Georgia Bureau of Investigation Home delivery $11.25 per month. said in a news release that it had identified three former students miss Your paper? who had been Rickard’s victims. If your paper has not arrived by 6:30 a.m., call our customer care Rickard had served as an assis- line by 11 a.m. at 770-382-4580 tant principal at Morgan County and a paper will be delivered to High School before he resigned your home. All subscribers call- earlier this year. He previously ing after 11 a.m. will have their had been a teacher at North paper delivered with their next Oconee High School in • Great Selecon Now In Stock regular delivery. Watkinsville and at Memorial • Lifeme Warranty • Superior Middle School in Conyers, where Construcon • All Steel Mechanism “Bartow county’s only he also served as the school’s ath- • Reinforced Hardwood Frame daily newspaper” letic director. • 8 Gauge No Sag Springs OFFICIAL ORGAN OF Rickard was jailed in Oconee BARTOW COUNTY County, GBI spokeswoman Nelly • Acella Flex Seat Foam USPS 146-740 Miles said. The charges against • Wider Base for Stability Published daily Tuesday him include crimes alleged to • Custom Orders Available through Sunday by Cartersville have occurred in Morgan and America’s #1 Selling Lift Chair! In Your Choice Of Style & Fabric Newspapers, a division of Walton counties in northern Geor- Cleveland Newspapers, 251 S. gia. Tennessee St., Cartersville, GA 30120. Periodical Postage It was not immediately known Paid at Cartersville, GA 30120. if Rickard had an attorney to rep- POSTMASTER, send all ad- resent him. dress changes to Cartersville The GBI said Rickard had pre- Newspapers, 251 S. Tennessee viously been under investigation St., Cartersville, GA 30120. “Since 1965... Serving Cartersville & Bartow County over 53 Years. Family Owned & Operated.” by federal authorities for trying to We will meet or beat Advertised Price access child pornography online. ANY State investigators worked on the item for item - Shop and Compare! case with federal prosecutors and copyright © 2010 the daily tribune 106 S. Tennessee St., Cartersville • (770) 382-2866 news. all rights reserved as to the en- agents from Homeland Security Open Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday 9am - 6pm • Saturday 9am - 5pm tire content. Investigations. FAMILY & LIVING

The Daily Tribune News www.daily-tribune.com Saturday, July 7, 2018 3A Wedding dims tug-of-war over marriage

DEAR ABBY: My boyfriend, their relatives’ cupboards (and re- “Pierre,” and I have been a couple DEAR DATE CHECKER: Your move any bulging or rusted cans for 18 months. We moved in to- mother is mistaken. While it is that could cause botulism, a fatal gether three months ago. safe to consume some foods a few illness). The trouble is, Pierre is French, weeks past their expiration date, and he doesn’t believe in mar- other items begin to lose their nu- Dear Abby is written by Abigail riage. He says it’s an “outdated in- tritional value or spoil. Van Buren, also known as Jeanne stitution and a social construct.” By I’m glad you wrote. I’m printing Phillips, and was founded by her He also claims that no one in Abigail Van Buren your letter for other readers whose mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact France gets married. older relatives think the way your Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com My parents are very religious, many others share this problem. mother does, so they can check the or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, and they do not support us living She refuses to throw away expired expiration dates on packages in CA 90069. in sin. They say if we have a child food. I’m not talking about some- out of wedlock, they will cut me thing a few days past its “best used    off completely. by” date; I’m talking YEARS. What should I do? I love my Yesterday, I found a box of family, but I also love Pierre. And bread crumbs that had expired in I’ve always dreamed of having a 2001 (I took a picture). Mom in- romantic wedding with my father sisted that they “never really go walking me down the aisle. I bad.” I told her she had better hope know Pierre is committed to me, she isn’t the beneficiary of the life but he dislikes the institution of insurance policy of anyone who   marriage and won’t budge on this. eats them or she could end up as  I’m 34 and my biological clock is an episode of “Snapped.” '  FREE BENCH with Select Dining ticking. Any advice will be appre- Seriously, though, this is a huge " $$ Room Table Sets Limited Time Only. ciated. — CONFLICTED IN problem for the elderly. I hope you ( CALIFORNIA will encourage your readers to   $ #!$ Tripp Nelson - Owner help their older friends and family Mon-Sat 9-6 Closed Wed & Sun DEAR CONFLICTED: Pierre members by cleaning out their !!  #$! ! ! $ "  !  715 Joe Frank Harris Pkwy. has given you fair warning and so fridge and cabinets. I always %%%""&#"  Cartersville, GA 30120 have your parents. Marriage exists check the expiration date before in France just as it does here in the eating anything at my mom’s.   $' $% %  770-212-9294 USA. That Pierre doesn’t believe Thank you! — DATE CHECKER in it should be an indication that the two of you have very different definitions of what a committed Bartow County-Cartersville Church Directory relationship is, and it may be partly cultural in nature. How do you feel about that? This Directory Is Made Possible By These Businesses Who Encourage All Of Us To Attend The Church Of Your Choice I think it’s sad that the parents of a 34-year-old woman would BAPTIST MT. ZION MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH POPLAR SPRINGS UMC ADAIRSVILLE BAPTIST CHURCH 147 Jones Street, Cartersville, GA 30120 2197 Hwy. 411 NE, PO Box 2170, Cartersville, GA 30120 7812 Highway 140, Adairsville, GA 30103 770-324-5669 threaten to cut her off if she de- 107 Church St., Adairsville, GA 30103 770-386-7425 770-606-8000 cided to have a child without 770-773-3198 NEW BEGINNING BAPTIST CHURCH SAM JONES MEMORIAL UMC ANTIOCH BAPTIST CHURCH CHURCH OF CHRIST 100 West Church Street, Cartersville, GA 30120 205 Colonel Way, White, GA 30184 770-382-4772 being married. If you can support 315 Grassdale Rd., Cartersville, GA 30120 CARTERSVILLE CHURCH OF CHRIST 404-643-9035 NEW CANAAN BAPTIST CHURCH 1319 Joe Frank Parkway, Cartersville, GA 30120 ST. LUKE AME CHURCH one, that choice should be yours 1883 Joe Frank Harris Parkway SE 770-382-6775 ATCO BAPTIST CHURCH 130 Jones Street, Cartersville, GA 30120 Cartersville, GA 30120 WEST CARTERSVILLE CHURCH OF CHRIST 770-382-8238 and not theirs. My advice is to stop 20 Parmenter Street, Cartersville, GA 30120 770-386-1644 770-382-5020 416 Hwy. 61, Cartersville, GA 30120 TRINITY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH dreaming about a romantic wed- NEW CORINTH MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH CHURCH OF GOD 814 West Ave., Cartersville, GA 30120 BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH 200 Cliff Nelson Road, Euharlee, GA 30145 770-386-1414 ding with your father walking you 42 Old Alabama Road, Emerson, GA 30137 770-386-5366 ADAIRSVILLE CHURCH OF GOD WHITE UNITED METHODIST 770-893-8834 297 Old Dixie Hwy. - PO Box 363 3411 Hwy. 411, White, GA 30184 down the aisle unless you can find NEW HOPE MISSIONARY BAPTIST BETHEL BAPTIST CHURCH Adairsville, GA 30103 770-386-8089 a man with a different view of CHURCH (CASSVILLE) (770) 773-3264 121 College Street, Adairsville, GA 30103 106 Firetower Road, Cartersville, GA 30123 CHURCH AT THE WELL commitment than Pierre appears 678-986-5063 770-382-8784 FOREVER BLESSED CHURCH OF GOD Meeting at Excel Christian Academy BETHEL CROSSROADS BAPTIST CHURCH 49 North Avenue 325 Old Mill Road Cartersville, GA to have. NEW VISION BAPTIST CHURCH Cartersville, GA 30120 678-721-2500 450 Iron Hill Road, Taylorsville, GA 30178 77 Wynn Loop, Cartersville, GA 30120 P.S. I once had a poodle named 770-684-8941 MOUNTAIN VIEW CHURCH OF GOD NAZARENE BRANDON'S CHAPEL BAPTIST CHURCH OAK GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH Highway 61 CROSSWALK CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Pierre. He and I got along fine and 136 Old Stilesboro Road, Cartersville, GA 30120 312 Burnt Hickory Road Cartersville, GA 30120 615 Grassdale Rd. Cartersville, GA 30120 REFUGE OF HOPE CHURCH OF GOD Cartersville, GA 30120 marriage was never discussed. CARTERSVILLE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OAKLAND HEIGHTS BAPTIST CHURCH 6103 JFH Pky Suite C, Adairsville, GA 30103 241 Douthit Ferry Road, Cartersville, GA 30120 (Beside Pizza Hut) PRESBYTERIAN 770-382-4994 16 Highland Way NE, Cartersville, GA 30121 770-386-3258 678-986-2791 BARTOW CUMBERLAND PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH DEAR ABBY: My mom and CASSVILLE BAPTIST CHURCH 2851 Highway 140, Rydal, GA 30171 OOTHCALOOGA BAPTIST CHURCH THE CHURCH AT LIBERTY SQUARE 1663 Cassville Road NW, Cartersville 2001 Liberty Square Drive 770-382-3896 770-382-6739 Woody Road, Adairsville, GA 30103 Cartersville, GA 30121 770-773-7869 FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF CARTERSVILLE CEDAR CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH 770-382-9489 183 West Main Street, Cartersville, GA 54 Folsom Rd, Adairsville, GA 30103 PEEPLES VALLEY BAPTIST CHURCH THE CHURCH OF GOD OF THE UNION ASSEMBLY 770-382-3511 770-877-9900 68 Ledford Lane, Cartersville, GA 30120 589 S.R. 20 Spur, S.E., Cartersville, GA 30121 RIVERSIDE COMMUNITY CHURCH PCA 770-382-5132 678-848-1087 CHURCH CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH Meeting at Cartersville Seventh Day Adventist Church 324 Cassville Rd., Cartersville, GA 30120 PLEASANT HILL MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH TRINITY CHURCH OF GOD 311 Old Mill Rd., Cartersville, GA 770-382-0148 1020 Mission Rd., SW, Cartersville, GA 30120 Highway 61, Cartersville, GA 30120 NON-DENOMINATIONAL 770-382-3132 CALENDAR CLEAR CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH EPISCOPAL BETH ISRAEL MESSIANIC CONGREGATION 142 Cedar Creek Rd., Adairsville, GA 30103 PLEASANT VALLEY BAPTIST CHURCH 96 Iron Belt Rd., Cartersville, GA 30120 174 Mostellers Mill Road EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF THE ASCENSION 678-531-8629 DAMASCUS MISSONARY BAPTIST CHURCH Adairsville, GA 30103 205 West Cherokee Avenue, Cartersville, GA 30120 174 Gasden Westbrook Avenue 770-382-2626 CREEKSIDE FELLOWSHIP CHURCH Emerson, GA 30137 PINE GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH PO Box 936, 585 Old Alabama Rd., Cartersville, GA 30120 BETHANY BAPTIST 93 Pine Grove Rd. HOLINESS 770-387-3484 DEWEY BAPTIST CHURCH CHRIST TEMPLE HOLINESS CHURCH OF Cartersville, GA 30120 DELIVERANCE TEMPLE CHURCH CHURCH — Bethany Baptist 895 Spring Place Road, White, GA 30184 770-387-1412 APOSTOLIC FAITH 1159 Mission Road SW, Cartersville, GA 30120 312 S. Tennessee Street, Cartersville, GA 30120 EUHARLEE BAPTIST CHURCH 404-558-5154 Church in Emerson will have re- RACCOON CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH 770-606-1400 85 Covered Bridge Rd., Cartersville, GA 30120 EXPEDITION CHURCH vival services, beginning Sunday 770-382-9115 1808 Highway 113SW NEW LIFE APOSTOLIC CHURCH Cartersville GA 30120 32 A Center Road, Cartersville, GA 30121 1646 Joe Frank Harris Pkwy., Cartersville, GA 30120 770-329-3767 at 6 p.m. Brother Joey Phillips, FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH 770-382-2456 678-637-8337 FAITH TABERNACLE 1024 Mission Road, Cartersville, GA 30120 ROWLAND SPRINGS BAPTIST CHURCH Pastor of Center Baptist Church, 770-387-0850 LDS/MORMON 3831 Hwy 140, Rydal, GA 30171 79 Rowland Springs Road SE will be preaching Monday through FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF EMERSON Cartersville, GA 30121 THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF FREEDOM WORSHIP CENTER 11 Franklin Loop, SE, Cartersville, GA 30121 770-382-4778 LATTER-DAY SAINTSS 1941 Cassville Rd., Cartersville, GA 30121 Wednesday nights, and Brother 770-382-5874 770-607-3174 SHILOH MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH 870 Peeples Valley Road NE. Cartersville, GA 30121 770- 386-0490 GRACE TEMPLE FELLOWSHIP CHURCH Eddie Hughes, pastor of Lakeview FLOYD CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH 26 Shiloh Road 851 Cedar Creek Road, Adairsville, GA 30103 Baptist Church, Rockmart, will be 2171 Hills Creek Road, Taylorsville, GA 30178 Stilesboro, GA 30178 LUTHERAN 770-684-2060 770-386-5574 SAVIOR OF ALL LUTHERAN CHURCH LIGHTED PATHWAY CHURCH OF GOD 2054 Cassville Road, Cartersville, GA preaching Thursday through Sat- FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST CHURCH TABERNACLE BAPTIST CHURCH 35 Indian Trail SE, Cartersville, GA 30120 600 Cassville Road, Cartersville, GA 30120 112 East Church Street 770-387-0379 LIGHTHOUSE EVANGELISTIC CHURCH urday nights at 7:30 p.m. Every- 770-606-3826 Cartersville, GA 30120 58B Sequoyah Trail SW, Cartersville, GA 30120 METHODIST 770-382-4667 one is invited. GRACE BAPTIST CHURCH 770-382-1977 LIVING WAY FOURSQUARE CHURCH 477 Old Cass White Rd. NW, Cartersville, GA 30121 TAYLORSVILLE BAPTIST CHURCH ALEXANDER CHAPEL UMC 118 East George Street, Adairsville, GA 30103 770-382-6446 19 Church St., Taylorsville, GA 30178 609 MLK Jr. Drive, Cartersville, GA 30120 770-382-7297 770-877-3600 CLEAR CREEK BAPTIST GREATER NEW FELLOWSHIP MISSIONARY 779-684-7734 NEW COVENANT CHURCH BAPTIST CHURCH CASSVILLE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 5425 Canton Hwy, Cartersville, GA CHURCH – 142 Clear Creek 69 Cassville Road, Cartersville, GA 30120 TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH 52 Church Street, Cartersville, GA 1511 Joe Frank Harris Pkwy. POINT OF GRACE CHURCH 770-387-9060 EMERSON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Road, Adairsville. Clear Creek Cartersville, GA 30120 11 Mimosa Lane, Cartersville, GA • 770-386-2047 HERITAGE BAPTIST CHURCH 404-886-3224 60 Eighth Street, Emerson, GA 30137 Baptist Church is hosting its 64th 1070 Douthit Ferry Road, Cartersville, GA 30120 678-227-3004 PURE WORD APOSTOLIC FELLOWSHIP 770-382-6076 WOFFORDS CROSSROADS BAPTIST CHURCH FAITH UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Meeting at The Travelodge--235 South Dixie Avenue Cartersville, GA 770-334-3217 annual homecoming July 15 at KINGSTON BAPTIST CHURCH 222 Old Tennessee Hwy. NE 501 Grassdale Road, Cartersville, GA 30121 White, GA 30184 770-382-0313 THE BODY OF CHRIST OUTREACH MINISTRY 10:30 a.m. The Partin Family, 40 East Main Street, Kingston, GA 30145 770-382-2602 770-336-5273 KINGSTON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 20 Tellus Dr. (Inside Fairbridge Inn Hotel) from Talking Rock, will be the YOUNG STREET BAPTIST CHURCH White, GA 30184 MACEDONIA BAPTIST CHURCH 26 East Main Street, PO Box 275, Kingston, GA 30145 6 Young Street, Cartersville, GA 30120 770-336-5234 THE GATHERING PLACE guest singers. The church will also 1810 Euharleet Road, Kingston, GA 30178 LIFEPOINT CHURCH 1337 Joe Frank Harris Parkway SE 770-382-9910 ZION HILL BAPTIST CHURCH Cartersville, GA 30120 (Behind: Tony Tires) host its revival July 16-20 at 7 p.m 1105 Mission Road 610 North Tennessee St., Cartersville, GA 30120 770-458-9881 MACEDONIA MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH 770-382-2040 Cartersville, GA 30120 CROSSPOINT CITY CHURCH nightly with Brother Joel Alexan- 521 M. L. King, Jr. Drive, PO Box 3633 MOUNT CARMEL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Cartersville, GA 30120 CATHOLIC 245 S. Tennessee St., Cartersville, GA 30120 der. Everyone is invited. 770-382-4878 825 Hall Station Rd., Adairsville, GA 30103 678-721-2377 ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI CATHOLIC CHURCH 706-280-9112 MACEDONIA PRIMITIVE BAPTIST CHURCH 850 Douthit Ferry Road WITHOUT WALLS CARTERSVILLE 180 Mansfield Rd., White, GA 30184 Cartersville, GA 30120 NORTHSIDE METHODIST CHURCH 214 Nelson Street, Cartersville, GA 30120 LIGHTED PATHWAY 770-891-2434 770-382-4549 102 Porter Street, Cartersville, GA 30120 678-535-7200 DAVID STREET CHURCH OF GOD CHURCH OF GOD – 2054 MT. PLEASANT BAPTIST CHURCH OAK GROVE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH CHRISTIAN 1689 Euharlee Road, Kingston, GA 30145 4 David Street, Cartersville, GA 30120 Cassville Road. Lighted Pathway 550 Mt. Pleasant Road, Rydal, GA 30171 FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH 770-606-2921 MT. TABOR BAPTIST CHURCH 113 Park Street PINE LOG UNITED METHODIST CHURCH RIVER CHURCH Adairsville, GA 30103 3497 Pine Log Road, Rydal, GA 30171 Church of God is having its annual 3068 Old Alabama Road, Taylorsville, GA 30178 770-773-3951 251 McCormick Rd, Cartersville, GA 30120 homecoming service, featuring 770-386-2736 678-908-3360 Dwayne Dover, on July 15 at 10:45 a.m. Walking With Jesus Leads To Freedom. MT. CARMEL UMC — 825    Hall Station Road, Adairsville. Join us at Freedom Worship Center Mt. Carmel UMC will host Spiri- worshipwithfreedom.com  tual Vision in concert Sunday, July 15, at 6 p.m. The singing will be followed by dinner. Everyone is    welcome.   

