Thursday, July 28, 2016 - B

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The Paducah Sun | Thursday, July 28, 2016 | paducahsun.com
Section
B
Tilghman sees airborne
offense as prime focus
Staff report
After a season in 2015 when
the Paducah Tilghman Blue
Tornado ran the ball 392 times
compared to just 155 passes,
changes are in store for the
coming year.
With a change from the
Wing-T offense to a pro style
under first-year head coach
Kurt Barber, Tilghman will
have the opportunity to show
off the arm of its new quarterback, Dalton Ferrell.
It was also a welcomed
change for the receivers at
Tilghman, including Hunter
Watkins and Howard Smith,
who expect larger roles in the
Tilghman offense in 2016.
“This is so much better because it will give us more opportunity to get the ball in our
hands, so that was real good to
hear,” said Watkins, a receiver
who had just one catch a year
ago but a player Barber projects to be a top receiver this
year.
Smith caught three touchdowns last year and had nine
catches total, but is also due
for an uptick with an offense
that is sure to be more receiver
friendly.
“We have athletes and with
the Wing-T it was all centered
around one receiver, and now
we have four wideouts who
can all get out and get the
ball,” Smith said.
The brains behind the new
system is Elliot Treece, who
will be in his first year as Tilghman’s coordinator.
Barber said the new offense
has been like a breath of fresh
air for his players, as it’ll be an
exciting brand of football.
“The kids are excited about
the opportunities the offense
presents, so there is enthusiasm about getting the ball in
the air into the hands of players we know can make plays,
and running it when we want
to run it,” Barber said.
But a more pass-featured offense must feature a quarterback who can get the job done,
and Barber feels he has that
guy in Ferrell.
The second-string quarterback last year, Ferrell saw
some action after a midseason injury to Jesse Dunigan
and he made the most of it
by completing 58 percent of
his passes for 302 yards with
three touchdowns.
Ferrell is taking a large, posRYAN HERMENS | The Sun
itive stretch in the right direc- With Dalton Ferrell at quarterback and a new offensive
tion every day, Barber said.
scheme, Paducah Tilghman will likely throw the ball more in
2016. Tilghman will be running a pro-style offense under new
Please see TILGHMAN | 2B head coach Kurt Barber.
Olympics
showcases
Brazil’s
contrasts
Razorbacks
win 18u title
with area’s
top players
Staff report
said Wednesday on the eve of
the PGA Championship. “So
at the end of the day, if you
stay healthy, you still can give
yourself a lot of chances here
and there. That’s my goal, to
keep giving myself chances
and hopefully take as many as
possible in the coming years.”
Stenson’s victory has shifted
the focus to Garcia, perhaps
more than any other player
in the final major of the year,
particularly in a season of
The Evansville Razorbacks, an 18u baseball team
filled with some of west Kentucky’s best talent, won the
Pastime National Championship last weekend in Indianapolis.
The tournament featured
144 teams from around the
country, with the Razorbacks winning all four games
of pool play before winning
five games in a 30-hour span
during elimination play Saturday and Sunday to take
home the national title.
McCracken County senior
ace Caleb Reinhardt pitched
six innings in the title game,
which Evansville won 11-1
over the Indiana Bulls.
The Razorbacks, thanks
in part to the pitching of
Reinhardt (4-0 with a 3.33
ERA in seven appearances
this summer), allowed more
than two runs only twice in
the nine-game tournament.
Four west Kentucky players on the Razorbacks batted at least .350 during the
summer, including Caldwell
County graduate and Murray State freshman Luke
Brown, who batted at a .524
clip during last weekend’s
Please see GARCIA | 2B
Please see ROSTER | 2B
BY STEPHEN WADE
Associated Press
RIO DE JANEIRO — Rafaela Silva hoped to get an
Olympic gold medal four
years ago in London. Instead
she got racial abuse.
Disqualified in her Olympic judo match and eliminated from the chance of winning a medal, Brazil’s Silva
thought she’d find refuge in
sympathetic text messages
from fans in her country.
Instead, here’s what she
found: “The place for a monkey is in a cage. You are not
an Olympian.”
“The messages said I was
an embarrassment to my
family, so they really hurt,”
said Silva, who won gold in
the world championships
a year after London, and is
among the favorites for gold
when the Rio de Janeiro
Olympics open in just over
a week.
Silva is one of many athletes familiar with the sting
of racism in a country where
most of the poor are brown
and black. Though a nation
of rich diversity — 51 percent identify as non-white,
brown, black or mixed race
— racism still runs deep.
On the one hand, Brazil
is thoroughly mixed. On the
other, there is searing racial
inequality in a place often
portrayed as a “racial democracy,” or “race-blind.” The
myth of a race-blind country
has been losing force, but
there’s still a yawning gap
between black and white.
“Behind the apparent
peaceful melting pot there’s
a lot of tension and not much
open talk about race,” Marta
Arretche, a political scientist
who studies inequality at the
University of Sao Paulo, told
The Associated Press.
Diversity and inequality
will line up side-by-side at
the Olympics, just as they
did at Brazil’s World Cup
two years ago. Visitors will
see the country’s racial politics play out in ways that are
subtle, yet clear.
Magazine covers seldom
feature a black face. The
very popular soap operas
feature mostly white actors,
Please see BRAZIL | 2B
Associated Press
Henrik Stenson watches his tee shot on the 18th hole during Wednesday’s practice round
for the PGA Championship at Baltusrol Golf Club in Springfield, N.J. First-round play begins
today. Stenson, 40, won his first major championship at the British Open two weeks ago.
Garcia gets reminder that time
still on his side to win a major
BY DOUG FERGUSON
Associated Press
SPRINGFIELD, N.J. — Henrik Stenson took his silver
claret jug and headed straight
for Switzerland to play in a
charity event organized by
Sergio Garcia. It turned out to
be the perfect occasion to deliver an important message to
the host.
Stenson was 40 when he
won the British Open at Royal
Troon. He had paid his dues
with a trio of close calls in the
majors. It was his time.
Garcia has paid even more.
It started when he was a
19-year-old trying to chase
down Tiger Woods at Medinah. He played in the final
group with Woods at Bethpage
Black and Royal Liverpool. He
twice was beaten in the final
holes by Padraig Harrington at
Carnoustie and Oakland Hills.
“Henrik, when I saw him
Monday at my event in Switzerland, he said: ‘You know,
I’m 40, you’re 36. You still
have probably 16 more before you get there,’” Garcia
Cardinals snap saves streak for Mets’ Familia
BY MIKE FITZPATRICK
Associated Press
NEW YORK — Yadier Molina
and pinch-hitter Kolten Wong
each stroked an RBI double in
the ninth inning, and the St.
Louis Cardinals ended Jeurys
Familia’s streak of 52 straight
saves in rallying past the New
York Mets 5-4 on Wednesday
night.
Yoenis Cespedes hit a goahead homer off Adam Wainwright to cap a three-run
comeback in the seventh that
gave the Mets a 4-3 lead. But
then Familia, who hadn’t
blown a regular-season save
opportunity since July 30 last
year, finally faltered.
Jedd Gyorko drew a one-out
walk in the ninth and was replaced by pinch-runner Randal Grichuk. Molina hit the
next pitch to deep center field,
and Grichuk scored standing
up to tie it.
Molina was thrown out
at third by Familia (2-2) on
pinch-hitter Jeremy Hazelbaker’s comebacker, but Hazelbaker stole second and
scored when Wong lined a
double just inside the left-field
line.
Familia’s franchise-record
saves streak was the third-longest in major league history
behind Tom Gordon (54) and
Eric Gagne (84).
Jonathan Broxton (3-2)
tossed a scoreless eighth and
Seung Hwan Oh got three
quick outs for his sixth save.
Including a split of Tuesday’s doubleheader, St. Louis
took two of three from the
Mets in a matchup of NL wildcard contenders. It was only
the second time in the past
Associated Press
decade that the Cardinals have St. Louis Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina and relief pitcher
won a road series against the Seung Hwan Oh react after Oh closed out the Cardinals’
come-from-behind 5-4 victory over the New York Mets on
Please see SAVES | 2B Wednesday in New York.
Sports
2B • Thursday, July 28, 2016 • The Paducah Sun
Sports Briefs
Newcomb in contention at Kentucky Open
The second round of the Kentucky Open commenced Wednesday at the University of Louisville
Golf Club in Simpsonville with several locals making the projected 7-over-par cut.
Benton native and golf professional Patrick
Newcomb remains well in the hunt for another
summer title after carding a 1-under 71. He’s
7-under (137) for the tournament and tied for second with Fort Mitchell native Cody Martin.
Shelbyville’s Daniel Iceman III leads at 136.
Nick Newcomb, Patrick’s brother and Murray
resident, also fired a 1-under 71 and was tied for
35th with a two-day 146.
Paducahans Josh Rhodes (72, T35th) and Nick
Thompson (76, T35th) also will remain on the
course for Day 3, while Kevil native and McCracken County senior Chase Korte will look to rebound
after shooting a 79 to fall into a tie for 45th.
Paducah native Nathan Wolfe was sitting at
1-over after nine holes before weather and darkness shortened the tournament.
Round 2 play was suspended due to inclement weather from 4:43-7:45 p.m. Then, play was
suspended due to darkness at 8:45 p.m. Round
2 will continue at 8 a.m. today before Round 3
begins.
— Staff report
Exaggerator joins Haskell field
The Nyquist-Exaggerator rivalry is set to resume, this time in the $1 million Haskell Invitational at Monmouth Park.
Officials at the Jersey Shore track said Exaggerator’s connections confirmed that the
Preakness winner will be entered in the race on
Thursday.
“What a pleasant surprise,” Monmouth Park
President Bob Kulina said Wednesday.
The unexpected development provides the
Haskell with a compelling matchup: Kentucky
Derby winner Nyquist against Preakness winner
Exaggerator.
“Any time two Triple Crown race winners go
against each other, it’s huge,” Kulina said. “And
usually a great race.”
It won’t top last year’s breathtaking moment
with Triple Crown winner American Pharoah, but
it’s a more than adequate follow-up. A year ago,
American Pharoah blew away the field in the
Haskell in his first race back after becoming the
first Triple Crown winner since 1978.
Nyquist had defeated Exaggerator four times
before his first career loss in the Preakness.
Nyquist did not run in the Belmont; Exaggerator
finished 11th.
— Associated Press
Predators sign Jarnkrok to extension
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The Nashville Predators have signed defenseman Matt Carle to a
one-year contract hours after signing forward
Calle Jarnkrok to a six-year, $12 million contract
through 2021-22.
Under the deals announced by the Predators
on Wednesday, Carle will earn $700,000 this
season while Jarnkrok will earn $1.7 million this
season rising to $2.2 million in both 2019-20
and 2020-2021 before dipping to $2 million in
the final year.
The 31-year-old Carle is a veteran of 724 NHL
games with 282 points while playing with San
Jose, Tampa Bay and Philadelphia where he
played for now Nashville coach Peter Laviolette.
The 6-foot, 197-pound defenseman spent the
past four seasons with Tampa Bay, which included a berth in the 2015 Stanley Cup finals.
The 24-year-old Jarnkrok played in 71 games
last season and scored a career-high 16 goals
with 30 points. The native of Gavle, Sweden,
was second on the team with four game-winning
goals last season.
Jarnkrok was traded to Nashville on March 5,
2014, and was a restricted free agent.
— Associated Press
Mavs lift Nowitzki’s deal to $50 million
DALLAS — Dirk Nowitzki has signed his contract with Dallas, and a person with knowledge
of the deal says it’s worth more than the original
agreement.
The 38-year-old star who has spent all 18 of
his seasons with the Mavericks signed a twoyear, $50 million contract on Wednesday — $10
million more than the deal struck before contracts could be signed. The person with knowledge of the contract provided terms to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because
they weren’t released.
After playing for two years on a hometown discount at roughly $8 million per season, Nowitzki
will be the highest-paid Dallas player at $25 million in 2016-17.
Nowitzki has said he would like to play 20 seasons. There is a team option in the second year
of the deal.
— Associated Press
ROSTER
CONTINUED FROM 1B
tournament.
As a team, the Razorbacks hit .407 during the nine games last
weekend — facing six
Division-I pitchers.
Lane
Kennemore
(Mayfield
graduate,
Kentucky
Wesleyan
freshman) batted .371
during the summer,
Keegan Breese (Mc-
Cracken graduate, Murray State freshman)
batted .350 and Trent
Shelby (McCracken senior, Kentucky Wesleyan commit) batted .359.
The team also featured Isaac Lineberry
(McCracken
graduate,
Spalding freshman), who
caught several games for
the Razorbacks, with McCracken junior Rook Ellington also playing a role.
paducahsun.com
USA Cycling at a crossroads
BY DAVE SKRETTA
Associated Press
Kristin
Armstrong
could win her third
straight Olympic gold
medal in Rio. The women’s pursuit team is favored to capture gold.
Several Americans could
land on the BMX podium.
Will anybody in the
U.S. notice? Or even
care?
That is perhaps the
biggest challenge facing
USA Cycling as the Rio
Games arrive. One of the
nation’s most popular
participatory sports is
dealing with aging athletes, declining membership and a vast disconnect between amateur
riders and their elite
counterparts.
It has left USA Cycling
officials to wonder just
where they stand in the
sport’s structure.
“There is no doubt we
need to adapt as an organization,” agreed Derek
Bouchard-Hall,
who
took over as the governing body’s CEO last year
after a successful career
in private business.
To usher the organization into the future,
Bouchard-Hall
spent
several months examining USA Cycling’s shortcomings, then came up
Associated Press
Sarah Hammer of the United States competes in
the women’s omnium flying lap event at the 2012
Summer Olympics in London. One of the nation’s
most popular participatory sports is dealing with
aging athletes, declining membership and a vast
disconnect between amateur athletes and their
elite counterparts.
with a three-prong approach to shake things
up.
First, he is championing a renewed emphasis on amateur cycling,
rather than funneling so
much of USA Cycling’s
resources to elite athletes. The idea is that
by fostering growth at
the grassroots level, the
sport in the U.S. will become more robust in the
long-term.
Second, he wants to
broaden the coverage
of USA Cycling to encompass not just racers
but the everyday cyclist,
those who ride in mass
events such as RAGBRAI
— the bike ride across
Iowa taking place this
week — and Gran Fondos, the pseudo-races
that have become all the
rage.
Finally, he wants an
organization that is
more open, transparent
and willing to adjust to
feedback, a customerfocused approach that
stems from his previous
job with bike retailer
Wiggle.
That’s not to say USA
Cycling is abandoning
elite athletes. Instead,
Bouchard-Hall believes
the amateur cyclist and
elite cyclist go hand-inhand, the growth of one
with Watkins saying the
knowledge of the coaching staff has been a big
help for them.
“Our coaches are very
experienced and what
they bring to the table
almost balances our lack
of experience,” he said.
“It outweighs a lot of our
inexperience.”
Tilghman, which finished the 2015 season at
8-4, is hoping to continue
to catch on to the details
as the season progresses,
according to Smith.
“Once we focus on the
little things we can do
some big things on the
field.”
Notes
helping the other.
“People say, ‘Where do
you put your efforts, the
amateurs or the elite?’
The answer is both,”
he explained. “This is a
balance that all national governing bodies in
America face.”
The Rio Olympics may
offer an opportunity to
kick-start his plan.
Sure, broadcaster NBC
will focus on more glamorous sports such as gymnastics and swimming,
the traditional Olympic
sports that push the public needle. But whether
they are mere highlights
of Armstrong in the time
trial or Connor Fields on
the BMX track, or online
streams of cycling events
throughout the Olympic
program, the visibility
of the Summer Games is
priceless.
