<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3513" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/3513?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-06T19:32:46+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="13424">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/06dce94b044a7b38ee4bc5fb0ba020d2.pdf</src>
      <authentication>8928b446bb6f689486dbc9eda2419217</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="12558">
                  <text>ad
for

ga

d

,A2

·dges asse up
us cash, AS

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

M

S PORTS
• Reds fall to Padres.
See Page 81

S gets new assistant prin __· al

Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCHOMYOAILYSENTIN£; COM

PO 1EROY - William Mark
Francb wao;; htred as assistant pnncipal at Meigs High School on a
two-)ear contract at this \\Cck's
meeting of the Meigs Local Board
of Education.
He replaces Susan Climer who
resigned in June. For the past year
Francis has been assistant principal nt
the Ravenswood Hh:h School. Prior
to that he taught social studie~ ~md
altemative education at St. Mary's
High ScHool at St. ~1ary·s, W.Va.

Francis i-; a graduate · of Eastern
H1gh School. rcceh ed h1s bachelor
of ~cience degree m education from
Ohio Umversity in 2004 and a master's degrl.!e from Salem l nh ersit)
in Auf?ust 2008. He has certification
in Prmcipal, Supervisor General
Instruction and Superintendent. all
in PrcK AD.
Teachers hi red on one·) ear contracts for the.! corning schnol year
pending completion of post requirements wc1 (' Roxanne Maria
Williams. kindergarten teacher:
Rm.:hcl Allya Taylor, first grade
teacher. Cynthia Ann Enright, third

grade teacher. Kimberly Kay Wolfe.
third grade special education
teacher, .md Hetke Perko. fourth
gmde TAG teacher.
A\\ardcd supplementary contracts
for the school )ear \\ere Donna M.
Wolf. high school student council
ad\ isor: John Rvun Hill. M1ddlc
School boys b·:i~ketball coach;
T)SOn Lee, High School \oluntee•
assistant football conch: Rick
Chancey Derek Miller, Eddie.! Fife.
and Eric Cullum~;, ~hgh School varsity assistant foothalf coaches. and
Casey Manley, Middle School
cheerleader ad\ i or.

Substitutes htred v.e1c:
lea~..:hers - Camille Bolin, lise
Burris. Janice Cady. Tere"a Carr.
C) nthia CJ\ ale, Janice Curry.
Danny De\\ hur::.t. Bill Downie,
Roben ftsh. Beth Gregory. V1cki
Griffin. Lone Gnmm. Jordan Hill.
Tncta Jackson. Janel Kenncd).
Lester Manuel. Allen Midcap.
Linda Myers. Ga) Perrin, Paula
Pickens. Amanda Reed, Nathan
Robinette. Charles Rymer. Jodi
Schultz. Jacqudine Smith, Hannah
Sunberg, and Angela Weeks.
Please see MHS, Al

Budget
cuts have
ittle effect
on Meigs
DJFS staff

OBITUARIES
Page A3
• Brian E. Bass, 53
• Hilton Wolfe, Jr., 74

Bv BRIAN

• Sonshine Circle
donates school supplies.
See Page A6
• For the Record.
Sec Page A2
• Stimulus funding
awarded to Wayne
National Forest.
Sec Page A2
• Local Briefs.
Sec Page A3
• Community Nursery
children celebrate
with year-end activity.
See Page A7

e

lues~

gin
Yesterday evemng was the first night of the Ntnth Annual B1g
Bend Blues Bash with several mustcal performances, lncludtng
one by C&amp;S Ra1lroad (pictured above) provtding the soundtrack
along the Ohio River at the Pomeroy Amphitheater. Whi e the
music played, several people were geanng up for the singles and
doubles cornhole tournaments also held dunng the Bash" which
conttnues tontght and Saturday. Headliner Nora Jean Bruso
takes the stage at 10 p.m on Saturday to close the festival.

..,BATHER

Beth Sergent/photos

Racine's Party in the Park plans set
Arrest
Joe Diffie to headline
reported
in Rutland
car theft

of the Southcm !Vlctgs and
BSERGE~T C MYOAILYSENTINE COM
School
Eastern
Local
0J&lt;;tri~..:ts and scene!) of
RACINE - The &lt;;chedulc Rncine on the Gatling. Ohio
for Racme' first Party in LLC beltline that crosses
the Park has been finalized Ohio 124, II a.m .. chtcken
"ith
somcthtng for C\ cry
barbecue at Racme Hre
STAFF REPORT
one, Including a perfor- Depanment: noon, poker
MOSNEWSOMYOAILYSENTINE'l COM
mance by country muc;Jc run, bikes om at Southern
POMEROY - A Rutland star Joe Diffie on Saturda''· Htgh School: parade av.ardo;
• at Star Mtll Park
v.- as
arrested Sept 12.
man
and
pat
king
at
Admission
AI&lt;,Q at noon at Star Mill
Wedne~da) for the theft of a
the "party'' arc free.
Park. the inflatable playLangsville man's car.
Organizers of the feo;;ti\ al ground opens up with not
Derrick Nichols, 20, Side
ha'
e made sure there arc onl) inflatablcs for small
Htll Road, Rutland, wa~
Joe Diffie
nctivttJes
for chtldren 1 teens.. children but inflatables for
released from .sheriff's cu tocly after appeanng in .tthletes, Cdr lover!&gt;. food teens mcluding a bun~ec Also at 12:15 p.m the
Mc1g:s. County Court on Jo\Cts, bikers. parnd~ mtlatable as \\ell a~ others Gatling Ycllov. buo;h Coal
'J'hun..day. He was released \\'atchers. country mu ic that feature competitive Mme tour~; begin and Jea\c
oil a $10,000 personal recog- fans and fans of The Ohio themes. A climbing rock v. .til from Star .\lill Park. In
nil'.am:e bond, charged with Stnte University Buckt!ye wt!l also be available. Ther(' &lt;~ddition, mus1c v.-iHb~·gin at
will hi! tickets sold to use the 12: 15 p.m. w1th a pcrforgrand theft and obc:tructi ng football.
A
complete
itmerary
for
inllatablcs
but all mone) wtll mam:c by Route 33 on &lt;1
ofllcial bu'&gt;mess.
According to Sheriff the "pan)·· is as lollov.-" 8 stay in the Racine communi- new. portable stage pJ,~eed
Robert
Beegle.
Paul a.m . 5 K run rcgtstrnuon t) w llh til:kets taken by the in the park for the day.
from
Kount1y Carmel Sutton UMC nnd
Mus'\cr, Langs\'ille, had nc1o..,s
At 2 p.m., the k1 l ~ tracparked h1s car at Fox's Kitchen, 9 a.m., 5 K run RJctne hrst Baptbt Church . tor pull beguts tt tht: ..,ketPizza m Rutland while pick- st,trts at the corner of 1lnrd ) outh groups.
b,lll coun ,md Radto One
At
12:15 p.m, the t.tke~ the &lt;&gt;t.•gc to pet f~ 1m; ~
ing up an order. but left the and Mum Strcch; 9:45 .t.m ..
key in it. When he left the Oag ratsmg at Southern High Ri' er~ide Cloggers are at p.m., the Rhcr C'lty Pla)er'&gt;
restaurant. the car, ,1 2006 School; 10 am., p&lt;~mde ut St,tr ~ill Park; 1 p.m , car \\Ill perlonn 1t the p.u k at 4
Southern H1gh School lot
... how and antique u dCtor
Plense see Arrest Al
lov.-ed b) Ull\eiling of logos !'.how at the old tire station.
Please see Party, Al
Bv BETH SERGiNT

Details on Page AS

I NDEX
2

Sl C:IIONS- 16 PAGF.S

Annie's Mailbox
A2
Calendars
A2
Classifieds
B4-6
Comics
B7
A4
As-7
B8

Obituaries
Sports
Weather
c

•

2009 Ohio

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSE"lTINEt COM

A3
B Section

AS

Valle) Publishing Co.

li.IJIJIJ !I!1.!I!II .

..

MIDDLEPORT Layoffs
ha"e been .tvotdec.l at the
Metgs County Department of
Job and Familv Services
becau.-;e of effecu\ e planmng
when fundmg ... ut bec.tme
apparent, and bec.mse retinng
employee&lt;; have not been
cp1actXJ.
County C'onun1 &lt;&gt;toners
::.aid Thur~da) they do not
e1-"}Ject acros the-board Ia)o :fs or redu~:tion' in .,taff as
the result of state budeet
cuts that have created
staffing shortages .tt agenc•e~ in surrounding counties.
At Wedne),da) ·s regular
meeting of Me1gs County
Commissioner&lt;;. Judge L.
$~,.:ott Powell. v. ho works
closely with the a~ency's
chtldren·s service-:. d1vision,
and commis.,ioners dio;
cussed Ia) offs that ha\ c
taken place at other DJFS
ngencies and created reductions in servtce ....
Pov.ell s..ud he ha been
pro.,iding orne appointed
Please see DJFS, Al

ACS
•
experiences
financial
deficits
Local cancer
services not affected
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSEI1GE'NT MYDA LYSENT1NELCOM

PO'i\tEROY - At its
mo"t
recent
meeting.
regional spokesper&lt;,ons for
the
Amencan
Cancer
Society told tt'\ Meigs
Count) ACS Advisory
Board that desJ?itc ACS
cxpenencmg !&gt;Jgmficant fis.
cal deficits nationall) .local1) service~ should not be
affected.
The deficits were sa~d to
have been a result of the
uepressed cconom). causing
the ACS to recel\ e less re\cnue and has further resulted m Ia) off.., of '\\!\ eral of
ACS' Di' ision t!mployees.
Also. the rail Rela) Summit
in ColumbtJ&lt;; has hl·cn can·
Cl!lcd but regional training
w1ll be offered. Also, the
ACS v. ill no longer he able
to pro\ ide food for Meigs
ACS !\d\ 1sory Bo~Hd meetings effe..:tne Sept. I.
ln other Adv1 ory Board
news, membel' have cheduled an organizational
me tmg for 5:30 p m .. Sept.
Please see ACS, Al

�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, .July 31, 2009

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Saturda~. Aug. 1
S) RACUSE - Sutton
fm\nship Tru~te&lt;:s. 10 a.m.
at the Syracuse IO\\ n hall.
Monday, Aug. 3
LETART
Letart
Township Tru~tcl.!s. 5 p.m ..
oflicc building.
Wednesday, \ug. 5
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
TO\\nship Trustees. regular
6:30
p.m ..
meeting,
Pagcville Town Hall.
~ Thursda~, Aug. 6
SYRACLSL - Symcusc
Village Council, regular
meeting. 7 p.m .. village hall.

Clubs and
organizations
Tuesda). Aug. 4
SYRACCSf
Wildwood Garden Club. I
p.m. at the Syracuse
Conumtntty Center. Janet
Bolin to present worbhop
on creatiYe flower designs
for the fair. Meeting open to
all interested.

Route 7 and Storvs Run
Road. ~1iddlepo1 i. with
'\orman Taylor preaching.
Sen11.:es will continue
through . Aug. 7. Ralph
Butcher Is the pastor.
"1IDDLEPORT- Familv
vacation Bible school. 6: IS
to 8:30 p.m Monda). Aug. 3
through Friday. Aug. 7. at
the Hope Haptist Church in
i\liddlep011. Theme ''ill be
"Boomerange
E\press:·
Classes for all ages.

Saturday. \ug. 1
MIDDLFPOR f - Big
Bend Youth Football Lea!!ue
signups. II a.m. to I p~m ..
ror football playt:.rs and
cheerleaders. Middleport
stadium. Mandator} coach
and staff meeting followmg
s1gnups for interested volun~
teers. Camp will begin at
5:30p.m. on Aug. 3.

• ulus tUDd•mg awarded
tun
S
rayne Natt•onal Forest
to 'X
ll
-F; ' .(.
fi ·z· · d /
B eneJ tfS JOrest QCl ltles an trai S
~

1

1

~1uch of the work on allerrai n vehicle trails will be
s rface and ba.:;e work. as
w I as draina~e. :.ignage
and ridge repatrs. Another

SubmiHed photo •

Reunions

Church events

improvemen~.

Rose Fife,
center, of AEP
R{ver
Operations
presents a
$3,000
to Pat Holter,
left, and Pam
Schatz of the
ChesterShade
Historrcal
Association to ·
be used'
towards the
Appalachian
Culture
Center, the
·'
educational
unit of the
Chester
Courthouse,
for educational
purposes for
area grade
schools.

Youth events

Saturday, Aug. 1
RACINP - 71rd 'itover~1IDDLEPORT
Casto ·eunion ) ~lr ~lill
Regular stated meeting of Park. R.tcme. Mustc. white
'Middleport ~lasonic Lodge elephant auction, basket
#363. 7:JO p.m .. lodge hall. dinner at noon.
Refreshments a1 6:30.
RACI\11:- - Bee!!le famiWednesday, Aug. 5
lv reunion at i\merican
PO~lERO\
Meigs Legion
in
Racine.
Countv Board ot Health. Registration at noon, potluck.
regulai· meeting 5 p.m .. con· dinner at I p.m. Square
ference
room.
Meigs dance. open to all, 7-11 p.m.
County Health Department.
Sunday, Aug. 2
RUTLAND Davis
Reunion at Rutland Fire
Department 12·30 p.m.
carry-in dinner.
Saturday, Aug. 1
~HDDI,EPORT
Sunday. Aug. 9
Benefit gospel sing for Fall
POMEROY
85th
Harvest Gospel Sing, 7 p.m Hayes Young and Holday
Middleport Church of the School
Reunion,
old
Nazarene. Singers include Holiday School grounds on
Christian Echoes. :vtarty Gilkey·Ridge Road. Potluck
Short. Sid and Carol at 1 p.m. Friends. rl.!latives
Hayman, Brian and Family invited. Bring photographs,
Connections. Jerry and genealogy information and
Diana Frederick and Angela entertainment.
RACir-.:E - Linley and
Gibson. Refreshments. 985Sarah OliYcr Hart family
3495 for information.
Monda)·, Aug. 3
reunion at the American
\11DDLEPORT
Legion Hall in Racine.
Re\ tval services will be Dinner at 12:30 p.m. Take
held at the Old Bethel covered dish. All family and
Freewill Baptist Church. friends welcome.

1\ibLSONVILLE
Wa) nt: National Forest in
southeastern Ohio has
received S 1.7 million from
the American Recovery and
Reinvl.!stment Act (ARRA)
to be used for needed
improvements to various
Forest facilities and trails
projects.
l.J .S. Departmt~nt of
Agriculture Secretary Tom
made
the
Vilsack
announcement along with
other projects on July 21,
2009. A total of 191 projeers, funded at more than
$274 millton, arc located
on public lands managed
by the U.S. Forest Service
in 32 states.
"The Recovery Act projeers we've just announced
are central to creating jobs
and building a better.
stronger economy in the
future," said Secretary
Vilsack. "These projects
President
exemplify
Obama's commitment to
sustainabllity. reducing our
environmental footprint,
and increasing energy efficiency, which will benefit
the 178 million people who
visit the national forests
each year, while generating
additional tourism and stimulating local economies."
Wayne ~ational Forest
project highlights include
the following efforts:
• Within twelve months.
S 1.3 million will be spent
on a variety of projects. The
fund~ will finance projects
that will improve over 120
miles of motorized and nonmotorLr.ed trails within the ,
boundary
of
Wa) nc
National Forest.
The
Athens
Ran~cr
Dtstrict
will
recen·e
$600,000 of the funds,
while the Ironton Ranger
District
will
receive
$300,000 to fund trail

Making a .d onation

will purchase
ora vel that will be u ed on
.::.
.
s
Forest-wtde
''.·arcrshed.
tratl. and road proJect-;.
• Within the next twelve
months. $275.000 . will be
spent in Lawrence Countv
to repair the waste\\ ater
handling and disposal sysrem at the Lake Vesuvius
Furnace recreation site. The
imprO\ eml.!nts to the I 930"s
er.. system will ensure the
public will not be exposed
to health and safety risks
due to the potential for surface water contamination.
• Also in Lawrence
County. $130,000 will fund
repairs to three Forest earthen dams; Timbre Ridge.
Smith Hollow. and Brady.
Repairs include work on
emergency spillways. outlet
structures. valves. and
embankments.
Across the country. the
Forest Service trails system
provides access to a wide
diversity of national forest
users. includin!! hikers.
horseback riders: mountain
bikers. cross-country skiers.
snowmobilers, and ali-terrain vehicle enthusiasts.
As with the roads and
trails sy~tem, there is currently u large backlog of
maintenance needs for publie facilities. Maintenance
needs
were identified
through extensive studies of
specific public facilities
needed to ~up port outdoor
activities thm are bl!st pro\ ided on the national forests
and grasslands.
Workl!rs hired under
ARRA \\ill maintain public
buildings and recreational
facilities so that they contribute to safe, high-4uality
outdoor experiences for
national forest VISitors.
Once work is completed.
these buildings will be
more energy efficil.!nt. use
less water, have a ~.maller
etl\'ironmental footprint.
and be less expensive to
operate and maintain, thus
saving taxpayer money in
the long run.
$ 400.000

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

e

If you witness abuse, call911
tact "' ith m) father's family.
as well as her own, and there
is no one who can influence
Dear Annie: A few vears her. Visiting is difficult
ago. my father had a series because Mom makes it obviof severe strokes at a rcla- ous she hates us. and we do
I tively young age. He is now not want to expose our childisabled and occasionally dren to her hon·ible beha\ ior.
incontinent. At times he is She savs she has the ri!!ht to
quite lucid. but he ncl!ds treat Dad this way because
continuous care. My par- he abused her so many years
ents have been married 40 ago, and his drinking and
vears. Earlv on. there was smoking caused his health
physical and verbal abuse. problems. Dad says he wants
l'hey are extremely well to be at home. Mom reiuses
off. and my mother is con- our offers of respite care and
vjnced a nursing home will won't see a counselor for her
drain all their asset:-, so she own mental health. What can
insists Dad stay home. ,She we do? - Scared of :\lorn
has fancy equipment and
Dear Scared: Your mothhired help that she pays er is getting revenge. and
under the table.
your father, in his more
My sister and I hve two lucid moments .. thinks he
hours away. r-.tom goes into deservt:s it Adult Protective
rages if we try to help with Services should step in. but
Dad's care. She also is if the'} \von't, call the
physically rough with him National Center on Elder
m front of our husbands and Abuse
hot
line
kids. The aides say she hits (www.ncea.aoa.gov) at 1and kicks him, and tell~ him 800-96-ABUSE
(1-800she wishes he were dead. 962-2873) and explain the
They won't call Adult situation. And if you witness
Protective Services because r-.tom abusing Dad, call 911.
Dear Annie: ~1y intdlithey want to keep their
jobs. We have called. and gent, good-looking husband
his psychiatrist and primary of 35 years bites his fingercare doctor also called, but naih to the quick and
1 we were told that as long as gnaws on the skin around
tll~ ~ther c~hoose~ to stah&gt;: in them. This drives me crazy.
1c orne. ere ts not tng His tingernails arc only half
thev can do.
the site the)· were when I
.~ ·1om•has broken off c _
;,
•
on met him.
---------------------BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

For the Record
Arraigned

Public Defender appointed
counsel. Trial was set for
POMEROY - The fol- Sept. 23.
• l.ee Fiupatrick on two
lmving were arraigned in
counts
of non-suppo ·t of
Meigs County C~lmmon
dependents.
Bond was set at
Pleas Court:
S
I
,000
personal
recog•
Thomas
Keith
nizance.
Lcamond, on four counts of
pl!rmittmg drug abuse.
Bond was set at $1 .000 perrccotmizance.
sonal
POMEROY - Nikolai
Charles H. Kni!!ht was
appointed counsel. Trial Adrian Leu '"as sentenced
in Meigs Count) Common
was set for Sept. I .
• Nancy Jeffers. on two Pleas Court to three years in
counts of possession of prison on two counts of'
crack cocaine and two gross sexual imposition.
counts of trafficking in
crack cocaine. Bond was ~et
at Sl ,000 personal rl!cognizance.
Knight
was
POMEROY - A dissoluappointed com\"o.;eJ. Trial tion v.. s g1 &lt;:.ntcd in ~1eigs
was set for Sept. I .
County Common Pk&lt;is
• Jamey Nelson, on a Court to Heather L. Searls
secret indictment charging and Roger D Searls
four counts of receiving
stolen property and five
counts of forgery. Bond was
set at $ I ,000 personal
HOCKINGPORT
recogniance. Christopher E. Three were arrested b} the
Tenoglia was appointed Athens Countv Sheriff'.,
counsel. Trial was set for Department after an investiSept. 5.
gation of multiple theft
• Jonathan Preast on a offenses in Hockingport .
count of breaking and enter- Robert L. Tippie. 36,
ing. Public defender was Coolville. and Darrell E.
appointed. Bond was set at Hill II , 31. Coolville. were
$1 ,000 personal rccog- arrested and t:harged with
nit. ance. Trial was set for burglary. according to
Sept. 8.
Sheriff Patrick Kelly.
• Buford W. Smallwood,
Both Tippie and Hill were
on a charg&lt;: of escape. allegedly involved in breakTl!noglia was appointed ing into campers in the
counsel. Trial was set for community over the past
Sept. 10.
two month~. Both were
• Rick Hawley. on a transported
to
the
charge of recci\'ing stolen Southeastern R~:gional Jail.
property. Tenoglia was
Terry L. Haiky, 18,
appointed counsel. Trial address unreponed. "as
was :.et for Sept. 8.
arrested and charged \\ ith
• Chasity James. on grand theft of two jet skis,
charges of grand theft of a stolen June 23 from
rirearm. grand theft, bur- Hockingport. lie is also in
glary. Athens County the regional jail.

He once tned to stop. but
then bcg&lt;m chev.. ing on thl.!.
inside of his checks. which
became sore. So now he
chews gum con~tantl).ChC\\S
on the inside of his mouth
and Mill bites his fingernails.
Even wheri in the other room,
I can hear him smacking.
slurping and chewing. I don 2t
know if I should buy him a
pacifil.!r or dump u bucket of
water on him. This is so
bizarre. Any suggestions? Creeped Out
Dear Creeped Out: t\
pacifier might not he a bad
idea. It ~ounds as if your husband has some anxietv and
stress. and what might have
been a bad habit has turned
into obsessive-compulsi\ e
behavior. It can be treated
with behavioral therapy and
possibly medication. but he
mu:-.t be willing to seek help.
Contact the ObsessheCompulsive
Foundation
(ocfoundation.org), P.O. Box
961029, Boston . .!VIA 02196.
for additional inforn1ation.
Dear Annie: I read your
column every day and fully
agree with your frequent
advice to young people to
talk to school counselors. a
friend's mother, etc.. but
you never mention grandmothers as possible sources
of such help. Many of us arc
ven• "with it" and able to be
·;
objective. We obsef\e '' har

PROCDTO BEA
PART OF YOUR LIFE.
l'lu• !Jail) Seminel
Subscribe toda\' • 992-2155
111111 .tll)daii)Sl'lltiuel.com

goes on, have good memories of our own adolescence,
(and marria!!eS) , and are
read\ to lend" an car. Don't
forget u... ! We plan to be ..
around for a long time. -,.
Montreal, Canada
Dear Montreal: We usu-·
ally ha\e "family member" ..
on that list so a ) oung person can tum to anv rdatiYe~
but you are rfght that•,
devoted
grandparents ~.
desene an extra mention ..
Consider it done.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and.
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi- ·
tors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your·.
questions to amziesmail- ,
boxcomcast.net, or write,
to: Annie's .Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL ·
60611. To find out more
about ttnnie's Mailbox,
and read features by other~
Creators Syndicate writ.
er.~
and cartoonists, risit
Creators Syndicate l
page at www.creators.com.

Internet
SUMMER SPECIAL
.i

L!n!!.m1ted Hours!

$88
77

ONE
FULLYEAR!
oi!II ...J]/JI/Q'

• Nol tree 12:"1 ~ ·edl

• FREE ~~So,~

•10 E·~Aild'fSit$

• SAVE '1\0r. when you

• FREE Tee: ral $w.xll

a~d Expmsl

.f.rPRf..U
(

~

:

Surf up to 6X Fasler!

'}

• .,'1110 __./

Sign Up Online! www.LocaiNatcom

~~
l.ocaiNet

740·992·6260

Rehable Internet Access Since 1994

Sentenced

Dissolution

Arrests

Ingels Electronics
Radio Shack Dealer
Middleport, OH • 740-992-2825
Hours:
M-T-W-F -9-5:30 • Thurs: 9-1
Sat. 9-2

at&amp;t
\Virelcss

..
---.a.;.;o..:.------~~-----------L--'- ---~---·----------~-~--- --~ --------~--~-.....:

�. Local Briefs

Obituaries

-------------------------------------------------------------- ~

Hilton Neigler
·Big Fooze' Wolfe, Jr.

Town hall
meeting set

RACINE
Hilton
Neigler "Big Fooze" Wolfe.
.
74, of Racine. died
nesday, July 29, at the
• o zer Medical Center with
family and friends at his
side.
Born on May 19. 1935 at
Racine, he was the son of
the late Hilton Wolfe, Sr.
dod Ruth Salser Wolfe. He
was a member of the Racine
Gmted Methodist Church,
president of the RacineSyracuse Sewer Board for
15 vears, and a fonner member" of the Racine Volunteer
Fire Department. He also
owned and operated Wolfe's
Hilton Neigler
Body Shop in Racine
" Big Fooze"Wolfe, Jr.
Village for nearly 50 years.
He is survived by his wife of 52 years. Marilyn
Eben.;bach, two sons. Scott of Syracuse and Bryan Sherry)
of Racine; two brothers Larry (Dolores) Wolfe. Racme. and
Duane (Brenda) Wolfe, Racine: and six grandchildren,
Kylie, Jennifer and Torrey Wolfe of Ravens\'-ood. W.Va..
Jarod and Raquel Wolfe of Racine. and Kyle Wolfe of
Gallipolis; an aunt, Grace Agre of Morris Plains, 1\1. J .. and
several nieces. nephews, great nieces and nephews.
Special lifelong friends who survive include Joe Stobart
and Ronnie Young, Layton Boyd, Larry Birch. Dave Nease
Dave Shain, along with many community members
leaves behind many racing family members and sports
ily members, all of which he considered members of
his famil)'. He took -l!reat pride in seeing his students attain
success after 2raduation.
Mr. Wolfe taught school for 32 years. 31 of wh1ch were
J.t Southern High School. He \'-as known for his dedication
10 academic achievement and athletic development.
Durin¥ those years. 1955 to 1981. he was the teacher and
coach of boys and girls basketball and baseball had awardwinning athletic teams. In 1970-71 he was named varsitv
coach in boys basketball. In girls basketball he led teams to
two SVAC and t\VO sectional championships. in baseball
from 1971 to 1985 took three SV.\C championships. one
d istrict championship and one regional championship and
became a three-time district Coach of the Year. His overall
baseball coaching record was 164-104.
All through the years he remained an avid fan of the
Southern Tornados, of the Cincinnati Reds and the
Cleveland Indians. along with auto racing and bluegrass
music. He was inducted into the Ohio Valley Racers Hall
of Fame. His hobbies included collecting coins and
arrowheads. He loved teaching. coaching, traveling, and
helping people. He was especially recognized for his
friendly smile, his keen sense of humor. and his signature
''Big Fooze" wave.
On Dec. 5, 2008 the Southern Alumni Association hosted a "Big Fooze Appreciation Night at the EasternSouthern game. Then on March 18,2009 the $2.000 raised
he alumni game was put into the "Big Fooze"
larship Fund. In lieu of flowers the farruly asks that
ds send donations to the Big Fooze Scholarship Fund.
In care of Southern Alumni; Attn: Junie Maynard: 906 Elm
Street. Racine. Ohio 45771
Funeral services will be held at 3 p.m . on Sunday. Aug.
2. in the Southern High School gymnasium. Officiating
will be the Rev. Don Walker. the Rev. Jim Satterfield. and
the Rev. Bill Marshall. Burial will be in Greenwood
Cemetery. Pallbearers will be Jarod Wolfe, Kyle Wolfe.
Torrey Wolfe. Wes Riffle. Jay Rees, Kevin Layne, Jonathan
Rees and Jason Shain.
Calling hours at Southern High School will be Saturday
from 1 to 3 and 5 to 8 p.m and I to 2:30 p.m. prior to the
funeral. Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine will be handling the funeral arTangcments.

POMEROY - A town
hall meeting hosted by rep
n:sentatives of Buckeye
Hills-Hocking
Vallt'Y
Regional
Dl.!velopmcnt
Distril't from I 0 a.m.-noon.
Aug. II at Rio Grande's
Meigs Campus located on
Charles Chancey Drive.
Meeting
participants
will ha\c the chance to
voice thoughts on a variety

Deaths
Brian E. Bass
Brian E. Bass. 53. of Long Bottom, Ohio. died
Wednesday, July 29. 2009. at Holzer Medical Center.
Arr~n~ements arc incoJ!lplete .and. ~·ill ~e announced by
the Wtlhs Funeral Home rn Galhpohs. Ohro.