MOUNT TABOR BAPTIST  748 JFH Pkwy. - Cartersville CHURCH — 3068 Old Alabama Cartersville’s Locally Owned Funeral Home 770-382-8282 Road, Taylorsville. Mount Tabor 770-382-0034 Baptist Church will have a parade through Taylorsville July 14 at 5 p.m. Food will be provided after the parade. The church also will have vacation Bible school July 927 N. Tennessee St., Cartersville, GA 16-20 from 7-9 p.m. Classes are 770-382-4652 • treasurechestoutlet.com provided for all ages. Supper will be served each night at 6 p.m. Commencement Service will be Pendley Heating conducted Sunday, July 22, begin- & Air Conditioning, Inc. ning at 6 p.m. Everyone is invited. For more information, contact “Serving You For Over 58 Years” Pastor Brent Edwards at 770-715- 770-382-1221 6167. U.S. & WORLD

4A Saturday, July 7, 2018 www.daily-tribune.com The Daily Tribune News Judge rejects delay to reunite children at border

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS cases merit a delay in an effort to from opponents who said families ents are outside government cus- A judge on Friday refused to present a unified front in court on should remain together. tody. grant the Trump administration a Monday morning. On Thursday, Health and Human The judge, who was appointed blanket extension of the deadline to “The government must reunite Services Secretary Alex Azar said by President George W. Bush, set reunite children separated from them,” the judge said. “It must fewer than 3,000 children are be- the deadline last week, writing that their parents at the border, instead comply with the time frame unless lieved to have been separated, but the “situation has reached a crisis acknowledging that more time may there is an articulable reason.” that includes kids who may have level” and that the “chaotic circum- be justified only in specific cases. The administration has matched lost parents along the journey, not stances” were of the government’s The administration said it 86 parents to 83 children and 16 are just parents who were detained at own making. needed more time to reunite 101 not yet matched, Fabian said. the border. Jonathan White, a Health and children under 5 years old to ensure The deadline is July 10 for par- If DNA testing is inconclusive, Human Services official, filed a the children’s safety and to confirm ents with children under 5 and July officials said in a court filing, they declaration with the court that their parental relationships. 26 for everyone else. won’t be able to confirm a child’s gives perhaps the most detailed ac- “There’s always going to be ten- More than 2,000 children were parentage by the deadline. They count yet of what the government sion between a fast release and a separated from their parents after will need more time to collect is doing and the hurdles it faces. Its safe release,” said Sarah Fabian, a Attorney General Jeff Sessions an- DNA samples or other evidence database has some information Justice Department attorney. nounced in May that the zero toler- from parents who have been re- about the children’s parents but U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw ance policy was in full effect, even leased from government custody. was not designed to reunify fami- ordered the administration to share if it meant splitting families. While About half of the parents of the lies by the court’s deadline. a list of the 101 children with the parents were criminally prose- 101 children are in the custody of The department has manually re- American Civil Liberties Union, cuted, children were placed in cus- Immigration and Customs En- viewed the cases of all 11,800 chil- CHARLES REX ARBOGAST/AP Diego Magalhaes, left, 10, kisses his mother Sirley Silveira, which successfully sued to force tody of the Health and Human forcement. Others have left the dren in its custody by working Paixao, an immigrant from Brazil seeking asylum with her son, the reunions, by Saturday after- Services Department. country or were released, Fabian nights and weekends, White said. after Diego was released from immigration detention Thursday noon. The two sides will try to de- Trump reversed course on June said. She said it has been more dif- The results of that review are being in Chicago. termine over the weekend which 20 amid an international outcry ficult to reunite children when par- validated. In Supreme Court fight, Dems target 2 GOP Senate moderates