That is crucial for USA
Cycling, which has always struggled to raise
money.
Part of its support
comes from the U.S.
Olympic
Committee,
and is based on success
at world championships
and other major competitions. But according to
recent USOC tax returns,
sports such as shooting,
rowing and sailing often
receive more money than
cycling.
TILGHMAN
CONTINUED FROM 1B
“He has a real strong
arm, is accurate and
is doing a better job of
reading the defenses,”
he said. “He can be as
good as he wants to be,
he has all the tools. And
not even that, he’s lucky.
He has a lot of weapons
around him and we have
the right offense to use
those weapons.
Watkins, Smith and
Ferrell will all be thrust
into starring roles for
a Tilghman squad who
graduated a heavy senior class. They know
it’s their time to step up,
There are two upperclassmen among the skill
players for Tilghman,
and Barber said they are
already two of their best
athletes.
Jordan
Harmon,
brother of University of
Kentucky senior JD Harmon, has stepped into a
receiver role in his first
season on the team.
“He wasn’t a part of the
program last year and after I saw him, I couldn’t
believe he wasn’t playing football,” said Barber,
who added that some
people say Jordan is more
athletic than his brother.
Also new to the team
is JJ Reed, one of the top
basketball players in the
First Region. Reed will
play as a defensive back/
wide receiver, adding his
tall frame to Tilghman’s
core of athletes.
“He’s enjoying the
weight room and seeing
how the structure and
physicality of playing
football can help him in
basketball,” Barber said.
Creeping up to the
three-week mark until
the season begins, Barber said there are still
plenty of position battles
— and he hopes it stays
that way.
ago. White fans bought
the pricey tickets, and
the black and brown
were priced out.
Rio de Janeiro Mayor
Eduardo Paes promised
during the World Cup
that the Olympics would
be different, pledging to
supply 1.2 million free
tickets to schools and the
poor. In the end, he came
up with 47,000 Olympics
tickets — 4 percent of his
promise.
The cheapest Olympic
tickets cost 40 Brazilian reals ($12), though
the average price is 100200 ($30-$60). The top
ticket for the opening
ceremony is listed on the
official website at 4,600
($1,400). By comparison, the governmentmandated monthly minimum wage is 880 reals
(about $270).
Blacks earn about half
of what whites do, and
among the wealthier the
gap jumps to 2.5 times
less.
It’s difficult to define
who’s black. Most Brazilians self-identify, which
means that two people of
similar skin colors may
identify differently — one
as white and one as black.
BRAZIL
CONTINUED FROM 1B
although black actors are
now getting roles other
than drivers, cooks or
doormen. Upscale restaurants and suburban
shopping malls are almost all white. Waiters in top restaurants
are seldom black. And
the only black faces at
the airport are the hired
help, or black women
caring for white children
in the airline lounges.
All shades sunbathe
on most Rio’s beaches,
though Ipanema and
Leblon tend to be more
white. Vendors selling
trinkets and drinks on
all beaches are usually
black.
It will also be apparent
in the crowds at venues,
an issue that began with
the World Cup two years
GARCIA
CONTINUED FROM 1B
first-time major champions — Danny Willet
at the Masters, Dustin
Johnson at the U.S.
Open and Stenson.
“It just shows that
you’ve got to keep on
trying,” Stenson said.
“It was nice to see
Dustin win at the U.S.
Open. He’s had some
close calls and some
heartbreaking calls in
the last four years, five
years. You’ve got to
keep putting yourself in
position. And the more
times you do that, that’s
what gives you chances
for it to happen.”
Lee Westwood is
another player on the
dubious list of “best
to have never won a
major.” The 43-yearold Englishman had a
chance at the U.S. Open,
British Open and Masters in successive years
and he is among two
players — Luke Donald
is the other — to reach
No. 1 in the world without ever having won a
major. Rickie Fowler at
No. 7 in the world and
Garcia (No. 10) are the
only players in the top
10 who have not won a
major.
Garcia is different,
because he has been at
a high level for so long.
Just not high enough.
The Spaniard is no
longer as temperamental, at times petulant,
as he was earlier in his
career when he accomplished so much at early age that he expected
so much more. He
complained about the
breaks Woods got from
the weather in the 2002
U.S. Open.
His worst moment
was in the 2007 British
Open at Carnoustie,
when he suggested
he was playing “more
than the field” because
he couldn’t catch a
break.
SAVES
CONTINUED FROM 1B
Mets.
Logan Verrett pitched
seven efficient innings
and
slumping
Neil
Walker went 3 for 3 with
a base on balls for the
third-place Mets, who
have alternated wins
and losses in their last
13 games. They dropped
5 1/2 games behind NL
East-leading Washington.
New York did manage
to keep Gyorko and the
rest of St. Louis’ hitters
in the ballpark after the
Cardinals had homered
in 17 consecutive games
— their longest streak
since a club-record run
of 19 games in 2006.
Gyorko went deep in
both ends of Tuesday’s
doubleheader,
giving
him seven homers in
nine games.
Matt Holliday hit a
two-run double off Verrett with two outs in the
third, and Matt Adams
followed with an RBI
double that made it 3-1.
Wainwright, who entered 3-0 with a 0.93 ERA
in July, nursed that lead
until the seventh — repeatedly pitching out of
trouble. He nearly did so
again after striking out
Curtis Granderson and
Asdrubal Cabrera with
runners at the corners.
But
then
Travis
d’Arnaud scored on a
wild pitch and Cespedes
socked a two-run homer
off the facing of the second deck in left-center
on the 117th and final
pitch from the 34-yearold Wainwright.
Sports
paducahsun.com
The Paducah Sun • Thursday, July 28, 2016 • 3B
Coming up
THE FINE PRINT
Baseball
Today
vs. Miami
at Miami
Time: 6:10 p.m.
TV: Comcast-95
Today
vs. Chicago White
Sox
at Chicago Cubs
Time: 7:05 p.m.
TV: MLB
Today
vs. Texas
at Texas
Time: 7:05 p.m.
TV: MLB
On Television
TODAY
CANADIAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE
8 p.m. — Winnipeg at Edmonton (ESPN2)
GOLF
3:30 a.m. — Ricoh Women’s British Open, first round (GOLF)
8 — Ricoh Women’s British Open, first round (GOLF)
Noon — PGA Tour: PGA Championship, first round (TNT)
4 p.m. — European PGA Tour: Kings Cup, first round, sameday tape (GOLF)
HORSE RACING
3 p.m. — Saratoga Live: John Morrissey Stakes (FS2)
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
Noon — Colorado at N.Y. Mets OR Arizona at Milwaukee (1
p.m.) (MLB)
7 p.m. — Kansas City at Texas OR Chicago White Sox at Chicago Cubs (MLB)
SOCCER
6:30 p.m. — MLS All-Star Game: MLS All-Stars vs. Arsenal
(ESPN)
TENNIS
Noon — U.S. Open Series: ATP World Tour, Rogers Cup, round
of 16 (ESPN2)
5:30 p.m. — U.S. Open Series: ATP World Tour, Rogers Cup,
round of 16 (ESPN2)
FRIDAY
AUTO RACING
7 a.m. — Formula One: German Grand Prix, practice (NBCSN)
10 — NASCAR: Sprint Cup Series, Pennsylvania 400, practice
(NBCSN)
11:30 — NASCAR: Camping World Truck Series, Pocono
Mountains 150, practice (FS1)
1 p.m. — IndyCar: Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio, practice
(NBCSN)
2 — NASCAR: Camping World Truck Series, Pocono Mountains
150, final practice (FS1)
3 — NASCAR: Sprint Cup Series, Pennsylvania 400, qualifying
(NBCSN)
3:30 — ARCA Series: ModSpace 150 (FS1)
4:30 — NASCAR: Xfinity Series, U.S. Cellular 250, practice,
same-day tape (NBCSN)
6 — NASCAR: Xfinity Series, U.S. Cellular 250, final practice
(NBCSN)
BASKETBALL
6 p.m. — Exhibition: Women’s national teams, United States
vs. Canada (NBA)
9 — Exhibition: Men’s national teams, United States vs. Venezuela (NBA)
BOXING
8 p.m. — Premier Champions: Adonis Stevenson vs. Thomas
Williams, for Stevenson’s WBC light heavyweight title (Spike)
CANADIAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE
9 p.m. — British Columbia at Calgary (ESPN2)
DRAG RACING
6:30 p.m. — NHRA: Toyota Sonoma Nationals, qualifying,
same-day tape (FS1)
GOLF
3:30 a.m. — Ricoh Women’s British Open, second round
(GOLF)
8 — Ricoh Women’s British Open, second round (GOLF)
Noon — PGA Tour: PGA Championship, second round (TNT)
4 — European PGA Tour: Kings Cup, second round, same-day
tape (GOLF)
HORSE RACING
3 p.m. — Saratoga Live, Curlin Stakes (FS2)
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
1 p.m. — Seattle at Chicago Cubs (MLB)
7 — Kansas City at Texas OR Pittsburgh at Milwaukee (MLB)
10 — Washington at San Francisco OR Arizona at L.A. Dodgers (games joined in progress) (MLB)
TENNIS
11:30 a.m. — U.S. Open Series: ATP World Tour, Rogers Cup,
quarterfinals (ESPN2)
5:30 p.m. — U.S. Open Series: ATP World Tour, Rogers Cup,
quarterfinals (ESPN2)
TRACK & FIELD
9 p.m. — Tracktown Summer Series Championship (ESPN)
Local schedule
TODAY
OHIO VALLEY BASEBALL — Semifinals: Hoptown at Owensboro, Madisonville vs. Dubois County (site TBA).
GOLF — Kentucky Open Championship at University of Louisville Golf Club in Simpsonville.
FRIDAY
OHIO VALLEY BASEBALL — Semifinals (if necessary): Owensboro at Hoptown, Dubois County at Madisonville.
GOLF — Murray High School Basketball 4-Person Benefit at
Murray Country Club.
Sports memos
HOLE-IN-ONE: Andy Bryan of Paducah scored his first career
hole-in-one Tuesday at Paxton Park. Bryan used a 4-hybrid to ace
the 165 yard No. 8 hole.
GOLF: The Country Club of Paducah Amateur Tournament will
be played Aug. 13 and 14. Entry fee is $150 per player. (Cart,
range balls and practice round included.) Payments should be
made payable to Country Club of Paducah. No entry will be
taken without payment. No phone entries will be accepted. No
entry will be accepted or refunded after Aug. 5. Entry forms
available at ccofpaducah.com.
Washington
Miami
New York
Philadelphia
Atlanta
W
58
54
53
46
34
Washington
Miami
New York
Philadelphia
Atlanta
W
59
55
53
46
35
Chicago
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Milwaukee
Cincinnati
W
60
54
52
43
40
Baltimore
Toronto
Boston
New York
Tampa Bay
W
58
57
55
52
39
Cleveland
Detroit
Chicago
Kansas City
Minnesota
W
57
54
50
49
37
Texas
Houston
Seattle
Oakland
Los Angeles
W
58
55
51
47
45
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
L Pct
GB WCGB
42 .580
—
—
46 .540
4
—
46 .535
4½
½
56 .451
13
9
66 .340
24
20
Central Division
L Pct
GB WCGB
42 .584
—
—
46 .545
4
—
47 .530
5½
1½
57 .447
14
10
66 .347
24
20
Central Division
L Pct
GB WCGB
40 .600
—
—
47 .535
6½
1
48 .520
8
2½
56 .434 16½ 11
61 .396 20½ 15
———
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
L Pct
GB WCGB
42 .580
—
—
45 .559
2
—
44 .556
2½
—
49 .515
6½
4
61 .390
19 16½
Central Division
L Pct
GB WCGB
42 .576
—
—
48 .529
4½
2½
51 .495
8
6
51 .490
8½
6½
63 .370 20½ 18½
West Division
L Pct
GB WCGB
44 .569
—
—
46 .545
2½
1
49 .510
6
4½
55 .461
11
9½
56 .446 12½ 11
NL scores, schedule
Tuesday’s Late Games
L.A. Dodgers 3, Tampa Bay 2
San Francisco 9, Cincinnati 7
Wednesday’s Games
Miami 11, Philadelphia 1
Washington 4, Cleveland 1
San Diego 8, Toronto 4
Tampa Bay 3, L.A. Dodgers 1
Cincinnati 2, San Francisco 1
Colorado 3, Baltimore 1
Pittsburgh 10, Seattle 1
St. Louis 5, N.Y. Mets 4
Chicago Cubs 8, Chicago White Sox 1
Arizona 8, Milwaukee 1
Atlanta 9, Minnesota 7
Today’s Games
Colorado (Anderson 3-3) at N.Y. Mets
(deGrom 6-5), 12:10 p.m.
Arizona (Ray 5-9) at Milwaukee (Davies
7-4), 1:10 p.m.
Philadelphia (Nola 5-9) at Atlanta (Wisler
4-10), 6:10 p.m.
St. Louis (Wacha 5-7) at Miami (Fernandez 12-4), 6:10 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Sale 14-3) at Chicago Cubs (Lackey 7-7), 7:05 p.m.
Washington (Roark 9-6) at San Francisco (Cueto 13-2), 9:15 p.m.
Friday’s Games
Seattle at Chicago Cubs, 1:20 p.m.
Colorado at N.Y. Mets, 6:10 p.m.
St. Louis at Miami, 6:10 p.m.
Philadelphia at Atlanta, 6:35 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m.
Arizona at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m.
Washington at San Francisco, 9:15 p.m.
Cincinnati at San Diego, 9:40 p.m.
Cardinals 5, Mets 4
St. Louis
AB R H BI BB SOAvg.
Garcia 2b-3b
4 0 0 0 1 0 .307
Diaz ss
5 1 2 0 0 1 .312
Piscotty rf
3 0 0 0 1 3 .290
Holliday lf
4 1 1 2 0 1 .235
Oh p
0 0 0 0 0 0 --Adams 1b
4 0 1 1 0 1 .257
Gyorko 3b
3 0 0 0 1 1 .254
1-Grichuk pr-cf
0 1 0 0 0 0 .221
Molina c
4 0 2 1 0 0 .267
Pham cf
2 0 0 0 1 1 .236
c-Hazelbaker ph-lf 1 1 0 0 0 0 .243
Wainwright p
2 1 0 0 1 1 .150
Kiekhefer p
0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Broxton p
0 0 0 0 0 0 --d-Wong ph-2b
1 0 1 1 0 0 .234
Totals
33 5 7 5 5 9
New York
Granderson rf
Lagares cf
Cabrera ss
Cespedes lf
Loney 1b
Walker 2b
Flores 3b
Conforto cf
Reed p
b-Johnson ph
Familia p
d’Arnaud c
AB
4
1
5
4
4
3
4
3
0
1
0
4
R
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
H
0
0
1
2
2
3
1
0
0
0
0
2
BI BB SOAvg.
