Just add the android:targetSdkVersion="8"
attribute to the uses-sdk
tag. If you just want to get rid of the warning, that will do it, safely.
If you want to know more, here's a description of what that attribute means,
http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/manifest/uses-sdk-element.html#target
The docs are a little fuzzy, but what they say is that the target SDK version is used to determine if android should enable compatibility layers. for example, If your min SDK was 8, but your target SDK was 14, you are telling android that while there's no reason it shouldn't work on version 8, you've only tested on 14. Therefore, if there any compatibility settings to enable between level 8 and 14, they can be set. note that this attribute may actually do nothing depending on the actual min / target values.
If you set min SDK == target, you are essentially saying you have tested on the lowest API level you claim to support, which is a good thing.
<manifest>
tag, but NOT inside the<application>
tag. And if that doesn't fix it, do a "Clean" of the project in Eclipse (I assume that's your dev environment).