BY ALAN FRAM Trump’s anti-choice picks?” each spot Associated Press asks. The American Civil Liberties Union began similar TV ads in both states. By themselves, Democrats can’t stop the A Republican defection would turn the Republican-run Senate from confirming tables and focus attention on three Democ- President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court rats seeking re-election in states that gave pick. But they’re determined to make it ag- Trump landslides in 2016: Indiana’s Joe onizing for a pair of pivotal GOP senators Donnelly, Joe Manchin of West Virginia to back the nominee. and North Dakotan Heidi Heitkamp. Just a weekend from Trump’s big reveal If Republicans have the votes to prevail, J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., talks during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington on June on Monday, Democrats’ early strategy is to some Democrats looking ahead to Novem- 19. In the budding battle over the Supreme Court vacancy, what’s the Democratic sweet spot between satisfying liberal cast the battle as either protecting the right ber’s elections for congressional control activists’ demands for an all-out fight against President Donald Trump’s pick and protecting senators facing tight re- to abortion and the 2010 health care law, want to give the three moderates room to election races in deeply red states? or emasculating both. Citing Trump’s stray if they so decide. views on the issues, they say the latter is “There’s a reason we still have the ACA, and the country’s hyper-partisan political opposition to a nominee who’s not yet been and Heitkamp. exactly what Trump’s selection would in- OK?” Jim Kessler, vice president of Third climate. named. “Radical Left Takes The Reins,” Their states’ conservative voters would evitably do. Way, the centrist Democratic group, said Yet that would still confront top Democ- headlined an email aides to Senate Major- be uncomfortable with a senator voting The hope is to pressure GOP Sens. of Obama’s Affordable Care Act, which the rats with a tough balancing act, even as ity Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., sent “no” based on abortion rights. But defend- Susan Collins of Maine or Alaska’s Lisa Senate narrowly thwarted Trump from dis- Election Day rolls closer. They’d need to reporters. ing Obama’s health care law is popular, es- Murkowski to vote “no,” which many mantling last year. “And that’s because we satisfy anti-Trump liberal voters demand- Aiming their comments at Collins and pecially provisions like its protections for view as difficult. Neither faces re-election have these senators.” ing a battle royale against his selection Murkowski, Demand Justice and other lib- people with pre-existing medical condi- this year, but both are centrists who’ve But the three moderates’ decisions about while allowing Heitkamp, Manchin and eral organizations said Thursday that tions. That could give those endangered backed abortion rights and helped block voting would be far more fraught if the Donnelly latitude to make their own voting Trump’s nominee must explicitly endorse Democrats a safer political pathway to op- their party’s 2017 drive to repeal former nominee’s fate is in the balance. They’d decisions. the rights to abortion, contraception and posing the pick. President Barack Obama’s health care face enormous pressure from the party’s The brewing fight is already highlight- same-sex marriage and voice support for Liberal organizations are already prepar- statute. liberal base and probably Senate Minority ing Democrats’ strains. Obama’s health care statute. ing the battlefield. The anti-Trump group If either flips, the nominee’s fate would Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. Winnie Wong, political adviser of Collins has said she would not back Indivisible is organizing demonstrations be in Democrats’ hands. Republicans con- “Then his job becomes exponentially Women’s March, said her liberal activist someone hostile to Roe v. Wade, the 1973 around the country next week. Abortion- trol the chamber 51-49, but Sen. John Mc- harder,” Patrick Griffin, a former top Dem- group is planning marches, rallies and Supreme Court decision that established rights groups are planning a “Day of Ac- Cain’s absence as he battles cancer has ocratic White House and Senate aide, said “massive civil disobedience” and said the right to abortion. The groups said her tion” for Aug. 26, the anniversary of the pared that edge to 50-49, making every of Schumer. Griffin said at that point, Schumer should press all Democrats to op- litmus test was insufficient because past 1920 adoption of the 19th Amendment giv- GOP vote decisive. Schumer would likely tell them, “I need pose Trump’s nominee. Women’s March nominees have said they’d honor prece- ing women the right to vote. The pressure on Collins and Murkowski you, because the argument would be defeat helped organize a noisy Senate office dents but ruled otherwise as justices. Brian Fallon, Demand Justice’s execu- is just starting. Demand Justice, a new of the candidate is paramount.” building protest against Trump immigra- Schumer this week called abortion rights tive director, said the group plans spots group helping coordinate liberal opposition Whatever happens, the fight offers both tion policies last week in which nearly 600 and the health care law “the most conse- next week in Manchin’s, Donnelly’s and to the pick, has started airing ads in Maine parties a chance to raise money and galva- women were arrested. quential issues” at stake in the fight. By Heitkamp’s home states asking them to and Alaska, part of $5 million it plans to nize voters. Right now, it seems unlikely “I want them to hold the line and I don’t painting those guidelines in a New York continue protecting patients with pre-exist- spend nationally during the campaign. that Senate Republicans would sink a want them to cave,” said Wong. Times column, Schumer offered a ing conditions by opposing a nominee “Why won’t she rule out voting for Trump nominee, due to the sky-high stakes Republicans are mocking Democratic roadmap for Donnelly, Manchin who’d threaten that. Trump administration imposes tariffs on imports from China

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS to impose tariffs on up to $550 bil- ico over his push to rewrite the The opening shots were fired just lion in Chinese imports — a figure North American trade pact. And he after midnight, when the Trump ad- that exceeds the $506 billion in has subjected most of America’s ministration imposed a 25 percent goods that China shipped to the trading partners to tariffs on steel tariff on $34 billion of imports from U.S. last year. and aluminum. China, and Beijing promptly retali- The root of the conflict is the China’s currency, the yuan, has ated with duties on an equal amount Trump administration’s assertion dropped 3.5 percent against the of American products. It accused that China has long used predatory dollar over the past month, giving the U.S. of igniting “the biggest tactics in a drive to supplant Amer- Chinese companies a price edge trade war in economic history.” ica’s technological supremacy. over their U.S. competition. The These initial tariffs are unlikely Those tactics include cyber-theft as drop might reflect a deliberate de- to inflict serious harm to the well as forcing companies to hand valuation by Beijing to signal its world’s two biggest economies. over technology in exchange for “displeasure over the state of trade Gregory Daco, head of U.S. eco- access to China’s market. Trump’s negotiations,” according to a report nomics at Oxford Economics, has tariffs are meant to press Beijing to from the Institute of International calculated that they would pare change its ways. Finance, a banking trade group. growth in both countries by no The rift with China is the most The Trump administration more than 0.2 percent through consequential trade conflict the ad- sought to limit the impact of the 2020. ministration has gotten into. Trump tariffs on U.S. households by tar- President Donald Trump, who is also sparring with the European geting Chinese industrial goods, has boasted that winning a trade Union over his threat to tax auto not consumer products, for the first war is easy, has said he is prepared imports and with Canada and Mex- round of tariffs. CONTACTING FEDERAL STATE Sen. Johnny Isakson • 131 Russell Senate Office Building • Washington, D.C. 20510 Gov. Nathan Deal • 206 Washington St., 111 State Capitol • Atlanta, GA, 30334 OUR 202-224-3643 • Fax: 202-228-0724 • http://isakson.senate.gov/ Sen Chuck Hufstetler • 3 Orchard Spring Dr. • Rome, GA, 30165 • 404-656-0034 • [email protected] Sen. Bruce Thompson • 25 Hawks Branch Ln. • White, GA, 30184 • 404-656-0065 • [email protected] ELECTED Sen. David Perdue • 455 Russell Office Building • Washington, D.C. 20510 • 202-224-3521 Rep. Paul Battles • 208 Rd. #2 South S.W. • Cartersville, GA, 30120 • 404-657-8441 • [email protected] OFFICIALS Rep. Barry Loudermilk • 329 Cannon House Office Buliding • Washington, D.C. 20515 Rep. Christian Coomer • 127-A West Main St. Cartersville, GA, 30120 • 770-383-9171 • [email protected] 202-225-2931 • https://loudermilk.house.gov Rep. Trey Kelley • 836 N. College Dr. • Cedartown, GA, 30125 • 404-657-1803 • [email protected] The Daily Tribune News Entertainment www.daily-tribune.com • Saturday, July 7, 2018 5A

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME Dennis The Menace by Hank Ketcham BECKER BRIDGE by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words. PRAGH

©2018 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved. RFAWH

PUYTED Check out the new, free JUSTCheck out the new, JUMBLE app

BBOANO Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as

suggested by the above cartoon. “ - ”

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: SALSA FENCE MINING FORBID Yesterday’sFriday’s Answers Answer: Running up a hillside can be great exercise if you are — SO INCLINED

For Better or For Worse® by Lynn Jonston

MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM by Mike Peters

Today’s Horoscopes

SATURDAY July 7, 2018 LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) If you have to divide or share some- You will prefer to be alone today. If thing today, make sure you don’t give ARIES (March 21 to April 19) possible, seek out solitude in beautiful away the farm. You feel sympathetic Family discussions are mutually sym- surroundings, because you want to toward others, and you might get car- pathetic today, which is why this is a contemplate something or explore ried away. Remember to respect your good day to discuss a problem in the some kind of spiritual discipline. own self-interest. family. This might mean focusing on a VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) parent or an older authority figure in You’ll find it rewarding to be involved You feel sympathetic toward a friend the family. with a group today, especially a group or partner today, which is why you will TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) that is charitable. It will feel good to do whatever you can to help him or Barney Google and Snuffy Smith® by John Rose You might spend time daydreaming help those who are less fortunate. her. (This is wise, because what goes today or being lost in a fantasy world. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) around, comes around.) That’s OK, because we all need a men- Today you might idealize a boss or par- AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) tal-health day. (It’s an escape.) ent, or put someone up on a pedestal. A co-worker might come to you for ad- GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) It’s important to know whether you’re vice or consolation today. Sometimes If out shopping today, you might spend doing this, because it means you are a person just needs someone to listen. too much money on something luxuri- seeing this person in an unrealistic PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) ous or elegant. If you do, keep your re- light. You’re in touch with your muse today, ceipts. (And keep the box.) SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) which is why you feel creative. Give CANCER (June 21 to July 22) You will be attracted to discussions yourself a chance to enjoy music, the Your idealism is aroused today. This is about religion, metaphysics, spiritual- arts, the theater and lighthearted times a good day for quiet study, especially ity or astrology today. Anything that is with children. about religion or spiritual subjects. You otherworldly will appeal to you. YOU BORN TODAY You are intu- also might feel romantically idealistic. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) itive and can read body language.

Pajama Diaries by Terri Libenson THE Daily Commuter Puzzle by Jacqueline E. Mathews

ACROSS 1 Dove’s sound 4 Zeal 9 Ravel 13 __ up to; admits 15 “__ It to Beaver” 16 Easy stride 17 Georgia __; univ. in Atlanta 18 Microsoft’s Bill 19 __-minded; willing to Written By Brian & Greg Walker reconsider HI AND LOIS Drawn By Chance Browne 20 Item in a toiletry bag 22 Gives up the single life 23 Cordial 24 Biggest diamond 26 Show up 29 Clouding of the eye 34 One-syllable U.S. state 35 Summoned with a beeper 36 Mr. Iacocca 37 Crooner Crosby 38 Shows courage 39 Nylons 3 __ in a blue Friday’s Puzzle Solved PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN 40 19th letter moon; rarely 41 Cooked in oil 4 Dan Quayle’s 42 Songwriter successor George M. __ 5 Provide with 43 Goes in again fresh guns 45 Grinders 6 Facts & figures 46 McMahon & 7 Kiln O’Neill 8 Says again 47 Element whose 9 Daisy or dahlia symbol is Pb 10 Lasso 48 Daddy 11 Ridiculed 51 Like a terrible 12 Strong urges headache 14 Exhibiting 56 __ about; 21 Actor Annable approximately 25 Womanizer 57 Thrill 26 Honey-yellow 58 Orderly color ADAM@Home by Brian Basset 60 French boy’s 27 Elevate name 28 Dishwasher ©2018 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 61 Classic name for cycle All Rights Reserved. a dog 29 Is concerned 39 __ up; delaying 49 Once more 62 Sports event 30 Middle-__; 41 Floral wire 50 Corn bread 63 Pitcher neither young service 52 Cemetery 64 “Dancing with nor old 42 Parka space the __” 31 Maui greeting 44 Closer 53 Etna’s output 65 Youth 32 Actor Romero 45 Linear measures 54 Actress Patricia 33 Adolescents 47 Slightly more 55 Explorer Vasco DOWN 35 Couple than a quart da __ 1 Rollaway 38 Chests of 48 Tiny skin 59 One of the 2 Had unpaid bills drawers opening Kennedys Business 6A Saturday, July 7, 2018 www.daily-tribune.com The Daily Tribune News After marathon meeting, UK leaders endorse Brexit trade plan

BY JILL LAWLESS May said that “the Cabinet has agreed our After the British statement, Barnier northwest of London came with just nine world, and a more pro-EU group that Associated Press collective position for the future of our ne- tweeted that the EU would “assess propos- months to go until the U.K. leaves the bloc, wants to avoid tariffs and other friction be- gotiations with the EU” — a pronounce- als to see if they are workable & realistic.” and with the EU warning that time is run- tween the U.K. and its biggest trading part- LONDON (AP) — British Prime Min- ment akin to the British government At first glance the British proposals sit ning out to seal a divorce deal. ner. ister Theresa May corralled her Cabinet in- equivalent of white smoke from the Vati- uneasily with repeated EU warnings that Currently Britain is part of the EU’s sin- That view has been echoed by big man- side an English country house for a long, can announcing the election of a new pope. the U.K cannot “cherry pick” the benefits gle market — which allows for the fric- ufacturers, including Airbus and Jaguar hot day Friday, and announced that the di- But getting the Conservative govern- of EU membership, such as access to the tionless flow of goods and services among Land Rover, who warn they could abandon vided government had finally agreed on a ment to agree with itself may be the easy tariff-free customs union and single mar- the 28 member states — and its tariff-free Britain if the EU and the U.K. cannot strike plan for a future free-trade deal with the part. As ministers met behind closed doors ket, without accepting the responsibilities, customs union for goods. That will end a strong free trade deal. Airbus alone em- European Union. — and without their phones, to prevent which include allowing the free movement after Brexit, but what will replace it re- ploys some 14,000 workers in Britain. The proposal aims to keep the U.K. and snooping and leaks — the EU’s chief ne- of EU citizens to the U.K. mains unclear. Airbus chief executive Tom Enders the bloc in a free-trade zone for goods, but gotiator, Michel Barnier, warned the bloc The U.K. is firm that it will end free Ever since Britain voted to leave the EU slammed Britain’s divided government not for services, which make up the bulk would not accept anything that treated the movement, as well as the jurisdiction of the two years ago, its government has been di- early Friday, saying “Her Majesty’s gov- of the British economy. union’s single market, which allows the EU’s top court in British affairs. vided between Brexit-backing ministers ernment still has no clue, or at least no con- After almost 12 hours of talks at Che- free flow of goods and services, as a “big Friday’s meeting at the 16th-century who want a sharp break from the EU so the sensus, on how to execute Brexit without quers, the prime minister’s country retreat, supermarket.” manor house 40 miles (65 kilometers) U.K. can strike new trade deals around the severe harm.” Stocks snap higher despite escalating trade tiff