0 0 1 .238
0 0 1 .248
0 0 2 .260
2 0 0 .297
0 0 0 .284
1 1 0 .244
0 0 0 .263
0 0 1 .227
0 0 0 --0 0 0 .294
0 0 0 --0 0 1 .246
L10
4-6
6-4
5-5
3-7
3-7
Str
L-2
W-1
W-1
L-1
W-1
HomeAway
31-20 27-22
26-2228-24
27-2126-25
23-2823-28
14-3620-30
L10
4-6
6-4
5-5
3-7
4-6
Str
W-1
W-2
L-1
L-2
W-2
HomeAway
31-2028-22
27-22 28-24
27-2226-25
23-2823-29
14-3621-30
L10
5-5
7-3
6-4
4-6
7-3
Str
W-1
W-1
W-1
L-1
W-1
Home Away
31-1629-24
25-3029-17
29-2323-25
26-25 17-31
24-2816-33
L10
5-5
6-4
4-6
7-3
5-5
Str
L-2
L-1
L-3
L-1
W-1
Home Away
37-16 21-26
30-23 27-22
34-25 21-19
29-2223-27
19-3020-31
a-walked for Hammel in the 7th. b-flied
out for Rondon in the 8th. c-struck out
for Shuck in the 9th.
LOB—Chicago 5, Chicago 5. 2B—Frazier (10), Zobrist (18). HR—Ranaudo (1),
off Hammel; Bryant (26), off Ranaudo;
Baez (11), off Ranaudo; Russell (12), off
Turner. RBIs_Ranaudo (1), Bryant (66),
Zobrist (50), Russell 4 (60), Baez 2 (37).
SB—Anderson (4).
Runners left in scoring position—Chicago 2 (Cabrera, Saladino); Chicago 2
(Montero 2). RISP—Chicago 0 for 3; Chicago 2 for 4.
Runners moved up—Navarro, Zobrist.
GIDP—Frazier.
DP—Chicago 1 (Bryant, Baez, Rizzo).
Chic Sox IP H R ER BBSO NP ERA
Ranaudo L, 6.2 2 3 3 4 3 107 4.05
Duke
0 0 0 0 1 0 6 2.70
Fulmer
0.1 2 4 4 1 0 2117.18
Turner
1 2 1 1 0 1 1814.04
Chic Cubs IP H R ERBBSO NP ERA
Hammel W, 7 5 1 1 2 7 103 3.23
Rondon H, 1 0 0 0 0 0 7 1.90
Chapman 1 0 0 0 0 2 15 0.00
Duke pitched to 1 batter in the 7th.
Fulmer pitched to 4 batters in the 8th.
Inherited runners-scored—Fulmer 1-0,
Turner 3-3. HBP—Fulmer (Bryant).
T—2:51. A—41,166 (41,072).
AL scores, schedule
Tuesday’s Late Game
Oakland 6, Texas 3
Wednesday’s Games
Washington 4, Cleveland 1
San Diego 8, Toronto 4
Detroit 4, Boston 3
Tampa Bay 3, L.A. Dodgers 1
Colorado 3, Baltimore 1
L10
Str Home Away
Pittsburgh 10, Seattle 1
4-6
L-2 30-1728-27
Chicago Cubs 8, Chicago White Sox 1
6-4
W-1 32-2123-25
Oakland 6, Texas 4
6-4
L-1 25-2326-26
Atlanta 9, Minnesota 7
7-3
W-2 24-2923-26
Houston 4, N.Y. Yankees 1
6-4
L-1 22-2623-30
Kansas City 7, L.A. Angels 5
Today’s Games
Verrett p
1 0 0 0 0 0 .059
Baltimore (Jimenez 5-9) at Minnesota
a-De Aza ph-rf
2 1 1 0 0 0 .193
(Gibson 3-6), 6:10 p.m.
Totals
36 4 12 3 1 6
Chicago White Sox (Sale 14-3) at Chicago Cubs (Lackey 7-7), 7:05 p.m.
St. Louis
003 000 002 — 5 7 0
Kansas City (Ventura 6-8) at Texas
New York
010 000 300 — 4 12 0 (Hamels 11-2), 7:05 p.m.
a- singled for Verret t in the 7th.
Boston (Price 9-7) at L.A. Angels (Weavb-grounded out for Reed in the 8th. c-out er 8-8), 9:05 p.m.
on fielder’s choice for Pham in the 9th.
Friday’s Games
d-doubled for Broxton in the 9th.
Seattle at Chicago Cubs, 1:20 p.m.
1-ran for Gyorko in the 9th.
Baltimore at Toronto, 6:07 p.m.
LOB—St. Louis 6, New York 7. 2B—Diaz
Houston at Detroit, 6:10 p.m.
(24), Holliday (18), Adams (15), Molina
N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m.
(19), Wong (5), Loney (10). HR—Cespedes
Oakland at Cleveland, 6:10 p.m.
(22), off Wainwright. RBIs—Holliday 2 (58),
Kansas City at Texas, 7:05 p.m.
Adams (42), Molina (30), Wong (11), CesChicago White Sox at Minnesota, 7:10
pedes 2 (58), Walker (41). SB—Hazelbaker
Boston at L.A. Angels, 9:05 p.m.
(5), De Aza (3). CS—Pham (2). S—Verrett.
OVL playoffs
Runners left in scoring position—St. Lou(x-if necessary)
is 3 (Diaz, Holliday, Gyorko); New York 4
Tuesday’s Games
(Cabrera, Conforto 2, d’Arnaud). RISP—St.
Madisonville 12, Muhlenberg 8
Louis 3 for 9; New York 2 for 14.
Owensboro 8, Fulton 7
Runners moved up—Granderson, Flores
Wednesday’s Games
2, Johnson. GIDP—d’Arnaud.
Owensboro at Hoptown
DP—St. Louis 1 (Gyorko, Garcia, Adams).
Dubois County at Madisonville PPD rain
St. Louis
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Today’s Games
Wainwright 6.2 11 4 4 1 4 117 4.16
Hoptown at Owensboro
Kiekhefer 0.1 0 0 0 0 0 2 5.11
Madisonville at Dubois County
Broxton W, 1 1 0 0 0 1 14 3.79
Friday’s Games
Oh S, 6-7
1 0 0 0 0 1 13 1.72
x-Hoptown at Owensboro
New York IP H R ERBBSO NP ERA
x-Madisonville at Dubois County
Verrett
7 5 3 3 3 7 88 4.12
Reed H, 24 1 0 0 0 0 1 16 1.88
Familia L, 2-2 1 2 2 2 2 1 26 2.79
IBB—off Familia (Garcia). WP—Wainwright.
T—3:07. A—37,851 (41,922).
PGA tee times
L10
4-6
6-4
5-5
3-7
4-6
Str
L-1
W-3
L-1
W-1
L-3
Home Away
27-17 30-25
26-1928-29
28-2422-27
32-19 17-32
20-31 17-32
Golf
Cubs 8, White Sox 1
Chicago
Eaton rf
Anderson ss
Cabrera lf
Abreu 1b
Frazier 3b
Shuck cf
c-Garcia ph
Navarro c
Saladino 2b
Ranaudo p
Duke p
Fulmer p
Turner p
Totals
AB
4
4
3
4
4
2
1
3
3
3
0
0
0
31
R
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
H
0
1
0
1
2
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
5
BI BB SOAvg.
0 0 1 .275
0 0 0 .272
0 1 1 .299
0 0 2 .276
0 0 0 .215
0 1 0 .233
0 0 1 .238
0 0 1 .200
0 0 2 .259
1 0 1 .333
0 0 0 --0 0 0 --0 0 0 --1 2 9
Chicago
Fowler cf
Chapman p
Bryant 3b
Rizzo 1b
Zobrist lf
Montero c
Russell ss
Heyward rf
Baez 2b
Hammel p
a-La Stella ph
Rondon p
b-Szczur ph-cf
Totals
Chicago Sox
Chicago Cubs
AB R H BI BB SOAvg.
4 0 0 0 1 2 .282
0 0 0 0 0 0 --3 2 1 1 0 0 .283
3 1 1 0 1 1 .287
4 1 1 1 0 0 .268
2 1 0 0 2 0 .198
4 1 1 4 0 0 .248
3 1 1 0 1 0 .229
4 1 1 2 0 0 .287
2 0 0 0 0 1 .239
0 0 0 0 1 0 .298
0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
1 0 0 0 0 0 .290
30 8 6 8 6 4
000 010 000 — 1 5 0
000 001 25x — 8 6 0
At Baltusrol Golf Club; Springfield, N.J.
Yardage: 7,428; Par: 70
Thursday-Friday
First hole-10th hole
6 a.m.-11:15 a.m. — Mark Brown, USA;
Patton Kizzire, USA, Bradley Dredge,
Wales.
6:10 a.m.-11:25 a.m. — Tommy Sharp,
USA; Jon Curran, USA; K.J. Choi, South
Korea.
6:20 a.m.-11:35 a.m. — Josh Speight,
USA; Kristoffer Broberg, Sweden; Jason
Kokrak, USA.
6:30 a.m.-11:45 a.m. — Daniel Berger,
USA; Darren Clarke, Northern Ireland; David Lingmerth, Sweden.
6:40 a.m.-11:55 a.m. — Aaron Baddely,
Australia; Kevin Kisner, USA; Emiliano Grillo, Argentina.
6:50 a.m.-12:05 p.m. — Vijay Singh, Fiji;
John Daly, USA; Padraig Harrington, Ireland.
7 a.m.-12:15 p.m. — Victor Dubuisson,
France; Marcus Fraser, Australia; James
Hahn, USA.
7:10 a.m.-12:25 p.m. — Soren Kjeldsen,
Denmark; Scott Hend, Australia; Billy Hurley III, USA.
7:20 a.m.-12:35 p.m. — Charley Hoffman, USA; Matt Jones, Australia; Rikard
Karlberg, Sweden.
7:30 a.m.-12:45 p.m. — Robert Streb,
USA; Vaughn Taylor, USA; Kevin Na, USA.
7:40 a.m.-12:55 p.m. — Roberto Castro,
USA; Jonas Blixt, Sweden; Gregory Bourdy,
France.
7:50 a.m.-1:05 p.m. — Omar Uresti, USA;
Greg Chalmers, Australia; Ross Fisher, England.
8 a.m.-1:15 p.m. — David Muttitt, USA;
Smylie Kaufman, USA; Zac Blair, USA.
11:15 a.m.-6 a.m. — Colt Knost, USA;
Joe Summerhays, USA; Yuta Ikeda, Japan.
11:25 a.m.-6:10 a.m. — Ryan Palmer,
USA; Rob Labritz, USA; Gary Woodland,
USA.
11:35 a.m.-6:20 a.m. — Scott Piercy,
USA; Alex Noren, Sweden; Andrew Johnston, USA.
11:45 a.m.-6:30 a.m. — Rocco Mediate,
USA; Rich Berberian Jr., USAs; Shaun Micheel,USA.
11:55 a.m.-6:40 a.m. — Anirban Lahiri,
India; Tony Finau, USA; Matthew Fitzpatrick, England.
12:05 p.m.-6:50 a.m. — Luke Donald,
England; Matt Kuchar, USA; Danny Lee,
New Zealand.
12:15 p.m.-7 a.m. — Francesco Molinari,
Italy; Shane Lowry, Ireland; Jim Furyk, USA.
12:25 p.m.-7:10 a.m. — Sergio Garcia,
Spain; Jordan Spieth, USA; Bubba Watson,
USA.
12:35 p.m.-7:20 a.m. — Justin Rose, England; Patrick Reed, USA; Charl Schwartzel, South Africa.
12:45 p.m.-7:30 a.m. — Danny Willett,
England; Dustin Johnson, USA; Henrik
Stenson, Sweden.
12:55 p.m.-7:40 a.m. — Graeme McDowell, Northern Ireland; Webb Simpson, USA;
Louis Oosthuizen, South Africa.
1:05 p.m.-7:50 a.m. — Ben Polland, USA;
Ryan Moore, USA; Kyle Reifers, USA.
1:15 p.m.-8 a.m. — Mitch Lowe, USA;
Younghan Song, South Korea; Kevin Streelman, USA.
Thursday-Friday
10th hole-First hole
6 a.m.-11:15 a.m. — Chris Kirk, USA;
Wyatt Worthington, USA; Freddie Jacobson, Sweden.
6:10 a.m.-11:25ap.m. — Brian Gaffney,
USA; Jeunghun Wang, South Korea; Jason
Bohn, USA.
6:20 a.m.-11:35 a.m. — J.B. Holmes,
USA; Brian Stuard, USA; Hideki Matsuyama, Japan.
6:30 a.m.-11:45 a.m. — Matt Dobyns,
USA; Tyrrell Hatton, England; Harris English, USA.
6:40 a.m.-11:55 a.m. — Ernie Els, South
Africa; Rickie Fowler, USA; Zach Johnson,
USA.
6:50 a.m.-12:05 p.m. — Jimmy Walker,
USA; Chris Wood, England; Branden Grace,
South Africa.
7 a.m.-12:15 p.m. — Rafa Cabrera-Bello,
Spain; Justin Thomas, USA; Paul Casey,
England.
7:10 a.m.-12:25 p.m. — Brandt Snedeker, USA; Brooks Koepka, USA; Lee Westwood, England.
7:20 a.m.-12:35 p.m. — Keegan Bradley,
USA; Adam Scott, Australia; Jamie Donaldson, Wales.
7:30 a.m.-12:45 p.m. — Phil Mickelson,
USA; Rory McIlroy, Northern Ireland; Jason
Day, Australia.
7:40 a.m.-12:55 p.m. — Bill Haas, USA;
Andy Sullivan, England; Jamie Lovemark,
USA.
7:50 a.m.-1:05 p.m. — Rod Perry, USA;
George Coetzee, South Africa; Hideto Tanihara, Japan.
8 a.m.-1:15 p.m. — Nicolas Colsaerts,
Belgium; Ryan Helminen, USA; Jhonattan
Vegas, Venezuela.
11:15 a.m.-6 a.m. — Michael Block, USA;
John Senden, Australia; Harold Varner III,
USA.
11:25 a.m.-6:10 a.m. — Johan Kok, USA;
Troy Merritt, USA; Kevin Chappell, USA.
11:35 a.m.-6:20 a.m. — Thorbjorn
Olesen, Denmark; Fabian Gomez, Argentina; Russell Henley, USA.
11:45 a.m.-6:30 a.m. — David Toms,
USA; Rich Beem, USA; Steve Stricker, USA.
11:55 a.m.-6:40 a.m. — James Morrison, England; Brandon Stone, South Africa;
Billy Horschel, USA.
12:05 p.m.-6:50 a.m. — Jason Dufner,
USA; Y.E. Yang, South Korea; Martin Kaymer, Germany.
12:15 p.m.-7 a.m. — Brendan Steele,USA; Bernd Wiesberger, Australia, Byeong
Hun An, South Korea.
12:25 p.m.-7:10 a.m. — Marc Leishman,
Australia; Russell Knox, Scotland; Kiradech Aphibarnrat, Thailand.
12:35 p.m.-7:20 a.m. — Thongchai
Jaidee, Thailand; Jim Herman, USA; Thomas Pieters, Belgium.
12:45 p.m.-7:30 a.m. — Soomin Lee,
South Korea; Joost Luiten, The Netherlands; William McGirt, USA.
12:55 p.m.-7:40 a.m. — K.T. Kim, South
Korea; Brad Lardon, USA; Peter Malnati,
USA.
1:05 p.m.-7:50 a.m. — Daniel Summerhays, USA; Rich Schuller, USA; Cameron
Tringale, USA.
1:15 p.m.-8 a.m. — Bryce Molder, USA;
Brad Ott, USA; Si Woo Kim, South Korea.
Bears open camp with renewed hope
BY ANDREW
SELIGMAN
Associated Press
BOURBONNAIS, Ill. —
The Chicago Bears rebuilt their defense.
They gave their offense
a different look, too.
More than anything,
they insisted they put
themselves in a position
to make a jump in the
standings.