DJFS from Page AI

court work in Gallia
County, where staff cuts
have been significant, and
said the county is facing
c.uts m servrces as a result.
So far, no staff reductions
have taken place at the
Meigs County agency.
Powell said those who have
run the agency in the past
year. including former
Director
Michael
L.
Swisher and interim director Barbara Chapman, who
replaced him. and the current Director Chris Shank.
have been prudent in managing the agency in light of
anticipated funding cuts
lhat came to being with the
state budget approved earlier this month.
A statewide reduction in
available funds from the
Temporary Assistance to
Needy Families program. a
(!.
or funding source for
·s social services has
made it necessary to reduce
services in Gallia and
Athens counties, and necessitated layoffs.
Commissioner Michael
Bartrum said Wednesday
the relatively easy transition
in Meigs County to the new
budget formula is also a
credit to his predecessor,
fOrmer Commissioner Jim
Sheets , and Board President
Mick Davenport, who
worked closelv with DJFS
administrators· to minimize

r

staff reductions and cuts in
sen·ice. Bartrum said commissioners and DJFS staff
were able to formulate an
cffectrve plan to transition
into a reduced budget without sacrificing services to
the public.
''Everyone knew it was
going to happen, so we had
time to plan ahead."
Davenport said. "The situation has created a huge
problem for some counties.
but Meigs has been able to
avoid most of the problems.''
According to Davenport.
counties received additional
TANF money in some budget cycles for additional services, and while some counties hired additional DJFS
staff to work those programs, the Meigs County
DJFS contracted with other
agencies for those services.
So, when funding for the
programs ended, the contracts were discontinued,
but not DJFS staff were laid
off. In other counties, people lost their jobs when the
funding was cut.
The agency has also taken
advantage of attrition to
save money. according to
Davenport. The ~feigs
County DJFS has lost several staff members to retirement or rcsrgnation. and
those staff members were
not replaced.

of topics and share ideas
for partnerships and working toward solutiOns. As a
result. it is hoped the true
voice of those living in the
county and region will be
gathered, offering needed
insight on future planning.
The perspectives raised in
these meetings will help
Buckeye Hills learn how
to best serve residents
across the eight-county
region.
In addition, the Buckeye
Hills Area Agency on
Aging will gather input on

regional senior services
through a needs assessment surv\!y and discussion related to current services and any potential
gaps. This information will
be used for the AAA8
regional plan.

Immunization
clinic set

childhood
immunization
clinic from 9-11 a.m. and 13 p.m. on Tuesday. Bring
child's shot records or medical cards if applicable. A
$1 0 donation appreciated
but not required.

In nursing home

The
Health
host a

POMEROY
Leota
Birch, whose birthday is
Aug. 3, is a patient at the
Rock Springs Rehab Center.
at 36759 Rocksprings Road . ...
Pomeroy

In other business the
Board authorized the treasureriCFO to advertise for
the purchase of three handicapped-accessible school
buses in cooperation/collaboration with Eastern
and Southern Local School
Districts, to be paid for
with stimulus monies
available to the three districts.
The Board reviewed federal and state grant awards
for the next school year
which included five stimulus programs relatmg to
Title I and special education along with school
improvement fiscal stabilization. Other programs
funded through grant program included the 21st
Century
Community
Learning Center, fresh
fruit and vegatable program
at
the
Meigs

Elementary, a program for
safe and drug free schoob,
technology
and early
childhood education, and
money for
improv ing
teacher quality.
A 12-month contract was.
renewed with Sabo/Linbach '
for utility audit services in •
the amount of $507. Scott
Walton, Board president, '
was appointed as delegate
to the 2009 OSSA annual
business meeting to be held
Nov.9.
An executive session was
held to discuss hiring and
compensation of personnel
and negotiations. Attending
the
meeting
were
Superintendent
William
Buckley, Mark Rhonemus.
treasurer/CFO. and board
members, Scott Walton,
Roger Abbott. Ron Logan, ·
Barbara Musser, and Larry
Tucker.

POMEROY
Meigs
County
Department will

MHS from Page AI
Bu~ dnvers Dav id
Casci , Bobhi Erwin. Linda
Fillinger. Clyde Gaus. L.
Dean Han·is, Penny Hysell ,
Shane l\tilhoan, Yvonne
:\loorc. Oliver r\oiTis,
Charles Pert"). and Bill
Taylor.
Coob _ Grace Abbott.
Linda Edmonds, Cathy
Pickens, Malenc Pierce,
Rebekah Yost and Fhonda

y,

~~~~clians - Lee Boggs.
James
Craven,
Danny
Davis. Charles Eggers.
J ames R . J o h r1son . .sr., G ary
Kau ft'. G er0 ge Ken t , J 1..
·
Gary Kin g. Jr. Tamara
Marshall , Roger Mowery.
Oliver Noris, Joseph Parker.
John Powell. Lawrence
Powell . Tony Quillen.
Donovan
Richmond,
Gregory Satterfield, Carl E.
Smith , David Staats, Jr..
Timmy Tillis .

I

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, July 31, 2009

Secretaries - Syephanie
Allen. Sandra Butcher.
Kolleta Fridley. Francis
Rainy Harrison. Angela
Hoalcraft. Dawn Kopec.
Carolyn Nicholson. Connie
Soulsby. Yvonne Young.
and Tammy Zirkle.
In other personnel matters. Rebecca Zurcher was
hired as 21st Century Grant
coordinator on a one-year
contract.
The
resignations
of
Wetzel Bailey as a substitute custodian and bus driver. Mitchell Buchmn as a
seventh grade math teacher
and Kelli Bailey as 21st
Century Grant social work
were accepted.
The Board esstablished a
supplemental contract for
the reading and math coaches at 40 percent of the base
salary in lieu of extended
service contracts.

1
•

Party from Page AI
p.m .• Radio One makes a
repeat performance: 5 p.m.,
a repeat performance by
Route 33: the tractor and car
show awards at the old fire
department: Gatling mine
tours end for the day.
At 6:30 p.m. , Joe Diffie
takes the stage at Star Mill
Park. Afte r Diffie 's perform ance , the OS U football
game aga inst USC will be
projected onto a ~crecn on

the old Star Mill Park
stage.
In addition to activities,
crafters are invited to attend
and can reserve a spot by
calling Maxine Rose at 9492210. For information on
the car and tractor shows
call 949-2217 and for any
other questions call 9492296.
There is no alcohol permitted in the park and those

who attend are encouraged
to bring lawnchairs for seating. Parking is free and
there will be designated
parking areas and shuttles
provided.
The party is put on by
corporate sponsors and
there will be 500 T-shirts
given out on the day of the
party on a first-come, firstserved basis. The Party in
the Park is meant to be

Racine's premiere festival
and build off of the annual
Cruisin' Saturday Night
Car Show sponsored by
Hill's Classic Cars, Home
National Bank and Gatling, ·.
Ohio LLC.
,
More on Party in the Park •
and its parade. which organizers hope will be the
biggest the village has seen,
will appear in next week's.
The Daily Sentinel.

ACS from Page AI
17 at the Wild Horse Cafe to the Cure Columbus affiliate.
establish
a
new A physician from The Ohio
State University Hospital I
Sunivorship Taskforce .
Armstrong
It was announced repre- Lance
sentati\'l.!s from Southern Foundation will be recruited
and Meigs Local School as a keynote speaker. All
Districts recently attended Appalachian breast cancer
the
School
Health survivors I patients are
Conference where action invited to attend but must
plans to enhance the health register via the ACS.
of students and faculty were
It was also reported the
developed. Both districts Rutland Walking Path
intend to implement the (located on property owned
''Fresh Start" tobacco cessa- by the Meigs County Soil
tion program for students and Water Conservation
and staff. Lora Rawson . for- District) has been completmerly of the now defunct ed. The MCSWCD is waitHolzer Tob.acco Pr~vention ing for funding to establish
~ro.gram, wrll be t!amed as a additional facilities at the
Also. members heard
~~~~l~~~~;:~ . fullrll college site.
there may be a new exerAdvisorv Board members cise facilit\ established in
also discussed the ~leigs the Tuppers Plains area in
i County Cancer Initiative is the Eastern Local School
planning another Cancer District.
Survivor Workshop from
Courtne) Sim. advisory
1 9 :30 a.m . - 3:30 p.m., Sept. board member, also report29 at the Ohro Valley ed on Monday the Meigs
Christian Assembly. The County Health Department
workshop is sponsored by v.·•ill offer a sports physical
MCCJ and the Komcn for clinic for children in grades
- - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

I

Arrest from Page At
Buick. was gone - and so
was a man he saw standing
outside when he first
entered the restaurant.
Musser told Beegle he
sav.· the car traveling west
on Salem Street. Nichols
later confessed to stealing
the car and told deputies the
location of the car ke) s.
Beegle said the vehicle
had been recovered earlier.

and was undamaged. It was
returned to Musser.
In another investigation.
Beegle reported deputies
also recovered items stolen
from the Rutland Ball Field
concession stand. Four juveniles have been charged and
will appear before Judge L.
Scott Powell. The concession stand was reported
entered on Tuesday evening.

TI1e Vaughan Agency
Pmvidu~g ;t

worlc.I of .:hoi..:e in insurance.

Agent
Dodger Vaughan
Call us today at
992-9784

Our family is here
to 1neet your
family's insurance needs.
Horne

Auto

Health

Life

Um.iness

seven-12 who attend school
in the Meigs, Eastern.
Southern Local School
Districts. Sim said the
MCHD hopes to immunize
several eligible adolescents
with recommended shots,
including Gardasil for
females which provides
protection against the HPV,
which can cause cervical
cancer.
Members also said the
20 I0 Meigs County Relay
for Life will be held on May
15-16 at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds and Shade
River
Coon
Hunter's
Building.
Sim noted several local
cancer patients have visited
the Cancer Resource Center
"'ithin the MCHD to obtain
transportation
vouchers
from the MCCI. Sim also
said she's assisted minimal
visitors mainly with refer-

rals
to ACS
Patient
Navigator Kim Painter.
Advisory Board members
also noted they have
received a significant number of positive comments
about ACS from Meigs ·
County residents. ACS
regional spokesperson Julie
Ellenwood said she credited
this to the availability of
programs I services and the ·
efforts of local volunteers. :
The next Meigs County '
ACS Advisory Board meeting is at noon on Sept. 17 in
the banquet room of the
Wild Horse Cafe. Attendees
will be responsible for pay- ·
ing for their own meals.
Attending the meeting
were Ellenwood, Sim, Rae
Moore, JoAnn Crisp, Maxine
Griffith, Dave Harris, Lenora
Leifheit, Amy Magorien.
Sim provided the meeting's
minutes for this article.

~

, - : : THANK YOU
FOR YOUR SUPPORT!

~

Pt•psi Cola Co. - Athens
Swisher Lohse Pharmacv
Farmers Bank &amp; Sa\'ings - Pomeroy
Karr· Audiology - Athens
Farmers Bank - Tuppers Plains
Home National Bank - Racine
Thank you to all those who suppm·ted
CSH A signature ad
Special thanks to those who donated
their time:
VFW #9053
Karen Gritlith
Del Pullins
Darlene Newell
Bryan &amp; Jerry Frcderit•k
Harmonica judges: Bill Cockier, Eugene
WilloughbJ &amp; Dallas Warner
E' cryone '' ho baked pies and helped in an)
other way to make
Chester Shade Da) s a Success!

~ster Shade Historical Associa~

�Pagei\4.

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 31,

VVhy Episcopalians get so much attention

The Daily Sentinel

On a typical Sunday.
4,281 Episcopalians attend
~o,ervices
in the world fnrnou... Diocese or Ne\\
llamp::.hire. according to
offici&lt;~! chun:h reports .
Terry
This isn't a large number
Mattingly
of worshippl'rs in the pews
of 47 parishes - roughly
the same number that would
attend weekend Masses in
two or three healthy openly gay, non -celibate
Catholic parishe.., in a t) pi - b1~hop.
cal American cit).
"We have rccei\cd o
Episcopal attendance in many Roman Catholics and
New Hamp~hire fell ~harply young families:· he said ,
between 2003 and 2007 . ··particular!) families who
which is the mo::.t recent sta- arc saying. ··we don't want
tistical ) car a' ailable . to raise our dau!!hters in a
~leanwhile. this diocese had church that doe'Sn't value
15,621 members in 2003 young people."' In fact , the
and 14,160 in 2007- a loss bishop insisted that his dioof 9.4 pcrccnt. The entire cese ..gre\\ by 3 percent last
Diocese of New Hampshire )ear:·
is about the same ~ize as
If this early 2008 report is
many indh idual Protestant true. then Robinson and his
mega churches.
diocese \\ill be in the ne,., s
Ho\\evcr, the influential again - offering proof that
bishop of this little diocese a liberalized Christianity
recently told the New York can lead to growth. rather
Times that things have been than decline~ If that hapfine since 2003. when he pens, many reporters will
was consecrated in a rite receive a smattering of calls
that rocked the global and e-mails from amatcd
Anglican Communion .
readers asking: "Why do the
·'There are 15 .000 people Episcopalians get so much
in the diocese of New news coverage?"'
Hampshire," claimed the
That's a good question.
Rt. Re'. Gene Robinson. in since the Episcopal Church
what he stressed \\as an - with a mere 2 million
exclushe interview during members - often draws
the
national
General more attention than the
Convention. This comen- Southern
Baptist
tion made more headlines Convention. the Assemblies
by approving the selection of God and :-.e\eral other
of ga) s and lesbians for major denominations com"any ordained ministry." bined.
What's going on'? After
\\ hich means Robinson may
soon lose his status as the 30 years on the religion
Episcopal Church's only beat. J haYe decided that

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

Cotr._S!ress shall make tto law respecting att
establislmretrt of rei(S!iott, or prohibiting tire
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of tlze press; or tire right of the
people peaceably to assemble, atrd to petitiotr
the Go11ermnettt for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday.July ~I. the 212th day of2009. There are
153 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On July 31. 1777. the
Marquis de Lafayette. a 19-ycar-old French nobleman. was
made a major-general in the American Continental Arm).
On this date: In 1556. St. Ignatius of Loyola. founder of
the Society of Jesus - the Jesuit order of Catholic priesb
and brothers - died in Rome .
In I 875. the 17th president of the United States. Andre\\
Johnson, died in Carter Countv. Tenn .. at age 66.
In 1919. Gennany's Weimar.Constitution~was adopted by
the republic's National Assembly.
In 1945, Pierre La,·ai. premier of the pro-Nazi Vichy gO\ernment. surrendered to U.S. authorities in Austria; he was
turned owr to France, which later tried and executed him.
In 1948, President Harry S. Truman helped dedicate New
York International Airport (later John F. Kenned)
International Airport) at Idlewild Field.
ln 1964, the American space probe Ranger 7 reached the
moon. transmiuing pictures back to Earth before crashing
onto the lunar surface.
In 1969. the American space probe Mariner 6 flew by
Mars. sending back images of the Red Planet.
In 1989. a pro-Iranian group in Lebanon released a grisly videotape showing the body of American hostage
William R. Higgins. a Marine lieutenant-colonel. dangling
from a rope.
In 1991. President George H.W. Bush and Soviet
President Mikhail S. Gorbachev signed the Strategic Arm~
Reduction Treaty in Moscow.
Ten year::. ago: Chicago authorities said as many as 46
more residents had died as a result of a relentless heat wave
that enveloped much of the nation and produced the hotte!'&gt;t
Jul) on record in .New York City.
Fh e years ago: The Vatican issued a document denouncing feminism for trying to blur differences between men
and women and threatening the institution of families
ba,ed on a mother and a father. Actress Virginia Grey died
in Woodland Hills. Calif.. at age 87.
One year ago: Three teenagers in Wisconsin were shot to
death when a gunman opened fire on a group of young pcopl.e \\ho'd gathered to go swimming in the Menominee
R1ver. (The gunman, Scott J. Johnson. was later sentenced
to life in prison without parole.) Scientists reported the
Phoenix spacecraft had confirmed the presence of frozen
water in Martian soil.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Wesley Snipes is 47. Country
singer Chad Brock is 46. Author J.K. Rowling is 44. Actor
Dean Cain is 43 . Actor Ben Chaplin is 40. Actor Loren
Dean is 40. Minnesota Vikings quarterback Gus Frerotte is
38. Former NPL player Jonathan Ogden is 35. Actor Robert
Telfer is 32 . Actor-producer-writer BJ . .1\'ovak is 30. Actor
Eric Lively b 28. Dallas Cowboys linebacker DeMarcus
Ware •~ 27. Countr) singer Blairc Stroud (3 of Hearts) is
26. Singer Shannon Curfman is 24.
Thought for Today: "The secret of managing is to keep
the guys who hate you away from the guys who are undecided ." - Casey StengeL American baseball manager
(born thb date in 1890 or 1891. died 1975).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Leuer.\ 10 the editor are H'e/come. They should be leu
than 300 1\'ord.L All letter.\· are .whject to editing, must be
signed. and include adclreu a/ICJ telephone number. No
unsigned letters ll'ill be puhlished. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing in·11es, 1101 personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and indit'iduals will not be accepted for puhlication.

The Daily Sentinel
_

Reader Services

(usPs 213-sso&gt;

Correction Policy

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our ma1n concern 1n all stories ss to Published every mornmg, Monday
be accurate If you know of an error through Friday, 111 Court Stroot.
In a story, call the newsroom at (740) Pomeroy, OhiO Second-class postage
992-2156.
pad ot Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and
the OhiO Newspaper AssoCiatiOn
Our main number Is
Poatmaster: Send address corrcc·
(740) 992-2156.
lions to The Dally Sentinel, PO. Box
Department extensions are:
729, Pomeroy, OhiO 45769

News

Editor: Charlene Hoeflich. Ext 12
Reporter: Brian Reed. Ext. 14
Reporter: Both Sergent, Exl 13

Advertising
•
•
•

Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
4 weeks •.•••••••.••••'11.30
52 weeks .•......•...' 128.85
Dally .•• • ...............so•

Advertising Director: Pam Caldwell,
Senior Citizen rates
740·446·2342, Ext. 17
26 weeks .•..•........'59.61
Retail: Mall Rodgers, Ext. 15
52 weeks .••. • ..•..•.'116.90
Retail: Brenda Dav1s, Ext 16
Subscribers should remit 1n adwnoe
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
direct to Tha Daily Sentinel. No sub·
scription by mail permrtted in areas
Circulation
where homo carrier seMCe Is avarl&lt;lble.
Circulation Manager: Oav1d Lucas,

• 740-446·2342. Ext 11
District Circulation Manager:
Mrke Whitt

General Manager
Charlene Hocfhch, Ext. 12
E·mall:
mdsnewsCmydallysentincl com

Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
12 Weeks • • • • • • • • •'35 26
26 Weeks • • • • . . • '70 70
52 WeekS • • . .•••• . .'140.11
Outside Meigs County
. ••....••'56 55
26 WeekS
• . . • . •'113.60
52 Weeks • • • . ••. • . • '227.21

12 Weeks

2009

se\eral factors are at work .
• Man) of the Episcopal
Chun;h 's most vocal leaders
- such as Robinson work in the :\ortheast ncar
el itc media institutions. The
church's national offices arc
in
New
York
Citv.
Meanwhile,
Epist.:optll
cathedral., elsewhere arc
usually in u1 han centers that
dominate regional media.
For
journalists.
the
Episcopalians arc nearby.
• Conscrvati\'es have, for
decades. been on the outside
looking in "hen the
Episcopal establi hment
made crucial decisions. in
part because many conservative dioceses are in the
Sunbelt far from the action.
But in the Internet age. even
conservatives are seckinc.
and ~ctting, more media
attention.
• Colorfu I photographs
and video clips are crucial
and it's hard to offer compelling cover:.tge of convention centers and churches
full of clergy in dull business suits. Episcopalians,
howe\ cr. know how to
dress up. In fact. their bishops cn.:n look like the leaders of the Roman Catholic
Church - the higgest religion-news game in tO\\n.
• The true religion of journalism is politics and
Episcopalians llH e to talk
politics - from global
warn1ing to feminism. from
multiculturalism to miiitaf)
spending. from national
health care to ga) rights.
And in recent decades the
denomination's tands on
contrmersial social bsucs

have meshed nicely\\ ith the
editorial stands taken by
America's most powerful
media corporations
The
bottom
Episcopalians wear
gious garb. work in coll\enient urban sanctuarie~ and
speak the lingo or progressive politics. Thcir leaders
look like Catholics and
think like journalists.
It also helps to remembl·r
that the Epbcopal Church's
roots connect to the Church
ofEnl!land, which ghes it a
unique role in American
historv.
noted
Bishop
William Frc) of the Diocese
of the Rio Grande. \\ho was
a media professional before
-.eekine ordination. Thic;
small.~
well-established
denomination has helped
shape the lives of II presidents. 35 U.S. Supreme
Court ju ... tices and legions
of journalists.
Like it our not . the
Episcopal Church occupies
its own corner in the public
square - which leads to
news coverage.
Is that a good thi.
Sometimes Frey isn 't su
"I can't understand why
some people want the kind
of media attention that we
get year after year," he said,
during one media storm in
the !'980s. ··1 mean. that's
like c.o\eting another man1s
root canal.''
(Terry Mattinqly direct\
the Washington Journali.Hn
Celller at the Co11nci/ fiJJ
Christian Colle -se s and
Universities. Contact him at
tmattingly( at )cccu .vrg or
11 wu•.tmatt.net).

FUTURE DIPLOMACY INTHt O&amp;AMA WHITE HOUSE ...
~14Hl_ffi,
OK ..
LET'S GET
DOWN TO
BUSINESS.
I

'

•

1
1
j

MIDEAST,__.._
PEACE
TALkS

Unkept promises haunt Obamacare
If Bnrack Obama fails to
enact national health care. it
will be because he sowed the
seeds of its demise last Feh.
17 - the day the president.
surrounded bv Democratic
leaders. ~o,igncd the $7R7 billion economic-stimulus bill.
In the legislative campmgn
leading up to that moment,
both Obama and congressional Democrats made
pr01111ses and took actions
that are now coming back to
haunt them a~ they pursue
their goal of remaking the
nation's hcalthcare system.
"We have another trilliondollar bill \\ ith the same
~trntcgy of passing it before
people even have a chance
to read it and know what's
in it," say!\ Republican Sen.
Jim DeMint, who has
emerged a~ a leader of the
opposition in the hcalthcarc
fight. "It's becoming clear
that they misunderstood the
economy.
and
no\\
Americans an: WOIH.kring
whether they misunderstand
h~alth care.
"People arc less trusting
now."
That diminished trust can
be traced directly to the
stimulu~. When Obama and
Democratic
allies
his
pushed it through Congress.
they :-poke constantly of
"cnsis'' and warned of "cata::.trophe'' if their bill was
not passed. So the public.

Byron
York

ready to giYe the new presi dent a chance. supported
him. even thou!:!h the stimulus spent billions on the pet
projects of Democratic Jawmakers.
Now. to judge by the
poJI..,, a lot of people view
things differently. In the latest Gallup sur. C). 64 percent sav the stimulus has
had no effect on their fami ly's financial situatiOn .
Twcnty-t\\ o percent say it
has made their linandal situation worse. Just 14 percent say it has made tlwir
silllation better. Even whl'n
asked to predict the long
term. more people say the
stimulus will have no ~ne&lt;..'l
or muke the economy worse
than say it will make the
economy better.
The stimulus has abo
pushed the issue of the
deficit ncar the top of the
public's concems at precisely
the time the Congressional
Budget Office has concluded
that Obamacare \\Ould make
the nation's rising debt

\\Orse. not better. "Our amlUal deficit this year (is bigger)
than all of the pre\ ious live
year!'&gt; combined.'' says
.Senate Minoritv Lcadcr
Mitch McConnelL "We saw
what happcnl'd when some
rushed and spcnt a trillion
dollars on an artilidal d~.!ad ­
line with the stimulus. The
American people don't want
the same mistake to be made
again."
The Drudgt• Report got
zillions of hih recently
\\hen it posted examples of
runaway stimulus spending.
In the House. Minorit)
Leader Rep. John Bochner
has u ed Obamacare a-. a
chance to rc\ is it the stimulus ' greatest hits. from the
John ~lurtha "Airport for
:\o One" to the San
Francisco s.tlt -marsh har\ est
mouse.
Local
R~publ knns around the
country arc sharpening their
rhctork as candidates gear
up for lll'Xt )'l'ar\ clet.:tions.
Finally. the stimulus
rcsulis M&gt; fnr have dealt a
blow to Obama 's l·nre cr~?d­
ibility. He l'lnimed his program would "create or
saw" millions of jobs. but
llOW he Can't SH) With any
specificity what it has done
for employment. All people
kno" is that he claimed the
stimulus '' ould keep the
unemployment rate belo\\ 8
percent, and it is now head-

•

ed tO\\ard 10 percent. "It '.,
clear that the policy of the
stimulus did not match h1s
promises," says Dcl\lint.
Radio
host
Rush
Ltmbaugh recentl y found
htmsclf in the odd position
of expressing gratitude for
the fact that Obama used hi.,
honeymoon to pursue the
stimulus bill. rather than the
even-morc-expen~d\ c
healthcare proposal . " lie got
that stimulus in t\\ o ,., eck-. ,"
Limbaugh said. ··we better
thank our luck; stars - I
ne.' er thought I would say
thts. but we better thank our
luck) star... - that the) did
the stimulus 1irst. Because Jf
they had done (health care)
first. it '' ould be signed into
law already. He \\ould have
gotten it.'.
There's something to that ,
althou!!h it's debatable
"hether Obama. e\ en at
height of his hone)
could have made the ca~c
that healthcarc reform \\as
the first thing he needed to
do for the el'onnm). But
there's no doubt that the
president spent much of his
early political capital on the
,timulus. and now he needs
it back - bad!). His problem is, a gro" ing number of
\ oters don't want to make
the same mistake t\\ ice.
(Byron }()rk ij chief p(l/itical correjponde11t for fire
Washington £mmina).

�WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Ffllowshio
Apostolf~

Cbu~h of Jrsus (

hrht Apo&gt;IOh&lt;
P I
Ja~
OJtl am
s nd.l) '&gt;&lt;hool
f,enuJJ; ? lOp m
\ 'anZ
Malia

•

I

:ld \\ ;ud Rd

Rher \alle1
River \~lley AP&lt;""'ltc \hrr.h p l cmer
\1c \hddlcpon Rc'
87J ~ Jrd
\l"h. c Rr:tJf,rJ, l'a'l•&gt;r, Sund.•y, Hl Jll
o 111 1\IC' b 10 prn)cr. \\ed 7 pm Rabie
SIUd\
t nnnunuel A(l&lt;"tulit·llthl'rnade Inc.
l..«'op Rd nfl Ne&gt;' Luna Rd R !land
Sm cc Sun 10 00 am &amp; 7 ~ p m.
Tlutr&gt; 7:00p.m , P \tor M n, R Hunon

Assembly of God
IJbt'rt) A~'&gt;mlbl) of (.od
P0 Ro' 467 DuddJ
Lane. !II
\\ \
Ptitar 'l;e Tenn31ll
&lt;;en ces- I :JO m and 7 pm

Baptist
Page' illt • l'ft" ill Baplht Church
Paslor llo)d R , Sunda\ S.:hool II 10 Ill
10;30 am \\Orshtp sc:nacc 10 lO 1• 'I ro
\\ ed preachrlll:l f. pm
t'ar~nter

lodep&lt;ndt·nl Unpll•l Church
S,hool
9 30am, Pre chtng
Sm1ct 10 I0;1m
E\emng Sen ICC
7 OOpm. \\ttlnesday Rabie Slud~ 7 00 pm
P.t...tor

~unJay

('he.hln· IIU(lli\l Chun:h
t•a,lor Sle\t lmlc 74Q 367 "1101, If
740-992 7S4l, C 740 6-15 l~~7 Sun&lt;13~
S~la.,ol 9 'II :un ~hmung \\o~lu
10 'ltl
1111!, Youlh &amp; lhble Boddae. 6 ~ pm
C'OOII pracucc 7 .30. Spe ••I t.b1 of mc&gt;nth
I Lad of GI11Ce 7 p 2nd Monda). 2
M~n·s ~llo"shap pm 1rd 1\tc$

•

llopt Baptlsl Church Soulbrm)
570 G
S1 Mtdd epon
nda) !&gt;Cbool
9 'lO
\\onh p II m Wid 6 p.m
\\ Ccfnesda, Se c 7 pJll Pa 10r Gary
Elh•
Rntbnd tlnt B1ptls1 Chul'('b
Sunday School II 'lO a.m \\ :'!hap
104Sam
l'omtro) hrsl Hapli\t
Pastor Jon Breden La.&lt;~ M n S1 •
Sunda) Sch 9 lO :n \\orsb p 10 lOam
Firs I Suutht rn llapti1l
.11872 P&lt;lfll ro) Pike, \unda' chool 9 30 am \\ol'lihap 9 45 am &amp; 7 00 pm •
\\cdntMIJ} Sen ace5 7 00 p m.