BY ALEX VEIGA if tight labor market conditions AP Business Writer would force wages higher, a sign of inflation. The trade dispute between the The Labor Department said that U.S. and China escalated Friday, U.S. employers added 213,000 jobs but Wall Street focused on a solid in June. Average hourly pay rose jobs report instead. just 2.7 percent from a year earlier, After a wobbly start, U.S. stocks which means that after adjusting for mounted a broad rally, shaking off inflation wages remain nearly flat. two consecutive weekly losses. Health care stocks posted the Growing jitters in recent weeks biggest gains, led by Biogen. The over a stepped-up trading dispute drugmaker’s stock soared 19.6 per- between the world’s two largest cent to $357.48 on encouraging re- economies had weighed on the sults from an Alzheimer’s therapy. markets well ahead of Friday, when Technology companies also Beijing and Washington launched notched solid gains. Advanced dueling tariffs on billions in goods. Micro Devices rose 5.6 percent to “The markets had already sold $16.36. off the prior two weeks,” said Dan U.S. crude oil prices reversed an Heckman, national investment con- early slide. Benchmark U.S. crude sultant at U.S. Bank Wealth Man- gained 86 cents, or 1.2 percent, to agement. “The market probably had settle at $73.80 per barrel in New built that expectation in already and York. Brent crude, used to price in- today we’re seeing a nice rebound.” ternational oils, fell 28 cents to A solid pickup in hiring by U.S. close at $77.11 per barrel in Lon- employers last month also helped don. keep investors in a buying mood. Bond prices rose. The yield on The S&P 500 index rose 23.21 the 10-year Treasury fell to 2.82 points, or 0.8 percent, to 2,759.82. percent from 2.83 percent late The Dow Jones Industrial Average Thursday. gained 99.74 points, or 0.4 percent, MARK LENNIHAN/AP The dollar fell to 110.45 yen from In this Feb. 9, 2017, file photo, traders work the floor at the New York Stock Exchange. to 24,456.48. The Nasdaq compos- 110.68 yen on Thursday. The euro ite added 101.96 points, or 1.3 per- damage could soon escalate. Presi- with China. American companies Jack Daniels, is off 15 percent since month. Last year China bought 30 strengthened to $1.1745 from cent, to 7,688.39. The Russell 2000 dent Donald Trump, who has that do a lot of business there have late May. Whiskey, along with soy- percent of the soybeans produced in $1.1680. index of smaller-company stocks claimed that winning a trade war seen steep drops in their stock beans, pork and cheese, is among the U.S. Gold dropped $3 to $1,255.80 an picked up 14.57 points, or 0.9 per- would be easy, has said that he’s prices in the past few weeks. the products Chinese is slapping re- “The market is counting on this ounce. Silver slipped 3 cents to cent, to 1,694.05. prepared to drastically raise tariffs Aircraft maker Boeing, which re- taliatory tariffs on. to subside,” said Erik Davidson, $16.07 an ounce. Copper was little The U.S. put a 25 percent tax on on more Chinese imports. Mount- lies on China for 12.3 percent of its As the prospect of Chinese tariffs chief investment officer at Wells changed at $2.82 a pound. $34 billion worth of Chinese im- ing tariffs could raise costs across sales, according to FactSet, has seen on soybeans grew in recent weeks, Fargo Private Bank. “If they get an In other energy futures trading, ports Friday. China retaliated with the board for consumers and busi- its stock fall 9.9 percent over the the price of soybeans has fallen indication that this will continue to heating oil slipped 1 cent to $2.17 a taxes on an equal amount of U.S. nesses, slowing growth and invest- last month as the trade tensions with sharply. Soybean futures have fallen escalate, that will cause some prob- gallon. Wholesale gasoline lost 2 products, including soybeans, pork ment and hurting companies that China worsened. from $10.42 a bushel in late May to lems.” cents to $2.11 a gallon. Natural gas and electric cars, calling the move rely on imported parts to make their Heavy equipment maker Cater- $8.95 Friday, a drop of 14 percent. Investors also welcomed new rose 2 cents to $2.86 per 1,000 the start of the “biggest trade war in goods. pillar, for whom China is also its That hurts U.S. soybean farmers data Friday from the government cubic feet. economic history.” Despite the market’s gains Fri- second-biggest market after the and could also have an impact on showing that U.S. employers kept Major indexes in Europe finished Though the first exchange of tar- day, much damage has already been U.S., is off 13.5 percent over the makers of farm equipment, such as up a brisk pace of hiring last month, higher. Germany’s DAX added 0.3 iffs is unlikely to inflict much eco- inflicted on stocks that would stand same time. Liquor maker Brown- Deere & Co. Deere’s stock has without having to hike wages much. percent, while France’s CAC 40 nomic harm on either nation, the to lose in a protracted trade battle Forman, whose products include fallen 11.7 percent over the last Markets have been watching to see rose 0.2 percent.

items in the outdoor space between the 927 Carter said, “and this truck would become ginning Signs, for three redwood signs at the around the generator and pump station. Cartersville and 929 buildings. Text Amendment, T18- one of their primary response vehicles.” entrances of Dellinger and Sam Smith parks. • Approved two proposals from Geo- 03, which was approved by council on • Approved a proposal by Toyo Tires to Hydro Engineers, Inc., for subsurface and FROM PAGE 1A May 3, allows outdoor storage of land- In other business, council: relocate a high pressure, natural gas line to construction materials testing at the new After a public hearing and a second read- scape supplies on non-residential proper- • Approved purchase of the Dabbs prop- accommodate a plant expansion that in- Fire Station No. 3. The subsurface testing ing, council approved a request from the ties in side and rear yards in the M-U erty at $200,000 an acre. cludes the addition of a railroad spur track. will cost $3,500 and the estimated total for owner of The Treasure Chest Outlet to use district with a Special Use permit. • Approved a time change for the Sept. • Approved Assistant City Manager Dan the construction materials testing is his property at 927 N.Tennessee St. for stag- Council also authorized a request from 20 meeting from 5 p.m. to 9 a.m. to accom- Porta to continue as a voting delegate to $24,367.20 and are funded through 2014 ing and outdoor storage of outdoor products. the fire department to remove a 1996 modate Civic Youth Day. Georgia Public Web and a GPW board SPLOST funds. Currently, the outdoor products are Pierce Saber fire truck from the fleet and • Approved a bid of $225,188.07 from member. being temporarily stored on an adjacent sell it directly to the Haralson County Fire Guardian Fueling Technologies to build a • Authorized $6,325 for electrical work The Cartersville City Council will hold property and consist of a broad selection of Department for $9,000. fuel station at the new gas department needed to install a diesel generator at the a work session on Thursday, July 19 at 6 concrete fountains, bird baths, statuary and “Haralson County Fire Department is a headquarters on Old Mill Road. Center Road Pump Station and secure it by p.m., followed by a regular meeting at 7 clay pots. The owner wants to store these department in great need,” Chief Scott • Approved a $9,460 bid from New Be- installing a vinyl-coated chain-link fence p.m. at City Hall.

THE MARKET IN REVIEW

STOCK MARKET INDEXES STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST DAILY S&P 500