Considering they finished last in the NFC
North last season, there’s
plenty of room for that.
“I feel really good
where we’re at right now
as a team and really good
where our staff is at, and
excited to get started,”
general manager Ryan
Pace said.
The Bears showed up
Wednesday for their second training camp under
Pace and coach John Fox
with a renewed hope after making strides last
season even if it didn’t
necessarily show up in
the record.
They finished 6-10
after winning just five
games the previous season. And if history is an
indication, they can expect to improve in Year 2
under Fox.
The Carolina Panthers
went from seven wins in
2002 to 11 with a trip to
the Super Bowl the following season. The Denver Broncos went from
eight wins in 2011 to 13
the following season.
While Fox was quick to
point out the Bears did not
bring in an all-time great
such as Peyton Manning,
he could see some parallels between his current
and past situations. More
than the moves that were
made, there’s the comfort
and familiarity that comes
in Year 2.
“It’s like when I was a
kid and we’d go on a trip
and it seemed a whole
lot longer on the way
there than it did coming
home,” Fox said.
“And the reason is that
you’ve seen it before, you’ve
been there before. So I
think that’s it’s just kind of
human development.”
The Bears signed Danny Trevathan from Super
Bowl champion Denver
and added Jerrell Freeman from Indianapolis
to fill needs at inside linebacker. They traded up
to draft Georgia outside
linebacker Leonard Floyd
with the ninth pick, hoping his athleticism will
give them a pass-rush
threat who can also drop
back into coverage.
Manfred: More rule changes needed to improve pace of play
BY STEVEN WINE
Associated Press
MIAMI — MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred
says more rule changes
are needed to improve
the pace of play, and one
proposal under consideration is a limitation on
relief pitching changes in
an inning or a game.
The majors shaved
several minutes off the
average game time last
season, but games have
been slightly longer in
2016.
“We’ve slipped back
a little bit this year, and
pace of play is one of
those issues where we’re
going to continually need
to evaluate the rules we
have,” Manfred said.
“And we’re going to
need to continually work
with our players to stay
focused on the issue.”
Manfred has said
he’s in favor of a limitation on relief pitchers
but didn’t lobby for it
Wednesday.
“We look at all aspects
of the game all the time,”
he said. “I don’t want to
put particular emphasis
on that one.”
Manfred spoke at the
Phillies’ game at Marlins
Park, where he helped
unveil the logo for the
2017 All-Star Game. It
will be played next July
11, with the Marlins
hosting the game in their
25th season.
“Miami is going to be
a great venue,” Manfred
said. “We had a wonderful experience in San Diego, and I know Miami is
going to top that.”
The game in San Diego
two weeks ago included
a record-breaking effort
by the Marlins’ Giancarlo
Stanton to win the Home
Run Derby.
“It was a truly awesome
performance,”
Manfred said. “I was actually there for BP, and
for those who didn’t get
there early, they missed
a good part of the show.”
Manfred also praised
the Marlins’ Ichiro Suzuki, who began the day
three hits shy of 3,000.
“For Ichiro to be able
to have 3,000 hits in major league baseball after
the fantastic and long
career he had in Japan
is just a tremendous, historic accomplishment,”
Manfred said.
4B • Thursday, July 28, 2016 • The Paducah Sun
paducahsun.com
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The Paducah Sun | Thursday, July 28, 2016 | paducahsun.com
BY KAYLAN
THOMPSON
kthompson@
paducahsun.com
Paducah will turn into
a small-scale Hollywood
next Friday as about
eight local teams envision, write, cast, video
and edit a film, pitting
their creations against
each other in a friendly
competition.
The catch? They’ll
only have two days and
two nights to pull it off.
It’s a sleepless, chaotic
weekend known as the
48 Hour Film Project, a
timed filmmaking competition that has been
coming to Paducah each
August since 2009.
“Movies inspire me
to think about what is
possible to do in storytelling, so that’s why it’s
fun to see can you put
something together that
makes sense in just two
days,” said Clay Howerton of Paducah, a returning participant, digital editor and a leader
for the local team Real
Productions.
“These are all homemade, close to zerobudget
productions
made by friends, family members, colleagues,
associates who get together and, without any
concept ahead of time
of what they’re going
to be asked to do, will
write, act and edit a fiveminute film,” he added.
“As Mark Twain said, it
takes longer to write a
shorter book, so that’s
why this gets so interesting.”
On Friday evening,
teams will draw one
of about 30 different
genres out of a hat at
Today
Ladies Night: 5 p.m.,
Casa Mexicana, 4793
Village Square
Drive.
Night Moves
Dance Club
Line Dancing
and Couple
Classes: 6 to 9
p.m., American
Legion, 425
Legion Drive,
$4, 270-442-3186.
Karaoke Nights: 8
p.m., Fat Moe’s Bar &
Grill, 909 Broadway.
Geeks Who Drink Trivia: 8 p.m., Dry Ground
Brewing, 8 p.m., 3121
Broadway, 270-2012096.
Beginning Knitting
for Kids Ages 13-16:
10 a.m. to 12 p.m., Itty
Bitty Knitty Shop, 1920
Kentucky Ave., $35,
270-709-3270.
Open House with
Timothy Wells: 5 to 7
p.m., A.I.R. Studio, 621
Madison St., 734-2650846.
RIVERfront Concert
with Ryanhood, Luke
Taylor and Aaron Potter:
6 to 8:30 p.m., Downtown Paducah Riverfront, 270-444-8508.
Paducah Symphony
Orchestra Annual Party:
5:30 p.m., 1857 Hotel,
210 Kentucky Ave.,
$10, 270-444-0065.
Friday
Ms. Dahn Piano and
Vocals: 6 p.m., Ristorante di Fratelli, 211
Broadway.
Paducah Writers
Maiden Alley Cinema.
Categories include action, comedy, fantasy,
musical, horror and
western, among others.
They’ll also be assigned
a character, prop and
a spoken line, all to be
incorporated somehow
into the film.
The teams will then be
sent off into the night,
and the timer will start.
“It may seem obvious,
but time is your biggest enemy,” said Cory
Greene, a producer who
has taken part in the
event nearly every year
since it began. “To me
personally, the project
is an exercise first and
foremost. It throws you
in a situation where you
and your team have to be
creative in an extremely
fast paced way. As challenging as it is, it’s also
fun. There are varying
levels of competitiveness between the teams,
but fun has always been
a high priority for myself.”
They’ll return Sunday
night by 7:30 to turn in
their final products. A
week later, the public
is invited to screen the
films on the big screen.
Screenings are slated
for 7 p.m. Aug. 12, 4:30
p.m. Aug. 13, and 4:30
and 7 p.m. Aug. 14 at
the cinema’s location
at 112 Maiden Alley in
Paducah. Seating is limited, and tickets can be
purchased by calling
the cinema at 270-4417007.
The teams compete
for multiple awards, determined by a team of
jurors and audience participation, on the last day
of screening. Awards in-
clude Best of City, best
music, best song and
an audience favorite
award, among others.
“The biggest reward is seeing friends,
families, and complete
strangers react to what
your team has produced,” said Greene,
whose films have won
multiple awards over
the years, including
audience
favorite.
“Seeing an audience
react to your team’s
film in the way you intended is an amazing
feeling. The audience
award was the most
fulfilling for me personally because, at the
end of the day, who do
you want to love your
film?”
Interested teams still
have time to take part,
Greene added, with late
registration stretching
all the way to Aug. 5, the
day the project begins.
Teams can register online at www.48hourfilm.
com/paducah-ky.
“If you have always
wanted to make a movie,
but don’t think you can
do it, talk to the dozens
of people who were just
like you who are about
to make their third or
fourth 48-hour film,” he
said. “It’s a really amazing art form, an all-encompassing media. You
see it, you hear it, it effects you emotionally.
From the dopiest action
flick, to the deeply layered art house film, to
a 5 minute film made
by your cousin for the
project, each individual
is going to bring a bit of
themselves into every
film and take something
different away.”
Group: 8 p.m., Etcetera
Coffeehouse, 320 N.
6th St.
zebo, Broadway and
Second St., 270-4448508.
Pretty Super Smashin’
Summer Meet
& Greet: 10
a.m. to 4 p.m.,
Paducah Main
Street, 300 S.
5th St., 270444-8690.
Harper’s Music
& Food Festival:
noon to 10 p.m.,
Cadiz Historic Downtown, 5748 Hopkinsville Road, Cadiz.
The Tangled Hearts:
8 p.m., JP’s Bar & Grill,
119 Market House
Square, 270-4422041.
Iron Man: 4 p.m.,
Maiden Alley Cinema,
112 Maiden Alley, 270441-7007.
Fridays @ 5: 5 p.m.,
Carson Center terrace,
100 Kentucky Ave.,
270-450-4444.
Be the Match Bone
Marrow Drive: 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m., Lourdes hospital, 1530 Lone Oak
Road, 270-444-2444.
Blood Drive: 12:30
to 5:30 p.m., Heartland Worship Center,
4777 Alben Barkley Drive, 270-5341400.
The Dock Ellis Band:
8 p.m., Maiden Alley
Cinema, 112 Maiden
Alley, 270-441-7007.
Concerts in the Park:
7 p.m., Noble Park Amphitheater, 2801 Park
Ave., 270-444-8508.
Saturday
Adult Jazz & Tap: 10
a.m., Market House
Studio Theatre, 120
Market House Square,
$20/month, 270-4446828.
Beer and Wine Tasting: 4-6 p.m. every
Saturday, Wagner Wine
and Spirits, 2700 New
Holt Road.
Music in the Gazebo:
6 p.m., Downtown Ga-
Ongoing
“On Golden Pond”: 7
p.m. Friday and Saturday at 2 p.m. Sunday,
Purchase Players Community Performing Arts
Center, 302 W. Water
St., Mayfield, $8-12,
270-251-9035.
The Neon Demon:
7 and 9:30 p.m. Saturday, 4 and 7 p.m.
Sunday, Maiden Alley
Cinema, 112 Maiden
Alley, 270-441-7007.
All items for the “Go
Guide” must be emailed
to news@paducahsun.
com no later than 5
p.m. Monday. Go Guide
listings are free, and
include entertainment
and arts events in the
Purchase Area region.
Contributed photo
The team Socially Present work on their film, “Surface to Air,” during last
year’s 48 Hour Film Project in Paducah.
Contributed photo
Samantha Bloom (from left) and Malinda and Sam Neihoff work on the film
“Surface to Air” for their team, Socially Present, during last year’s 48 Hour
Film Project in Paducah. Their film took home multiple awards including best
film, best actress, best cinematography, best directing and five others.
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Television
6B • Thursday, July 28, 2016 • The Paducah Sun
paducahsun.com
THURSDAY DAYTIME - JULY 28
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6:30
7 AM
7:30
8 AM
- Wild Kratts Ready Jet
Å
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# WSIL 3 (5:00) News 3 News This
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Daniel Tiger
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8:30
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10 AM
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Paid Program Tai Chi
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Paid Program Paid Program Matlock The state prosecutor
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46 Little People, Big World
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Anger
Anger
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HGTV 50 Vanilla
DSC 51 Food
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Beachfront Renovation
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Flip or Flop
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J. Meyer
Paid Prog.
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Mob: Chicago
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Morning Drive (N) (Live)
Paid Prog.
58 Mountain Men Å
59 Married
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62 Too Cute! ’ Å
63 Paid Prog.
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TOON 64 Teen
COM 65 Paid Prog.
FOOD 67 Paid Prog.
VH1 99 My Wife
›› “Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus” (2009)
The Middle
SYFY 47 “Ragin’ Cajun Redneck Gators” (2013) Å
FX
49 ›› “Taken 2” (2012, Action) Liam Neeson.
52 Paid Prog.
GOLF 56 Women’s
SPIKE 57 Paint Like
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Reba ’
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Naked Afraid
››› “Troy” (2004) Brad Pitt. Achilles leads Greek forces in the Trojan War. Å
2016 Ricoh Women’s British Open Championship First Round. (N)
Live From PGA
2016 Ricoh Women’s British Open Championship First Round.
Police Video
Police Video
Wildest Police Videos
Cops ’
Cops ’
Cops ’
Cops ’
Cops ’
Cops ’
Mountain Men Å
Mountain Men Å
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Mountain Men Å
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
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Married
King
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Amer. Dad
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Family Guy
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New Girl
New Girl
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King
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Cops ’
Amer. Dad
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Bad Dog! ’ Å
Dogs 101 ’ Å
Animal Cops Houston
Animal Cops Houston
Animal Cops Houston
Pit Bulls and Parolees
Pit Bulls and Parolees
Lone Star Law Å
Planet
Planet
Metropolis Å
Metropolis Å
Metropolis “Rome”
Metropolis “Paris”
Mysteries-Museum
Mysteries-Museum
Mysteries-Museum
Teen
Gumball
Gumball
Gumball
Gumball
Teen
Steven Universe
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
Nightly
The Daily Show
KitchenAid
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
Pioneer
Cupcake Wars
My Wife
Jamie Foxx
Jamie Foxx
Jamie Foxx
Jamie Foxx
Prince
(:35) ››› “The Bourne Ultimatum” (2007) ’
Teen
Teen
Teen
(:17) ›› “Starsky & Hutch” (2004) Ben Stiller.
Cupcake Wars
Prince
Prince
RENO 911!
Cupcake Wars
Powerpuff
Powerpuff
Clarence
Clarence
Teen
Teen
RENO 911!
RENO 911!
Gaffigan
RENO 911!
RENO 911!
RENO 911!
Pioneer
Beat Flay
Beat Flay
Food Network Star
Pioneer
Dating Naked ’
Prince
Barely
Any Given
(:05) ›› “The Mistress of Spices”
Basketball Wives LA ’
Love, Hip Hop
Shaunie’s
PREMIUM CHANNELS
HBO
Open Your
(:25) ››› “Juno” (2007) ’ Å
Lion
SHO
Mission 2
›› “Arctic Tale” (2007) ’ Å
›› “The Alamo” (2004, War) Dennis Quaid. ’ Å
(:20) ››› “Punch-Drunk Love”
(:45) ››› “The Namesake” (2006) Kal Penn, Tabu. ’ Å
“Meet the Hitlers” (2014) ’ Å
››› “Ray” (2004) Jamie Foxx. ’
THURSDAY EVENING - JULY 28
P 3 PM
( WNPT
# WSIL
3:30
Ready Jet
Odd Squad
- Go! ’ (EI)
’ (EI)
The Dr. Oz Show ’ Å
3
The Wendy Williams Show
Q WDKA 4 “Broadway” ’
Jeopardy!
The Insider
& WPSD 5 (N) Å
(N) Å
Jerry Springer (N) ’ Å
7 KBSI 8
WGN-A 9
5 WKMU 10
, KFVS 12
) WQWQ 14
ION
15
4 PM
4:30
Wild Kratts Wild Kratts
Å
Å
The Ellen DeGeneres Show
’Å
Family
Family
Feud ’
Feud ’
Dr. Phil ’ Å
Judge Judy Judge Judy
Å
Å
Blue Bloods “Innocence”
Blue Bloods “A Night on the
’Å
Town” ’ Å
Ready Jet
Odd Squad Wild Kratts Cyberchase
Go! ’ (EI)
’ (EI)
Å
’
Flip My Food Fix It & Fin- Heartland
Access Holish It ’
News Now
lywood
The Bill Cunningham Show How I Met/
How I Met/
’Å
Mother
Mother
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
5 PM
5:30
Martha
Speaks
News 3 News
at 5
Name Game
WordGirl
’ (EI)
ABC World
News
Name Game
Local 6 at
Nightly News
Five (N) ’
Mike &
Modern FamMolly ’
ily ’
Blue Bloods “Black and
Blue” ’ Å
World News Nightly Business
Heartland
CBS Evening
News (N)
News
Mama’s
Mama’s
Family
Family
Blue Bloods ’ Å
6 PM
6:30
PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
7 PM
7:30
8 PM
16 Law & Order: SVU
NICK 18 SpongeBob Loud
E!