Hr't Rsplhl Church
Pa,lor Utll~ Zu&gt;pan hah • nd 11almer Sl ,
\llddkpon Sunday s,hoo 'J I~ a.m •
lfl 15 a 111 • 7 oo p '11.
\\orsh1p
\\ edntsda) ~- ce 7 00 p.m
Racine f1r,l Baptist
Pa&lt;lor R)&amp;R I a1on pa&lt;lor S~nda~
School 9 30 a.m , \\orsh1p 10 40 1:'
6 00 p
\\ednesda) 'itl'\ 1 Cl 7 00
pm

•

1h tr Run Bapllst
Pa&lt;lor John S\\an on, Sunda) School
IOam,\\orhap-lhm 700pm
\\Cdnesda) Sm cc
:00 p
:\h. l nlon Baptl•t
Pas10r Dcnn1&gt; \\ea\ tr Sunda) Schoo
9 4~ am c\e r.g
6 10 p m .
\\ednesd.J) Sen ~tts 6 30p m

lltlbldlt'll llapti&gt;l ( hu~h
Ureal Bend Rou1e 124 R~emc. 011
Pa,tor
Sunday School 9 10 .1 m ,
Sunday \\ol'lihop 10·30 8.111 .. \\edne~y
Babic S1udy 7 00 p.m
Old llrthd hte \\ illllupl"t l'hurda
28601 Sl R1 7. Mtddlcpon Sunday
Ser\ICC II) am, 6 ()(I p o:n Tuesday
Scrvtcc&gt; 6 00
l lill;ldc J:laptlsl ( bun:h
Sl Rl 143 ~ 1 1J I Rt 7 I' &lt;lat: Re'
t;nafied
6p~

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page AS

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, July 31, 2009

\!ClOT) ll4ptlst lndtfX'ndent
~25 N 2nd S Mtddlepon P lor Jarne~
1:. Kec ee \\ r htp IOJ m 7 p m ,
\\cdne 'Se~ • 7pm
• ullh Uaplj,t c burch
Raalroad S1 M n Sunda• School - 10
a m \\or hap
I I 3 m , 6 p m,
\\cdnesday &amp;~Ice 7 p.m
Fomt Run llaplbl· l'unl&lt;ru~
Re' Jo eph Wood , Sunday S.:hool - IO
u.m., \\onhap-11 'lOam
Mt. \lurlnh llnplhl
I ounh &amp; Mam S1 \1oddlepon, Sunda)
'ichool fJ ~ UJll "onhtp- 10 ~5 Mn
f'aslor Rev ~ltchsel A ThMilpsnn, ~r
Anliquit) Caplist
Sunday S hoot '11(1 • m V.onlup
10 4S a.m Sunday l:.\enm (i 00 rm •

Rulbnd l n-e \\UI Rapti&lt;t
Salem S1 Pas1or E.d Bame) Sunda)
S•hool
10 am. E•entn
7 p m.
\\Cdne&lt;.d.l) S.:n ce•- 7 p.m
1\econd Rapti;t l'lmn:h
Ra,cns\\ood, \\\,Sunday S.hoo' 10 lfl\oo
• Mommg "&lt;mhiP 11 am hcnmg 7pm,
\\ Cdn~sda) 7 p m
t ir'l Unplhl Church uf \l;~,nn, \\ \
!lndcpcndcnl Baplbl)
SR M.! und Ande.-.on S1. l'a-aor. Ro&gt;bcn
lor:ady, Suml.a~ "hool 111 am, Mornms
,hurdt 11 am, Sund;J) e\cn•!•!l6 pm, Wed
R:!lle 'i!Ud) 7 pm

Catholic
~acrtd

ll&lt;'llrll'athoU(' Church
161 \I~XIT) A'c. Pomeru~. 991 ~898,
P &lt;lor Re' Wslter I' lkmt Sal Con
4 45 ~ 15p m ~b·s- 'i lO p m ~un
Con 1\ 45-9 15 am .. Sun M '&gt; 9 30
a m D ) \Ia.$ - S-30 a.m

Church of Christ
\\l'Sl,ide Church ofCbri•t
1\2.26 Clnldren's Home Rd. fumeruy, OH
Comacl 740-992- ~ 47 ~unda) momang
1(1 00
Sun mommg Babic •ludy
folio"'"!! "oBhap. Sun e•e 6·00 pm.
\\ .:d bible stud\ 7 pm

Male Hall Rd Rae nc. Pas1or Jam~
Sallcrficld, Sunda) School 9 4S am •
henmg 6 p m \\cdncscl3y Sen tees 7
pm
!!Ulland Church or (,od
Pu1or Shane M Br\\ lon(:. ~un" )
\\ r.hap 10 m 6 p m., \\c:dncsdoty
Sen t•CS 7 pm
• ir;;t ( hur,h nfC.tKI
\rplc md S.xnnd Sis , Po lur Re' l&gt;a•11l
Ru.-,•11 Sunda) Sch•~•l and \\••••hap 10
11m I \cnrng Scr""''' 6 10 p.m,
Wednesda} Sci\ ll&lt;S h·3U p 111
S~romw

('hurdanf (;oKI nf l'ro&gt;Jlhl'&lt;'Y
O.J \\bur R,1 oil ~~ R1 J(&gt;(J, i'a&lt;tnr I'J
Clutpllllln, SundJ) Srhool
10 am.
\\orshtp II nm. \\ednesda\ Sm1~~ 7
pm

Congregational
Trlnit~ l'hul'l'h
Pastor Re' Tom Johnson Second &amp;
L) nn Pomeroy. Pa.•lor • \\ orshap I0 2~
a.m

Episcopal

t:pl:scopal ( hul'('b
32() I&lt; Mam St Pomcro),
Holy
Eu..--!l.tf 1 11 30 am Sunday &amp; 5 m pm
\\ Cd Re&gt; Leshe 1-lenunmg
(,J'IlCt

Holiness
ll&lt;mlod; Gro'e Chri,tian Churrh
Mmt&lt;ler LaiT) Bro\\n, \\oBhtp 9 30
p m sunda) S.:hool
IO.JO n m , Rtble
Study. 7 p.m

l'oanmunity l'bur.-h
Tonek, :\IJm Slreel
Rulland. Sunday \\llrslul' HJ:OO am •
Sunda) Servacc--7 p m

Ponwro) Church of Chrbt
212 \\. \lam Sl.. SonJa~ School • 9: )0
am \\or&gt;hap- 10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m ..
\\ edncsduy S&lt; n ace&lt; - 7 p m

lluan llle llolh1c'' C'hur.h
/il.uc Rnu1~ 325 l~ong.-lle,l'."l"r:
llnan BJolC). Sund.a~ S('hool • 9·)0 a.m.
~unda~ \\uJ&gt;hop - lll'30 a.m &amp; 7 Jl.lll ,
\\etlnc....Uy prayer""""'" 7 p m

Pomtro) \\tshide Ch1ln'h of l'hrbl
3'~226 Cl!· dren·, Home Rd, Sund~~
S,hool- I am , Wor-;hip - IOa.m • 6 p.m
\\tdnesd.1y Scrvace,- 7 p m
l\liddltport Chnn:h of Chrht
S1h and l\lam Pa,lor. AI Han~C'n
Chtldttn&lt; Dtre.:tor. Sharon Sayre, Teen
D11e.:tor Dod~:er \au~ba.n. Sunday S.:boc: I
- 9 30 a.m. V.o,...lup- S.l'i. 10 :&gt;0 am. 7
p m • \\tdoe'lby Sen J«s 7 p m

K~no

Churcb of Chri&lt;t
\\orshap 9.30 am .. Sunda; School
10:.!0 am .. Pastor-Jeffrey \\a!l:lce, hi and
lrd Sunday
Beano alto" Ridge Church of Chrul
l'a&lt;tor Bruce Tcny. Sunday School -9 30
am.
Wor,hap
10:30 am • li 10 p.m
'Wcdnc~a) Scrvac«- b:30 p.m.
Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy. lldrrbon\llle RJ. (R1.143).
Pa.1or: Roj!cr \\ a1son, Sunda) S.:hool
~ •o am \\or,hap
10 10 a.m. 7{J()
p m \\edne!da~ Sen•= -7 p m
Tup~rs Pl&lt;lin Church of Christ
lnstnmlenlal. \\orshtp Sen~ce 9 am.
Commuruon 10 am Sunday &amp;hool
10 Sa 111 )oulb- &lt;:30 pm Sund.1y Bable
Study \\edne~) 7 pm

Bmdl&gt;or) CburdJ of Chrl,t

Mtmster. Tom Runyua. 39558 Bradbury
Road ~: ddlepon. '\unday School 9 10
am
V.orsh p- 10 30 am
Rulland Cbun:h of Chri&gt;t
Sunday School - 9.30 am , \\or,hap and
&lt;'oml!:~n on - 10:30 a m., DJvtd
Wasc:man. \f,nt,ler

l'as10r

lahar) l'll~rlm Chaptl
lbmson' tile Rood l'aslor: Chari~
McKennr. Sunday s.hool 9 ~ am
\\orshap II 11.m 7 00 p m , \\Cdaesda)
Ser\ICe 7-()()p.m
Rusr of Sharon llnllntss Charrh
l.e3dm Creel; Rd • Ru1land Pa lor. Rr•
De" e) Km Sunday school 9 30 a.m
Sunday Mnhtp 7 p.m , \\~do)
pra)er meeung 7 pm
Pin&lt; &lt;;rm t Blhlc llc•liness Cbur~h
I 2 nule off Rl 325 PIISior Rev O'Dell
Man I~). Sunda) &amp;hool
9 30 a.m •
10 30 nm, 6.00 p m.
"ur&lt;hap
\\ ~dnesday Sen rce 7:00 p m
\\t"k~ un Ill hie Jloliness Chun:h
7S l'~arl St , \loJdlcpt&gt;n l'a•lnr L)o.'uM
C'ol\, Sun•l·•Y s,·hool 10 am Wu11-hop
10:45 p 111. Sumla)' h&lt;' 6.00 p 111.
\\cdn~sday Sen ace· 7 UO p m
Jl~,tll Run Cnnununil~ lhunh
l'as1or Re' Larry l.c-nley Sunday Sd~t»l
9 30 um • \\ol'1hap 10 45 am 7 p.m
lbursda) Babk SIUd) and )oulh 7 p m

llradford Church or Chri;t
CNncr ul ~~. R1. '24 &amp; Br.tdbury Rd,
\lmtsler Doug Sh3mbhn, Yo01h Mmas1cr
H II Amberger. Sunda) S~hO&lt;&gt;I 9·30 a.m.
\\orshlp 8:00 a.m .. 10: '0 a rn • 7 00
p m ,\\'tdnesday Sen ICC' 7 00 p.m
lhd•Df'l Jlilb Church of l hrisl
TUppers Pbans. Pa,lor Mike Moore. Btble
class 9 am Sunda). " rsbap 10 a m
Sunday "onh1p 6JO pm Sunda) B le
t'~7pm\\Cd

Rl't'd,liJit• Church of Christ
Pa tor Jacl. Colgrme Sunda) ~chool
9 10 am. \\onlup Sen"e 10 30 am
8 "le Study \\cdnesda). 6:30p.m
l&gt;e~1er Cbun:h of Christ
Sunday school9 ..30 am &lt;;unda} \\ONnp
IOJOom
Jbe Chun:b of Cbri,t nf Pomeru)
lnJenec•aon 7 and 124 W, E.vangeh"
Oennu Sargem. Sunda) IIDie SIUd}
9 30 am , \\.,)r,hap. 10.30 a m ~nd 6.30
p n. \\' nesda) Btble Study 7 p.m.

Chr istian Union
llurlford Church nr Chrisl in
Chrhlian Lninn
Hanford, \\ Va., Pas1or: Male Puckcll
Sunday Sc~ool - 9·30 a.m \\or&lt;hap
10 30 am • 7 00 p m • \\Cdnesday
&amp;nace 7:00pm

Cliff • l't't' Mrthodi&lt;l Chu~h

Pastor qJen McClung, Sunda) School
9JOD-III \\n 1:!~ IO!Oam and6
pm V.ednesday Sen1ce 7:()(1 p m

Latter-Day Saints

fh~ c hurt'h or Je.u.•
Christ of l.~tlltr·lla) SainL•
S1 R1 160, 4.16 6247 or 446 1486,
SundJy School 10 20 II a.m Rchef
Socte1y Pr esthood II OS 12 00 noon
S~cr~mer.l Serv1ce 9 10 I~ a m •
Hnmenul;,ing rn«l!ng. I&lt;I Thu"' 7 p m

Lutheran
I'm~

flah•oods
l'aslor Dcway ne SIUI!ler, Suncb} School
10 a.m \\'oNlip II a.m

Sl, John l.uthtran &lt;burch
Gru,c, Wo,.hap 'I.!KI dJn , Sunday

s,h,.,l HJ:OO a .m "·""11

Hellth (~liddleporll
Pastor. Bnan Dunham. Sunda) School
9.30 a.m. \\orship II 00 am
~llntrs-ille

Pas1or: Bob Robtn§(ln, Sunda) School • 9
a.m , \\or;hap 10 a.m

\'e"'

Beginning~

Church
Pomrroy
P~stcw Bnan Dunham Wor&gt;hap
a.m., Sunday School· 10:45 a.m.

'1:2~

Rock Sprin~:-'
Pas1or Dewayne Stutler. Sunday School 9.00 ~.m. \\orshap
10 am • )oolh
FeUO\\&gt;htp. Sanday h pm Early Sundav
"orslup b
Lalora Leafben

=

Rulland
Pa$1or John Cbap111811, Sunday School
9 30 a.m .. Worship- 10 'lO a.m .Tlumday
~'J('C;-7p.m

Salm!(.'entu

Pastor: \\ alltarn K l\larnwl, Sunda)
School- 10:15 am. Woohip 9 15 am.
Bable ~tud) Mooday 7 00 pm
Sno&gt;nllle
Sunday s~bool- 10 a.m • \\Mh•p- 9 a.m
l\etban)
Pas1or John Roze\\ acz. Sunday School
10 am .. \\or,hlp - 9 a.m, "edne&gt;day
Scntce'- 10 a.m
Cnrmrl-Sullon
Carmel &amp; Ba,han RJs. Rao;one, OhiU,
l'a\IOr; John RolC\\lCZ. S~nday s.·hool
9·45 a m., \\or-;hap II 00 a m , Bable
Stud~ \\Cd. 7·10 p.m
Morning Star
Pas1or· John Roze\\tCZ. Sunday School
II am. \\oo.!up lOam

East letart
Paslor. Ball MarsluJll SundaJ School
9a m • \\or,hlp 10 am , I sl Sdnda)
C\et) monJb t\cnmg SCf'ICC 7 00 p.m,
\\~y-7pm

Racine
Pas1oc: Re\. Wallwn Mmh&lt;lll, Sunday
School - 10 a.m Worship
II
a.m Wedll&lt;!,day Scmces b pm, !bur Rabie
Sludy7pm
Coohille Unil!'d \lelhodbl l'amh
Pa,lor Helen Khne, Cnohllle Chtii.:h,
~Ltm &amp; Fiflh S1 .. Sun s,·hool
10 aJn ,
Worship- 9 a.m .. 1 ue,, Servaces • 7 (1.111

Sl,l'uul l.ulhr-ran l'hunh
Ulmer Sycamore &amp; Second S1 Pomeroy,
Sun School 9 4~ n m . "brshtp II a.m

Hockingport l'Jlurch
Kalhl')n \\al~. Sunday School 9 30
am . V.cmbtp- 10·30 am Pa.s1or PlnU1p
Bell

\II. Olh f l nlted \lethod"t
Off 124 behmd \\tlkes"lle, Pti1or Re\
Ralph Sp1re Sunday School il 30 am ,
\\orshap 10 30 ~.m • 7 p m Thursd.ly
Strvaces 7 p m
\ll'itt' t'OC&gt;fX'ruli\c l'arl'b
['.urlhra\1 Clusler, t\llrcd, l'aslur Jilll
Curball, Sun~ay School
'I ~n ,, m
\\un.hop II am ,II 10 p.m

Chtlotcr
11asltlr Jam Cortl11t, \\orshap 9 am
Sund.l} School
10 am • Thur~y
Servaces 7 p m

Church of God

6 pm

Pnmtrm Cburcb of tht :&gt;..IWirt'nt
Paslor Jan.La•ender. 'iuod3y '&gt;ehool
9 10 am , \\or hap IC 30 u m nd ()
p m, \\Cdne~) Services· 1 pJll
Chrsl..r l hurch ur lh~ :\lllllrtne
Rev Curl s Randolph Sunda)
S&lt;hnol 'I II) am, Worshtp 10 &lt;o a.m ..
Sunda&gt; ~' cmng h )1111
Rutlnnd C hun·h of llw \j111arenc
l'a&gt;lt&gt;r c;corgc St•dkr. Sund.ay School •
&lt;I .IU u n\., \\M•hlp
10 ~(I 8 111 • b 30
p m \\i;dnesday S~rvacc.• • 7 p :n
p~~IOr

Other Churches
Old Amencan Legton Hall,
f'OUnh Ave Maddleporl. SundayS p m
..,) racuw Communi!) Church
24SO Second S1 • Syracu~ OH
Suo School 10 am, Sund~ naj;hl 6 30 pm
Pas lor Joe: G" mn

Torcb Chun:h
Co. Rd. 63. Suoda~ School
\\Orship- 10:30 a.m

9 30 am

Nazarene
Pulnl Rock Chun:h of lh.- :&gt;..aza~ne
Rou1e 689, Alban) Re' IJoyd Gnmm.
pastor Sunday School 10 am, \\Orbsap
semce II am. e&gt;-cnmg sen ace 7 pm \\Cd.
pr:a~~ mecung 7 pm
\liddleport Chunh or tht !I.Mtlrent
PiiMor. Leonard Poll ell, Sunday S.ho"l •
9·JO a m.,Wol'\hip I0.30 aJll., b 30 Jl.m ,
Wcdnc,da} Servace&gt; 7 p.m.
Reed~•illc Fcllo"'hlp
C'hun:h of lhe N1ilarene, l'a&gt;lor· Russell
Carson , Sunday S'hool - 9 Jll a m ,
\\u~h•p 10:45 a.m, 7 p.m, WedneM!ay
Scmce' 7 p.m
S~racuse Church of lhe :'\'a.ron-ne
Pa,lor \like Adkms, Sunda) School 9 30

Saher R1dte Pa&lt;lor Linda D mcwood.
Sunda) Sdaool 9 am \\o hap Sen ••
10 am 2nd and 41b Sunday
Carleton Inlerdtnomlnatlonal Church
Kmgsbury Road Pa lor Roben \ance,
Sundav ~cbool
9 10 m \\onh1p
Scrvac~ 10 30 am. heaun 'iervace 6
p.m .
Freedom Gospel \ h'i.&lt;lnn
Bald Knob, u" l'o Rd 11, l'u\lor· Re\
Ro£er \\til lord, Sunda) Schon! 'I Jll
a.m Wot,htp 7 p m
While', Chapel "''''"~un
Coohalle Road, l'a&lt;wr llcv Charlc•
\lanindale, Sunday s,hool 9 30 u m
\\ol'lup 10 30 am \\ronesday Servace
7pm
Fuinie11 Bihlt Churcb
Lelall. \\'\a Rl I Pa 10r Bnan llhy
Sunday School 9 3C a
\\ brsh p 7 00
p.m .. \\ed.'ICSda) Bal&gt; e Saud\ 7:00pm
Failb Ftllo" ship ( ru.ad£• fur Chrt.l
Pastor Rev Franlhn D ekens, Servtcc
Fnday 7 p.m

\ '"" llf1!innlng
ull G~n~l &lt;'burch) H311lson\alle
P;ulro Bob and 1.:11) Marshall.
Thun 7pm

Cuh11n Bihlt Cbu~h
Pomeroy Pile. C Rd P;hlor Rev
Blad:,.ood, Sunday Sc oo 9 ~ a.m
7 JO p m •
Worsh p ltl JO a m
Wcdn~y Sen tee· 7 ~ p m

Amatlng l;run Communi!) Churcb
l':l'tor Wayne Dunl3p. Slate Rl 681.
Tuppc:~ P!Juns, Sun \\orsh•1• 10 urn &amp;
6.30 pm,. Wed Rablc SIUJ~ 7·00 p m

Slher-.,illt Communil) Chutch
Sunda) S,h,l(&gt;l 10.00 am. Sunday \\o,.hap
11.00 .un. \\ed11~'day 7 00 pm Pa\lor
B~an &amp; \li,y O.u C)

Pe&lt;trll'ha~l

Sunday School· Q am .. \\or5bop 10 Dm

Our Sn,lnur l.ltthiTOll Church
\\alnu1 and Henry Sl&lt;, Ra,cn&lt;\\o&lt;&gt;d
\\ \a, l'aslor: l&gt;a\ld Russell Sunday
Schtx1l 10.00 am \\ur&gt;htp II am

Graham l:nlltd \1£-lhodM
\\or&gt;hap II am Pauor Rachard :\ease
BrchttiLnit!'d Methodist
:\e" Haven Rtchlll'd !\ease. Pa51or,
Sunday "orslup 9 30 am lUes 6.30
pr:a)a and Btble \lud\

m • \\orshap
10 30 1 m
'&gt;m c~ 7 pm

\\ed~'&lt;lay

(I

Bethel Church
fn"n'hop Rd, 4bSC. Sunday S~huol 'I
d m. Wor,bap - 10 am Wednesday
Sci\ ICC'· 10 iliD

United l\1ethodist

1

\t" ll~pe Chu~h

.-ornt Run
Pas1or. Bob Robinson Sunda) School 10
a.m , \\orslup- 9 am

SIC\C

110~7

l.uu~l

l'a.slor: Dcnz :"ull. \\orshap 9 10 am
Sunday School - I0 30 a .m
LonRBottum
sunday S.:hool - 9 'lO a.m. \\oolup
I0:30a.m.
Rrt'd'i\ille
\\orshap - 9;30 o .m • .Sunda) S..'bool
10 30 "m Firsl Sunday of \lnnth 7 00
p m SCIVlCe
fup~r; !'lain• St.Puul
Po,lor· Jun Corball, Sunda) S•hool - 'l
a 111 """'hap 10 n m.. I ucsda~ Sen ace'
7•30p.m
Central Clu,ter
A'buf) (Syr...:u,e), p,.,lor· Bllb Rt•bmson.
Sunda\ Sehoul 9 45 a.m , \\orshtp • II
a m Wcdne'&lt;la) Scm= • 7 JO p.m

Oa'l\ Chri•tian I ellow~bip
(r\on-Jcnununallnnal fcllo" 'hip)
Mecllng m rhe Meig&lt; Moddlc S&lt;hCltll
Calclcria Pa•ror: Chns Sic" un
10.00 am !'\non Sunday; lnlormal
Wor~lnp, Cluldrcn\ nnmM~
l'ommunit) of Chri•l
i'onland Rae e Rd , l'.tslor: Jam Proffiu.
sunday School 9 30 a m • WoBhap 10 'O am • Wcdnesda) Ser\ ICes - 7-()()
pm
Rethtl \\orship (A,ntrr
397 2 Sl Rl 7, 2 mile \OIIIb of Tuppe~
Plams, OH Son denommallonal walb
ConlemporU) Prarse &amp; \\Of5htp Pastor
Rob Barber. A!&gt;So.: Pastor Karyn Da\IS
Youth D11et1or Belly l·ulls Sunday
sen ace&lt; 10 am \\orshap &amp; 6 pm Famaly
L1fe Classes, \\ed &amp; Thur nagb1 L1fe
Groups a1 7 pm, ThuB mommg ladte$'
L fc Group dt 10 Ou1er L amaJJ Youlh Ltfe
Group on \\ed e•enmg from 6 ~to S ~.
Vw1 us onlme 11 www.bctbel\\c org
\'h Strt'CI ( hurch
Jr.8 Ash S1 , ~hddlepon-Pustors Marl;
Morro\\ &amp; Rodne) Walker Sunday
School • 9· )0 u m , \lornmg Wor,htp 10:31l,a m. &amp; 7 00 pm, Wednc,Ja~ Strv.-c

• 7·(XI p.m .. Youah Sen~&lt;c 7:00 p no
\j:llpt· l.lfe ('rnlcr
"l·uii-Uuspel Church , l'n,lor$ John &amp;
l':my \\adc, till\ Sctund A\e \1ason. 773·
5017, Sen ace lime. Sunda) 10 30 am.
Wedncsdav 7 pm
Abundant Grott
921 S T1urd S1. Mtddlcpon, Pll'torTeresa
Da\1 , Sund y e•\Jce
0 am
\\Cdnesday sen1CC 7 pm

Rcjnidng l.Jf~ Church
500 :-.; 2nd A\e, \lodJ!cpon, Pa"or
~1ike Foreman. Pa'''" l.menl s l.a\\rence
Foreman, \\urshap- 10 00 am
\Vednesda) Sm'a=- 7 p.m
CliRon lahernacle Chu~h
Chf1oo. \\\a, Sunda) School 10 a~
\\ orsbtp 7 p m , \\tdne~y Sen tee 7
p.m
1heArl.: Cbunb
3773 &lt;ko~ Creel.. Road. Galltpoh•. 011
Pas~«; Jan~~r \\ II'Cman, ~Unda) Sen ces
10 &gt;0 am \\e~y • 7 pm Thur5da)
Pra) er &amp; Pr;usc 11 6 p 1 Cla&lt;ses Cor all
ages e• er} Sunday &amp; \\edne!day
""'"' tbeari"hurch .nel
Full Go,pet Church
of the thing ,a,ior
Rl US, Anllquuy. Pas1or Je se Moms,
Sen ace' Sarurday 2:00 p m
~alem C:ommunit) ( hurch
Back of \\'e,t Columb1a, \\ \ a.um Ltevmg
Road. Pa,lor· Charlc&gt; Ruu;h (104) 67~­
~~SS, Sunda~ School 9 ~0 am, Sunday
e1 enin~ se"\ ace 7 00 pm Btl&gt;!) Stud)
\\edne,day •.:~~ &gt;•C 7 00 pm

Hob•on Chri•tbn friiO\Hhip Church
Pastor H=cbel Wbue ~unday School
10 am. Sunday Church servace 6 30 pm
\\ Cdne!da~ 7 pm
Re&gt;tora!lon Chrntaan t'cllowshlp
936&lt; Hooper Road, Alben• Paslor

t'alth hll G~~ll hUTt.'b
Long Bouom Paslur Sle\e Reed. Sund:a)
School 9 ~ a.m. \\ 1'\hip 9 30 am
and 7 p m \\CdneWa) - 7 pm F-n!la' fel 0\\ib p SCI\ ICe 7 p.m

Lonrue Coal&gt; .Sunda) \\Or&gt;Jup 10.00 am,
\\Cdncsda) 7 pm

Harrison I lllc l'ommunll~ Chu~b
Pas1or Thaon Durham Sunday - 9 30
am and7pm \\Cdnesda) -7pm
\!lddkpurl Communlly Church
!'carl St • \hddlcpon , Pastor· Sam
AnJerson, Sund.ty School I 0 a m ,
l.vcmng. 7·311 p.m • Wcdncsda) Scno.:e
7·10 p.m.
57~

f alth \Kllc) IHbcrnadc Church

Bailey Run Road. Pasaor. Re' Emmell
Ha\\s&lt;•n, Sunday ll\Cnlni 7 p m •
Thur5da) Servace 7 pJn
s~ rKu.e ~ hsslon

1411 Bndgemnn S1, Syracuse, Pa.'""Rev Ro) lbo pson Sunday St'hool 10
a.m. E\entng 6 p m. \\ednesda, Sav.ce
• 7 p.m.
H ot~l l'ommunlt) ('hurch
Off Rl 124, Pastor Ed!tl Han Sll!lda)
School 9 30om. \\Orshap 10 30 m.
7 'lO p.m

O)esl nte Conununll) Chul'\"b
Sunday Sthool - 9 ;o am \\o11ihap 10;30a.m, 7 p m
\lnr;e l'ha~ll.hu~h
SunJa) sc1Jool 10 am , Worshap
II
am \\Cdnc'tla) Sen ace 7pJn

!louse of Hrallng Ministries
St. Rl. 124 Langsullr, Oil
Full Gospel, Cl Pa~rs Roben &amp; Roberti
Mu&lt;Ser, Sundav School 9 \0 1m •
\\or,lup 10 30 am
7 00 pm. \\Cd
Sen ace 7 00 pm
T&lt;-um Jr,us \lini\lrlrs
Meeting 33l111c.:hanac Strttl Pomeroy.
OH . Pa,tor Eddae Bur, Semce e•el')
Suuda' HI.OO d ':l.

Pentecostal
l'ent•co•lat,\"cnthl)
Pas1or· SL R1 124. Ra,me, Tom3do Rd
Sunda~ So;hool
10 d m , I venans 7
p.m., \\ Cdnesda y ~en aces 7 p m

Presbyterian
Harri&lt;OD\ lllc l'rtsb) lerlan Church
Pa&gt;tor Roben \larshall \\ oBhap 9 00
um.Sunday
~Uddlepon Presb) t~rlan
Pa•IOr James Sn)der. Sunda} S,hool 10
am • \\OI'Slup set\' ace II am

Seventh-Day Ad' entist
~e,enth-lla) Ad1mtist
MulbeiT) Ills Rd . Pomc:ro)
Jlurdav
Sen tee,. S.1bba1h School
1 pm
Wo.-.btp Jpm

United Brethren

Failh Gt"pel Churrb
Long Bullmn, Suntl.ty Sehoul • '1:30 u.m •
Wt~hhop • 10 45 a Ill. 7:10 p m,
\\'ednesda) 7. 1(1 pm.
t'ull c;u&lt;pd IIKhthuu'e
'3045 Htland Road, Pomellly. PalSior Ro~
tlumer, Sunday School - 10 a.m • E• entng
7 10 p.m , Tucsda) &amp; ThUr5 7 'lO p.m.

\11. Hcrm1•n l111!cd lll't'lhrrn
In l'hrht l burch
Te\a&gt; Commuml) .16411 \\ "kham Rd,
Pa,lor: Pe1er \lanmd3lo, Sunday Sch,~•l
9:30 a.m , \\'nr-hip Ill: 10 ~ m. 7 lKl
p.m .. \\edn~'day Strvtces 7 lXl pon
Youth gruup mcwng ~nd &amp; 41h Suml.o) \
7p.m.
Eden l nllrd Rl't'lhrcn in ('hrhl
Slate Rou1e 124. bel\\een Reed \llle &amp;
Ho.:kmgpon. Sundav School 10 u m
Sunda~ \\orshap • IIIlO am \\edne)da)

Suuth Rclhtl Communi!) lhurrb

Mt. \loriah Cbun:h of God

Church announcements sponsored by these area merchants
"Let your light o shmc before
men, that they ma) sec your
good \\Orks and glonfy your
Father m hea\cn."
Matthew 5:16

lm-

499 Richland AHnue,Athen~
74fl-59.:l-6333
1-800-451·9806
\1\\w.ka

Oavis-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My
Full hne of
Insurance words abide in you, ye shall
Products+ a.fik what ye will, and it shall

1:\SlJRANCh

A.