YTD YTD Name Div Yld PE Last Chg %Chg Name Div Yld PE Last Chg %Chg S&P 500 2,800 Dow Jones industrials 24,680 AT&T Inc 2.00 6.1 12 32.68 +.08 -15.9 iShGold ...... 12.03 -.02 -3.8 Close: 2,759.82 2,740 Close: 24,456.48 24,320 AbbottLab 1.12 1.8 28 62.16 +.83 +8.9 iShBrazil .67 2.0 ... 33.18 +.89 -18.0 Change: 23.21 (0.8%) Change: 99.74 (0.4%) AMD ...... 16.36 +.86 +59.1 iShChinaLC .87 2.1 ... 42.34 +.39 -8.3 AegeanMP .08 4.3 5 1.86 -.17 -56.7 iShEMkts .59 1.4 ... 43.41 +.59 -7.9 2,680 10 DAYS 23,960 10 DAYS 2,880 27,200 Alibaba ...... 57 192.27 +5.39 +11.5 iS Eafe 1.66 2.5 ... 67.58 +.36 -3.9 Allstate 1.84 2.0 14 92.16 +.22 -12.0 iShR2K 1.77 1.1 ... 168.25 +1.41 +10.4 Altria 2.80 4.8 18 58.29 +.66 -18.4 Intel 1.20 2.3 19 51.37 +.62 +11.3 2,800 26,400 Ambev .05 1.1 8 4.65 -.07 -28.0 IntPap 1.90 3.6 17 52.36 +.17 -9.6 Apache 1.00 2.1 30 46.91 +.58 +11.1 JohnJn 3.60 2.9 17 125.75 +.75 -10.0 25,600 Apple Inc 2.92 1.6 22 187.97 +2.57 +11.1 Kroger s .56 1.9 12 29.12 +.52 +6.1 2,720 BP PLC 2.38 5.2 24 45.94 -.06 +9.3 LockhdM 8.00 2.7 36 299.19 ... -6.8 BkofAm .48 1.7 16 28.03 +.11 -5.0 Lowes 1.92 2.0 21 96.14 +.62 +3.4 24,800 BkOzarks .80 1.8 15 45.56 +.34 -6.0 McDnlds 4.04 2.5 24 159.42 +2.10 -7.4 2,640 B iPVxST rs ...... 34.23 -1.86 +22.6 24,000 BlackBox .48 23.6 ... 2.03 +1.08 -42.8 Merck 1.92 3.1 23 62.20 +.56 +10.5 BlockHR 1.00 4.3 8 23.51 -.05 -10.3 MicronT ...... 5 53.23 +.39 +29.5 Microsoft 1.68 1.7 59 101.16 +1.40 +18.3 2,560 23,200 BrMySq 1.60 2.8 56 56.56 +.61 -7.7 JFM A M J JFM A M J CSX .88 1.4 10 65.00 +.64 +18.2 Mohawk ...... 16 218.74 +1.28 -20.7 CampSp 1.40 3.3 13 41.91 +.42 -12.9 MorgStan 1.00 2.1 12 47.09 +.39 -10.2 MUTUAL FUNDS Caterpillar 3.44 2.5 16 135.41 -.40 -14.1 NCR Corp ...... 27 30.76 +.26 -9.5 52-Week Net YTD 12-mo NewellRub .92 3.4 6 27.42 +.27 -11.3 Total Assets Total Return/Rank Pct Min Init High Low Name Last Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg ChesEng ...... 9 5.29 +.02 +33.6 Chevron 4.48 3.6 55 124.14 +.16 -.8 NikeB s .80 1.0 67 76.48 -.07 +22.3 Name Obj ($Mlns) NAV 4-wk 12-mo 5-year Load Invt 26,616.71 21,279.30 Dow Industrials 24,456.48 +99.74 +.41 -1.06 +14.21 Cisco 1.32 3.1 21 42.71 +.15 +11.5 Oracle .76 1.7 52 46.00 +.59 -2.7 American Funds GrfAmrcA m LG 90,175 54.82 +0.5 +25.0/C +15.4/B 5.75 250 11,423.92 9,010.19 Dow Transportation 10,473.93 +47.31 +.45 -1.30 +8.04 Citigroup 1.28 1.9 12 67.14 +.58 -9.8 PepsiCo 3.71 3.4 22 109.56 +.01 -8.6 American Funds InvCAmrcA m LB 62,412 40.98 +0.6 +15.3/C +12.8/B 5.75 250 778.80 647.81 Dow Utilities 729.37 +5.84 +.81 +.83 +3.89 CocaCola 1.56 3.5 76 44.64 -.02 -2.7 Pfizer 1.36 3.7 15 37.11 +.24 +2.5 American Funds WAMtInvsA m LV 56,225 44.91 -0.9 +15.7/A +12.0/A 5.75 250 13,637.02 11,670.88 NYSE Composite 12,664.88 +79.67 +.63 -1.12 +7.76 ColgPalm 1.68 2.6 23 65.78 -.18 -12.8 PhilipMor 4.56 5.5 21 82.26 +.23 -22.1 Federated EqInc,IncA f LV 802 25.32 -1.9 +12.7/A +8.4/E 5.50 1,500 7,806.60 6,081.96 Nasdaq Composite 7,688.39 +101.96 +1.34 +11.37 +24.95 ConAgra .85 2.4 17 35.73 -.19 -5.1 PUVixST rs ...... 10.99 -.87 +7.6 Fidelity Contrafund LG 96,758 134.23 -0.3 +26.9/B +15.9/B NL 2,500 1,273.99 1,061.97 S&P 100 1,213.34 +10.81 +.90 +2.55 +13.54 Darden 3.00 2.7 23 111.08 +.89 +15.7 ProctGam 2.87 3.6 21 79.31 +.10 -13.7 George Putnam BalA m MA 989 20.35 +0.2 +10.0/A +8.5/B 5.75 0 2,872.87 2,407.70 S&P 500 2,759.82 +23.21 +.85 +3.22 +13.80 Deere 2.76 2.0 28 139.98 +.28 -10.6 PShtQQQ rs ...... 13.40 -.62 -37.7 INVESCO QualIncA m CI 322 11.58 +0.8 -0.3/D +2.6/C 4.25 1,000 2,008.97 1,686.25 S&P MidCap 1,989.49 +15.09 +.76 +4.68 +13.86 Disney 1.68 1.6 15 104.78 +.28 -2.5 RealGSol rs ...... 40 -.13 -72.8 Lord Abbett AffiliatedA m LV 5,622 15.52 -1.0 +8.9/D +10.3/B 5.75 1,000 29,760.60 25,030.07 Wilshire 5000 28,869.28 +247.77 +.87 +3.87 +14.47 DowDuPnt 1.52 2.3 21 65.93 -.14 -7.4 S&P500ETF 4.13 1.5 ... 275.42 +2.31 +3.2 Lord Abbett BdDebA m MU 4,666 8.01 -0.4 +3.8/A +5.8/A 2.25 1,000 1,708.10 1,349.35 Russell 2000 1,694.05 +14.57 +.87 +10.33 +19.65 DrPepSnap 2.32 1.9 27 122.92 -.89 +26.6 SearsHldgs ...... 2.27 -.04 -36.6 Lord Abbett DevelopingGrA m SG 700 29.69 +1.2 +47.9/A +12.9/C 5.75 1,000 EliLilly 2.25 2.6 82 87.39 +.83 +3.5 SouthnCo 2.40 5.0 53 47.76 +.20 -.7 Lord Abbett MltAsstGlbOppA m IH 130 11.37 -1.6 +5.0/D +4.8/D 2.25 1,000 Equifax 1.56 1.2 22 127.24 +1.07 +7.9 SPDR Fncl .46 1.7 ... 26.67 +.13 -4.4 Lord Abbett SmCpValA m SB 359 22.03 +0.3 +15.3/D +9.7/D 5.75 1,000 EsteeLdr 1.52 1.1 48 142.42 -1.13 +11.9 MARKET SUMMARY: NYSE AND NASDAQ SunTrst 1.60 2.4 14 67.35 +.41 +4.3 Putnam DiversIncA m NT 1,411 7.04 -0.2 +5.3/A +3.3/A 4.00 0 ExxonMbl 3.28 4.0 18 82.33 +.02 -1.6 3M Co 5.44 2.8 29 197.46 +.12 -16.1 Putnam EqIncA m LV 8,238 24.75 -0.5 +13.6/A +10.9/A 5.75 0 GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) Facebook ...... 38 203.23 +4.78 +15.2 Putnam GlbEqA m WS 797 16.02 -2.5 +15.2/B +8.7/C 5.75 0 FordM .60 5.4 6 11.06 +.01 -11.4 Twitter ...... 46.65 +1.59 +94.3 Name Last Chg %Chg USG ...... 24 43.25 +.07 +12.2 Putnam GlbHCA m SH 1,208 52.15 +1.8 +6.7/E +11.6/E 5.75 0 Name Last Chg %Chg Name Vol (00) Last Chg GenElec .48 3.5 ... 13.85 +.42 -20.7 Putnam IntlGrA m FG 259 23.10 -3.9 +15.3/B +7.4/C 5.75 0 US OilFd ...... 14.96 +.18 +24.6 BlackBox 2.03 +1.08 +113.7 WinsFin 60.01 -22.99 -27.7 AMD 650366 16.36 +.86 Gerdau .02 .5 ... 3.94 +.13 +5.9 Putnam SustLeadersA m LG 4,086 97.20 -1.4 +22.3/D +15.3/B 5.75 0 Vale SA .29 2.2 13 13.03 +.35 +6.5 AC Immun n 12.86 +3.56 +38.3 ChinLend h 2.48 -.78 -23.9 BlackBox 618271 2.03 +1.08 Goodyear .56 2.4 8 23.80 +.03 -26.3 Vanguard 500IdxAdmrl LB 245,825 254.89 -0.3 +16.7/B +13.4/A NL 10,000 HP Inc .56 2.4 9 23.01 +.26 +9.5 VanEGold .06 .3 ... 22.61 -.07 -2.7 Vanguard InsIdxIns LB 125,168 251.62 -0.3 +16.7/B +13.4/A NL 5,000,000 XeneticB n 5.29 +.97 +22.5 Greenpro n 8.20 -1.80 -18.0 GenElec 495088 13.85 +.42 HeliMAn h ...... 19 -.01 -97.1 VerizonCm 2.36 4.6 7 51.48 +.20 -2.7 Vanguard InsIdxInsPlus LB 98,320 251.64 -0.3 +16.7/B +13.4/A NL 100,000,000 ArQule 6.81 +1.14 +20.1 RiotBlck 5.15 -.86 -14.3 AT&T Inc 411852 32.68 +.08 HomeDp 4.12 2.1 25 194.48 +.07 +2.6 WalMart 2.08 2.5 20 84.51 -.06 -14.4 Vanguard TtInSIdxInv FB 125,611 17.43 -3.6 +8.1/B +6.4/B NL 0 Biogen 357.48 +58.67 +19.6 LSC Com 13.94 -2.30 -14.2 BkofAm 394887 28.03 +.11 Hormel s .75 2.0 23 37.15 +.08 +2.1 Wendys Co .34 2.0 18 17.28 ... +5.2 Vanguard TtlSMIdxAdmrl LB 199,003 69.52 -0.1 +17.5/A +13.3/A NL 10,000 MediciNova 8.34 +1.28 +18.1 NewConcEn 4.26 -.69 -13.9 IQIYI n 375554 29.92 -1.27 IQIYI n ...... 29.92 -1.27 +92.4 WDigital 2.00 2.6 9 77.93 +.47 -2.0 Vanguard TtlSMIdxIns LB 119,160 69.53 -0.1 +17.5/A +13.3/A NL 5,000,000 Vanguard TtlSMIdxInv LB 131,182 69.49 -0.1 +17.4/A +13.1/A NL 3,000 Lifevant rs 8.44 +1.22 +16.9 UrbanOne 2.60 -.40 -13.3 MicronT 316315 53.23 +.39 Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet continued-listing standards. lf = Late filing with NuverEnv n 12.48 +1.78 +16.6 MarPet 3.90 -.55 -12.4 Ambev 294091 4.65 -.07 SEC. n = New in past 52 weeks. pf = Preferred. rs = Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50 percent within the past CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, FB -Foreign Large Blend, GI -Intermediate Government, IH -World Allocation, LB -Large Blend, LG -Large year. rt = Right to buy security at a specified price. s= Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. un = Units. vj = In Growth, LV -Large Value, MA -Moderate Allocation, MU -Multisector Bond, SB -Small Blend, SG -Small Growth, SH -Health, WS -World ConiferH n 7.14 +.89 +14.1 JerashHl n 5.91 -.83 -12.3 FordM 256379 11.06 +.01 bankruptcy or receivership. wd = When distributed. wi = When issued. wt = Warrants. Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are Stock, Total Return: Chng in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%, MotusGI n 9.69 +1.17 +13.7 RestorRob n 3.25 -.42 -11.4 Twitter 236803 46.65 +1.59 unofficial. E in bottom 20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. Source: Morningstar. The Daily Tribune News Local www.daily-tribune.com • Saturday, July 7, 2018 7A

My favorite ruin was the Acropolis in dents,” she said. “Our group was so diverse the United States either. every opportunity they have to travel, CTC Athens because of its sheer size and archi- in both ages and backgrounds. We had some “I went to Mexico when I was about 3 “even if it is in the United States.” tectural significance. My most emotional seasoned travelers and some students who years old,” he said. “But let me be honest. “It is great to see life outside your own,” FROM PAGE 1A and awe-inspiring favorites were the Sis- had never flown before. They immersed I don’t remember anything from that trip.” he said. “We are living in a beautiful nation be Sorrento on the coast of Italy, just for tine Chapel and Michelango’s Statue of themselves in the history and culture of each Hughes said she would “highly recom- with a rich history. We should love and ap- the scenic beauty alone,” she said. “My fa- David. They both brought me to tears.” area, and it was so inspiring to observe and mend” that students, staff and faculty par- preciate it, especially love one another, no vorite museum was the Uffizi Art Gallery Traveling with this group of students be a part of their global-learning experience. ticipate in a study-abroad trip. matter their skin color or ethnicity. We are in Florence because of the magnitude and was “so much fun” for Hughes. And they definitely kept my energy level up.” “It was an experience of a lifetime,” she said. at a time where we need to open our hearts beauty of the Italian Renaissance paintings. “They were such a great group of stu- The trip wasn’t Reyes’ first time outside And Reyes encouraged people to take and minds to each other.”

children, they will bring them too.” to be able to bring their children Rodeo Based on its total purse money and enjoy a night together and get TRAFFIC BACKS UP I-75 and gate attendance, the Bartow to experience a little bit of the Old FROM PAGE 1A County Championship Rodeo cap- West and see rodeo athletes in ac- With the event taking place at the tured one of four 2016 Rodeo of tion. Second, you cannot put a price Bartow County Saddle Club’s the Year awards. Presented by the or value on the partnership we have arena, the rodeo also serves as a Professional Cowboy Association, with Bartow County Saddle Club. fundraiser for the local nonprofit. the awards ceremony was con- We work together hand in hand to Founded in 1961, the organization ducted Jan. 21, 2017, at the Island make this great local event. A lot of is the oldest saddle club in the state. View Casino in Biloxi, Mississippi. blood, sweat and tears go into the “We, Phillips Rodeo Produc- “It is wonderful to receive this rodeo each year. We handle all the tions, will celebrate 40 years in the award,” Danny Phillips told The marketing and everything inside rodeo business in 2019,” Phillips Daily Tribune News following the the arena, and they handle outside said. “So we have pretty much seen accolade’s presentation in 2017. the arena by providing the conces- and done it all. We have made mis- “My father, Larry Phillips started sions, vendors and the facility to takes but have learned from them Phillips Rodeo Productions in host the rodeo.” and continued to grow. I hope we 1980, and I have done my best to Entry fees to the Bartow County have left a lasting impression on continue on in his memory. ... I be- Championship Rodeo will be $12 Bartow County and have grown lieve he would be proud that we for general admission and $8 for several lifelong rodeo fans here. have been able to continue his vi- youth 5 to 9. Children 4 and “We know that you can’t please sion and to build on what he younger will be admitted at no 100 percent of the people 100 per- started. charge. Parking also will be com- cent of the time. But we try. I want “I believe there are two things plimentary.

RANDY PARKER/THE DAILY TRIBUNE NEWS people to bring their family and that make this rodeo special. One, For more information, visit the As Independence Day travelers were making their way home Friday, maintenance work along the children to the rodeo and enjoy the we do our best to provide great rodeo’s Facebook page, www.face- northbound shoulder of Interstate 75 at Mile Marker 286 caused traffic to back up for several miles time together. And then as those family entertainment at an afford- book.com/bartowcountychampi- for most of the day. children grow and have their own able price. We want mom and dad onshiprodeo, or call 706-218-0382.