19 Kourtney and Kim Take
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Loud
Henry
Crashletes
›› “Garfield: The Movie” (2004)
Question
ESPN 22 Nation
ESPN2 23 NFL Live (N) Å
CNN 24 Jake Tapper
Around
Interruption
SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å
Nation
ESPN FC
Around
USA
MTV
LIFE
25 (:15) Ridiculousness ’
26 Grey’s Anatomy Å
Prince
28 Prince
EWTN 29 World Youth Day 2016
CNBC 31 (2:00) Closing Bell (N)
BET
A&E
TNT
TVL
Kourtney and Kim Take
Henry
Kourtney and Kim Take
Thunder
E! News (N) Å
The Kardashians
The Situation Room (N)
The Situation Room (N)
Erin Burnett OutFront
Ridiculous.
Ridiculous.
Ridiculous.
Ridiculous.
Ridiculous.
My Crazy Ex Å
My Crazy Ex Å
Prince
Prince
Savoring
Vocation
Fast Money (N)
Mad Money (N)
E! News (N) Å
SportsCenter (N) Å
SportsCenter (N) Å
CFL Football Winnipeg Blue Bombers at Edmonton Eskimos. (N) (Live)
Benson ’
Benson ’
America’s Choice 2016
America’s Choice 2016
America’s Choice 2016
America’s Choice 2016
Ridiculous.
Ridiculous.
Ridiculous.
Ridiculous.
World Over Live (N)
Ridiculous.
World Youth Day 2016
Ridiculous.
American Greed
American Greed
Your Vote
American Greed
American Greed
The First 48 (N) Å
To Be Announced
(:03) The First 48 Å
First 48
Castle “Watershed” ’
››› “The Hangover” (2009) Bradley Cooper.
B. Miller
B. Miller
First 48
“Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy”
(:45) ››› “Men in Black” (1997) Tommy Lee Jones. ’
All/Family
All/Family
Benson ’
Benson ’
B. Miller
The O’Reilly Factor (N)
The Kelly File (N)
Hannity (N)
Griffith
Griffith
George
Raymond
Raymond
Griffith
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Griffith
George
Toddlers & Tiaras ’
“Swamp Shark” (2011) Kristy Swanson. Å
Raymond
Toddlers & Tiaras ’
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
B. Miller
Raymond
Toddlers & Tiaras ’
“Ozark Sharks” (2016) Laura Cayouette. Å
›› “The Other Woman” (2014) Cameron Diaz, Leslie Mann.
Naked Afraid
Flip or Flop
Naked and
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Naked and
Lip Sync
Lip Sync
Lip Sync
Lip Sync
Naked Afraid
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Naked Afraid
›› “Terminator Salvation” (2009) Å
2016 Ricoh Women’s British Open Championship
Lip Sync
Lip Sync
Mountain Men (N) ’
Ozzy & Jack’s
Friends ’
Friends
Friends
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Broke Girl
Big Bang
Broke Girl
(:01) North Woods Law
King
Toddlers & Tiaras ’
›› “Date Night” (2010) Tina Fey
Mountain Men Å
Last Alaskans: Remote
King
King
Fat Fabulous
Hunt Intl
Mountain Men Å
Last Alaskans: Remote
King
Hunters
Pawn Stars
Big Bang
The Kelly File
Hunt Intl
Pawn Stars
Broke Girl
Bunker
The O’Reilly Factor
Hunters
Pawn Stars
Seinfeld ’
Kim Poss
Bunker
All/Family
› “Dark Tide” (2012) Halle Berry. Å
Naked and
Lip Sync
Kim Poss
All/Family
Sex &
Live From the PGA Championship
Lip Sync
The 700 Club ’ Å
Sex &
›› “Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows” (2011) Robert Downey Jr.
Live From the PGA Championship (N) (Live)
First 48
CSI: NY ’ Å
Sex &
Pawn Stars
The Last Alaskans ’
Martin ’
World Youth Day 2016 The anniversary of Poland’s Baptism.
Pawn Stars
Gumball
TOON 64 Gumball
COM 65 (:14) RENO 911! Å
Ridiculous.
First 48
Greta Van Susteren
Naked Afraid
The Last Alaskans ’
SportsCenter (N) Å
Baseball Tonight (N)
Ridiculous.
Special Report
52 ›› “Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End” (2007) Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom. Å
European PGA Tour Golf
GOLF 56 Women’s Open Champ
Cops ’
Cops ’
Cops ’
Cops ’
Cops ’
SPIKE 57 Cops ’
62 Lone Star Law Å
63 My.- Monument
Friends ’
American Greed
AMC
TRV
WAGS Å
The First 48 ’ Å
Flip or Flop
AP
Mr. Robot Å
Friends ’
Friends ’
Wendy Williams Show
HGTV 50 Flip or Flop Flip or Flop
DSC 51 Naked and Afraid ’
TBS
Law & Order: SVU
Friends ’
Martin ’
Toddlers & Tiaras ’
58 Pawn Stars
59 Friends ’
Queen of the South (N)
Being “Fantasia”
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
46 Four Weddings Å
“3-Headed Shark Attack” (2015) Danny Trejo.
SYFY 47 (2:00) “Roboshark”
›› “This Is 40” (2012, Romance-Comedy) Paul Rudd, Leslie Mann.
FX
49 Mike
HIST
Homemade
Jam
(:35) The Late Show With
PGA HighStephen Colbert
lights
Discovering Heartland
The Twilight
Life
News (N)
Zone
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
News
TLC
Naked Afraid
Jubilee ’ Å
To Be Announced
Daily Mass - Olam
My Crazy Ex Å
BBC World
News ’
Heartland
News (N)
Carol Burnett
Full House
Full House
11:30
News
Bunker
Flip or Flop
Ridiculous.
11 PM
› “Baggage Claim” (2013) Paula Patton, Derek Luke, Taye Diggs. Å
››› “Jurassic Park” (1993, Adventure) Sam Neill, Laura Dern. ’
Flip or Flop
The Kardashians
10:30
Last of the
Raising Ms. President
Wine
Female political leaders.
(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live
(:37) Night’Å
line (N)
Family Guy The ClevePaid Program
’Å
land Show
(:34) The Tonight Show
Seth Meyers
Starring Jimmy Fallon
2 Broke
2 Broke
Modern FamGirls Å
Girls Å
ily ’
Cops ’ Å
Cops ’ Å
Cops ’ Å
(:02) My Crazy Ex
Bunker
Griffith
Full House
10 PM
BBC World
News ’
News 3 News
at 10
The Simpsons Å
Local 6 at
10:00 (N)
Mike &
Molly ’
Cops ’ Å
(:02) Born This Way
The Middle
Griffith
9:30
I Love You... But I Lied
The Middle
The Five (N)
9 PM
My Crazy Ex (N) Å
Dolores
My Crazy Ex Å
Champs
Anderson Cooper 360
(:45) Ridiculousness ’
All/Family
42 Your World W/ Cavuto
44 Gunsmoke “Luke”
Law & Order: SVU
MLS Soccer All-Star Game: MLS All-Stars vs. Arsenal. (N)
ATP Tennis Rogers Cup, Round of 16. (N) (Live)
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
34 The First 48 ’ Å
35 (12:00) 2016 PGA Championship First Round. (N) (Live) Å
FREE 36 The Middle
FNET 37 All/Family
FNC
Sanjay
8:30
Democratic National Convention The 2016 Democratic National Convention. (N) ’ (Live)
Å
News 3 News Ent. Tonight BattleBots (N) ’ Å
Greatest Hits Fifth Harmony; Democratic National Conat 6
Kelsea Ballerini.
vention (N) Å
Family
Family
The Mentalist A jockey is
The Mentalist A case perEverybody
Everybody
Feud ’
Feud ’
murdered. ’ Å
plexes the CBI team.
Raymond
Raymond
Local 6 at Six Wheel of
Running Wild With Bear
To Be Announced
Democratic National Con(N) ’
Fortune ’
Grylls “Zac Efron” ’
vention (N) Å
Big Bang
Big Bang
Home Free “Flying Solo; Skill Got It” The contestants conNews at 9 on FOX23 (N)
Theory
Theory
tinue building. (N) ’ Å (DVS)
Cops ’ Å
Cops ’ Å
Cops ’ Å
Cops ’ Å
Cops “Odd
Cops ’ Å
Cops ’ Å
Cops ’ Å
Arrests”
PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
Democratic National Convention The 2016 Democratic National Convention. (N) ’ (Live)
Å
Heartland
The Middle Big Bang
(:31) Life in Big Brother (N) ’ (Live) Å Democratic National ConNews (N)
’Å
Theory
Pieces ’
vention (N) Å
M*A*S*H Å Heartland
DC’s Legends of Tomorrow Beauty and the Beast “The Law & Order: Criminal
News (N)
“Progeny” ’
Getaway” (N) ’
Intent “Monster” Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods “Baggage”
Broke Girl
(:02) Lone Star Law (N)
Lip Sync
› “The Final Destination” (2009)
(:03) Mountain Men ’
(:03) Mountain Men ’
Conan (N) Å
Broke Girl
(:03) North Woods Law
(:04) Lone Star Law ’
Conan
My.- Monument
Mysteries-Museum
Mysteries-Museum
Mysteries-Museum
Mysteries-Museum
Mysteries-Museum
Mysteries-Museum
Mysteries-Museum
We Bare
Teen
Teen
Steven
Gumball
King of Hill
Burgers
Cleveland
Amer. Dad
Family Guy
Family Guy
Chicken
Squidbillies
Futurama
Futurama
(:14) Futurama Å
Futurama
(:20) The Comedy Central Roast “Justin Bieber”
Jeff Ross
Jeff Ross-Roast Battle
Daily Show
Nightly
At Midnight
Jeff Ross
Beat Flay
Beat Flay
Beat Flay
Chopped (Part 4 of 5)
Teen
Chopped
Chopped “Beer Here!”
FOOD 67 Food Network Star
›› “How Stella Got Her Groove Back” (1998) Angela Bassett. ’ Å
VH1 99 Shaunie’s
Chopped
Burgers
Chopped
Chopped (Part 4 of 5)
›› “Maid in Manhattan” (2002) Jennifer Lopez. ’
Amer. Dad
Beat Flay
››› “13 Going on 30” (2004) Jennifer Garner.
“Sisterhood-Trav”
PREMIUM CHANNELS
(:45) ›› “Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials” (2015) ’ Å
HBO
Last Week
SHO
(1:30) ››› “Ray” ’
(:15) ›› “Shaft” (2000) Samuel L. Jackson. ’
REAL Sports With Bryant Gumbel
Ray Donovan ’ Å
Roadies ’ Å
Vice
›› “Our Brand Is Crisis” (2015) ’ Å
Real Time
(:35) The Night Of
› “Good Luck Chuck” (2007) Dane Cook. ’
Gigolos ’
Gigolos ’
Roadies ’ Å
9:30 p.m.
No, You’re Wrong
Channel 2
8:00 a.m.
8:30 a.m.
9:00 a.m.
9:30 a.m.
10:00 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
11:00 a.m.
Noon
4:00 p.m.
5:00 p.m.
7:00 p.m.
7:30 p.m.
8:00 p.m.
8:30 p.m.
9:00 p.m.
Your United Way
L.I.F.E. After Lockup
Community Service Spotlight
KY Cancer Program
The Heart of Collaboration
New Pathways
Community Billboard
West KY Stars Basketball
REPLAY
Veteran’s Voice
Backstage Pass
Merryman House
Eye On Arts
For The Love Of Animals:
Butterflies
Master Gardening
River Discovery Center
Channel 11
8:00 a.m.
9:00 a.m.
9:30 a.m.
10:00 a.m.
4:00 p.m.
4:30 p.m.
5:30 p.m.
8:00 p.m.
10:00 p.m.
Any Given
PHRC: Community Coming
Together
Your City at Work: Body
Cameras
City Profile: Brandon Barnhill
City Commission Meeting
REPLAY
Tot School
PHRC: Childwatch
City Commission Meeting
REPLAY
Your City at Work: Distracted
Driving
Your City at Work: Online Safety
Horoscopes
THURSDAY, JULY 28, 2016
ARIES (March 21-April
19): Get back to the people
and things you enjoy most in
life. Express your ideas and
concerns. Solutions can be
found and changes made to
improve your position, looks
and relationships with others.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20): Apply for a new position or express your desire
to help others. Expanding
your interests or knowledge
will increase your chances of
developing a worthwhile partnership with someone you
encounter. Rely on your past
experience and do things dif-
ferently.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
A chance to do something
constructive with someone
you enjoy working with will do
you good. Avoid anyone who
tries to coax you into something that isn’t healthy.
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Get involved in something
you’ve never done before
and it will broaden your
awareness of the possibilities around you. You can’t
achieve anything unless you
take risks.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Refrain from confronting an
emotional situation until you
get the proper insight. Put
an emphasis on making personal plans and physical or
mental improvements that
will put you in a better position to advance in your field.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
If you are passionate about
your goals and plans, your
chances of finding success
will be improved. It’s up to
you to make things happen
and to instigate the opportunities to improve your life.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22):
Consider suggestions, but
don’t give in to someone
who is pushing you to do unreasonable things. There is
a fine line between wanting
to please and being taken
advantage of.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23Nov. 21): Jealousy is best
avoided. Whether it’s you or
someone else who is feeling
insecure, it’s best to stick
to the projects and people
that do not get you all riled
up. Making a snap decision
could end in regret.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22Dec. 21): Uncertainty will
hold you back. If you overreact, you will end up standing
still. Make personal improvements that will help you
achieve a more confident
attitude.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Get involved in some-
thing you’ve never done before. The experience will be
valuable and could prevent
you from making a costly
mistake.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Emotional energy will be
your downfall if you express
your feelings without thinking. Take a realistic approach
to how you handle partners,
colleagues and those who
can influence your future.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March
20): Take action, get moving and turn your ideas into
something constructive. Talk
is cheap, but actions will
show others that you mean
business.
paducahsun.com
Variety
The Paducah Sun • Thursday, July 28, 2016 • 7B
BEETLE BAILEY
DENNIS THE MENACE
BLONDIE
HI & LOIS
BABY BLUES
BC
CURTIS
WIZARD OF ID
ZITS
Crossword
DILBERT
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
GARFIELD
FORT KNOX
PICKLES
ACROSS
1 Novelist
celebrated on
Bloomsday
6 Leaves on a
shelf?
11 Pampering place
14 Spheres of study
15 Like 1-Across
16 Granola grain
17 Host of a program
also known as
“The Factor”
19 “What a cutie!”
20 Pampas weapon
21 Slanted text:
Abbr.