T aF.NCIISinc

Bill Quickel

Financial

Serv1cos
992-6677

be done unto you .
} oh n / 5:7

jftsbrr. ~nbrrson, .fHcDamrl
ROCKSPRINGS
jf unrr.11 ihomr
REHABILITATION CENTER
Middltport, OH 7~0-992-51~ 1
jamr' Anderson, \dnm \lcllanltl·
OirttiO~

Pomcru), 011 7~0-992-Sm

Commit thy works
unto the Lord, and thy
thoughts shall be
established.
Proverbs 16:3

Let your li~ht so shine before
men.thatrhey may see mur
Tire care you desen·e, clou lo homt• good work.1 and glorify your
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Father in hem·m."
Pomeroy. OH 45769
.\latthew 5:16

740-992-6606

SWISHER
&amp; LOHSE
www.ThePharmacy4U.com

Prescription Ph. 992- 2955

For God so lovn/ the 1\'o
that he gcn·e his only
begotten sm1 ...
John 3:/6

White Funeral Home "For God o loved the
Blessed are the pure "So I strive always to kcl!p ~
Since 1858
world that he gave his one
ourfamdyfufp
in heart; for they my conscience clear before ~'Ln
protect ycur fttmJ!y•
9 Fifth Street
God and man.''
and only Son .. .''
Suppression • E.\ungu~She~ • Spnnl.:lers
shall see God.
Coolville, Ohio
• Securll}
John 3:16
Acts 24:16 172 N. 2ndA~e.
M1tldleport, OH
1Uattlzew 5:8
740-667-3110
(80(&gt;) 353·0837 !·ax (740)

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohto

Located fe,, than 30 mmutc from
Athen&gt;, Pomcro} or Parkersburg

l-740-667-3156
"Still small
to care"

MY erace is sufficient
for thee: for mY
streneth is made
Perfect in weakness.
11 Cor. 12:9
Tire Lord doe~ 1/ntlook at t/11 tlu'ngs
ma11 Iouks at, ma11/oaks attire
outward appcarance,tlre l.ord lonk1
attire hean.
l Samuel J6-7b

�PageA6
The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 31,

Cronkite had class - - - -A Hunger For More
It seems that we have had
more than our !'~hare of
celebritY deaths this summer. 11ichael Jackson.
Farah Fnwcett, Robert
McNamara. Stevt.: \1cNair.
Allen Klein. Karl Malden.
Billy Mays. l.ucia Lauria
Vigna. Ed McMahon. and
now we add Walter
Cronkite to the list.
If you don't recogmi1e
some of those celebrity
name!'~, vou arc either too
young to remember them, so
old you've forgotten them,
or so out-of-touch that you
didn't hear about them.
Jackson, obviously, was the
''King of Pop:" Fawcctt \\.as
an actress. McNamara was
former U.S. Secrctar) of
Defense durin!! Vietnam.
McNair was a fom1er NFL
player killed by his girlfriend. Malden was an actor;
Mays was a late-night
infomercial pitchman. Vigna
was the oldest man in
Europe when he died at age
113 years. 116 days on June
28th. McMahon was Johnny
Carson's Tonight Show sidekick. And Walter Cronkite
was the man with the most
class of his generation.
Actually. I cannot say that
Cronkite had the most class
of his generation - I don't
know everyone of his generation. But I can certainly
say that Cronkite was the
consummate example of
class that I ever !:-.aw on television news.
I am not old enough to
remember Cronkite's historic
broadcasts
from
Europe during World War
II, his announcement of
President John F. Kennedy's
death in Dallas. or even his
coverage of the Apollo I I
landing on the moon on July
20. 1969. But at least I was
ALIVE for that lunar
achievement.
My earliest memories of
Walter Cronkite arc from
the early 1970s as my dad
would turn on ens·
"Evening Ne\\ s with Walter
Cronkite.'' I sat on the floor
next to Dad's easy chair as
he learned from Mr.
Cronkite just the wa) it Wa!:-.
in the world that day. It was
almost as if nothing happened until Cronkite said
that it had happened . But
ohce HE said it, it was fact.
Somehow, Cronkite made
even terrible events something that we could listen to
and understand. His rich,
earthy speaking voice carried just the right amount of
weight to be taket! seriously
without also commg across
pompously. There isn't a
single newsperson on TV
today who can match him. It

Pastor
Kerry
Wood

seems we've determined
that loud and shrill is more
entertain in!!. But Cronkitc
wasn't on the news to entertain; he was on TV to
inform. He did not offer
OI_)inion or engage in diatnhe against any particular
political position.
So what was the source
of Cronkite"s objecti\ it).
endurance and popularity'?
How is it that someone who
retired in 1981 could still
be so revered almost 30
ycars later? I believe it
came from a deeply personal. and deeply felt faith in
Jesus Christ.
In a J994 interview,
Cronkite said more about
his faith than ever before: "I
got into a Boy Scout troop ~
that met in an Episcopal '
church. The church had a
wonderful minister who
was also the scoutmaster.
And I suppose you could
say he proselytized me. At
any rate. I was much
involved with the church.
and became Episcopalian
- and an acolyte. Later.
when I worked for a paper
in Houston. I was church
editor for a while The
Episcopal House of Bishops
met in Houston one year.
and I became intrigued by
the l_eaders of the ~hur~h fascmated by ~herr dt~~ussions and the1r erudttton.
For a short. while I t~~ught
about entenng the mmtstry.
But that was a short while.
1
prevailed tor his professional
career. but I don't think
Cronkite ever gave up his
quiet faith. It anchored him
a'i he anchored the news for
so long, and so well. I just
wish that v. e could get one
last report from him on the
state and nature of heaven.
Wouldn't you love to have a
concise. and precise report of
the heavenly hosts closed by
his famous line: "And that"s
the way it is ... for eternity."
(Kerry Wood is now associate pastor at Grace
U11ited Methodist Church
in Perrysburg, Ohio after
serving Racine United
Methodist Church for three
years. He can be reached
h is
website:
through
h ttp://pursueholiness.bfogs
pot.com).

Having spent ,.,·hat seems
to me a great deal of time in
hospital emergency roon~s. I
haw learned to npprcctatt:
to some extent the !:-.olemniPastor
ty as!:-.ociated '' ith them.
Thorn
The expcrience not being
Mollohan
exactly a barrel or la~rghs.
sitting with someone 111 an
ER can easily remind one ol
the fragility of life.
While \\e can make all invading his land of Judah.
sorts of assumptions about he docs all he can physically
life in general or de\ clop do to prepare (which isn't
very complex ideas about enough) and then calls his
what reallv is important. people to him~elf. Ha\ ing
real crisi:- c'im force refocus- them assembled before hrm
ing: refocusing of prioritic.s. in the city square a the city
refocusing on our place. m gate. the Bible says that he
the world. and refocusmg •·encouraged them with these
on how we should have \\.Ords: ·'Be stronl! and couraim·cstcd the life given to us. geous. Do not be afraid or
And although we can discouraged because of the
develop tunnel-\ ision in the king of Assyria and the vast
joumc) of living nnd neglect am1y with him. for there is a
other.- or e\en our 0\\.11 ctcr- greater power with us than
nnl destin) (to our ultimate \\ ith him. With him is only
&lt;md utter min), crisis has the the arm of flesh. but with U!'l
potential of estab~ish~ng a is the LORD our God to help
whole new pcrspecttve tor us. us and to fight our battles.'
We may at one moment be And the people gained confiplanning our next day's agcn- dence from what Hezekiah
da and in the next. alter a hru- the king of Judah said.''
tal accident. be wondering if
Realjust a little further in
we'll ever be able to walk that chapter to see HOW
aoain. We may on one da) be God delivers Hezekiah and
thinkino~ about getting .the the people of J11dah. though
entertainment S) stem \\. c ve Sennacherib taunts Hezekiah
ah\ays dreamed of and then and blasphemes God. Verse
after being laid off. be won- 22 contradicts any grand
dering htm long we might be claims Hezekiah 's armv offiable to count on our uncm- cers might ha\'e been temptplovment checks. Or v.c may ed to make by saying simp!).
on "one evening be thinking "So the LORD saved
that our ...pousc is nearly the Hezekiah and the people of
most cxaspcmting person in Jerusalem from the hand of
the \\Orld and then find our Sennacherib king of Ass) ria
hearts breaking the next mom- and from the hand of all othino when the doctor sadly er!-.. He took care of them on
says. ''I'm sorry. 'n1cre's noth- every side."
ing more I can do." .
In a national emergency.
When King Hczckrah of Hezekiah did the very be ... t
Judah see Sennacherib. king thing he could ha\·c done.
of the Assyrian Empire, He turned to God. As a good
-------------------

Jor~~~~~~r~va~ ~~~~

king, he did all he could to
prcp&lt;trc, but, in the end, he
knC\\ and proclaimed that
onl) one truly . had the
power to dl•liver hts people.
II ere's a les.,lm we as
Americans should. continually take to heart. um_nerscd_
·1s '\'" ·tre in tlw m1dst ol
'global
' "' war
' on terror.
Lest. we think that such
principles do not apply to
wn I h es consider
~;~~~th~r defining 'moment in
l1ezekiuh ·~ life: pcr~onal illness to the pomt of death. In
.,.. K Jngs
'
Ch•tpte
, I. .,..0 , the
Scriptures describe a malad)
that \ery nearly takes
Hczckiah's life . While 2
32 .· 24.?6
Ch rome Ies
describe~ the illne!:-.s as a
ch·tstening of God on
'
k'. 1 . 'd . d In ·k of
I.J'JC/e
r,t.1 s pn c .m, 't:
resl)onsl
' enes 'It
s funn)•
·
\
how unresJXHl!-.ivc \\.C ca~ he
d'
,. • ) ., Kmg~
to G o s men:) ' -,
elaborates on . I{e/ckrah s
response to thrs new and
· · ·111 111s
·
\ crv
.
Gcnsts
I ·111 h ·1
. • personal
1
lite: tun11ng to m
umr.itv and faith. God hears hts
·.
. .. (.
cne-; an~1 sees 111S_ te,us '~ry
real cvtdcnce ot very 1eal
faith) and honors his requc"t.
Whit~ we can.not say t~at
God \\til answet our prayers
the way&lt;; th,ll we ah,ays ru.k
or demand, if ~e ''ill trust
r
.
Lie 'an
l ltm
'".tl11 our 1I\C.'&gt;, c t:.
t.um evtl around for good. pam
for &lt;;O}ace. and sorrow to J0 ) ·
What should one say then
"hen hrs or her plans go
a~' I)·&gt; What 9oes he do "'hen
hts st~n~th. 1 ~ not enough to
save htm. 1 o ''hom docs she.
tum \\hen she finds hersell
alone and broken?
Where do YOU tum \\ l}en
your world comes crashmg
dnwn mound yo~t'? Do. you
rely on your own mgemuty to
save you'? Do you look to Oth.fi

er~ to bail you ~ut &lt;'!f ,your
phght ~r start searchmg fo,;

proverbml escapes .hatches.
Do yo~ rt:rhaps ~~~~n. to plot
reme?tes ~d _rctahc~uons •
the bitter btl~ ol hurt an~/ng
bubbles up. m your. soul. . h
:Would .~ou no! ,~low ~u~·cnses to 1eorgan11c you• pr ~
· · an d PI~ns ')• Wouldn, t
ontte~
you hke to thmk that yo~ d •
stop \\ h.at you were dhomg.
and begm ro focus on t ose
things that really ~atter, so
that a l~gacy tha~ wtll ?utl.~st •
you mtght rem~m behrnd,. · •
But why. wart
unttl Crt!:-.ts
? Wh
t r
•
com ~s calh!lg:t' ed ~~ ....~~ye
our rves ~.non IZ ,. • . • l
from the .get-go. k~owt~g
that there ts no promtse ot a,
? E
1t
tomorrow j vcG ~~w ~ ~s
5
0
1
&lt;&gt;eek to a ow
· P~~mties become our pnonttes.
· s n His Church. ·our
· ) to
Hts 0 · d your servrce
f 'I
Ha~t ) anh
er ,you live
tm w erev
work and plav, arc all
gently important to Him ..
ur~
.
io.tay·
thev· hbe ·G~·t
Sl) 1or us. 1no.
· 'tee .
..May
t e
uu o1 pe,
WI10 th
•h th, blood of the
roug tt:b ·ou •ht back
etema 1covenan 1 g
fi 1 the dead our Lord Jes.
ron
,
herd of t
t~at great.1 Sh·~r ..., ith every~h~ef~~ fo~doing His will.
. d~n~a He work in us what
~
).
t H'm through
Jts P1e&lt;rCsthn~ to to' \\'hom be
esus
ns .
olon for e .. er and ever.
Amen.. (Hebrews 13:20-21 ).
(Thom .Mollolzall a11d his
family ha~·e mi11istered ill
southem Ohio the past 14
l'ears and is the author oj
··'The Fairy Tale Parables."
He is the pastor of Path way
Communitl' Church and
may be reached for commellts or questions bv
email at pastortlwm@patliwa alii olis.com).
yg cJvRiGHT c 2009.

1

•

c
I
d
h
I
Sonshine ire e onates sc oo suppues
THOM MOLLOHAN

l!

Thirty-one book bags, quantities of loose
leaf paper, rulers, three ring folders,
erasers, pencils, markers, glue, crayons,
folders, pencil sharpeners, scissors, md.
cards, spiral notebooks and pencil case
have been donated by the Sonshine
Circle of Racine to the Meigs Cooperative
Parish. Presenting the supplies to Arland '
King, Parish director. right, are, from the
left, Evelyn Foreman, Ann Zirkle and
Kathryn Hart of the Sonshine Circle. In
addition members Wilma Smith and Ruth
Simpson made 12 school bags, other
members filled them with supplies and
they will be presented to the UM District
Conference to be distributed to needy
children. Another project of the Circle is to
bake desserts once a month for the children attendina God's Net. All area women '
are invited to meetings held 7 p.m on the
second Thursday of each month.
Submitted photo

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community

Forgi1 e All Injuries
1

Nc.t~ thor

lltfl LC1

the dxth Mt oc lfrir'aru£ rMrcy

•tut;Ei\'.: ell

lrf:Hit:A...

1luu,

t.o~'l' Cite

at! led
lG M2J.'R iilJ ~ v.~ l!.fllllfl us,
u•• ~llA:r t•m• lOJf!r t.lf 11utJl tht inJury. N.Y!

Blessed a~e the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

nuly k thts wldllf'hill.tAI tll.h~. but It Ia 1111.1
rurn~ f&gt;!HpC&lt;'IM I)( h:::~mUl
rtlcl
t\1 11~. Lhis em t~C: iucrdlb!y
J(
ult, ~bUt· II \lie h&amp;oa- ~~~ 'Wl'Cti''l).&gt;tl
r.n-th' r rtteu.o.lly lJ!.• s~lil«!llt'llilo sa::ms
inttut
rru
us.lk~r .~·U•fBlvtng

fDIG

gcKJJ lrt•lil tbt

~

• who rum: lt!lrmoo tH, we
r~· i.bc
h diet ~ lbus end the- cDnib.:t ,d ouy
ltd at

) (l:htf'Wtk. tort ;if~

Utp thuunl'liLl rucrt1n l£:d :.&amp;O lncrm:o:
1 pa iblllrv af htit't6
cd in 1.t.: f:.:.cutt.
Circ.ai
ltl fnrgtwfltSS .au
d
Jj)

nt~:...r;;llv

bcw 11;;11 .:; ion'- l£:ld tltm ked lil
r:cond.:uti.!!nl trlUcll ~ttl!rc not thouatJt tCI ~
hu
tk. turrudN rhm plut:ii £
Rwu!aL, lthei~ GCU ci @_ttriXUit 'to'C.ft r.:d Ul,
vlnln 1rllo hLid tbt: -na:ireo ltwaGes 1nu1 drrL'\1
h ~ 'IJC)tbow Jl111 11 't.1tltin thtrnt • ,~ u.d
"ith lbe hq of God. to furt;l~&lt;e thnrff'.!'fuia \\\!
ll."'I

•t,ould rdkct oo "'~

lt.'t:

rc c&amp;Jn)'ull!

UHUIId iilll}'.U!tf trUJ~ l'il'rJ Lhus htSUtlll '~-en

inJurr.a. ,.ud lht"'l, HiltiGcdii:bclJI. 11-ul}• lo•tf.Vc
'IlL

fMt &amp;ln Oun, ~u Citart l'h~ dni'J lr.1f) ~r»J
tlrhwttf, cWJJp.;uiim.i. J.,'ti'/Ju,u_ fit 1'•11'1{,
mt"'t~ amt p4Ju tut·, Jatlli:Unrc:t. nnt• anat.Wr

&amp;ln•l 1/ ~ JiiU ~ tMW~t cflltlutSf lfrt~t ,
furti• ,.,n tUMI. dS' tft, /oi£!/d fw jtlt"',fllfll JUll.
'"''kUI did tt11riffot'gJw.

2009

209 Third St.

n
UCI•I

Racine, OH
6

HIACoiSI

We'veGo

740-949-2210

t

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-949-2217

~
()~
~ i&lt;datiliMtl&lt;Ut ~
Short &amp; Long Term &amp;
Respite Care • Rehab Sen ices
AYailabJe
"'' "·"' trhroot..rehabilitaticmcentrr.com
333 Page Street
(740) 992·6472
Middle rt OH
mm11 Frimdll'

Armo.1phue

Ilour'
6um-8prn

Mif[ie's :J(estaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Datly
Jlome Cooktd Meals &amp; Dail)' \puials

Open 7 day~ a "eek
740-992·7713

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you. ye shall
ask what ye will. and it ~hall
be done unto you.
John 15:7

Sizes available 5x1 0 to 10 x 20

The Appliance Man
740-985-3561
992-1 550
Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Young

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second St.

Middleport OH

740-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
olaaues t-shirts and more

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE. LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 1\lulbcrr~ Heights
Pomcro), Ohin 45769 ~
(7411) 992-3179
'!!V
'l'ol Free 1-X77-.583-243.'

P.O. Box683
Pomero . Ohio 45769-0683

�PageA7

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 31, 2009.

La Bendicion The Blessing!

Left: Graduates of the
Monday/Wednesday/Friday class of
Community Nursery School are seen
at their graduation. In the first row
are Darcie Harbour, James Sisson,
Bobby Kmcaid, Oliver Osegvera,
McKenzie Wray and Isaac Blank;
second row, Jerah Justice, Trevin
Allen, Zachary Koebel, Ryan Wh1te
and Adam Rogers; third row, Carson
Mares, Lalla Hurlow, Makenna
Caldwell, Brynna Weaver, Gabby
McConnell and Taylor Hopkins; fourth
row, Nick Rykowski. Carson Call,
William Hendrickson, Zoe Nickels,
Javan Gardner and Carter Harris;
fifth row, Mrs. Moore. Blake Smith,
Nolan Collins. Nathan Young, Reece
Little and Mrs. Jindra.

In Bthlc: times. \\C \l'C
throughout the s~:riptures the
importance of a blessing. We
sec different examples
(which I will not take time to
mention) where people made
sure that they wen! blessed
hy either their father or a
priest. The blessing was VCI)'
imp011ant. Fur1hermorc. the
Bible tells us that we ha\'e
been blessed with ever) spiritual blessing (sec Ephesiam
chapter 1),
Even the blessing told by
the priest as he came out of
the temple was a very
important part of the ritual
for God's people. Because
to God, the blessing in
which you bless others with
is essentially what you will
become or do.
In Puet1o Rico. a tradition
exists where children and
grandchildren ask the parent
or grandparl!nt for the "bendicion," or the "blessing."
In return. the parent would
say: ''God bless you" or
"God kl!ep you."
I grew up with such custom. To this day. J greet as
well as end a conversation
or a \is it \\ ith my parents
and grandparents with "bendicion.'' It's a "holy" custom. Also. to not a!&gt;k for the
''bcndicion or ble~sing" is
considered disrespectful.
With that in mind, I have
also learned the importance
of biblical blessings. I came
across a blessing that
includes 30 specific areas
that we can bless others
with. So today. if you arc a
believer. as a minister of the
Lord. I chOO!&gt;C to bless you
in the name of the Lord with
an example of a blessing
using thirty different areas

Right: The children of the
Tuesdayrrhursday class at
Community Nursery School celebrated the end of the school year with a
party. In the first row are Reece
Little, James Sisson, Bobby Kincaid,
Blake Smith, Nathan Young, Zachary
Koebel, Ryan White, Adam Rogers,
Darcie Harbour, Makenna Caldwell
and Trevin Allen; second row, William
Hendrickson, Carson Call, Carter
Harris, Nolan Collins. Zoe Nickels,
Brynna Weaver, McKenzie Wray.
Gabby McConnell, Isaac Blank,
Javan Gardner, Oliver Osegvera,
•
Taylor Hopkins and Jerah Justice.

Left: Children of the
Tuesdayrrhursday class at
Community Nursery School
celebrated the end of
school with a class party.

ehlldre0
Celebrate WI•th year-end ·a edVI•ty
~ODIIDOUI•ty 1~TurSery
'-.1
~

·
·•
GALLIPOLIS
Children m the
.:vlonday/Wedcnsday/Friday class of
unity ~ursery School presented
graduation ~ro~ram to family and
1ds on Ma} _7 sn the sanctuary of
t First Presbyterian Church.
They performed songs, poems and
infom1ed their guests of "'hat they
want to be"' hen·they grow up. These
children will be attending kindergarten
when school starts in August.

GALLIPOLIS The
school lunch program was
started as a youth mission
project by Charlie Huber in
Janum) 191.)(), when he was
youth direc10r of the First
Presbyterian Chmch.
A meal was sen ed every
Monday to over 100 junior
high and high school students. Eventually. the junior
high was a closed campus.
The meal&lt;; were free or a
donation was accepted, and
the meals rotated every
week. They consisted of:
hamburgers or ehee eburg. chicken sandwiches,
1a,
subs, hot dogs with
•
Ina Belle Sibley's delicious
hot dog sauce. Peanut butter and jell) wa&lt;; availahle
for those who &lt;.:ouldn 't eat
meat. There v. as alwavs
chips, fruit, cookie::- ai1d
drinks to go v. ith the sandwiches.
Tho~e who helped to
make th1s program &lt;~ success throughout the years
are: Bob and Jud) Ball
(buyer~), George and Mary
Hout (made cookies), Roger
Barron. K1m Hilderhrnnt,
Ray and Jane Boles. Lily
Holley. Keith and Evelyn
Brandeberry (made cookIes), Ken Holley. Debbie
Beegle. Charlie Huber
(started the program). India

After the program, C\'eryone went
into the social room of the church for
cake and punch. Patty Ha) s did a
beautiful professional DVD of the
children.
The children abo celebrated the end
of school with a picnic in the park.
The
children
from
the
Monday/Wednesday/Friday
class
made a \oisit to the kindergarten classes at Washington Elementary to meet

.
.
.
the tea~hcrs. smce these c~tldren WI 1I
be leavtng preschool for krndergarten
next sch~ol year.
?
.·
T~e ~chool year for -009-2010 \\Ill
begm for the Tuesday/ Thursday Class
on
Sept;
8~
.an~
10 ... T~e
MondayJ\\edensda)/Fnday class w11l
start on _Sept. 9. .
For mformauon on next year's
class, coil Barbara Moore ay (740)

446-2795.

~~ript~:.:
to. ~~~~:~~~h.~ He~~
ts my
to you.
ble~smg

God's blessings rest upon
1 you this day. You are pleasing to the Lord and He
enjoys your fellowship. You
are well-favored and more
than able to receive His
abundant provision. God's
angels 'are with you all the
time and they shall guide
you! God's goodness and
mercy shall follow close
behind you and be the
,guardian::- bet\\CCn you and.
your past.
God has determined that
you shall have good success
because you move in faith
and in strong courage. Your
eyes shall sec the salvation
of the Lord. He shall keep

I
I
I
I

Submitted photo

Volunteers from the First Presbyterian Church who operated the school lunch program for
Gallia Academy High School students, started in 1996, are seen here. The program offered
by First Presbyterian and two other Gallipolis churches have ended with the opening of the
new GAHS next month.
Borden.
Diane
Love.
Charlie and Cathy Bostic.
Tim and Tracey Luoma,
Leland Brimm. John Moore
chief
cook).
Kathryn
Costen. Jack Mink. Carol
Crabtree, Alice and Wayne
Niday. .Mtck Davis, Bill and
Ina Belle Sible), Mary
Daw!&gt;On, Ed and Jane Ann
Slagle. AI Earley, Joan
Schmidt. France::; Kingery.
Dori~
Stone. Jonathan

Kollmann, Bob Turner.
Clare and Be\erly Gcttlcs,
Kim Vunco and Raafat Zaki.
"We were glad not onl~ to
provide with them with n
meal. but al o a safe and
wann place for them to visit
with their friends," a
spokesperson for the group
said. "Through all the years.
the kids were polite und "ellmannered. It was a pleasure
to have them with us."

Help to fund this project
came from private donations. Presbyterian Women.
Grace :Vlethodist Women.
plus the donations from the
kids. Also, John Moore
applied for and received a
couple of grants from AEP.
This program was so successful that eventuallv Grace
Methodist ant the Catholic
Church each took a day each
week to feed the ktds.

Pastor
.•
Alex
Colon

y

you safely under His wings
•
and pinions.
I declare this da) th~t you•
arc protected and delivered •
from the e\ it of the day:·
You shall not stumble nor;
fall for Holy Sprit has"'
anointed your eyes with eye·
salve to sec clearly and has.
given yo~ spiritual ears to.
hear prectsely.
You will be wise in ymm
generation. Your soul will •.
rest in God Shalom. He has··
declared you to be strong"'
and pleasing in His sight. •
You will eat the fruit of his
promises in the land of the
living and will enjoy long,
life and length of day~.
because you have wholly_
trusted in the Lord your God.
Your habitation shall be a
place where you "'ill rest in
His love. find hope for
tomorrow. and joy shall
strengthen you as you rest.
upon your bed. He shall_
restore your soul and give.
vou rest in the stillness and·
quietness of your home.
In your prayer chamber,
Holy Spirit shall birth acreatiYe and powerful mind.
and give you sound ideas .
that will bring you promo-:
tion and great favor. He
shall give you fresh anoint~
ings and bless your life and
ministry with good results.
The Lord is pleased with
you and has placed His .,
name upon you for leadership. favor. provisions and·,·
miracles.
Call upon Him and He.
will show you great and·
mighty things you know !lOt
of. You are blessed commg
in and blessed ~oing out."
You are blessed m the city',
and blessed in the field. I, ,
bless you in Jesus' Name!,
Be blessed!
Make it a blessed week! ··
(Alex Colon is pastor and,
evangelist at Lighthouse
Assembly of God, 4976 ~
Ohio 160, Gallipolis, 1-112 ..
miles north of Holzer
,Wedical Center. He can be'
contacted by phone at 740-•
446-9281 or 937-386-3340~~
or at www.lagohio.org).

"'

Rev. Ike, who preached~
prosperity, dies at 74
LOS A~GELES (AP) The minister known as
Reverend Ike. who preached
the gospel of material prosperity to millions natiom\ ide.
died Tucsda). He was 74 .
Family
spokesman
Bishop E. Bernard Jordan
told The New York Times
that The Rev. Frederick J.
Eikcrcnkocttcr II. who suffered a stroke in 2007 and
never fully recovered. died
in Los Angeles. He moved
to the c1ty two years ago,
Jordan said.
Reverend Ike preached the
power of what he called
"positive self-image psychology" to his 5.000 parishioners at the United Church
Science of Living Institute.
The church was housed in a
fom1er movie theater in i\ew
York's Washington Heights
neighborhood.
In the 1970s. Reverend
Ike was one of the first
evangelist:-. to reach an audi-

cnce of millions through
,
television.
··This is the do-it-yourself
church." he proclaimed1
"The only savior in this phi~
losophy is God in you.'' :
Reverend Ike stretcheq
Christian tenets. relocating
the idea of God to the interior of the self. with the
power to bring the believer
anything he or she desired
in the way of health ...,·ealtn
and peace of mind.
:
The philosophy did not sit
well
with
traditional
Christian ministers and civil
rights leaders who felt black
churches should focus on
social reform rather thar1
self-fulfillment.
'
His critics said he preyed
on the poor and conned the
faithful into giving him
donations that he s~nt or(
cars. clothes and homes for
himself. The IRS and the
Postal Sen·ice in\'Cstigatcd
~
'
hrs businesses.

�--------·~-------~--------~

~he

PageAS

Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 31,

2009

--------- -Today's Forecast
City/Region
High 1Low temps

Forecast for Friday, July 31

Cleveland

77 167°

•

Youngstown•
Mansfield•

~

79°165°

Dayton•~

lJ;'ft'?