• Elijah Ray Bat- arrested and charged with con- arrested and • Huge Mendez arrested and BARTOW tle, of 21 Amanda tempt of Civil Court. charged with ag- Lopez, of 313 charged with two Court, Cartersville, gravated assault North Elm St., counts of simple BLOTTER was arrested and • Bryan Keith with a gun. Rome, was ar- assault-family vio- charged with con- Gabel, of 123 rested on a Probate lence. The following information — tempt by failure to Lloyd Drive, Ma- • Joshua Court sentence. names, photos, addresses, charges appear. rietta, was arrested Franklin Holder, • Candy Tabitha and other details — was taken di- and charged with of of 1601 Atlanta • Kayla Ann Volk, of 4953 rectly from Bartow County Sher- • Todd Vernon probation viola- Highway, Rock- Neubauer, of 60 Country Lane, Ac- iff’s Office jail records. Not every Brotherton, of tion. mart, was arrested Kingston Pointe worth, was ar- arrest leads to a conviction, and a 2301 Buchannan and charged with Drive, Kingston, rested and charged conviction or acquittal is deter- Highway, Cedar- • Terrence Lamar aggravated assault was arrested and with driving under mined by the court system. Arrests town, was arrested Griffith, of 27 with a gun and charged with pos- the influence of al- were made by BCSO deputies ex- and charged with River Oaks Drive, probation violation. session of cohol, possession cept where otherwise indicated. probation viola- Cartersville, was methamphetamine with intent to of less than 1 ounce of marijuana tion. arrested on a Drug • Andrew Steven distribute and improper lane and seat belt violation. July 5 Court sanction and Hughes, of 35 change. • Samantha Lynn charged with Carson Loop, • Lamar James • Tammy Dale Burgess, of 103 speeding and driving with a sus- Cartersville, was • Tristan Frances Williams Jr., of Banks, of 6 Akron White St., Cal- pended license. arrested and Thurman, of 25 26 Red Top Circle, St., Cartersville, houn, was arrested charged with bat- Cut Off Road, Emerson, was ar- was arrested and and charged with • Kelly Desiree tery. Cartersville, was rested and charged charged with pos- three counts of Holden, of 521 N. arrested and with terroristic session of less theft by shoplift- Division St., • Donald Joseph charged with tex- threats or acts. than 1 ounce of ing. Rome, was ar- Knott, of 80 ting while driving marijuana and failure to use sig- rested on an Lakeside Trail, and driving under the influence of nal. • Ashleigh Brooke agency assist. Cartersville, was drugs. Cayton, of 4757 boarded at the jail. • Amy Elizabeth Old Lyme Court, • Donna Harris Holder, of 1601 • Horacio Vasquez, of 2036 Barron, of 246 Duluth, was ar- Atlanta Highway, Rockmart, was Cassville Road, Cartersville, was Lawrence St., rested and charged Adairsville, was with reckless driv- arrested and ing, fleeing police, charged with driv- willful obstruction of law enforce- ing without insur- ment, theft by taking, driving with- ance, failure to obey stop or yield out a valid license, speeding, two sign and driving with a suspended counts of failure to obey a traffic license. control device, not meeting tail- light requirements, driving on the • Ricky Eugene wrong side of the road and giving Barron, of Box false information to a law enforce- Coming In July Sample one of these 664, Cartersville, ment officer. was arrested and charged with pos- • Darla Lynn PROGRESS 2018 Advertising Specials session of less Fair, of 303 Rudy than 1 ounce of York Road, Largest Special Section marijuana. Cartersville, was of the Year! COMING SOON!    Coming Sunday, July 29, 2018    Advertising Deadline July 19th " %"  &# "($  ( Coming In August         FOOTBALL          "#'!" SPECIAL SECTION    Coming Friday, August 17, 2018         Advertising Deadline August 8th Coming In October DISCOVER BARTOW FALL EDITION Coming Sunday, October 14, 2018 Advertising Deadline August 31st

Wicker Table & 4 Chairs

Monday - Saturday 927 N. Tennessee St., Cartersville, GA 770-382-4652 treasurechestoutlet.com 8A Saturday, July 7, 2018 • www.daily-tribune.com The Daily Tribune News SPORTS B

The Daily Tribune News www.daily-tribune.com Saturday, July 7, 2018 Last remaining multiple World Cup champs eliminated heading into semifinals

BY PAN PYLAS tles, didn’t even qualify, losing to After a lackluster start in quali- Brazil has now been eliminated by Associated Press Sweden in the playoffs. fying, Brazil replaced 1994 World European opposition in the knockout This is the first time there will be Cup-winning captain Dunga with stages at each of the four World Cups Only five countries have won the a semifinals without at least one of Tite as coach. Tite oversaw an im- since it last won in 2002. World Cup more than once. None Argentina, Brazil, Germany or mediate improvement in results URUGUAY of them have a chance to win an- Italy. that led to Brazil’s qualification. Uruguay was the World Cup’s other this year. That only leaves France and Although Brazil finished first in first winner back in 1930 and the Five-time champion Brazil and England as former champions still Group E, it failed to impress in at- country added a second title 20 two-time champion Uruguay were with a chance to win another title tack. There were glimpses of pace years later when it defeated Brazil both eliminated Friday, losing in in Russia. and skill from Neymar and in the final match in Rio de Janeiro. the quarterfinals. Argentina, an- BRAZIL Philippe Coutinho, but the team Although the Uruguayans other two-time winner, lost in the Brazil was one of the biggest fa- was not as free-flowing going for- haven’t made a final since, they MATTHIAS SCHRADER/AP round of 16 while four-time cham- vorites heading into the tournament ward as many had hoped. have become a presence again in Belgium’s Axel Witsel celebrates after the final whistle as Belgium defeat Brazil in their quarterfinal match between Brazil pion Germany couldn’t make it out in Russia, but it struggled early in At least the defense was solid, the final stages. and Belgium at the 2018 soccer World Cup in the Kazan Arena, of the group stage. the group stage and finally lost to conceding only one goal through in Kazan, Russia, Friday. Belgium won the game 2-1. Italy, which also has won four ti- Belgium 2-1 on Friday in Kazan. the round of 16. SEE WORLD CUP, PAGE 2B

Braves place LHP Fried on 10-day DL with blister THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Atlanta Braves placed left- hander Max Fried on the 10-day disabled list Friday with a blister on the middle finger of his throwing hand. Right-hander Evan Phillips was called up from Triple-A Gwinnett to take his place. Fried (1-3) started a 7-2 loss to Milwaukee on Thursday, going three innings and allowing four runs on four hits and three walks. Braves manager Brian Snitker said the team is trying to get ahead of the injury by placing Fried on the disabled list now instead of let- ting the issue linger and potentially get worse. Phillips' most recent stint at Gwinnett lasted two days. He ap- peared in Tuesday's loss to the Yan- kees, allowing two runs in 2 1/3 innings in his major league debut and was sent down the next day.

Braves fail to sign top draft pick

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The top draft picks of the Atlanta Braves, Arizona Diamondbacks and Los Angeles Dodgers failed to sign before Friday’s deadline, giv- ing each of those teams an extra se- lection in the first round of next June’s amateur draft. GEORGIA STATE/SPECIAL Atlanta failed to sign the eighth Former Adairsville and current Georgia State safety DeAndre Applin hits the South Alabama quarterback during a game on Oct. 26, 2017. overall pick, right-hander Carter SEE DRAFT, PAGE 2B Former Tiger looks to cap GSU career in style

BY NICHOLAS SULLIVAN and made 46 tackles from his safety posi- felt as though he settled in pretty well. would in JUCO. The playbook is a lot more [email protected] tion for a defense that allowed more than There were, obviously, going to be some technical. You’ve got to be in the right place Stewart 35 points just twice. differences between the JUCO game and at the right time, or the coaching staff will After spending his first two collegiate Applin started the opener against Ten- those played in the Sun Belt Conference. expose you up top in the booth. scores 29 to seasons at Georgia Military College follow- nessee State, and he was super amped-up in There wasn’t a major physical difference “The game speed, some plays you could ing graduation from Adairsville High in his first D-I game. between the players, Applin said. Mental probably take off in JUCO. … If you jog to 2015, DeAndre Applin finally got the op- “I had first-game jitters,” he said. “I was fortitude became a deciding factor, and Ap- the ball at this level, it’s going to be shown help Storm portunity to play Division-I football last fall. tired the first four plays, probably because plin used his high football IQ to keep up and it’s going to be exposed, immediately. All Applin did was help Georgia State I was going a little bit harder than what I with the faster pace. You really have to work on your endurance, beat Dream put together the best season in the history would regularly do in practice. It was the “The players are just as big, just as fast because the game speed is just a whole lot of the program, which started in 2010 and first game and the adrenaline rush was on, [and] just as strong at this level,” Applin faster and we can’t have anybody lagging THE ASSOCIATED PRESS moved to the FBS level in 2013. people are watching. After my second wind said. “At the Division-I level, I feel like on any type of play.” Breanna Stewart had 29 points, He wasn’t the most important player for kicked in, I settled in.” players are a lot more disciplined, they nine rebounds and three blocks to the Panthers, but Applin played in all 12 After that initial bump in the road, Applin don’t mess up on simple things like they SEE APPLIN, PAGE 2B help the Seattle Storm beat the At- lanta Dream 95-86 on Friday night for their fourth straight victory. Sue Bird added 18 points and 10 assists, Alysha Clark scored 14 McDonald, 23, reaches Wimbledon’s 4th round in debut points and Jewell Loyd had 11 for Seattle (14-5). Natasha Howard BY HOWARD FENDRICH “Once I get home and kind of just think and last year’s Wimbledon runner-up, in a ing,” McDonald said. “He just said: ‘Great had 10 points and 10 rebounds. AP Tennis Writer about everything and stuff,” said McDon- second-round match that began Wednes- job. Congrats. Second week.’” After Atlanta (8-9) jumped to a ald, who collected NCAA singles and dou- day, was suspended because of rain, then On Monday, McDonald will face either 9-2 lead, the Storm scored 14 of the Mackenzie McDonald earned post- bles titles in 2016, “I’ll put a little more concluded Thursday. 2016 Wimbledon runner-up Milos Raonic next 15 points and never again match kudos from John McEnroe and emotion in my words.” “I was pretty nervous this morning, wak- or 171st-ranked qualifier Dennis Novak, trailed. Stewart converted a four- something else pretty significant Friday: a The last man to get this far in his initial ing up,” McDonald said. “And even last whose match was suspended because of point play and then hit a jumper to spot in Wimbledon’s round of 16 in his appearance at Wimbledon was Nick Kyr- night, just thinking about the opportunity fading light Friday night. spark a 14-0 run that made it 50-21 tournament debut. gios in 2014. after Cilic went down. I thought I had a They’re in the same quarter of the draw with a minute left in the first half. The 103rd-ranked American, a college It’s been quite a week for the 23-year-old good chance.” as No. 9 seed John Isner, another Ameri- The Dream outscored Seattle 29- star at UCLA not that long ago, played in a McDonald, who is 5-foot-10 and says he’s McDonald’s jitters were calmed by a can. 19 in the third quarter and a 3- Grand Slam tournament’s third round for “learned to love” some of the tour’s less- conversation he had with Wayne Ferreira, “I practiced with him last week, prior to pointer by Tiffany Hayes trimmed the first time and won, beating Guido Pella tall players such as Belgium’s David Goffin a former pro who reached the top 10 in the the tournament, and I told my coach that if their deficit to 72-66 early in the of Argentina 6-4, 6-4, 7-6 (6). and Japan’s Kei Nishikori. rankings in the 1990s and coached McDon- he got in a good spot of the draw, meaning fourth, but Atlanta got no closer. “I’m in disbelief, to be honest. Just pretty McDonald needed a total of nine sets — ald in the juniors. if he didn’t play Roger (Federer) first round Loyd answered with a 3 and then a crazy,” said McDonald, who grew up in including three tiebreakers and a fifth set “He told me just to enjoy it and told me or Rafa (Nadal) or one of these guys, be- pull-up jumper to push the lead California, and now is based at the U.S. that finished 11-9 — to get through the first I have nothing to lose and brought me back cause he’s unseeded, that I would not be back into double figures. Tennis Association’s main training facility two rounds, before having an easier time of down,” McDonald said. surprised at all if he did some damage,” Angel McCoughtry scored 26 in Florida. “I mean, if you told me I’d be in things against the 82nd-ranked Pella. Mc- Another conversation he enjoyed was the Isner said about McDonald. “And he’s points and Hayes added 23 for the the second week of Wimbledon before the Donald, who hit 11 aces, won all 16 of his one at Court 18 right after he beat Pella — doing that right now, because he was hitting Dream. tournament, I wouldn’t believe you.” service games and had more than twice as with McEnroe, who won three titles at the ball very well. I think grass is a surface Seattle shot 51.4 percent from He said this in a bit of a monotone, with many groundstroke winners as Pella, 15-6. Wimbledon and four at the U.S. Open. that suits his game especially well. So I’m the field, including 9 of 20 from 3- both hands stuffed into the pockets of his It was Pella who stunned No. 3 seed “To see him after that match is pretty not surprised that he’s in the round of 16 point range. black shorts. Marin Cilic, the 2014 U.S. Open champion cool. That meant a lot, that he was watch- right now.” The Daily Tribune News Sports www.daily-tribune.com • Saturday, July 7, 2018 2B