22 “A” on many a
cornerstone
23 He or I
24 Feature of some
German nouns
27 Lee material
29 Locks
30 Half a repartee
32 Stick around
33 Berliner’s
direction
34 ’60s-’70s sitcom
whose four
original family
members were
married over the
course of the
series
37 Wee amount
39 “Glee” extra
40 Backing
41 Belgian diamond
center
43 Expressive tweet
space-savers
47 Virus symptom,
perhaps
51 Cries of clarity
52 Temptation
garden
53 “O, beware, my
lord, of jealousy”
speaker
54 Banks on a
runway
55 Place for a
screwdriver
56 Private details ...
or what’s found in
this puzzle’s
circles
59 Before, to Byron
60 Action movie
climax
61 Toys in laps,
briefly
62 Newsman
Koppel
63 Pompeo of
32 C-SPAN fig.
45 Rattled
“Grey’s Anatomy” 34 Complained under 46 Mom’s
argument-ending
64 Hobbit on a quest
one’s breath
words
35 Retaliatory act
48 More than see
DOWN
36 “Oh, it’s fine”
49 Birth city of most
1 Elbowed
37 Low-risk wager
of the Osmonds
2 Player with an
38 How some
orange-and-black
foolish things are 50 Seafood delicacy
56 Hotel amenity
logo
done
57 Org. with 30
3 Federal Reserve 42 Pallid
franchises
chair after
44 Tribute song on
58 Hawaiian Tropic
Bernanke
John Lennon’s
lotion letters
4 Great misfortune
“Imagine”
5 Anka’s “__ Beso”
6 Michelangelo
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
statue
7 Courier
alternative
8 Manufacturer of
Venus razors
9 Immigrant’s subj.
10 Uncomfortable in
singles bars
11 No-goodniks
12 “Dances With
Wolves” natives
13 If all goes wrong
18 Edge
22 Short reply?
25 Clutch
26 Pooh’s gloomy
pal
28 Monster High doll
maker
31 “Done!”
07/28/16
[email protected]
By C.C. Burnikel
©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
07/28/16
Stocks
8B • Thursday, July 28, 2016 • The Paducah Sun
Today
Jobless claims
The number of Americans seeking
unemployment benefits has been
falling recently. Last week the
Labor Department said weekly
claims, a proxy for layoffs, dipped to
253,000, the lowest level since
mid-April. Weekly claims have been
below 300,000 for 72 consecutive
weeks, the longest stretch since
1973. Analysts surveyed by
FactSet expect that run will extend
for another week, with today’s
report expected to show claims
rose to 265,000.
Eyes on Alphabet earnings
Initial jobless claims
est.
265
258
254
254
7/1
7/8
253
250
6/17 6/24
7/15 7/23
Week ending
Source: FactSet
CombinedStocks
Stocks in bold changed 5% or more in price
Name
Div P/E Last Chg Name
Div P/E
GATX
1.60
7
A-B-C-D
AK Steel
... 20
6.70 +.52 GenDynam 3.04f 16
.92 30
AbbottLab 1.04f 25 43.67 +.07 GenElec
6
ActivsBliz
.26f 35 40.89 -.67 GenMotors 1.52
.07e ...
AMD
... dd
6.85 -.13 Gerdau
GileadSci
1.88
7
AkamaiT
... 22 50.51 -7.58
.24 dd
Alcoa
.12 33 10.74 +.07 Goldcrp g
... dd
Alibaba
... 31 83.10 -.49 GoPro
... dd
Altria
2.26 23 66.75 -1.18 Groupon
HP
Inc
.50
9
AnalogDev 1.68 22 63.33 +.46
.01e cc
Anavex rs
... dd
4.46 -3.03 HeclaM
1.00f dd
Annaly
1.20 12 10.89 -.08 Hess
.28 17
Anthem
2.60 14 133.86 -3.73 Hilton
.16 49
Apple Inc
2.28 12 102.95 +6.28 HopFedBc
HostHotls
.80a
20
ApldMatl
.40 25 26.90 +.09
ArcelorMit
... dd
6.02 -.06
I-J-K-L
AstraZen s 1.40e 16 31.54 +.63
IAMGld g
... 17
BcoBrad s
.29e ...
8.73 +.05
.16e ...
BkofAm
.20 12 14.63 +.10 ICICI Bk
1.03e
q
B iPVixST
...
q 10.75 -.25 iShBrazil
.13e
q
BarrickG
.08 61 21.35 +.90 iShJapan
iShSilver
...
q
BindThera
... dd
.84 -.09
q
BostonSci
... 50 23.66 -.32 iShChinaLC .76e
.84e
q
CSX
.72 15 28.21 -.51 iShEMkts
1.70e
q
Carlisle
1.20 18 103.06 -.81 iS Eafe
q
Cemex
.29t ...
7.10 +.13 iShiBxHYB 5.09
iShR2K
1.77e
q
ChesEng
... dd
5.19 -.16
.40 23
Cisco
1.04 15 30.76 -.12 IngrmM
1.04 17
Citigroup
.20 12 44.29 +.14 Intel
.45e ...
CitizFincl
.40 13 22.58 +.09 ItauUnibH
1.76 11
CliffsNRs
... 87
7.85 -.17 JPMorgCh
JnprNtwk
.40 13
CocaCola
1.40 25 43.40 -1.48
.34 11
ConAgra
1.00 26 45.98 -.65 Keycorp
.50 33
ConocoPhil 1.00 dd 40.07 -.72 KindMorg
... dd
Corning
.54 19 21.49 -.22 Kinross g
2.00f 11
CSVInvNG
...
q
8.26 +.05 Kohls
LinearTch
1.28
29
CSVelIVST
...
q 31.90 +.71
6.60 21
CSVLgCrd rs ...
q 19.44 -1.13 LockhdM
CSVixSh rs
...
q
1.25 -.08
M-N-O-P
CypSemi
.44 22 11.68 +.02
.20 dd
DeltaAir
.54
6 38.54 -.49 MarathnO
1.60 42
DenburyR
... dd
2.93 -.12 MartMM
.24 ...
DevonE
.24 dd 36.13 -1.33 MarvellT lf
Mattel
1.52 29
DxGlMBr rs
...
q
5.16 -1.03
3.56f 23
DirDGlBr rs
...
q
5.68 -.89 McDnlds
1.60 11
DollarTree
... 55 95.72 -.93 MetLife
... 46
DomRescs 2.80 23 76.52 -1.01 MicronT
Microsoft
1.44
25
DukeEngy 3.42f 20 84.83 -.92
MolsCoorB 1.64 37
E-F-G-H
Mondelez
.76f 10
.80f 13
eBay s
... 18 31.31 -.09 MorgStan
NY
CmtyB
.68m
13
EMC Cp
.46 19 28.34 -.06
.10 40
ElevenBio
... dd
3.96 +.48 NewmtM
.64 26
EmersonEl 1.90 18 56.04 -.14 NikeB s
.16e ...
EmpDist
1.04 25 33.65 +.11 NokiaCp
EnCana g
.06 cc
7.64 -.41 NorthropG 3.60f 21
.46 42
EpirusBi h
... dd
.19 +.10 Nvidia
... dd
EqtyRsd
2.16 24 65.96 -3.86 OasisPet
... 52
ExactSci h
... dd 16.82 +.61 OfficeDpt
.60 20
ExxonMbl
3.00 29 90.91 -.62 Oracle
PPG
s
1.60
18
Facebook
... 58 123.34 +2.12
... ...
FedExCp
1.60f 16 160.91 -.59 PetrbrsA
... ...
FiatChrys
... ...
6.70 -.30 Petrobras
1.20 19
FordM
.60a
6 13.84 -.02 Pfizer
...
1
FrptMcM
... dd 13.06 +.38 PiperJaf
FrontierCm
.42 85
5.09 -.06 Potash
1.00m 14
5.00 +.37
7.98 +.15
32.59 +.02
11.85 +.02
19.37 +.71
35.65 -.14
36.01 +.12
57.42 +.21
85.69 +.26
DOUBLE
121.14 +.34
PLAY
33.51 -.15
34.83 -.26
10.25
64.33 +.20
22.57 -1.65
11.57 +.05
20.25 -.48
5.01 +.17
40.70 -.35
Div P/E Last
59.23 -3.26 Name
254.16 -.60 PwShs QQQ1.52e
q 114.58
PUVixST rs
...
q 28.25
PrUCrude rs
...
q
8.85
13.13 -.65
Q-R-S-T
201.52 -.34
11.67 +.03 Qualcom
2.12 18 62.51
32.91 +.04 ReynAm s 1.44f 25 49.90
119.48 -2.23 RiteAid
... ...
6.97
43.18 -.11 RymanHP 3.00f 18 55.96
14.19 -.48 SpdrGold
...
q 128.03
56.19 -.57 S&P500ETF 4.13e
q 216.52
93.13 -4.98 SpdrBiot s
.44e
q 61.62
43.94 -1.31 SpdrLehHY 2.30
q 36.16
29.02 -.01 SpdrOGEx .73e
q 33.22
14.27 -.43 SpdrMetM
.49e
q 28.48
42.32 +1.19 Sequenom
... dd
2.35
55.79 -.58 SiriusXM
... 40
4.40
5.86 +.09 Sophiris
... dd
5.11
217.81 -.54 SouthnCo
2.24f 19 53.54
56.06 -.57 SwstnEngy
... dd 14.25
7.29 -.58 Sprint
... dd
5.79
3.61 +.09 SP CnSt
1.28e
q 54.19
40.93 -.01 SP Engy
2.04e
q 66.69
106.09 -.67 SPDR Fncl .46e
q 23.64
6.99 -.23 SP Inds
1.12e
q 58.23
8.33 -.08 SP Tech
.78e
q 46.25
36.85 +.02 SP Util
1.55e
q 51.61
1.52 24 114.83
41.94 +.58 Stryker
17.15 -.21 TeckRes g .10m ... 14.37
JULY 2016
www.fourriversbusiness.com
Baseball and
business often go
hand in hand
August Issue Publishes
July 28th
www.fourriversbusiness.com
Chg
+.79
-1.38
-.31
+1.16
-.10
-.44
+2.03
-.23
+1.74
+.10
-.70
+.47
+1.50
+.05
-.53
-.91
-.10
-.46
-.82
-.66
-.01
-.23
+.38
-.60
-1.61
+.29
2,200
S&P 500
18,640
Dow Jones industrials
2,160
Close: 2,166.58
Change: -2.60 (-0.1%)
18,500
Close: 18,472.17
Change: -1.58 (flat)
2,120
18,360
10 DAYS
2,200
18,400
17,600
2,000
16,800
1,900
1,800
16,000
F
M
A
StocksRecap
Vol. (in mil.)
Pvs. Volume
Advanced
Declined
New Highs
New Lows
NYSE
NASD
3,898
3,361
1399
1615
225
9
2,024
1,962
1638
1180
157
36
M
J
DOW
DOW Trans.
DOW Util.
NYSE Comp.
NASDAQ
S&P 500
S&P 400
Wilshire 5000
Russell 2000
15,200
J
HIGH
18542.39
7980.11
712.07
10785.24
5151.06
2174.98
1557.78
22543.10
1222.26
F
LOW
18430.94
7831.18
699.03
10696.80
5120.66
2159.07
1543.93
22384.82
1212.82
M
CLOSE
18472.17
7861.45
704.80
10739.77
5139.81
2166.58
1548.49
22464.39
1218.93
Stocks of Local Interest
TICKER
Computer Services Inc
CSVI.PK
M
CHG.
-1.58
-118.85
-8.39
-33.22
+29.76
-2.60
-6.22
-33.72
+2.07
CLOSE
HI
CLOSE
CHG
37.90
+.20
YTD
%CHG %CHG
J
J
%CHG.
YTD
-0.01%
+6.01%
-1.49%
+4.70%
-1.18% +21.98%
-0.31%
+5.88%
+0.58%
+2.64%
-0.12%
+6.00%
-0.40% +10.72%
-0.15%
+6.13%
+0.17%
+7.31%
1YR
%RTN
-5.3
P/E
DIV
18
1.00
AT&T Inc
T
30.97
0
43.89
42.76
+.38
+0.9
+24.3
+29.2
17
1.92
Aerojet Rocketdyne
AJRD
13.98
6
23.55
18.81
+.06
+0.3
+20.1
-17.7
dd
...
Air Products
APD
114.64
0
152.16
149.01
-.84
-0.6
+14.5
+17.8
22
3.44
Amer Elec Power
AEP
52.29
9
71.32
68.86
-.88
-1.3
+18.2
+31.8
24
2.24
AmerisourceBergen
ABC
73.31
4
109.08
85.42
-.29
-0.3
-17.6
-20.0
16
1.36
Aon plc
AON
83.83
0
111.60
110.48
-.54
-0.5
+19.8
+10.8
25
1.32
ATMOS Energy
ATO
52.08
9
81.97
78.84
-.75
-0.9
+25.1
+51.0
24
1.68
BB&T Corp
BBT
29.95
7
41.39
36.95
-.04
-0.1
-2.3
-6.6
14
1.20f
Comcast Corp A
CMCSA
50.00
0
67.95
67.92
+.74
+1.1
+20.9
+9.7
21
1.10
Cracker Barrel
CBRL
117.95
7
172.89
155.76
-1.49
-0.9
+22.8
+10.4
22
4.60f
Dillards Inc
DDS
54.37
3
103.09
66.24
-.16
-0.2
+0.8
-32.7
11
0.28
Dover Corp
DOV
50.91
0
73.58
71.84
-.51
-0.7
+17.2
+15.5
21
1.68
EnPro Inds
NPO
37.53
4
63.82
46.54
+.29
+0.6
+6.2
-7.6
dd
0.84
Freds Inc
FRED
11.27
7
18.37
16.04
+.04
+0.3
-2.0
-9.2
dd
0.24
Fuller HB Co
FUL
30.72
9
48.49
46.28
-.11
-0.2
+26.9
+20.9
22
0.56
Goodyear
GT
24.31
5
35.30
29.09
+1.18
+4.2
-11.0
-3.7
9
0.28
Honeywell Intl
HON
87.00
9
120.02
114.96
-.99
-0.9
+11.0
+15.1
18
2.38f
0.32
Jabil Circuit
JBL
16.78
5
26.00
20.54
+.21
+1.0
-11.8
+6.0
14
Kimberly Clark
KMB
103.04
8
138.87
130.50
-1.78
-1.3
+2.5
+21.5
22
3.68
Kroger Co
KR
27.32
6
42.75
35.57
-.85
-2.3
-15.0
-4.0
17
0.48f
1.40f
Lowes Cos
LOW
62.62
9
83.65
80.76
-.30
-0.4
+6.2
+22.4
23
Motorola Solutions
MSI
58.34
6
76.83
69.26
+.84
+1.2
+1.2
+17.6
19
1.64
NiSource Inc
NI
16.04
9
26.94
25.46
-.14
-0.5
+30.5
+55.0
33
0.66f
Old NBcp IN
ONB
10.69
6
15.00
13.14
+.04
+0.3
-3.1
-4.8
12
0.52
Penney JC Co Inc
JCP
6.00
6
11.99
9.40
-.25
-2.6
+41.1
+14.3
dd
...
Pilgrims Pride
PPC
15.57
9
26.50
24.32
-.86
-3.4
+23.0
+42.8
11 2.75e
Regions Fncl
RF
7.00
6
10.81
9.10
-.05
-0.5
-5.2
-11.0
13
0.26f
Seabrd Cp
SEB
5 3500.00
2930.00
-25.00
-0.8
+1.2
-11.1
18
3.00
Sears Holdings Corp
SHLD
10.52
3
28.31
15.05
+.03
+0.2
-26.8
-32.3
dd
...