81°163°

77"165°

~

*Columbus

81°165°

~
//-

/

Cincinnati

• 83°167°
Portsmouth•
81° 167°

~
Partly
CIOIKfy
Weather Underground • AP

Local Weather
AP photo

In a photo made July 15, work continues on a new bridge being rebuilt over the Snake River near Grasston. Minn.
Minnesota Will spend about $50 million in stimulus cash on bridges. with less than half of that going to bridges deemed
'"structurally deficient.··

Sunday...Partly sunny
Friuay ... Mustly cloudy.
Showers with a chance of with a chance of showers
thunderstorms in the mom- and thunderstorms. Highs··
ing ...Thcn a chance of the upper 70s. Chance
1 showers with a slight rain 40 percent.
Sunday night •••Mostly
chance of thunderstorms in
the afternoon. Highs in the cloudy in the cvening ...Then
lower 80s. We';t winds becoming partly cloudy.
around 5 mph. Chance of Lows in the lower 60s.
.Monday and Monday
min ~0 percent.
Frida)
night...~1ostl)
night...Partly cloudy. Highs
cloudv with a slight chance in the mid 80s. Lows in the
of ·showers - in
the mid 60s.
Tuesday...Partly sunn)
evening ...Then
part!)
cloudy after midnight. Lows with a chance of showers
ty was jobs and the econom). recalled bosses telling him· in the lower 60s. Southwest and thunderstorms. Highs in
As a result, we had to mme last fall. as talk of a stimulu~ winds around 5 mph. the lower 80s. Chance of
rain 40 percent.
things quickly. I don't fault was just beginning, that the Chance of min 20 percent.
Tuesday night ...Mostly
Saturday
...
Mostly
sunny.
that," said John Zicconi, state would probably make
Highs
in
the
lower
80s.
in the evening ...Then
cloudy
spokesman for the Vcm1ont bridges a priorit).
Agency of Transpmtation.
"They said, get as many Southwest winds 5 to 10 becoming partly cloudy.
Lows in the lmver 60s.
"Nobody put the stimuhts bridge projects as I could mph.
Saturday night ... Partly
· and
Wednesday
together as an answer to all get and they'd be willing to
cloudy. Lows in the mid Wednesday night ... Partly
our bridge issues. It was about entertain it:' Walus said .
putting people to work."
With more than I ,200 60s. South winds around 5 cloudy. Highs in the lower
80s. Lows in the upper 50s.
That's not exactly how it deficient bridges in the state mph.
was billed. Obama pointed and an estimated $3.7 billion
to the construction of the needed to repair or replace
Golden Gate Brid~e during them, there were lots of
the Great Depresston a an choices. Engineer" selected
example of hmv tran ... porta- small bridges that could be
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS.
tion money in the nc\1. stim- fixed '' ithout the long engi- AEP (NYSE) - 30.65
(NASDAQ) - 53.76
DAQ)- 29.56
ulus law could ''remake the neering proce:-.s and em iron- Akzo
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 32.34
BBT (NYSE) - 22.63
face of the nation."
mental pennittmg normaH) Big Lots (NYSE) - 23
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 18.04
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 29.41
"It's what we're doing once requned for larger strue:
Pepsico (NYSE) - 56.60
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6
more, by butlding a 21st cen- tures. \\'alus . aid engineer" BorgWarner (NYSE) - 31.60
Aluminum (NASDAQ)
Rockwell (NYSE) - 40.72
tul)' infrastructure that will worked long hours this win- Century
-7,69
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)- 3 .75
make America's economy ter tying uploose ends to get Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.59
Royal Dutch Shell - 52.53
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) stronger and America's pt:Oplc those projects read) to go.
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 66.97
safer:· Obama said in ~lan:h.
As a result 69 of the 73 4.79
Holding (NASDAQ) - 32.29
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 49.98
While the stimulus will pay Virginia bridges receiving City
Collins (NYSE) - 42.52
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.54
for a few such project'\, like stimulus money arc either DuPont (NYSE) - 30.81
WesBanco (NYSE) - 16.77
the massive new Cleveland deficient or obsolete, accoru- US Bank (NYSE) - 20.48
Worthington (NYSE) - 12.76
Gannett (NYSE) - 6.65
Dally stock reports are the 4
lnnerbelt Bridge, for the most ing to inspection recon.ls.
General Electric (NYSE) - 13.11
p.m. ET closing quotes of transprut the money will not build
But targeting deficient Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 22.29 actions for July 30, 2009, provida 21st century tn.msportation bridges with new federal JP Morgan (NYSE) - 38.47
ed by Edward Jones financial
system. It will repave the money isn't as easy as it Kroger (NYSE) - 21.29
advisors Isaac Mills In Gallipolis
Brands (NYSE)- 12.74
at (740) 441·9441 and Lesley
20th century system.
sounds, officials in other Limited
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) Marrero In Point Pleasant at
Democrats helping Obama states said.
42.95
(304) 674·0174. Member SIPC.
campaign for the stimulus
program singled out bridge
repairs when promoting the
bill. In a conference call with
reporters before passage,
Rhode Island Sen. Jack Reed
said a bridge in Providence
would benefit from the
recovery program.
..If we fix that briuge,
we're not onl) putting people
to wor~. but \\.e're going to
speed, htcrally speed our economic activity," Reed "aid.
The Pa\\tucket River
Bridge may have helped
Reed make his point, but it
was already on track tq be
repaired and is not part of
the state's stimulus plan.
Rhode Island, the state with
ll)at's rrgt;n Be9ti&amp; Ba1Jtty. HI &amp; Lors.
the nation's highest percentage, 52 percent, of bad
Nagar the Homble arid Dermis tfte
bridges. so far plans to usc
Menace are aoinmg BkNJd,a. Funky
stimulus money to work on
only six of its 397 deficient
Winkerbean atld tha test of ttle funny
or obsolete structures.
After the stimulus bill was
pages garlQ on Tuesday, August 4th
passed
in
February,
For puzzle lovers, ~u~u and a nifty
Massachusetts Gov. Deval
Patrick ""as asked on National
crosswotd round out tt1e new comics
Public Radio to list projects
the stimulus would fund.
page. Watdl for •t!
"I can tell you that. for
example, we have some
prominent bridges that are
structurally deficient that
we want to get to as soon as
possible for reasons of safety," Patrick said.
But Patrick knew that
months earlier he and state
legislators had pa.-.scd a $3 billion bridge program that didn't rely on stimulus money.
Massachusetts, a state with
more than half or its 5,063
bridges deemed deficient or
obsolete by inspectors, so far
is spending recover)' money
D~1tll'
on only one bridge.
Some states did dcdde early
~)lt'tl Scl
to target bad bridge ""ith ceonomic reco' ery money.
In Virginia, state bridge
engineer Kendal Walus

AP IMPACT

Bad bridges passed
up for slintulus cash
B Y BRETT J. BLACKLEDGE
AND MATT APUZZO
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

WASHING rON -Tens of
thousands of unsafe or decaying bridges carrying 100 mil·
lion drivers a day must wait
for repam; because states are
spendmg stimulus money on
spans that arc already in good
shape or on easier projects like
repaving roads, an Associated
Press analv:-is shows.
President Bamck Obama
urged Congress last winter to
pass his $787 billion stimulus
package so some of the economic rcco\ cry money could

The idea, he said, was to
provide an immediate jolt to
the nation's econom)
"We're delighted states
are able to move quickly,"
Deseve said.
A few states, such as
Virginia and South Carolina,
are targeting their troubled
btidges. In all, 1,286 deficient
or obsolete bridges are
expected to share $2.2 billion
in stimulus money for repairs,
the AP analysis shows.
But that\ less than I percent of the more than
150.000 bridges nationwide
that engineers have labeled
deficient or obsolete. Of

he u..ed tn rehuild ""hat he

tho-.e, more than 39,000 are

called America\ "crumbling
bride:es." Lawmakers said rt
was-a historic chance to chip
away at the $65 billion backlog of deficient structures.
often neglected until a catastrophe like the .Minneapolis
bridge that collapsed two
years ago this Saturday.
States, however, have
other plans. Of the 2.476
bridges scheuuled to receive
stimulus money so far, nearly half have passed inspec
tions with high marks,
according to federal data.
Those I ,123 sound bridges
received such high inspection ratings that the) nonnally would not qualify for federal bridge money. yet they
will share in more than S 12
billion in stimulu~ monexThe wooden bridge bUilt in
1900
carrying
Harlan
Springs Road in Berkeley
County, W.Va., i~ one of the
nation's unsafe stmctures not
being repaired. About 2.700
cars cross it every day. But
with holes in the wooden
deck and corroded railings
and missing steel poles, only
one car at a time can travel
the 300-foot rickety span.
The bridge is an example of
how Obama's call to spend
recovery money quickly on "shovel ready" projects to
get people back to work has cla-;hed with other goals of
the stimulus, such a-. targeting
high-unemployment areas and
rebuilding the nation's infrastructure. State transportation
officials say the need for
speed makes it hard to funnel
money into needy counties or
to take on extensive bridge
repairs that can involve years
of planning and con~truction.
Repaving or widening roads
requires less planning and can
be done quickJy, which is why
such projects account for 70
percent of the $17 billion in
transportation stimulus money
approved so far. Bridge projects represent 12 percent.
The spending decisions
by state~ are OK with the
Obama administration.
Ed Deseve, the president's
chief executive of the stimulus, said the administration
understands the desire to
tackle ··longer-term, gleamin-the-eye projects" but told
states "please, give us your
shovel ready projects.''

considered the worst, rated
poor in at least one structural
component and eligible to be
replaced with federal money.
. William Stubblefield, a
Berkeley County, W.Va., comrntssioner, said he's confident
state transportation officials
are monitoring bridge safety
and money will come soon for
hts county's bridges. The
wooden bridge in Berkeley
County is among more than a
third of the state's 7,064
bridges deemed deficient or
obsolete by inspectors.
Safety problems are so
obvious on some spans, like
the Harlan Springs bridge.
that engineers have restricted traffic.
''If we· re seeing some
obvious deterioration. that's
too late," Stubblefield said.
For . tts analysis, the AP
asked each state and the
District of Columbia to identify every bridge on which it
planned some work using
stimulus money. In some
states that represented a final
list. In others, new projects
could be added. Most states
provided project costs, but
some did not. Some states
included in their costs other
road work related to the
bridge project. like paving or
widening nearby roads.
The AP then researched
each bridge using the latest
inspection data available
from the Transportation
Department.
This analysis found that:
• Many states did not make
bridge work a priority in stimulus spending. More than half
plan work on fewer than two
dozen bridges and 18 states
plan fewer than 10 projects.
• In 24 states, at least half
of the bridges being worked
on with stimulus money
were not deficient.
• In 15 states, at least twothirds of the bridges receiving stimulus money are not
deficient.
Transportation officials
said the stimulus program's
mandates - shovel-ready
projects that can be finished
m three years and create jobs
quickly - made it nearly
impossible to focus on bad
bridges that weren't already
scheduled for repairs.
'The feds had their own
priorities, and their big priori-

r

Local Stocks

arehac/d

beginning

7~.~4~
&lt;!."1(t.Lhpohs

·&lt;rrii.Junr
nt l:\t'gtstl' r

iJolnt
The Daily Sentinel

1

�Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Little interest in Vick, Page B2
Local sports briefs, Page B3

Friday, July 31, 2009 .

Ortiz linked to 2003 positive test
NEW YORK (AP)
Boston Red Sox slugger
David Ottiz becrune the latest
star implicated in bm;eball"s
ever-growing drug scandal.
acknowledging Thursday that
the players' union continned
he tested positive in 2003.
Shmtly after hitting the goahead home run that beat
Oakland 8 5, Ortiz responded
to a story on The Nev. York
Times' Web site that he ru1d
fonner teammate Manny
Ramirez tested positive for
perfmmance-enhancing drugs
six years ago.
'Tve just been told that the
report is true," Ortil said in a
statement after contacting the
union. "Based on the way I
lived my life I'm surprised to
learn I tested positive."
The popular Big Papi. who
had never been I inked to
drugs, said he intended to find
out what was in his system
and would tell the Red Sox
ru1d the public.
"You know me- I will not
hide and I will not make

DAYS
Maloney
.takes lead in
Riverside
Senior Mens

excuses," he said.
Alex Rodriguez, Bany
Bonds. Roger Ckmens and
Srunmy Sosa are. arnong the
many All-Stars tamtcd by the
drug cloud. which has called,
into question some of the
sport's greatest achievements
over the la-;t two decades.
Ortiz and Ramirez led the
Red Sox to the World Series
title in 2004- their first in 86
ycars - and another championship in 2007.
Ramirez, now with the Los
Angele~ Dodgers. recently
served a 50-g~me suspension
for violating ba&lt;;eball 's drug
policy. Asked about this second alleged doping violation.
he told reporters in St. Louis·
"You wru1t more information.
I'm pretty sure you guys got
the phone number to the
.union. Call the union. and they
can explain that to you guys."
More than 100 major leaguers tested positi\'e for perfonnance enhancing dmgs in
2003 - the results were supposed to be ru1onymous and

ru·e now under cotut seal.
..Precisely for that reason.
the Plavcrs Association will
not. indeed crumot. comment
on whether the information is
accurate,"
union
leader
Dom1ld Pehr said.
The Time~· storv cited
lawyers involved in ·pending
litigation over the testing
result:&gt; who spoke anonymously because the infom1ation is under seal by a court
order. The newspaper did not
say what the players tested
positive for.
The results from the 2003
tests were supposed to remain
anonymous but were sei.ted
by federal agenb. Rodriguet.
admitted using pelformanceenhancinf! dmgs after he was
linked to the 2003 list. And in
June. The Times reported Sosa
also -w a..; on the 2003 1ist.
Ramire.t was a long-establtshed star in 2003. 0Itiz, in
contrast, had been a part-time
player before that season.
Please see Ortiz, 82

AP photo

In this April 19, 2008. file photo. Boston Red Sox's Manny
Ramirez, right, celebrates his two-run home run with teammate David Ortiz in the eighth inning of a baseball game .
against the Texas Rangers at Fenway Park in Boston.

1

~cyYoung

STAFF REPORT

'That took the pressure off
the offense:·
Adam Rosales hit a threerun pinch-hit homer in the
ninth for the Reds. who have
lost nine of their last 10
games and II of 14 since the
All-Star break to fall a season-high II games under
.500 at 45-56.
Rosales, whose homer
was his first in 105 at bats
since a 13-5 win at Ariwna
on May II, hopes his blast
can help the Reds snap their
slump. ·
"It's definitely a grind," he
said. ··You've got to be· able
to show up every day. The

CLEVELAND (AP) Looking ahead. here's a safe
prediction for the 2009 season: The Cleveland Indians
won't trade a Cy Young
Award winner.
The; don't have any left.
I They
may soon be low on All, Stars, too.
Faced \Vith the potential of
losing
ace Cliff Lee as a free
I agent after
next season anq
1 desperate to cut payroll, the
Indians. whose season unrav' eled months ago. dealt the
AL\ reigning Cy Young winner to the World Series chamI pion Philadelp)1ia Phillies on
1 Wednesday for four minor
leaguers.
The deal came a year after
the Indians traded CC
1 Sabathia. the 2007 Cy Young
wmner. to the :Milwaukee
Brewers before last season's
deadline.
With the trades. the
Indians. who have already
made four deals this season
and are listening to offers
for All-Star catcher/first
baseman Victor Martinez
before Friday's non-waiver
deadline. made history just not the kind to be proud
f
Cleveland IS the first team
to trade incumbent Cy
Youngs in consecutive seasons, accordine: to STATS
LLC. Lee joined Sabathia,
Frank Viola ( 1988) and
David Cone (1994). as the
only winners to be dealt in
midseason the year after getting the award. STA'fS said. ·
Cleveland's decision to
trade Lee - a move panned
by the majmity of Indians
1
fans - carne after general

Please see Reds, 83

Please see Tribe, 82

Joey Votto
MASON
Jack
Maloney of Gallipolis has
taken a four point lead
after four weeks of the second half of the 2009
Riverside Senior Mens
League . Maloney has 67
points total for his efforts
to lead Mick Winebrenner
of Racine who stands in
second place with a total
63. Bob Stewart curtly holds down the third
sition after hitting 62
points for the season thus
far.
A season high of 82
players took part in
Tuesday's session for the
Senior League. The participants formed I 9 four- man
teams and two teams of
three, setting the winning
1
score at 21 points.
The low score of the day '

I

~:~~Jr~~~li~ng;\h~rlea:~

of M1ck Wmebrenner
(Racine.OH). Gerald Kelly
(Middleport. OH), and
Elmer
.Click ·
(Cottageville).
The second low score
was 59 (-11 under par) by
the team of Carl Stone
(Ripley), Chuck Yeager
(Mason). Jim Spencer
(Ripley)., and Bob Stewart
(Cottagevi lie) .
There was a three-way
tie at 60 points to claim
d place.
•
he closest to the pin
winners were Carl Stone
{)n the 9th hole and Bill
Yoho of New Haven on the
J4th hole. The league is
averaging 78 players per
week for this second half
of the Riverside season.
The league is hoping to
extend that average to 80
or higher for the rest of the
year.
RIVERSIDE SENIOR
LEAGUE STANDINGS
AS OF JULY 28
Jack Maloney
M1ck Winebrenner
Bob Stewart
Haskel Jones
Carl Stone
Curtis Grubb
Frank Brown
Bob Humphrey
Chuck Stanley
Jerry Arnold
Bill Strlckfin
Russ Holland

~

•

Paul Somerville
Gerald Kelly
~'~a!p,F. Sayre
:.&gt;ebalski
Oliver
1 1s Dudding
Bob Hill
Rich Mabe
Butch Bookman

J1mGress
John Thompson
Mitch Mace
Jack Ocheltree
Joho Blankenship
Earl Johnson
Ed Wilson
Tom McNeely
Bub Stivers
Claude Proffitt
Don Corbir&gt;
Jim Spencer
Elmer Click
RICh Gilkey

67
63
62
59
55
55
53.5
53.5
51 5
51.5
51.5
50.5
50.5
so 5
50
49.5

48
47.5
47
46.5
46
46
46
45 5
45.5
44.5
44.5
43.5
43

41
41
40.5
40.5
40.5
40.5

.

I winner again

Cincinnati
Reds first
baseman

MDSSPORTS@MYDAILYSENTlNELCOM

It,

Indians deal

makes the out
on San Diego
Padres' Luis
Rodriguez
(15)ona
close play at
first in the ·
eighth inning
of a baseball
game,
Thursday in
Cincinnati.
San Diego

won 7-4.
~liilll'~~~~fij,!ijp~

AP photo

I

Venable drives in 4in Padres 7-4 win over Reds
CINCINNATI (AP) The Cincinnati Reds played
their annual fun game
against their family before
taking on the San Diego
Padres on Thursday
Then the son of a former
Red took over. Rookie Will
Venable hit a three-run
homer to help Tim Stauffer
earn his first win in almost
three years and San Diego
romped to a 7-4 win over
reeling Cincinnati .
Venable. whose father
Max played for the Reds in
the mid-1980s. drove in a
career-high four runs and
had four hits as the Padres
picked up a third consecutive win for the first time

since they won 10 straight
from May 15 through May
25. He only had five RBis in
38 games this season coming into the game.
·'My dad always pays
attention t~ the box scores,"
Venable said. "It's nice to
contribute. At times. it feels
close. At other times, it feels
far away. It helps to have my
dad just a phone call away.
so he can let me know about
the ups and downs.''
Luis Rodriguez and Chase
Headley each added two hits
behind Stauffer ( 1-2). who
allowed seven hits and one
run in seven innings for his
first win since beating Los
Angeles 4-2 on Aug. 21.

2006.
'"It's a good win." said the
right-handed Stauffer. who
missed the entire 2008 season after having shoulder
surgery. "We battled. It
made it a lot easier to pitch
when they put those runs on
the board. I was feeling a lot
more confident."
Manager Bud
Black
believed pitching was the
key to the Padres winning a
series for the first time since
winning two out of three at
Texas June 26-28. They finished the season with six
wins 111 seven games against
the Reds .
''We got three wellpitched games," Black said.

°

Appeals court hears argum.::nts
in Kentucky N!SCAR suit
CINClNNATI (AP) The former owners of the
Kentucky Speedway are
asking a federal appeals
court for a green flag to pursue their antitrust claim
against NASCAR.
"They were squceled
out." attomey Stan Chesley.
who helped file the lawsuit
in 2005, said after arguments Thursday in front of a
three-judge panel of the 6th
U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals.
A lower-court judge last
year rejected the speedway's
claim that the racing body
and a sister company that
operates tracks and promotes races have conspired
to monopolize control over
who gets the top stock car
events.
The Kentucky track. some
40
miles
south
of
Cincinnati, has new ownership that wants the case
ended to help its chances of

gaining a coveted NASCAR
Sprint Cup race. But
Chesley said there are
important issues for a trial.
and that the fonner owners
also want hundreds of millions in damages.
"People have the right to
have their case heard in
court,'' Chesley said.
NASCAR attorney David
Boies said the law'iuit
against the racing body and
its lntemutional Speedway
Corp. represented impatience by the Kentucky
Speedway to get a Sprint
Cup race.
''They
want
one.
Everyone wants one," Boies
told the judges.
Boies noted that the
speedway has hosted other
NASCAR series races since
AP photo
opening in 2000 and was in
effect saying: "We want it In this file photo taken Aug. 11, 2002, Felipe Giaffone, left, leads Sam Hornish Jr. across
the finsih line to win the Belterra Casino Indy 300 at the Kentucky Speedway in Sparta, Ky.
all and we want it now."

Please see Su1t, 83

A federal appeals court panel is hearing arguments on an effort to revive an antitrust lawsuit seeking to gain a top-tier NASCAR race for the speedway.

'f

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 31.

www.mydailysentinel.com

2009

Bears, Raiders, Titans
not interested in Vick
B Y HOWARD ULMAN
AP SPORTS WRITER

MSL All Star's Landon
Donovan, left, is held by
Everton FC Jose Baxter
as he goes for the ball in
the second half of the
MLS All Star game in
Sandy, Utah, on
Wednesday. Everton beat
the All Stars 6-5 in a
shootout.
AP photo

Everton beats MLS All-stars on penalty kicks
SA 'l"DY. Utah (A P) Landon Donovan is looking
forward to playing with Tim
Howard behind him again.
Facing Howard was a frustrating reminder of how good
the U.S national goaltender is.
Howard made -six !'aves in
regulation and stop(&gt;l!d three
shot" on pen~lty kicks to lead
Everton past the .\1ajor
League Soccer team in the
MLS All-Star game 4-3 in
penalty kicks on Wednesday
night. Howard kept the MLS
club out of the goal time after
time and forced the 1-1 game
into two extra rounds of penal('. kicks to decide it, before
Seattle Sounders star Freddie
~Jungberg was taken to hospital for a migraine headache.
"I wasn't surprised. I've
seen it a lot of times in training
and in games." said Donovan,
who ~ad a chip shot punched
over the crossbar by Howard
in the second half.
Fortunately for Donovan, he
and Howard should be teammates again Sept. 5 in a World
Cup qualifier when the lj .S.
team plays El Salvador at Rto
Tinto Stadium. where Howard
shined Wednesday night.
··He's one of the best goalkeepers in the world and he
showed that again," Donovan
said. "Hopefutl) he won't get
many chance... against him
again, but if he plays like that
we're going to get through
qualifying relatively easily
and \\e can do big things in the
World Cup."

Tribe
from Page Bl
manager Mark Shapiro was
infonned b) ownership that
he would not have significant
money to spend on overhauling his roster in the upcoming
off."&gt;Ca"on.
Although the Indians held a
tlub option on Lee for 2010.
it wru:; e\ ident they were not
going to be ahle to sign the
left-hander to a long-term
extension, so they made the
010\'e.

Shapiro was in a similar
spot last year, but Sabathia
was eligible to leave after the
2008 season so there was a
greater sense or urgency to
get quality players in retum.
Shapiro deiendcd his shipping Lee for prospects, three
of whom he believes are
major-league ready. as ncces"ary to get the Indians back
into contention in the
winnable AL Central.
''It's not going to be wait,
wait, wait and sec." he said. "I
think we'll be playing championship ba-;eball again and
that we'll do it quickly:•
has
rapidly
Shapiro
changed the face of the
Indians. ·\\hO just two years
ago were withm one win of a
trip to the World Scric~.
Instead, tHey're rebuilding
-again.

Ortiz
from Page BJ
Oniz had never hit more
than 20 homers in a season as
a . part-time player in
Minnesota early in his c:u·eer.
He carne to Bo::.ton as a platoon player in 2003 and had
four homers by July I. then
hit 27 the rest of the year.
Orti?. followed up with seasons of 41. 47 and 54 home

Howard wru:; voted the most
valuable player after stopping
Ljungberg on the fmal penalty
kick.
Seattle's Swedish midfieldcr. who played the entire
game, was carted off the field
aflcr the final kick due to the
migmine. He was taken to a
hospital
for evaluation.
according to MLS.
Ljungberg has been bothered by migraines periodically
during his fJISt months with
the Sounders.
Jack Rodwell opened the
sixth round of penalty kicks.
after the teams were tied 3-3
through the regulation five
rounds, with a goal. Ljungberg,
needing to score to keep the
game alive, tried to fake
Howard with a soft chip shot to
the middle. Howard lunged in
time for the winning stop.
'T here's always a bitofluck
involved," Howard said. "He
had me for the most part. I was
just able to get a little piece of
it."
Everton is the onlv international club to beat -the io. fLS
All-Star... who had been 5-0 in
this format indudin!! four\\ ins
over Premier League teams.
The Toffees were wrapping
up a preseason i\orth
American tour as they prepare
for the Premier League opener
Au!!. 15 at home a~ainst
Ar:-;cnal.
~
Everton captain Phil NeYille
\.\as happy that Howard wa...
making the return trip to
Liverpool with the rest of the

English club.
"That \vas just &lt;I normal perfonmmce for him. He's a topclass keeper - one of the best
in the Premiership." Neville
said. "The USA have obviously got to be glad that he\ their
keeper:'
Louis Saha scored the only
regulation goal for Evetton in
the 12th minute. Brad Davis of
the Houston Dynamo :-cored
for the ~ 1 LS ... tars. who held a
21-11 shots advantage.
Everton had only one shot
i'n the second half, and none
on goal. At the other end. the
:..u.:S pla)ers had Howard diving and leaping to keep
Everton from falling behind.
Donovan nearly got a chip
shot over Howard in the 68th
minute but the goalkeeper
punched it over the crossbar.
Donovan had another great
chance in the 75th minute, but
bounceJ a shot hard off the left
post. Howard got a little help·
in the 84th minute from teammate Jose Baxter, who corrJIJed Connor Cnsey's shot
with both feet just before it
reached the goal line.
The ~tLS club made another push during stoppage time,
but Howard was there again to
stop a header by Davy
Arnaud.
Everton was clearlv the
team that had experience playing together. The Toffees controlled play for most of the
opening 20 minutes and only
allowed one ball. to reach
llo\.\ ard - a botched clearing

In dumping Lee ($9 mil- now, but Shapiro feels he
lion),
reliever
Rafael added talent to an already
Betancoutt ($5.4 million). deep pool of players in
first baseman Ryan Garko (S2 Cleveland\ system.
··we•ve been through tt
million) and Francisco (about
$600.000) for eight prospects, before in a much worse situathe Indians have slashed near- tion \Vith much less in the
ly $18 million in payroll for player-development cabinet
next season . Martinez has a and much less talent under
control on the major league
$7 million option for 2010.
From the outside. the team,"
Shapiro
·aid.
moves appear to be nothing "Ultimate)). we prO\ ided fans
more than cost-cutting mea- with two contending sC.'bons
sures. with attendance drop- after that trade. We hope to
ping due to a dreary economy get back into it for a longer
and disappointing team.
period of time."
Shapiro said it·s all about
TI1at's little cum:nt comfon
securing the future.
for Indians fans, who ha\e
"There has been no direc- seen stars like Mann)
tive from ownership to move Ramirez and Jim Thome
lea\ e as free agents and now'
salary," Shapiro said
That may have been the must deal with their second
case in 2002, when Shapiro straight Cy Young pitcher get-.ent No. I starter Bartolo ting traded. Cleveland went
Colon to Montreal for Lee. 35~ years he tween Ga) lord
center
fielder
Grady Perry's Cy Young win in
Sizemore. second baseman 1972 and Sabathia's honor.
They. only waited one more
Brandon Phillips and first
baseman Lee Stevens. At the year for Lee to win and now
time. the blockbuster si!!naled he·:-. gone, ttx&gt;.
Shapiro appreciates fans·
a turning point for the
Indians. an acceptance that frustmtions.
they were no longer a cham"I under~tand and sympapionship-caliber club and it thize with the fans' focus. and
was time for a major their desire is alwa) s in that
makeover.
moment and that juncture in
Back then. Cleveland fans, time." Shapiro said. ''Like
accustomed
to
playoff any other decision ~e make.
appearances. braced for the we ha\ e one eye on the
worst. They thought, how immediacy of the moment
could Shapiro give up the pre- and one e)C on building a
sent for an uncertain future? team that's going to win a
'I11at's what they're saying championship."
runs as he established himself
as one of the best sluggers in
the game.
Last year. he dipped to 23
home runs. and his slump
continued this season. He
went into Thursday's game
hitting .224 with only 13
homers.
Ramire1 rctumed from his
sul&gt;pension this month and
quickly re-established his
presence in the· middle of the
lineup for the i':L West-leading Dod!!crs.
Boos have rained down on

Rmnirc1 throughout this
week's series in St. Louis
'v\'henevcr he comes to the
plate or touches the ball.
''He's a great player and I
don'r think~ the suspension has
anything to do with it."
Dodgers manage!' Joe Torre
said. "Personally, if ht• ne\er
got su~pended they'd still be
boomg the hell out of him.''
"I think the reception
would have been the same.
Some people hate the long
hair or \.\ hatevcr it is. or the
fact he's a free spirit." he said.

attempt that sailed high and
backward.
Everton took a 1-0 lead late
in the 12th minute when
Houston's Stuart Holden tried
a soft crossing pass that went
right to Saha 15 ycu·ds outside
the net. Saha had an easy time
knocking it pa~t Seattle goalkeeper Kasey Keller. the veteran American who joined
~tLS thi~ year after a long
career in Europe.
MLS tied it in the 26th
minute when Davis tapped a
shot just inside the left J:Xlst.
Casey started the play from
the other side with a pass in
front to Holden. \Vho couldn't
control it for the shot but accidentally tipped it to Davis.
The goal seemed to loosen
up both sides. but especially
the MLS players.
"It gave them confidence,"
Neville said. "They gave us a
real tough game after that. It
was a good learning curve.''
Howard made four saves in
the half. including two diving
stops that prevented the MLS
team from taking a lead.

The rcjel'lion notices for .\1ichael \;ick came from Lovie
.
Smith. Jeff Fh,her and 1bm Cable on l'hul"\day.
But Patriots coach Bill Belichick isn 'L sa) ing whether ht.
team is inten:sted in the qua11erback.
.
.
As the Chicago Bears began .trai!ling camp, ~!mth satd
Vick dcseryl.'s another oppot1untty 111 the NFL . I he coach
ju ... t do~:sn 't sec it happening with the Bears even though
·
they luck an experienced backup.
The former Atlanta Falcons star. who served 18 months
for running a dogfighting ring. said Thursda_) he is gettin~
clo ...e to sisning with a pro football team. V!ck. was comlttionally 1\:tnstatcd ~londay by l\'FL commtsstoner Roger
Goodell.
.
"I think t\likc de ...erves a second chance. like everyone tn
society \\ ho has paid their debt to society.'' Smith said. "He.
deserves a second chance. As far as \\ e'rc concerned. \\C
like this team that \\ c have right now."
The Titans. com in!! off the best record in the 2008 season,
also like what thev ha\e .
"I'm pleased wi"th our qu~rte~back.sit~anon:·. Fisher said.'
Would he be opposed to ~tgnmg Vtck tf the Tttans needed
help'?
.
. .. .
·
''I'd have to cross that brid!!e when vou come to tt, Ftshcr
considered a quarterback, not
added. saying Vick should
a receiver or running back.
• . . .
"Michael Vick's a quarterback. He proved that early tn hts

be

cai\!Cr~,.