RECREATION Jesus Aguilar homers as    CALENDAR Brewers beat Braves 5-4 THE ASSOCIATED PRESS $%"' % ' ! ' %#'  #' The Milwaukee Brewers held off the Atlanta Braves 5-4 on Friday  (" (( TENNIS CAMPS — The City night. The Brewers have won five straight to extend their NL Central of Cartersville Parks and Recre- lead to 2 1/2 games over the second-place Cubs. ation Department’s summer tennis Atlanta rallied for three runs in the seventh off Jacob Barnes. But camps, QuickStart Tennis Tots pro- the Braves’ rally faltered when they failed to score with two on and gram, for ages 3-6 will run July 9- no out after Dan Jennings replaced Barnes, and then left two on with 12 and July 23-26. The camps will one out in the eighth against Jeremy Jeffress. !&"# #$!" # !"# ! !"# ! !"# ! !"# ! run from 9 to 11 a.m. each day with Corey Knebel worked around a one-out single in the ninth for his a fee of $80 per session. The Junior '!#$' #!&"# #$!" # #!&"# #$!" # #!&"# #$!" # #!&"# #$!" # 11th save. Atlanta has lost a season-high four straight. Jesus Aguilar’s !%'  !#$'!%' "$'#% '&$ !#$'#% '&$ !#$'#% '&$ Beginner/Intermediate Camps for towering 433-foot homer to straightway center off Mike Foltynewicz ages 7-14 will have sessions the   "   "   ""  "" (6-5) capped a five-run rally that put Milwaukee ahead for good. !&"# #$!" #     same days as the Tots program with Foltynewicz, who had allowed five runs over his previous nine starts, '!#$' !"# ! '"# ! '"# ! '"# ! an additional session taking place allowed that many in the span of six hitters in the third inning. !%'&$ #!&"#!#$' #!&"#"$' #!&"#!#$' #!&"#"$' July 16-19. All sessions will take "  !%'!&  !%'!&  "!& " !%'!& " place from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. daily at a cost of $130 per session.

GYMNASTICS CAMPS — Draft Dates for the Cartersville Parks and Today’s weather National weather FROM PAGE 1B Recreation Department summer Forecast for Saturday, July 7, 2018 Forecast for Saturday, July 7, 2018 Stewart. Also failing to sign were shortstop Matt McLain, selected Bands separate high temperature zones for the day. gymnastics camps have been an- 25th by the Diamondbacks, and right-hander J.T. Ginn, taken 30th TENN. N.C. nounced. The preschool summer SeattleS t Rome 75/577 / 7 Billings by the Dodgers. 990/620620/0/62 83/69 MMinneapolispo camps for children ages 3-6 will 84/694/699 Ginn said he will attend Mississippi State, which also recruited NNYNew w Yorkrk run July 16-20. The cost is $80 for 79/6779/659/6/6 Athens SSan FranciscoFr cco H Stewart. McLain plans to attend UCLA. L CCoChChicago 81/68 775/59/ 9 DDetroittro t each session. The camps run from 82/61/1/6 81/621/62/6/ Atlanta S.C. DDenverv r The Braves will get an extra pick following the originally slated 83/70 99/698/65/ WWashingtonh gto 8181/661/66/ 66 9 a.m. to noon each day. The devel- KKaKansass CtCitCityy eighth selection next year, Arizona after the 25th, and the Dodgers Loso AAngelesg 85/61/6/6611 AAtlantat opmental summer camps for chil- 1101/73010 /7/73 83/70303//7707 after the 30th. Augusta dren 7 and older will run July 9-13 86/70 El PPasoso Just four first-round picks failed to sign in the six previous years ALA. Macon 9/799292/74/744 87/69 and July 23-27 from 9 a.m. to noon HHoustonoot of the current draft system of bonus pools: right-hander Mark Appel 9099/90/74/74/74 each day. Columbus MMiami (taken eighth by Pittsburgh in 2012), right-hander Phillip Bickford 87/72 89/77 (10th by Toronto in 2013), left-hander Brady Aiken (first by Houston Savannah Fronts CHEER CAMPS — A pair of 90/72 in 2014) and right-hander Kyle Funkhouser (35th by the Dodgers Cold Warm Stationary youth cheerleading camps will take Albany Pressure with a compensation selection in 2015 following the loss of Hanley 91/73 H L place July 20-21 at Excel Christian High Low Showers Rain T-storms Flurries Snow Ice Ramirez to Boston). Valdosta Academy. The camp for those en- 89/71 <-10 -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110+ Only one other player among this year’s top 300 picks failed to tering kindergarten through second FLA. NATIONAL SUMMARY: Much of the area from the Midwest to the North- sign, right-hander Gunnar Hoglund, taken 36th by Pittsburgh with east can expect sunshine with low humidity today. Hot and humid conditions grade will take place from 9 a.m. to a competitive balance round A selection. Hoglund said he will attend with showers and heavier thunderstorms are forecast from central Texas to noon each day. The camp for those the southern Atlantic coast. Storms will erupt over the Southwest as showers Mississippi and already had started summer classes. dot western Washington. A tropical storm may blossom near the Carolinas. heading into third grade through sixth grade will be from 1 to 4 p.m. ©2018 AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018 AccuWeather, Inc. Cost for each camp is $50. For more information or to register, call However, during the loss to France in the hat trick from Messi. GERMANY 770-382-9488 or email dgar- World Cup quarterfinals, Uruguay was forced to play With coach Jorge Sampaoli struggling to Germany won its fourth World Cup in [email protected]. without injured striker Edinson Cavani. build a team around Messi, Argentina la- Brazil four years ago. A chance for a fifth FROM PAGE 1B And a bad mistake from goalkeeper Fer- bored during the group stage in Russia, no- was expected in Russia, not least because the BASKETBALL CAMP — In 2010, Uruguay made the semifinals, nando Muslera gifted Antoine Griezmann a tably in its opening 1-1 draw against team hadn’t done much wrong in between. Excel Christian Academy will host losing to the Netherlands 3-2. The team goal. Iceland. Germany’s failure to make the second a coed basketball camp for ages 8- came close again this year, but lost to ARGENTINA A 3-0 loss to Croatia raised the prospect stage for the first time since 1938 is one of 13. The camp will run July 23-27 France 2-0 on Friday in Nizhny Novgorod. Argentina, the World Cup champion in that it wouldn’t even make it out of the the World Cup’s great surprises. After all, from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day. Uruguay came second in South Ameri- 1978 and 1986, has arguably the best player group, but the team scraped through with a Germany has made it to the semifinals in The cost is $165 and lunch will be can qualifying behind Brazil. Its strong all- of his generation in Lionel Messi. But few late winner against Nigeria. each major tournament it has contested provided. For more information or around performances in Russia, particularly gave the team much of a chance of making The reward, though, was tough — France since 2006. to register, contact camp director in the 2-1 victory over Portugal in the round a second straight final. in the round of 16. Kylian Mbappe ex- Losing its opening group match against Shannon Boatfield by phone at of 16, raised hopes that the team could at Qualifying for the tournament in Russia ploited the lack of speed in Argentina’s de- Mexico was seen as a blip. Normal service 770-382-9488 or by email at sboat- least match its performance from 2010. proved to be an ordeal, requiring a final day fense and lead France to a 4-3 victory. would surely resume, it was thought. [email protected].