Sherwin Wms
SHW
218.27
8
312.48
292.30
-.60
-0.2
+12.6
+10.8
25
3.36
2427.01
P/E Last Chg
25 71.27 -.15
22 178.27 +.61
21 10.68 -.46
22 26.74
dd 15.77 -2.68
U-V-W-X-Y-Z
UndrArm s
UPS B
US OilFd
USSteel
Vale SA
Vale SA pf
ValeantPh
ValeroE
VanEGold
VanE JrGld
VangEmg
VerizonCm
Visa s
VulcanM
WPX Engy
WalgBoots
WeathfIntl
WellsFargo
WhitingPet
WTJpHedg
Yahoo
Yamana g
...
3.12
...
.20
.29e
.29e
...
2.40
.12e
...
1.10e
2.26
.56
.80
...
1.50f
...
1.52
...
2.98e
...
.02m
77 39.72 -1.64
19 108.80 -1.57
q
9.90 -.18
dd 25.49 +2.54
...
5.77 +.10
...
4.59 +.15
dd 23.49 +.44
8 52.21 -.46
q 29.80 +1.30
q 47.92 +2.57
q 36.86 +.05
15 55.32 +.51
29 78.53 +.04
55 125.66 +1.30
dd
9.23 -.45
24 79.94 -1.39
dd
5.73 -.22
12 48.00 +.03
dd
7.35 -.46
q 41.14 +.52
dd 38.66 -.10
dd
5.89 +.43
Is the smartwatch boom over before
e it
has a chance to take off?
Research firm IDC says global
smartwatch sales fell 32 percent in
the April-June quarter, compared
with a year ago, the first ever drop.
IDC says an estimated 55 percent
nt
drop in Apple Watch sales, to 1.6
million units, is to blame. Apple Chief
ef
Financial Officer Luca Maestri said the
estimate was “not in the ballpark,”
though its “other products” segment,
t,
which includes Apple Watch, saw revenue
evenue
drop 16 percent from a year ago.
Some reasons for the drag: Unimpressed with the
first model that debuted in April 2015, many are
waiting for refreshed hardware. And Apple’s new
watchOS operating system – which will speed up app
Top Five Smartwatch
Vendors for
April-June
Stock listings requested by our readers
52-WK RANGE
LO
NAME
A
Div
1.52
4.44
...
.30
...
Name
NAV
American Century
ValueInv
8.33
American Funds
AMCAPA m
26.80
AmBalA m
25.02
BondA m
13.14
CapIncBuA m
59.60
CpWldGrIA m
45.01
EurPacGrA m
46.16
FnInvA m
53.37
GrthAmA m
42.92
IncAmerA m
21.67
InvCoAmA m
36.46
MutualA m
37.18
NewPerspA m
36.88
SmCpWldA m
45.43
WAMutInvA m
41.05
BlackRock
Engy&ResA m
17.04
GlobAlcI
18.41
StrIncIns
9.78
DFA
EmMkCrEqI
17.89
Dodge & Cox
Income
13.86
IntlStk
36.77
Stock
167.18
Fidelity
500IdxIns
76.27
500IdxPr
76.27
Bal
22.14
Contra
100.64
ContraK
100.62
GrowCo
138.15
LowPriStk d
49.33
LtAm d
20.87
Puritan
20.91
Tel&Util
26.09
TotBond
10.83
TtlMktIdxPr d
62.64
FrankTemp-Franklin
Income C m
2.27
IncomeA m
2.24
FrankTemp-Templeton
GlBondAdv
11.35
Harbor
CapApInst
59.85
IntlInstl
61.05
Janus
GlbLfScT
50.71
Matthews Asian
China
16.97
India
27.78
Metropolitan West
TotRetBdI
11.02
TotRtBd b
11.02
Oakmark
Intl I
20.48
Oberweis
ChinaOpp m
11.23
PIMCO
IncomeInl
11.99
RERRStgC m
6.97
TotRetIs
10.38
Closing figures as of Wednesday, July 27, 2016
YTD
Chg %Rtn
-.02 +10.7
+.03 +5.3
-.02 +6.5
+.03 +5.4
-.02 +8.6
+.10 +5.1
+.27 +1.7
-.12 +6.7
+.03 +3.9
-.03 +8.8
-.03 +10.2
-.08 +11.0
+.08 +2.4
+.21 +4.1
-.12 +7.8
-.28 +13.1
+.07 +2.7
+.01 +1.7
+14.6
+.02
+.25
-.46
+6.1
+.8
+5.7
-.09
-.09
+.03
+.18
+.18
+.76
+7.3
+7.3
+5.2
+2.5
+2.5
+1.2
+3.3
+27.8
+3.7
+20.5
+7.3
+7.3
-.05
+.03
-.16
+.02
-.08
+10.3
+10.3
-.02
+.2
+.29
+.34
-1.6
+2.7
+.37
-2.6
-.06
+.12
-7.9
+5.1
+.02
+.02
+4.9
+4.8
+.37
-4.1
-.05
-7.6
+.03
+5.5
+15.7
+4.9
Putnam
NewOpp
74.85
Schwab
S&P500Sel d
33.84
T Rowe Price
BlChpGr
71.73
CapApprec
26.87
EqIndex d
58.35
EqtyInc
31.17
GrowStk
53.06
LatinAm d
20.42
MidCpGr
77.75
NewIncome
9.76
Rtmt2020
20.86
Rtmt2030
23.04
Value
32.95
Vanguard
500Adml
200.12
500Inv
200.12
BalIdxAdm
30.96
BdMktInstPls
11.12
DivGr
23.84
GNMAAdml
10.83
GrthIdAdm
57.46
HltCrAdml
91.44
ITGradeAd
10.12
InstIdxI
198.18
InstPlus
198.19
InstTStPl
48.88
IntlStkIdxAdm
24.70
IntlStkIdxI
98.76
IntlStkIdxIPls
98.78
MidCpAdml
159.15
MuIntAdml
14.55
MuLtdAdml
11.10
PrecMtls
12.01
PrmcpAdml
107.80
REITIdxAd
128.14
STGradeAd
10.78
SmCpIdAdm
57.93
Star
24.39
TgtRe2015
15.05
TgtRe2020
28.80
TgtRe2025
16.57
TgtRe2030
29.39
TgtRe2035
17.84
TlIntlBdIdxAdm
22.38
TlIntlBdIdxInv
11.19
TotBdAdml
11.12
TotBdInst
11.12
TotIntl
14.76
TotStIAdm
54.03
TotStIIns
54.04
TotStIdx
54.01
WellsIAdm
63.75
Welltn
38.96
WelltnAdm
67.28
WndsIIAdm
62.62
Waddell & Reed Adv
AccumA m
9.61
SciTechA m
13.15
+.17
+4.3
-.04
+7.2
+.11
-.9
-.03 +7.3
-.07 +7.2
-.04 +10.5
+.19
-1.1
-.07 +35.9
-.26 +6.0
+.03 +5.8
+5.9
+.04 +5.6
-.14 +5.4
-.24
-.23
+.01
+.04
-.13
+.01
+.09
+.54
+.03
-.23
-.23
-.07
+.10
+.38
+.39
-1.01
+.01
+.39
+.02
-1.10
+.02
-.11
+.04
+.02
+.04
+.02
+.04
+.02
+.06
+.03
+.04
+.04
+.05
-.07
-.07
-.07
+.02
+.02
+.04
-.09
+7.3
+7.2
+7.0
+6.0
+7.5
+3.1
+5.5
+.9
+6.8
+7.3
+7.3
+7.4
+3.5
+3.5
+3.5
+7.7
+3.7
+1.6
+92.5
+4.4
+15.7
+3.3
+9.8
+5.5
+5.8
+6.1
+6.1
+6.0
+5.9
+6.7
+6.7
+6.0
+6.0
+3.4
+7.3
+7.4
+7.3
+8.8
+7.3
+7.3
+6.6
-.01
+.04
+2.2
-2.8
Clock ticks on smartwatch
10 DAYS
19,200
2,100
Name
TexInst
3M Co
Transocn
21stCFoxA
Twitter
The Pennsylvania chocolate giant saw its stock price
slump after it cut its profit forecasts on the back of weak
first-quarter sales. The candy maker’s shares rebounded
in the last month after
Cadbury and Oreo owner
Mondelez International
made a $22.3 billion
cash-and-stock offer for
Hershey, which Hershey
rejected. Analysts expect
Hershey to report today
that profit stagnated in
the second quarter on
slightly higher sales.
MutualFunds
Your.
Regional.
Business.
Connection.
Last Chg
44.13 -.06
146.63 +2.12
31.28 -.19
32.02 -.13
2.35 +.06
81.79 +.74
18.85 +.55
11.57 +.25
3.78 -.13
13.99 -.19
6.18 +.27
51.60 -2.08
23.17 -.70
11.74 +.08
17.14 -.46
Hershey reports profit
$761.97
GOOGL
Google’s parent company, Alphabet, $800
$654.77
reports its second-quarter earnings
today. Analysts surveyed by FactSet
700
expect the internet search giant’s
earnings per share jumped to $8.04
’16
600
in the quarter from $6.99 a year
earlier. The firm’s profit grew 20
est.
Operating
$6.99 $8.04
percent in the first quarter,
EPS
disappointing investors who’d
Q2 ’15
Q2 ’16
expected even higher earnings.
Price-earnings ratio: 32
Despite a strong run this month,
based on past 12-month results
Alphabet shares have yet to return
Dividend: none
to the $780 level they were at before
that announcement in April.
Source: FactSet
seasonally adjusted, in thousands
270
270
260
paducahsun.com
Total SA
TOT
39.05
6
52.34
46.92
+.17
+0.4
+4.4
+3.3
US Bancorp
USB
37.07
6
46.02
42.01
+.04
+0.1
-1.5
-5.1
13
1.02
WalMart Strs
WMT
56.30
0
74.35
73.32
-.41
-0.6
+19.6
+5.8
16
2.00f
Westlake Chemical
WLK
39.48
3
67.84
45.77
+.02
...
-15.7
-23.3
10
0.73
WestRock Co
WRK
35.77
9
44.14
43.24
-.39
-0.9
+14.1
-15.1
2.71e
...
Apple Watch estimates
for the July-September quarter
Wells Fargo
Others
Garmin 4
launches – isn’t coming
c
until this fall.
Ap
Apple
doesn’t release figures, but
sa the iPhone maker dominates
IDC says
category, accounting for nearly
the c
half of smartwatches sold. But signs
are troubling for this once-highly
expected new source of growth for
exp
Apple in a smartphone-clogged world.
Watch-wearing is down and
young people aren’t expected to
pick up the habit, according to
analysts at Mizuho Securities.
a
Few
people expect to buy a
F
sma
smartwatch
in the next three months,
Mizuho says, and those willing don’t want to pay
more than $250. Apple Watch prices start at $300.
Alarm bells are ringing on this category and it’s no
time to hit snooze.
Units
16
UBS
47%
Wells Fargo
9
Lenovo
16
UBS
Source: IDC Worldwide Quarterly Wearable Device Tracker
918m
680m
Ryan Nakashima; Jenni Sohn • AP
Commodities
Futures trading on the Chicago Board of Trade
Open
High
Low
Wheat CBOT
5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
Sep 16 416.00
420.00
414.00
Dec 16 443.00
446.00
440.00
Mar 17 469.00
472.00
466.00
May 17 482.00
485.00
479.00
Est. Sales 157,474 Tue’s sales 118,389
Tue’s open int.471,210 Chg. -124.00
Corn CBOT
5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
Sep 16 332.00
338.00
331.00
Dec 16 339.00
345.00
338.00
Mar 17 349.00
354.00
348.00
May 17 354.00
359.00
354.00
Est. Sales 441,776 Tue’s sales 259,031
Tue’s open int.1,309,528 Chg. +12355.00
Company
Spotlight
1.1billion
Revenue Credit Suisse
Samsung
Settle
Chg
414.00
441.00
467.00
480.00
-.00
-.00
-2.00
-1.00
335.00
343.00
351.00
357.00
+3.00
+3.00
+2.00
+2.00
Open
High
Low
Oats CBOT
5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
Sep 16 198.00
201.00
197.00
Dec 16 197.00
199.00
196.00
Mar 17 202.00
203.00
201.00
May 17
n/a
n/a
n/a
Est. Sales 430 Tue’s sales 456
Tue’s open int.9,937 Chg. -6.00
Soybean CBOT
5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
Aug 16 994.00 1015.00
991.00
Sep 16 985.00 1007.00
983.00
Nov 16 974.00
995.00
971.00
Jan 17
975.00
995.00
972.00
Est. Sales 405,368 Tue’s sales 185,194
Tue’s open int.702,484 Chg. -7798.00
Settle
Chg
197.00
196.00
201.00
204.00
-3.00
-2.00
-2.00
-3.00
1010.00
999.00
986.00
986.00
+17.00
+14.00
+12.00
+11.00
Apple gets a new shine
Apple notched its biggest gain in
two years Wednesday as investors
took a shine to the iPhone maker’s
second-quarter earnings.
Investors have worried about
Apple’s decreasing iPhone sales,
but the company’s net income and
revenue were both higher than
expected. Its total revenue fell 15
percent from a year ago to $42 billion. Higher sales
from businesses including iTunes, the App Store and
Apple (AAPL)
Apple Pay partially offset the drop
in iPhone sales.
Those activities brought in
more revenue than even iPads or
Mac computers in the quarter.
Apple stock advanced 6.6 percent
for its biggest one-day gain since
April, 2014. However the stock is
still down 16 percent over the last
year. Despite the drop, Apple remains the world’s most
valuable publicly-traded company.
Wednesday’s close: $103.03
52-WEEK RANGE
AP
1.7m
Apple
LG 8
$89
3.5million
2.2m
Credit Suisse
Price-earnings ratio: 12
$126
(Based on past 12-month results)
Total return 1-yr
AAPL
-14.4%
Div. yield: 2.2%
*annualized
3-yr*
20.3
5-yr*
14.8
Dividend: $2.28
Source: FactSet
Dividend Footnotes: a - Extra dividends were paid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in last 12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was increased by most recent dividend announcement. i - Sum of dividends paid after
stock split, no regular rate. j - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dividend was omitted or deferred. k - Declared or paid this year, a cumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Initial dividend,
annual rate not known, yield not shown. r - Declared or paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date.
PE Footnotes: q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months.
Stock Footnotes: g - Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h - Does not meet continued-listing standards. lf - Late filing with SEC. n - Stock was a new issue in the last year. pf - Preferred stock issue. rs - Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50% within the past year.
s - Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. wi - Trades will be settled when the stock is issued. wd - When distributed. wt - Warrant, allowing a purchase of a stock. vj - Company in bankruptcy or receivership, or being reorganized under the bankruptcy law. Appears in front of
the name.
Classified
The Paducah Sun | Thursday, July 28, 2016 | paducahsun.com
9B
7R3ODFH$Q$G
575-8700
or1-800-599-1771
outside McCracken Co.
Email: [email protected]
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is currently accepting applications for:
FULL-TIME OFFICE DELIVERY AGENT
Duties
will include
delivery
newspaper
The Paducah
Sun currently
has aoffull-time
positionroutes,
available for an
making
of newAgent.
delivery
tapes,
delivery
of missed
Office Delivery
Duties
will include
delivery
of newspaper
routes, making
of new
deliverysubscribers,
tapes, deliveryassist
of missed
papers
of
papers
of home
delivery
with
kiosk
homedoor
delivery
subscribers,
with kiosk
and door
to door sales.
and
to door
sales.assist
Company
vehicle
provided.
Company vehicle provided.
Applications
bepicked
picked
Applications may
may be
up up
Monday
through
a.m.
4 p.m.