,

Cable's Raiders haYc JaMarcus Russell, the first pick in
the 2007 draft, and veteran Jeff Garcia.
"We likl.' \'tho we have:so let's mo\'e forward:' Oakland's:
coach said. "We haven't had that discussion because it's not
•
relevant to \Vhat we're trying to do and who we have."
A.rter New England's first .Pr~ctice ~f training camp .
Beltchick wa. asked about V1ck s posstble return to the,
NfL. He praised Vick· ... athleticism. but left it at that.
,
·'Michael is an outstanding player. hasn't played in a couple of years." Belichick said . "But right now. our focus is on.
our team and our player:- and trying to get the New England,
Patriot~ ready and !'O that's really \\here my attention :S
been. But he's a tremendous athlete. Where exactly he ts- •
right nO\\, I don't know."
•
Matt Schaub, who ~pent three ...easons as \'ick's backup m,
Atlanta and no\\ is Hou~ton·s starter. is excited about \'ick
getting another chance.
'
Schaub said \\hoe\ er signs Vick will be getting "a heck of
an athlete and a guy that can help their football team : ·
The Texans, who also ha\'e Dan OrlO\ sky and Rex
Grossman. have previously said they aren't interested in
Vick.

PROUD TO BE APARTOF YOURLIFE.
71ze Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2155
www.m) dailyseminel.com

Once Again, The Daily Sentinel Will Have A
Special Meigs County Fair Preview Edition.
This Year's Edition Promises To Be One Of The
Biggest And Best Everl
Look For this Special Edition In Your
Friday, August 14th Paper
BE SURE YOUR BUSINESS IS A PART OF THIS YEAR'S FAIR
EDITION ... CALL TODAY!
.

.

.,. .
~

ADVERTISING DEADLINE...
FRIDAY~

August 7th

For More Information Call
Brenda Davis or Matt Rodgers 740-992-2155

The Daily Sentinel

.

\.

�Friday, July 31,

www.m ydailysentinel.com

2009

Extreme makeover leaves Pirates with no-names ~"

l ocal Sports Briefs
Southern basketball golf scramble

denly are key p layers.
Remarkably. McCutchen.
v. ho was recalled to play
center fie ld after McLouth
was traded to Atlanta on
June 3, might be their best
everyday player.
"People might wonder
what we're doing, but if you
keep looking at all the names
we're getting and all the premier talent we're getting, it's
going to equate to a very
solid, very good ballclub in
Pittsburgh.'' manager John
Russell said. "We have big
names all over the diamond.
That's where we're headed.''
Right now, it's mostly no
names.
The Pirates may have
more recognizable prospects
than before - third baseman Pedro Alvarez and outfielders Jose Tabata and
Gorkys Hernandez among
them - but even the sixplayer haul obtained for
Wilson and Sanchez is questionable. Four are pitchers,
but only one is considered to
be a potential future star.
Double-A pitcher T im
Alderson, acquired for 2006
NL
batting
champion
Sanchez,
immediately
becomes the Pirates' top
pitching hopeful. However,
first baseman-catcher Jeff
Clement, the top player of
the five dealt by Seattle for
Wilson and right-hander Ian
Snell, may be a man without
a position because of his
limited defensive skills. He
also has been a d isappointment since being the No. 3
pick in the 2005 draft.
The Pirates also may be
questioning if they gave up
too quickly on fonner 14game winner Snell after his
frustration with a 2-8 record
caused him to lobby for a
demotion to the minors. As
Huntington said, "This is
one of those where you feel
uneasy
th is one has a
chance to come back and

haunt us.''
:
As usual. the ~ira.tes . - }
who have the maJors thirdlowest attendance are
denying that mone~ forced ~
the trades. yet their every
move seems to save them ·
dollars . Their 2010 payroll :
figures to be one of the "
majors' two or three lowest :
unless they sign a notable free ~
agent or two, something .._
they've haven't done in years. 1:
With McLouth. W ilson·
an d Sanchez gone since !
openmg day, the Pirates' •
highest-paid player is left- '
bander Paul Maholm at $3.5
million. But, despite needing
another starting pitch er,
they've declined to recall
former 14-game winner Tom •
Gorzelanny from Triple-A, :
apparently because it might :
advance his arbitration eligi- :
bility by a year.
•
The Pirates are putting ·
more money than ever into
their farm system. and have
begun paying above slot for
drafted high school players
that other teams may have
passed on for money reasons . They also opened one
of the top academies in the•
Dominican Republic, but
that won't produce players 1
for years and years.
Their
fans·
patience
appears all but exhausted wasn't PNC Park, which .
opened in 200 I . supposed to
allow them to compete ,
financially with the big .
boys? - yet the Pirates keep •
asking for it.
"We know these moves are
going to be incredibly
unpopular." Huntington said.
''But this IS how we're going
to rebuild this franchise. •
We're trying to create a win- :
ner. We have no interest in :
getting to .500 once and then
losing for five years."
So far, they haven 't gotten
to .500 even once for years,
a streak about to hit 17 seasons.

Suit

Kentucky Speedw·ay owners, Speedway Motorsports
Inc .. were co-conspirators.
Boies told the judges there
was no evidence of that
claim.
Kentucky became the
etghth
NASCAR-sanctioned track in SM I's poi1folio, but the only one without a Cup date NASCAR
has said the lawsuit must
end
before
Kentucky
Speedway could get a
Sprint Cup race.
"We're not a party to it,
and we'd like to see it
resolved,"
Mark
Simendinger, general man-

ager for the Kentucky
Speedway, said in a telephone interview.
Appeals judges typically
take months to decide and
prepare their opinions.
They repeatedly questioned Rule on his contentions they should overtum the January 2008 ruling
by U.S. District Court Judge
William 0. Bertelsman.
Judge Ronald Lee Gilman
asked whether a premium
race was "in the eye of the
beholder." Rule replied that
NASCAR ·s top-tier races
draw the most television
revenue, fan interest and

other benefits to tracks, and
are the "major league'' of
racing.
)-J'ASCAR officials say''
there are limits to how
many premium races they
can run in a year
the
Sprint Cup series currently •
has 36 points competition
races and two "All-Star"
races.
"Like other sports - the ·
NFL,
Major
League
Baseball, the NBA
NASCAR has the right to
create its schedule and host
events where it wants to,"
said NASCAR spokesman
Ramsey Poston.

Reds

f1 y for a 1-0 lead. They

"He has a ton of ability
and upside,'' Black said.
"He played four years in
college at Princeton. and
he's just got to keep playing .
He '11 get plenty of chances."
Cueto (8-8) allowed nine
hits and six runs with two
walks and three strikeouts
in five innings while falling
to 0-4 in five starts since a
1-0 win over Arizona on
July l. Cueto was a bictim
of bad luck, manager Dusty
Baker said.
"They found every hole
on the field," Baker said.
"They v.ere wearing the
hole out between tirst and
second.''
Venable added an RBI
single in the seventh before
flying out in the ninth.

Notes:
The
Reds
announced after the game that
RHP Justin Lehr will be ·
called up from Triple-A '•
Louisville on Friday to start ·
against Colorado. Lehr will··
start in place of injured RHP
Micah Owings. ... Plate
umpire Jerry
Crawford
warned Reds relief pitcher
Carlos Fisher and both benches after Fisher hit Stauffer '
with the first pitch of the six ''
innings .... OF Willy Taveras
was
scratched
from
Cincinnati's original starting
lineup with a sore left wrist. ... ·
Of Wladimir Balenhen ,
acquired by the Reds
Wednesday from Seattle for
RHP Robert Manuel, arrived ~
in Cincinnati early Thursday
morning and was in unifonn. \

P ITTSBURGH (AP)
Thb might be the toughest
current trivia questton in
baseball: Quickly. v. ithout
looking at a box score. name
' one Pittsburgh Pirates everyday player.
Nate ~fcLouth? Long gone
t&gt;.IIDDLEPORT - Big Bend Youth Football League will to the Braves. Jack Wilson.
be having sign ups Satuday, August I from l 1 a.m. until the most-tenured Pirates
!p.m. for anyone wishing to play football or cheer. The player? Off to Seattle. Freddy
sign-ups will take place at the Middleport Stadium.
SancheL., the three-time NL
There will he a mandatory coach and staff meeting fol · All-Star? Now a Giant. Jason
lowing sign-ups for anyone interested in coaching for the Bay? Prospering in Boston.
2009 season. Camp will begin Monday, August 3. Campers Adam LaRoche. Ian Snell.
should arrive at 5:30p.m.
Xavier Nady, Ronny Paultno,
Njycr
Morgan.
Jose
Bautista? All gone from a
team that has only one of its
TUPPERS PLAI~S - Coach Caldwell of Eastern High nine opening day starters
School will be holding an Eagle Volleyball camp for all from 2008 remaining.
girls entering 7th, 8th, and 9th grade as well as all players
After breaking up their
new to the 2010 volleyball program who have yet to play last remaining area of
under Coach Caldwell.
strength by dealing the dou
Staffing the program will be players and coaches from ble-play combination of
e 2009 team.
Wilson and Sanchez, the
The camp will feature fundamentals essential in a \),.in- Pirates have become basening volleyball player that span across all levels of the ball's version of Extreme
game.
~takeover. What's left might
The cost of camp is $30 pre-registration or $40 at the first be the majors' weakest 25day of camp. This cost includes an Eastern Eagle volleyball man roster, one of its lowest
T-shirt.
payrolls and, perhaps, a
Checks should be made payable to Eastern Athletic glimmer of hope the future
Boosters and should be sent to either: Coach Howie might be better.
Caldwell 40878 Old Seven Road, Reedsville, OH 45772;
Whenever that future may
or Eastern High SchooL Attn: Coach Howie Caldwell. be.
38900 SR 7. Reedsville, OH 45772.
"We don't feel like we've
broken up the '27 Yankees."
general
manager
Neal
Huntington said after dealing Wilson and Sanchez in a
six-hour span Wednesday
RACINE - The inaugural Party m the Park 5K that left the Pirates v.•ithout a
Run,Walk Race will be held Saturday, Sept. 12 to kick off single accomplished posiRacine's Party in the Park event, and organizers are hoping tion player.
people come for the run, but stay for the party.
Since being hired nearly
Registration will begin at 8 a.m. in downtown Racine two years ago, Huntington
across from the post office, followed by the race at 9 a.m. has cast off virtually every
A Party in the Park parade will follow at 10 a.m.
The race begins. rain or shine, in downto\\-n Racine and
includes Star Mill Park, the new Ohio River Boat Access,
residential streets and Southern Local Schools before ending downtown in front of spectators lining the parade route .
from Page Bl
Overall and age-group awards will be awarded to walkand runners at the finish line after the parade.
chicken barbecue will be held at 11 a.m. followed by
Plaintiffs·
attorney
inment and activities throughout the day at Star Mill Charles Rule, who headed
Park culminating with a concert by country music superstar the Justice Department's
Joe Diffie at 6:30 p.m .
antitrust division during the
Pre-registration is $12 with race-day registration $15, Reagan administration. said
and donations are greatly appreciated. Proceeds will bene- the alleged conspiracy is
fit the Southern Fitness Center. which is open free to all meant to keep independent
commumt&gt; members.
tracks from gaining top-tier
For more information about participating or sponsorship races.
opportumties. contact Junie Maynard at 740-949-4222 ext.
"This is a classic case of
1129. Registration forms will be available at the Southern anti-competitive illegal conFitness Center, Southern Local Schools and many Racine duct." Rule told the judges.
area busmcsses.
Rule said the new

BBYFL sign-ups

Eastern volleyball camp

SK race to kick off Racine's
''Party in the Park"

MYL Fall Ball sign-ups
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Youth League will
have Fall Ball sign-ups on Saturday, August I. and
Saturday, August 8. for all kids ages 6-16 who are interested in the fall baseball and softball leagues.
The sign-ups will be held at the Middleport ball fields .
Contact either Dave at (740) 590-04:18 or Tonya at (740)
992-5481 for more information.

Eastern's rrrst annuaiSK Road Race
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Eastern High School Athletic
sters will be hosting the First Annual Eagel 5K Road
e on August 1 at St. Paul United Methodist Church in
ppers Plains, Ohio.
Registration begins at 7:30 a.m . in the Cheaper Place
parking lot (across the road from Annie's Place). Pre-registration is $12 (received by July 30). and the cost is $ 15 to
registration on race day.
The race will begin and end at St. Paul United Methodist
Church and will run on the surronding roads and streets.
The top three male and female overall finishers will receive
awards along with the top three male and female one mile
fun run finishers. T-shirts will be provided for the first 5
registrants.
The age division for both males and females are as fol lows: 14 and under, 15-18. 19-25.26-35.36-49. and 50 and
over.
For more infonnation please contact Josh Fogle, (740)
667-9730. Registration checks may also be sent to Fogle at
2038 Campbell Street, Coolville, Ohio 45723.

l

BBA adult softball tournament
BIDWELL - T he Bidwell Baseball Association
announces an adult slow pitch softball tournament will be
held on Saturday, August I .
The tournament will be limited to eight team~ and the
entry fee will be $135 plus two 12-inch optical green softhalls. There is a $50 non-refundble deposit. All proceeds
will benefit the children of the BBA.
~r more general or sign-up information, please contact
May at (740) 388-8293 or Robert Eddy at (740) 3880039.

- 'Y

Varsity G Golf Scramble
GALLIPOLIS -The Vars1ty G Alumni Association will
hold its annual Varsity G Scholarship Golf Scramble on
Sunday, August 16, at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallipolb .
The entry fee is $55 for members and $65 for non-members. Tee-off will be at 8:30 a.m.
Food will be provided and a t-shirt will be given to each
player. To sign up , call Tom Meadows at 446-2726, Dan
Mink at 446-3643, Jim Osborne at 446-9284, or call 446GOLF.
A ll money made goes to college scholarships.
~~

1

from Page Bl
~ ..
here IS to sta) to?et~er
as a team. At the begu~nmg
of the season , the httters
were picking up the pitchers
and the pitchers were picking up the hitters. That's
how it works. In order to be
successful, that's how it has
to happen. We still have two
months left. That's a lot of
games - a lot of opportunities to make strides.''
The Padres scored in the
first inning for the third
consecuti\e game as Kevin
Kou1.manoff
drove
in
Rodriguez with a sacrifice

. .

! ke)

•

experienced Pirates player
with a substantial salary. in a
determined
attempt
to
rebuild a fam1 system that
was arguably the majors'
worst. T hat farm system has
since grown deeper at every
level but, as Pirates fans
long ago came to realize,
prospects are exactly that
until they become credible
major leaguers.
That's one reason why the
Pirates are only 24 losses
away from becoming the
tirst major league team to
endure 17 consecutive losing
seasons. They've been living
off prospects, hope and f~i~h
almost since the day Wtlile
Stargell retired in 1982,
breaking up the We Are
Family team that won the
Pirates' last world championship 30 years ago in 1979.
Over the last quarter century. the Pirates have had an
astoundingly low four winning seasons and have made
only three postseason appearances, the last in 1992. Their
latest overhaul rivals that
made after GM Syd Thrift
and manager Jim Leyland
took over in 1986 following a
104-loss season, and then it
took four years for the Pirates
to contend again.
An entire generation of
fans have grown up watching
the Steelers and
Penguins consistently win
- each won a championship
earlier this year - but has
yet to see the Pirates field
even a .500 team .
Pirates faithful must wonder if tomorrow will ever
come.
So might the players in a
fast-changing
clubhouse
where Andrew McCutchen,
Garrett
Jones.
Charlie
Morton. Ronny Cedeno,
Steve
Pearce,
Delwyn
Young and, soon, Lastings
Milledge - none of whom
were with Pittsburgh when
the season started - sud-

RACINE - The Southern basketball program \\-til host
its second annual four-man golf scramble on Saturda).
August 29, at Riverside Golf Club in Mason.
The fonnat is 'bring your own team· with only one player under an 8-handicap while maintaining a total team
of 40 or above. The four-man scramble will be an
a.m. shotgun start.
he cost is $240 per team ($60 per person) with optional
cash pot, skins and mulligan for purchase. Priles of first,
second and third place finishes will be awarded, as well as
prizes for longest putt. closest to the pin and longest drive.
Beverages and food will be probided. To enter, please
contact SHS coach Jeff Caldwell at 740-949-3129.

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

increased the lead to 2-0 in
the second when Kyle
Blanks scored from third
base on Henry Blanco's
double-play ball
The Reds got on the board
in the fourth on back-toback leadoff doubles by
Joey Votto and Brandon
Phillips, who singled in the
second to snap his streak of
consecutive hitless at bats at
10. San Diego immediately
got that run back in the fifth
as
Kevin
Kouzmanoff
scored from ftrst base on
Headley's two-out double to
right-center field. Cincinnati
starter Johnny Cueto hit
Blanks with a pitch, and
Venable followed with his
second homer of the season.

DON'TMl~,

OUT ON OUR EXTRA
MONEY $AVING
COUPOISII
THI$ WEEIC
IN$IDE
$UNDA Y'$ PAPER!II
~unbap

\!times ~entinel

'

�Friday, July 31, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

{~\~

m;rtbune - Sentinel - l\egister

~~ ~~:"
&lt; 'S.·

&lt; H·&gt;

CLASSIFIED

Meigs County, OH

In One Week With Us
E·m.a.U
mdtclassified@mydailytribune.com

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
~LUS

YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

mrtbune

To Place
Your Ad,

Websites:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

l\egister

Sentinel

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

ca II Today...

Or Fax To (740) 446-3008

Or Fax To (740) 992-2157

Or Fax To (304) 675--5234

lJeatiA~I4
Display Ads
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
;..,~HOW TO WRITE AN AD
''

\
\

1

,.

...

...

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errors
Must
Be
Reported on the firs
day of publicatior
and
the
TribuneSentinel-Register wil
be responsible for nc
more than the cost o
he space occupiec
by the error and only
he first Insertion. We
shall not be liable for
any loss or expense
hat results from the
publication
or
omission
of
an
advertisement.
Corrections will be
~ade
in the firs
~vailabfe edition.
Box number ads are
~lways confidential.

Current
applies.

rate

card

Estate
All
Real
advertisements
are
subject to the Federal
air Housing Act o

h968.
This
newspape
~ccepts only help
r,vanted ads meeting
EOE standards.
We

will

no

~nowlngly accept an~

•

~dvertisement
I~
~lolation of the law.

1
I
I

I
I
I

.-

•

•

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday tor Sundays Paper

• All ads must be prepaid*

Detcrlptlon • Include A Prke • Avoid Abbreviation'
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

~

-m.r

~-

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED
Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
~
~
Borders$3.00/perad
I!
,~
Graphics 50¢ for small
~
$1.00forlorge

.J"i

POLICIES: ONo valley Publlthlng ro~~e~v" the tight to edll. reject, or cancel any lld at any time. Errore must be repollcd on the f1r1t day of publication an&lt;! the
Trlb~ertlnel-Reglller W111 be n1eponslblt for no more than the cost of the spliCe occupied by the error and only the first Insertion. We shall nol be liable tor
any lou or expenee thet r•utta from I he publicatiOn or om IniOn of an adVMISO!ment Corrtction will be made In the first avaQable edition • Box numbt!llldl
are always confidential. • Ct.rrent rate card appllea. • All real estate advertleementa are subject to lhe Feden~l Fair Housing Act Of t968 • This rMWspaper
tccapls only help warted ada m"llng EOE stal'llards. We '111111 not kno..,lngly acc.pl any advertiSing In vlOIItlon of the law Will not be respo'*bte lor t ny
erroraln an lld t•ken over tne phone.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
200

Announcements

last &amp; Found
Found on Safford School
Rd. Young BNV F Border
Collie mix weighs about
251bs 1 blue eye 1 brown
eye. 446-7203
Black Lab mix,(m) while
on chest &amp; paws seen on
Rl 62 Reward $100.00
304·675·4027.
Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO. recommends that you do
business with people you
know, and NOT to send
money through the mail
until you have investigat·
ing the offering.
ISSUE I MEETING
Gallia County Commis·
sioners will hold an Issue
I • Round 24 meeting for
all township and village
Officials, Gallipolis City
Manager and County Engineer
on
Tuesday,
August 11, 2009., at 7:00
PM in the Gallia County
Commis·
Courthouse.
sioner's
Office.
This
meeting is open to the
public.
Justin L. Fallon. Pres.
Gallla County Commis·
soners
For sale 2 tickets Meijer
Indy 300, at Kentucky
motor
speedway,'
$60.00 each'
good
seats
Sat.
08/01/09
304·593-6872.
Solar light globe stolen
from porch,please return
I won't file charges.!
know who you are, San·
dhill resident...

CLASSIFIED INDEX

,-

Dally In-Column: ~:OO a.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-column: 9:00a.m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

• Start Your Ads Witfl A Keyword • Include Complete

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

«POLICIES«

JUST SAY

CHARGE IT!

Legals ...........................................................100
Announcements .......................................... 200
Birthday/Anniversary..................................205
Happy Ads ....................................................210
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notices ......................................................... 225
Personals ..................................................... 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Servlces ....................................................... 300
Appliance Service....................................... 302
Automotive ..................................................304
Building Materials .......................................306
Business ......................................................308
Catarlng ........................................................310
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors ..................................................316
Domestlcs/Janitorial...................................318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Flnanclal .......................................................322
Health........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Cooling .......................................328
Home Improvements 330
lnsurance..................................................... 332
Lawn Servlce............................................... 334
Music/Dance/Drama....................................336
Other Servlces .............................................338
Plumblng/Eiecttlcal.....................................340
Professional Servlces.................................342
Repalrs .........................................................344
Roofing .........................................................346
Securlty........................................................348
Tax/Accountlng ........................................... 3SO
TraveVEntertalnment ..................................352
Flnanclal .......................................................400
Financial Servlces.......................................405
Insurance ....................................................410
Money to Lend .............................................415
Education.....................................................soo
Business &amp; Trade School ...........................505
Instruction &amp; Tralnlng .................................510
Lessons........................................................515
Personal .......................................................520
Anlmals ........................................................600
Animal Supplles.........................................60S
Horses..........................................................610
Llvestock ......................................................615
Pets ...............................................................620
Want to buy ..................................................625
Agrlculture ...................................................700
Farm Equlpment..........................................705
Garden &amp; Produce.......................................710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hunting &amp; Lan&lt;1 ........................................... 720
Want to buy..................................................725
Merchandlse................................................ 900
Antlques .......................................................905
Appllance .....................................................910
AucUons .......................................................915
Bargain Basement.......................................920
Collectlbles ..............................................-825
Computers ................................................ •
Equlprnent/Suppllea....................................935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel Oil Coai!Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Fumlture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport....................................955
Kid's Corner .................................................960
Mlscellaneous..............................................96S
Want to buy ..................................................970
Yard Sele ....................................................975

Notices

Home lmprovemenh

Yard Sale

Pictures that
have been
placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will be
discarded.

Basement
Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local refer·
ences furnished. Estab·
lished 1975. Call 24 Hrs.
740-446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing .

Multi family yard sale.
July 31 &amp; Aug . 1st, at
46220 Erwin Or.. St. Rt 7
past
Chester-Shade
River Agn, f~rst road to
the left, 8am·5pm, watch
tor signs, something for
everyone
Tues·Thurs. Aug . 4·6, 44
Middleport,
Lincoln St.
g1rls clothes 10·12 thru Jr
sizes.
misses
&amp;
women·s. boys &amp; men's
clothing,
Longaberger.
lots of m1sc.

Ot+ter Services
Pet
Cremat1ons.
740-446-3745

Call

Wanted
to
do
Steel Arch Buildings
office/house
cleaning
3 cancelled orders, sell· hrly rate. 740·256-1567
ing for balance owed
20x24,
25x40
Save
Professional Services
Thousands!!!
Made
in
USA display discounts
TURNED DOWN ON
also! 1-866·352·0469.
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Win!
1·888-582-3345
Personals
SEPTIC
PUMPING
Galha
Co.
OH
and
SWM 47 wants to meet
fun loving SWF, N-S, Mason Co. WV. Ron
OH
Evans
Jackson,
N·D
for
relationship.
800·537·9528
Write to PO Box 624,
Kerr, OH 45643
400
Financial

222
ESTATE
SALE,
Skidmore
Rd. Bidwell.
Lots of Antiques, Home
Interior Collectibles, Old
Trains,
Furniture
&amp;
Christmas Items Friday.
7/31 Sat 811. Sam-?

7-~1

www.comics.com

~ 2009

~

by NEA, Inc

Wanted
Money To Lend
N1ce Family of 4 looking
for a rental home or mo·
bile home. Please Call
740·709·0181

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact the Oh1o Divi·
sion of Financial lnstitu·
lions Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refinance your home or ob·
tain a loan. BEWARE of
300
Services requests for any large
advance
payments
of
fees or 1nsurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
Home Improvements
Alfiars
toll
free
at
1·866·278·0003 to learn
Small home repair, brush if the mortgage broker or
cutting &amp; lawn service. lender Is properly li·
Free Est. 20 yrs exp. censed. (This is a public
serv1ce
announcement
(740) 446·3682
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

Recreational Vehlcles ............................... 1000
ATV .............................................................1005
Blcycles......................................................1010
Boats/Accessorles.................................... 1015
CamperiRVs &amp; Trallers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automotlve ................................................ 2000
Auto Rentalll.ease .....................................2005
Autos ......................................................... 2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Commercialllndustrlal .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessorles ..................................2025
Sports Utility.............................................. 2030
Trucks .........................................................2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................2045
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commerclal ................................................3010
Condomlnlums ..........................................3015
For Sele by 0Wner.....................................3020
Houses for Sale.........................................3025
Land (Acreage) ..........................................3030
Lots ............................................................3035
Want to buy ................................................3040
Real Estate Rentals ...................................3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commercla1.. ..............................................3510
Condomlnlums ..........................................3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) ..........................................3525
Storage.......................................................3535
Want to Rent ..............................................3540
Manufactured Housing .............................4000
Lots ............................................................4005
Movers........................................................4010
Rentals .......................................................4015
Seles...........................................................4020
Supplles ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property........................................5000
Resort Property for sale ........................... S025
Resort Property for rent. .......................... soso
Employment...............................................6000
Accounting/Financlal.. ..............................6002
Admlnlstrative1Professlonal. ....................6004
Cashler/Cierk .............................................6006
Child/Elderly Care .....................................6008
Clerlca1 .......................................................6010
Constructlon ..............................................6012
Drivers &amp; Dellvery.....................................60t4
EduceUon ..................................................6016
Electrical Plumblng ...................................6018
Employment Agencles ..............................6020
Entertalnment............................................6022
Food Servlces............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs....................6026
Help anted· General ..................................6028
Law Enfor~rnent ......................................6030
Mmnc.n.nctt'Domestlc .............................6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanlcs..................................................6036
Medlcal.......................................................6038
Muslca1.......................................................6040
Part·Tlme-Temporarles.............................6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales...........................................................6048
Technical Trades .......................................6050
Textlles/Factory .........................................6052

500

Education

Business &amp; Trade
School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1·800·214·0452
gall,poliscaraercollege.edu
Accredtled Member Accred~·
1ng Counc.l for Independent
Colleges end Schools 1274B

600

Animals

Peh
CKC Min Pins pups Cho.
BIT tails docked $300.
740·388·8788
Adorable black &amp; gray
kitten around 12 weeks
old to a good home.
740·446·8192

Farm Equipment

Miscellaneous

EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSEJLIVE·
STOCK
TRAILERS,
MAX
EQUIP·
LOAD
TRAILERS,
MENT
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE TRAILER INVENTORY AT
WWW.CAAMICHAEL·

Rainbow Gym set w/
slide sw1ngs. tire swing,
&amp;
loft.
ladders
740-446· 7925

TRAILERS.COM
740-446·3825
Have you priced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
surprised! Check out our
used
inventory
at
www.CAREO.com.
Car·
michael
Equipment
740·446-241 ~

)

Saturday Aug 1, 9·3.
1378 Jackson Pike. Lots
of baby clothes, baby
items, breast pumps. 1n·
!ant car seat, books. X
16 1/2 horse Kabota. die· decor,
tools,
archery.
sel, 175 hours, belly items, old records. etc.
mower,
back
blade,
$7.000,
740·742·2498 Saturday, August 1, 3/4
anytime
mi. N of Rocksprings
-H-ot--Tu-b--O-ut-le-t,-T-o-p Rehab, household items.
Wilton
cake
Quality, Free Delivery, clothes,
Save SO%. Tiki Tubs. pans
Aug. 1, motorcycle hel·
met, men &amp; womens
WantTo Buy
leather jackets, Longa·
berger, exercise gym. 2
Absolute Top Dollar • sil· high chairs lots of misc..
ver/gold
coins,
any 1178 College Rd. Syra10K/14K/18K gold JeW· cuse.
elry, dental gold, pre
US
currency, Aug. 1st, Hill's Mommg·
1935
Sony
surround
proof/mint
sets.
dia· star
monds, MTS Coin Shop. sound system, poker ta·
finishing
mower,
151 2nd Avenue, Galli· ble.
Christmas
decorations,
polis. 446·2842
plus
size
electronics,
clothing, misc.
Yard Sale
606·929·5655

STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Now Available at Carmi·
chael
Equ1pment 2 family Yard Sale 1nside
740-446-2412
&amp; out some antiques.
guy things, &amp; lots of
900
Merchandise house hold items. 1467
July
Jackson
Pike,
30·31 , 10·5
Furniture
3 Family, July 31st. Aug .
Estate
Furniture
Sale 1st. 2nd. 3rd, 10am·?,
1950's blond mahogany 1778 George Rd, Bidbedroom furniture (head- well. Lots of everything!
board.
dresser.
chest.
3325 Little Bullskin Rd.
mirror,
nightstand)
tools. knives, antiques.
1950's blond mahogany
7131·8/2 from 8·?
din1ng room furniture (Ia·
ble, 6 cha~rs, china cabi· 3 Fam1ly Yard Sale Solar
net) Flex steel sofa and Dr. Adult &amp; baby clothes.
love seat, French provin- Christmas items. dishes,
cial end tables, round &amp; m1sc. items. Fri/Sat
coffee table. electric or· 7130 • 8/1 from 8A-4P
gan,
miscellaneous
lamps, kitchen table + 3 3 Family Yard Sale July
from 9·5
cha1rs,
2
tall 31·Aug. 2
black/chrome bar tables 15158 St. AT. 554 Bid·
w/
stools ,
Call well

Free to a good home 2 yr
old pure bread M chow
chow great w/ kids can·
not
live
w/
cats.
937·243·4981 to sched·
339-0538
ule an appointment be·
Free young. spayed fe- tween 12·3PM ion Sat
male cat, good home. Aug 1st. Pictures by
black/white,
friendly, e-mail ava1lable.
740-949·3408
Miscellaneous
Poodle Super Summer
Sale· 3 F $275, 3 M
Jet Aeration Motors
$225 each, white, cream
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
&amp; apricot. teacup. toy
In stock. Call Ron
miniature,
CKC.
vet Evans 1·800·537-9528
lowest
price
checked.
ever. ready to go, good
10th, Bargin Tools- AT 554
thru
August
buying· mech &amp; carpen·
740·992-7007
ter tools, lawn &amp; garden
tools mowers, weed eat·
700
Agriculture ers, chain saws also. lap·
tops
computers,
cell
phones.
!pods.
Black
Farm Equipment
Berrys. GPS
&amp; ets.
Home 740·388-1515 Cell
John Deere STx38 794·1188
lawn tractor $300.00. 1
Troybuilt
walk-behind Chain Link dog pens for
sickle
bar
mower sale take down small
$600.00
call metal
bulld1ng-haul
304·675·4920 after 6pm.
away. 446·3209

Yard Sale

203 Kineon Dr. Sat 8/1 .
9-3, 0 mo • 4T. Baby &amp;
boy clothes
Garage Sale 1165 SA
588 GallipoliS. Fri July 31
Sat Aug 1 8·3 ra1n or
shine
Sat. Aug. 1st from 8·4
438
Debb1e Dr
n1ce
clothing. dishes &amp; other
goodies

Sat. Aug. 1st, 9·4:30, 34
Race St., Middleport. beh1nd Radio Shack, ant1ques. tables, jewelry.