FLAG FOOTBALL — Regis- tration to play flag football in the to say you’re the first team that did it is word you want to say. We’re really grind- last spring, when I first came in.” Cartersville Parks and Recreation Applin also a big accomplishment. ing hard. After making it back from injury and Department league is currently “It’s a feeling of a lifetime. It’s really “These seniors want to go out with a spending the summer getting stronger and open. The league is split into two FROM PAGE 1B hard to explain. It’s just something you’ve bang like last year’s seniors. That’s most more agile, Applin is looking forward to divisions — the Pee Wee Division Based on the Panthers’ current depth got to be there to witness how it feels. It’s definitely our goal, but I think our goals his final college season. for those 4-5 and the Tyke Division chart, Applin looks set to start this season, really a blessing to make it to a bowl game are a little higher than they were last year. It hasn’t been the straight-line trajectory for those 6-8 — based on age at giving Bartow County a probable starter and actually win the bowl game.” We exceeded the expectations last year a he probably expected when he was a Tiger Sept. 1. Registration is $60 through on both sides of the ball for Georgia State That level of unprecedented success lot. Now, that we see we’re capable of dreaming of playing at the next level, but Aug. 12 and $70 from Aug. 13 until with Cass graduate Lucas Johnson slotted brings higher expectations and increased doing it, hopefully, that makes the drive Applin trusts the process. Now, he’s just all the spaces have been claimed. in at right tackle. confidence — two things that could poten- stronger.” hoping to go out with a bang. There is a non-residence fee for Both are seniors who will look to repeat tially derail the 2018 campaign. Applin’s drive appears to be extremely “It’s indescribable, words can’t describe those living outside the city of the success of the 2017 team. Last year, As great as it is to improve the stature high. Despite missing most of spring prac- it,” Applin said of how he feels looking Cartersville. the Panthers set a program record with of the program, the key, in Applin’s eyes, tices with a broken thumb, he believes that ahead to the fall. “I’m just really excited seven wins, including a first-ever bowl is to not let overconfidence creep into the he’s well ahead of where he was last year. to see what God has planned out for me FOOTBALL — Registration to victory in the AutoNation Cure Bowl in locker room. “The two days I was out there, I felt re- and what I have planned out for myself. I play in the Cartersville Parks and Orlando, Florida. “At the same time, we want to stay hum- ally comfortable,” Applin said. “I felt like just want to see how all this work that’s Recreation Department youth foot- “Winning is always a great experience,” ble,” Applin said of how to approach the I was a lot more advanced than I was the been going on, all the hours of working out ball league is currently open. Reg- Applin said of the bowl win. “Just to actu- season. “We don’t want to go into the sea- previous year. I made a whole lot more … I’m just ready for it all to pay off for istration is $100 through Aug. 12 ally do it, the first time in program history, son too arrogant or too cocky, whatever plays in those two days than I probably did me and also the team.” and $110 from Aug. 13 until all the spaces have been claimed. There is a non-residence fee for those living outside the city of Cartersville. SPORTSROUNDUP FOOTBALL CHEERLEAD- ING — Registration for cheerlead- ing for the Cartersville Parks and NASCAR Recreation Department 2018 youth football league is currently open. MONSTER ENERGY CUP On the Air Cheerleading is open to those 5-12 SCHEDULE AND STANDINGS Feb. 11 — x-Advance Auto Parts Clash, Daytona Beach, ATP TOUR TENNIS NASCAR years of age, based on age at Sept. Fla. () Feb. 15 — x-Can-Am Duel 1, Daytona Beach, Fla. (Ryan Noon — Wimbledon: Third-round play (ESPN) 7 p.m. — Xfinity Coke Zero Sugar 400 (NBC) 1. Registration is $95 through Aug. Blaney) FIFA WORLD CUP SOCCER NBA SUMMER LEAGUE BASKETBALL 12 and $105 from Aug. 13 until all Feb. 15 — x-Can-Am Duel 2, Daytona Beach, Fla. 10 a.m. — Sweden vs. England (FOX) 3:30 p.m. — San Antonio vs. Indiana (ESPN) the spaces have been claimed. Uni- () Feb. 18 — Daytona 500, Daytona Beach, Fla. (Austin Dil- 2 p.m. — Russia vs. Croatia (FOX) 5:30 p.m. — New York vs. Atlanta (ESPN) form cost is included in the regis- lon) Feb. 25 — Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500, Hampton, Ga. MLB BASEBALL 7:30 p.m. — Phoenix vs. Sacramento (ESPN) tration fee. There is a non-residence () fee for those living outside the city March 4 — Penzoil 400, Las Vegas (Kevin Harvick) 4 p.m. — Atlanta at Milwaukee (FS1) 9:30 p.m. — Chicago vs. Cleveland (ESPN2) March 11 — TicketGuardian 500, Avondale, Ariz. (Kevin 7 p.m. — Miami at Washington (FOX) 11:30 p.m. — Philadelphia vs. Los Angeles (ESPN) of Cartersville. Harvick) March 18 — Auto Club 400, Fontana, Calif. (Martin Truex MLS SOCCER PGA TOUR GOLF Jr.) SOCCER LEAGUE — Trinity March 26 — STP 500, Martinsville, Va. () 7 p.m. — Philadelphia Union vs. Atlanta United (FSSE) 3:30 p.m. — A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier (CBS) April 8 — O'Reilly Auto Parts 500, Fort Worth, Texas (Kyle UMC has opened registration Busch) 11 p.m. — Los Angeles Sc vs. Orlando City SC (FS1) through Aug. 3 for its fall soccer April 15 — Food City 500, Bristol, Tenn. () April 21 — Toyota Owners 400, Richmond, Va. (Kyle league, which will run from Aug. Busch) 7. , 560 July 28 — U.S. Cellular 250, Newton, March 2 — Stratosphere 200, Las Vegas (Kyle Busch) April 29 — GEICO 500, Talladega, Ala. () 8. , 537 Aug. 4 — Zippo 200, Watkins Glen, N.Y. March 26 — Alpha Energy Solutions 250, Martinsville, 13-Sept. 29. The league is available May 6 — AAA 400 Drive for Autism, Dover, Del. (Kevin 9. , 524 Aug. 11 — Mid-Ohio Challenge, Lexington, Ohio Va. () to those from ages 4-11, based on Harvick) 10. , 495 Aug. 17 — , Bristol, Tenn. May 4 — JEGS 200, Dover, Del. () May 12 — KC Masterpiece 400, Kansas City, Kan. (Kevin 11. , 493 Aug. 25 — Johnsonville 180, Elkhart Lake, Wis. May 11 — 37 Kind Days 250, Kansas City, Kan. (Noah age at Sept. 1. Registration is $60, Harvick) 12. , 442 Sept. 1 — Sport Clips Haircuts VFW 200, Darlington, Gragson) plus an additional $30 for a uni- May 19 — x-NASCAR All-Star Open, Concord, N.C. (AJ 13. Chase Elliott, 435 S.C. May 18 — Education Lottery 200, Con- Allmendinger) 14. , 408 Sept. 8 — Lilly Diabetes 250, Indianapolis cord, N.C. (Johnny Sauter) form if needed. Uniforms from a May 19 — x-NASCAR All-Star Race, Concord, N.C. 15. , 390 Sept. 15 — DC Solar 300, Las Vegas June 8 — PPG 400, Fort Worth, Texas (Johnny Sauter) (Kevin Harvick) 16. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., 367 Sept. 21 — , Richmond, Va. June 16 — M&M's 200, Newton, Iowa () previous season are acceptable. May 27 — Coca-Cola 600, Concord, N.C. (Kyle Busch) 17. , 362 Sept. 29 — Drive for the Cure 300, Concord, N.C. June 23 — Eaton 200, Madison, Ill. (Justin Haley) Parent coaches are also needed. June 3 — Pocono 400, Lond Pond, Pa. (Martin Truex Jr.) 18. Daniel Suarez, 316 Oct. 6 — Series Race at Dover, Dover, Del. June 29 — Overton's 225, Joliet, Ill. (Brett Moffitt) June 10 — FireKeepers Casino 400, Brooklyn, Mich. 19. , 314 Oct. 20 — , Kansas City, Kan. July 12 — Buckle Up in Your Truck 200, Sparta, Ky. Registration is available online or (Clint Bowyer) 20. Jamie McMurray, 309 Nov. 3 — O'Reilly Auto Parts 300, Fort Worth, Texas July 18 — , Rossburg, Ohio at the main church office Monday- June 24 — Toyota/Save Mart 350, Sonoma, Calif. (Martin Nov. 10 — Series Race at ISM Raceway, Avondale, Ala. July 28 — Gander Outdoors 150, Long Pond, Pa. Truex Jr.) Nov. 17 — Ford EcoBoost 300, Homestead, Fla. Aug. 11 — Corrigan Oil 200, Brooklyn, Mich. Thursday between 9 a.m.-4 p.m. July 1 — Overton's 400, Joliet, Ill. (Kyle Larson) XFINITY CUP SCHEDULE AND STANDINGS Aug. 15 — UNOH 200, Bristol, Tenn. For more information, contact Ann July 7 — Coke Zero 400, Daytona Beach, Fla. Feb. 17 — POWERSHARES QQQ 300, Daytona Beach, Points Leaders Aug. 26 — Silverado 250, Bowmanville, Ontario July 14 — Quaker State 400, Sparta, Ky. Fla. () Through June 30 Sept. 14 — , Las Vegas Wood at 770-387-0200. July 22 — New Hampshire 301, Loudon Feb. 24 — Rinnai 500, Hampton, Ga. (Kevin Harvick) 1. , 541 Oct. 13 — Series Race at Talladega, Talladega, Ala. July 29 — Gander Outdoors 400, Long Pond, Pa. March 3 — Boyd Gaming 300, Las Vegas (Kyle Larson) 2. , 538 Oct. 27 — Texas Roadhouse 200, Martinsville, Tenn. Aug. 5 — GoBowling at The Glen, Watkins Glen, N.Y. March 10 — DC Solar 200, Avondale, Ariz. (Brad Ke- 3. , 537 Nov. 2 — JAG Metals 350, Fort Worth, Texas VOLLEYBALL CAMP — The Aug. 12 — Consumers Energy 400, Brooklyn, Mich. selowski) 4. Christopher Bell, 513 Nov. 9 — 150, Avondale, Ariz. Aug. 18 — Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race, Bristol, March 17 — Roseanne 300, Fontana, Calif. (Joey 5. Tyler Reddick, 491 Nov. 16 — Ford Ecoboost 200, Homestead, Fla. 2018 Canes Camp for volleyball Tenn. Logano) 6. , 488 players entering third through Sept. 2 — Bojangles' , Darlington, S.C. April 7 — My Bariatric Solutions 300, Fort Worth, Texas 7. Brandon Jones, 463 Points Leaders Sept. 9 — Big Machine Brickyard 400, Indianapolis (Ryan Blaney) 8. , 430 Through June 29 eighth grades will take place July Sept. 16 — South Point 400, Las Vegas April 14 — Fitzgerald Glider Kits 300, Bristol, Tenn. (Ryan 9. , 400 1. Johnny Sauter, 508 Sept. 22 — , Richmond, Va. Preece) 10. , 372 2. , 443 30-31 at Storm Center on the cam- Sept. 30 — Bank of America 500, Concord, N.C. April 20 — ToyotaCare 250, Richmond, Va. (Christopher 11. , 359 3. Brett Moffitt, 423 pus of Cartersville High School. Oct. 7 — Cup Series Race at Dover, Dover, Del. Bell) 12. , 315 4. , 368 Oct. 14 — 1000Bulbs.com 500, Talladega, Ala. April 28 — Sparks Energy 300, Talladega, Ala. (Spencer 13. , 282 5. , 367 Both days will run from 9 a.m.-3 Oct. 21 — Hollywood Casino 400, Kansas City, Kan. Gallagher) 14. , 277 6. Justin Haley, 362 p.m. The cost is $115 per player. Oct. 28 — First Data 500, Martinsville, Va. May 5 — OneMain Financial 200, Dover, Del. (Justin All- 15. John Hunter Nemechek, 276 7. , 356 Nov. 4 — AAA Texas 500, Fort Worth gaier) 16. , 274 8. Ben Rhodes, 349 There will be a 30-minute lunch Nov. 11 — Can-Am 500, Avondale, Ariz. May 26 — , Concord, N.C. (Brad Keselowski) 17. , 266 9. , 307 break starting at noon, and partici- Nov. 18 — Ford Ecoboost 400, Homestead, Fla. June 2 — Pocono Green 250, Long Pond, Pa. (Kyle 18. , 241 10. , 290 x-non-points race Busch) 19. , 231 11. , 270 pants are encouraged to bring a June 9 — LTi Printing 250, Brooklyn, Mich. (Austin Dil- 20. , 224 12. , 258 Points Leaders lon) 13. , 225 sack lunch and water. From 9 a.m. Through July 1 June 17 — American Ethanol 250, Newton, Iowa (Justin 14. , 218 to noon the camp will focus on 1. Kyle Busch, 736 Allgaier) CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES 15. , 204 2. Kevin Harvick, 674 June 30 — Overton's 300, Joliet, Ill. (Kyle Larson) 16. Justin Fontaine, 193 honing individual skills, while the 3. Joey Logano, 617 July 6 — Coca-Cola Firecracker 250, Daytona Beach, SCHEDULE AND STANDINGS 17. Jordan Anderson, 190 afternoon portion from 12:30-3 4. Martin Truex Jr., 594 Fla. Feb. 16 — NextEra Energy Resources 250, Daytona 18. , 172 5. Brad Keselowski, 592 July 13 — Alsco 300, Sparta, Ky. Beach, Fla. (Johnny Sauter) 19. , 146 p.m. will look to improve team 6. Clint Bowyer, 579 July 21 — Lakes Region 200, Loudon, N.H. Feb. 24 — Active Pest Control 200, Hampton Ga. (Brett Moffitt) 20. , 135 skills. The Daily Tribune News Classifieds www.daily-tribune.com • Saturday, July 7, 2018 3B

ANNOUNCEMENTS 350 General 600 Autos For Sale 3KRHQL[$LU)%2DW&DUWHUVYLOOH%DUWRZ&R$LU SRUWVHHNVIXOOWLPH/LQHPDQ0XVWEHDWOHDVW DQGSRVVHVVDYDOLGGULYHU¶VOLFHQVHZLWKDJRRG GULYLQJUHFRUGKDYHJRRGFXVWRPHUVHUYLFHVNLOOVD 011 Lost & Found JRRGZRUNHWKLFDQGEHDYDLODEOHWRZRUNIOH[LEOH KRXUGD\VLQFOXGLQJPRUQLQJVHYHQLQJVZHHN HQGVDQGKROLGD\V-REUHVSRQVLELOLWLHVLQFOXGHIXHO LOST YOUR DOG OR CAT? LQJDQGSDUNLQJDLUSODQHVPDQDJLQJUDPSVSDFH &+5<6/(537&58,6(5*7%OXHOHDWKHU Stop by the Bartow County Animal Shelter at WRZLQJDLUSODQHVDVQHHGHGPD\PRQLWRUUDGLRDQG VXQURRIORZPLOHVGRZQWDYW

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600 Autos For Sale 610 Vans/Utility Vehicles 610 Vans/Utility Vehicles 630 Trucks For Sale

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630 Trucks For Sale

'RGJHUDP*UD\GRZQWDYW WITH A PICTURE AND $ &DOOXVWRGD\ 0LWVXELVKL*DODQW:KLWHGRZQWDYW 0$='$%*ROG03*2QO\N )RUG(VFDSH6LOYHUGRZQWDYW&DOOXV &DOOXVWRGD\ PLOHV:2:GRZQWDYW6WRSE\WRGD\:H TEXT AS LOW AS WRGD\ 2 weeks 39 KDYHORFDWLRQVWREHWWHUVHUYH\RX

WITH A PICTURE 640 Autos/Trucks Wanted $ &$6+)25$1<&$56 758&.6 3 months AND TEXT AS LOW AS 47 &$// H

These Specials Are &+(952/(775$,/%/$=(5*UH\UG5RZ  7R\RWD&DPU\%OXHGRZQWDYW&DOO /HDWKHU$08676((2QO\WDYW H XVWRGD\ &$6+63(&,$/+LJKZD\:KLWH*D    Available To Dealers )RUG(9DQZKLWHPLOHV9 6HUYLFHELQV FDJH*RRGWLUHV&DVKRQO\ Email photo & ad text to: 1RWH[WV&DOO [email protected]   or come by 251 S. Tennessee St.    &+(9<6,/9(5$'2%ODFNGUQHZWLUHVFROG $&3HUIHFWIRUZRUNRUSOHDVXUH'RZQ  WDYW(YHU\ERG\5LGHV&20(6((8672'$< Cartersville, GA  Call 770-382-4545 "#"&# '#% $ ! " #

For More Information or To Place Your Ad &+5<6/(537&58,6(5*7%OXHOHDWKHU VXQURRIORZPLOHVGRZQWDYW

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