Monday
throughFriday,
Friday, 88a.m.
to to
4 p.m.
at at
The
Sun
ThePaducah
Paducah Sun
408
Kentucky
Avenue
408
Kentucky Avenue
Paducah,
Paducah, Kentucky
Kentucky
NoNo
phone
please.
phone calls
calls please.
The Paducah Sun is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate
on the basis of race, religion, color, sex, age, national origin or disability.
2IÀFH+RXUV
SPECIAL NOTICE
0RQGD\)ULGD\DPSP
0107
$GMXVWPHQWV
&/$66,),('$'5$7(6
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
POLICY
On all personal
and happy ads,
The Paducah Sun
reserves the right
to divulge the
name of the party
placing the ad.
Also, we will no
longer put any age
on happy birthday
ads.
Lines
Per 1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Day Day Days Days Days Days Days Days
Classified
Advertising
Dept.
$GYHUWLVHUVDUHUHTXHVWHGWRFKHFNWKHÀUVW
LQVHUWLRQRIWKHLUDGVIRUDQ\HUURU7KH
3DGXFDK6XQZLOOEHUHVSRQVLEOHIRURQO\RQH
LQFRUUHFWLQVHUWLRQ$Q\HUURUVKRXOGEHUHSRUWHG
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TRUCKING
ANNOUNCEMENTS 0244
Call about our
30 day specials!
270-575-8700
MONDAY-FRIDAY
8:00AM TO 4:30PM
OR EMAIL:
classifieds@
paducahsun.com
In-Column Deadlines
Sunday-12PM Friday
Monday-1:30PM Fri.
Tuesday-Saturday
10AM Previous Day
CHECK
YOUR AD
Advertisers are requested to check
the first insertion of
ads for any error.
The Paducah Sun
will be responsible
for only ONE INCORRECT INSERTION. Any error
should be reported
immediately so
corrections can be
made. CHECK
YOUR AD carefully and notify The
Classified Advertising Department
during business
hours Monday
through Friday
8:00AM - 5:30 PM
in case of an error.
270-575-8700
FREE PALLETS
The Paducah Sun
is pleased to offer
free wood pallets
to the community.
They may be
picked up daily
while supplies last
in the alley behind
The Paducah Sun
building.
Hiring CDL Truck Driver Class A with
Tri-axle experience, Low Boy and
heavy equipment a plus.
Apply @111 Pioneer Industrial Dr.
Mayfield 270-247-1400 EEO
0107
SPECIAL NOTICE
0204
ADMINISTRATIVE
END ROLLS FOR
SALE
The Paducah Sun
has newspaper
end rolls available
for sale while
supplies last at our
office located at
408 Kentucky Ave.,
Paducah, KY, from
8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
Monday through
Friday. Depending
on size, large rolls
are priced from $3
to $6 and half rolls
are priced from $2
to $4. There is no
charge to
non-profits or
teachers with
school ID.
0142
is currently
accepting
applications
Is currently
accepting applications
for for
PRODUCTION/INSERTING POSITION
LOST
LOST YOUR DOG??
Check your local
Humane Society
270-443-5923
GARAGE /ESTATE
SALES
GARAGE/ESTATE
0151
SALES
Garage Sale
SPECIAL
Single Family
5 lines / 3 days
270-575-8700
West end
West Park Dr. 2332
Moving sale!
Sat. 8-3
Many items for sale!
EMPLOYMENT
PROFESSIONAL
0212
0212
PROFESSIONAL
PARALEGAL
with litigation
experience
preferred.
Personal injury,
insurance or bankruptcy helpful. Immediate opening.
Send resume to
P. O. Box 7766,
Paducah, KY
42002-7766.
Compensation
commensurate
with experience
0220
MEDICAL/
DENTAL
Dental Assistant,
full time, exper. in
chair-side and sterilization preferred.
Send resume to
P.O. Box 503,
Mayfield, KY
42066 or email
jameshadamspsc@
live.com
The Paducah Sun Production Department has positions available parttime production worker.
Positions’ Main Requirements:
• Place preprinted sections into newspapers or preprint jacket.
• Assist in the processing of newspapers including stacking, bundling,
counting, and labeling finished products and delivering papers to
post office
Job Specifications:
• Education: High school diploma, GED or equivalent.
• Skills and Abilities: Fast learner, be alert, ability to communicate,
ability to work with hands, responsible for acting in a safe and
responsible manner, valid driver’s license required.
• Hours may vary from 6 p.m. until 5 a.m., Monday through Sunday.
An application and job description may be obtained at
The Paducah Sun office located at 408 Kentucky Ave., Paducah, from 8
a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday
The Paducah Sun is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate on
the basis of race, religion, color, sex, age, national origin or disability.
10B • Thursday, July 28, 2016 • The Paducah Sun
paducahsun.com
FREE
ESTIMATES
270-559-1892
270-554-9316
1030
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Midwest
Basement Tech
foundation
problems, leaking,
cracking or settlement, basements
or crawlspaces,
Free Estimates!
270-441-7200
0220
MEDICAL/
DENTAL
FT MEDICAL
CONSULTANT
needed to work as
a paralegal in the
litigation practice of
growing law firm.
RN, BSN or
similar background, training
and experience is
required.
Candidate must
have strong
organizational and
analytical skills.
Excellent comp
package provided.
Please send
resume to:
Attn: Personnel,
Whitlow, Roberts,
Houston &
Straub, PLLC,
300 Broadway,
Paducah, KY
42001
0232
GENERAL HELP
HOUSEKEEPING
personnel needed.
Apply in person at
Days Inn of Calvert City, I-24 exit
27.
Maids PT/FT
Quality Suites
by Home Depot
Trinity United
Methodist Church,
Paducah seeks
pt time Custodian.
Send resume to:
6125 Blandville
Rd., Paducah, KY
42001
0240
We also do
Window Cleaning!
Home & Office
Cleaning
Est. 1986 Great
Rates and
References Call
Theresa @
270-445-1440
1108
EXCAVATING
GOODE
TRUCKING &
EXCAVATING
White Rock,
Gravel, Sand,
Topsoil, Lime,
Land Clearing,
Dirtwork, Grading,
Demolition
(270) 970-0421
(270) 832-5790
0248
OFFICE HELP
Construction Co.
hiring Office Assistant
experience
necessary. Email
[email protected]
0264
NOTE TO PARENTS:
Kentucky State
Law requires
licensing for child
care facilities
providing care for 4
or more children
not related to the
licensee by blood,
marriage or
adoption.
0276
Seeking
Licensed
Electricians
for large
residential project
in Paducah.
Top Pay Available,
based on
experience & work
ethic. Electricians
benefit package
available,
including 401K.
Please call to set
up an appointment
270-842-2465 or
email resume to:
[email protected]
TRUCKING
Experienced OTR
Driver needed.
Home weekends
$45,000/yr avg. income. Pay on all
odometer miles
(loaded or empty).
No touch freight.
No East coast. No
West coast. Clean
MVR. Extra stop
pay, paid vacation,
paid holidays. Call
270-376-5250
Licensed & Insured
(270) 366-4165
Free Estimates
1150
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
THE
PADUCAH
SUN
Independent
Contractors
needed in the
Cunningham
area at a monthly
profit up to $1500
and the Paducah
area up to $1500.
To be part of this
amazing process,
call Darren Turner
at 270-575-8792
or email
dsm1@
paducahsun.com
CLEAN OUT
HAUL OFF
• Garages • Attics
• Basements
• Outbuildings
W. KY & So. IL
No Job Too Small!
FREE ESTIMATES
(270) 210-5470
MERCHANDISE
ANTIQUES/ART
Downsizing
Due To Health
Antique furniture,
marble top tables,
lamps, clocks,
Carnival glass,
Hummels, & more!
270-970-0599
0509
HOUSEHOLD
GOODS
PILLOW TOP
mattress sets NEW
in plastic Queen $195,
Full $185, King, $385
270-293-4121 can
deliver. $40 Down Take
home Today
0533
Lic.#M00651;$71/hr.
1162
HOME IMPROVEMENT
& REPAIR
$IIRUGDEOH
&RQWUDFWLQJ
Roofing - Siding Windows
Pressure Washing Storm Damage
Repair
GENERALCONTRACTOR
CONTRACTOR
GENERAL
Doors, Windows,
Siding,Decks,
Decks, Covers,
Siding,
Retaining Walls, etc.
Mike Downing
270-816-3609
270-816-3609
REAL ESTATE FOR 0610
RENT
REAL ESTATE
0605 FOR RENT
UNFURNISHED
APARTMENTS
2BR 2B upstairs apt.,
quiet street, private
gar., laundry, Lone
Oak, no pets, $550.
270-366-6034
HUD
PUBLISHER'S
NOTICE
All real estate
advertised herein
is subject to the
Federal Fair
Housing Act which
makes it illegal to
advertise any
preference,
limitations, or
discrimination
based on race,
color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial
status or national
origin, or intention
to make any such
preferences,
limitations or
discrimination.
State laws forbid
discrimination in
the sale, rental or
advertising of real
estate based on
factors in addition
to those protected
under federal law.
We will not
knowingly accept
any advertising for
real estate which is
in violation of the
law. All persons
are hereby
informed that all
dwellings
advertised are
available on an
equal opportunity
basis.
UNFURNISHED
APARTMENTS
1 BR, good & quiet
location, water pd.
No pets $440mo
554-0211/217-5890
2 bdrm., 1.5 bath,
inc. cable & WiFi
No Pets, $700
270-898-7146
2 BR townhouse apt.,
350 Herman. All
elec.,water included,
$500/month + $500
dep. 573-587-1321.
Upscale 2 BR apt.
Over looking TN
River. $850 mo.
501-454-9564
Townhouse - 2 BR,
2 bath, 1100 sq. ft.,
all appl. incl., mall
area. $950/mo.
270-556-1365
0615
FURNISHED
APARTMENTS
1 BR apt., includes
utilities/ cable/WiFi,
no pets, $715
No lease. Reidland
270-898-7146
0620
HOMES FOR
RENT
3 bdrm, 2 bath,
appls. carport,
$800 + Dep
30/ to Paducah,
20/to USEC
323-828-6788
3BR 1 1/2BA Brick
House w/carport
for rent Reidland
area
$1000/Mo+Dep.
270-366-6987
0630
DUPLEXES FOR
RENT
3 BR, 2 B w/garage, Reidland.
908-9860
REAL ESTATE FOR
SALE
HOMES FOR
0710
SALE
SEEING is believing! Don't buy
property based on
pictures or representations. For free
information about
avoiding timeshare and real estate scams, write
the Federal Trade
Commission at
Washington, DC
20580 or call the
National Fraud Information Center,
1-800-876-7060.
HOME IMPROVEMENT
& REPAIR
ANDERSON’S
CONTRACTING
For all your home improvements
& new construction projects.
No Job Too Small.
Free Estimates.
Licensed & Insured.
Quality Work at a Fair Price.
270-559-0643
270-366-5133
1198
LAWN/LANDSCAPE/
TREE SVC
ADORE LAWN &
LANDSCAPING
Leaf Removal &
Cleanup, Mulching,
Over seeding,
Hedge Trimming
270-554-2426
270-933-8869
1198
LAWN/LANDSCAPE/
TREE SVC
Joe's Tractor &
Backhoe Service
Hauling White &
Red Gravel,
Top Soil, Sand
& Mulch. Spread
For Driveways &
Yards. Tilling...
Free Estimates!
270-564-9008
YARD WORK &
ODD JOBS
FREE
ESTIMATES
DONALD
FORKEY
(270) 210-3718
1200
TREE SERVICE
ACE TREE
SERVICE
& Stump Removal
Hayden's
Lawn Care
Free Estimates
270-556-4459
0734
Aerial Bucket Truck
Insured
Free Estimates!
1200
TREE SERVICE
FIVE STAR
TREE
SERVICE
Stump Grinding,
Tree Trimming,
Take Down &
Storm Cleanup
No Job Too Big or
Too Small!
270-804-9449
LITTLE'S
TREE & STUMP
REMOVAL
Hedge Trimming
Aerial Bucket Truck
FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES
270-933-3086
PADUCAH
TREE
SERVICE
(270) 210-5132
FREE ESTIMATES
(270) 898-8733
TREE SERVICE
1200
1276
ROOFING
NO TREE TOO TALL.
NO JOB TOO SMALL.
WE CUT THEM ALL.
FREE ESTIMATES.
PRO AFFORDABLE
TREE SERVICES
270-366-2033
COWBOY UP
TABER
Tree Service
Tree Removal
GATOR
CONSTRUCTION
• Metal Roofing
Shingle roof
Flat roof
*Free EstimatesWill beat any
contactor's price
270-705-5799
270-382-2345
Roofing,
Construction,
Pressure Washing
Painting
(270) 704-5917
Stump Removal
Free Estimates
270-816-3724
ROOFING
1276
HINES
ROOFING
Shingles & Metal
Affordable Home
Improvement
35 Years Experience
INSURED
Specializing in
ALL your home
improvement needs
(Roofing, Flooring
Repairs, etc.)
Insured, Free Est.
5% Military Discount
Scott, 270-309-3025
All Work Guaranteed
270-443-6338
270-556-5474
LOTS & ACREAGE
Lot for sale $12000
Kevil 4883522
FINANCIAL
0910
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
GOVERNMENT
WILDLIFE JOBS!
Great Pay and
Benefits. No
Experience
Necessary. The
ticket to a dream
job might really be
a scam. To protect
yourself, call the
Federal Trade
Commission
toll-free,
1-877-FTC-HELP,
or visit www.ftc.gov
A public service
message from The
Paducah Sun and
the FTC.
SOME ads in this
classification are
not necessarily for
"help wanted" but
for employment information booklets.
LEGALS
0955
LEGALS
Mobile home, unknown make, 14x70,
VIN#540134875, mobile home, Horton,
14x70,
VIN#
H31771G, mobile
home, NewK, 14x70,
VIN# 701410798 will
be sold to the highest
bidder Aug. 8, 2016 at
3712 Clarks River Rd
Office at 10:00a.m.
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square,
to form four ordinary words.
COSAH
©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
All Rights Reserved.
CLEET
FURNITURE
Dining Room Suite
Duncan Phyfe
270-339-4277
0563
Joe Thweatt
270-554-1208
270-217-4027
Over 25 Years Experience
0610
0506
HAULING
CHILD CARE
SKILLED TRADE
EXPERIENCED
Auto Glass installer. Apply in
person at Gray's
Glass, 2937 US
Hwy. 641 North in
Draffenville, KY.
0244
270-556-4287
Services
No job too small
INSTALL & REPAIR
Clean & sell window
air units, Charge ups,
Will pick up or you
bring
1162
ROSWOR
MISC. ITEMS
FOR SALE
THIS NEWSPAPER
COULD BE YOURS
EVERY DAY!
What better gift to
give yourself or a
friend.
Call The Paducah
Sun Customer
Service Dept for
details. 575-8800
or 1-800-599-1771.
OYMENK
Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.
Answer
here:
Yesterday’s
“
-
Brick-Block,
Stone &
Concrete
No Job To Small
Exp. & Insured
Serving McCracken
& Surrounding Co's
HEATING/
COOLING
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
HOME SERVICE 1048 CLEANING 1144 HANDYMAN 1156
SERVICES
DIRECTORY
Dhomynic
A&R
ASPHALT/
Lightfoot
Cleaning Service
1018 CONCRETE
Handyman
”
(Answers tomorrow)
SPELL
FRUGAL
TIPTOE
Jumbles: CYNIC
Answer: There are more than 1,000 satellites orbiting
Earth, because there’s — PLENTY OF SPACE