Yard Sale 7/31 &amp; 8/ 1
2570 Kerr Road, Multi
fam1ly.
furniture ,
livmg
room set,
house hold
items.
clothing.
toys,
movies. and much more.
Rain date 8/8/09

Commercial
For 'ale Re,taurant locattd
&lt;1! the end of Hannan Trace
Rd call 304-593--H 14 rel'&gt;'ecn 9am-~pn
Houses For Sale

+- 46 acres w/ new 4 bed
2112
bath .
Possible
owner finance 446·3570.
2 bed 1 bath $249
month. 740·446-3384
2hr. ~ car ~arage . 125x'l0
comer lot on Fain icw Rd
Camp
Conle)
S l8.000
304-67 5-61\~X.

3 bed 2 bath new con·
struction on +I· 5 acres
$525 month. Owner fi·
available.
Lg. yard sale Blaine Ln. nance
740 446 3570
Rt 2 Gallipolis Ferry Aug.
1&amp;3
3
Bed.2
Bath •

home,:Only I'J9.!amon.'
Mega Yard Sale, 795 d\\n.l5 }''· at &amp;% for
.
Clark Chapel Rd, July S(XJ-6l0·-l946 exT461
30th-Aug. 2nd. 8am-3pm
Bed~
Bath
HUD
Yard Sale 14 Wakefield home,!Onl) I'J9.!amon .. 5%
Rd Pt. Pleasant Sat. "" n.l5 &gt;"· at S~ for Ji,t .
~00-620-4946 ex T46 1.
Aug . 1st.
Yard Sale 3 miles out
588 from town bes1de
Kraus Beck Fri. &amp; Sat.
9·5

;;..;~------­

80 Locust St. Gallipolis 2
story Victorin home. 9
rooms. SBA. @ BA, 5
fireplaces, fenced in bak
yard. Reduced $150.000.
ATVs
Call
304·675·6363
50 cc Yamaha 4 wheeler (June) or 740·441-1202
shaft driven. 4 stroke (K1ml
good
condition. LeGrande
Blvd.
3BA
740-645·3669
brick, hardwood floors,
FR. 2 full baths. central
Boob Accessories
a11, 10X14 metal build·
ing. 5 mins from town ,
15' boat wltrailer, 55hsp
$89,000. 740-709-1858
outboard, throttle control,
$650. 3BR, fam11y rm. dining
runs
good
rm, laundry rm , newly re·
740·416-7997
modeled, 1g. yard, county
Compel'$ RVs &amp;.
$72.000.
schools
740·446-4543
or
Trailers
740·645-4834
2005
Sportsman
bykz
321 /2' 1 pullout. queen Madison Ave. Pt. Pleasbed never used 19,600. ant. frame house •
lots, excellent locatio
388·0189. 208·8333
2 future rentals, $14.
740·645·0938
RV
Serv1ce
at Carmichael 4BR 2.5 baths big family
Trailers
room in the basement, 1
740·446·3825
car ()ilrage &amp; 1 car port.
Recreational
Vehicles

1000

I

I

Garage sale. ram or AV Service at Carmi·
Trailers
shine,
July 31 , Aug. chael
1.3.4,
Wright
St. 740·446·3825
Pomeroy. Lots of stuff! I
Motorcycles
Garage sale Fri. &amp; Sat.,
8·3, Forest Run Rd., just 94 Harley Davidson Soft
past church
Tail ,
Black w/chrome.
740·446·9585
or
Huge Estate mov1ng yard
339·2490
sale. July 31-Aug. 1.
Three family. St. Rt. 143
two houses past Wolfe 2000
Automotive
Pen
Rd,fumlture,children
&amp; adult clothes , dining
room set, some antiques,
Trucks
new things in boxes. lots
Dodge
Dakota
of
household.
cheap 05
full-size 4 wh. dr. 29,000
prices, 9am
miles exc. shape call me
Huge 3 family basement for details 304-675·3476.
sale, t/ 1/2 miles north of
Chester on Sumner Ad.
Utility Trailers
first
house
on
left,
clothes, chairs, mise, fur· 2005 frfth wheel two car
box
45'
niture, New Home &amp; Gar· trailer,inslde
white ,
excellent
den products &amp; much long.
more, Saturday August condition. with three side
electric
wench ,
1, 2009. 9am to 3pm , doors.
Price $9.500 call for
Ra1n or Shinel
more
Information
Huge yard sale, Johns (740)949 •2217
Ad. , Racine , July 31 &amp;
August 1st. 9am-4pm
Vans

Large sale· much misc.
Sale @ 1825 Cora Mill No children items. across
Rd.
Aug.
1st,
SAM. from old Letart Falls
OF
EVERY· School, 30th-31st-1st
LOTS
THING!
Large
basement
sale,
Yard Sale 413 4TH AVE. Salem St., Rutland , new
SaturdayY
9-3
Mater· baby
lots
clothes
nity. baby. furniture
more/cheap, Sat.·Mon.

Real Estate
Sales

3000

04

big deck in the back.
740·682·0802
Jbr.656 \lanun Ct.do'c tu
&lt;'ampu' prking Hun1ng \ lar'hall mo\e·•n con&lt;IS59.900.
74&lt;~4.\ 1 -570~

In Pt. Pleasant 2004
fTlanufactured home on
7 acres w1separate ga·
rage 304·372-5558
land (Acreage)
2.25 acre residential lot
for sale in Pomeroy on
Lincoln Hill. All utilities on
s1te, asking $29,000 call
(740)992·5052 and leave
message
For sale- 76 acres on
Bailey Run Rd. . Pomeroy
Oh, call740·992·3174
Real Estate
Rentals

3500

Apartmenh/
Townhou.es
Island V1ew Motel
vacanc1es
$35.00/Night.
740-446·0406

Ford cargo Van w/

NC , radio, V·8, 23.500 Spacious

secondthird
m11es. garage kept, used floor
apt.
overlooking
only to transport an· Gallipolis City Park and
tiques.
$11 ,000
neg R1ver.
L.A . den.
lrg
Phone 740·698-2613
K1tchen·d1n1ng area w1th
all new appliances &amp;
1992 Dodge work van for cupboards.
3
BA,
2
sale Ram 250· runs &amp; baths.
laundry
area .
Mov1ng sale· Aug 1.2,3.
dnves good 3.9 LT $700. $900 per month. Call
Mary Layne's Aousl'l Rd.,
Call441·1236
446·2325 or 446-4425
CheShire, fum1ture
HD
clothes.
household
N1ce
3BR Pt, Gallipolis
WantTa Buy
1tems. girls 10112. pool.
City Part. Furn. WID,
tools,
women's
10112. Want to buy Junk Cars. some uhl. incl. No Pets.
John Der e toys
call 740·388·0884
s5951mo. 740·591·5¥4

�Friday, July 31, 2009
Apartments/
Townhouses

.•

•
•

rent 111nt, must move
In by September 1st.
Rural DevelopMent
Property Currently rentIng 1 &amp; 2 BR units SpaCIOUS Door plans, ranch
&amp; townh0111e style hvlng, playground &amp; basketball court. on-s1tc
laundry II!Cihty, 24 hr
emergency maulte·
nance, quiet country lo·
cation close to major
medical
taciiiiJes,
pharmacies, grocery
store...JUSt minutes
away from other mator
shopprng 1n tho area
Honeysuckle Hills
Apartments
266 Colonral Drive #113
B1dwall, Orro 45614
74o-446·3344
OffJCO Hours M W F
9AM
5PM

•
•
•

•

•
•
•
~

•
"
,.
•
•
•
:

.
..:

::
•
•
•

•

, br ground-lei tl ~2 brApi
d\\ 01\\ n 1'1 l'lca-.;!nl
uul. pd HUD c~;pl ~o J'CIS
call 30-1· '360.() 163
1 and 2 bedroom apts.,
furnished
and
unlur·
nrshed. and houses rn
Pomeroy and Middleport,
secunty deposrl required.
no pets. 740-992-2216

11oar

2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
up, Central Arr WID
hookup,
tenant
pays
electrrc. EHO
Ellm VIew Apts.
(304)882-3017

•
•

Apartments/
Townhouses

MOVE IN READY Completely lumrshed 2BR. all
appliances,
TV,stereo
sys, l1nens &amp; complete
krtchen ware $700/mo +
elec $500/dep. 446-9585

1.!!.r

~

3 br house for rent
2105 N. Marn St. no
pets. dep. &amp; ref.
$450.00 a mon. call

304-675-2749
3BR, 1 bath, stove &amp; refng. turn. Gas heat, CIA,
No Smoking, WiD hook
up. No Pets. $6001mo +
depos11. Nice location.
Gallipolis. Call446-3667

Nrce b1g 2 bd., 1 bath,
apt.,
Hud
approved.
Pomeroy. rncludes water
&amp; trash, $430 plus deposit. 740-416·6622

2 bd., 1 bth. house
Racine, new bathroom.
full basement, garage,
fenced in yard. $415 per
mo., $415 deposit, referTwo 2 bedroom apart- ences required. available
In
Pomeroy. Aug. 1, 740-416-6622
ments
740.949-2311
ask
tor
Donald
Very nJCe 1 BR llome 1n
llc utrfut 1br. 2 ba 1p1 • Pomeroy. great 'laigh2000 sq f1 • S650 00 pc:r bortlood.
large
yard.
111011 • gas . "ater sarbage 1deal for 1 or 2 people,
xlutl&amp;:d. o1er Huuons Car 'law appliances. No n\\ 'h 'l04 172·609~
docr pets, Non smoking,
740-992-9764
or
Be..ut•f~ 1br. 2 ba &lt;ip! • Call
2000 -.q ft • 650.00 pc:r 740.992-5094 &amp; leave a
m n • gas , water. garbage message
m.:ludcd. iller Hunon' C:u
\\ash iO-' l 7 ~ 609-1
3
- -BR
_ t_u_
m-rs-hed
- .- C
- ,-A- an-d
Beautiful Apts. at Jackson Estates. 52 Westwood Dr.. from $365 to
$560
740-446-2568.
Equal Housing Opportunrty. ThiS InStitUtiOn IS an
Equal Opportunity Provider and Employer.
Down· starrs apt. for rent
in Pt. Pleasant 2 br.. w/
k1tchen appliances , ACJ
gas furnace w/ WD
hook·up Lg front porch
$350.00
a
mon.
+
$200.00
dep.
304·675-6375
or
cell
604·677-8621

Office/
Warehouse/Storage
Great Location 749 Third
Ave., Gallipolis!
S399/month for 1600
sqft. Build-out negotiable
Call Wayne
404-456-3602

Tw1n R•vers Tower 1s ac· ~=~~~~~~
cepling applications lor
Houses For Rent
wa1hng list for HUD sub- =======;;::;;;;
s,d,zed. 1-BR apartment ~199 mo' 4 bed 2 ooth.
or the elderly disabled, !lank Repo' ~~ down. IS
all675-6679

FRIDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

Houses For Rent

2BR apts 6 m1 from Holzer some ut1 nms pd. or
appliances
avail.
+
dep.
$400/illo
740.418·5288
Of
988-6130

1br.• 1ba.
over
garage
apt. $500.00 a mon. +
$500.00 dep. 870 sq.
lt.located at Lak1n WV
couples or single person
only, no children or pets. Gracious Living 1 and 2
no smoking Inside must BedrooM Apts. at Vrltage
have re1 304·773-5856
Manor
and
RIVerside
2br apt Rodney area. No Apts tn Mrddleport, from
to
S592.
pets. Dep&lt;Rel reqwed $327
Equal
740.992-5064.
740-446·1271
Hous1ng Opportun ty.
2BR APT.Ciose to Hoi·
Townhouse
zer Hosp!tal on SR 160 Tara
ApartiT'erts • 2BR. 1.5
CIA. (740) 441.0194
bath, back pat1o, pool,
CONVENIENTLY
LO- playground, (trash, sewCATED
&amp;
AFFORD· age. water pd.)No pets
$450/rent,
ABLE! Townhouse apart- allowed.
dep.
Call
ments,
and/or
small S450tsec.
houses for rent. Call 740-645-8599
740-441-1111 tor appu·
Commercial
calion &amp; lnformat1on.

Free Rent Special !II

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

)=-s 8
fc&gt;r hsungs
...,__
_APR)
_
__
800 62()..19-16
e~ R027

heat, no pets. SSOO/rent
+
sec.
dep.
2027
Chatham
Ave.
7 4()-441-0143
3br., 1 ba. attach. garage in mce sub·d1vr·
S1on,
lg fenced '"
back-yard.
all
elec.
separate laundry-room
in Pt Pleasant $695.00
amon.
+
Dep.
304-531-1197.
Newly remodeled 3br 1
112 ba. prrme location,
ret.&amp;
dep.
no
pels
304-675-5162.
Manufactured
Housing

4000

Rentals
3BR 2 Baths front porch
wl roof over 1t PatriOt
OH.
$450/mo.
740-379-2254

SATURDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

2BR tailer V1nton area.
S350Jmo $350/dep 2 references no inside pets.
366-0011 or 441-7670
3 bedroom trailer. total
electric, HUD. No Pets,
740-742-2714
Older mobile home in
New Haven. WV. 2 br.. 1
bth on rental lot. new
carpet. countertop. un·
derpinning. plumbing, up
dated
electnc,
new
porches, $3500. lot rent
$120
per
month,
74()-416-6622
--------

R20. 1991 2 bd., 1 bth
on rental lot m New Haven, WV S420 per mo.
for 4 yrs. wl$800 deposit
1ncludes lot rent or sell
$400/MO $400..~p 258 ;;,;;;;.,;:;~;:.;;.;,;;..;,;;;;.;.,_ _
tor
$11 500,
State St • No Smoking, 1 or a possrble 2br 740-416-6622
No Pets 740-446·3S67
house m New Haven
S300 a mon. • S300 - - - - - - - - no
pets 3BR dble-wide fum1shed,
3 room end bath down- dop.,
SR 143 - Pomeroy. $625
stairs frrst months •ent &amp; 304-682-3652.
depoSit references re- 3br., 2 ba. wl garage. lg. mo. ~ncr. most ut,lrt1es &amp;
quired. No Pets and lot
no
pets
call lawncare. 740-591-5174
clean. 7 40·441.0245
304-675-3431.
16x80 2br.
S "1'1 me 4 bed 2 bath.
Bank Repo 1 (5'l do\\ n. 15
1BR, stove &amp; refng fum. ).ars. 8 APR) for hstmgs
2nd
FL.
until
pd. 800 62049-16 ex R027

N.
Get Your Message Across With ADally Sentmel

BULLETIN BOARD

14x70 3br.

13 coluMn tnctl weeKdays
'22 colum."'rnch Sunday

CAU OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

Sales
1983 Shultz :4,70 111 Camp
Conle)
li1 mg-room
ex
pando. &gt;br. 2 fuU baths,
from &amp; bad decl; sood
cond., great starter home
~&amp;000.00 no paymems .:asb

only'

304-67.)-5169

or

JO.I-59~&lt;!00 I.

Superstore
Live Remote
Big Country 99.5
11 am to 1:00 pm
Saturday,
August 1st
Free Fair Passes to
GiveAway
Gallia-Meigs- Mason
Fairs
Broad Run Gun Clug
Sunday, August 2nd
3 rounder stock match
Meeting before match
KINGS ISLAND
&amp; BOOMERANG BAY
WATER PARK
Saturday, August 22, 2009
$80/person
Includes transportation &amp;
admissron ticket for both parks
Leave the dnving 10 us!
Leaving PVH lower level parking
lot at 7 a.m.

All ages welcome!
To make reservations please call
PVH Community Relations,

(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326
Ltmi1ed seats!

96 14X70 Skyhne Mobile
Home 2BR 2Ba. great loC3IIon
$17,000.
441-9884 on rented lot m
Park Lane across from

IrVIng- 3-5BR,
on
property.
Many floor plans! Easy
Financ1ng! We own the
bank
Call
todayl
866·215·5774
Etcona 14x70 635
Paxton. Gallipolis good
shape you move.$7200
080
740-645-1646
74()-446-2515
The BIG Sale
Used Homes &amp; Owner
Frnanc~ng ·New 2010
Ooublewide $37,989
Ask about $8,000 Rebates
mymidwesthome.com
74()-828-2750

"The ProctoMIIe
Difference•
S~ and a deed IS all you
need to own your oreaM
home. Call Now!
Freedom Homes
866-565.0167
6000

Employment

Education
Part-time
Instructors
needed dunng the day
In:
mathematrcs.
economics. and accounting.
Mathematics and economrc lnstroctors must
have a master's degree
1n the discphne. 1 mterested please emarl a resume and cover letter to
jdanrclo@galrpollsca·
reercoDege.edu

\

Education

Education

Help Wanted· General

The Unrversrty of R1o
Grande IS tak1ng applrcatrons for part·timo faculty
members lor the Academic Year 2009·2010.
Instructors are needed 1n
thA ::~reas nf R•ology, E'nvironmentat Science, Geology, Astronomy, Physics. Mathematics. Eng·
lrsh.
Communications
(Speech).
A master's degree Is re·
quired
All
Candidates
should
subm1t a letter of interest,
current resume and the
names and addresses of
three
references
Resumas will be rev•ewed
as reco1ved. Information
must be subrrttted to
Phy1hs Mason, SPHR,
VICe Pres dent of Human
Resources, University of
Rio Grande, Po. Box
500, Rro Grande, OH
e-marl
45674.
pmason@rio.edu
EEO/AA Employer Fax
740-245-7972

EdUC9Athens-Meigs
tJonal
ServJCO
Center,
507 Rrchland Avenue.
Suite #108, Athens. Oh
45701 Application Deadlrne: August 7, 2009,
3:00 p.m. The AMESC is
an
Equal
Opportunity
Employer/Provider.

Licensed dock foreman.
also expenenced person
for load1ng coal barges.
Send resume to Sands
Hill M1ning LLC, P.O

The Athens-Meigs Edu·
cat1onal ServiCe Center
has an antrc1pated position
openrng
tor
a
Part· T1me
Administrative
Assrstant for tho Early
Childhood Educ11t1on Of·
hce. Applicants should
possess excellent organIzational Sk1lls, abil1ty to
work well wrth staff and
pUbliC,
abllrly
IO
multrlask,
excellent
computer skills (M,crosolt Word. Excel, etc.)
type/keyboard 45 wpm.
Salary wrll bo based on
quallflcellons and experience Submit Iotter of Interest and resume to
John D. Costanzo, Su·
penntendent,

1

;;;H;;;;e;;ip;;;;W=a;;;;n;;;;te;;;;d;;;;-;;;;G;;;;e;;;;n;;;;e;;;;ra.,l
Assistant House Manager
Min1mum
of
a
high
school diploma/GED reqwred. Work evenings.
nights, weekends. and
holidays.
Expenence
working With indiViduals
1n crisis preferred. must
be able 10 pass background check. maintain
conlldentialrty and worl&lt;
well With others. Send resume to Assistant Hoose
Manger P.O. Box 454
Gallipolis Oh 0 45631•
~--~---Courtstde Gnll now accepllng apphcations for
expenenced
line/grill
cook. Good pay rn fast
paced environment. Ap·
ply rn person or call to
set up tnterview between
6·10AM 308 2nd Ave.
across from the park
740-441·9371
We are currently looking
for home health ardes rn
the Gallra County area.
Must be flex1ble w1th reliable transportation and
have a High School diploma or GED Equrvalent We are also locking
lor sOMeone with expenence as a manager
Please Apply at· 740288·7075
Ask
for
Rhonda or Emarl: monda sbcCyahoo cam
EOE

Help Wanted· General

All Areas! To Buy Home
Health
Care
or Sell Shrrley Spears Agency seeking Home
304·675-1429
Health A1des. no expenence necessary, Reeds•G-et- lh-at_ pe
_ rf_ec_l_p_a_rt_t-,me
- VIlle, Long Bottom. Chespay1ng job workrng for an ter, Pomeroy area. call
o•l linn ets tt local agem 740-662-1222
and eam more. Job requirements: Good communication skills rn Eng·
lish, Internet access Any
previous working expenence could be an advantage. Applicants should
send their resume to Ja.
son Wheller email Oasonwheller27Cgmall.co
m ) for more Info.

Box 650. Hamden, OH
45634 or colt
(740)
364-4211 to request application.

Woodland Centers, Inc.,
a commun1ty behavioral
health agency serv1ng
Gallia.
Jackson,
and
Meigs counties in South·
eastern Ohio for 35
years is accepting apph·
cations tor the pos1tion of
Grant Writer. Applicants
must possess a bachelo(S degree in Englrsh or
related field and have a
knowledge of the grant
appliCation j)focess, rn·
clud1ng vanous grant opportunities available for
substance
abuse
end
mental health counseJ.
1ng Woodland Centers,
Inc. oHers campetJt1ve
salaries and 8 campre·
henslve benefrls peck·
age.
Interested
applr·
cants should apply by
e-mailrng
resumes to
lporter@woodlendcenters.org, or mailing resumes to Tanya Porter,
HR Specialist. Woodland
Centers, Inc. 3086 State
Route 160 Gallipolis. OH
45631
Woodland Cen·
ters. Inc is an AA/EOE.
Managing cosmetologiSt,
60%
commiSSion,
choose your own hours
as a Independent Contractor, free tanntng tra,nrng &amp; free tal'rrng cert1fl·
catiOn,
10%
tannrng,
1O'lo reta1l. exceUent Iacaban, tree parking. call
740-992·2200

l

Medical

AVON 1

The
Mason
County
Commission
Is now acceptrng applrcatrons for the position of a
part-trme employee for
the Mason County Ammat Shelter applicants
must be able to work
weekends &amp; somo holidays, thrs will be a mrnimum wago position. Ap·
pl~eatrons can be oblarned In the Masor
County Commrsston of·
frce on the ground floor
of the courthouse between
the
hrs
of
6:30·4 30 Monday- Fnday.
The Meson County Com·
mission is an equal opportunity employer and
does
not
d1scnmrnate
due to race. sex, creed,
relig1on or natrona! ong1n.

Law Enforcement
V1llage
of
Syracusopart·trmo
patrolman.
$9 25 hr C 24 hr
scheduled work WAek.
2581 Third St., Syre·
cuse. Oh 45779, appiiCa·
liOns may be piCked up
at tho Villago Hall, ques·
lions call740·992·7777

d

d'

FIND A JOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

ASSISTANT CLINICAL COORDINATOR OF
OUTREACH OPERATIONS
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a full-time Asst.
Clinical
Coordinator
of
Outreach
Operations. Must possess 5 years
experience in long term care with 3 years
supervisory experience. Must possess 5
years experience in phlebotomy. Must
have current WV/Ohio RN license. CPR
instructor preferred. Experience with
public speaking and development of
policies and procedures, as well as
educational inserving for outreach
facilities.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
Or fax: 304-675-6975, or apply on·line
at www.pvalley.or&amp;

AA/EOE

�Friday, July 31, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

~~~
PUBLIC
NOTICES
Public Notice
The Village of Middle·
port, Ohio shall receive
sealed Bid Documents
for a contract for the
construction of the
"Well field Expansion
and Improvements".
Sealed bids will be re·
calved until 1:00 p.m.
local time on August
27, 2009, at the Village
offices,
237
Race
Street,
Middleport,
Ohio 45760. All bids will
be publicly opened and
read aloud In the City
Council Chambers at
said time and place.
Any Bids received after
the above specified
time and date will be returned to the Bidder
unopened.
A Pre-Bid conference
will be held at 10:00
a.m. local time on Au·
gust 17, 2009, at the
Middleport Village Of·
flee • Village Council
Chambers, 237 Race
Street,
Middleport,
Ohio 45760. Represen·
tatives of VILLAGE and
ENGINEER will be
present to discuss the
Project. BIDDERS are
encouraged to attend.
The Wellfield Expansion and Improvements
consist of the con·
struction of modifications to the existing
well houses and devel·
opment and construe·
tion of a new 400 gallon
per minute (gpm) well,
well house and cheml·
cal feed system. Modi·
flcatlons
and
Improvements Include
but are not limited to:
Abandoning of existing
monitoring wells; Construction and develop·
ment of test well;
Construction and development of new well;
Construction of new
discharge piping from
well; Construction of
new CMU well house;
Installation of chemical
feed systems; lnstalla·
tlon of new flow meter;
Construction of electrical improvements to
support above process
Improvements. Con·
structlon of HV AC lm·
provements to support
above process Improvements; Construe·
tlon of new System
Control And Doto Ac quisition
system
(SCADA) to allow monItoring and control of
the new water treatment facilities as well
as modifications to ex·
lstlng; Construction of
site Improvements to
accommodate
the
above work Including,
but not limited to, clearIng and grubbing, grad·
lng,
restoration,
seeding, fencing, road·
ways, piping, and other
site Improvements required for a complete
project;
Bidders are hereby notified that this project Is
being funded with fed·
eral American Rein·
vestment and Recovery

Act (ARRA) funds and
The VIllage of Middle·
port, Ohio. In accordance with Section
1605 of ARRA, reclpl·
ants of ARRA financial
assistance are required
to complete the project
facilities using only
Iron, steel and manufactured goods produced in the United
States unless a waiver
Is provided to the Bor·
rower by the EPA.
EPA's guidance pro·
vides instructions for
Implementing this re·
qulrement and request·
lng a waiver from EPA
from the requirements,
as well as sample Buy
American contract len·
guage. In addition, all
applicable laws and
regulations which govern the use of ARRA
funds shall apply to
any contract resulting
from this Advertisement.
The work for which
Bids are to be received
shall include all portions of the work In·
eluding
General
Construction and De·
molltion, with all labor,
materials, equipment,
tools and appurtenances, transportation
services. all applicable
taxes, and everything
required or necessary
for the entire perform·
anee and completion of
the work In every detail.
All work shall be per·
formed In strict secor·
dance with the Project
Documents as prepared by ATS EngineerIng,
Inc.,
7908
C In ci n nati-Dayto n
Road, Suite P, West
Chester, Ohio 45069,
hereinafter referred to
as the Engineer.
Project
Documents
may be examined at the
following
locations:
Middleport Village, 237
Race Street, Middleport, OH 45760,740·
992·5571
or
ATS
Engineering, Inc, 7908
Cl n cl n nat I· Dayton
Road, Suite P, West
Chester, OH 45069,
513·755·9842.
Copies of Project Documents can be ob·
tained from the offices
of the Engineer, ATS
Engineering, Inc. 71Xl8
CIncinnati· Dayton
Road, Suite P, West
Chester, Ohio 45069,
(513) 755-9842. Electronic copies on com·
pact disk (CO) in PDF
format are available at
a non-refundable cost
of $50.00. Paper copies
are available at a nonrefundable cost of
$200.00. Checks for
purchase of Project
Documents shall be
made payable to ATS.
Bids shall be submitted
on the bid forms provided In the Project
Documents. The non·
collusion affidavit must
be signed and executed. No exceptions
will be allowed. Bids

Publi(.· Nuti(.'C" in N&lt;''\'SPUJ)Ct's.
Ynur Rill:ht tn KnO'\V, Oclh·cr·(.•d 1-liAht to Your· l&gt;uur·.

shall be signed and accompanied by either a
Bid Guaranty Bond In
the amount of 100°o of
the Bid Amount or by a
certified
check,
cashiers check or letter
of credit In the amount
of 10% of the Bid
amount pursuant to
Chapter 1305 of the
Ohio Revised Code.
Any such letter of
credit is revocable only
at the option of the Village. The Successful
Bidder shall be required to furnish a satIsfactory Performance
Bond In the amount of
100% of the Bid.
Bids shall be enclosed
In a sealed envelope,
addressed to the Village, with the name of
the Project and the
name and place of
business of the Bidder
on the envelope.
Bids may be held by
the VIllage for a period
not to exceed ninety
(90) calendar days from
the date of the opening
of Bids for the purpose
of reviewing the Bids
and Investigating the
qualifications of the
Bidders, prior to award
of the Contract.
Award of any Contracts
related to this Project Is
contingent on the approval and concur·
renee by the OEPA and
the acquisition of all
permits.
In the event any Bidder
withdraws his bid or
fails to execute a satisfactory contract and
furnish a satisfactory
performance bond or
bonds within fifteen
(15) days after a contract has been awarded
to such Bidder by the
VIllage, the Village may
declare his certified
check or cashier's
cheek or Bid Bond for·
felted to said Village as
liquidated damages.
ARRA Section 1606 ap·
plies the provisions of
the Davis-Bacon Act to
all assistance agree·
ments made In whole
or In part with funds appropriated under the
ARRA. The contract
documents must include language that requires (among other
things) contractors and
subcontractors to pay
wages at rates not less
than those prevailing
on similar projects with
the area as determined
by the US Secretary of
Labor.
All jobs created with
ARRA funds must be
posted
on
the
www.ohiomeansjobs.c
om website and at the
closest Ohio Department of Job and Family
Services One-Stop location. The contract
must Include provi·
sions requiring the
contractors to comply
with this requirement.
Instructions for the
contractors are provided here for refer-

ence.
It Is the policy of the
Village and the OEPA
that
Disadvantaged
Business Enterprises
(DBEs), as defined in
49 CFR Part 23, shall
have the maximum op·
portunlty to participate
In the performance of
any contract to be formulated from this Ad·
vertisement.
The
Village has established
a goal of three percent
(3%) Minority and three
and seven-tenths percent (3.7%) Women's
Business participation
In all contracts let. Any
firm submitting a bid
shall be required to
meet this Disadvan·
taged Business Enter·
prise
(OBE)
participation goal or
completely document
its "best efforts" to·
ward meeting this goal.
This procurement Is
subject to the EPA pol·
icy of encouraging the
participation of small
businesses in rural
areas (SBRAs).
The VIllage reserves
the right to reject any
and all Bids and to
waive any informalities
In the bidding and to
award a Bid that In their
judgement Is the most
advantageous to the
VIllage.
Village of Middleport,
Ohio, Faymon Roberts,
Village Administrator
(7) 31 (8) 7

Public Notice
Public Notice
Sealed Bids for the Vii·
lage of Middleport
Water Distribution System Improvements will
be received by the VII·
I age at 237 Race Street,
Middleport,
Ohio
45760, until 1:00 p.m.
local time on August
27, 2009 at which time
they will be publicly
opened and read.
A Pre-Bid conference
will be held at 10:00
a.m. local time on Au·
gust 17, 2009, at the
Middleport Village Of·
flee • Village Council
Chambers, 237 Race
Street,
Middleport,
Ohio 45760. Represen·
tatives of VILLAGE and
ENGINEER will be present to discuss the Project. BIDDERS are
encouraged to attend.
In general, the Work
consists of the Installation of water main,
water services and
pavement repair.
Bidders are hereby notified that this project is
being funded with fed·
eral American Reinvestment and Recovery
Act (ARRA) funds and
The Village of Middleport, Ohio. In accordance with Section
1605 of ARRA, recipi·
ents of ARRA financial
assistance are required
to complete the project
facilities using only

iron, steel and manu·
factured goods produced In the United
States unless a waiver
is provided to the Bor·
rower by the EPA.
EPA's guidance pro·
vides Instructions for
Implementing this requirement and request·
ing waiver from EPA
from the requirements,
as well as sample Buy
American contract fan·
guage. In addition, all
applicable laws and
regulations which govern the use of ARRA
funds shall apply to
any contract resulting
from this Advertise·
ment.
Project
Documents
may be examined at the
following
locations:
Middleport Village, 237
Race Street, Middleport, OH 45760, 740·
992·5571
or
ATS
Engineering, Inc, 7908
C i nci n n ati·Dayto n
Road, Suite P, West
Chester, OH 45069, 513·
755-9842.
Copies of Project Documents can be obtained from the offices
of ATS Engineering,
Inc. at the above ad·
dress.
Electronic
copies on compact
disk (CD) In PDF format
are available at a nonrefundable cost of
550.00. Paper copies
are available at a nonrefundable cost of
5200.00. Checks for
purchase of Project
Documents shall be
made payable to ATS.
Bids shall be submitted
on the bid forms provided in the Project
Documents. The non·
collusion affidavit must
be signed and executed. No exceptions
will be allowed. Bids
shall be signed and ac·
companied by either a
Bid Guaranty Bond in
the amount of 100% of
the Bid Amount or by a
certified
check.
cashiers check or letter
of credit in the amount
of 10% of the Bid
amount pursuant to
Chapter 1305 of the
Ohio Revised Code.
Any such letter of
credit Is revocable only
at the option of the Vii·
lage. The Succe!lsful
Bidder shall be re·
quired to furnish a sat·
isfactory Performance
Bond in the amount of
1oo~c. of the Bid.
Bids shall be enclosed
In a sealed envelope,
addressed to Middleport Village, with the
name of the Project and
the name and place of
business of the Bidder
on the envelope.
Bids may be held by
the V1llage for a period
not to exceed ninety
(90) calendar days from
the date of the opening
of Bids for the purpose
of reviewing the Bids
and investigating the
qualifications of the
bidders, prior to award
of the Contract.

Award of any Contracts
related to this Project is
contingent on the approval and concurrence by the OEPA and
the acquisition of all
permits.
In the event any Bidder
withdraws his bid or
falls to execute a satis·
factory contract and
furnish a satisfactory
pertormance bond or
bonds within fifteen
(15) days after a contract has been awarded
to such Bidder by the
Village, the VIllage may
declare his certified
check or cashier's
check or Bid Bond forfeited to said Village as
liquidated damages.
ARRA Section 1606 applies the provisions of
the Davis-Bacon Act to
all assistance agreements made In whole
or in part with funds appropriated under the
ARRA. The contract
documents must In·
elude language that requires (among other
things) contractors and
subcontractors to pay
wages at rates not less
than those prevailing
on similar projects with
the area as determined
by the US Secretary of
Labor.
All jobs created with
ARRA funds must be
posted
on
the
www.ohlomeansjobs.c
om website and at the
closest Ohio Depart·
ment of Job and Family
Services One-Stop location. The contract
must Include provisions requiring the
contractors to comply
with this requirement.
Instructions for the
contractors are pro·
vlded here for reference.
It is the policy of the
VIllage and the OEPA
that
Disadvantaged
Business Enterprises
(DBEs), as defined in
49 CPR Part 23. shall
have the maximum op·
portunlty to participate
in the performance of
any contract to be for·
mulated from (his Ad·
vertisement.
The
Village has established
a goal of three percent
(3%) Minority and three
and seven-tenths percent (3.7%) Women's
Business participation
in all contracts let. Any
firm submitting a bid
shall be required to
meet this Disadvan·
taged Business Enterprise
(DSE)
participation goal or
completely document
its "best efforts" toward meeting this goal.
This procurement is
subject to the EPA pol·
icy of encouraging the
participation of small
businesses in rural
areas (SBRAs).
The VIllage reserves
the right to reject any
and all Bids and to
waive any informalities
in the bidding and to
award a Bid that in their

YOUNG'S

) I

Carpenter Service

~~~

·Room Addttlons &amp;
Remodeling
·New Garages
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Gutters
·Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
·Polio a"d Poreh Deeka

wv 036725
V.C . YOUNG Ill

I

liil.1ll

j

-.1l'IIHU I

Roofmg, Stding.
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing.
Drywall.
Remodeling. Room
Additions

992-6215
740.591-0195
Pomeroy, Oh10

Local Contractor

30 Years Local Expenence
FULLY INSURED

7 40-367-0536

MICIIAEL'S

S&amp;L
Trucking

SER\ ICE CE:\TER
1555 :\YE ,\\c.
l'umci"O\, OU
• Oil &amp; hiler change

• Tunc L;p,
• Bml..\: :'icrvicc
• ,\C Rt•charge
• \1inor cxhau\t
repan • Tu'C Repair
• Trunsnu sion Filler
&amp; Fluid Change
• General ~lechanic

740-367-0544
Free Estimates

Dump Truck
Serv1ce
We Haul Gravel.
Limestone. Coal.
Compost, Top Soil
Call Walt or Sandy

740-992-3220

\\Ork

or 7400-591-3726

(740) 992-0910

I Cell)

• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742-2332

446.9200

jrshadfrm@aol.com

H&amp;H
Guttering

Dt\:\KS
CO'iSTRUCTIO:\

FOR YOV!!

~
-~,~~?ttd­

Now Selhng:
• Fnrd &amp; Moto~crafl
Pans • Engines.
Transmissions
• Aftermarket

Replacement Sheet
~Ictal &amp; Components
Fur \II \l.okes of \'choclc'

Radnc.Ohio

are joining Blondie,

ROBERT

Funky Winkerbean

BISSEll

• Hometown News
• Area Shopping
• Local Sports
• Community
Calendar
... and much more.

the new comics page.
Watch for it!

llailp ~ribune
~ o int ~Ieasant l\egister
The Daily Sentinel

Cell: 740·416·5047
email:

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

740-949-1956

~aUipolis

rurnitute

2459 St. Rt. 160 ·Gallipolis
FOR FREE ESTIMATES

Dennis the Menace

7~, ~ 4d

per
month

... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING

the Horrible and

beginning

$70

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

Beetle Bailey, Hagar

crossword round out

Advertise
in this
space
for

judgment is the most
advantageous to the
Village.
Village of Middleport
Faymon Roberts, Vii·
lage Administrator
(7) 31 (8) 7

That's right! Hi &amp; Lois,

sudoku and a nifty

Hours
7:00 am • 8:00 pm

www.tlmbercreeJc.cab!netry.eom

Tr:msfer Ca\es &amp;

For puzzle lovers,

Sizes 5' x 1o·
to 10' x 30'

Public Notice

arehac/d

Tuesday, August 4th.

740-949-2217

•Jafdw~od ~a3inetrv An~

Q.USltuat~nOO&lt;aPUT"S

funny pages gang on

29625 Bashan Road
Racine, OH 45771

J&amp;L
Construction

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Sid1ng. Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653·9657

and the rest of the

Hill's Self
Storage

CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

140-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

Rcplucement
Windows and
Vin) l Siding
Spcdalists, LTD
(7~0) 7~2-2563

®a1Iipolis1!lailp ~rihune
~oint ~leasant 31\rgister
The Daily Sentinel
~unbap {Cintrs -ientinel

• Siding • \in) I
Windons • \Ictal

und Shingle Roofs
• l&gt;l·cl.. \ • Additions
•Eitctrical

• Plumbing
• l,olc Barns

co.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Commercial •
Residential
• Free Estimates
(740) 992-5009
Custom Home Building
Steel! rame Butlding'
Bmldmg. Remodeling
Gcncr.tl repair
' ' IHI .hankscclb.com

Kl\t:HSJI)E
Sl : \\ll .J:SS &lt;;tTTI :KS
\'111~ I

,.,du•:._t. UOITh.·

\ l.••ntl·n.tlh.. l'. Pu'''-''

w....hm~ ,\: ( iurh.·r C'h:omin}!
lln111k·d ,\ lnsun:d
h cl' L sl imah:s
.11~-X 12--l79S

LE\\'IS
CO:'iCRETE
CO:'iSTRCCTIO:'i
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

All Types Of
Concrete Work
29 Yl'llr~ E'\:perience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
•Prompt and Quality
Work

• Rc&lt;NH1able Rates
*lnsUr\:d
•Expericm:~.:d

Reference' A' 3ilable!

Call Gat)

Stanle~ @

7·JU-591-S044
Please lea\ e

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions, Remodeling, ;\Ictal &amp;
Shingll· Roof,, '\e'' Homes, Siding, Decks,
Hathruum Remodeling. Lkenscd .~Insured
WV1040954

Cell 740-416-2960

740-992-0730

�Friday, July 31, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87 •

ALLEY OOP

NEA Crossword P,uzzle
BRIDGE
ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

1 TD passers

4 Interest
amt.

7 Devious

Nol'th
l,l 8

07-31-09

s

4

'I K 7

+ AQ9863
ofo K 7
East
/.l A 2
• J 96 4

West

.t•Q9763

'I A 10
•

+

7 2

K 54
ofoJ964

ofo8532

South
/.l K J 10
'IQ8532

• .,J 10
ofoAQIO

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both
Sout~

1 'I
2 NT

West

North

Pass
Pass

2
3 .NT

+

East
Pass
All pass

Opening lead: ;. 6

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

~L-

~'M l&gt;ONE,
'('0 - / WILt.. YOU

WtiEN

$vJEA~

Mf

lACK OUT!

BA~NEY
THEM FISH WON'T
GO HUNGRY T'DAY ! !

THE BORN LOSER
p-~Gt&gt;W. \J't£.BLEn:S\ER.
IS fl.. \&gt;\R.\1',
{2..0\TE~

P"12J\~C\\&gt; W. 'JE'£~Ltf[~\C.\&lt;..
\~ p... t&gt;\{Z\1',

~C:.CI-1.0 1'01 ~\ fl.~
fl... CE:.t-\50fZ ~

\&lt;..()\\(~

*#.f!

One way to tell,
one way to know
Aristotle, who died in 322 B.C., wrote, "It
is possible to fa11 in many ways ... while
to succeed is possible only in one way:
In this deal, there is only one way for the
defense to succeed. You are East,
defending against three no-trump. Your •
partner leads his fourth·highest spade,
the six. How would you plan the
defense?
North was right to raise to three no·
trump. Whenever responder has a long
m1nor suit, game·only values and no sin·
gleton or void, he should aim squarely at
three no-trump, not five of his minor.
You should win with your spade ace.and
lead back the spade two. Partner takes
declarer's jack with his queen and
returns a spade to South's king.
Declarer runs the diamond jack to your
king. What would you do now?
You seem to have a guess between a
heart and a club shift. And you would
probably lean toward a club because
South opened one heart. But if you look
at the full deal. you will see that a club
switch lets the contract make. Declarer
takes one spade, five diamonds and
three clubs. How can you know to shift
to a heart?
West can tell you - legally' At trick
three. he has the spade nine, seven and
three left. For the purposes of winning
spade tricks, it does not matter which
one he leads. So he makes a suit·pref·
erence signal. Since he has the heart
ace, he returns the spade nine, his h1gh·
est remaining card in the suit to call for
the higher-ranking suit (If he had the
club ace•. he would lead the spade
three.)

10 - kwon do
11 Crow's-nest
cry
13 Grimace
14 SaultMarie
15 Numbers to
crunch
16 "Waterloo"
pop group
17 Gray-brown
bird
19 Not e'en
once
20 Toothpaste
type
21 Gets close
23 Story
26 Norwe~ian
playwnght
28 Depot info
29 Golly!
30 Cause-and·
effect law
34 Generously
36 Tummy
muscles
38 Heating fuel
39 Saturate
41 Edible
seaweed
42 Free to

roam
44 201, to
Claudius
46 Swiss city
47 Heated to
the boil
51 Shoestring
52 La senorita
53 Frat-party
fixture
55 Europe-Asia
range
56 Male
turkeys
57 "Evil
Woman"
rockers
58 USN officer
59 Recipe qty.
60 Close kin
12

DOWN

2

3
4
5
6
7
8
9

13

18
Liquid
me as.
Some vam· 22
pi res
Ooze out
23
San Diego 24
pro
Checkpoint
25
Dorothy's
27
dog
29
Like a teeto·
31
taler
Grease jobs 32
Once
33

Answer to Previous Puzzle

around the
sun
Gapes
open
Tomorrow,
in Madrid
Historical
period
Cartoon
shrieks
Mild brew
Cash dis·
penser
(abbr.)
Lick
Swain
Workout
sites
Caviar
Wire gauge
Matterhorn,

for instance

35 Big name in
trains

;

37 Deprives

·~
!

40
41
42
43
45

46
48
49
50

54

ofwind
Assail
•
Moppet
.i
Ferret out •
Whales like •
Shamu
•
Barrette
·p
Eyeshade
Sour, as
••
cream
Just
scrapes by 1
Cold-cuts '
vendor
Swabbie

....

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebllty Cipher cryptog&lt;ams are created f'Qm quo:a1o0ns by !amous people. past and P'9se«1l
Eacn er.er 10 the crpller s~a'lds lo&lt; anolter.

'J

Today's clue: Xequals K

'ZMAAKFMMI'C
DZGK'AA
IMAAWOC
RGSDC

NWK
BMO

BMO

W NAWRG
KMH
W

W

DZMHCWSI

XTCC,

KMHO

U W0 T A K S U MS 0 MG

FZGOG

WSI

BTBDK

CMHA."

,

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ·songwriting is ... like being possessed. You try to go •:
to sleep, but the song won'tlet you.· · John Lennon
·,

~AstroI MEA/II, I DO
HAVE A FEW
ONION RING,S
BACk HERE,
BUT ..

IF ONION
RINGS ARE
I

WRONG.
DON'T

WANNA
BE RIGHT.

PEANUTS

I HAVE A
NEW P~ILOSOPI·N..
I' LIFE GOES ON II

GARFIELD
THAT'5 MY FAMILY ANt::'
Me AT MY COLLE:G-e
GRAt7UATION

I

V~!!!=

Saturday, Aug. 1&gt;2009
By Bernice Bede Osol
Ambitious ObJectives you establish for
yourself in the year ahead can be realized, but only if you don't bog down with
too many ineffective alliances. Associate
only with productive types, or go it atone.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Be sympathet·
ic to the plight of a friend who has been
kind to you in the past. and come to his
or her aid. If you opt for plans of your
own instead, your gu11t won't allow you to
have fun.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) Selfishness can quickly put strains on a
friendship, especially if ypu are too self·
serving and thoughtlessly inconsiderate
of this pal's feelings. Stop and think
before you niake light of something.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Chances
are you will do quite well in competitive
developments, but your accomplish·
ments w111 mean little if the tactics used
are underhanded or dece11ful. Be an
honorable person at all times.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - A friend
who usually supports your ideas or your
position m1ght be diametrically opposed
to something you propose. Don't take it
personally; stop and think why.thls person d1sagrees with you.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21)-This
could be one of your mo1e Wi:l::&gt;ttlrul days
financially unless you get a hold of your·
self early on. Don't yield to extravagant
foolishness - live within your means.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) There's nothing wrong with satisfying
your needs, but you usually do so with
great consideration of those involved
You could totally ignore how it affects
others.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19)- Make
certain that you show the proper grati·
tude to someone who goes out of his or
her way to perform a special favor. To do
otherwise would make you look bad.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Owing to
the fact that you want to think well of
everyone - which is nice but not necessarily sensible- you could put your faith
1n a person with queslionable ethics and
wind up getting hurt. Be careful.
ARIES (March 21·April19) -In order to
satisfy a personal desire, you may knowingly step on the toes of another who
wouldn't do the same to you. You'll be
sorry later
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) Companions might nor. be as excited
about doing something as you are, so
don't be disappointed if they suggest
plans of their own. Unless you're a joiner, you could find yourself all alone.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Be on
guard when shopping because a hotshot
salesperson might consider you an easy
target and attempt to palm off a piece of
merchandise no one wants.
CANCER (June 21·July 22)- If you
don't wanl to turn a promising day into
one of misery, give-and·take will be
reqUired with your sweetheart. Jf a lack of
consideration is allowed to exist. wound·
ed feelings will result.

....

..;

..
@ Pl11N1

NV/o.tiERfD
l'HTE!i:S IN SOlJAI!fS

Ponder Ledgr:~ - Knock -lyocwn - DECENCY •
My dad ac~kcti ~ if J k.nf\~ wllk.it of m}f 5 scmes ~
dimmi5hefJ ~ilh age. He claimed it was~ se~ of r
DECENCY.
ARLO &amp; JANIS

~~.·
~

�Friday, July 31, 2009

www.mydai lysentinel.com

:c

..,. If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, cjo The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia, NC 28053

iJ/1 IJ.J.E ·JTIJ.Bin

All times Eastern
~Prfllt Cup

Sprint Cup

_

Sunoco Red Cross
PennsylVania 500,
1 p.m., Sunday

Nationwide Series

I::JI"""i

-

-

U.S. Cellular 250
presented by
l::lr'll
Northland Oil and
TMC Trucking, 4 p.m., Friday

Truck Series
Toyota Tundra 200,
7:30 p.m., Saturday

K1ii1lltilJi
t1t11tJlll!J

===

.,. At last. the 12 drivers in pos;tion to make the Chase for the
Sprint Cup have some breathing
room. There's a 68-point difference, still modest, between
12th-place Matt Kenseth and
13th-place David Reutimann .
.,. As a result of unbelievable tire
problems, last year's Allstate
400 at the Brickyard because
many fans left last year's race
vowing not to return.
..,. last year Kyle Busch ·s swoon
occurred in the Chase. In spite
of three victories. Busch needs
to regain his footing over the
next six races because he has
fallen to 14th place in the point
standings, 82 points out of
Chase position.
•
.,. Though Juan Montoya complained loudly and denied his
• guilt, it should also be pointed
out that being penalized for
speeding on pit road, with the
race all but in the bag, was a notable and senseless mistake.
.,. Montoya could make up for it
• quickly by winning this week at
• Pocono. which has many similari: ties to Indianapolis.
: .,. Engine problems cost Dale
• Earnhardt Jr. a likely top-five fin; ish at the Brickyard. The result
was 36th place. He has only one
• top-five finish all year and is now
• 22nd in the point standings.
' .,. Tony Stewart's 192-point edge in
the standings. h;s biggest margin
• of the season, is of very little practical use. The edge will be elim~
nated when the Chase begins.
: .,. There's probably no stretch in
• the season where winning races
is more important. For those drivers whose Chase status is relatively assured - Stewart, Jimmie
Johnson and Jeff Gordon - the
chief incentive is now the bonus
: points awarded for race victories.
a ... Johnson is the first driver to
: win consecutive Cup races at
Indy. Seven times the eventual
• champion has won at the Brickyard en route to a title, and John·
son has already done it twice.
• .,. Only Gordon. Johnson's teammate, has won at Indianapolis in
: stock cars more often than Johnson. Gordon still leads in Brick·
yard victories, 4·3.

SmvART

.,. Who's hot:
Jimmie
Johnson moved
up to second in
the Cup points
and confirmed
his status as
the title fa·
vorite.... Tony
Stewart im·
proved his
leadwith a rock·
solid thirdplace finish.

.,. Who's not:
Eleventh place
was a crushing
disappointment to Juan
Pablo Montoya, whoremained tenth
in the standings .... Denny
Hamlin,
thought by
many to be a
Bnckyard contender. suffered '
early transmission trouble and
wound up fmishing 34th.

Nationwide

Race: Sunoco Red Cross
anapolis Motor Speedway by
Pennsylvania 500
technicaliJY. Said Juan Pablo
Where: Pocono Raceway, Long
Montoya, "It kind of sucks."
Pond, Pa. (2.5 mi.), 200
Montoya, who could have been
laps/500 miles.
the only driver ever to win both
When: Sunday, Aug. 2.
the Indianapolis 500 and the
Last year's winner: Carl EdAllstate 400, lost.Pecause.
.., wards, Ford.
while running aw~ with the
Qualifying record: Kasey
race, he was inexplicably ticketKahne, Dodge,172.533 mph,
ed for speeding. There are no
June 11, 2004.
speedometers in tre cars. only
Race record: Rusty Wallace,
in the NASCAR tower where
Ford, 144.892 mph, July 21,
luckless drivers have hopes
1996.
dashed and dreams shattered.
Last week: Numbers suggest
The decisive moment occurred
decisively that Jimmie Johnson on the 125th lap. .At the time,
is the finest NASCAR driver of
Montoya's bright-red No. 42 had
his age. In the span of his cabeen at the front for 116 of
~ reer, he's won 43 races, the
them. As it turned out, though,
most recent being the Allstate
Johnson held off
400 at the Brickyard. N0 one
teammate Mark Martin to beelse has won more than 24 dur- come the only driver to date to
ing that period. But Johnson
win at Indianapolis consecutivewon for the third time at lndily in a NASCAR race.

Camping World Trucks

Race: U.S. Cellular 250
Race: Toyota Tundra 200
Where: Iowa Speedway,
Where: Nashville SuperNewton (.875 mi.), 250
speedwa~ Lebanon. Tenn.
laps/218.75 miles.
(1.333 mi.). 150
When: Saturday, Aug. 1.
laps/199.95 miles.
Last year's winner: First
When: Saturoay, Aug. 1.
series race at this track.
Last year's winner: JohnQualifying record: None.
ny Benson Jr., Toyota.
Race record: None.
. Qualifying record: Erik
Last week: Carl Edwards
Darnell, Ford, 162.116
outdueled Kyle Busch to
mph. Aug. 12. 2006.
capture the Kroger 200 at R&lt;!ce record: Scott Riggs,
O'Reilly Raceway Park in
Dodge, 132.466 mph,
Clermont, Ind. The two
Aug. 10, 2001.
Sprint Cup stars drove
Last week: Ron Hornaday
through the pack after
Jr., ;n a Chevrolet, won at
starting at the back beO'Reilly Raceway Park. because neither was able to com;ng the first driver in
qualify, thanks to ac:ivities Truck Series history to win
nearby at the Brickyard.
four consecutive races.
Mike Skinner finished second in a Toyota.

Distance: 2.5 mile oval

- ,

~~ Length of frontstretch:.....3,740ft.l~

f t4~

Length of backstretch:.....3,055 ft.
~ Length of shortstretch:.... 1, 780ft.
I tum 1 Milesj laps:..... 500 mi.= 200 laps
Banking

~

Turn 2.

s•: J

tum 3. 6~

n-?.
s;s:; - •
c- PE-.,l.J
'Jr j'rJ.s:..5 'il
"J;.,;..=.J

BILL ELuon

SPRINT CuP

No. 21 MoroRCRAFT FoRo

v

~

E

"""-~~1
.:.I .

s

--

u
Montoya

~,

R

~ ,

S

Juan Pablo Montoya
vs. NASCAR
Montoya dominated the Allstate
400 until a pit-road penalty cost him
the race. The Colombian driver, who
could've become the first driver to
win at the Brickyard in both Indy cars
and stock cars, complained loudly,
denying that he was over the pit-road
speed limit. NASCAR officials John
Darby and Robin Pemberton said he
was 5 over the 55-mph limit.
NASCAR This Week's Monte Out·
ton gives his take: "This should focus attention on the lack of precision.
Drivers rely on the tachometer, not a
speedometer, when they enter pit
road. There's got to be a better way."

Part-time racer
still awesome
after many years
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

SPEEDWAY, Ind. -Veteran driver
Bill Elliott, the 1988 champion of what
is now known as the Sprint Cup Series, wound up finishing 26th in the
Allstate '400 at the Brickyard, but not
before he turned heads with a fourthplace qualifying effort.
·
Elliott, 53, now competes only partime for what was once one of
NASCAR's premier teams, the Wood
Brothers. The most recent of his 44
career victories occurred on Nov. 9,
2003, at North Carolina Speedway in
Rockingham, a track no longer on the
Cup schedule.
The second-row qualifying effort
erased a particularly bad memory for

NASCAR This Week welcomes letters to the editor, but please be aware
that we have room for only a few each
week. We'll do our best to select the
best, but individual replies are impossible due to the bulk of mail received.
Please do not send stamped and selfaddressed envelopes with your letters,
which should be addressed to:
NASCAR This Week, The ~aston
Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia. N.C.
28053

Stewart can do no wrong, and
Junior should know better
Dear NASCAR This Week,
Keep up the good work.
Now, Tony (Ste'tlllrt), our boy,
don't feel bad about Kyle Busch. You
did nothing wrong to him. He did it
all to himself. He is a big crybaby. It
is always everyone else's fault. He
could never fit Tony's shoes. We are
for you, Tony (Smoke) Stewart.
·
Betsy Sweet
Coopersville, Mich.

Elliott, who won at Indianapolis Mo·

tor Speedway in 2002. Wood Brothers
Racing, a team that dates back to
19S3, has won 96 races over the
years.
After his Indy qualifying run, Elliott said, "All that kept going through
my head was here a year ag&lt;&gt; and how
bad we screwed up in qualifying. It
hurt so bad, missing this race a year
ago, and being able to come back here
(and qualify near the front) meant a
lot.
"(Co-owners) Len and Eddie (Wood)
have really worked to give me something to drive, and I've been working
my butt off making sure that I haven't
let them down on the other side."
Elliott, from Dawsonville, Ga., is
paired with crew chief David Hyder.
"I can't say enough good things
about (the team)," said Elliott. "We've
kind of meshed. We're able to get input back and forth. We're working so
well together right now, and that's so
important.
"I'm proud to get in this race car
when we come to the track. They've
done so much work."
Elliott takes heart in the perform-

We have no way of knowing
whether Tony Stewart will read your
note, but we don't think he's losing
any sleep over the Daytona incident.

John Clark I NASCAR This Week

Veteran racer Bill Elliott has put together some strong qualifying runs recently. Elliott is
running on the Sprint Cup circuit on a limited basis for Wood Brothers Racing.

ance of another veteran, Mark Martin, who, at age SO, has already won
four Cup races this year.
"If a SO-year-old can win, I think a
few more years ain't going to hurt a
thing," he said, referring to Martin.

Among Elliott's predecessors in the
No. 21 Motorcraft Ford were team cofounder Glen Wood, Cale Yarborough,
Neil Bonnett, Buddy Baker, Dale Jarrett, Kyle Petty and, most notably,
David Pearson.

Dear NASCAR This Week,
•
... Why would you have someon
who doesn't do well in racing (Dale
Earnhardt Jr.) as the main story
when there is "poor" Joey Logano, ,
who has become the youngest winner ever? ... Are you people blind or
not?
Dale Jr. should be ashamed of
himself for letting this happen. He's
never going to be like his dad was.
Doesn't he realize that? The news
media just caters to Dale Jr. Wake
up, people, and smell the roses.
l don't have anything against
Dale Jr.. but it just isn't fair that oth·
er drivers have to work to get what
they have, instead of having it given
to them. only because of his dad!
Helen Hoover
Blairsville. Pa.
We try to profile every driver once,
and Logano had already been profiled
in April. Gee, we're glad you don't have
anything against Dale Earnhardt Jr.

•GALliPOLIS •MIDDLEPORT •PT. PLEASANT •RIPLEY •RAVENSWOOD •SPENCER

157 Walnut Street, Middleport, OH • 740-992·2131
.

~

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="558">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10009">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="12560">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="12559">
              <text>July 31, 2009</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1337">
      <name>bass</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="14">
      <name>wolfe</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
